Tag Archives: Bob Welsh

Fish Food: Steel-High’s aquaponics program yields school-to-table fare.

Screenshot 2016-01-26 21.18.37Order a dish in a local restaurant—let’s say Mangia Qui, Home 231 or Garlic Poet—and the food on your plate may well be locally grown.

No big deal, right? After all, farm-to-fork is all the rage.

But when I say locally grown, I mean locally grown—like a mile away. And available any time of the year. And raised by school-kid farmers.

Your lettuce, arugula or basil may have originated from the Steelton-Highspire School District, which, last year, launched an aquaponic greenhouse program and quickly found local markets for its goods.

So, what’s an aquaponic greenhouse? It’s a combination of aquaculture, or fish farming, with hydroponics—the science of growing plants in water without soil—into an interdependent system that produces fish, feedstock, fruit and vegetables year-round in a climate-controlled environment.

The aquaponic system filters water from its fishery operations, which, in turn, fertilizes its crops through fish waste. Clean water then is returned from the plants back to fish.

The Steelton-Highspire School District is the perfect site for such a venture, said Bob Welsh, founder and director of the Wheelhouse, a program of Jump Street, a Harrisburg-based organization focused on youth empowerment.

“This school district had an available plot of land and a real eagerness to learn about science, as well as a visionary administration and faculty,” said Welsh. “It’s a good fit.”

 

Cutting Edge

The Steel-High greenhouse is a collaboration of Aggreco International and the Wheelhouse School to Table Education Program, funded largely through donations and by the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development. After two years, the district will have the option of taking over the costs to continue the program.

Aquaponic programs also are maintained on a smaller, classroom-level scale at Marshall Math Science Academy and SciTech High in the Harrisburg School District, the Milton Hershey School and several locations in the Philadelphia area.

“It’s cutting edge. It’s a great educational program,” said Steel-High Acting Superintendent Travis Waters. “It’s a great experience and educational opportunity for our kids.”

Junior/Senior High School Principal Mick Iskric, Jr. shares that passion.

“My thought process is that, when any kid is given an opportunity, they rise to the occasion,” Iskric said. “Our juniors and seniors are getting college credits, internship and mentorship through this. They’re making resources that will last them for the rest of their careers. The kids took it and ran with it. They picked it up in a week.”

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Much Healthier

So far, mostly 11th– and 12th-graders have worked in the greenhouse, but all students in grades K-12 get a chance to come into the greenhouse and see how things work.

Waters said that district administrators are developing a multi-grade curriculum for the program. Older students even work in the facility for pay during the summer months.

Zuleyka Folk, a junior, and seniors Jessica Cunningham and Katie Jorich work in the greenhouse during the school year as part of their chemistry class. They were selected for the job as top students with dual enrollment at Harrisburg University.

“This is how the world will be eating in 50 years,” noted Cunningham of Steelton.

“It’s a much healthier way to grow food,” said Folk of Highspire. “There’s not as much contamination as there is with growing food in soil. There’s no spraying of chemicals, either. I like seeing the changes in the ecosystem and how the plants change over time.”

“I love teasing the fish,” joked Jorich of Steelton.

The greenhouse is host to a wide variety of more than 4,000 growing plants, as well as an abundant fish community comprised of tilapia and Malaysian prawn. The plants provide a multitude of collard greens, chard, mint, bok-choy, onions, beets, kale, basil, lettuce, watercress and more. A tropical plant section provides bananas, mangos and cocoa beans.

The fish aren’t forgotten either. Duckweed is grown as fish food.

Fish and produce are delivered to a number of restaurants and markets within a 15-mile radius of the greenhouse.

“Our idea is to build these close to everything to lower the transportation costs,” Welsh said. “Then we can have super-low prices.”

 

From Steelton to You

In the Harrisburg area, Steel-High aquaponic greenhouse products can be found at:

  • Café 1500, 6th and Reily streets, Harrisburg
  • Garlic Poet Restaurant and Bar, 148 Sheraton Dr., New Cumberland
  • Home 231, 231 North St., Harrisburg
  • Lancaster Brewing Company, 469 Eisenhower Blvd., Swatara Township
  • Mangia Qui, 272 North St., Harrisburg
  • Radish and Rye, Broad Street Market, Harrisburg
  • Rubicon, 270 North St., Harrisburg
  • Stock’s on 2nd, 211 N. 2nd, Harrisburg
  • Suba, 272 North St., 2nd floor, Harrisburg
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Wheel Life: After building up Jump Street, Bob Welsh has turned his attention to where art, education and commerce meet.

Screenshot 2014-12-29 09.00.54On a stroll through Strawberry Square, you might notice that one store stands out boldly.

Bursts of color pour through the plate-glass window and, once inside, you see creations that range from repurposed furniture to T-shirts to functional sculpture. The goods are youthful, fun and artsy; most are even practical.

A few months back, Urban Xpression opened its doors to give a creative and entrepreneurial outlet to area youth eager to meld art and business. The store also is the most visible manifestation of The WheelHouse, a program recently spun off from Jump Street, the community arts group long run by Bob Welsh.

“WheelHouse is an outgrowth of a program at Jump Street, which focuses on art-based workforce development,” Welsh explained. “The WheelHouse program is an innovative partnership in STEM education (science, technology, engineering and math) designed to give high school and college students real-world experience in live work environments—learning while earning a paycheck.”

Defining Moment

Welsh arrived in Harrisburg in 1983, joining a “bunch of musicians” doing the club circuit. He owned and operated Green Room Records and the Green Room recording studio and was elected to the Grammy Academy.

Then came one of life’s defining moments. Welsh read in the Patriot-News about a school that had no musical instruments, so he decided to do something about it. Together with fellow musician Paul Kruis, he put together the Gift of Music program to collect instruments. He raised money among friends and acquaintances and found he was good at it.

The program’s first big gift—of more than 30 instruments—went to Ronald Brown Charter School.

A bit later, when Beverly Portis, executive director of MetroArts, precursor to Jump Street, announced her decision to move on, she recommended Welsh to the board of directors. He was appointed interim director, then executive director and served for 14 years.

Now, he heads Wheelhouse, a subsidiary of Jump Street, while remaining a staff member of the parent organization.

“This seven-figure-budget organization requires all my attention,” he said of The WheelHouse.

Eye Opener

Wheelhouse projects give youth skills they need to be successful in future employment, while advancing high school and college education with in-demand areas of study.

Michael Mills, a senior at Harrisburg Academy, is one participant. Last summer, he was part of a student team tasked to design a store.

“It was an eye-opening experience,” said Mills, a Harrisburg resident who plans to get a master’s degree in biomedical engineering. “We worked with many professional artists and business people and other co-workers from Jump Street. We named the store, painted it, created a vision and mission statement, created a slogan for it, and decided what to put in it.”

The result: Urban Xpression, a youth-created shop focused on making and selling artistic goods. The students learn business planning, customer service, marketing, finance and entrepreneurship, while earning high school and/or college credits.

As part of the program, Mills, who is an assistant store manager, will be taking a college course in technology. Beginning this month, he also will be a paid apprentice.

In addition to Urban Xpression, The WheelHouse operates an Agtech program, which combines agriculture and technology, and a Community Tech program, which teaches students digital photography and technology-based design. Projects in finance and IT are likely to be added, said Welsh.

Students come from all over the region and from public, charter and private schools to participate.

“We try not to interrupt their school day,” Welsh said. “We work around their senior hours, co-op, study programs.”

Meanwhile, Jump Street, with its slogan of “connecting artist and community,” continues its own programming.

The Gift of Music, the project that originally drew Welsh into the nonprofit world, is expanding beyond the acquisition of instruments to the actual support of music programs. These are too often cut from schools because of budgetary concerns, said Melissa Snyder, the group’s interim executive director.

Jump Street also helps students who cannot afford to buy or rent an instrument to participate in music programs. Learning to play an instrument has many benefits, from developing language and reasoning skills to increased self-discipline and self-confidence, said Snyder.

“Music is a gift you can give your child that lasts their entire life,” she said.

Since 2001, the Gift of Music has collected and distributed more than 500 instruments to students in the Capital Region.

“Since the instruments stay in schools, we have easily reached 1,000 kids locally with them,” said Welsh.

Other events and programs sponsored by Jump Street include the annual Artsfest; the teen publication “and” magazine; and Paintin’ Lively, which teams teens with professional artists, who use their creative skills to refurbish furniture for sale.

While Welsh no longer is at the helm of Jump Street, he emphasized that Jump Street and WheelHouse are parts of a whole. They share office space, as well as a mission of bringing the community together and advancing youth through art.

“Almost 17 years at Jump Street taught me to do workforce development in arts and culture,” said Welsh. “WheelHouse is just an extension.”

The WheelHouse is co-located with Jump Street at 100 N. Cameron St., Harrisburg. Visit www.wheelhousepa.com. Urban Xpression is located inside Strawberry Square, 315 Market St., Harrisburg.

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Great Jump Forward: From a single program, Jump Street has become a connecting point for the arts.

Shailen Vines, Xavier Farrow & Ayat Muhammad in period costume after training to become docents for the Bethel Trail.

Shailen Vines, Xavier Farrow & Ayat Muhammad in period costume after training to become docents for the Bethel Trail.

Bob Welsh, Jump Street’s impressive executive director, wasn’t always at the helm of a top-notch non-profit that provides creative opportunities for youth and adults. Back in the day, he was just an ordinary city resident who was unhappy about what he saw happening in the city school’s music programs.

“Music education was really in terrible shape,” he said. “Not that the teachers weren’t great, there were just not many resources.”

Wanting to do something about it, he came up with the idea of starting an instrument donation program.

“I went to Mayor Reed to see what he thought, and he basically told me I have lots of energy and good ideas but no clue how to execute. He told me that I needed to go out and find some agencies that do this kind of work and find out how this work gets done. It was the best advice I ever got.”

Welsh found a kindred spirit in Metro Arts, where he was able to learn about non-profit management and how to write grants. One of the grants that he got allowed him to start the fledgling “Gift of Music Program.” Welsh served as a volunteer, a board member and then was hired as executive director of Metro Arts. A year later, in 2000, the organization changed its name to Jump Street.

Now, Jump Street is a thriving organization providing multiple programs for youth, teens and the community at large. It operates a facility on N. Cameron Street that includes the Thrive Art and Fitness Center for Seniors, teaching and rehearsal space, arts business incubator/office space, gallery space and administrative offices.

The following is a spotlight on three of Jump Street’s programs.

The Gift of Music

The Gift of Music is Jump Street’s oldest program. Through the program, band and orchestral instruments are collected, restored and distributed to students interested in learning to play an instrument. It’s not the first time that organizations have collected instruments, but Welsh has come up with some ideas that have streamlined the process.

“We decided not to get involved with trying to determine if individuals qualify for an instrument,” Welsh said. “Instead, we qualify programs.”

Accordingly, Jump Street works with 40 or 50 schools, community organizations or churches.

“They let us know what they need, and then they take responsibility for determining which students should get the instruments,” he said.

Repair of the instruments is done in local repair shops and typically costs about $100.

“In a former life, I repaired instruments, so that helps,” said Welsh. “So that’s one place that we have a leg up because I can identify what will probably get out into the field.”

Welsh says that he has a rule of thumb that, if the repair is more than one-third of the value of the instrument, check with him. If it doesn’t, the shop can just go ahead. “That saves time and cost,” he said.

During the 12 years of the program, Jump Street has refurbished and distributed around 500 instruments in the Harrisburg region, but the program expanded several years ago and now operates in four other cities. “All across the state, we’re probably pushing towards a distribution of 5,000,” Welsh said.

Jump Street accepts instrument donations at its offices in Harrisburg or at any area Classic Cleaners.

AND Magazine

One of Jump Street’s major literary projects is the publication of a magazine for teens written exclusively by teenaged journalists.

AND Magazine (which stands for “A New Diversion”) has been in publication for seven years and, since its inception, has had about 150,000 readers. The magazine was conceived as a way to provide opportunities for regional teens to participate in all phases of the magazine publishing process, including writing, editing, graphic design, photograph and marketing.

“Most magazines [geared towards teens] are people our age writing what we think and what wisdom we can offer to teens,” said Welsh. “It occurred to me that it might be more interesting to mentor young writers or just be with them to facilitate their own process.”

So far, the project has involved around 100 dedicated writers and about 100 more who may have contributed one or two stories, poems or photographs. One of the magazine’s most famous graduates, and its first editor, is Annie Stone, who is now editor of teen books with Harlequin. Many other students also have benefited from working on the magazine by being able to include stories they have written in their college portfolios. Welsh notes that the literary work of AND Magazine writers has helped them to net scholarships to many prestigious schools, such as Point Park University in Pittsburgh, Temple University, the University of Pennsylvania and Shippensburg University.

Every year, the project attracts a core of roughly half-a-dozen students from local school districts, many of whom travel to Jump Street’s offices on a daily basis as part of their school’s senior project programs, during a free period or after school. Working together as a team gives these students an opportunity to learn to work with people who have different backgrounds and skills.

“We may have a Harrisburg High School student sitting next to a Boiling Springs student so, for the first week or two, they may as well be from different galaxies,” said Welsh. “They won’t know very much about where each other is living, but it’s personally been a joy for me to watch those barriers dissolve—and they almost always do.”

Jump Street staff also goes out to schools to work with groups of students, tasking them to create pieces around a particular editorial thread, such as young people’s attitude towards voting during election time. Teens also can contribute work remotely on their own or through their teacher, counselor, community organizations or probation officer.

“Some of the most interesting work in one issue was from a kid in lock-up,” said Welsh. “He actually received a small scholarship from what he submitted to AND Magazine while incarcerated.”

The Speak Team

Besides its regular staff, Jump Street pulls in other professionals to help develop and facilitate creative projects for area teens.

Currently Lenwood Sloan, an actor, playwright, director and self-described “catalytic agent,” is the lead resident artist. Under the direction of Jump Street, he spent this past school year heading up an intensive theater lab program at Susquehanna Township High School, where students learned everything from basic acting skills to set design, lighting and make-up. The theater lab is part of the high school’s new School of the Performing Arts, which also focuses on the visual arts and fashion.

When some of the students asked to continue working with Sloan during the summer months, Welsh created a program that trained the students to be historical actors and docents in Harrisburg. Modeled after a decade-old tourism model called the “Past Players,” the young members of the “Speak Team” were trained to portray civilians and military personnel from the 19th century and went out as an ensemble to the city’s historical places such as the train station, the Capitol building and the Broad Street Market. There, they engaged tourists and school groups with renditions of period stories, poetry, dances and songs.

“They were scheduled on Tuesdays and Thursdays to appear in different places,” said Welsh. “They would start at the market and stroll through a scripted batch of locations while another Past Player might be going in the opposite direction. The two teams might meet up in the Capitol, one heading north and one heading south. It was very, very well received.“

At times, group members portrayed composite or generic people of the era, but, more often, they reenacted actual Pennsylvanians that they had studied. The message was mostly focused on African American history, which is where Sloan’s professional experience lies.  In a typical day, passersby would be able to hear stories of the Underground Railroad and African American life during war and Jim Crow. The goal was to get history to come out of the books and celebrate the lives of people in Pennsylvania who made a change, one person at a time, one neighborhood at a time.

During the inaugural year of the “Speak Team,” members of the ensemble received more than 100 hours of training. In addition to learning historic songs, stories, poetry and dances, they took elocution lessons and received tips on how to adopt mid-19th century postures.

“The cool thing for the kids is that they are working with a total pro,” said Welsh. “Lenwood Sloan is a treasure. We are lucky he hangs out with us.”

Moving forward, Jump Street is looking towards continuing to serve the community.

“Much of our success has been based on assessing needs in our sector,” says Welsh. “Then we train up our staff in certain responsive skill sets and take reasonable risks to grow toward the opportunities. “

Welsh says that he’s sure that Jump Street can meet any challenge that the community throws at them. “I have one of the best non-profit staffs around,” he said.

To learn more about Jump Street, visit www.jumpstreet.org.

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