EAT~DANCE ~SING~PAINT & ACTIVATE
Circle Food 4 Thought!
Kick-off Campaign to Re-Open the Circle Food Store
DATE: August 5, 2009
TIME: 6:30pm
WHERE: Circle Food Store Parking lot
LOCATION: 1522 St. Bernard Ave.

FEATURING
•    The Hot 8 Brass Band (Brass Band) www.hot8brassband.com
•    Saddi Khali (Spoken Word) www.myspace.com/saddikhali
•    Chuck Perkins (Spoken Word) www.voices.e-poets.net/PerkinsC
•    Elizabeth Traina and Ivan Watkins (Muralists )
•    Mondo Bizarro and Fyre Youth Squad, (Digital Media) www.mondobizarro.org
•    Upper 9th Ward Farmers’ Market, fresh produce and prepared foods

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
CIRCLE FOOD 4 THOUGHT!
Campaign to Re-open Circle Food Store

For More Information, Contact:
Khalil Shahyed
504-259-1673
7th Ward Neighborhood Center
504-373-5117
circlefood4thought@gmail.com

“How many of you remember the Easter holidays, with all the Easter rabbits, pecan, heavenly hash and gold brick eggs???? The snack bar in the old days was the bomb. Gumbo crabs, shrimp, catfish and crawfish were to die for. You could also purchase school uniforms and supplies for your kids at Circle Food Store. Cash checks, purchase money orders and pay your utility bills there too.”

NEW ORLEANS, July 23, 2009 – The kick-off event of the Campaign to Re-open Circle Food Store, CIRCLE FOOD 4 THOUGHT! will take place at 6:30PM on WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, AT 1522 ST. BERNARD AVE. in the CIRCLE FOOD STORE PARKING LOT.

This event will include a variety of activities, including: the unveiling of a mural by local artists, muralists Elizabeth Traina and Ivan Watkins, spoken word by SADDI KHALI and CHUCK PERKINS, brass band music from THE HOT 8 BRASS BAND, a marketplace featuring local fresh produce and prepared foods vendors from various FARMERS’ MARKETS, audio recordings of stories about the store by community members produced by MONDO BIZARRO and FYRE YOUTH SQUAD, and testimonials by community members and the store’s owner, DWAYNE BOUDREAUX.

Additionally, there will be opportunities for attendees to sign postcards to local officials pushing for the store’s re-opening, and for recording memories and stories about CIRCLE FOOD. In addition to community members, we will be inviting other local neighborhood organizations, food-related organizations, local politicians, and local business owners.

HISTORY
-    Circle Food Market opened in 1919 as a farmer’s market.
-    In 1938, the store was formally incorporated and eventually became a full grocery market.
-    It was the first African-American owned and operated grocery store in New Orleans.
-    The store has been closed since Hurricane Katrina caused massive flooding and structural damage.
-    Bring Back Circle Day – August 25, 2007 – brought out over a thousand local residents to shop at an open air market held in the Circle Food Store parking lot.

WHY KEEP CIRCLE FOOD STORE LOCALLY OWNED?
-    60 cents of every dollar spent at a locally owned store is reinvested in the local economy.
-    20 cents of every dollar spent at a chain store (e.g., Walgreens or WalMart) is reinvested in the local economy.
-    6 cents of every dollar spent at a big box retail grocery (e.g., Rouses or Albertsons) is reinvested in the local economy.

Benefits of a Community Owned-Cooperative Grocery
-    A community-owned grocery ensures local ownership.
-    A community-owned grocery can help to keep prices low because the goal is not private profit but rather to meet the shopping needs of the community.
-    Profits from a community-owned grocery belong to the whole community rather than to individual investors.
-    Community ownership means shared responsibility for and investment in the grocery store’s success, thus strengthening the community.
-    Community ownership empowers local people to have greater control over local economic development decisions.

CIRCLE FOOD 4 THOUGHT! will also serve as one of several Community Renewal events held in conjunction with the Urban Bush Women Summer Leadership Institute, bringing community members of the 7th Ward and surrounding areas together with other supporters of the Circle Food Store to celebrate the store’s rich history and push for its re-opening.

Sponsors:

7th Ward Center
The 7th Ward Neighborhood Center is a community-based neighborhood center located in New Orleans’ historic 7th Ward area. Sponsored by Neighborhood Housing Services of New Orleans, the 7th Ward Neighborhood Center opened in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina to provide community members with a space where neighbors can come together to reconnect and organize and to participate in the rebuilding of their lives and neighborhoods.

Neighborhood Housing Services of New Orleans (NHS NOLA)
NHS NOLA was founded in 1976 as a private, non-profit housing corporation.  It was created in the belief that a partnership between local residents, financial institutions, businesses, and local government working together can stop decline, promote reinvestment, and restore pride and confidence in urban neighborhoods.

Urban Bush Women
Urban Bush Women (UBW) seeks to bring the untold and under-told histories and stories of disenfranchised people to light through dance. We do this from a woman-centered perspective, as members of the African Diaspora community, in order to create a more equitable balance of power in the dance world and beyond. www.urbanbushwomen.org

Junebug Productions
The Mission of Junebug Productions is to create and present artwork of the highest quality that encourages and supports African Americans in the Black Belt South who are working to improve the quality of life available to themselves and others who are similarly oppressed and exploited.
www.junebugproductions.org

 July 8, 2009

by Emilie Bahr, America’s Quarterly blog http://www.americasquarterly.org/node/712

Just upriver from the French Quarter—New Orleans’ oldest and most famous district—the wrought iron balconies and handsome Creole townhouses give way to a scruffier set of neighborhoods that are getting lots of attention lately thanks to new development plans.

The Faubourg Marigny and Bywater districts in recent years have become the city’s new havens of bohemia—places where artists, musicians and eccentrics thrived after the French Quarter became overrun with tourists (many of them in search of 3-for-1 beer specials) and wealthy folks.

Now, locals—and good music—are more likely to be found at one of the bars in the Marigny than along bead-laden Bourbon Street.

Hurricane Katrina—the 2005 storm that went down as one of the deadliest in U.S. history—only strengthened the two neighborhoods’ appeal. Like the French Quater, they escaped serious flooding due to their strategic location along the Mississippi River, on some of the city’s highest ground. Today, these traditionally working-class neighborhoods are also the site for an ambitious project set to break ground in the fall that will transform much of the riverfront into a park. Not surprisingly, housing values have skyrocketed and investors are busy buying up the peeling shotgun structures that can still be had at bargain prices.

Running just north of these two neighborhoods is St. Claude Avenue—a stark dividing line between areas of increasing vibrancy and those where the poverty is more heavily entrenched and the flood damage, even four years after Katrina, pronounced. St. Claude today is a patchwork of grand and ramshackle buildings, many of them boarded up and abandoned or donning signs advertising payday loan outlets and fast-food joints. Followed for a few miles, St. Claude leads into the city’s infamous Lower Ninth Ward.

But the avenue is staging a comeback. It is already home to a burgeoning arts community, with galleries and music venues cropping up with regularity alongside funky standards with names like Sweet Lorraine’s and Saturn Bar.

This spring, a group of MIT urban planning students adopted the avenue, tasked with developing a plan for revitalization. In May, they presented their findings at a former St. Claude public school that has been converted into artists’ studios and a performance space.

There is also talk of bringing the city’s iconic streetcar back to the avenue, which was once home to one of 26 streetcar lines that crisscrossed the city at the peak of service in the mid-1920s. Plans to extend the streetcar to St. Claude Ave. have been in the works since the late 1990s, but floundered after funding for the project proved elusive. Transit officials and streetcar advocates are now optimistic that the plan can be realized with the help of public transit funding included in the federal stimulus package. The proposed extension is dubbed Desire, after the streetcar line that once ran parallel to St. Claude and lent its name to Tennessee Williams’ play, A Streetcar Named Desire.

Among the other players agitating for the St. Claude transformation is developer Pres Kabacoff, who intends to soon begin construction on a multi-million dollar “Healing Center” to be housed in a former furniture store along the avenue. The multi-purpose center will include such signature urban amenities as a yoga studio, food co-op, organic café, and meditation space. An athletic 60-something who sports a silver goatee, Kabacoff, through his firm, was responsible in the early 1980s for the redevelopment of the city’s Warehouse District, then a mishmash of discarded one-time manufacturing facilities, into the high-end condos and apartments of today.

Kabacoff’s current venture, undertaken with his voodoo priestess girlfriend, has garnered widespread praise. Still, there are those who wonder how they figure in to the grand plans being hatched in their midst. The concerns are perhaps most pronounced among the residents of the mostly poor, African-American neighborhoods on the northern side of St. Claude.

As Reggie Lawson, an African-American resident of a nearby neighborhood told me: “You can’t force evolution. They want coffee shops and antique boutiques and on and on and on. That’s not the history of the neighborhood.”

His concerns might be exaggerated, but they speak to an ongoing challenge among myriad ones confronting New Orleans as it continues to rebound from Katrina: balancing the new opportunities that stand to benefit the city as a whole with the interests of those that help make it so special in the first place.

Emilie Bahr is a guest blogger to AmericasQuarterly.org. She is a staff writer at New Orleans CityBusiness.

The Univesal project was described by James Gill today in The Time Picayune, and although much of the article focused on the off-topic issues for us, there were a couple of excellent highlights.

Continue reading »

We had a wonderful potluck dinner yesterday at the First
Pilgrims Baptist Church in the St. Roch neighborhood. About 40 people
attended and shared a great dinner. We gained 6 new members at this
meeting and folks are really getting excited about owning their own
co-op grocery. Our membership committee plans to continue having
potluck dinners in rotating neighborhoods near our future store.
February’s potluck will be in the Bywater, and we are considering the
Treme for our March potluck. When we know the dates and locations they
will be sent out as part of the weekly announcement. I envision our
potlucks getting bigger and bigger each month!!

The January 12th issue of the Renaissance Project’s Downtown Neighborhood Market Consortium newsletter contains a statement of support for our efforts to open a storefront at St. Roch and St. Claude.

Healthy Affordable Groceries for Everyone

We support the efforts of New Orleans Food Community, Inc. to open a food cooperative in the Universal Furniture building in 2009. The food co-op will sell local produce, local seafood, bulk and packaged natural foods, and whatever else the membership asks for. The New Orleans Food Community currently operates a monthly buying club through which allows members to order on-line from a natural foods wholesaler in Arkansas who brings the food to New Orleans. One-time membership fees are on a sliding scale ranging between $25-$100. To learn more about the food co-op attend their potluck dinner on Monday, January 14, 2008, at 6:30 p.m., at First Pilgrims Baptist Church at 1228 Arts Street (near the corner of Franklin and Marais).

from downtown neighborhood market consortium newsletter, Jan 12, 2008

Thanks for the support you guys! Check out the newsletter for regular information about what is featured at the Upper Ninth Ward Farmer’s market every Saturday from 1 to 4pm at the Holy Angel’s parking lot at 3500 St. Claude Avenue.

We have gained 2 new members this week bringing our founding member total up to 76. We continue to grow and are working on strategies to increase this rate of growth so we can meet our short term goal of having 300 members by May 1. We are having our first potluck dinner of the new year next Monday, Jan. 14 at 6:30 p.m. in the St. Roch neighborhood at the First Pilgrim Baptist Church at 1228 Arts (half a block from the corner of Franklin and Marais). As always our potluck dinners are open to anyone and everyone. Friends, family, adn children of all ages are welcome. This is a very important community event and we encourage everyone to attend. It is very essential that our current members and others who have been involved with the co-op attend to help welcome new faces to our food co-op.

We had success with our December info meeting and are hoping to repeat this with our January potluck/info meeting. Our thorough flyering of the Marigny/Bywater was a large part of the reason we had a good attendance at this December meeting. We plan to do widespread door to door flyering in the St. Roch and surrounding neighborhoods for this potluck and info meeting. Please call John at 914-6936 if you can help with this effort. If you aren’t available to help with flyering, please bring a friend to the potluck or spread the word in other ways. We are gradually getting closer to our membership goals and our larger goal of opening a storefront, and we will need an even larger and more inclusive and widespread effort to ensure that our store opens. At this critical time in our development we need the widespread involvement of our membership and our community to open our store. A good attendance at this potluck and other community outreach events is essential in growing our membership and increasing our community involvement and support which will both be necessary for our store to open.

Get involved!! We are having our next membership committee meeting on Saturday Jan. 12 at 4 p.m. at the Sound Cafe. This is a great way for people to get involved with growing our membership and community outreach. We are currently working on many strategies to grow our membership and spread the word about what we are doing. There are many ways to be involved regardless of interest or skill level. We are excited about continuing to see our co-op infused with new faces and fresh ideas in the new year.

Aug 282007

There is a new blog available for folks seeking news about food issues in New Orleans, LA. The byline is “Local food news, action and surveys about our Alligator territory bioregion” and you can find it here http://nolafoodnews.blogspot.com/

The NOFC Buying Club got a mention in the Times-Picayune Living section today in an article on
how to save money on groceries:

“43. Join a food co-op. The New Orleans Food Co-op Buying Club is up and
running, according to its Web site. Members order organic food online
and split the cases as well as the work to sort it into individual
orders. Details are at www.nolafoodcoop.org

Here’s the link to the full article, we’re on pg 7 of the on-line story.

The “Food Briefs” column of the December 1st issue of the Times-Picayune discusses our plans to open a store at the Melonhead Cafe. There are some nice quotations from John Calhoun, and a mention of joining the co-op.

Nov 252005

The Greater New Orleans Community Data Center (GNOCDC) have released a new set of data and maps capturing the effect of Hurricane Katrina on the city, and tracking the recovery effort so far. Some of the new topics, as described in their press release:

  • What was the extent of the flooding?

  • How many citizens are returning and to what parts of town?

  • Where are the zip code boundaries?

  • Where did we all go? Where have former New Orleans residents evacuated?

  • What’s the elevation of different neighborhoods?

  • Where are there concentrations of historic housing outside the protection of federal historic districts?

  • What neighborhoods had the highest percent of households without cars to evacuate in?

  • What progress is being made in rebuilding New Orleans?

We’ve posted announcements about GNOCDC data before: they provide a fascinating view of New Orleans demographics in multiple formats including graphic maps. The Greater New Orleans Community Data Center is a product of Nonprofit Knowledge Works and is supported in part by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Technology Opportunities Program. They provide a wonderful source of information for grant-seeking area nonprofits.