Bosco turns up the volume on community while considering development
An organization that supports people-serving non-profits in northeast Edmonton has launched a podcast series on community belonging as it considers what to do next with its sizable land.
Across three episodes of The Bosco Neighbourhood Podcast, hosts Soni Dasmohapatra and Darine Moukhaiber help tell the stories of the people who bring communities together at the John Bosco Child and Family Services Foundation.
"We chose voices that are not usually at the centre of conversations about city planning or neighbourhood revitalization," Bosco Foundation CEO Shelley Sabo told Taproot. "We have a lot of groups (at Bosco) that already work collectively, and I think there's a lot that our neighbours can learn. Our common theme is that we are an abundant community; we have many assets to build on."
The organization offers support services such as volunteer recruitment, bursaries, and fundraising assistance. But it primarily provides affordable space to groups that serve individuals and families at its 50,000-square-foot complex on 3.5 acres at 6770 129 Avenue NW, near the boundary of Balwin and Belvedere.
"If we want neighbourhood development to build social equity, we need to turn up the volume on their stories," Sabo said of the podcast's guests, who are supported at Bosco.
Building social equity involves 1.5 acres of unused land on the Bosco property, she said. It is zoned for a seniors' affordable housing project, and there are seven housing sites within a six-block radius. Sabo said she wants to make sure whatever Bosco builds falls into "the continuum of what already exists." So the foundation is exploring what serves the neighbourhood best. A $25,000 grant from the Edmonton Community Foundation is funding that work, which entails six to eight months of "learning our way forward," Sabo said.
Bosco is not alone in this quest. Activating the land that not-for-profits own is among the topics to be explored this week at the Housing Forward summit on affordable housing.