Dayton Daily News

Central State to build garden for community

Raised-bed facility to allow people to plant on their own plot.

- By Max Filby Staff Writer

The school is partnering with a Cleveland-based organizati­on to create a new botanical and community garden on campus.

Central State University is partnering with a Cleveland-based organizati­on to create a new botanical and community garden on campus.

Work will begin this month on the garden, which will include a raised bed facility modeled after Rid-All green partnershi­p’s gardens in Cleveland, according to the university.

Rid-All has turned empty plots of land in Cleveland into organic “urban farms” which include two green houses and four hoop houses, according to the organizati­on’s website. The organizati­on also educated people on the best methods to provide access to healthy, quality, safe and affordable food.

Central State and Rid-All leaders celebrated the garden partnershi­p with a groundbrea­king ceremony on Friday. The garden facility will cost $700,000 and an aquaponics facility will cost $125,000, said CSU spokeswoma­n Edwina Blackwell-Clark. Both will be paid for by the United States Department of Agricultur­e.

“The botanical garden will be a space that allows the community to come in and plant their own little plot of land and grow food that is healthy and will support their lifestyles,” said Central State president Cynthia Jackson-Hammond.

With work beginning this month, Jackson-Hammond said the university hopes the land will be prepared by spring so community members can pick out plots of land they would like to own and use.

The decision to create the garden was made as part of Central State’s focus on being an 1890 land-grant institutio­n, Jackson-Hammond said. Being a land grant school, Central State is expected to focus its attention on the needs of the community and state, including agricultur­e.

Central State was designated a land grant institutio­n in 2014 and as such has partnershi­ps with other land grant colleges, including Ohio State University, Jackson-Hammond said.

“This is such an amazing time for Central State University. I think this is the first opportunit­y that the public really understand­s what it means to be an 1890 land grant institutio­n,” she said. “Today we are so fortunate to inaugurate our partnershi­p with Rid-All.”

The garden is just the latest of several new initiative­s launched by Central State since the school was removed from state fiscal watch in April.

The historical­ly black college’s environmen­tal engineerin­g and social work programs recently gained accreditat­ion and the campus is in the midst of something of a transforma­tion with more than $20 million in projects underway.

In July, CSU was named HBCU of the year and in late September, Central State became one of just two colleges to offer to operate a lab to test medical marijuana for Ohio’s new medical pot industry.

 ??  ?? Officials from Central State University and Rid-All celebrate the school’s upcoming community garden with a groundbrea­king ceremony Friday. The garden should be ready by spring, Central State’s president said.
Officials from Central State University and Rid-All celebrate the school’s upcoming community garden with a groundbrea­king ceremony Friday. The garden should be ready by spring, Central State’s president said.

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