Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Community Gaming Grants Support Environmental Youth Programs

Darpan News Desk, 19 Dec, 2019 09:42 PM

    In a small plant nursery tucked away in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, Marika Van Reeuwyk assists a dozen youth with planting the last of their big leaf lupine and springbank clover.


    The seeds, which are native plants, are carefully placed into tiny pots where they’ll spend the winter growing in a greenhouse at Strathcona Community Gardens. Come spring, the youth will distribute at least 1,700 of the plants to local schools, community organizations and families to support urban wildlife habitat.


    The work is all part of the Environmental Youth Alliance’s (EYA) Community Nursery Program, which began in 2004 and provides youth facing barriers with opportunities to become environmental stewards. Some of the youth have mental-health challenges, while others have recently arrived in Canada to become citizens. Van Reeuwyk’s heart warms when she sees the impact the program has on youth.


    “We see a big shift in their confidence and social skills. A lot of the youth leave the program with more social connections and friends, and they are empowered with this new knowledge about native plants,” Van Reeuwyk, an EYA facilitator, said. “It really deepens their connection with nature and builds their awareness of what they see around them. There’s a deeper strength and gift in seeing a plant and knowing that it has an ability to heal people or is something you can eat.”


    The Community Nursery Program is one way the EYA has been providing transformative nature experiences for youth during the last 30 years. Through a variety of hands-on programs, the youth gain skills in native plant horticulture, habitat restoration and citizen science. More habitats are also created for wildlife, such as birds and pollinators, in downtown Vancouver.


    According to Van Reeuwyk, many of the youth involved in EYA programs now walk down the street with their friends, pointing out a garden they helped plant or certain plants that can be used to heal wounds. Because of the program, 16-year-old Sarah is now aware of the impact plants have on ecosystems and animals.


    “I had never really thought about the native plants that I see every day. I’ve had the chance to spend more time outside learning new skills and information I’ve never thought about before,” Sarah said. “I didn’t know how to plant seeds, transfer a plant, make soil, know what birds are native to my community, and I didn’t understand the impacts of humans on nature before I came to this program.”


    The EYA recently received $60,000 in community gaming grants from the Province to support four programs, including the Community Nursery Program.


    Every year, commercial gambling generates revenue that the B.C. government invests in key services. A portion of the revenue is allocated via the $140-million Community Gaming Grants program, which helps fund over 5,000 not-for-profit organizations throughout the province.


    For 2019-20, approximately $4.6 million from the program was allotted to 135 organizations in the environment sector. Environmental programming gives British Columbians the opportunity to learn about and connect with nature. The grants also support wildlife rehabilitation programs and shelters for animals.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nothing 'Sinister' About Airport Questioning Of Huawei Exec Meng Wanzhou: Crown

    VANCOUVER - The actions of Canadian officials during the arrest of Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou at Vancouver's airport were "not at all sinister" and followed their legal obligations, a Crown prosecutor says.    

    Nothing 'Sinister' About Airport Questioning Of Huawei Exec Meng Wanzhou: Crown

    Fish Farm Deaths, Escapes Raise Concerns About Atlantic Aquaculture Industry

    Northern Harvest Sea Farms, owned by the Norwegian company Mowi, attributed the deaths to an extended period of high water temperatures, between 17 and 21 degrees Celsius.    

    Fish Farm Deaths, Escapes Raise Concerns About Atlantic Aquaculture Industry

    Winnipeg Man Suffers Bites During Multiple Attacks By Bear In Ontario Woods

    Winnipeg Man Suffers Bites During Multiple Attacks By Bear In Ontario Woods
    Dave Schwab, who is 69, says he was finishing his walk near Kenora last Thursday when he spotted a black bear about 100 metres ahead of him in some bushes.

    Winnipeg Man Suffers Bites During Multiple Attacks By Bear In Ontario Woods

    Brampton Children Aatish Kapoor (10), Jasleen Cruz (8) in Parental Abduction Have Been Found

    Investigators from the 22 Division Criminal Investigation Bureau have located the mother and the children from a parental abduction investigation.

    Brampton Children Aatish Kapoor (10), Jasleen Cruz (8) in Parental Abduction Have Been Found

    Police Investigating Fatal Daylight Shooting In Surrey’s Clayton Heights, Release Video Footage Of Suspect

    At approximately 6:00 pm on September 28, 2019, Surrey RCMP responded after receiving multiple 911 calls reporting a shooting in the 18600-block of Fraser Highway.

    Police Investigating Fatal Daylight Shooting In Surrey’s Clayton Heights, Release Video Footage Of Suspect

    2 Overnight Shootings In Vancouver Both Targeted But Unrelated, VPD Seeks Witnesses

    2 Overnight Shootings In Vancouver Both Targeted But Unrelated, VPD Seeks Witnesses
    The first shooting occurred around midnight near Kingsway and Gladstone Street, when a 44-year-old man from Vancouver was shot multiple times outside a restaurant.

    2 Overnight Shootings In Vancouver Both Targeted But Unrelated, VPD Seeks Witnesses