
 
        
         
		After a dispute over the future of Meg’s Garden, located on the DeWitt  
 Clinton Campus, the city Department of Education is now stating that the  
 community garden is here to stay.  Photo Robbie Sequeira 
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER,BTR SEPT. 24-30, 2021 41 
 BY ROBBIE SEQUEIRA 
 Meg’s Garden, which  
 adorns the West Mosholu  
 Parkway South and Goulden  
 Avenue side of the DeWitt  
 Clinton  High  School  in  the  
 Norwood section of the Bronx,  
 is here to stay, according to  
 the city Department of Education. 
 “Meg’s  Garden  space  will  
 remain on-site and will not be  
 removed,” reads the DOE’s letter. 
 Since 2016, the garden had  
 been overseen by the James  
 Baldwin Outdoor Learning  
 Center on a pro-bono basis but  
 was facing eviction after the  
 Clinton Campus Committee  
 chose not to renew the center’s  
 permit to utilize the garden on  
 school grounds. 
 Earlier this year, the committee  
 — which is headed by  
 the  administrators  of  the  De- 
 Witt Clinton Campus’ four  
 schools: DeWitt Clinton High  
 School, PS X721 Stephen Mc- 
 Sweeney, Bronx Collaborative  
 High  School  and  World  
 View High School — called for  
 the removal of all mentions  
 or  associations  with  the  De- 
 Witt Clinton campus from the  
 JBOLC website and all published  
 material, and the removal  
 of the campus address  
 from the JBOLC website as  
 the  “location”  of  the  JBOLC  
 Farmer’s Market, which the  
 organization operates in close  
 proximity to the school, by  
 May 12. 
 But pushback from environmentalists, 
  local growers  
 and elected offi cials like Democrat  
 City Councilman Eric  
 Dinowitz, of the Bronx’s 11th  
 District, put pressure on the  
 DOE to intervene on the dispute  
 and uncertainty of the  
 garden’s future. 
 “After months of advocacy,  
 the DOE recognized how essential  
 this space has been and  
 will be for the community and  
 our children,” said Dinowitz  
 in a released statement. “All  
 the  meetings  that  took  place  
 over  the past months allowed  
 the students and community  
 to speak out about their  
 needs, and defend something  
 that has been so impactful to  
 their  lives,  particularly  during  
 these past 18 months.” 
 With the garden’s status no  
 longer in question, the next  
 steps include a change in the  
 garden’s  management,  as  the  
 DOE announced that a new  
 committee — a DeWitt Clinton  
 Campus  Garden  Leadership  
 Committee — will be formed  
 and tasked with the future operations  
 of the space. 
 The committee will include  
 members from the JBOLC,  
 a yet-to-be-named Community  
 Based Organization,  and  
 members of the Clinton Campus  
 Community. 
 The committee will meet  
 at the beginning of the school  
 year and will provide an open  
 platform for their members to  
 discuss the future of the space. 
 The DOE had alleged that  
 JBOLC failed to maintain the  
 garden, ignored directives  
 to  cease  operations,  referred  
 to  the  school’s  property  as  a  
 “community garden,” and  
 changed the landscaping of  
 the campus grounds without  
 approval. 
 Additionally, the popular  
 local farmer’s market will  
 also continue to be held in the  
 area, as Dinowitz was able to  
 secure a permit for JBOLC  
 to  continue  community  programming  
 at their Saturday  
 farmers market. 
 DeWitt  Clinton  sustainability  
 coordinator  Raymond  
 Paultinus  thanked  Dinowitz  
 for his advocacy and looked  
 forward to the next chapter of  
 Meg’s Garden, which is dedicated  
 to  longtime  community  
 activist Megan Charlop who  
 tragically lost her life in a bicycle  
 accident in 2010. 
 “We  want  to  thank  Council  
 Member Eric Dinowitz who  
 worked  hard  on  behalf  of  the  
 students and the community,”  
 Paultinus said. With his support, 
  we now have a voice …  
 which will direct all future decisions  
 regarding the garden  
 spaces.” 
 Meg’s Garden is here  
 to stay, DOE says 
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