Green Block Parties

Plan a Green-Themed ‘Show & Tell’ for Your Block Party 

Click here to request one of the following FREE and fun sustainable-living activities for your block party.  Learn simple tips to help combat climate change and live in  harmony with our planet Earth

  • Mobilizing for monarchs. Cool stories of the amazing monarch butterfly help us to understand the importance of pollinators to our food system

  • Tips for a beautiful, family friendly, chemical-free lawn that benefits both families and ecosystems!

  • Strategies for eating sustainably and reducing food waste.

  • Fun ideas for plastic-free or low-plastic living.

Three Steps to Schedule a Green Event for your Block Party

  1. Select your date and complete the Oak Park Village application and petition.

  2. In order to get the recycling, compost and landfill bins from the village, complete the village’s Green Block Party Request Form.

  3. IMPORTANT:  To select one of the Green “Show & Tell” events for your block party listed above click here.  Note: Applications for block party “show & tell” events offered through Green Community Connections are open for the 2019 season.

For more information about planning a green-themed show & tell event for your block party call or email sally@greencommunityconnections.org or 773-315-1109.

‘Do It Yourself’ Ideas for Green Events at Block Parties

Most blocks have awesome expertise and resources among the residents on the block. Following are some examples of green-themed activities that residents are already doing or would like to do at their block parties:

  • Turn everyone on your block into a treehugger with a tree-tagging activity for all ages to identify your parkway trees and calculate their value. See “How to” sheet attached, compliments of Mary Chris Jaklevic!

  • Share what neighbors are doing to conserve water and prevent flooding, like installing rain barrels and rain gardens.

  • Have a garden walk to feature edible and native gardens on your block. Consider a home grown food exchange.

  • Invite the OP Library’s Book Bike to visit and/or visit the “Little Library” on your block and have a book exchange.

  • Register voters, share favorite ways to be engaged in civic activity/advocacy.

  • Set up an outdoor theater and show a movie at your block party.

  • Visit the beekeeper or chicken farmer on your block or invite someone to visit that can talk about the ups and downs of beekeeping and raising chickens.

  • Progressive dinner or tasting pot luck/share dishes from different ethnic and cultural groups.

  • Register bikes/arrange for a bike safety demo/share favorite bike routes in and around OPRF

We look forward to lots of creative DIY green block parties. Please share your stories and photos with us: sally@greencommunityconnections.org!

Mobilizing for Monarchs

The Monarch Butterfly is in trouble.
Populations of monarchs have declined 90% in the last 20 years. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is evaluating the status of the monarch butterfly for listing under the Endangered Species Act.

That’s where you come in.
It turns out that urban & suburban areas are the monarch’s best hope for survival. We can help save the monarch by providing “pockets” of habitat in every park, school, congregation and yard, whether large or small.   

Together we can make a difference:
Faced with the possibility of extinction of this beloved species, communities locally and nationally are mobilizing to increase monarch habitat. A group of partners are launching an Oak Park & River Forest area campaign to help make room for nature.

For more information call 773-315-1109.

Mobilizing for Monarchs – Resource

William Warby/Wikimedia Commons

William Warby/Wikimedia Commons

Mobilizing for Monarchs Calendar of Events

“How to” Resources:

Monarch Garden Support (West Cook Wild Ones)

How to build a butterfly and pollinator garden in seven steps (US Fish & Wildlife Service)

Register your Butterfly/Pollinator Garden to become part of the Wildlife Corridor

National Campaign to Save the Monarchs:

Monarch Joint Venture:  Partnering to conserve the monarch butterfly migration

Mayors for Monarchs Campaign (National Wildlife Federation)

Save the Monarch Butterfly (US Fish & Wildlife Service)

Sustainability Resources

Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy

Healthy Lawn, Healthy FamilyCompost for use in lawns and gardens  

Native and Edible Gardens 

Waste Reduction & Recycling

Family Friendly Lawns

We can all contribute to a healthier environment for our family, pets, butterflies and other pollinators, as well as the Des Plaines River by using natural lawn care methods, free of toxic chemicals. Who knew we could do so much good with our little patches of ground! The villages of Oak Park and River Forest are both promoting family friendly lawn care.  Link to more information about these programs below. Both villages are also offering village composting which is a great way to create “black gold,” aka, compost to help build healthy soil for use in garden and lawn care. Organic lawn maintenance tips:

  • Smart Mowing — Adjust your mower’s cutting height to at least 3-inches to maintain a taller grass blade. This increases food production for stronger roots and helps shade out weeds. Clippings are integrated into the lawn to recycle nutrients and add beneficial organic matter.

  • Smart Watering — Organic lawns only need 1-inch of water per week.

  • Home Composting — As easy as recycling, learn how to capture lawn, garden and kitchen organic matter with affordable composting systems.

Take the Pesticide-Free Pledge, and Then Post One of These Signs

For River Forest: http://vrf.us/take-the-pledge   For Oak Park: learn more here.

Keep On the Grass sign from River Forest.
Pesticide Free sign from Oak Park. All living creatures welcome.

Green Guides Share Sustainability Resources with Neighbors

The Green Guides program is being developed by PlanItGreen, and River Forest and Oak Park sustainability organizations in response to a need to share, at the neighborhood level, the many sustainability resources available to our communities. Green Guides are not expected to be experts, just to have a willingness to connect neighbors to already existing opportunities and resources.

PlanItGreen will provide a quarterly newsletter, materials, resources, talking points, and more for Green Guides to use in getting the word out to your neighbors. Residents who wish to serve as a Green Guide are asked to choose the block(s) or building that they would like to cover. You decide how best to connect to your neighbors (email, phone, in-person).

Make a big impact with little effort!

Connect with the resources you need to answer your neighbors’ questions.

Ready to Sign-up Now?

If you would like to be a Green Guide and together with your neighbors help build a more beautiful, healthy and resilient community, please follow this link  sign- up:

http://tinyurl.com/nkz89ut