30 
 COURIER LIFE, MARCH 25-31, 2022 
 BY MIKAELA WEGNER 
 Robert Jeffery, better  
 known as Planter Rob, has  
 his own unique way of advocating  
 for affordable  
 housing — and it involves  
 house plants. 
 Late last month, Planter  
 Rob partnered with house  
 plant delivery site The Sill  
 to donate almost 200 house  
 plants to Edwin’s Place residents  
 in Brownsville, and to  
 host a plant-care workshop  
 and Q&A at the complex,  
 which consists of 126 apartments  
 for homeless and lowincome  
 individuals, veterans, 
  and families, according  
 to  homeless  outreach  organization  
 Breaking Ground. 
 The flora aficionado  
 originally intended to use  
 his plant workshops as a  
 platform to foster important  
 conversation about  
 racism and social justice,  
 but  is  now  looking to  use  
 them to help foster affordable  
 housing opportunities  
 across the five boroughs. 
 “I realized a lot of people  
 in our community, a lot of  
 plant enthusiasts, tend to  
 shy away from having those  
 tough conversations about  
 racism, and I wanted to  
 make those conversations  
 less taboo for us,” Planter  
 Rob  told  Brooklyn  Paper.  
 “But I realized that I could  
 be doing more with that  
 and  …  doing  something  
 that was tangible, like actually  
 bringing  people  indoors  
 as well as plants.” 
 A graduate of Western  
 Michigan University,  
 Planter Rob said he was always  
 “the plant guy,” gifting  
 greenery to friends and  
 roommates. But after graduation, 
  Planter Rob had the  
 choose between living with  
 his parents in Alabama, or  
 “couch surfing” until he  
 could “get on his feet.” He  
 chose the latter. 
 Now 34, Planter Rob  
 is living in New York, engaged, 
  and a dad to 80  
 house plants. Wanting to  
 “advocate for others” in situations  
 he experienced, he  
 set up a way to give back. 
 Through Planter Rob’s  
 “Welcome-Home Plants”  
 program, people can  
 choose to gift a houseplant  
 — and access to one of his  
 workshops — to a permanent  
 resident  associated  
 with Breaking Ground,  
 with the ultimate goal of  
 helping people establish  
 homes where they might  
 not feel that they have one.  
 Beyond that, he hopes his  
 workshops will inspire  
 others to advocate for better  
 housing opportunities  
 across the Big Apple. 
 Planter Rob remembers  
 how buying a plant for his  
 first home made him feel  
 “empowered,” and “as if  
 things were going to get  
 better.” He also said having  
 something to nurture  
 acted as a type of personal  
 therapy. Beyond personal  
 growth, Planter Rob said  
 having house plants introduced  
 him into an “amazing  
 community” of fellow plant  
 lovers, something he wants  
 to give back to those experiencing  
 homelessness. 
 At Edwin’s Place in  
 February, Planter Rob observed  
 firsthand the connection  
 house plants could  
 make. 
 “It was amazing how  
 many residents would come  
 up to me and just want to  
 show me their plant,” he  
 said, noting that, in the  
 past, gardening has primarily  
 been an “exclusive  
 club.” Most people “don’t  
 have the income to spend  
 on something that might  
 die within a week,” he said. 
 “I want house plants to  
 be more accessible to people  
 Planter Robb at his February plant workshop at Edwin’s Place in  
 Brownsville. Photo by Breaking Ground 
 that look like me, people  
 that look like my mother,  
 that look like my sister, my  
 brothers,” he said. 
 A long-term goal of  
 Planter Rob’s is to have politicians  
 look to his “plant  
 followers” to sign petitions  
 and change policies. He  
 said this would show he  
 has created “a community  
 of plant lovers that are actually  
 advocating for affordable  
 housing.” 
 But between advocating  
 for social change and  
 teaching planting basics,  
 Planter Rob said attitude  
 is key. “I always want to be  
 taking up space in a joyous  
 way because we don’t see  
 enough of that,” he said. 
 One man’s mission to combat the  
 housing crisis — with house plants 
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