Tuesday, September 30, 2008

September Outreach Weekend

Over 100 volunteers helped kick off another great school year for ESLARP in East St. Louis. Classes in Library Information Sciences, Recreation Sport and Tourism, Landscape Architecture, and Fine and Applied Arts worked in several different neighborhoods September 26-27. The weather was on our side and helped make sure volunteers completed their goals for the weekend. See the following posts to read more about specific projects worked on by students, faculty, and community members.



Students were welcomed to East St. Louis by some of ESLARP's Community Partners


Christina Fisher of Village Theatre and Community Concepts



Rev. Bradley Watkins of Lessie Bates Davis Neighborhood House



Martha Watts of Eagle's Nest

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Ramping it up

This weekend, a small group of volunteers constructed a ramp for an ice cream and coffee shop by the Village Theater. This shop will operate as a source of funding for the theater's youth programs. ESLARP was able to obtain donations from three central Illinois Home Depot stores, with the bulk of the donations coming from the Collinsville Home Depot, whose store manager was very excited to be able to contribute to a local project! The weekend ran smoothly despite the 95 degree weather, and we were able to complete the ramp by Sunday afternoon. Thanks to the volunteers who made it happen--Mike Andrejasich, Paul Herring, Noah Lenstra, Andy Harmon and Abby Harmon.




Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Flat, not boring

Winnipeg definitely proved to be not boring. Elizabeth Andrejasich, Abby Harmon, and I, along with a fellow UIUC graduate student, Chuck Allen, made the 15 hour drive up north to the midwest of Canada to attend the annual Planners Network Conference July 18-20. We met up with ESLARP community liaison, Billie Turner, and ESLARP community partner, Martha Watts of Eagle's Nest, early Friday morning just in time for walking tours of Winnipeg focused around issues like homelessness, gentrification, arts, and sprawl. It was clear that Winnipegians were not afraid to address these challenging issues in their communities as the tours were led by many local activists organizing around these issues.


The entrance of Art City, a local community art center for kids and adults
that was on both the gentrification and arts tour.




Saturday morning Elizabeth, Abby, Billie, Martha, and I conducted a workshop on the use of storytelling within planning. Billie and Martha shared stories about East St. Louis and Eagle's Nest, and through video-taped interviews we were also able to share stories of other community partners from East St. Louis. See our workshop agenda and resources list here. Attendees shared their own stories and the ways in which some of them have been able to incorporate storytelling into their research or organizations. The conference ended with a big bash at a local community center, with locally produced food (delicious tacos with fresh produce!) and musicians. Although it was an action packed two days, we met some amazing educators, practitioners, and activists trying to address social justice issues in their own communities. Who knows, maybe we'll see a Planners Network Conference in Champaign or East St. Louis in a few years...


The poster for the big bash Saturday night.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Winnipeg, here we come!

This July, three ESLARP graduate students, one community laison, and one community partner will be attending the Planners Network Conference in Winnipeg, Manitoba. This conference is a gathering of planning practitioners, community organizers, activists, students, and faculty to discuss strategies that address social and enviornmental justice.

The ESLARP students and community members will be conducting a workshop titled:
"Storytelling: Critical Reflection and Creative Performance". We will also be bringing other longtime community partners and their stories with us to Winnipeg via video-taped interviews.