Thursday 10th April – The Big Issue has announced the launch of “Big Grow,” an innovative community gardening project aimed at empowering marginalised individuals through food growing.
The initiative has been made possible thanks to a generous grant of up to £2,500 from Norwich City Council, funded by the UK Government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.
Big Grow will transform public spaces into edible landscapes, beginning with a pilot project at St George’s Church in Colegate, Norwich.
By teaching valuable skills while building community connections, the new project embodies the Big Issue’s long-standing philosophy of providing a “hand-up not hand-out” – an ethos that was made famous by its renowned street magazine. The Big Issue magazine is sold to vendors at £2, with vendors then selling the magazine on to customers for £4, keeping the difference.
The Big Issue is intent on partnering with grassroots organisations to create projects like the Big Grow, combining local knowledge with its 34-year experience of providing earning and learning opportunities for marginalised people to drive change at a community level.
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation estimates that 13.4 million people in the UK were in poverty as of 2023[1]. 7.3 million of these are experiencing food insecurity, according to the Food Foundation[2].