Green Agenda for Jackson Heights, a project led by Friends of Travers Park and Queens Community House with support from the Pratt Center for Community Development, will be convening Jackson Heights residents to assess proposals for making Jackson Heights a sustainable neighborhood, generated through workshops held this winter with hundreds of community residents. Participants at the March 20 town hall meeting will review ideas for expanding open space, reducing waste, and many other steps toward environmental and economic sustainability, and emerge from the session with a consensus agenda of priority actions to promote a greener Jackson Heights.
Event Details
Saturday, March 20, 2010 - 10:45am to 1:00pm
Renaissance Charter School, 35-59 81st Street, Jackson Heights, Queens
On Saturday, May 22, the Pratt Center, Queens Community House and Friends of Travers Park released the Green Agenda for Jackson Heights, the product of a five-month, community-wide visioning process for a sustainable future in one of New York City's most diverse neighborhoods.
More than 400 community members contributed to multilingual grassroots planning sessions, which were held by volunteers in living rooms, schools, houses of worship, community centers, and senior centers. Participants identified priority areas for greening Jackson Heights, including expanding open space, reducing waste, and many other steps toward environmental and economic sustainability. Residents proposed strategies that built upon existing strengths while addressing neighborhood concerns. The final document includes goals as well as recommendations thatcan be implemented legislatively, by community-based organizations, and by individuals.
The Green Agenda for Jackson Heights is a collaboration between Queens Community House, Friends of Travers Park and the Pratt Center for Community Development, bringing together residents of Jackson Heights to plan an environmental blueprint for the neighborhood.
Jackson Heights is already a "green" community in that most people in this neighborhood take public transportation, live in compact spaces, shop locally and live frugally. But Jackson Heights also faces a distinct set of environmental challenges. The City Council district that includes Jackson Heights has just 1 acre of park space for every thousand children. Traffic to and from nearby LaGuardia airport pollutes the air and clogs the streets. And Jackson Heights has a larger share of tenants living in severely overcrowded housing than any other neighborhood in New York City.
Air quality, traffic, open space and housing conditions are among the issues participants grappled with in through a process that engaged hundreds of neighborhood residents and is designed to ultimately influence city spending, services and priorities. It was the first community-wide conversation on ’greening’ Jackson Heights. In the process, residents identified seven priority topic areas. In a series of visioning sessions that began in the fall of 2009, more than 400 residents assessed the state of the neighborhood environment and identifed opportunities to improve it. At these workshops, participants did group exercises to reckon with specific sites, needs and challenges in the neighborhood and come up with concrete responses. Participants in these vision sessions identified priority areas for greening Jackson Heights, including expanding open space, reducing waste, and many other steps toward environmental and economic sustainability.
Building Hopeis a one-hour documentary chronicling the history and accomplishments of community development corporations across the nation, based on oral histories conducted with founders, leaders and supporters of 19 influential CDCs. Produced by the Pratt Center and Vanguard Films, Building Hope aired on PBS in 1994. See it here.