Tag Archives: community

Green Party proposes hour of darkness

I serve as secretary of the Eco-Action Committee, an official committee of the Green Party of the United States.
See the Eco-Action Committee News Ticker here.

I found this post today about an action item the Eco-Action Committee has put forth for the third Thursday of each month – Dark Earth Hour:

December 18, 2008

This holiday season, the Eco-Action Committee of the Green Party of the United States is asking Americans to observe a Dark Earth Hour from 9 to 10 p.m. tonight, the third Thursday of the month.

By turning off all unnecessary lights and appliances for that hour, we can show our understanding of the need to conserve energy as we seek to move away from destructive technologies and to wind and solar power.

The Dark Earth Hour is more than symbolic. Especially during this period of high electricity use, it can represent an actual reduction in power demand. The Eco-Action Committee encourages people to light candles, visit with family and friends, or simply take a quiet hour of down time during this busy season.

No matter what your political persuasion, the Dark Earth Hour is a reminder that we are all in this together, and we can all take this opportunity to power down for the Earth.

Buy Nothing Day in Utah

From KUTV Channel 2 UtahI am quoted near the bottom
Utahns Participate In Buy Nothing Day

While millions of Americans where rushing from store to store hunting for rock bottom deals of Black Friday, a significantly smaller portion of the population was refusing to spend a single penny on that day. 

Sarah and Derek Staffanson have decided to join the legions of people across the country taking part in “Buy Nothing Day.”  A grass roots effort to stamp out consumerism and unnecessary debt.

The Staffanson’s decided to spent this “Black Friday” decorating their tree.   Derek says for most of his life heading to the malls the day after Thanksgiving was part of his family holiday ritual.

He says during a long evolution he and his wife have decided that blatant consumerism often left him empty inside he says he still wants to buy certain things but says community service is more fulfilling.

Also celebrating “Buy Nothing Day” is Deanna Taylor.  She spent the afternoon at Library Square collecting old coat and handing them out to people who need them.

Staffanson and his wife say they enjoy living a simpler life. 

2008 Community Coat Exchange

Today was a success. We gave away about 600 coats.

How to Start the Holiday Season: Annual Community Coat Exchange on Black Friday

This will the 3rd year for the ever growing Annual Community Coat Exchange.  The first year we gave away about 150 coats.  Last year we gave away 300 coats.  Based on the donations received to date (Thanksgiving Day), it looks like we are likely to exceed last year’s total coat exchange give away.  What a great way to spend the day after Thanksgiving.
If you need a coat come get one.  If you have a coat, we know someone who can use it.
(Flyer graphic created for the Rhode Island Coat Exchange)

http://coatexchange.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/coat-exchange-have-a-heart-flyer1.jpg

Rosa Clemente – Community Organizing and Electoral Politics

Rosa Clemente, Green Party Vice Presidential candidate talk at New York University Oct 10

Community Organizing and Electoral Politics

Women involvement in activism and electoral politics

Rosa’s political history, the Green Party, being asked to run for VP by Cynthia McKinney

The imperative of building the Green Party

Attracting young people to the Green Party

Where’s radical labor?

http://votetruth08.comhttp://www.rosaclemente.com/index.html

Shot by
Craig Seeman
Patrick Dwyer
Edited by
Craig Seeman
NY

3rd Annual Imagine Peacfest a success!!!

Yesterday’s 3rd Imagine Peacefest was a success, despite being rained out a little earlier than scheduled.
View photos of the entire event.

The Eyes Wide Open Exhibit provided pause for reflection on the human cost of war.

The Opening Ceremony involved a reading of the City of Logan’s Peace Day Proclomation and the Peace Dove Procession.

There were numerous organizations who tabled and participated at the event.

Wonderful Local Utah musicians shared their time and talents for the event.

Children’s art was on display throughout the day

and a Peace Story Time for Children was held in the Art Display Room of these books
(Readers provided by student members of Westminster College and Skyline High School Roots and Shoots)

and

Films were shown highlighting the advent of International Day of Peace

and Utah veteran’s journey across Utah to tell his story about the Iraq War
.

The day was beautiful. I am looking forward to planning for next year’s event, the 4th Annual Imagine Peacefest, Saturday, September 19, 2009.

Artspace Resident Locked Out; Lawyer is medically incapacitated

Recently I have posted pieces on A Cup of Joe Coffee Shop and tenants in the Artspace Building in Salt Lake City being ousted from their space. Even more recently the Salt Lake City Weekly had a feature article on the issue.

Here is the latest news, as written to me from a person who has been involved in this from the beginning.


John Fitzen, an outspoken member of the Artspace Tenants Association
had a court date this morning. His attorney Kent Fillmore, who has
been representing the residents pretty much for free, suffered a
seizure last week and was hospitalized. He was in the hospital again
on Monday. On Monday he filed a request with the court to postpone
the hearing today because of his incapacity. He spoke with the court
recorder directly. This morning, he called the attorney for the
prosecution, Kirk Cullimore, told him he was going back into the
hospital today, and asked to postpone the hearing. Mr. Cullimore said
no. Mr Fitzen, his wife and 7 year old daughter have been locked out
of their apartment without so much as a change of clothes.

Mr Fitzen had been in touch with the ACLU on Monday, knowing of Mr.
Fillmore’s incapacity, but they have not yet been able to work on the
case. We have called Luke Garrott, the City Council member for the area.

Readers, please contact Luke Garrott:

luke.garrott@slcgov.com
801.535.7600
801.535.7651 (FAX)
801.535.7654 (Comment Line – 24 hour voice mail)

The Demise of the Jubilee Center

The Jubilee Center was “home” for many peace meetings and events from 2001 – 2006. It was owned by the Episcopal Church in Salt Lake City and not only catered to peace groups, but also provided services to homeless and low income people. The church sold the center a few years ago and built new buildings on the same lot as its church building (the Jubilee Center was in the block east of the church).

The Jubilee Center was purchased by some east coast investment firm which let it sit for almost 3 years. Last week, I saw it being torn down. The photos below show the building being demolished, with what was left of the stage still standing when I passed it:

Cup of Joe Will Open – Temporary New Home

This report is offered by A Cup of Joe Events Coordinator, Eileen McCabe:

Rosemary Winters of the Salt Lake Tribune called both Kristy and I yesterday and posted the following article:

http://www.sltrib.com/ci_10094052?IADID=Search-www.sltrib.com-www.sltrib.com

The Office Manager for Evergreene saw the article yesterday when a shorter version was posted, saw the quote “I?ve got food rotting in there,” and called Kristy to arrange a time for her to move everything out.  So Kristy will be spared the hassle of waiting for a court motion to go through its channels, taking perhaps 2 weeks. Kristy is trying to work out the logistics and it will probably be in the next couple of days. 

The second piece of good news is that Bob Evans of Rimini Coffee, Sugarhouse Coffee and Café Marmalade, who has been enormously supportive of Kristy, has offered for her to set up shop in Baxter’s Café at 1615 S. State, for either a short or long-term arrangement.  For starters, she will have full weekends starting 6PM on Friday, since Baxter’s currently is not open on weekends. She may take over the entire lease from Baxter’s. I visited Baxter’s last night, and am very optimistic.  The space is only slightly smaller that the Artspace space, it has wonderful lighting and acoustics and a friendly aura. It also has a patio out front, and lots of lawn (anyone care to run through the sprinklers?)

Poetry is back on for Saturday night!!! Same time (8:30), new place, 1615 S. State St, on the east side of the road between the high school and the community college.  There is a huge billboard on the south side of the front parking lot that has an enormous motorcycle and 100 MPH in huge letters.  The front parking lot is very small, so park in the community college parking lot.

With that in mind, as Kristy’s event’s coordinator, I’d like to invite everyone to bless the new space and participate in the grand opening of “A Cup of Joe 2.0.”  Kristy has already booked music for Friday night, a group she had booked for the old space for the same date.

Cup of Joes goes on because of the hearts and souls of those who have shared its energy.  As I said in the article, we go on because of our community, regardless of the physical space we occupy.

Please forward this noticel far and wide, call or text folks who do not have email, or who access it infrequently.  We will also post a sign on the doors at Artspace.

A Cup of Joe: Shut Down by Corporate Landlords

A few weeks ago the peace calendar included a story about A Cup of Joe coffee shop in Salt Lake, a place where members of the activist community have been able to gather and hold events, and about the landlords threatening to evict it and other tenants from the Artspace building.

http://deesings.livejournal.com/568341.html

Since then, the inevitable has occured – A Cup of Joe is currently shut down, having been locked out by the landlords with its assets inside.

Below is an account and update from Eileen McCabe who is working closely with the owner of A Cup of Joe in this situation.  Please consider doing anything you can in support of this situation – a letter, a protest, a check to help cover expenses.  Contact info@utahpeace.org if you can do anything.  Most of all, please stand up to injustices that result in things like this happening in our own community.

Thank you to everyone who was able to attend the show of solidarity and protest against Artspace on Saturday night. I am so moved by the outpouring of emotional support that has driven the poets to compose new work about Cup of Joe, including my 14 year daughter, and 10 year old son.  My son performed for the first time on Saturday.  Misty River graciously provided sound equipment and her keyboard, and came up with the idea and supplies for the signs that literally stopped traffic. There were more than 50 people present, numerous newcomers, and we were able to educate numerous passers-by about the issues, and distribute flyers with Artspace and Evergreene contact information. $58 was taken in in merchandise sales, and Kristy graciously donated her share to the poets leaving for Madison for Slam Nationals.

We are all part of something larger than Cup of Joe.  We are discovering and deciding in our hearts what is important to us, and what we want in our communities.  Further, some of us have spoken up for the first time in our lives.  Once that threshold, that tipping point towards standing up and being counted has been crossed, a voice in the wilderness will never be silenced.  We are many voices, with newly found power.  Whatever happens with the locked doors at Cup of Joe, we are a community that will continue to exist and flourish, regardless of the  walls that temporarily shelter us.

It was disappointing that only 1 media outlet showed up on Saturday.  The Deseret News posted a short two paragraphs on the event.  Since they did not provide a story with the photos,  provide the story ourselves with our comments to the article.   I’ve included my own comments.  Those of you that took photographs, please provide links to your own photographs, so that the public has a chance of seeing the real story.

Here is another tool, provided to us, ironically by the slum-lord attorney that authorized changing the locks; the name, address, phone number and email contact info for the attorney himself.  Please contact him to express your opinion of his actions.

Kirk E. Cullimore
644 East Union Square
Sandy, UT 84070
801-571-6611 – phone
801-571-4888 – fax

Here’s a web address with a way to contact him by email
http://pview.findlaw.com/view/3083757_1?noconfirm=0

Kristy is in court, even as I write, and working on her next steps.  Send good energy out to her, and I will send out an update when I hear back from her.

This isn’t over, not by a long shot!

http://deseretnews.com/sitesearch/1,5155,,00.html

I called 10 media outlets early Saturday afternoon telling them of this event.  While I am very grateful to the Deseret News for sending a photographer to this event, given the 4 hours that the photographer was present for the event, shooting protesters holding signs, poets performing and writing, I am disappointed that the Deseret News chose to post only 2 photographs.  Given the impact of this issue to the neighborhood, and the legal ramifications of the landlord’s actions, I hope that more expansive coverage of the issue is forthcoming.  The closure on Saturday morning was not due to economic woes, but to the landlord taking advantage of a court error in a hearing filing.  The business equipment of Cup of Joe has been illegally impounded, and the owner is being prevented from earning a living. The owner, Kristy Gonzalez is in court as I write.

Update from court today:
Hi Everyone,

I just got off the phone with Kristy, and Fillmore, her attorney.

They have another hearing on August 19, on the “order of restitution” which deals with the money Kristy has paid to the court for the landlord, and with the bonds she has posted.  There was no action today on  re-opening the doors.

Fillmore is planning on filing a motion to allow Kristy back in to retrieve her property.  This could also take 2 weeks to be processed.  In the meantime, food is spoiling inside, Kristy is being denied the right to earn her living, and her taxes still have to be paid.

It has been suggested that the next step to expedite action on letting Kristy in to retrieve property is to picket the places of business of the members of the board of Artspace, as well as continuing to picket outside Cup of Joe.  These would include the Mark Miller car dealerships, Xmission, as well as the half dozen banks that provide funding to Artspace.  We could also picket the attorney for Evergreene and the Evergreene office.

If you would be interested in doing picketing, please let me know, and we can start to schedule shifts.  Both the rush hours are the best times.

When the doors are finally opened to let Kristy get her property, we will need folks to help with the moving.  This will probably be late in August;  I will send details as they come.

Thank you all for your love and support of Kristy during this difficult time.  In lieu of shopping at Cup of Joe, please give support to the other indy coffee shops in town, such as Addicted, Alchemy, Sugarhouse Coffee, Nostalgia, NoBrow and Cafe Marmalade, the temporary home for Salt City Slam.