Webutuck digs community garden idea

WEBUTUCK — The Board of Education has approved the creation of a community garden on the Eugene Brooks Intermediate School/Webutuck High School campus, which has become a school-led project.

Rebecca Cossa from the North East Community Center gave an informal presentation at a board meeting earlier this year about creating a community garden that would be to the district’s benefit but ultimately maintained by the North East Community Center (NECC). NECC, which is located in Millerton, would also have cared for the garden during the summer under this arrangement.

Not much has changed from that proposal except that the garden will officially be under the school district’s auspices. The goal is that eventually the school’s agriculture program, which was given a reboot this year and is still too much in its infancy to handle such a large endeavor, according to the school board, will some day take over the reins.

For now, middle school technology teacher John Roccanova has been assigned as the school’s representative for the garden. At the Feb. 8 Board of Education (BOE) meeting, he was also officially approved as a mentor for Anna Duffy, who is in her first year running the ag program. Roccanova  is also heavily involved with NECC’s after-school program, having been presented with 2009’s Citizen of the Year award by the community center at an event last summer. (During his acceptance speech, Roccanova took the opportunity to talk about the possibility of a community garden project he was working on.)

There have been community gardens at the school before, Roccanova said last week, as recently as two years ago, so the idea is to make this garden a deep-rooted one.

“With so much talk about sustainability and nutrition,� he said, “the hope is that some of the produce could be used in the cafeteria. In the past we’ve had some very nice salads.�

Roccanova and Cossa are currently working on a questionnaire about the possible location for the garden, and are open to suggestions. They plan to present a more complete picture of what the Webutuck garden will look like at the March 8 BOE meeting.

Students in NECC’s after-school program have already been hard at work thinking about the possibilities of their new garden, talking about what can be planted, whether or not it will be organic and discussing basic garden philosophy. Roccanova added that McEnroe’s Organic Farm has already offered to provide compost soil to get the garden started.

“It’s nice to see the cooperation between the school district and the community center,� Roccanova added. “A lot of the same kids are involved.�

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