As you know, the Jamaica Plain Gazette and JP Patch are reporting that Whole Foods will be moving into the building currently owned by Hi-Lo Foods - even though Whole Foods has yet to confirm.
Highlights of questions that have been raised so far include: What will be the impacts on local businesses, the Latino and Caribbean communities, traffic, parking patterns, the cost of rent, and properties values?
Given that these impacts could be significant, I propose we need a community process!
We need to educate ourselves about the facts, understand what we can legally influence and how, and ensure that all those potentially impacted are made aware and given the opportunity to participate in the process.
Let's discuss:
Comment
I there was a LIKE button on here I'd click LIKE on Brett's post.
"no facts have come out yet...."
Thanks for writing that.
@Robbie I have some concerns as outlined in this article about a new Target store.
http://honoluluweekly.com/cover/2011/01/off-target/
Most interesting are the questions at the bottom of the article, many of which are relative to Jamaica Plain.
@Bill - this is exactly the kind of outside the box brainstorming that could help us find a resolution that meets more people's needs instead of pitting us against each other.
If you want to connect with Edith Mernane, her JPNFN profile is: http://jamaicaplain.neighborsforneighbors.org/profile/EdithMurnane
@Kurt - I haven't seen anything concrete. I expect folks (e.g. Hyde/Jackson Square Main Streets, JPNDC & City Life/Vida Urbana) are trying to get together, discuss and then announce - and with a 3 day weekend things have been slowed down. Since I don't represent an organization I can jump right into the fray but if I did I'd have to wait to discuss a response/plan with my board/group. I hope we hear something soon though so folks like you can join their efforts and we can respond as a community rather than individually.
Also, I haven't seen any actual confirmation from Whole Foods that they purchased Hi-Lo and plan to move in. Just quotes from the Hi-Lo manager but no comment (that I've seen) from Knapp (Hi-Lo's parent company) or Whole Foods.
There goes the neighborhood.
What I've been searching for all weekend, and I'm not finding, is a concerted effort against this move. Is there anything happening? I'm strongly anti-WF, and I'm willing to put time and effort against what I think will be a nasty stain on JP.
Boston is in the process of trying to establish a Boston Public Market, a year round farmer's market, something akin to, I think, Reading Terminal in Philly, which is not just produce, but food stalls and vendors of all sorts in an indoor market. I'm wondering if Hi-Lo is a reasonable (square footage, facilities, etc.) space to do a smaller scale version of that, where possibly you could have vendors selling many of the products lost with Hi-Lo leaving. In addition, there'd be more fresh food made available, and potential to support a diversity of local businesses, and possibly even serve as a gateway for entrepreneurs who wouldn't have considered going it alone.
Boston apparently has a food czar in the Mayor's Office, who happens to be a long-time JP resident, Edith Murnane. Any ideas on how to bring her into the conversation?
JP should be the perfect place to chart a different and compelling middle ground, unconstrained by "it's either this or that" kind of thinking. A thriving market that served JP's diverse communities, both culturally and economically, would be a heck of a model for other neighborhoods.
The answer for anyone or any organized group/partnership is simple.
If you want to see something done your way, approach the owners of hi-lo and buy the property.
Then, do whatever you like with it.
@Steve - thanks for the link. I'm not saying WH has no redeeming qualities. I've even been known to shop there myself and would likely shop there if it was in JP (I'm definitely the demographic they're targeting).
If WH coming in to JP didn't mean Hi-Lo closing I might be focusing on other aspects of this saga. I might be considering the effect of WH moving in on the local organic/specialty food shops in JP, the effect it will have on parking and traffic and the questions one might ask if a big box store was moving in to a neighborhood that has embraced diversity and locally-owned shops over convenience and simplicity.
Do you have any thoughts on those questions? This is a complicated issue and WH being good in some areas (local, workers) doesn't make this easier.
In addition, I posed a question asking where will the Latino & Caribbean communities find the ingredients they've been getting at Hi-Lo - many has stated Hi-Lo reminds them of home and connects them with their family's culture. That's my main concern at the moment and until there's a plan in place to remedy that I'm not expecting it to just be a quick fix based on market demand.
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