Thursday, January 28, 2010

$5,000.00 Prize for Creative Neighborhood Project

The City of Bellevue recently announced a neighborhood match program for projects involving neighborhood labor on City land:
click here for details on how to win the $5,000.00 prize.

Submission deadline for consideration is March 1st, 2010.

It seems like a great idea for the community to work together on, except...ideas like the ones pictured below all involve private land, businesses owned by landlords who aren't a part of the community. About the only land the City actually owns are the sidewalks. The bus stops, owned by Metro, are off-limits. What we really need is a plan which engages the land-owners.


Community garden/pea patch?


A mural?


Farmer's Market?



Community kiosk?
















Friday, January 15, 2010

Healthy Corner Stores


As reported earlier this week by Ruby de Luna on KUOW:
King County Pushes For Healthy Corner Stores

"Most people go to a grocery store or supermarket for food. But for many residents in South King County, the convenience store is where they shop. Without a car or adequate bus service going to the grocery store is a challenge. So their options are narrowed down to fast food restaurants or convenience stores. King County health officials are trying to change that. A corner store in West Seattle's Delridge neighborhood could be a model for giving residents healthier food choices."


The Super 24 store on Delridge Way looks like most convenience stores. The shelves are stocked with chips, candy and snacks. Near the register the hot case is filled with corn dogs and fried chicken, fresh out of the fryer. Also near the register there's a basket of apples, bananas and oranges.

Singh: "I have 4 to 5 customers every morning they take bananas, they take apple. Those ladies they go office, they buy cigarette sometimes, but they take the fruit."

That's store owner Bhim Singh. When he bought the business in 2006, adding fruit was one of the many changes he made. At first he sold a little. But eventually sales picked up. Today Mr. Singh's produce offering has expanded. There are lemons and limes in the refrigerator. By the doorway a small bin holds russet potatoes, onions and ginger. Super 24 is not a likely place for produce, but more and more neighborhood customers are coming here for things other than snacks.

Singh: "Everybody know, if they go market, Safeway, they go I miss onion, I miss the tomato, they say let's go Super 24 and they find (it) here."

Mr. Singh is part of a pilot project by the Delridge Neighborhood and Development Association. The neighborhood group is working with Seattle–King County Public Health to help convenience store operators to stock up on fresh fruit and vegetables. Maria Reyes is a Delridge resident and member of the neighborhood group. She says they're not telling storekeepers to stop carrying chips and soda. The idea is to give customers a variety of choices, healthy choices.


Reyes: "We're not saying we're going to come in and change your store; you're just going to have specific healthy foods. No. We're saying we're going to limit certain things and have healthier options also."

The neighborhood group also designed special labels that are posted on shelves to help customers identify low–fat or healthier food items. For many Delridge residents the ability to get healthier options is not easy. The closest supermarket is in White Center, a neighborhood just two miles south. But getting there requires a car, or a long bus ride. There are no walkable paths to the grocery, either. At the same time there are at least a couple dozen convenience stores in a neighborhood of 30,000 residents. That means their choices are limited to processed, high–fat, calorie–dense foods. As a result, Delridge and other low–income neighborhoods have higher rates of chronic diseases like diabetes.

Kreiger: "Place matters and where you live has an important influence on your health."

Dr. Jim Kreiger heads the chronic disease and injury prevention unit at Seattle–King County Public Health.

Kreiger: "We know for example that low income neighborhoods have less access to parks, less green space, there are higher density of fast food restaurants, there tend to be less access or fewer supermarkets per person in those areas. That then contributes to the higher rates that we see in those neighborhoods of obesity, diabetes and so on."

For years residents have lobbied for a full–service grocery store to serve Delridge and nearby communities. They even looked at starting a farmers market. But there are major logistical and financial hurdles to overcome. So public health officials and neighborhood organizers are working with existing corner stores like Super 24. The county provides technical assistance like how to handle perishable items and make sure foods stay fresh, or link store operators with potential partners. Organizers also want to help corner stores put systems in place in order to accept food assistance cards. Erin MacDougall is program manager of the county's Healthy Eating/Active Living (HEAL) program.

MacDougall: "These benefits require some new technology in stores — EBT card readers and eligibility from the store operator to be able to accept the benefits. So this element is one that we're very committed to because we know that many of the people with these benefits have very limited access to healthy foods and these stores are sometimes the only option they have."

The convenience store program is one of many health initiatives the county hopes to expand to other low–income communities. Recently it applied for federal grants through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC.) One request is for $14 million for tobacco prevention programs, and another $20 million to address the county's obesity epidemic. Health officials will learn by late February whether the programs will be funded.

Singh: "Maybe that corner there, the microwave."

Back at the Super 24 store, Bimh Singh and Maria Reyes talk about adding greens. Question is where to put them.

Singh: "So maybe I can make big stand there."

Reyes: "We're in the process now of getting him a refrigerator. So we're going to get him a new refrigerator and put it there so he can put his healthier foods there."

Singh: "Like spinach, cilantro, those kind you know."

There seems to be enough demand to make it work. Singh says when he first started carrying fresh fruit and vegetables he sold about 10 pounds a month. These days he figures he sells 50 pounds. And it's not just the residents who rely on his store for fresh food. Singh says even the folks at a nearby pizzeria have come in when they miss their produce delivery.


© Copyright 2010, KUOW

Further Adventures of Neil and Yvette


Neil and Yvette, fresh from Syria, and now in Bolivia (after three months in Asia and three months in the Middle East they are now ensconced there for three final months--at least I think that's the plan).

I wish I knew what the writing said in the mural above. Perhaps Yvette or Neil, with all their language study, will translate it one day for me. It doesn't take a linguist, though, to see the joy here, at arriving in a different land, and I think I'm even beginning to get the whole high-heel thing, even though my feet would curl their toes up at the thought of walking around in them.

Neil has always been one of the most focussed, productive people I know. This might give you an idea of how busy he can get:

"The only thing to complain about has been that my bed (our room has two singles) is rather cup shaped and morning finds my back urging me to move towards vertical – which is good in that it has moved me to explore the city early in the morning and be up around 5:30 a.m… This morning I had studied my Spanish, drawn a picture, read a novella, and explored the Mercado campesino before Yvette managed to rouse herself."


Makes me feel such a layabout! And this--


"I think this world contains many worlds – and we are blessed to be here – talking politics, feeding pigeons, pondering llama fetuses, visiting lunar landscapes, buying flowers, eating chocolate, negotiating for humintas, renting a house, watching babies be swaddled with packing straps into a papoose…"

Thursday, January 14, 2010

The school formerly known as Eastside Catholic

For a beautiful photo by eff-stop local of the current demolition work at a neighborhood schoolclick here

Art in the Neighborhood


Some very professional graffiti has suddenly appeared at Stod's, opposite the Red Apple and home to a longtime local batting-cage business. This is the cruddiest blank wall in the neighborhood and with its lovely southern exposure I've long thought it would be the perfect place for a mural or community garden. I don't mind the graffiti, although I know its days are numbered. And local residents will think we're in the midst of a major crime wave. They might even try to blame the skateboarders.

Somehow the fact that someone cared enough to paint something on the old grocery store wall (a wall which is in the center of the neighborhood and we all pass by on a daily basis) proves there's still signs of life about. Stod's wall has been looking ever more uncared-for since the Red Apple closed and to me the graffiti is something of an improvement. Just look at those happy bare feet! Not sure whose tag it is...my neighbor Steve knows all the gangs hereabouts so I'll check with him.

Lunch with Joyce

Aaah, Bellevue. Does anything so epitomize a downtown as much as a shoe made of artisanal chocolate? I think it's the perfect symbol for our city. I'm not being snarky--I say this with profound respect for the artistic genius of the resident chocolatier Lisa Degoix.The women who come in to this patisserie wear gorgeous boots and waist length leather jackets in every hue. All eyes turn to whoever comes through the door, checking first the footwear, then the outfit, finally the haircut. The lone man here keeps his eyes on his computer, looking slightly out of place. I definitely feel out of place. But I'm here with my friend Joyce, who makes me feel comfortable wherever we are. And the croissants are divine.

In addition to shoes, there are Eiffel Towers in chocolate. And figs enrobed in chocolate.
Pear caramel mousses and tiramisu
Napoleons and pistachio mousse



Belle Pastry, where the chocolate shoe reigns supreme on Main Street in olde Bellevue. How had I never known about this quintessential bit of Bellevue before?

Monday, January 11, 2010

Paul's Katrina

A lot of what I know about Hurricane Katrina I learned from my friend Paul over at Citizen K. He's been to New Orleans eight times and writes eloquently about his love for the Crescent City.

I hadn't seen this post before. The photos of the houses moved me so much. I've never seen anything like them. Because they're nothing like the images of destruction which accompanied the news reports they speak to me in a quieter, deeper way.

"A week ago today, we joined ten other people and toured the Katrina-damaged areas of New Orleans. This amounts to 80 per cent of the entire city, an expanse of 144 square miles, or the size of seven Manhattans. Katrina-related damage extended to four parishes: Orleans, Jefferson, Placquemines, and St. Bernard's. As we discovered on the tour, little of it need have happened: Although touched off by natural forces, Katrina was largely a man-made disaster."
click here for more from Citizen K's blog entry.

The hole in the roof indicates the family inside had to force their way through the attic to await rescue by boat.

An emergency crew from Georgia found no bodies here.


Although it looks intact, this house was scheduled to be torn down by the City.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Three new synthetic soccer fields for Newcastle

Click here for the latest on Newcastle's 33.5 acre sports park proposal. When I saw how large the proposal was, I thought about our soccer players having to make do with our little 2+ acre field and wondered how they feel about having three synthetic soccer fields so close by. Couldn't we just use those ones and pocket our $1.8 million earmarked for turf and spend it on, I don't know, an abandoned supermarket or something?

I'm serious! Stella and I plan to visit visit the off-leash dog area regularly.

The plan is broken into three phases which will cost a total of (sharp intake of breath) 14.7 million dollars:

"The first phase is scheduled to include the installation of a natural turf softball/Little League field and two play areas.

The second phase is scheduled to include the installation of a synthetic turf baseball field, two synthetic turf softball/Little League fields and two synthetic soccer fields.

The third phase is scheduled to include the installation of another synthetic turf soccer field, a synthetic turf lacrosse field, at least three informal practice football fields and the fenced, off-leash dog area.

'It’s a great design for Newcastle,'(Parks Program Manager Michael) Holly said. “It has all the elements that we look for in making an athletic park.'”





Oh and that reminds me:
If you haven't already, check out "Parks and Recreation" the 2 year-old sitcom featuring Amy Poehler. I'm sure there are many City Planners out there watching it basking in the glow of "finally! some recognition!" tinged with the knowledge that this recognition is won through painful exercises in humiliation and office politics. As it's produced by "The Office" folks, it isn't surprising that the characters are obnoxious and loveable all at once.

Happy New Year!


Happy New Year!

One of my resolutions was to walk more often. With the dog. For Stella, a walk is not a walk without lots of off-leash time. Here's a great description of today's walk from effstop in our neighborhood of Lake Heights, where there are marked trails through a ravine. It's where Coal Creek has managed to find it's way from Cougar Mountain, under Coal Creek Parkway, and then is shunted via fish ladders and weirs under I-405 to arrive at the shores of Lake Washington.

And here"s an account of my friend T's walk on the other side of town, near Microsoft HQ: at Premium T


Happy walking everyone!