“The Reimagining Farm to School NYC initiative is very important because it provides a critical opportunity for students to learn directly about agriculture education, where their food is grown, and that food is growing right here in New York City,” said Mayor’s Office of Urban Agriculture Executive Director Qiana Mickie. “It also allows community gardeners to share their knowledge and informs residents that we have active green space that all New Yorkers can and should have access to, while also supporting small farm businesses from community gardeners in our community.”
“Our city has historically been cut off from its food sources, and nutrition more an abstract idea than immediate skill for our city’s youth. No more,” said Deputy Mayor for Operations Jeff Roth. “By putting their hands in the dirt, seeing how a radish grows differently than lettuce, learning to care for what they consume, city kids will be better prepared to live healthy, mindful, active lives. Thank you to the Urban Agriculture team for another great year.”
“As we prepare the next generation of New Yorkers to lead their communities, the Reimagining Farm to School NYC program helps our students learn about urban farming and gardening as they engage with our local farms and green spaces,” said Public Schools Chancellor Melissa Aviles-Ramos. “I am grateful to our city, federal, and external partners who make this program possible.”
“From neighborhood gardens to rooftop farming, urban agriculture is an essential piece of New York’s diverse agricultural landscape,” said State Agriculture Commissioner Richard A. Ball. “New York’s Farm–to-School Program incorporates fresh, locally grown foods into school menus while increasing students’ understanding of where – and who – their meals come from. I’ve been fortunate to see firsthand just how meaningful this programming is to these students. I’m grateful to our partners at the Mayor’s Office of Urban Agriculture for all the great work they do in connecting the dots and supporting the community growing organizations that fill an essential gap in our supply chain, and congratulate them on another successful year of this innovative program.”
The schools in the second cohort of Reimagining Farm to School NYC were P.S. 199X The Shakespeare School in the Bronx, Eagle Academy for Young Men II و P.S. 67 Charles A. Dorsey School, both in Brooklyn, Eagle Academy for Young Men of Harlem in Manhattan, P.S. 147 The Ronald McNair School in Queens, and P.S. 59 The Harbor View School و P.S. 721R The Richard H. Hungerford School, both on Staten Island.
Students, parents, and teachers from these schools visited Green Valley Community Farm in Brooklyn, New Roots Community Farm in the Bronx and Queens, Hill Street Community Garden on Staten Island, and Gracie Mansion. As part of the program, P.S. 59 The Harbor View School also got a refurbishment of their existing school garden with technical assistance provided by project partner GrowNYC, an agriculture-based nonprofit.