Before and After of the Same Spot Photos; same kind of transformation here in many places...
Hi all. Here is a background report for our Board meeting for
tonight, Thursday Sept. 19 6:30 pm here at the community center, 5920 N. Owasso
Ave., that I thought I would share with all of you too...
In ways large and small, in upcoming events this weekend and
in recent weeks here, and in our ongoing service during the week, we have been
seeking to embody the wisdom of the saying, "The opposite of poverty is not
wealth. The opposite of both poverty and wealth is community." You are invited
to follow along daily with our activities through Facebook; friend me at Ron
Robinson or go to www.facebook.com/revronrobinson; also "like" our
page at WelcomeTableMission and A Third Place Community, and see more reports
and analysis at www.turleyok.blogspot.com, www.progressivechurchplanting.blogspot.com, and
www.missionalprogressives.blogspot.com. Keep up
with the growth of the community gardenpark and orchard at www.cherokeeschoolgardenjournal.blogspot.com.
First, a short story about the way community should work, and
its healing power: a few Saturdays ago I was talking with a church youth group
that had come here from Shawnee to learn about missional church, and while I was
teaching them upstairs downstairs one of our neighbors and his wife came to see
about getting food from our Corner Store, which had already closed for the day
and the volunteers gone home, all except one who had stopped by too and who
didn't work in the corner store free pantry anyway; so she was still downstairs
when the couple came by. The volunteer didn't turn them away to come back
another day but knowing we work with people by appointments too decided to try
to help them anyway. As they were entering the Corner Store she tried to turn
the lights on, only to find one of the main light wouldn't stay on but kept
flickering; the man immediately started figuring out the problem, found it was
in the light switch, said he knew how to fix it, went to the local family-owned
hardware store and bought the little items that he needed out of his own money,
refusing the volunteers money for it, came back, fixed our light, got their food
(got community more than that, as we say) and went on. That spirit runs through
the bulk of what we do; it is our vision; not all live up to it including us,
but we know it is possible, and are reminded of it often enough that we can say
we also know that "Another World Is Possible" and we catch glimpses of it, and
our mission is to create spaces and encounters where others can too.
Here is a rundown of our invitations to you to come
participate in community renewal on the far northside of Tulsa, and an update of
our projects, some of our uplfting stories, our wish list and needs and ways you
and your organizations can partner with us to renew community in the McLain
School area.
1. Turley Area Free FunFest and Senior Fair and Heritage
Lunch, Friday and Saturday, Sept. 20-21 at both our community center and our
community gardenpark and orchard. We are in the midst of launching our new
seniors group for our area and conducting a survey of interests and needs of
seniors in our area during our annual Free FunFest for All Ages. If you are part
of a group that serves families and persons including those more than 55 years
old we would love for you to have a table or provide information to area
residents during the event this weekend. Let me know. Our area demographics are
skewing on both ends toward 2015 when projections are that our zips will have a
majority of residents that are either over 60 or under 18, the two most
vulnerable age ranges. Get all the details on this weekend at http://www.turleyok.blogspot.com/2013/09/2013-turley-area-free-funfest-this.html. Games, pizza, breakfast in the park, community art, food and clothing
giveaway, childrens jump area, community info and projects, history and heritage
lunch, a visit by our partners OU Graduate Social Work students, seniors survey,
movies, documentaries, stories, sharing, and more. Launching our new Turley Area
Seniors, Inc. nonprofit group we helped to found.
Donations are vital to break even on the festival by keeping
it free for all. Those can be made online at www.turleyok.blogspot.com. We desperately need
your donations for our all volunteer grassroots group.
2. Cherokee School Project. This is the third Fall that we
have started with the school in our area closed and unused except as storage
(reminds me at times of how our area hosts a landfill for Tulsa's storage of a
sorts, and more). We would love to move some of our key programs for the
community into the school's buildings, and bring in partners for using more of
the building; I think once it is open and being used again for community
purposes it will be a magnet for others, nonprofit and profit, who want to serve
our area; we want to host meals, senior group, kids under 18 summer cafe, G.E.D.
classes, move our pantry operation and so much more into this asset in our
community where the best public or non profit building in our area sits not
being used; we could probably outright own the property (seven acres plus the
building right on North Peoria Ave. and the city bus line) for something like
$400,000 (probably about a quarter of its appraised value) based on the selling
price for other school properties sold to community nonprofits. It would be a
win-win for us, for the neighborhood, and for the local school system as it
would be off their books and with a payoff. So we are still looking for partners
for a potential mortgage, or better yet for a purchase from some group, tribe,
foundation for us. If you are part of a business or nonprofit that might see
yourself with an operation in the 74126 and 74130 zipcodes or just want to
pursue helping us on this project, contact me.
3. Abandoned Buildings and Houses Project and Crime Stats and
Community Spirit. We continue to highlight this big need in our area to tear
down very visible burned out neglected abandoned dangerous buildings in our
area; we are waiting to hear a six month update report from the Tulsa Health
Dept partners helping to take action for abatements of properties that are in
worst shape; we hope to hear it at the next Turley area townhall meeting,
Tuesday, Sept. 24 at 7 pm at O'Brien Park Recreation Center, near 61st and North
Lewis Ave. All are invited to the meeting. These structures are feeding also
into the low community spirit and fosters crime as it fosters keeping
neighborhoods in the dark; clearing away abandoned structures brings light into
area and that helps cut down on crime, as does the environmental factors of
decreasing hunger and poverty and reducing stress in people's lives that prompts
them too often to make bad impulsive decisions as they live in the moment to
moment. Unfortunately we are still not getting the crime reporting statistics
for our area that we used to get from the County Sheriff's office, or visits
from their officials to our area planning or town hall gatherings; the
comparison of crime stats for our area with previous years to see any trends
going up or down, the mapping of where the incidents occur most often, all the
hard data helps us to see issues, judge any effects. It is the kind of data
often easily made public by the city online; we can get it for the city side of
our service area, but it is more difficult to get for the unincorporated side of
the service area...Finally in this area we had a wonderful engaging and
enlightening and educational meeting with the Community Action Project about the
Scattered Sites Housing for low income residents in our area; 34 houses, 14
being rented currently, and heard why it is hard to rent the others, about the
compliance issues and the restrictions that would prevent many of our neighbors
from using this resource, because of felonies in the past, or size of family
(which reminds me we also had a good meeting with an OU grad student wanting to
work with us on voter registration drive, and on the particular issue we face of
helping change the wording on voter registration forms so it reflects how felons
can vote not how they can't do so; without having to change any law or policy on
that even). We are hoping to continue our learning about housing opportunities
and needs in our area and ways we might be able to enter into helping with this
mission.
4. Fire Dept. Election Campaign for Fire District Board. With
the good decision not to rush the vote to the public on this November ballot, we
are in a holding pattern but still want to be ready to help the volunteer fire
department out as we can when they are ready to make the push for the petition
drive and election, as creating the Title 19 board and getting funds pumped into
the volunteer fire dept to help improve services, attract and recruit
firefighters, get a local dispatch person again, and more equitably distribute
the source of income for the department so it doesn't have to rely on people
voluntarily sending in their dues all plus for most people who pay fire dues
being able to realize a saving financially themselves, makes this project
important not only for the fire dept and the residents but for the town itself;
the experience of being able to hold and win a campaign like this will help give
us experience for a potential incorporation into a new city campaign.
5. We are partnering with some OU Tulsa Graduate Social Work
classes again this year on research projects to help in our area; on Monday,
Sept. 23 in the afternoon I will make another presentation on our area and our
work here at one of the classes. We are always looking for other
service-learning opportunities with other programs and other universities and
with common education classrooms too; we can offer a kind of University of
Poverty 101 with others.
6. This summer in the three months of June July and August our
Free Corner Store affected the lives of some 2000 persons; with thanks to grant
money from the Tulsa Elks this past year, and individual donations from some
givers, we were able to pay for much of the food we were able to get through the
Food Bank. But now those funds are gone, and you can tell it this Fall in what
we are able to offer folks, and with the drop in what we are even able to get
supply-wise from the Food Bank. But we had a great summer; our former Food
Coordinator Deb Carroll left us a great system in place as she moved to a new
place and work, and it has helped us to weather the new drought in finances; we
are also learning to streamline our procedure thanks to new computer volunteer
helping people check-in, which is good since our numbers seeking assistance
continue to rise. We had a great showing here of the documentary on hunger in
America, A Place At The Table, in August, too. Looking ahead, our next Big
Mobile Van Food Giveaway Day here with the Food Bank will be Friday, Oct. 18
from 11 am to noon when we will give away some four tons of food in one hour.
Volunteers are needed and can come for orientation at 9 am, begin preparations
at 10 am, serve at 11 am, then finish as we provide the helpers with a
lunch...We are also continuing to make slow improvements in the remodel of the
crafts/new sewing circle room; still need volunteer carpenters to help us
remodel our bathrooms; need helping hands to help us install, with supervision,
a new donated air conditiioning unit; we are excited about working with Green
County Permaculture on new public space outside that is sustainable, uses
beautiful rain gardens, and will help fix a flooding drainage issue, but to do
that we need a few hundred dollars in donations, and donation of a Bobcat
equipment and operator for a day.
7. Our Miracle Among the Ruins gardenpark and orchard is
looking in its best shape and the harvest is continuing as is the teaching and
healing and health practices that go on there through the gardens. I only half
joke with our garden project leader who is a physician that she does more for
increasing life expectancies through the community garden presence and
connections with others than through a clinic setting. But the park is a health
space. There are many opportunities to use it, and there are many ways to help
us continue taking it to the next needed level in our phases of making it better
for our neighborhoods. We are also working on the Native Prairie Plant
Wildflower area across from the gardens, and hope to continue making them a sign
of improved safety, health, education, spiritual lift and more for those who
have to walk and push their shopping carts by the area on the way down and back
up the hill to the grocery and business areas. We particularly are wanting to
make a priority out of creating paved areas for access to the gardens for
neighbors using wheelchairs and scooters. It is also bad that they have to ride
those or get pushed in them out in the street, sometimes with kids with them
(same for families that walk with shopping carts to the store and back who have
children riding in them with them) all in the busy highway or on streets because
of lack of sidewalks in many many places here, as well as lack of street lights.
See the above links for more details on the gardenpark and events and more there
including its wish list.
8. We partner with so many local community folks in our area:
it was fun to meet so many families at the combined back to school event in
August; we shared a table with the McLain School Foundation we support. Still,
it is such a changed place and evidence of so much community fragmentation and
difficulty in organizing when any neighborhood of ours will have its children
going to so many different schools, many of them outside of our area. We seek to
support the schools here, but also the children of our area who leave our area
for school during the day or who are schooled in other ways and look for
partners to help us do that better, even in the small ways we can probably
manage...We will be having a booth for our projects at the community health fair
the Health Dept is putting on on Sat. Oct. 19 from noon to 3 pm and invite all
to come help and enjoy the event focusing on healthy food. Stay tuned for all
the events upcoming where we promote or help plan and have a presence at.
9. We are gearing up to seek another grant partnership like
the one we got for the gardenpark; this one would be to help us remodel and
renovate the building we use for the community center; we are looking to add
folks with various experiences to help us on a series of advisory teams this
year for the park, for grants and fundraising, for events and programs, for
organizational development and capacity building. You might be asked to help in
one of these areas, but don't wait to be asked to offer assistance and
connection. Over and over we have not let our bare bones income keep us from
dreaming and doing big things; we are probably at our lowest financial point
ever now (juggling those past dues) with more of our leaders and contributors
having moved or started supporting other local endeavors. Besides the grants
work, we are also going to be making it easier than ever for individuals to
respond with us and make a difference with us by contirbuting in small ways each
month through our donation button on the website, www.turleyok.blogspot.com Soon we plan to have a
way to indicate you will help us out with just $10 per month, and with automatic
withdrawals so you don't have to return to do so online each month. We would
rather receive the 100 donations of ten dollars each month than the ten
donations of 100 dollars a month, but we need them all, as well as the one who
can make a life changing donation (by life changing, I mean their life changing,
even more than the with others here)...We also need to focus on taking some of
our unsold nice items in the thrift store to an auction or consignment sales
place, so if any in the Tulsa area have leads or would like to help us do that,
let's say it would be both an immediate help, and help us prepare a new space in
the south building to create a full renovated community room.
10. Our missional worshipping community will be meeting at the
Center, 5920 N. Owasso Ave., this Sunday at 11 am for Singing, Praying,
Communion, Conversation and then Common Meal. We will be talking about growing a
worshipping community to sustain our missional community, and how each can
contribute to that; hour our spiritual practices are going; how to create
contemplative space in our center from the hectic harried lives, and from
even our programs. Come help us grow a new church, and more importantly, a newer
kind of church. And how can we promote having more community fun in our area, in
small ways, in organic ways. The invitation still stands as well to come join
with me in New Orleans Oct. 10-13 learning and doing and helping; see more at
www.uuchristian.org/revival.
11. It has been uplifting to be in this summer on the ground
floor of growing community organizing connections and learning how to better
respond with relational power as part of a wider local empowerment group,
leaders committing out of their deepest place of faith, hoping to grow something
like Oklahoma City has with its VOICE group. In that vein, there is an important
three day training event in Oklahoma City that will feature longtime acclaimed
organizer Ernie Cortez, to be held the last weekend of this month. For more, go
to http://www.voiceokc.org/events.html.
12. Bonnie and I just returned from the first gathering of
missionally-living and minded progressives at www.lifeonfire13.wordpress.com
in Oak Ridge, TN and are ourselves fired up to help others here and elsewhere
host the Life On Fire 14 event to be held here at The Welcome Table Center and
also at the Park and possibly other places in our community on Feb. 28 to Mar.
2, 2014. A heads up to save the dates and come experience the 'mmersion in
mission.
Renewing community, turning blight to beauty, empowering
residents, doing small acts of justice with great love, making the radical way
of Jesus visible in the world, growing healthy lives and neighborhoods,
relocating, redistributing, reconciling...this is our mission and calling; come
see, come join, even from afar.
blessings, thank you, yes you, and more soon,
Ron