Seven of the City and County of Honolulu’s 10 community gardens are within just a few miles of each other, all within a crowded urban triangle that runs from Foster Community Garden downtown to gardens in Manoa Valley and to Diamond Head.
Two other gardens are in Hawaii Kai and Kaneohe, short drives from town when traffic is flowing. Some have proven so popular that there are waitlists to access them.
But there is just one community garden to be found elsewhere on Oahu (it’s in Wahiawa), leaving residents in most other locations on the island without the benefit of such lands. It includes West Oahu, which stretches from Kapolei to Kaena Point and is home to hundreds of thousands of people.
A Civil Beat article Monday revealing the lack of a community garden — publicly funded plots where citizens can grow plants for food and recreation — on the Westside prompted a public cry for equal access for the area.

Community gardens should not be limited to certain parts of Oahu, as has been the case for decades.
City and County of Honolulu
“This is a great program that fosters true community engagement,” one commenter wrote. “The city would do well to expand it wherever possible, including adding additional plots to existing gardens.”
No argument there. Let’s hope the Blangiardi administration — especially Parks and Recreation Director Laura Thielen, herself a bit of a green thumb — is paying attention.
More community gardens is not just a matter of equity, although as Civil Beat also reported this week the Westside has long suffered from too many negative media reports.
It’s also a matter of greater self-sufficiency. As the COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated as well as natural disasters like flooding and hurricanes, Hawaii is all too vulnerable to food shortages during times of crisis.
This was the motivation behind new gardens for residents of city-owned, special needs housing. Last December the Honolulu Department of Community Services used CARES Act funds to build seven gardens at senior living facilities, housing for formerly homeless families and a domestic violence shelter.
“Along with helping to sustain the bodies of those affected most by the pandemic, this project will also feed their spirits as they see their hard work grow into what will become vibrant urban gardens,” said then Mayor Kirk Caldwell in a press release from the ribbon-cutting.
More community gardens could mean more home-grown fruits and vegetables for families, friends and food banks. A 2020 city ordinance directing the parks and recreation director to seek out locations “in underserved areas” for new gardens specifically referenced the pandemic as a rationale to act.
The ordinance says implementation is at the director’s discretion and must not jeopardize the city’s budget. Thielen told Civil Beat that she has to consider budget and personnel constraints.
What concerns us is that the Department of Parks and Recreation has not opened a new community garden in over 30 years. The potential payoff for the Westside and other underserved areas such as Waipahu, Waimanalo, the North Shore, Kailua and Whitmore Village could be substantial.
There are also other benefits, as another commenter explained about a friend living in senior public housing.
“It’s quite true that there are many green thumbs in his building who could find joy in their poverty stricken old age tending a garden,” he wrote. “The opportunity to do good things in our community and bring joy to hardened, saddened people, as well as everyone, could not feel better and should be done. ”
Rick Blangiardi’s slogan as a candidate for mayor was “It’s about you.” Here’s an excellent opportunity to demonstrate exactly that.
The post A Community Garden Is A Must-Have For West Oahu appeared first on Honolulu Civil Beat.