Tag Archives: consumerism

Sugarhouse, continued

 I have been posting about the demise of Sugarhouse’s Granite Block.  Today’s Deseret news continues reporting about this saga in its post, Redevelopment worries Sugar House:  Residents ask City Council to save area’s eclectic feel
Councilman Sorensen is an advocate for saving the businesses and look and feel of that block, I’m not sure how that will help the businesses currently located there, because.they have all been given eviction notices and will have to be out by around July 1st. 
By Doug Smeath
Deseret Morning News

      SUGAR HOUSE ? Sugar House fans on Tuesday begged the Salt Lake City Council to save their eclectic neighborhood from a development they worry will bring a dulling down of a vibrant community.
      The council, meeting at Sugar House’s Nibley Park Elementary School for its monthly neighborhood outreach meeting, heard from about a dozen people Tuesday evening ? and received a thick stack of comment cards from scores more. Most wanted to talk about the intersection of 2100 South and Highland Drive.
      The block to the southwest of that intersection, known as the Granite block, is home to several unique local businesses ? the Free Speech Zone, Artopia, Blue Boutique, Orion’s Music, Sugar House Coffee, Pib’s Exchange and others ? but many residents and business owners worry plans for a redevelopment of the area will do away with its funky feel.
      In December 2005, the council approved a zoning change on the block to allow for buildings as tall as seven or eight stories. Landowners, including Craig Mecham Management and California-based Red Mountain Retail Group, say they have plans to upgrade the area, though details have not yet been announced. In February, businesses on the block began receiving eviction notices.
      Orion’s Music owner Andrew Fletcher on Tuesday said the zoning change “steamrolled over the wishes of the neighborhood.”
      One woman, who lives farther west in Salt Lake City but said she regularly shops on the Granite block, asked, “Why do we need to rip down that nice little Haight-Ashbury-type of street to put up more office space and more retail space that is not going to be used?”
      Landowners hoping to redevelop the Granite block have told the Deseret Morning News they have no intention to change the area’s mood ? in fact, they hope to enhance it ? and that they need to give it a face-lift because some buildings are out of shape.
      Eric Nelson of Red Mountain said his plans would see “90 to 95 percent” of the area’s buildings renovated but remaining where they are.
      The developers say the local businesses currently located there could be part of the new development, but many business owners say they doubt they’ll be able to afford it.
      Simonsen, who tried unsuccessfully to revisit the zoning change shortly after taking office a little more than a year ago, has said he doubts the redevelopment can be stopped. But that doesn’t mean the city can’t guide it in a way that would preserve its character.
      On Tuesday, he asked the council to consider a handful of possible actions and received tentative support for his ideas.
      Among them would be looking into ways to make use of a citywide study of historical areas currently under way. The study, expected to be finished in about a year, will point out areas that need protection as historic, and Simonsen wants to be ready with ways to respond if the Granite block is named one of those historic areas.
      The council was generally receptive to the idea, and it will be addressed in more detail at a future meeting.
      Simonsen also wants the city to consider aiding local businesses currently on the block with loans or grants that would help them reopen on the block once it is redeveloped.
      He said “various elements” of that idea will be presented to the council in the coming months.
      Councilman Dave Buhler said money similarly doled out in the past was typically to help offset city action, such as light-rail construction work, so the idea in this case might be a little unusual. Still, he said he was supportive of the concept.
      “Sugar House is vital, not just to the neighborhood but to our city,” Councilman Eric Jergensen said, adding the city will find ways to protect it.


E-mail: dsmeath@desnews.com

My school in the news today

Healthier lunches from the ground up:  City Academy students operate their own garden and food store

By Tiffany Erickson
Deseret Morning News

      Before this year, healthy eating didn’t mean much to Melissa Powell, a junior at City Academy in Salt Lake City.

Porter England, left, and Garrett Atkinson decide on lunch. (Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News)

Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News
Porter England, left, and Garrett Atkinson decide on lunch.

      She ate where it was convenient — the nearby McDonald’s or chips and soda from the gas station.
      But now you will find her eating sushi made with organic vegetables, fresh fruit smoothies and other healthy items available to students at the school through a student-run lunch “store” dubbed City Academy Creations.
      Schools all over the nation are making efforts to become healthier through vending choices and healthy breakfast and lunch options. And when City Academy, a charter school, moved to its new building downtown, it chose to ditch the vending machines altogether and provide its own healthy affordable goods.
      The school recently received a $1,350 Community Garden Grant from the state health department to establish what the school calls a “full circle garden” that will contribute to the school’s store.
      Spearheaded by Shea Wickelson, the school’s food science teacher, the garden is run by students who cultivate tomatoes, cucumbers, carrots and strawberries to sell in the school store for lunch.
      And the students are the chefs, farmers and marketers — hence the name “full circle.”
     

Aside from serving and selling the vegetables fresh, students at the school take cooking into their own hands. Each week students from the food science class, who all have their food handler permits, whip up a batch of hummus and create hummus platters with pita chips. They also make fresh smoothies, served alongside sushi rolls made daily.
      When the store first opened, it sold out. Since then, about 20 to 30 students visit the store at lunchtime each day.
      “Not all kids really understand the importance of healthy eating, but they get lunch from the store because it’s right there, it’s good and it’s affordable,” said Nirvana Huntington, a junior at the school who also helped create the store.

Tomato seeds are planted during a food science class at City Academy in Salt Lake City. (Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News)

Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News
Tomato seeds are planted during a food science class at City Academy in Salt Lake City.

      Wickelson said the key to success is price and convenience. A sushi roll goes for a mere $1.50, and a fruit smoothie is only a buck. The store also sells things like squash and lentil soup, fresh fruits and apple pie. What students don’t grow themselves, they buy with the proceeds.
      “It’s so much fun to be in (the kitchen) and working,” said Toni Albam, a seventh-grader. “It gives you some responsibility and job experience — it’s pretty cool.”
      “I just think it’s a really great opportunity to have kids think about where food is coming from — to think about what’s in their food and be on another side of those choices and have them be faced with that sort of decisionmaking,” Wickelson said.
      Students also have learned how to run cost analyses, nutritional analyses and create food business models. The students decide what to sell, what to charge and how much profit they make — which also covers supplies needed for the food science classes.
      “For me it’s about the kids doing authentic work — where they learn not just about something but by actually doing something — it is deeper kind of learning,” Wickelson said.


E-mail: terickson@desnews.com

The Eviction of Sugarhouse Shops – Support the “Buy-cot”

They knew it was coming.

About a month ago the Craig Mecham of Mecham Management, owner of a building that houses the heart of Sugharhouse businesses, dropped off eviction notices to those businesses and then left town for two weeks. The area is being redevloped to allow for chain stores to barge their way in and 8 story high buildings to be built, changing the entire look and feel of Sugarhouse as we know it.

In the Deseret News articleSugar House shops forced out, Orion Music Store, Andy Fletcher, owner and other Sugarhouse business owners say this was inevitable and is devastating, but shop owners are facing the music: It’s time to move on. It is likely that some businesses will not be able to survive this change. Fletcher has indicated that Orion Music is facing an end to its business.

To that end, Fletcher has called for a “buy-cot” of these businesses.

“Rather than having a funeral for Sugar House and bemoaning the fact that it’s going away — because it is going away, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it now. The decisions have been made, and the wheels are in motion — I’m advocating a ‘buy-cot,”‘ Fletcher said. “We’re inviting the public to come down, and we’ll have live music and information available so that people understand not just what happened, but where people are moving. It’ll be a festival, not a funeral. “If people want to help, if they want to do something, they should come down and buy that CD they’ve been wanting. They should buy that cup of coffee or that Italian ice, or that card from Blue Boutique. Because if it’s not financially a possibility for these businesses to move, they’ll close. But if they have some money in their pocket, and they know that the people around them will support them when they move, I’d say that most of them will continue to look very hard at finding a solution.”

I spend a lot of time in that area since my friend and sister radical cheerleader owns the radical infoshop, Free Speech Zone there, where we have are practices and where I help organize film showings and other events. I’m still having a hard time knowing that in a matter of months we will no longer have that place to do these things. I really like Fletcher’s call to action to make a bad situation into a good one for the affected businesses.

New York Town Adopts Sweatfree Policy

Nov 16, 2006 (New York State Labor-Religion Coalition) — NEW PALTZ ADOPTS SWEATFREE POLICY

On November 1, 2006 the Village Board of New Paltz, New York (pop. 6,000+) adopted a new sweatfree purchasing policy for apparel and textiles as allowed by New York state law. The Village of New Paltz has some of the oldest houses in North America and was founded in 1678. Its Village Board is led by two Green Party activists, Mayor Jason West and Deputy Mayor Rebecca Rotzler- a National Green Party Co-Chair who also led the effort to pass the sweatfree ordinance.

New Paltz’s new policy establishes a sweatfree advisory committee staffed by the Village Treasurer to implement the policy. This Advisory Committee is also charged to recommend possible membership in the new national sweatfree consortium. Apparel and textile contract information will be made public and the outside parties will be allowed to comment on companies. Contractors and subcontractors who violate the policy, such as being untruthful about actual labor standards, can be fined $5,000. New Paltz joins Suffolk County, Long Island as the second New York jurisdiction to successfully enact a sweatfree ordinance. New York City enacted a sweatfree law in 2001 that was opposed successfully to the New York Supreme Court by Presidential Candidate and former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.

SweatFree Purchasing Policies

To see which of the following policies require factory disclosure, go here.

Sweatfree procurement policies adopted in the United States as of October 2006:
States: 6
Cities: 35
Counties: 10
Dioceses: 4
School Districts: 117
Individual High Schools: 3
Total: 174

CALIFORNIA
State of California
City of Los Angeles – [Report, Ordinance]
Los Angeles Unified School District – [Report, Motion]
Port of Los Angeles
City of San Francisco – [Sweatfree Ordinance, Fair Trade, Organic]
Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District

COLORADO
Jefferson County Open School

ILLINOIS
State of Illinois

Oak Park and River Forest High School

MAINE
State of Maine [2001 law, 2006 law]
City of Bangor
City of Biddeford
City of Orono
City of Scarborough

City of Portland Public Schools
City of Bangor Public Schools

MASSACHUSETTS
City of Boston
City of Fall River

MINNESOTA
City of Minneapolis
Minneapolis Public School District
Saint Paul Public School District
Stillwater Public School District

NEW JERSEY
State of New Jersey
Archdiocese of Newark
City of Camden
City of Clifton
City of Deptford
Township of East Brunswick
City of Neptune
City of Newark
City of Redbank
Bergen County
Cumberland County
Essex County
Gloucester County
Hudson County
Mercer County
Middlesex County
Passaic County

NEW MEXICO
City of Albuquerque

NEW YORK
State of New York – [language renewed in 2006, Apparel, Sports Equipment]
Albany Diocese
Buffalo Diocese
Rockville (Long Island) Diocese
Village of New Paltz

109 school districts, including:
Albany City School District
Averill Park Central School District
Brentwood Union Free School District
Berne-Knox-Westerlo Central School District
Bethlehem School District
Central Islip United Free School District
Edinburg Common School District
Guilderland Central School District
Jordan Elbridge Central School District
Lansingburgh Central School District
Newburgh City School District
North Colonie Central School District
Northport-East Northport United Free School District
Patchogue-Medford United Free School District
Rondout Valley Central School District
South Colonie Central School District
South Glens Falls Central School District
Three Villages Central School District
Troy City School District
Voorheesville Central School District

NORTH CAROLINA
City of Durham

OHIO
City of Bedford Heights
City of Berea
City of Brookpark
City of Elyria
City of Fairview Park
City of Lakewood
City of North Olmstead
City of Parma
City of Toledo

Cuyahoga County

PENNSYLVANIA
State of Pennsylvania
City of Pittsburgh Ordinance (Dec 2004), Proclamation (July 2006)
Northampton County

RHODE ISLAND
City of Providence

VERMONT
Brattleboro Union High School

WASHINGTON
City of Olympia

WISCONSIN
City of Madison – [Resolution, Report, Ordinance]
City of Milwaukee
County of Milwaukee
Milwaukee Public School District

Visit the Worker Rights Consortium website to see the list of affiliate colleges and universities.

I am very happy with the Winter Coat Exchange that took place yesterday.

What made it all worthwhile was being able to give coats away to folks from all socio-economic levels. Well-off folks took coats, driving home the concept of reusing; Women with children that had been referred to us by a local social agency came and took coats. One young man, dressed in very thin, practically sleeveless, clothes was looking at the coats and started to walk away. We told him he could take a coat and he said “for FREE?”. We explained the coat exchange. He walked away with a warm coat on a rather cold day. He was one of many like this.

A veteran picked out a coat and profusely thanked us and stayed around to chat for awhile. An older man exchanged his thin hoodie for a warmer jacket.

Folks who donated appeared with arm loads of coats and sweaters with smiles on their faces. Some stayed and participated and others dropped off their donations as part of their errand-running for the day.

The smiles were priceless. The looks of content as folks walked away with warm clothing were “warming” in themselves.

Although we got lots of media to show up, I haven’t seen anything appearing on the TV stations that covered us, nor in the papers today. I think there were stories more important than ours to put in today’s news. But that’s o.k. We got the coverage of the feature article in “IN Utah this week” magazine and hopefully our sound bytes will be on KCPW radio Monday or Tuesday. We were listed on multiple community calendars and the Deseret News announced it as an article in the Utah section on Thursday. The reporters/videographers/photographers that did show up shared personal stories with us and it was obvious that they enjoyed being with us rather than at the stampedes at the shopping malls – by virtue of the fact that they stayed around for a long time.

The left over coats are being taken to Crossroads Urban Center Thrift Store next week.

Start saving your coats – Next year this will be even bigger. Thanks to all who participated in any way with this – from donating and coming down to hang out, to printing out flyers and posting and publicizing to all your friends, co-workers, and clients. And a special thanks to the Green Party of Rhode Island for the inspiration to do this, which got this coverage of their event:

The comfort of strangers

Continue reading

Consumerism

Unbrand America

 

Coat Exchange News

The Buy Nothing Day Winter Coat Exchange has made it into today’s news:

Deseret News

Other sites announcing this event:
Salt Lake City Weekly
Green Bloggers
Adbusters

Last minute Thanksgiving tips

Organic Bytes from the Organic Consumers Association


TreeHugger 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge: Time to Vote

TreeHugger 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge: Time to Vote

It is time to vote for your favorite entry in TreeHugger’s 100-Mile Thanksgiving Challenge. Go here to check out each of the five finalist’s recipes and then vote below for the one that is the most creative, tasty and/or appealing. The reader-voted winner will recieve a year’s worth of organic milk from contest sponsor Organic Valley. The winner will be selected after midnight tomorrow (11/23), so be sure to vote right away!

                     

Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange

This is our 1st Annual Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange. This year we have
several community co-sponsors.

As a positive, community-affirming event on this day, we are asking people to reflect on the effects of consumerism to our communities and our planet. At the same time, we are asking people to donate a winter coat they no longer need to the Coat Exchange so that it can be given to someone who needs one.

It’s not whether or not you go out for some groceries or some Christmas presents. We want people and governments to truly focus on taking care of each other and the earth, but life goes on. We do not expect to have an economic impact this year or any time soon, but we want people to think
about whether the frenzy of consumption actually helps people live better lives or take better care of their communities.

The developed countries, with 20% of the world’s population are consuming over 80% of the earth’s natural resources. Countries have always been willing to go to war for valuable resources, and the 21st century is no exception, which is why the developed countries are able to access 80% of
the world’s resources while a billion people go hungry every day and natural disasters turn into cultural disasters. The effects of over- consumption are widely apparent: global warming, deforestation, poverty, crime, despair, soil erosion, polluted water, sprawl and war.

The Holidays are more than simply consuming more and more goods and feeling we have to buy expensive presents. People want to have an enjoyable, satisfying, secure, comfortable life How many of us can honestly say we look forward to the holiday pressures awaiting us at each
year’s end. By mutual consent we trap ourselves in materialistic interpretations of holidays that are sacred.

It makes little sense to increase consumption, destroy the planet, or go to war when all it is upholding is an economy based on keeping wages as low as possible and inequality as high as possible. Surely there has to be a better way. Buy Nothing Day is about that. So if it pleases you, buy nothing for one day. As a substitute give something away to someone else who needs it more than you do. Clean out your closet and join the celebration of life on Earth. We believe you will feel better. Then please continue to think about what you buy, why you buy it, and the effects of its production on the world and the people who live here, throughout your life. Continue reading