Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Journal 13

Loretta Alexander
April 22, 2008
HUM 3500
Freeda Burnstad


Journal 13

How did the Earth Day event go for your organization? Actually, our organization won’t be able to participate due to time conflicts. It was sad that I could not meet my service learning partner at Earth Day. I was looking forward to seeing what his organization offered to the public.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Journal 12

Loretta Alexander
April 17, 2008
HUM 3500
Freeda Burnstad

Journal 12

What role do non-governmental organizations have in advocating for social and environmental justice? NGO’s have the ability to harness community energy, work outside of the strict confines of government bureaucracy, and the mandates of the profit sector. Therefore, they play a critical role in a democracy – in particular, their ability to address human and natural needs, justice, sustainability these are issues that profit motivation and bureaucratic intransigence often have a difficult time addressing in effective and responsive ways.

Journal 11

Loretta Alexander
April 17, 2008
HUM 3500
Freeda Burnstad


Journal 11


What is your organization history of activities? The Community Gardens Project is a new project of NCO that I initiated this past summer and officially got started on this past September. However, as a prelude to beginning, I went around to numerous community organizations, non-profits and did a community assessment on needs and desires. All meeting pointed to the local food, access, poverty issues. NCO offered to let me house the project as a program of theirs. The only caveat was that I had to find all of my own funding. So, since then, I have been working on developing different model gardens, finding sustainable funding, and program development, getting all the players, partners, to collaborate, guidelines, working relationships, liability. Finally, we are moving into implementation with the MCOE garden, Head Start Gardens, Talmage Garden, and by this fall, we should be moving forward on several garden implementations. Have they been effective in creating change? Again, this is a new project I just got it started last September. How can you continue to advocate for changes after this course is over with? I can advocate for more gardens in the community, by showing the sustainability of the gardens that are already in progress.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Journal 10

Loretta Alexander
March 31, 2008
HUM 3500
Freeda Burnstad

Journal 10

Yes, we are advocating for policy changes. One of the key issues to making access to healthy, nutritious local foods a sustainable endeavor, is to get local institutions to change their purchasing policies and demand more local fresh foods. However, as businesses and public institutions, they will not change unless there is significant demand for change. Even though there already exist a number of people clamoring for change, it will take much larger numbers of people to demanding the change. These larger numbers are not going to demand local, healthy produce unless they have direct experience growing and eating it, earning more money by producing their own food, and questioning why. Policy change is important, for me, the most important and effective agent of change comes from a ground swelling of demand from below.