Local commerce.
Another key to re-localization is a healthy local economy that can provide goods and services using local talent and resources. That's a large part of why we want to garden, although the Springfield project is still more of a back-breaking construction site with no paid workers than a lush and delicious paradise garden! Trust me, we'll get there.
Some of our Springfield garden helpers have started a small manufactory of bike messenger bags, called Burro Bags. They coexist with a new bike cooperative called Zombie Bikes. These two operations inhabit the space between Chan's and Shantytown (name that compound, folks!), between 5th and 6th on Main Street.
I just heard about another small business start up: a bookstore in the Gateway Shopping Mall. I think it's called
GateWay Book Store, from the caption of the photograph. The name of the shop isn't in the article.
The owner, Dorothy Pitman Hughes, has the right idea when she says, "
We're trying to find out what the community doesn't have and try to attract it."
There are problems attached to our market economy, and to the profit motive run wild, but this characteristic of optimism and responsiveness is truly positive: find spaces and fill them. Find hungers and feed them. Find neglect and negate it with care.
I hope she does well.