Archive for March, 2005

renewable. alternative. sustainable. clean. politically-charged.

Wednesday, March 9th, 2005

Article on how to frame the energy debate.

His Music is Hot

Monday, March 7th, 2005

www.craigslist.org > san francisco > classes > DJ Spinnerty0/0:
last modified: Sun, 13 Feb 17:47 PST

3/12: DJ Spinnerty

Listen as Spinnerty combines a collage of downtempo, hip hop, soul, and beyond into a cohesive mix.

Saturday, March 12, 6:00 p.m.

Apple Store, San Francisco
One Stockton Street
San Francisco, CA 94108
415-392-0202

Sample THIS

SF Independent Article

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2005

I’d post the link, but the The Independent online edition is a little behind… most current articles dated Jan. 18, 2005.

Article on commercial district development, discussing Union Square as a BID.

Saturday, Feb. 26, 2005 front page article…
“Community Benefit Districts Catch On”
by Adriel Hampton

Commercial Corridor Development

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2005

Models, Processes for City and Neighborhood District Economic Development

Business Improvement District formation… BIDs in California. BID formation is generally difficult to pull through, needs strong community backing and leadership, and needs to happen early in the organizing and planning process. I need to do more research.

The Main Street Approach…the model. I attended the Feb. 28 networking meeting in Davis, CA specific to Main Street initiatives in California. It seems like a comprehensive, common-sense model that is not necessarily innovative, except through its foundation in historic preservation. Is the Main Street initiative successful in both urban city and rural small-town settings? Is it more successful in the rural small-town setting than in the urban city setting?

The Fruitvale District in Oakland, CA is a community economic development model we are currently researching as a feasible guide for the planning of Bayview/Hunters Point in San Francisco. I met Darlene Rios-Drapkin, currently VP of the Board of Directors for California Main Street Alliance, and discussed business attraction and development in Fruitvale (she was Manager of the Fruitvale Main Street Program). Among the many projects she has catalyzed, Rios-Drapkin started the Dios de Los Muertos festival that now attracts thousands and thousands of people to Oakland each year to shop at the local businesses, to revel in the festivities, and to further look upon Fruitvale as a true destination point and place of opportunity. I liked that Rios-Drapkin began the process of development by explaining and understanding it through Maslo’s Hierarchy of Needs.