Whitehorse hotel grows veggies in parking lot - Action News
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Whitehorse hotel grows veggies in parking lot

Instead of planting flowers, Whitehorse's Days Inn planted vegetables this summer. The potatoes, carrots, beets, Swiss chard and kale were shared with Whitehorse's food bank. It's an experiment the hotel hopes to repeat.

Parking-lot planters supply carrots, potatoes and even kale to local food bank

"There's hungry people in the city of Whitehorse and we need to start fixing that," says Days Inn manager Francis Van Kessel. This summer the hotel planted vegetables for the local food bank. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

A hotel in Whitehorse says it's happy with the results of a summerexperiment.

Instead of planting flowers, theDays Inn planted vegetables. The potatoes, carrots, beets, Swiss chard and kale were shared with Whitehorse'sfood bank.

ManagerFrancis Van Kesseldoesn't know how many kilogramswere harvested, instead measuringthe harvest in milk-crate-size boxes.

"When we did our potatoes and carrots we got about eight containers of potatoes and aboutsevenof carrots," she said.

Greens, like beet tops, were brought to the food bank once a week during the summer.

"I did this, pretty much, because we as people need to changeour society andthe change comes from within. There's hungry people in the city of Whitehorse and we need to start fixing that," she said.

Another business mentioned by city council: The Riverside Grocery is getting rid of plastic bags. 'We've got pretty good feedback so far,' says Levi Commons. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

Council recognizes community,environmentalwork

The Days Inn was one of the threebusinessesin Whitehorsementioned by city council this week, as councilor Mike Gladish listed what he called positive examples in the community.

One of those, the Riverside Grocery in Whitehorse, is doing away with plastic bags.

Levi Commons works at the grocery and says the change is being madeon principle.

'We're trying to make the first step to eliminating plastic bags. I know a lot of places around the world are doing it."

Gladish also mentioned Yukon College, which has stopped sellingbottled water on its Whitehorse campus. Instead, the school has installed water fountains designed to refill re-useable bottles.