Showing posts with label Fort Lauderdale community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Lauderdale community. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Community garden grows tomorrows for a Fort Lauderdale neighborhood


Kantner and Smith
Community Garden at
Church of the Intercession
501 NW 17th Street
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311

By Jane Feehan

A community garden grows in Fort Lauderdale, transforming what was once an eyesore of abandoned cars and dumped garbage into a green area of repose and productivity. Located on land owned by the Church of the Intercession, the garden is carefully tended by church-appointed co-gardeners Steve Kantner and JoAnn Smith.

Built in the 1950s, the church was once the center of a thriving mixed-race community. It was first in the Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida to be integrated. Over the years, the neighborhood entered into decline, with rival gangs and drugs dominating daily life. People moved away. Church membership dropped. Few cared about garbage accumulating in the vacant church-owned lot.

One civic group decided to do something.

 “The South Middle River Civic Association (SMRCA), under the aegis of Donna Collins, was the prime mover,” said Kantner, better known for his fishing exploits in South Florida and beyond. “They approached the church and offered volunteers to clear the site. The offer was gladly accepted.”

Garden of Mark Adler & Mason Wagner

The cleanup occurred more than 12 years ago.

Today, former SMRCA board member Kantner is a church member. He spends between 20 and 30 hours a week on the lot-turned-garden cultivating ornamentals - of interest to his wife,Vicki - and an array of vegetables they donate or bring home to cook.
“It’s taken that long to develop this soil into a viable environment for cultivating vegetables and fruits,” Kantner said as he showed off cucumbers, onions, carrots, collard greens, eggplants and melons.  “Some might call me an organic grower because I don’t use commercial  products; I have a source for horse manure to use as fertilizer.”

Smith also has a green thumb. Currently president of the Fort Lauderdale Woman’s Club, Inc., she brings her expertise as Master Gardener to this peaceful neighborhood plot. “I grow herbs, flowers, and heirloom tomatoes,” said Smith. “I also use what I grow to make floral arrangements for the Woman’s Club.”

Others participate in the acre-and-a-half-community garden; church affiliation is not required, Kantner emphasizes.  Neighborhood residents and partners Mark Adler and Mason Wagner cleared out a space in the undergrowth and put up a fence. They planted tomatoes, broccoli, sweet potatoes and other vegetables in and around a picturesque raised garden.

Adler serves as executive director of Meals on Wheels Broward. He appreciates the benefits of fresh produce. “We [Meals on Wheels] plan to include locally-grown food on particular days of meal deliveries.”

He also understands the problems neighborhood gardens confront. “It’s difficult to sustain a community garden unless a paid person is assigned to the project.”

That of course, requires money and this community garden gets very little of that kind of support. A recent – and to date the only – contribution of $3,000 paid for fertilizer, tools, mulch, fencing and a well pump. A well sits on church property but gardeners need two pumps to deliver water to the garden. Other than an additional pump, they need a soil tiller, fertilizer and fencing.

The gardeners have dug deep into their own pockets to keep the community garden going. Additionally, the Kantners paid for the neutering of eight cats living there. Vicki Kantner stops by twice a day – on the way to and from her job as case manager for a Broward judge and two magistrates – to feed them.

There are more creatures … Smith feeds Guinea fowl that live harmoniously with the well-fed cats. Adler and Wagner oversee a friendly peacock. Steve Kantner hopes the controlled population of animal residents will add to the nature-focused mission of the community garden. It underscores good stewardship.

Vicki Kantner tames feral cat with love
Other than money shortages, gardeners are facing a chance the church property could be sold. On the bright side, an ordinance was passed to zone the four-and-a-half-acre church property for farming. According to Kantner, negotiations with a developer to establish a farm to grow restaurant produce with proceeds going to the church stalled months ago.

Currently 10 gardeners till the soil. “More diggers – preferably those who are solidly committed to seeing this
work – are welcome,” Kantner said.  “It’s not only a commitment to gardening that’s important. This garden is about revitalizing, strengthening the community. Neighborhood students and at-risk teens learn about gardening from us. People can grow food. Since we’ve been here, things have improved, the neighborhood is coming back. People are proud to live here.”


A sign at the restored lot greets visitors with this: To grow a garden is to believe in tomorrow. Residents now know there will be many more tomorrows for this once-neglected community.
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Contact Steve Kantner or JoAnn Smith about plots and donations, which are tax deductable, to sustain this community garden. Email Steve Kantner: Steve@landcaptain.com or JoAnn Smith at club10@aol.com.


Tags: neighborhood green initiatives, community gardens, Fort Lauderdale community gardens, farm to table produce, sustainable planting, neighborhood stewardship, Fort Lauderdale inner city farms

Monday, July 9, 2012

Feeding Fort Lauderdale's homeless - where a meal could be a new start

Update: Arnold Abbott died today, Feb. 22, 2019 at 94. A crusader for the homeless, he brought unwanted, international attention to his feeding of the down and out on Fort Lauderdale Beach. He did more than feed them; he trained many for jobs in the restaurant industry. Some may recall five years ago when he was arrested and released. The city released him after all the cameras were on Fort Lauderdale.


By Jane Feehan

While crowds headed to the beach last Wednesday for Fourth of July festivities, Arnold Abbott and his volunteers were stopped after they unloaded their vehicle at Fort Lauderdale’s South Beach, across from Bahia Mar Marina.  They were there, as they have been so many Wednesdays before, to feed about 200 of the city’s homeless. It was a tense 45 minute showdown until a sympathetic cop familiar with Love Thy Neighbor (www.lovethyneighbor.org ) and their mission let them set up and dish out meals.

Abbott, founder of the organization, has had these confrontations before but it doesn’t deter him from feeding the homeless. Love Thy Neighbor also provides more than 200 people with meals at Stranahan Park and All Saints Catholic Mission on Sundays. What many might not know as they see people gathered for food is that much of it is prepared by homeless volunteers. In an attempt to acquire skills, find a job and get off the streets, they take a nine-week culinary class provided by Abbott at the Homeless Assistance Center of Fort Lauderdale. If they succeed in this first step, they can attend McFatter Technical Center in Broward County at no charge to learn more about their new trade.

“About 40 percent of LTN students move forward to McFatter ,” Abbott said. “Some graduate from there to attend Fort Lauderdale Art Institute's culinary program; we consider it graduate school.”  Abbott, who founded LTN in 1991 at the behest of his dying wife, Maureen, says 350 students have graduated from his culinary skills program. It’s not easy keeping track of them as they move on, laments their teacher. Some go back to the streets to resume old drug and alcohol habits. Many have mental problems.  Others find jobs they were trained for. According to LTN, about 45,000 people work in the restaurant business in Broward County.


Arnold Abbott (from LTN site)
Both the feeding program and the culinary program are funded through donations.  Abbott, who works a full schedule of daily activities, including fundraising, does not get paid for his efforts. Only one staff member is salaried. Love Thy Neighbor attempts to fill a large social resources gap in the tourist-based economy of South Florida. 

LTN founder and students delivered meals recently to homeless families temporarily housed through Hope South Florida and Faith in Action at Saint Anthony Catholic Church. The food - meatloaf, pasta and chicken, curried potatoes, cole slaw, fruit salad - was prepared and dished out by Abbott’s students and other volunteers.

Some say a society can be judged by how it treats its elderly, women and children. If that is true, a community might also be judged by how it treats its homeless. A locally-based organization serving a local population in need, Love Thy Neighbor attempts to pull people up through caring and training. They do much; they need much.   I’ll  post more about Arnold Abbott, a University of Pennsylvania graduate, published writer, former jeweler, and man with an endless mission.

Visit www.lovethyneighbor.org for more information. 
For more on St. Anthony Catholic Church: www.saintanthonyfl.org
For more on Hope South Florida: www.hopesouthflorida.org



Tags: Arnold P. Abbott, Arnold Abbott, Love Thy Neighbor culinary program, homeless in Fort Lauderdale, feeding the homeless in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Lauderdale charities