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Can collective ownership solve housing affordabil­ity? These Black communitie­s in N.S. are working on it

- Shaina Luck

Lynn Jones wanted to pre‐ serve the spirit of the Truro, N.S., neighbourh­ood known as "The Marsh" once a thriving community of Black families, most of whom have moved away over the years.

She and her family mem‐ bers each owned a small plot of land in The Marsh and, over time, Jones began to purchase land from her rela‐ tives as people left. But she hadn't figured out what to do afterward.

"I was not selling to devel‐ opers for them to reap the benefits of a traditiona­l African Nova Scotian commu‐ nity and there be nothing left for the community," she said in a recent interview.

Joneshas received the Or‐ der of Canada for her decades-long work on labour rights and human rights, and comes from a large family with a long tradition of antiracism work.

Two years ago, Jones learned about a concept of collective land ownership called a community land trust, and something clicked.

"This land can stay in the hands of the community and the people can live on the land or develop things on the land that benefit the commu‐ nity, forever and ever," Jones said.

"For me, that was per‐ fect."

Jones and a group of oth‐ er leaders in Truro set up an organizati­on called Down the Marsh community land trust, and investigat­ed how to transfer the ownership of Jones's land to Down the Marsh for it to hold in perpe‐ tuity.

A community land trust is a type of non-profit organiza‐ tion that owns land which is used for the benefit of a group. Five years ago, it was a concept that was almost unknown in Nova Scotia. But as the challenge of finding af‐ fordable housing increases, at least four new trusts have begun to organize to meet that need.

A "fragmented" commu‐ nity

Curtis Whiley says a land trust is the right fit for Upper Hammonds Plains, N.S., a community just outside Hali‐ fax settled in 1815 by Black refugees from the War of 1812.

He says many local young people want to live near where they grew up, but in‐ creasing housing prices are forcing them to move any‐ where they can afford. With‐ out a land trust, he feels that trend will accelerate.

"I believe that our com‐ munity would be gone," he said. "It would just be really fragmented."

Whiley's group is holding a series of meetings to an‐ swer questions about what the community wants to do with land, how it will acquire land and who's eligible to be a member of the initiative.

The Upper Hammonds Plains land trust doesn't own any property yet, but has identified a few parcels of

Crown land that are appeal‐ ing. For now, organizers are concentrat­ing on figuring out what the community wants.

They expected 50 people at the first meeting, but 85 showed up.

"The room was set up al‐ most like how they hold wed‐ ding receptions here," Whiley said. "You could barely walk through."

"I feel like what we're doing is deeply resonating with people."

New Communitie­s Inc. According to the Canadian Network of Community Land Trusts, there are more than 30 trusts establishe­d in cities that include Whitehorse, Van‐ couver, Toronto and Mon‐ treal, and even more are being set up.

In Toronto, the downtown area of Kensington Market has used a land trust to pro‐ vide two buildings with hous‐ ing at low rents like $850 a month. In Vancouver, a com‐ munity land trust called the Hogan's Alley Society wants to use the model to offer ser‐ vices like rental housing, a cultural centre, and childcare spaces.

All four new land trusts in Nova Scotia started in areas where a historic Black com‐ munity has roots. The mod‐ ern-day community land trust concept is attributed to a Black farming community in Georgia during the Ameri‐ can civil rights movement - a history that adds special meaning for the organizers in Nova Scotia.

New Communitie­s Inc. was founded by a group that included Shirley Sherrod and her late husband Charles Sherrod.

In 1969 the group estab‐ lished a land trust on 6,000 acres of land in Lee County, Ga. Their vision developed in‐ to the current concept recog‐ nized as a community land trust, with the farm "leased from a community controlled nonprofit."

They spent a year dis‐ cussing how they would farm, and how their commu‐ nity would take care of health, business and railroad connection­s, and education.

In the early years, the farm was home to about five or six families.

WATCH | Shirley Sherrod shares her advice for people who wish to start a land trust today:

"It was very empowering to actually be able to plan how we would operate in this new community," Sherrod told CBC in a recent inter‐ view.

New Communitie­s oper‐ ated in Lee County between 1969 and 1985, when a se‐ vere drought struck the area. New Communitie­s was de‐ nied an emergency relief loan, but it joined a lawsuit that successful­ly argued Black farmers had been de‐ nied loans which white farmers received. The organi‐ zation received a settlement and purchased a different piece of property, which is still used today as a farm and conference retreat.

However, Sherrod didn't know until 2015 that others were duplicatin­g the same model. That's when she at‐ tended the screening of a documentar­y about New Communitie­s and spoke with other attendees.

"I learned for the first time that they were using the model we created to help deal with housing issues in New York City. I was blown away," she said.

"I couldn't wait to get back here to tell folks," she said. "We had no idea."

The story is still spread‐ ing. Whiley remembers when he first learned about it.

"I was like, wow, this is such a missing narrative, es‐ pecially in the Canadian land‐ scape," he said. "And then it set me on a course of always telling people this."

When Jones first started research for "Down the Marsh" community land trust, she wasn't aware of the history, either.

"I was so happy when I did find out: 'Oh! This was started by Black people,'" she said.

Rural land trust

In late February, Shekara

Grant was thrilled to close on what she hopes will become the first property of the Wey‐ mouth Falls Community Land Trust.

It's a piece of vacant land south of Digby, N.S., that was her great-grandparen­ts' homestead. After their right to the deed was challenged in the 1980s, Grant's family lost the land.

"My grandmothe­r has tried for 30 years to get this property back," Grant said. Her family was able to nego‐ tiate the sale only within the last year.

She incorporat­ed the trust in May 2023. Now, she's starting a consultati­on pro‐ cess to determine the com‐ munity's priorities. Wey‐ mouth Falls is a deeply rural area, with a population of roughly 100 people.

"These communitie­s have been stripped of jobs. They've been stripped of ser‐ vices. There's really nothing left for them," she said.

Grant hopes a land trust will be able to reverse some of this decline.

"The idea that I can take my family's legacy and put it into the land trust for the wider community to benefit from - that's really the dream," she said.

Urban land trust pro‐ posed in Halifax

Meanwhile, Treno Morton is preparing to incorporat­e a community land trust in the heart of Halifax.

He and the 28 active members of the North End Community Land Trust hope to grow their membership and represent the communi‐ ties of Uniacke Square and Mulgrave Park.

Many families in those communitie­s have ties to Africville, a historic Black community the city of Halifax demolished in the 1960s. The city relocated hundreds of residents and razed the buildings, including the church that was the centre of the community. In 2010 the city officially apologized for the destructio­n and it's now a national historic site.

Morton's organizati­on wants to acquire a $50 mil‐ lion parcel of Halifax's Cogswell redevelopm­ent area in order to create mix‐ ed-income housing. He has started discussion­s with city councillor­s and staff about how to do this, but the dis‐ cussions are at early stages.

"We know they're not giv‐ ing the land away. They're trying to get full value for it, which is about $50 million," he said. "Which is no small task."

Morton hopes the com‐ munity will get behind the project.

"We're just hoping to open ourselves up to more opportunit­ies for funding, particular­ly crowdfundi­ng," he said. "Getting community members to want to invest in this project and have it all community-run and owned." Capacity building

The four young commu‐ nity land trusts acknowledg­e there's a lot of work ahead.

Jones says community members are eager to pitch in, but don't have the same capacity as profession­al de‐ velopers.

"We're all working off the side of our desk - or no desk at all," she said. "I'm sup‐ posed to be retired and I do more work now than I've done in my life."

But she believes the com‐ munity land trust movement is already a success.

"Because we're doing it," she says. "We're there, we're doing the best we can. We're learning as we go along."

For more stories about the experience­s of Black Canadians - from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

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