Friday, July 27, 2012

Knitting & Bassets = Community, oh my!


As you might have recently read, I’ve taken on a new role at Alberta Recreation and Parks Association (ARPA). I’m now a Programs Manager whose main focus is on community-related initiatives. Like with my work with ACE Communities, I find myself really having to think about what the word ‘community’ actually means.

Just the other day, I was speaking with my neighbour Veronica Murphy who is owner of STASH – one of our local Inglewood businesses (STASH is a knitting, sewing, and crafting studio). I’ve known Veronica for a few years now in your typical neighbourly way. When she goes out of town, I will sometimes watch over her rabbit Mr. Freckles. We’ve gotten together for New Year’s Eve and the occasional summer deck party. My husband borrows her husband’s power tools.

In our recent conversation, Veronica was telling me about her booth – which happens to be a converted 1956 Shasta trailer… how cool is that! - which she currently has at the Calgary Folk Festival. As part of her roles as a ‘vendor’, Veronica also planned a series of free guerilla-like knitting circles in an effort to develop community connectedness during the festival.

Veronica’s plans for her knitting circles got me thinking. When we do sit down to contemplate ‘community’, we often think of geographical connections like the ones we have with others in our neighbourhoods and in our towns or cities. Community is often associated with place.

The insight that popped into my head, as I was chatting with Veronica, was that we shouldn’t forget about the OTHER kind of community. This is the kind of community that’s defined by our passions, by our common interests, and by our feelings.

If you were to ask someone what it truly means to be part of a community they would probably say that it was somewhere that they felt they belonged and where they knew that they could always make a positive impact.

Here’s a case in point. A few weeks ago, I mentioned to Veronica that I was doing a bottle drive to help raise funds for the basset hound rescue that I help run as a volunteer. Veronica took action and placed a note in her newsletter saying that anyone willing to donate their bottles to my cause would get a free knitting lesson at STASH. And the bottles came in by the bags… Many didn’t even take up the offer of the free knitting session, they just wanted to simply help out.

Her knitting community helped my basset community raise much needed funds. My basset community helped Veronica’s knitting community feel like they were connected to a greater cause like helping animals in need.

Veronica is also a supporter of East Village initiatives, she donates her space for use as a venue for the Calgary Fringe Fest, and is planning monthly events at STASH that will fundraise for and support local arts programs. So the fact that she was instigating free knitting circles as part of the Calgary Folk Festival, and helped out homeless hounds in need, is not that surprising.

When people come together to share in a passion, true community is formed. Don’t forget that community doesn’t necessarily have to be out your front door.



Live in Calgary? Make sure to visit Veronica and her pale blue Shasta trailer this weekend at the Calgary Folk Festival. She’d love to hear your thoughts about your community.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Alberta's communities get active!



It was announced recently that the Alberta Recreation and Parks Association (ARPA) was offering a new opportunity to communities who were interested in getting more people, more active, more often!

As we all know, an active community is a more healthy community so ARPA partnered with Alberta Health Services to deliver the Active Community Strategy (ACS) project funded by the Alberta Cancer Prevention Legacy Fund. This initiative will support the creation of comprehensive strategies that connect and articulate local assets to get communities more active.

As part of my position at ARPA, I have been asked to join the team working with the Active Community Strategy (ACS) project. This opportunity is exciting for me for various reasons. The biggest one is that I get to continue with work similar to what we accomplished with ACE Communities. A whole new group of 10 Albertan towns and cities will be coming on board with one major goal – to affect positive change in their communities from a grassroots level. Hurrah!

The second great thing about working on ARPA’s Active Community Strategy (ACS) project is that it will allow me to explore what it really means to be an active community. While my background is in the visual arts, many might be surprised to know that I’m also a … gasp!… jock. Yes, it’s true. This new partnership with Alberta Health Services will offer me the opportunity to explore a whole new field of research and applied learning related to active living, thus allowing my art/bruiser personality to shine on through!

The third draw of this project is that I’ll get to see, firsthand, how an active living strategy can transform a community. Did you know, for example, that families and couples that share play and leisure are more likely to stay together? Or that leisure activities like sports and recreation build social skills and stimulate participation in community life?

Research also shows (and you can check it out on the National Benefits HUB) that if you live in an active community, there’s a higher chance for people to combat isolation, loneliness, and alienation. Or that our recreation, parks, sport, arts, and culture-related activities that build pride in a community as well as a sense of belonging.

How FANTASTIC is that! We can literally use our recreation time to positively transform the quality of life in our communities.

Over the next few weeks, ARPA will be selecting the first round of 10 ACS communities. These 10 communities will work with ARPA on their active community strategies starting in September. It is never too late, however, to learn about how you can affect the quality of life in your community. Contact Janet at jnaclia@aceleaders.ca to learn how.

We’d love to hear from communities wanting to get more people, more active, more often!