Kingston climate groups band together for Earth Day event
Global News
Kingston climate action groups came together on Saturday to host a community event in celebration of Earth Day at Skeleton Park.
Saturday was Earth Day, and in Kingston, some local climate action groups banded together to host an event aimed at seeing a brighter future.
It’s been four years since the City of Kingston declared a climate emergency, and local environmental activist groups are still carrying on the fight.
“The Earth day event is kind of a way, again, to bring the community together through various artistic activities,” said Hannah Ascough, a member of New Climate Stories.
Climate activists young and old gathered on a sunny spring day to play and learn about the climate crisis.
Kids could recycle T-shirts, plant sunflowers and learn more about their world and what they can do to help.
Ascough said art can be a vehicle to help people avoid feeling helpless about climate change.
“We were a bit concerned that sometimes climate messaging can veer into the apocalyptic, so it does feel, especially to young people, like we have no future,” Ascough said.
April Swoboda and her young daughter June were out on Saturday, but it was far from their first climate-based activity together.