With a slashing motion across his neck tonight, a Boston Police sergeant ordered Whole Foods to shut down its first Jamaica Plain community meeting early, after officers arrested two people for unfurling an anti-Whole Foods banner in the back.
As people filed out of the Curley School, police officers from across the city began arriving - the sergeant had activated the department's Emergency Deployment Team system, used to swarm a trouble spot with police. At one point, at least a dozen Boston Police officers (one in plain clothes) stood at the top of the school's steps guarding it against potential mayhem.
No violence actually broke out, although two women on either side of the issue had to be separated by friends when they cursed and then lunged at each other as they were leaving the auditorium.
As the meeting began around 7 p.m., the roughly 200 residents seemed evenly split between people holding up yellow signs in favor of the impending Whole Foods in Hyde Square and people holding blue signs - and many wearing blue T-shirts - in opposition.
A line of Whole Foods executives and managers sat on tall chairs at the front of the auditorium, explaining how they do business and how they hope to open in late fall.
The mostly white, mostly young anti-Fooders quickly began trying to shout down both Whole Foods managers and other residents as they screamed their opposition to what they said was the ultimate gentrifying force that would push the neighborhood's minority residents out.
The mostly white, mostly middle-aged pro-Whole Foods contingent pleaded for civility - but occasionally shouted out demands that the protesters shut up. For the most part, however, they limited their noise making to applauding when somebody made a point with which they agreed.
The yelling reached a fever pitch after Whole Foods finished explaining its wonderfulness and opened the floor to questions. Things quieted down when a Whole Foods executive said if the yelling didn't stop, she'd cut the meeting off there and take any questions by e-mail. Occasional yelling continued, however, as people at the mikes made one point or another. And then Frankel and Murray went up to the auditorium balcony and unfurled a banner:
Both were arrested and led out of the school in handcuffs, to be booked at District E-13 on charges of disturbing a public assembly and trespassing (the third person arrested was taken away as the police were clearing the auditorium).
Meanwhile, a Whole Foods executive explained why the company had waited several months to actually meet with the community:
Whole Foods had reserved the auditorium until 9 p.m. and had planned to start winding things down at 8:30 p.m. to get people out by then, but the sergeant cut things short at 8:15.
As people poured out, some pro-market residents went down the line of Whole Foods employees shaking their hands.
Outside, City Councilor Matt O'Malley, who supports the Whole Foods, said he was disappointed the meeting was cut short and hoped Whole Foods would hold another - and that residents could come to some meeting of the minds. "We all love Jamaica Plain and we all want to be proud of Jamaica Plain," he said.
Several other residents in favor of the market expressed disgust with both the shouting blue shirts and police - they said as much as they disagreed with the protesters' tactics, they were disturbed by the strong-arm nature of the police reaction to a meeting they said had calmed down since its rocky beginning and showed no signs of collapsing into chaos.
At District E-13, a couple dozen protesters gathered to support the three arrested people. At one point, a different police sergeant came out and laid down some rules, including: If they just stood there, as they were doing, they could be arrested, so they had to stay in motion. The protesters quickly began marching in a circle. One protester dashed off to get pizza. They pooled their money to pay the $40 bail processing fee for each of the three.
Around 9:45, the three emerged, one by one, to applause.
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Comments
Were you?
By JPforAlmonds
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:27am
Or were you just too anxious to speak that nothing sank in?
Que relajo!
By John-W
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:18am
Just a quick peak on a map and it seems that the distance from the Jackson Square T stop to Mahoney Square is twice that of the Curley to Mahoney Square. So if what he wants to say is "you sited this meeting towards the non-Latino/gentrified side of JP and not towards the Latino/non-gentrified side" maybe he should have just said it.
I like the fact that he's calling out the anti-WFers and that he recognizes that no one "speaks for" everyone else in a neighborhood, but at the end of the day, I'm not sure what his position is on WF.
The lady in mourning (clip below) is just really sad. Is anyone in mourning for HiLo? You're in mourning for kids getting shot and stabbed in the street, for folks who have their houses blown away by tornadoes, for people getting foreclosed on, for any number of other concerns before we get to mourning over a process that is already well under way and that you yourself are as big a symptom of as the presence of WF.
Even for those who want to fight gentrification tooth and nail, I'm sure we can come up with something better to blow your energies on than this one, lame-ass issue.
Mahoney Square?
By Ron Newman
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:41am
When did Hyde Square get renamed, or is this some other nearby intersection?
I wondered this once when I
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:51am
I wondered this once when I saw it on Google Maps. Mahoney Square is technically the island in the middle of Hyde Square as far as I can tell.
Square Circles
By John-W
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:53am
Hyde Square is the general n'hood and the traffic circle is known as Mahoney Square. I think most people (who don't work for the Parks Department) probably refer to it as Hyde Square. Don't ask me who Mahoney was.
Oh, hipsters.
By Meg Fowler
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:00am
Nothing like entitled white people screaming about entitlement.
Reading the comments on an JP
By Where's the E-line
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:02am
Reading the comments on an JP post lately is worse than a story about bicycles and fixies.
As an anti hipster/ anti
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:07am
As an anti hipster/ anti hippy, tea bagging, Scott Brown voting, Rush Limbaugh listening, right wing nutbag I say keep it up. This is all very amusing to watch.
Hell, as a left-leaning,
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:15am
Hell, as a left-leaning, gay-loving, feminist, this is still very amusing to watch.
Liberal Conservative
By BostonUrbEx
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:11am
As a social security hating, gun loving, gay loving, pot loving, highway hating, bailout hating, stimulus hating, diversity loving, equal rights loving, raw milk loving, IRS hating, tax hating, intervention hating Libertarian I find this amusing.
A community divided?
By JPArbor
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:27pm
Judging by the last three comments, Whole Foods is actually uniting people in their collective mockery of JP.
Nice to know the overwhelming majority of JP sat out this fiasco and spent First Thursday milling about Centre and South streets and packing the bars.
As a teabagging christianist
By anon²
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:31pm
I stand by their irrational hate.
Baaa Baaaa
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:10am
Gentrification. Baaaa. Baaaa.
Don't ask me to explain why, or how. Just baaa, baaa. Baaaa.
I wonder if the ESWA
http://politicalcults.blogspot.com/2006/12/eswa-bo...
is making any hay by recruiting any of these dupes. They're missing an opportunity, if not.
A woman in mourning
By adamg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:23am
Anti-Fooder starts by complaining about an outburst by other protesters before complaining about Whole Foods not paying enough attention to the "pain and suffering" the community is going through.
Isn't this woman Barney's Dining Room Table?
By issacg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:58am
n/t
I don't think so
By Kaz
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:04am
But Here's a pic of Rachel Brown so you can compare for yourself.
Do (so-called) hipsters....
By Michael Kerpan
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:17am
... typically flourish posters of Obama wearing a "Hitler mustache"? Inquiring minds want to know? (Look at the bottom of the sheaf of papers she is holding).
The furniture is not a hipster
By adamg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:30am
She's a LaRouchie. Sui generis and all that of crazy.
Huh?
By Kaz
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:34am
Rachel Brown isn't a hipster. She's one of the looney LaRouchians who wanted to stop the healthcare bill by confronting Barney Frank at a town hall meeting. To which he replied that trying to discuss the matter with her would get him as far as if he were having the discussion with his dining room table.
Ah, I see
By Michael Kerpan
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:47am
Getting my links mixed. ;~}
Barney's living room table
By johnmcloughlin
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 3:50pm
Kaz,
thank you for the context. I was actually thinking of the purple dinosaur and could not fathom the connection.
me neither too, umm!
By John-W
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 4:16pm
Glad I wasn't the only one. You wouldn't believe the mental gymnastics I was going through to make that statement work under the purple dinosaur premise....
No Mourning Here
By JP-Stonybrook
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:19am
Speak for yourself lady. I'm stoked on Whole Foods.
I was planning to go check this meeting out for the comedy factor. I see it provided more than I could have hoped for.
JP is full of the "my dad is a lawyer" types that have never had to actually bust their ass to build a secure life for themselves. While I admire their effort, the ignorance and lack of self awareness is stunning.
on behalf of all of my fellow
By pierce
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:42pm
I shopped at Hi-Lo, and I look forward to shopping at Whole Foods, but on behalf of all of my fellow JP-residing, bicycle-riding, ivy league-educated, out-of-stater children of working class who have worked their asses of to afford a decent apartment in a fun, urban area full of interesting and interested people......
FUCK OFF
Really?
By Brains_yummm
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:13am
If you want to support your community, support the creation of jobs. It's a super market, not a sweat shop. FFS.
Whole Foods Protests
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:43am
Why are there no latinos protesting & only a few bored white hipsters?
just a thought
By diff. anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:03am
I wonder if many JP Latinos thought Hi-Lo was a dump, are looking forward to shopping at the new WF, think this whole debacle is silly and therefore didn't show to the meeting. Plenty of Latinos shop at the WF in my neighborhood. I guess the fine anti-WF white folks in JP forgot to let them know that they shouldn't.
"Passion is good. Rudeness is not."
By adamg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:46am
Long-time resident started by asking everybody to take a long deep breath and try to actually listen to other people. Naturally, people tried to shout her down.
I'm confused on this JP WF mashup.
By issacg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:57am
Please forgive my ignorance on this, but I have a few questions.
I thought hipsters were those youngish types who wear really tight jeans (to the male ones in particular - how the eff do you get into those anyway, let alone walk or sit?!), usually have a "fight the power" type tattoo or two, facial jewelry and thick glasses. After looking up the term on urban dictionary, this seems at least partly right (although, they seem to suggest that they live only in Williamsburg and a couple of other places - none of which are in Boston).
Anyway, here's the thing that I'm really confused about. The Brighton WF, where I normally shop, not only seems well patronized by "hipsters", but indeed, it appears to be run by said hipsters (at least at the staff level). Said hipsters also seem to get along famously with the fairly well-heeled clientele, who have, presumably, gentrified Brighton and Brookline (along with the Russian immigrants and old folks from the several assisted-living/lifestyle-living/whatever they're called facilities that surround WF Brighton).
So what gives, JP? Should we be on alert that the "revolution" is coming to a WF near us. Could someone send word from Cambridge? Has the enemy been spotted sailing up Alewife Brook? Are you sure it's not a school of alewife or shad? How tight are their jeans?
Meanwhile
By Pete Nice
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:10am
A few hundred people looking for good jobs have to wait for this store to open. And another dozen or so have to waste 10-15 hours a week taking public transportation from JP/Roxbury to their job at the Dedham Whole Foods.
Next time you people start
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 8:56am
Next time you people start preaching about how enlightened you are compared to republicans, suburbanites or people from the south look at what happened here. These are your people acting like immature entitled spoiled brats.
Whole Foods Banner
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:31am
Kind of funny. There is a Whole Foods ad banner at the top of this page. Doesn't Universal Hub support diversity and anti-gentrification?
Actually, both sides are "our people"
By JPforAlmonds
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:33am
And I'd still rather have both of them than a bunch of AC-breathing knuckledraggers from a subdivision letting the local main street rot while waiting for the new Wal-Mart to open so they can save 10 cents on a pack of underwear that won't last until Thanksgiving.
None of these kids were
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:37am
None of these kids were around when the REAL orange line came down so WFT gives them a right to say anything. Plus everybody should have access or the option to get healthy food. And I'm sure the dork with the smile purchased his shwanky shirt at Urban Outfitters not Goodwill or Boomerang..
"You people"?
By Michael Kerpan
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:41am
Painting with a rather broad brush here, aren't we, anonymous coward>
Former JP resident chimes in
By mediaseth
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:39am
When I moved to JP in 1998 I went into Hi-Lo hoping to find some uniquely latin foods and hopefully things I never tried before. I was massively disappointed to find a mess of a market with an underwhelming selection of stereotypical canned goods, with everything else looking old, wilted, and expired. It was sad. The bodegas and eastern European shops where I live now, in Lynn, are better.
Anyway, the thing I'll miss most about Hi-Lo is its sign, second to the ability to park in its lot when the Milky Way was still there.
I'm not a big fan of Whole Foods, either, mostly because of their prices. But at least they understand the diet of a gluten free (not by choice) vegetarian (choice made 20 years ago, long before the celiac thing reared its ugly head.)
As a teacher to lives paycheck to paycheck and who never had a trust fund, I'm annoyed that I have to shell out so much money for basic needs, but at least they have them. Recently, Stop and Shop has been selling some of the same items for less, though. But in any case, at least there will be healthier options in that spot, now, and they'll probably be at least cheaper than City Feed. (How do they not consider City Feed gentrification? Is it ok when it's not a corporate chain?)
Also, I'd like to know how many of the protesters actually shopped at Hi-Lo and to what extent they reached out to and met with the community the claim to support.
And lastly, they're not hipsters.
Keeping the clock, sort of the sign
By adamg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:51am
"And lastly, they're not hipsters"
By Michael Kerpan
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 9:52am
Why do I have the feeling that "hipster" is simply the modern day equivalent to the good old fashioned "dirty f***ing hippie" -- a mindless slur to be thrown at anyone young who annoys irritable older folks (and young conservatives who are old well before their time)?
or at least "young liberals"
By meg w
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:32am
or at least "young liberals"
How to spot a hipster
By Kaz
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:39am
[img]http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_TRz6GpCWCTg/TVFg-ZE-2EI/...
Back in the day...
By Miss M
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:04am
Those kids wore dreadlocks and patchouli and we called them Trustafarians. The trends change but the entitled brats stay the same.
http://www.latfh.com/ And
By anon²
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:42pm
http://www.latfh.com/
And yes, Hipsters are not Hippies. Most are anti-political, and don't really fall along neat little lines.
Kind of like people calling democrats moonbats, which makes no sense since it was made up to describe GOP'ers who follow Sun Myung Moon's sort of "we make our own facts" politics.
Oh please. If there was ever
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:41am
Oh please. If there was ever any group deserving of "mindless slurs" it is these douchebags.
(By the way, proposing that the word "hipster" is a slur is patently absurd)
Hipster
By SwirlyGrrl
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:50am
Basically, hipster = stupid wealthy entitled child.
Remember those special children of the ME generation who could do no wrong? Whose parents conflated "discipline" with "punishment" and avoided either? Demanded that their kids go to high-end schools and paid tutors to prop their grades and scores? Yup.
While not all high Socioeconomic status parents bought into those vogues of child rearing, and not all hipsters were born with a silver spoon in their mouths, there seem to be a fair number of this age group wandering JP and Davis Square - as well as Williamsburg and Portland and Seattle ...
I wonder if somebody should hand them a trophy for showing up.
Not convinced by your definition
By Michael Kerpan
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:57am
Seems to be used much more broadly to brush off lots and lots of younger people that a complainer is disapproving of for a wide array of reasons.
You are wrong.
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:06am
Sorry, but thanks for playing. Also, you can't get much more hipster than 'Swirly Grrl.' Just saying.
Anonymous comments are
By MattyC
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:25am
Anonymous comments are ignored.
Just sayin'.
,,,but, you didn't ignore it
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:24pm
Swirly Grrl doesn't need anonymous logged-in posters to defend her. Just sayin'.
Then
By anon²
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:48pm
Whats a Yuppie?
Hipsters aren't wealthy. At least not any I know of.
They parents might always have their back in a pinch, but they usually live in old, rundown city apartments. Play in shitty bands. And try to be all non-conformist, by being conformist withing their weird, smelly group. Beards and skinny jeans are big for them.
They're pretty much the Goths of the 2000's, only instead of makeup, they accessorize. Some might be liberal, but most seem to be against all politics. They're probably good candidates to be LaRocuhe's down the line after the world smacks them upside the head a few times.
I Recall Seinfeld...
By Suldog
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 3:19pm
... calling Cosmo Kramer a "hipster doofus".
[img]http://www.iwatchstuff.com/2009/10/19/kramer-seinf...
Is that a sub-species or just a narrowing of the definition?
Suldog
http://jimsuldog.blogspot.com
Shop the Whole Foods
By mila
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:07am
Shop the Whole Foods "madness" sales and you will save a bundle. They are much, much cheaper than Roche Brothers or Stop and Shop when you purchase items on sale. And there are ALWAYS things on sale there, so you can just purchase sale items and then do your "regular" shopping at a cheaper store. That's the most sensible way to shop Whole Foods. Stock up when things are cheap.
But wait, there's more
By adamg
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:05am
Julito Varela posts a statement from JP for All, the pro-WF group, adds:
Hey! Is there still a couple of wars going on?
By Brian Riccio
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:16am
Also, aren't the Republicans about to try and enact the most sweeping anti-choice legislation ever in Congress? Add to that global warming, slashed first responder and public school budgets, and the largest disparity between rich and poor since the depression and these idiots are protesting a food store?
God, I'm so glad I won't be around in 50 years to see the food shortages caused by global warming, I'm sure these schmucks won't be protesting then, only starving.
Not in Boston
By Stevil
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:52am
"slashed first responder and public school budgets"
make up your own mind about the other stuff, but those never happened at least in Boston. Boston doesn't do slashing - freezing maybe, but never slashing. That's just what they want you to believe. I don't think there has ever been a year over year operating budget decrease since prop 2 1/2 was enacted.
They can't stop . . .
By Chris Dowd
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:56am
. . . the wars, income disparity, or global warming. They can maybe stop this store. And it's not a zombie march, slut walk, or pillow fight.
It's good to see people not deluding themselves with national nonsense and the two party Kabuki theater- stuff that we have absolutely zero say over- and getting their hands dirty on the local level.
So, Chris
By Brian Riccio
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:17pm
Who CAN stop those things? So what, we all should give up on trying to enact change on a national level? I'm trying to follow your thinking here.
Also, without trying to sound preachy, but what if Martin Luther King felt that way? Or Daniel Ellsberg?
A bunch of goofy clueless liberals getting their knickers in a twist over a fucking food store does not qualify as getting your hands dirty on a local level to me. Sorry. Take it from a guy who had his skull cracked more than once by the TPF during the busing days when I lived in Charlestown. And I wasn't even protesting.
Maybe you are right . . .
By Chris Dowd
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:19pm
. . . they should have gone to Glenn Beck's or Jon Stewart's rallies in DC and "done something."
They did
By anon²
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:53pm
They proved what a farce the MSM and punditry is. It had little to do with politics.
I think you nailed it
By JPforAlmonds
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:22pm
It speaks to the feelings of insecurity and powerlessness on both sides. The WhoseFoods people and their supporters have spent the last decade watching anti-war protests that filled streets and cities but failed to affect anything each time. They've seen protests about global warming attacked and shouted down. They've seen unemployment rise despite countless jobs programs and area job initiatives.
In this case, they're trying to fight a fight they can win. Even Whole Foods opponents admit it'll be a symbolic victory and likely do nothing to stop gentrification, but they need a W to feel like what they're doing matters -- that the actions of one person amount to something.
On the other side, Whole Foods supporters see people trying to take away something they want and feel like they're not being heard. They've perhaps been hit by the recession, watched their bills rise, watched their health care costs go up, watched gas prices go up and just want this one thing. They want this little bit of comfort that they enjoy and don't want to see yet another thing taken away from them while they sat powerless to do anything about it.
Whether this fight is worth fighting for either side is questionable, especially when the stakes aren't displacement (already happening) or organic treats (already available here) but personal validation and the overwhelming need to be heard.
(says the person jabbering away in a comments field)
*Newsflash* A "win" is not
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:50pm
*Newsflash*
A "win" is not happening. Lease is signed. Zoning is done. Renovations underway. Don't think WF is stupid enough to allow a loud, vocal but miniscule portion of the community to nullify their investment in JP.
I live in Hyde Square and
By JP Gal
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 4:23pm
rarely shop at Whole Foods. I support Whole Foods in JP and it has nothing to do with my "comfort" or "convenience" or organic foods or anything else. Hyde Square has been dying. More businesses have closed than have opened in the past 3 years (last count: 13 vacant storefronts) and the existing businesses -- many owned by Latinos -- are hanging on by a thread. I don't want my neighborhood to die. A responsible business with a track record of success will bring new energy, customers, and resources to this neglected corner of JP. Ultra Hair Salon, El Oriental, Fat Ram's, Miami Subs, The Haven -- all of these places will survive and even thrive once Whole Foods opens its doors. That's why I'm fighting for Whole Foods and thanking our lucky stars that the company decided to invest in JP without government incentives and tax breaks, which is what it usually takes to get a grocery store to locate in an urban neighborhood.
Hi Lo decided to close. If not Whole Foods, who? A liquor store, an auto parts store, a used car dealership -- those are the kinds of businesses that could afford to lease this particular site. What would they bring to Hyde Square? Not 100 jobs and groceries. Or the old Hi Lo could sit vacant, like Omni Foods, also owned by Knapp Foods, has on Route 9 has for a decade. These are terrible alternatives, so I'm in the fight to make sure we come out of this better off than when we went in.
OK Chris
By roadman
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:39pm
Prove to us beyond a reasonable doubt why a privately-owned and run grocery store shouldn't be allowed to conduct business in JP.
But don't waste everybody's time by continuing to spew the same old tired and illogical "non-arguments" that have little basis in fact, are completely irrelevant to the issue at hand, and then turn around and demand that Whole Foods disprove these "claims" beyond that same reasonable doubt standard.
It's a supermarket for crying out loud. Supermarkets and other businesses have moved into neighborhoods like JP for decades, and yet life somehow goes on.
I don't live in . . .
By Chris Dowd
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:46pm
. . . JP so I don't even really care that much about it. I go to whole foods once in a blue moon and it seems to be a nice store. Not sure I'd want it as a neighborhood supermarket though- not exactly my daily fare. I don't the know the neighborhood or the issue all that well. I'm just glad to see some people actually doing something about an issue right out their front doors for a change.
Saying
By anon²
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:52pm
The guy who sits at home on his computer and never tried.
It's amazing what you can do with a little effort, and turning off the PC. Go find a respectable candidate to get behind and work your butt off.
You might be able to get a like minded community organizer in the white house. Get enough people working behind such people, and you might take congress back and actually have the votes to make a change.
The system works, it's lazy, disillusioned people that are the problem.
But hey, if you're not into that you can take consonance that Two and a Half Men's returning soon. At least that will be a good use of your time.
The system doesn't . . .
By Chris Dowd
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 1:41pm
. . . work.
Is anyone in JP protesting the closing of the laundromat?
By Ron Newman
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 11:40am
That seems to me to have much more immediate and negative effect on the neighborhood than whether or not Whole Foods opens a store there. Shouldn't the greedy landlord who kicked out the laundromat get some attention from the protesters?
I am tired of the media and
By jplatina11
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:27pm
I am tired of the media and Whole Foods supporters saying that Whose Foods people are only young, white people. I am a LATINA WHO IS FROM JP (I didn't just move here ten or two years ago). I am a woman, not a child or a college student, who has invested in this neighborhood all my life. I have a voice and so do many of my fellow Latino JPers who oppose a Whole Foods Market in JP. If you attended the meeting last night, you saw that the majority of Latinos there are against a Whole Foods in our community and we speak for ourselves. That's why we've been involved in this Whose Foods campaign, not just online commenting, as some folks like to do. We are LATINOS who work on behalf of many issues affecting our comunidad, including affordable housing, health care, the environment, and education. The displacement of lower income people, disproportionately Latinos and African Americans, from JP, and Whole Foods' almost certain acceleration of this IS A CRITICAL ISSUE. If you think that this is just about a supermarket or food products, you're mistaken. Stop trying to silence and ignore the MANY LATINO VOICES who have stood up against a WF in JP.
Finally...a voice of reason!
By Brian Riccio
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 12:47pm
Thank you for your passionate argument. I have to ask, has anyone reached out to Market Basket? Their commitment to community values clearly shows in it's flagship Chelsea store, one that serves not only Latinos of Chelsea, but low income people of all kinds from Medford, Malden, Everett and Revere also.
If they did, Market Basket
By anon
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 1:05pm
If they did, Market Basket would respond that they're not interested in getting sued.
Market Basket
By Ron Newman
Fri, 06/03/2011 - 10:53pm
My guess is that Market Basket would find the Hi-Lo site too small for the type of new store they want to open. Removing the parking lot would make room for a bigger store, but might cause other problems for the neighborhood. When the Chelsea Market Basket opened, they said it was the largest grocery store in New England.
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