They want a grocery store and a coffee shop and families mostly go to Rainbow Park and only seniors hang out at Queen Square.
Those are some of the findings from a survey on the south end by P.U.L.S.E.-People United for the South End.
Here it is folks!! Dakota Lutes south end asset mapping project presentation!! https://t.co/pv826iBPtt
— Mary LeSage (@PULSE1INC) February 24, 2017
Dakota Lutes did the research for PULSE and found the people living in the south are tired of being asked questions.
He also found Saint John does well providing hot meals for those who need it but we need to teach people to cook and to make their money go farther by using purchasing progams.
Dakota Lutes has a vision for the unused fields at Barrack Green Armoury.
He says in his perfect world they would take that empty field that no one is using and put in a vertical farm facility and they would start doing hydroponic food production and distribute food more equitably.
#Aeroponics #farming offers new promises #urbanag #verticalfarming #innovation #research @NewIndianXpress https://t.co/Y5ytVbvvnU pic.twitter.com/ISQNW8VjQM
— Indoorharvest (@indoorharvest) February 18, 2017
The survey found the $50,000 industrial kitchen at St. John the Baptist-King Edward school is an underused asset.
Lutes says it should be used all the time including evenings and weekends.




