Park People’s Executive Director, Erika Nikolai, has been honoured with the Distinguished Individual Award from World Urban Parks—an international recognition that celebrates her leadership and the growing national movement Park People has helped build here in Canada.
Why are events in parks important? How do grants fit into Park People’s larger goals for creating change in city parks?
The InTO the Ravines Champions program offers people living near ravines training and support to learn, explore, and celebrate Toronto's one-of-a-kind ravines system.
For years, Geri and Gary James drove an hour outside Toronto to find nature — not realizing one of the…
Ready to rally your crew and make a visible difference in your local park? This guide walks you through everything you need to host a successful community clean-up in Toronto
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Climate community organizer, Eco-arts practitioner, Outdoor leader, Policy Analyst
Sayemin is a climate advocate committed to building a more climate-just future—one project at a time. She is passionate about bridging gaps in climate initiatives through a multidisciplinary approach rooted in arts, land-based stewardship, and cross-cultural intergenerational knowledge transfer.
An economist by education, she works as a policy analyst for the BC Public Service. Outside her professional role, she is an active climate community organizer in Vancouver, serving in various leadership roles. She is a board member of the BIPOC Sustainability Collective and a co-founder of Solastalgia, a youth-led grassroots initiative that uses creative content, art, and land-based events like eco-walks to amplify youth and intergenerational voices on eco-anxiety.
Sayemin embraces a holistic approach to climate justice advocacy, grounded in her deep connection to nature. As an aspiring outdoor leader, she is eager to integrate advocacy with land-based educational activities that inspire action and use nature as a healing space for eco-anxiety. She is dedicated to removing barriers to accessing nature, parks, and outdoor spaces for historically excluded groups – because “nature is for all”
Sayemin is certified as an Outdoor Council of Canada field leader and an Interpretive Guides Association interpretive guide.