US Correctional Service Centre’s aquaponics greenhouse grows lettuce and gives back to the community

US Correctional Service Centre’s aquaponics greenhouse grows lettuce and gives back to the community

Posted by : Frank Short Posted on : 06-Sep-2021

US Correctional Service Centre’s aquaponics greenhouse grows lettuce and gives back to the community

In the USA in Pittsfield. a large greenhouse at the Berkshire County Sheriff’s Office’s Correctional Service Centre is filled with thousands of heads of lettuce and other leafy greens, all being grown using aquaponics.

“It’s the first of its kind at any correctional facility on the east coast,” deputy sheriff Robin McGraw said. “Actually, we don’t really think anyone else has built anything like this in corrections anywhere else in the country. But that’s what we’re hoping to be a model for.” 

The greenhouse includes tanks with about 1,500 fish. The water from those tanks is run through a filter and then into the floating growing beds, where nutrients from the fish waste serves as food for the lettuce. The water is then filtered again and pumped back into the fish tanks.

The result is an environmentally-friendly and efficient growing process.

“We’re growing lettuce anywhere from 35 to 50 days from seed to harvest, depending on the strain or the variety,” officer Jason Turner said.

The lab is one of many educational programs for the inmates at the house of correction. It’s especially beneficial for inmates who have to stay on-campus and aren’t eligible for off-site community service.

“We get them out to teach them about their own work ethic, about what it means to work as a member of a team,” McGraw said. “They learn all the different things you have to learn in this, whether it’s around the science piece, the technology piece, the engineering piece, or around the math piece. So they’re learning a lot of different skills.”

The lab produces more than 1,000 heads of lettuce each week, and most of it gets donated to local food banks.

Sheriff Thomas Bowler said inmates have told him having a connection to the community gives the work an added purpose.

“To know that it’s going back out into the community to help somebody else that is in need gives them a great deal of self-worth,” Bowler said. “It builds their confidence, and they just feel good about themselves, which is a huge component in getting better and being reintegrated back into the community.”

Footnotes

 

· The Berkshire County Sheriff’s Office has an aquaponics lab

· Aquaponics is an efficient, environmentally-friendly way of growing produce

· The lab produces more 1,000 heads of lettuce weekly, most of which gets donated

· It’s one of many educational work programs for inmates at the house of correction

Comment.

This article focuses on what is being done in a US Correctional Centre which concentrates on growing lettuces in a aquaponics greenhouse, giving useful practical education and work skills to the inmates of the correctional facility.

The lettuces are given to the local community food bank.

The concept of crop production with aquaponics is something that might be considered in the Solomon Islands with help from one or more development partners, MAL and the Fisheries.

I am familiar with the work being done in Singapore where large scale production of food crops, obviating imports and cost savings, is carried out by hydroponic techniques and less familiar with aquaponic methods, but believe the Solomon Islands should explore more the possibility of food production by both methods.

The PRC is said to be importing most, if not all of the Solomons exports, including agricultural production, and perhaps Chinese help in establishing both hydroponic and aquaponic greenhouses on an industrial scale could see the kind of crops cultivated to accommodate Chinese requirements and tastes.

Yours sincerely

Frank Short

www.solomonislandsinfocus.com

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