I'm glad to hear you're a fellow community gardener, Nancy!
This job is definitely a labor of love. It's been in chaos since the founder left a few years ago, and it's been very satisfying to see the gardeners coming together with a little encouragement and organization. We do have a few members who are better off and can pitch in more, but a large number of our gardeners struggle to pay the $15 annual fee (nobody is kicked out for lack of ability to pay, though). NeighborSpace (the nonprofit land trust that owns our property) has worked out some kind of deal with the city for water (we are only allowed a hydrant between mid-May and mid-October, and we have to be careful not to abuse its use). We get free wood chips from the city and Bartlett Tree Experts. We were given a gift card to Gethsemane, which is how I got my hands on 20 bags of compost to enrich our soil, but I'm still trying to figure out a free or super-cheap source of good organic compost.
We did have a pretty big waiting list, but I've managed to weed out the no-shows and get all our new gardeners placed in time for this year's planting season. It's very challenging, though... a lot of my gardeners do not have email, some don't have a phone, and a few don't have a stable mailing address, so it can be difficult to find them.
I WISH it was a paid position! Holy cow, it's turned into somewhat of a monster, especially since we've launched a new parkway "food forest" project that will offer 7 8'x4' boxes filled with herbs, flowers, and vegetables for our neighboring community to enjoy. But I just had an interview today for a potential grant for compost and plants to fill them (fingers crossed!), and we have several volunteers working on signage and weeding and such. It's been a lot of fun, even amid the squabbles and miscommunications and rained-out events. I am so proud of my gardeners... they are so willing to learn and improve the garden. Poor people in our culture have a reputation for laziness, but the poor people in my garden are among the hardest-working folks I've ever met in my life.
The Hello Howard garden, a few short blocks from us, charges $75 for a 4'x4' raised bed. They are very good at what they do, and they have done some amazing things with their resources. But their classes and plots are so far out of reach for people like me and my gardeners. It's really important to me to make sure this opportunity to grow things doesn't become some kind of special luxury activity, and to keep the plots in my garden available to whoever needs them the most.
It's a little dream of mine, to find some kind of sponsor who will help me find a way to make this a paid position. I'm fortunate in that I'm an at-home, homeschooling mom who has the time and experience to devote to our garden, but I'm trying to pace myself, delegate jobs, and make sure I don't get burned out too fast (a common problem in volunteer and nonprofit groups). And while a few of the gardeners have my cell number, I set up a Google phone account to take messages for general calls.
By the way... if anyone has a small used plastic storage shed, seeds/seedlings, or garden tools they don't need anymore and would consider donating, please let me know! We do have a nonprofit EIN, so you can write it off on your taxes if you'd like, and I promise your donation will be deeply appreciated.
And thank you reading my article!
“Assuredly it is a great accomplishment to be a novelist, but it is no mediocre glory to be a cook.” -- Alexandre Dumas
"I give you Chicago. It is no London and Harvard. It is not Paris and buttermilk. It is American in every chitling and sparerib. It is alive from tail to snout." -- H.L. Mencken