All posts by Darren Cotton

Community Soup Micro-grant Program Returns November 13th!

community-soup-flyer-for-nov-13-2016

The University Presbyterian Church‘s Community Soup is back on Sunday, November 13th at 5:00PM. Share a great meal with your neighbors and help get a great idea off the ground!

The Soup Grant is a grassroots model for funding small projects through community meals. A group of people come together to share a meal at an affordable price. All income from the meal is given as a grant to support a project to benefit the Buffalo community. Everyone who purchases a meal has one vote to decide who gets the grant.

Download the full program brochure for more information.

Dinner costs just $5.00 and project proposals are encouraged from those between the ages of 15 and 25.

Proposals are due two weeks before the soup event (by Sunday at 11:59 p.m.). E-mail them to Lee Ann Grace at laghhupc@roadrunner.com.

Download the funding application

Be sure to follow the University Presbyterian Church on Facebook for ongoing updates on this and other community events.

University Blooms

universitybloomsslider

Help plant 1,000 daffodil and tulip bulbs across University District on Sunday, October 30th. We’ll be planting on the west side of Main Street starting at 10AM and on the east side of Main Street starting at 1PM.

We’ll be targeting green spaces like Linear Park and the Rail Trail, as well as some of the Westminster Triangle Parks and in front of the new mural on Bailey Avenue.

RSVP to the Facebook Event

Apply to The Pitch Business Plan Competition

updated-pitch-flyer

THE PITCH is a collaborative M/WBE business plan competition designed to elevate the profile of minority and women business owners in the city of Buffalo. Three businesses will be chosen from a pool of applicants to participate in a pitch-prep boot camp before presenting to a live panel of judges comprised of business owners and leaders in the Buffalo area.

UB Bike Stampede and Pedal Party

bike-stampede-flyer

The UB Professional Staff Senate (PSS), in conjunction with Slow Roll Buffalo, invites you to join the UB Bike Stampede and Pedal Party, October 1, 2016. The event is open to all members of the UB community and surrounding neighborhoods: staff, faculty, students, friends and family.

By partnering with Slow Roll and GoBike Buffalo, the PSS brings the fun and community-building achievements of the Slow Roll movement to UB, uniting the North and South Campuses and neighborhoods in between.

The event will begin with riders lining up starting at 10a.m. on the UB South Campus, Townsend Lot. At 11a.m. riders will roll out to loop around the beautiful South Campus and proceed through Amherst to the North Campus, around the iconic bull statue and past the Solar Strand. The route concludes back at South Campus where riders can enjoy an after-party, featuring music, food trucks and opportunities to meet with UB, local government and neighborhood representatives.

For more information, contact Domenic J. Licata, PSS Chair, at djlicata@buffalo.edu or 716-645-2003.

Project MOVE Buffalo Brings Two AmeriCorps VISTAs to University District

pmbslider450

The University’s Office of Government and Community Relations is participating in Mayor Byron Brown’s M.O.V.E. VISTA initiative and will host two VISTA volunteers who will work with community partners located near the Main Street campus. These members will act as community organizers who will help block clubs, business associations and community groups better plan, execute and evaluate their programs.

The goal is to increase the capacity of community based groups and business support organizations in the University Heights community with the goal of improving employment and entrepreneurial opportunities for residents, improve the physical ascetic of the community and help empower area residents to mobilize their community more effectively to combat urban blight.

They will also have the opportunity to work with UB’s leadership staff to help these organizations access UB students and faculty in new and creative ways.

Member Duties : Members will be expected to work with business associations, CBOs and block clubs serving the University Heights neighborhood. The members’ duties will include conducting surveys, designing and utilizing needs assessments tools, developing marketing plans, coordinating outreach/recruitment drives and conducting research on funding opportunities.

Members will also work to help put our partner organizations on a path toward sustainability. They will work on developing leadership and succession plans, helping businesses become M/WBE certified, connecting University resources with the community, recruiting volunteers for the Tool Library in order to expand its capacity and leverage private resources.

Finally, members’ duties will include developing plans that help eliminate urban blight in the community by organizing community service days and working with local community groups that are interested in addressing housing and blight issues.

If interested, you can apply online!

Funeral Arrangements for Mrs. Rotundo

Mrs. Rotundo, owner of College Laundry Shoppe on Main Street, has passed away at the age of 101. An institution in the neighborhood, Mrs. Rotundo will be dearly missed by all who knew her.

Wake Details:
Sunday, September 11, 2016 – 1-5PM: Amigone Funeral Home, 1132 Delaware Avenue

Funeral Details:
Monday, September 12, 2016 – 10AM: Mount Olivet Cemetery, 4000 Elmwood Ave, Kenmore, NY 14217

Slow Roll University District

SlowRollUniversityDistrict

Slow Roll Buffalo & GObike Buffalo are labors of love for our city – please join them on Labor Day for a big ol’ bike ride!

The next ride will meet at the NFTA‘s LaSalle Station at 3030 Main Street, with a route including major streets Main, Hertel, Delaware, Kenmore, Bailey & Kensington along with residential neighborhoods in North Park, University Heights and LaSalle, returning for an afterparty at The Steer, 3151 Main.

Presenting partner Independent Health will have their RedShirt team onsite before the ride giving out free bike lights, while supplies last!

Onsite and along the ride, Slow Roll bullhorn the work of the University Heights Collaborative “to maintain and enhance the quality of life within the University Heights by working with residents, property owners, block clubs, University at Buffalo staff and students, law enforcement, business owners and elected officials in order to coordinate and develop resources and responsibilities within the community.”

Slow Roll is free and open to all ages and skill levels – safety first, no tricks or training wheels. One-time 2016 season registration is at www.slowrollbuffalo.org or onsite.

Founded in Detroit Bike City, Slow Roll is a group bicycle ride that meets every Monday night and has expanded into a global network of community rides. Each week we meet at different venues and take a unique route of about 10 miles; our slow pace keeps the group safe and gives riders a unique perspective of our great city and its neighborhoods.

Presented by Independent Health. Support from Deep Thinka Records,The Good Neighborhood, and GObike Buffalo. Schedule, locations, and volunteer opportunities with Slow Roll Buffalo can be found by joining our open Facebook group and at www.slowrollbuffalo.org. Information on the worldwide Slow Roll movement can be found at www.slowroll.bike.

RSVP to the Facebook Event

From Blighted To Beautiful, Bailey Fights Blight Transforms East Side Streetscape One Building At A Time

BFBStockbridgeBefore&After

The transformation of a vacant building at the northwest corner of Bailey Avenue and Stockbridge Avenue.

Buffalo, NY – Stocks are rising at the corner of Bailey Avenue and Stockbridge Avenue thanks to a new mural on the side of a long vacant building. Bits of painted over graffiti and the remains of an old plywood sign have made way for an electric green background punctuated by gold and copper lines that ascend to the building’s roofline. Artist Nick Miller partnered with the Bailey Avenue Business Association (BABA) and University District Community Development Association (UDCDA) on the piece of public art as part of a broader initiative called Bailey Fights Blight.

Started in the Fall of 2014, Bailey Fights Blight is a community-based project that seeks to board up and secure blighted and vacant storefronts along Bailey Avenue, while incorporating public art as a way to beautify the neighborhood, re-imagine vacant or underutilized properties and help redevelop the commercial corridor. The project has brought over 200 volunteers from the community, area schools and universities, and businesses to board vacant and blighted buildings, prep and prime walls for murals, weed and mulch tree pits, clear out storm drains, and maintain vacant lots.

“All too often, the focus is on big ticket development projects across the city, yet it is these small, incremental improvements made over the course of years that can lead to significant improvements in quality of life for existing residents and businesses” stated Roseann Scibilia, Executive Director of the UDCDA.

Funded through a $2,000 Arts Service Initiative of WNY grant, the mural is the latest addition to Bailey Avenue’s ever-evolving streetscape. The design for the mural developed out of a number of community brainstorming sessions lead by Nick Miller. Presented only with construction paper, scissors, a glue stick and some books for inspiration, residents, business owners, and students were challenged to reconsider their traditional ideas of murals as scenic landscapes or portraits, and instead focus on things like color, shape, and pattern. Members of the Stockbridge Avenue Block Club attended one of the meetings and shared the phrase “stocks are rising” as a motto for their street. This would ultimately become the inspiration behind the mural, which is composed of an upwardly darting gold and copper line set against a vibrant green background. The design, which carries across three sides of the building, is meant to give the viewer a sense of being uplifted.

“Communities become great when they’re built for and by the people who use them. Bailey Fights Blight is demonstrating that residents armed with nothing more than paintbrushes and rollers can transform their communities for the better” said Ibrahim Cisse, President of BABA.

Community painting days were held throughout July and August, and, despite the 85+ degree weather, over two dozen volunteers were part of the painting process. From AmeriCorp VISTAs working in neighborhood schools and Tool Library members and volunteers, to business owners and residents, volunteers worked collaboratively with the artist to tape and paint the design. By keeping the design bold yet simple, Nick has made it easier for the mural to be maintained by the community for many years to come.

The completed mural is just one of a number of positive developments happening on Bailey Avenue over the last year. A new farmers market sponsored by the Buffalo Promise Neighborhood is bringing fresh and affordable produce to the neighborhood at the corner of Bailey Avenue and Dartmouth Avenue. The Varsity Theatre located at 3165 Bailey Avenue held its grand opening in February after nearly $400,000 worth of renovations and being shuttered for over a decade. Over half a dozen new small businesses have sprung up on Bailey Avenue between Winspear Avenue and Kensington Avenue and the UDCDA was just awarded a $300,000 Better Buffalo Fund grant to assist business owners with façade improvements and building renovations along Bailey Avenue.

Bailey Fights Blight has helped bring together key community stakeholders, such as the Bailey Avenue Business Association, Buffalo Promise Neighborhood, Junior League of Buffalo, LISC Buffalo, University at Buffalo, University District Block Club Coalition, University District Community Development Association, University District Council Office, University Heights Collaborative, the University Heights Tool Library and Villa Maria College. Through these partnerships, Bailey Fights Blight hopes to continue its blight mitigation and public art activities into the coming year.

With nearly 20,000 cars traveling down Bailey every day, turning vacant and blighted buildings into pieces of art and visual statements on the neighborhood not only transforms Bailey’s physical fabric, but also can begin to change people’s perceptions and attitudes toward the street. They can capitalize on the cultural and artistic vibrancy of Bailey that is oftentimes overlooked or ignored. By looking at the issues of vacancy, vandalism, and graffiti as opportunities for community-driven change, artists, business owners, residents, and students can work together on community-based solutions to quality of life challenges.

For those interested in getting involved, please visit www.ourheights.org/baileyfightsblight

View more photos from the project