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Gov. Gary Locke visits NewHolly P-Patch
Marks MLK day with service project
SEATTLE—January 20, 2003—On Monday, Jan. 20,
Gov. Gary Locke paid a visit to a P-Patch at NewHolly to observe
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day by helping to install new retaining
walls. According to Gov. Locke, "At the heart of Dr. King's
philosophy was the principle of service. Together, we are making
this holiday 'a day on, not a day off' to honor Dr. King’s life,
and his work."
Gov. Locke praised the efforts of the group gathered
at NewHolly, "We’re building the foundation of a community
garden – a place where residents will gather, and work,
together," he said, "That same spirit of teamwork is the
reason why the NewHolly community is such a success story."
"The public-private partnerships created to
help improve this neighborhood are now serving as a model for the
rest of the nation to follow. You should be proud of your success.
The work we do here today will make this already-vibrant community
even more beautiful."
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Gov. Locke
listens as P-Patch Coordinator Bunly Yun explains the NewHolly
community garden program.
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For
his part, Gov. Locke, wearing jeans and sturdy boots, brought
his work gloves and pitched in. He worked with a group of
AmeriCorps volunteers constructing NewHolly’s newest
P-Patch, the "Power Garden."
Located just uphill from
townhouses in Phase II of New Holly, at the edge of the power
line right-of-way, the garden is scheduled for planting this
spring. Over 50 volunteers from AmeriCorps agencies around the
city, along with NewHolly residents and staff from the P-Patch
program donated many hours of service on MLK Day to construct
retaining walls in the new garden.
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A series of walls, made
from broken- up pieces of pavement from the old streets of
Holly Park, will help to contain the plots along this gradual
hillside.
Martha Goodlett, P-Patch
staff member for the City of Seattle, reports that the new
garden is expected to be ready for use by May of this year.
First priority for use of the garden will go to
people living in New Holly. Some will be gardeners who cultivated
the P-Patch in the Lower Holly area, now abandoned to make way for
Phase III. The new garden is open to renters and homeowners alike,
and is available for general use.

The new garden is near the Phase II townhouses alongside the
power line right-of-way.
This garden is the fourth new P-Patch in the
NewHolly neighborhood. Others include a second garden under the
power lines, further up the hill, reserved for NewHolly youth, a
market garden and another community garden.
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AmeriCorps
volunteers enthusiastically transported large pieces of
recycled pavement for use in the new retaining walls.
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