After 15 years, volunteers at a Bushwick farm discovered themselves locked out of the inexperienced area that has fed hundreds through the years, and currently grew to become a brief house for asylum seekers. The property proprietor instructed them he doesn’t need “any complications” — and now, the gardeners are hoping town will transfer to make it an official, protected neighborhood area.
“We had been actually unaware that the scenario had modified till Wednesday, when he confirmed up fairly upset,” Spike Appel, a longtime volunteer of Bushwick Metropolis Farm, stated of the property proprietor, Faramarz Roshodesh. “He grabbed our lock and threw it in his automobile.”
The closure follows quite a few issues on the property in the previous few years. Following former Mayor Eric Adams’ order in late 2023 that restricted how lengthy migrant households may keep in a metropolis shelter, asylum seekers had been routinely sleeping on the farm grounds.
“The town put out lots of people into the road and we had been type of left with a handful of fellows that saved hopping the fence to sleep,” Appel stated. “I personally kicked them out most likely 100 instances, waking them up within the morning.”
Farm volunteers had testified repeatedly to the Metropolis Council, urging businesses to assist the migrants discover everlasting housing.

“BCF is now overrun with rats and trash, and it has been troublesome to take care of the area clear and protected for everybody to make use of,” the volunteers wrote in a November 19, 2024 assertion to the Metropolis Council Committee on Immigration and Welfare.
“The area doesn’t have enclosed buildings … so throughout the winter months it’s inhospitable, however asylum seekers who discover no higher choice find yourself sleeping in there,” the testimony continued.
Starting in 2011, volunteers have remodeled the 2 mixed vacant tons right into a backyard on the nook of Lewis Avenue and Stockton Road, the place two dozen chickens, 60 raised beds for greens, an aquaponics system, and a communal area offering free meals for the neighborhood.
“It takes a very long time to construct what we constructed there, you may’t simply decide it up and transfer it,” Appel added.
Over the past three years, lots of of asylum seekers have entered the farm, discovering meals, water, garments, neighborhood and assets. It’s additionally been a spot the place Membership A Kitchen, a mutual support group, has distributed hundreds of free meals to the neighborhood, together with as much as 1,800 every week throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, in accordance with the group.

However the farm has by no means had a proper settlement or lease with Roshodesh, the proprietor, to make use of the area, complicating its standing.
It isn’t the primary time the farm has confronted eviction. In 2017, Roshodesh despatched a letter telling volunteers it had days to close down, however after a protest and public outcry, he ultimately determined to permit the farm to remain open.
That’s why, since 2017, longtime volunteers, like Mariel Acosta, have spoken at Metropolis Council hearings and reached out to native politicians, pushing town to step in. Ideally, the group needs GreenThumb, the neighborhood backyard operator for NYC Parks and Recreation, to take over the area.
“It’s complicated and convoluted, and I assume that’s the character of forms, paperwork, going to conferences, and attempting to get in contact with politicians,” stated Acosta. “It’s simply painstaking, and it shouldn’t be taking this lengthy.”
A spokesperson for the Parks Division stated GreenThumb met with Bushwick Metropolis Farm leaders in 2025, however stated there may be at present no energetic dialogue or plan for town buying the farm.

For town to purchase the farm, Roshodesh, who didn’t reply to THE CITY’s requests for remark must comply with promote it. Then funding for the acquisition must be secured — probably from a mixture of public sources. The property would additionally need to undergo town’s prolonged Uniform Land Use Overview Process (ULURP) course of, in accordance with the spokesperson.
“I simply don’t need any complications,” Roshodesh instructed volunteers final week as he locked the farm gates. “That is an excessive amount of. I’m carried out!”
Fines and Taxes
In current months, the farm hit an deadlock as volunteers struggled to forestall individuals from sleeping on the grounds in a single day, they stated.
Gardeners stated that after weeks of reaching out unsuccessfully to the Division of Homeless Companies about serving to the lads discover shelters or housing, Appel stated members of the native precinct council advised getting a vacate order to forestall them from sleeping on the property.
However when officers from town Division of Buildings carried out their inspection, they fined the proprietor for having buildings, together with a gazebo, that had been over 7 ft tall and not using a allow.
That joint inspection with the New York Police Division and the Division of Sanitation resulted in a number of violations on the farm and its neighboring lot, 23 Lewis Ave., in accordance with DOB information.

Inspectors reported two violations, fining Roshodesh and his firm, Arrow Property, $1,250 for a 10-foot-tall gazebo that was used to distribute meals and not using a allow, in accordance with Division of Constructing information, and $2,500 for electrical wiring that took energy from a public streetlight to be used on the privately owned lot.
Roshodesh is about to look at an April 15 listening to with town’s Workplace of Administrative Trials and Hearings to deal with the violations.
The fines come as Roshodesh owes town greater than $550,000 in property taxes — $285,865 for the 23 Lewis Ave. lot and $267,771.20 for the 354 Stockton St. lot, in accordance with Division of Finance information.
Councilmember Chi Ossé, who represents the world, stated he’s working with metropolis officers, Roshodesh and the positioning’s volunteers to discover a answer.
“We’re trying into the quotation, chatting with all events concerned and see how we will chart ahead,” Ossé instructed THE CITY. “I believe neighborhood gardens are integral to this district, to this neighborhood and social alternatives for individuals at a time when issues are very divisive.”
For Acosta, the farm is necessary due to what it represents.
“It’s been an area of pedagogy, of transmission of information from elders locally to us, who’re like older millennials, to the youth who had been little youngsters,” she stated. “It’s very significant and an area of respite for an space that doesn’t have many inexperienced areas.”

