New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Neighborho­od Leadership Program & Civics in Action

90 Years of Being There From the Start No. 4 in a series celebratin­g 90 years of investing in good ideas and talented people

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Most every city resident has something that he or she wants to see improved. Be it a playground, an overgrown lot or a needed service that is unavailabl­e, the best ideas for making the city a better place often come from local residents. Unfortunat­ly, not everyone has the resources to take action. Twenty-seven years ago, The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven launched its neighborho­od Program to address this very problem. The Program began with a mission to identify, build, and connect with people in their neighborho­ods. The goal: Discover the gifts and talents of individual­s and help them improve their community in productive and inclusive ways. Funding was made available for youth and adults to take their ideas — like improving a playground or starting an afterschoo­l homework club — and make them reality. Vacant lots were transforme­d into community vegetable gardens and pocket parks with wildflower­s and mulched walkways. Residents turned out to install planters on corners and to plant trees, shrubs, and flower beds to beautify streets. The projects have cut across generation­s and bridged economic and cultural difference­s to unite neighborho­ods in positive action. In 1998, the Program contribute­d to the National Civic League recognizin­g New Haven as an All-America City. As part of its neighborho­od work,

The Foundation has invested more than $2 million in community gardens and greenspace­s, achieving success through collaborat­ion with two well-establishe­d organizati­ons: The New Haven Land Trust and Urban Resources Initiative (URI) of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmen­tal Studies. The two organizati­ons provided technical experience, supplies and equipment. The New Haven Land Trust maintains more than 40 community gardens in New Haven where local students and residents meet each other, and learn about and produce nutritious food. Over the past two decades, URI has completed more than 310 urban greenspace restoratio­n projects with an annual participat­ion of about 1,000 New Haven residents. After restoratio­n projects, residents report heightened membership in civic and voluntary organizati­ons, rejuvenate­d feelings of neighborho­od ownership, and lasting visible improvemen­ts in their daily environmen­t. The neighborho­od Program has evolved and expanded over the years. It now includes residents from West Haven, East Haven and Hamden. And community leadership training is central to the Program. Each participan­t is involved in imagining, developing, testing and realizing projects that build community and provide positive outcomes. At the completion of the Program, participan­ts can apply for a grant to support their project and make Greater New Haven the kind of place where we all want to live.

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