Soil Restoration is Soul Restoration w/Elliot Royal
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The episode connects soil restoration to human health and climate action, then examines food insecurity in Charlotte as both lack of funds and lack of proximity to healthy food retailers. It defines “food desert” using the federal criteria and cites a 2020 Sustain Charlotte figure that 15% of Mecklenburg County residents—about 180,000 people—lived in a food desert. Leaders from the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition explain West Boulevard has lacked a full-service grocery store since 1989, describing how grocery store location decisions track median incomes and framing food as a “new age version of segregation.” The community’s response is Three Sisters Market, a community-owned food co-op honoring Amy James, Lucille McNeil, and Dorothy Wade, building on Seeds for Change, a quarter-acre urban farm employing youth. The episode links food access work to environmental justice, community organizing, and food sovereignty, and shares ways to support through memberships and volunteerism.
00:00 Soil and Soul
01:23 Defining Food Deserts
03:22 West Boulevard Grocery Gap
05:15 Why Stores Avoid It
08:15 Food as Segregation
10:41 Community Co-op Solution
12:12 Three Sisters Origins
13:52 Seeds for Change Farm
16:36 Community Gardens Debate
20:12 How to Get Involved
23:16 Environmental Justice Link
29:22 Food Sovereignty Wrap
31:02 Closing Credits
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