(9/2019) In the
beginning there was a garden. No matter your
personal belief or your religion’s origin
story, it is fair to say that the start of
civilization and gardening go hand in hand.
When our gardens are successful, so are we.
Fast-forward to today and you will still find
gardens wherever people live. From vegetable
gardens and ornamental landscaping to
houseplants, we like to surround ourselves
with plants. In every place people live, you
will find plants. We even have a garden at our
local jail. Hopefully, soon that garden will
get a significant meaningful boost in Adams
County.
I’ve been working with
some local experts to create an Adams County
Jail Nursery. Our intention is not to just
have inmates tend a pretty garden. Our plan is
to create a multifaceted educational program,
wherein inmates are taught marketable
horticultural skills, learn basic gardening,
and work towards improving our local and
regional environment. Along the way I hope
inmates and our community learn that through
the act of gardening, life grows and improves.
It is a lesson still with us from the dawn of
civilization.
With the help of Penn
State Extension, the Conservation District,
the Adams County Adult Detention Center, local
horticultural and environmental groups, we are
developing an action plan and funding plan to
create four unique nursery programs, each with
its own benefit to the inmates and our
community.
Before I get too far
along, I want to make clear that all of these
projects are predicated on receiving funding.
We are currently in the planning phase and
have yet to sit down and research funding
opportunities. Once we have an approved plan,
then we will seek local, state, and federal
funds to get the project off the ground. We
still have a ways to go before asking the
prison board for approval. This article is
intended to give you a heads up on an idea
that may grow roots.
The first and most
basic nursery will be to improve the existing
jail vegetable garden. Anyone who gardens
knows that even an average vegetable garden
can produce a fair amount of food. A well-run
garden can be a cornucopia. With the
assistance of our local Penn State Extension
we will design a course on basic vegetable
gardening, the produce from which will be used
in the prison. If this project is successful,
it may also help to reduce the cost of food in
the prison, as well as improve the quality and
nutritional content of the meals.
The second nursery
will house flowers for pollinator and rain
gardens. Three-fourths of the world’s
flowering plants and about 35 percent of the
world’s food crops depend on animal
pollinators to reproduce. Based upon the 2016
Adams County Fruitbelt Economic Impact
Analysis our fruit industry represents
$580,000,000 in annual impact to Adams County.
Our fruit industry no longer relies solely on
native pollinators, instead orchard owners
must import honey bees to make sure fruit
trees are pollinated. There are even state and
federally funded programs to create pollinator
habitat and plant native flowers to attract
pollinators. Hopefully, we can tap into some
of those funds for this project.
Growing plants for
rain gardens will also have practical local
effects on our community. Many of you have
heard about efforts to clean up the Chesapeake
Bay. Since we are within the Chesapeake Bay
watershed, we have a part to play in these
efforts. While it seems a small thing, making
sure our rainwater has adequate time to absorb
into the soil is critical to keeping the bay
clean. This is why we have retention ponds at
all newer housing developments and beside
large parking lots. Growing the right plants
within these areas and along our waterways can
further enhance our efforts to keep
phosphorus, nitrogen, and sediments from
reaching the bay. In working with the Adams
County Conservation District and local garden
clubs, we will create a curriculum that both
educates inmates on the environmental efforts
of storm water and nutrient run-off and
teaches inmates the skills necessary to
design, grow, and plant rain gardens.
Just as rain gardens
help protect the bay, so too does the fourth
nursery program, Riparian Buffer plants. This
nursery will focus on the growth of trees and
shrubs intended to improve riparian buffers
along Adams County creeks and waterways. A
riparian buffer (or stream buffer) is a
vegetated area near a stream, which helps
shade and partially protect the stream from
the impact of adjacent land uses, such as
homes and farms. Riparian buffers play a key
role in improving water quality. For the past
few years Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia,
West Virginia, New York, and Washington DC
have been engaged in efforts to improve the
Chesapeake Bay. Engaged may be a bit of a
watered down expression, the Environmental
Protection Agency has ordered these states to
create plans to improve the water quality of
the bay. In fact if we don’t clean up our act
by 2025, we can expect some hefty fines from
the federal government.
Each state is creating
a plan to address their effects on bay water
quality. In Pennsylvania and Adams County our
efforts are focused on created wooded riparian
buffers. These have proven to be the most cost
effective way to improve water quality. This
aspect of the jail nursery project is perhaps
the most exciting and impactful. We will work
with the PA Department of Conservation and
Natural Resources and the Conservation
District to create an educational plan that
includes learning about watersheds, land use
practices, water quality, and a practical
component of learning to grow, design, plant,
and maintain riparian buffers.
A program that helps
inmates and our local environment is a win-win
for all of us. Over the coming months I will
continue to meet with state and local
stakeholders to create a program for full
review by the Adams County Prison Board. For
now I am just planted the seed.
If you have any
questions about this project or any other
county business, do not hesitate to contact me
at mqually@adamscounty.us or give me a call at
717-339-6514.
Read other articles from Adams County Commissioners