From: Issue 34 Categories: Society

10 Ways to Invest in your Community

15 February, 2011

Guy Dauncey, author of The Climate Challenge: 101 Solutions to Global warming, has come up with ten practical things you can do to help make your community a more sustainable place to live.

Written by Guy Dauncey, Columnist

Image via Flickr user Coach O

1. Slow Down. Chat and Mingle

When thinking of investing, most think of money. But there is more to wealth. A wealthy community is rich with friends, time, beauty, and so much more. It all starts with relationships, so the next time you are out, take the time to mingle, say hello, and chat. Every new relationship is a sound investment in your community.

2. Support Locally-Owned Businesses

When compared, local business has two to four times greater economic benefit for the community than other business. They spend, employ, and donate more locally. So why not support them? By supporting a local farmers market, you will get healthy food, and help build local farms.

See www.livingeconomies.org and www.small-mart.org

3. Become a Volunteer

A community may be financially wealthy, but without volunteers it’s surely a “poor” community. Volunteering builds wealth, whether it’s picking up the trash and talking to your neighbours while you do so, planting trees, or joining your local community association. If you volunteer with Big Brothers Big Sisters, you will be investing in love and friendship for the next generation.

See www.bigbrothersbigsisters.ca

4. Invite Your Neighbours to Grow Food

In Vancouver, two women wanted to grow some food so they invited their neighbours to join them. Thirteen people showed up, and started a tomato sprouting station, built a greenhouse, and held weekend work parties in each other’s yards. Chickens and bees soon followed, along with a real spirit of community.

See www.bit.ly/twoblockdiet and www.zeromilediet.ca

5. Organize a Block Party

When my wife and I organized a block party on our street in Victoria, we knocked on everyone’s door and invited people in person. Everyone brought food and drink for a potluck, and we played an ice-breaker game to get people chatting. People loved it. The whole experience of living on a street feels friendlier once you have socialized with everyone.

See www.quezi.com/13238

6. Create a Public Space

Like the piazzas in Italy, a good public space forms the heart of a community, but many of North America’s cities are lacking neighbourhood hearts, especially in the suburbs. In Portland, neighbours have been investing time to create their own public spaces, re-designing local intersections with street murals, and building public seating and coffee-stands, often, using sustainable methods.

See www.cityrepair.org

7. Make Your Community More Walkable

People like to walk, but it isn’t easy in communities without sidewalks or walkways that are safe and beautiful. We need to invest in “walking audits,” a community process that informs the local council where improvements are needed, and where new walking routes can be created. And we need to organize local traffic calming.

See www.walkscore.com and www.walkableamerica.org/checklist-walkability.pdf

8. Invest In Community Bonds

In downtown Toronto, the Centre for Social Innovation used community bonds to buy a beautiful old 35,000 sq. ft. building that will be home to over 400 people and projects. They issued community bonds to raise $6.5 million to buy and develop the building. And it worked.

See www.socialinnovation.ca/communitybonds

9. Join Your Community Association

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