Monday, August 24, 2009

Bayview Outdoor Film Fest - Saturday Sept 12th


The Bayview Outdoor Film Festival at Quesada Gardens is scheduled for Saturday, September 12th beginning at 6:30. A second, and more "low-key," film night will follow on Sunday evening.

Pre-film fun includes free local food cooked up by volunteers from Jackrabbit Catering, and served by youth from Old Skool Cafe. Music and dance lessons for the inspired dancers and curious newbies. University of San Francisco volunteers will be on hand. Informal art, performance, and other activities are also planned.

Short films about Bayview Hunters Point and classic cartoons from the 1940's to more recent times will be shown beginning at dusk (about 8pm). The Karl Paige and Annette Smith Community Service Award, which was presented to Steve Aiello last year, will be presented to another hero serving our community.

It's an event not to be missed, and it's all free! Just remember: your chair is your ticket (as we have just a few).

Heart of Bayview vibrant Saturday




The Landmark Tree Tour, organized by SF Environment, ended at the Quesada Gardens where 13 Canary Island Date Palm Trees were admired. James Ross is shown speaking the group of nearly 40 visitors.

Jonathan Bonato (left) contributes the photo of members of Soka Ghakai posing with Jeff Adachi. Soka Ghakkai, a Bhuddist group with deep roots in Bayview, shared a Victory Over Violence display on Mendell Plaza.

James Ross contributes the photo of residents lining up at the Joseph Lee Rec Center for BMagic's annual backpack giveaway.

The Bayview Hill Neighborhood Association hosted a block party Saturday. If you have pictures of that event, we'd love to post them. Email

Citizenship celebrated at Quesada

Neighbors and friends of Sudeep Motupalli Rao celebrated Sudeep as a new citizen of the United States on Sunday, August 16th by gathering at the Quesada Gardens community mural site and sharing food and laughter.

The gathering was a community affair that Sudeep organized, boasted foods from the honoree's native India, and was as spirited as Sudeep himself!

The pictures and graphic layout shown here were contributed by Jonathan Bonato, who once lived on the 1700 block of Quesada. Jonathan became known for his beautiful floral photography which documented the growth of the Quesada Gardens from an artful perspective. He know lives not far from the gardens, and remains involved with the community-building work there.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Food access in Bayview - UPDATE

Robin Nicolaus, Ann Berry, Rhonda Winter, Michael Janis, Roberto Varga, and Jeffrey Betcher (not pictured) talk with FoodsCo Store Manager Tim Arrivas during a walk-through of the store.

Access to nutritious food at a reasonable price is a big issue for those who live in Bayview Hunters Point. Unless you grow your own, finding a decent carrot may well require spending time in a train, bus or car.

Many community-based groups have been working to change that, and some existing food retail businesses are responding to the gap in services.

A collaboration of community groups, government agencies and business leaders, called SEFA (Southeast Sector Food Access Working Group, has been meeting for years to improve access to healthy foods by supporting urban agriculture, attracting new food options to the neighborhood, working with existing food retailers to improve their offerings, and creating community-based education and advocacy responses.

The group administerered a survey to residents two years ago in which 94% of respondents said they would support new food options in the neighborhood, an astounding expression of community concern. Well over half of the respondents said they bought their food outside the neighborhood, helping to explain the $38 million in annual food retail leakage in Bayview.

The survey also showed that residents were sorely critical of what are still the two main food options in the neighborhood: SuperSave Market and FoodsCo (a division of Kroger).

Customers of SuperSave Market on 3rd Street will have noticed that the fruits and vegetables are more prominent now than they used to be, and that a deli with more healthful choices has been created.

Community members and store management walked through FoodsCo a year ago, and walked the same store again last July, looking for opportunities for improvement and evidence of progress. The group found that, while staff is concerned and working hard, and while the fruits and vegetables are competitive in quantity and quality, there was no improvement in the cleanliness of the store.

Some participating community members felt the store was worse than a year ago with regard to cleanliness, and expressed additional concerns about marketing of unhealthy options, and aisle obstructions that could be safety hazards.

Prices at FoodsCo remain lower than at other stores, and some cosmetic changes to the store, mostly exterior ones, have helped make the parking lot a better experience for customers.

Healthier products, like whole wheat bread and organic milk, which FoodsCo began stocking as a result of earlier advocacy, did not sell well at first. Now, however, those and other healthier products are selling much better, and store staff have received requests for high-end cheeses.

The store manager, Tim Arrivas, an impressive leader who started with the company in 1982 in an entry-level position and worked his way up, gave the group its tour. Arrivas proved open to customer feedback. The produce manager, Kin Tsui, was clearly doing all he could to ensure the quality of produce the store offered.

Other food retail options have been appearing along 3rd Street, including a remade Community Produce Market," a new bakery, and a fruit and vegetable stand at Upper Crust Deli.

Urban food production in community and backyard gardens that results from community-building and workforce development goals, are becoming trendsetting phenomenon. A farmers' market facilitated by Hunters Point Family and SF Environment is finishing its sixth year.

More information: Access to healthful food is good prevention for chronic health problems that are more prevalent in Bayview Hunters Point than other neighborhoods.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Ideas for using Bayview plums

Click an image to enlarge it.


Are plums piling up? Bayview's trees typically bear fruit later in the season than others, even those whose homes are close as the east bay.

But even in Bayview, the season is coming to and end. The last of the plums will go to pests, compost, or preserves.

If you know a couple tricks, it's easy to turn the plum pile into jam or sauce. In fact, the more ripe the plum, the sweeter the result.

Quick tips include adding pectin, playing with a touch of ginger root, and trying the results in your cooking (if you can stop eating toast and jam).

Gospel brunch a hit at the new Powell's

The colors are red and gold, the food is down home soul, and the vibe is all about community youth. It's the Old Skool Cafe Gospel Brunch at the new Powell's restaurant on 3rd Street at Underwood every Sunday from 1:30 to 4pm.

Bayview Footprints Network representatives joined Wells Fargo Bank and other supporters of Old Skool Cafe at the kickoff brunch on August 2nd, the first in a series of eight events. Young people learning life skills serve the tables and entertain guests, helping dish up fried chicken, greens, yams, mac & cheese, and other Powell's favorites.

Pictured is our server, Vivi, fashionably sporting her Old Skool touch of red.

School children with asthma: Get help at school


Rene Gonzalvez wants children who have asthma and their parents to know that their public school can help.

Rene, Executive Director of the Alpha and Omega Asthma Resource Center in Bayview Hunters Point, is helping get the word out about the Asthma Action Plan.

“Most people don’t know about this resource,” he said in a phone interview recently, “and children can suffer as a result.”

Every public school should have Asthma Action Plan forms available, forms that can alert teachers to the special needs of students with asthma, make it possible for children to carry inhalers in school, and even help families obtain often expensive medications at no cost.

Asthma is much more prevalent in Bayview Hunters Point than most other San Francisco neighborhoods, can have severe health consequences for young people, and raises a barrier to achievement at school.

The Asthma Action Plan emerged as a key recommendation from the San Francisco Asthma Task Force, and is supported by prominent state and national healthcare organizations.

“Parents of children with asthma should ask their children’s teachers or the school’s principal about the Asthma Action Plan,” Rene said.

For more information, stop by the Alpha and Omega Asthma Resource Center at 4909 Third Street