The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Cultivatin­g Justice

Like-minded collaborat­ors seek to transform unused park into community farm

- By Cassandra Day STAFF WRITER

MIDDLETOWN — A social justice organizati­on wants to turn a rarely used park in the North End into a farm run by youth and people of color.Diana Martinez, program manager for Cultivatin­g Justice and principal of Dee’s Crafty Bees, wants to rent the property for five years. The plot would be used for beekeeping and honey production, crop growing, poultry farming, arts and crafts and other purposes.

City-owned Roosevelt Park is a 2-acre plot at 18 Miller St.

Cultivatin­g Justice and its partners were looking for communitie­s such as Miller and Bridge streets, “which are isolated from the rest of town, a distance away from any local food source or bodega, and where people are experienci­ng high need,” Martinez said during the March 12 Economic Developmen­t Commission meeting. “We found that here.”

Martinez is partnering with Lorenzo Jones, cofounder and co-executive director of the Hartfordba­sed Katal Center for Equity, Health, and Justice on the project.

Dee’s Crafty Bees is a “queer, BIPOC womanowned apiary invested in the future of our communitie­s and our environmen­t,” Martinez said in her proposal. Her goal is to cross-pollinate apiculture and fiber arts.

“Our passion is connecting upcoming generation­s to the natural world around them, teaching them

about the importance of bees, supporting their interest in arts for creative and therapeuti­c purposes,” she said.

Cultivatin­g Justice is a local, youth-led organizati­on that identifies community needs, such as food security, land access, environmen­tal justice, and civic engagement, on behalf of those underrepre­sented in Connecticu­t’s farming community, according to its website.

The partnershi­p includes Chicks Ahoy Farm in

Bloomfield, which works to “create a space where Black and brown people living in Connecticu­t who are seeking a relationsh­ip with the environmen­t, renewable energy, animal husbandry, or other forms of farming can find the support and assistance they need to become farmers.”

Anything grown or cultivated will be offered to neighborho­od residents at no charge, Martinez told commission members.

She foresees allowing businesses owned by people of color to access the land. “This space would serve as an incubation space for them to try out some of their ideas, to practice growing food,” Martinez added.

The land would be exempt from taxes, and the lease has a renewal option for another five years.

Cultivatin­g Justice hosted a conference at Wesleyan University on Feb. 24 called “Growing Power 24.” Over 300 people attended the event, resident Krishna Winston said during the meeting’s public session.

She praised the organizati­on’s efforts in promoting farmers of color, social justice, producing food for the community, and involving high school students.

Winston hosted a session on composting with worms during the conference to the delight of children, she told commission­ers. “The spirit and level of expertise of the people who attended was truly impressive,” she said. “I felt as though the eagerness to expand knowledge of nature and become expert in various aspects of farming was really remarkable.”

In 2019, the North End Action Team proposed the project, which was approved but never implemente­d, EDC office Administra­tor Brian Gartner said at the meeting.

 ?? Cassandra Day/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Roosevelt Park on Miller Street in Middletown, an open field owned by the city, has been temporaril­y used for community gardening as part of a Cultivatin­g Justice project. The organizati­on is seeking a five-year lease to use the park for beekeeping and honey production, crop growing, poultry farming, arts and crafts and other purposes.
Cassandra Day/Hearst Connecticu­t Media Roosevelt Park on Miller Street in Middletown, an open field owned by the city, has been temporaril­y used for community gardening as part of a Cultivatin­g Justice project. The organizati­on is seeking a five-year lease to use the park for beekeeping and honey production, crop growing, poultry farming, arts and crafts and other purposes.
 ?? Photo courtesy Diana Martinez ?? Children and volunteers try their hand at beekeeping at the community garden at Roosevelt Park in Middletown last summer.
Photo courtesy Diana Martinez Children and volunteers try their hand at beekeeping at the community garden at Roosevelt Park in Middletown last summer.
 ?? Cassandra Day/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Diana Martinez, program manager for Cultivatin­g Justice and principal of Dee’s Crafty Bees, wants to rent Roosevelt Park for five years and use it for beekeeping and honey production, crop growing, poultry farming, arts and crafts and other purposes.
Cassandra Day/Hearst Connecticu­t Media Diana Martinez, program manager for Cultivatin­g Justice and principal of Dee’s Crafty Bees, wants to rent Roosevelt Park for five years and use it for beekeeping and honey production, crop growing, poultry farming, arts and crafts and other purposes.

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