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GARDENS

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Despite the fact that households including an adult with a disability report food-insecurity rates as high as 33.9 % in 2023, disabled individuals are rarely included in community gardening or urban agriculture, most notably due to accessibility assumptions and barriers. 

 

This exclusion means Disabled people are significantly more

likely to be disconnected from food-growing practices and participation in interdependent community-based self-reliance. 

 

Community food cultivation deepens social connections and

lessens isolation, something Disabled people experience at higher rates. Additionally, there are numerous studies that substantiate the significant boosts in mental health, mood, and quality of life that gardening provides. 

Within our immediate geography, we work alongside other organizations in green spaces that have been activated for food justice to increase the accessibility for and engagement from our Disabled neighbors.We currently run a small garden outside of Part & Parcel for this effort, and also support the Langley Garden in Lyon Park.

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1901 Chapel Hill. Durham, NC 27707                                             ___        t.land@candornc.org
CANDOR operates on the traditional, ancestral lands of the Eno, Occaneechi, Tuscarora, Shakori, Sissipahaw, and Saponi Peoples.  We pay respect to their elders, both past and present, who have been stewards of this land for generations. We engage in our work here with humility and reverence for the original peoples of this land and hold awareness of the legacy of violence, displacement, forced migration, and settlement. 
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