FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - JUNE 3, 2010
CONTACT Gordon Clark - 301-801-3406
gordon@montgomeryvictorygardens.org
COMMUNITY
GROUPS SEEK TO END BAN ON VEGETABLE GARDENS IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY SCHOOLS
POLICY
CONTRADICTIONS NOTED IN WAKE OF FIRST LADY'S VISIT
Silver Spring, MD - A growing collection of civic and community groups in
Montgomery County are joining together to request that the Montgomery County
Public Schools ban on vegetable gardens be revoked.
An open
letter requesting the change, written by Montgomery Victory Gardens and the
Montgomery County Master Gardener Association, was delivered today to MCPS
Superintendent Jerry D. Weast. While the
letter will remain open for additional group signatures, initial co-signers
include groups such as the West Montgomery County Citizens Association, the
Audubon Naturalist Society, the Takoma Park Silver Spring Co-Op, the Montgomery
Countryside Alliance, and the National Capital Area Garden Clubs.
"Vegetable
gardens bring a multitude of benefits to school students," noted Jon
Traunfeld of the University of Maryland Extension's "Grow It Eat It" campaign,
"from increased academic achievement and physical activity to greater
environmental understanding and stewardship.
Vegetable gardens also teach children healthier eating habits, and what
could be more important in the battle against childhood obesity than teaching
kids how to grow and eat fresh vegetables?"
The irony of
the vegetable garden ban is noteworthy in the wake of First Lady Michelle
Obama's recent visit to New Hampshire Estates Elementary School in Silver
Spring. "Superintendent Weast was
deservedly proud to highlight the school's achievement in the Healthier U.S.
Schools Challenge," observed Gordon Clark, Project Director of Montgomery
Victory Gardens, "but was Michelle Obama aware that the Superintendent has
banned school vegetable gardens, another one of her signature priorities?"
The ban on
vegetable gardens is not part of written school policy, but was announced by
Dr. Weast in a February 26 memo to the Board of Education. Other types of gardens, such as butterfly
gardens or "sensory" gardens, are allowed. Some Montgomery County schools have submitted
applications to build vegetable gardens, only to be refused by the MCPS
Department of Facilities Management. The
open letter responds to concerns raised in Dr. Weast's memo, while also
outlining the many benefits vegetable gardens would bring to our county's
school children.
The open
letter can be viewed at http://montgomeryvictorygardens.org/documents/htm/weast_ltr.htm
# # #
The public letter to Dr. Weast remains open for signature - please ask your community group to show their support for school vegetable gardens by signing on!
Current organizational co-signers, as of 6/2/10:
Audubon Naturalist Society
Cherrywood Garden Club (Olney)
Chesapeake Education, Arts and Research Society
East Silver Spring Community Association
GrowingSoul
Montgomery Countryside Alliance
National Capital Area Garden Clubs, District IV (Montgomery County)
Takoma Horticultural Club
Takoma Park Silver Spring Co-op
Through the Kitchen Door International, Inc.
Silver Spring Garden Club
Washington Gardener Magazine
West Montgomery County Citizens Association
Woodley Gardens Garden Club (Rockville)