skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

SCOTUS skeptical that state abortion bans conflict with federal health care law; Iowa advocates for immigrants push back on Texas-style deportation bill; new hearings, same arguments on both sides for ND pipeline project; clean-air activists to hold "die-in" Friday at LA City Hall.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

"Squad" member Summer Lee wins her primary with a pro-peace platform, Biden signs huge foreign aid bills including support for Ukraine and Israel, and the Arizona House repeals an abortion ban as California moves to welcome Arizona doctors.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

The urban-rural death divide is widening for working-age Americans, many home internet connections established for rural students during COVID have been broken, and a new federal rule aims to put the "public" back in public lands.

Kiddie Pool Gardening To Battle Hunger

play audio
Play

Tuesday, August 18, 2009   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - For generations, struggling families in Appalachia have supplemented their food budgets by growing their own veggies. Now a Lutheran social service ministry is reigniting some of that tradition - using kiddie pools for planting beds.

Dory Campbell, coordinator with the Evangelical Lutheran Coalition for Mission in Appalachia (ELCMA), says they are working through local partners like churches, food pantries and agricultural extension agents to target poor households with seniors or children. She says the gardens should be free for the families.

"We've begun to use wading pools that you can buy at the local hardware store. Drill some holes in the bottom for drainage, and they hold enough soil, they hold enough water; the ideal thing for our neighborhood."

Campbell says the church groups pay for setting up the gardens. After that they're designed to be used with no cost, thanks to composting and saving seeds.

"Composting is totally free. We made sure they had plants that would generate seeds that would produce plants the following year. They are totally independent the next year and it's still cost-free."

Campbell says they made a conscious decision to tie into the region's gardening traditions and to use the knowledge of things like home canning from women she calls the community matriarchs.

"We knew that gardening was something that was being lost from being handed down. We've got several sites where the grandmas are telling the grandchildren how it was in great-granny's garden."

The kiddie pool gardens are already going in a number of states and will be started statewide in West Virginia this fall.


get more stories like this via email

more stories
Rep. Crystal Quade, D-Springfield, the House Democratic floor leader, called Missouri politicians "extremist" on social media after they passed the most restrictive abortion ban in the country and defunded Planned Parenthood. (Fitz/Adobe Stock)

Health and Wellness

play sound

The Missouri Legislature has approved a law to stop its Medicaid program, known as MO HealthNet, from paying Planned Parenthood for medical services …


Environment

play sound

A round of public testimony wrapped up this week as part of renewed efforts by a company seeking permit approval in North Dakota for an underground pi…

Social Issues

play sound

Air travelers could face fewer obstacles in securing a refund if their flight is canceled or changed under new federal rules announced Wednesday…


The Iowa Movement for Migrant Justice calls Senate File 2340 a "ridiculous stunt," passed in an election year "to mobilize voters using fear and anti-immigrant sentiment." (Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

Advocates for immigrants are pushing back on a bill signed by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds in the last few days of the legislative session, modeled on a …

Environment

play sound

An environmental group is suing the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the Arkansas mudalia snail under the Endangered Species Act. In …

Currently, more than 2.7 million Californians live within 3,200 feet of an operational oil well. (MSPhotographic/Adobe Stock)

Environment

play sound

Leaders concerned about pollution and climate change are raising awareness about a ballot measure this fall on whether the state should mandate buffer…

play sound

A coalition of climate groups seeking cleaner air at the rail yards and ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will hold a "die-in" rally tomorrow at Los…

Health and Wellness

play sound

By Marianne Dhenin for Yes! Magazine.Broadcast version by Shanteya Hudson for Georgia News Connection reporting for the YES! Media/Public News …

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021