Soil Generation

A Black & Brown-led coalition of growers

Soil Generation (formerly known as Healthy Foods Green Spaces) is a Black & Brown-led coalition of gardeners, farmers, individuals, and community-based organizations working to ensure people of color regain community control of land and food, to secure access to the resources necessary to determine how the land is used, address community health concerns, grow food and improve the environment. Soil Generation reaches these goals through relationship building, honoring culture, community education, organizing, activism and advocacy: a People’s Agroecology.

Learn more about Soil Generation’s current work and how you can get involved on their website. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram for the latest updates.

Soil Generation’s work is guided by four pillars:

  • Shared Black and Brown Leadership
  • Racial and Economic Justice
  • Anti-capitalism
  • Agroecology

The coalition works together towards a vision of

  • Community Self-Determination. We believe communities know what is best for their neighborhoods and should lead efforts to envision and plan for their land and their food system.
  • Community Self-Representation. We believe decisions about policy, land use and resources should be informed by those most affected.
  • Supportive Policies. We believe policies should encourage community-driven green space and food systems, including community gardens and farms. To this end, we advocate for an equitable, accountable and transparent process for accessing, preserving, and tending land for community gardens, farms and green spaces.
  • Healthy Neighborhoods. We believe gardens, farms and green spaces are integral pieces of a healthy neighborhood, yielding many benefits such as: improved public health; opportunities for education; access to and consumption of healthy, affordable, local and culturally appropriate food; self-reliance; safer, healthier and greener neighborhoods; resilient and sustainable environments; community building; leadership development; job training and economic development; and recreation.
  • Food Justice. We believe in a food system that encompasses health and equity at all stages of production, distribution, consumption, and disposal.
  • Environmental Justice. We believe in preserving safe and healthy built and natural environments so that every community has access to gardens, farms, green spaces, wholesome foods and clean water.

Current Projects

Threatened Gardens Campaign

From Soil Generation: “COMMUNITY CONTROL of LAND is the foundation of our collective struggle towards liberation.  Whether the issue is food, education, or housing, community control of resources, REQUIRE community control of the land… Our gardens are not just extracurricular spaces–!! They are community-driven acts of resistance and resilience by communities of color in their historically underinvested communities.

We are calling to attention changes that need to happen to create real and transparent pathways towards community control of land. WHO controls land and HOW it’s being used dictates what our communities look like.  In the urban agriculture community, we’ve seen too many community gardens and farms lost to Sheriff sales & development in the waves of gentrification across the city.”

Vacant Land 215

Soil Generation has created and organized a series of Vacant Land 215 events. These events have taken place across Philadelphia, addressing topics such as:

  • The Philadelphia Land Bank, Sidelots, Sheriff’s Sales, Conservatorship, Adverse Posession and other mechanisms for preservation
  • Starting a non-profit, community organizing and building alliances
  • Starting a community garden
  • Addressing tangled titles
  • Navigating the zoning process
  • Storm water management
  • and much more

Thank you to Alicia Dorsey for putting together this great video about the series! Click here to learn more.

Healthy Foods Green Spaces First Campaign Against Bill 120917

The coalition announced its first victory in early 2013 after successfully working with City Council and Councilman Bill O’Neil to amend a bill that would have placed 20% of existing gardens and farms at risk. After advocacy and mobilizing efforts, Councilman O’Neill amended his bill to allow community gardens and market or community supported farms as a matter of right, just as they would have been otherwise permitted under the new zoning code.

This was an incredible victory for community gardens and farms as well as the Philadelphia community as a whole. Following this successful campaign, the coalition decided to formalize and is now dedicated to making sure enhanced food access and resources for managing blight and community-led initiatives are consistently available and prevalent.

Background on Bill 120917

In November, Councilman Brian O’Neill introduced Council Bill 120917, which sought to alter Philadelphia’s new zoning code by restricting and prohibiting several uses in “commercial mixed use districts” (zoned CMX-2 and 2.5). The bill would have required all market farms and community gardens on CMX-2 to obtain a “special exception.” Bill 120917 would have created new and unnecessary barriers to gardening and farming in Philadelphia, putting at least twenty percent of existent garden and farm parcels at risk of fines and sanctions.

This Bill Would Have Hurt Market Farms and Community Gardens

Bill 120917 would have applied to one third of all commercial land in the City (CMX-2).  It could have negatively affected twenty percent of parcels where Philadelphians are currently gardening. Since this bill was considered a “pending ordinance,” it had already gone into effect, even before the full Council vote, meaning twenty percent of Philadelphia’s market farms and community gardens were being placed at risk.

In Philadelphia, gardens have long been important social and cultural spaces and the cornerstone of vacant land stewardship. If this bill had succeeded, many people from youths to and seniors engaged in projects that are national models would have suddenly found their work in jeopardy.

This Bill Would Have Made Philadelphia Less Sustainable

Philadelphia strives to be the “Greenest City” in the country, and our nationally acclaimed Greenworks goals call for increasing access to healthy food and green space. But Bill 120917 did the opposite, creating obstacles to greener and healthier communities just when the City and countless residents and community-based organizations are working to increase access to fresh, local food and create innovative solutions to our vacant land problem.

As cities across the nation look for ways to support urban agriculture, this bill moved against the tide of progress and threatens Philadelphia’s position as a leader in this area.

Sufficient Safeguards Were Already In Place & Bill 120917 Would Have Undermined Philadelphia’s Newly Reformed Zoning Code

After years of work, Philadelphia’s new zoning code is receiving national acclaim as a model of good government. In fact, the American Planning Association has just announced that Philadelphia’s Integrated Planning and Zoning Process will receive the APA’s 2013 National Planning Excellence Award for a Best Practice.

In order to garden on a vacant parcel, a community group must determine the owner and obtain permission from the owner:

  • If the owner is a city agency, to obtain a license or lease, or to acquire title, the garden group must meet a set of criteria being developed by the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority and the Mayor’s Office of Sustainability. This will include demonstrating community stakeholder support.
  • For a lease of longer than one year, the group must also obtain a letter of support from the district councilperson and the transaction must be passed by ordinance.
  • Once permission is obtained, a garden group also must obtain a use registration permit from the Department of Licensing and Inspections. This requires at least a $125 per parcel one-time fee.
  • The new zoning code contains additional safeguards to prevent any negative impacts on neighbors.  Safeguards include (1) requiring fences around community farms that are adjacent to a residential zoning district; (2) refuse and compost bins must be rodent resistant and refuse must be removed once a week; (3) storage areas for tools must be enclosed; and (4) no outdoor work activity that involves power equipment may occur between sunset and sunrise.

Requiring Special Exceptions Would Hinder Gardens and Farms

  • Starting in August of 2012, the new zoning code allowed community gardens and market farms in CMX-2 and 2.5 by right, while building in parameters to prevent negative impacts on neighbors. It created a structure under which gardens and farms could finally be in compliance.
  • To acquire a special exception, an applicant must apply and pay a fee to the Zoning Board of Adjustment and meet additional requirements (described below).
    • Fees:
      • A minimum $100 application fee (increases with footage and structures). If it is a permitted use, then a permit is issued as a matter of right (total charged is $125). But if it is not permitted, then the Department of Licensing & Inspections will refer for a special exception.
      • A special exception requires a $250 appeal fee (an additional $625 to expedite if needed)
    • Additional Process: After filing an appeal, the applicant must
      • Contact Registered Community Organizations within 7 days to obtain a support letter;
      • Post notice on-site for 21 days;
      • Provide a floor plan drawn to scale with a copy of the deed or lease;
      • Provide lease or deed;
      • Provide tax certification
      • Additional fees and requirements apply for incorporated entities.
  • At the hearing, an applicant must demonstrate that the proposed use is consistent with the zoning code and any applicable standards for the use. If there is any testimony at the hearing from the community that the impacts would be more than normally expected from that use, the applicant must provide evidence to overcome such testimony.
  • Community building is an essential component of gardening and farming throughout Philadelphia. And the zoning code builds in parameters to prevent negative impacts on neighbors. The special exception process does not add value; it just foists administrative burden, time, and expense on already overburdened community groups.

Read the Law Center’s testimony opposing the amendments to the new zoning code during the December 4, 2012 hearing before the City Council Committee on Rules.

Find out the zoning category for your garden or farm or other use.

Campaign Documents

  • Read the Campaign’s press release here.
  • View a PDF of the Talking Points here.
  • Visit the Campaign’s Facebook page here.
  • Read the full text of the bill.

Press Coverage