Sunday, July 25, 2010

Disturbing facts about food in District 10


A recent Briefing on Hunger and Food Insecurity in San Francisco For the San Francisco Board of Supervisors has special significance for the Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood in District 10, and our community's children, youth, seniors and people living in poverty. The Briefing was produced by the San Francisco Food Security Task Force.

While many San Franciscans may not qualify for federal nutrition programs, they are still at risk for hunger. Of all Supervisorial districts, District 10 has the lowest median income per capita, the 2nd highest number of residents served by pantries, and the highest number of individuals receiving food stamps.

Over 33,000 breakfast, lunch and snacks are served each day, during the school year, through the San Francisco Unified School District. During the summer months, lunches are served through summer school, and through partnerships between the Department of Children, Youth and their Families and community-based organizations. In 2010, summer school may be limited in San Francisco. DCYF is planning to serve more children through their summer lunch program. In 2009, District 10 had the most summer lunch sites of all districts, serving 2,296 children.

Older adults throughout California face a shortage of nutrition resources. Of all Supervisorial districts, District 10 is home to the 2nd lowest number of seniors living in the district, and the 6th highest number of city-funded congregate meals served.

The San Francisco Food Security Task Force was established at the request of District 10 Supervisor Sophie Maxwell. For more information, contact Paula Jones at the Food Security Task Force at (415) 252-3853 or by email.

Exploring faith at USF and Quesada Gardens

USF educators Seth Wachtel, Melinda Stone, and Dayle Smith at the Quesada Gardens Initiative's "home office."

It sounds like the set-up for a joke: A gardener, a community organizer, and a religious leader walk into a bar...
 
These characters are usually not thought of together. But there is something similar about each of them, something that links them to one another despite differences.

Faith.

Spiritual leaders need it, of course. Gardeners need it to push seeds into dirt hoping for plants. Community organizers need it as fortification in the daily work of bringing people together as a path toward improving lives.

"By Spirit and Deed," an article by Kimberly Winston that appeared in USF Magazine, explores the role of faith and community involvement in the context of the Jesuit tradition. It draws on experience from a service-learning partnership between the University of San Francisco and the Quesada Gardens Initiative in San Francisco's Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood.

Religion and spirituality need not be confined to church walls any more than raising plants or organizing people must be purely earthly pursuits. For many people, strength of "spirit," health of the planet, and socially-just relationships between diverse people who live near one another are all part of the same vision.
The Bayview Hunters Point area of San Francisco is a gritty neighborhood that usually makes the news only when gunshots are fired. Here and there, discarded tennis shoes droop from telephone wires, broken glass glitters in the gutters, and split garbage bags belch forth refuse onto the sidewalk. Drivers keep their car doors locked, more intent on passing through than passing time.

But it is here, in a few hard-won plots of dirt that dot the neighborhood with lettuce, tomatoes, fruit trees, and even corn stalks, seven miles and a world away from the University of San Francisco’s tidy campus, that the school and its students live out the Catholic and Jesuit identity of their university. “The fundamental desire of Jesus was to create a world that was fair and balanced and a help to those with the least ability to help themselves,” said Seth Wachtel, an assistant professor of architecture whose students have helped design and build the dozen or so green plots of the Quesada Gardens Initiative, where local residents, many of them poor and underserved, grow their own food. “To train students professionally and emotionally to use their skills to develop a fair planet is very much in the Catholic and Jesuit tradition and very much the mission of the university.”

Kimberly Winston is a freelance journalist who covers religion for several national publications. She is the 2005 recipient of the American Academy of Religion's award for best in-depth reporting on religion and the author of three books. She lives in the Bay Area and is a graduate of Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.


Who said it, and what what they said:

“To train students professionally and emotionally to use their skills to develop a fair planet is very much in the Catholic and Jesuit tradition and very much the mission of the university.” Seth Wachtel, Assistant Professor of Architecture and Community Design at USF, and the catalyst of many service-learning partnerships around the globe.

“When people ask about the Catholic character of the university, I think it is important to understand you cannot find it in any single place,” Stephen A. Privett, USF President

“I don’t feel connected to Catholicism. But that is one thing I can have a lot of respect for: the message to help others.” Irene Kim, 2009 USF graduate

"[Social justice at USF] is just always on your mind, it’s just a part of your process.” David Castro, 2009 USF graduate.

Both Kim and Castro contributed to the Quesada Gardens Initiative, and plan to direct their careers in architecture to design for the poor and underserved.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

New video about Bayview's blooming center


University of San Francisco student, Samuel Hernandez, spent several days at the Quesada Gardens in Bayview, with other team members Grace Anna Rahn and Brandon Michael Mendez, as part of a service-learning program the University and the Quesada Gardens Initiative has forged over the past several years.

Samuel's video about Quesada Gardens is an insightful peek into the importance of community-building, and the value of urban gardens to create a place and a purpose for people to connect with one another.


Photos by Peter Thoene

Dr. Davis' name to grace new building

The Bayview Hunters Point Multipurpose Senior Services, Inc. has announced that the Senior Center building at 1706 Yosemite has been renamed the Dr. George W. Davis Senior Center in honor of Dr. Davis who served as its Executive Director for 32 years.

A dedication ceremony is planned for 12:30 Friday, August 6th as part of a celebratory event from noon to 4pm at the new building on Yosemite and 3rd Street. Call 415.822.1444 or 415.826.4774 for more information.

Vote for Flora Grubb and Virginia Donohue

Flora Grubb (yes, there really is a “Flora”!) and Virginia Donohue of Pet Camp have been nominated for the 2010 Woman Entrepreneur of the Year Award! Did you think they were running for D10 Supervisor?

Cast your vote. These extraordinary Bayview business women need your vote to put them over the top.

The prestigious award is given by Women’s Initiative for Self Employment, the largest microenterprise training and funding organization in the country. For more than 20 years, the Bay Area nonprofit has been providing low-income women with the business training, access to funding, and ongoing support to start and grow their own businesses and become financially self-sufficient.

Yosemite Creek and Marsh

Fascinating environmental history and neighborhood asset



"There's something about San Francisco's bodies of water that people just can't resist. We abuse them, we bury them, we fill them in with rubble and toxins - and then finally when we realize the error of our ways, if we're lucky we can pull them back from the brink. Consider Yosemite Creek, a small but crucial part of the city's watershed..."
See the full article by Matt Baume, a San Francisco writer and photographer covering transit, ecology, and the science of cities, and learn more about our neighborhood's natural history and environmental assets.

Pictured is a portion of an 1890's topographic map (credit: Christopher Richards) showing Yosemite Creek, in the center, flowing into South Basin near Double Rock.

Source: spotsunknown dot com