Monday, November 8, 2021

Once more, Key Food looks to be closing overnight TONIGHT; plus, Thanksgiving in aisle 6

After the cancellation last Wednesday night, Key Food on Avenue A will once again close overnight to update its self-serve stations and point-of-sale systems. (Thanks to Stacie Joy for the top pic!)

Meanwhile, we're continuing to monitor the latest on the grocer's aisle-produce switcheroo-ing

Key Food Observers have noted that a seasonal change has occurred on aisle 6. The future home of new freezers and temporary home for bulk paper towels and other bulky items is now your go-to spot for roasting and stuffing pans ... not to mention cookie sheets. The Pepperidge Farm Herb Seasoned Stuffings are here too.
Down the aisle, you'll find the cans of Libby's Pumpkin Puree... and other baking items...
Given the time-sensitive Thanksgiving connection, we will likely NOT see any further changes here until AFTER Thanksgiving.

So, question: Where are the bulk paper towels if not here on aisle 6? Back in their old spot atop the aisle one freezers...

Documenting the city's 'clean-up' along Tompkins Square Park on 7th Street

Photos by Stacie Joy (click on images for a larger view)

On Friday afternoon, a Department of Homeless Services-led entourage, featuring the Department of Sanitation, the Parks Enforcement Patrol and the NYPD, conducted a "clean-up" in and along Tompkins Square Park.

Several posted notices, dated in late October and early November, detailed what would be taking place, a process that most of the residents — a number ranging from 10 to 25 at any given time — have experienced while sheltering along Seventh Street between Avenue A and Avenue B late this summer and early fall. 

The flyers also offer information about DHS shelter services and how to apply online for various grants...
EVG contributor Stacie Joy was there to document the proceedings. There were two sweeps — one on Seventh Street where nearly a dozen makeshift tent encampments have arrived since the late summer ... and the other inside the Park, where the people who had been congregating at the now-closed chess tables have moved.
The people staying on Seventh Street did everything themselves with trash bags and other items provided by the city: They cleaned up their areas, threw out some garbage, struck their tents and waited it out across the street... all under the supervision of the various city agencies... 
The clean-up went on mostly without incident. One man, clearly agitated, hurled insults at the Parks Enforcement Patrol and NYPD while filming them. They did not respond to his tirade, and he eventually stopped.
Stacie spoke with several of the people who have been living along Seventh Street. (She also had their permission to take photos.) 

They reported the same problems that we've heard countless times: the shelters aren't safe, they can't be with their partners and their personal belongings get stolen or destroyed. 

The people Stacie talked with said they continue to feel safer on the street than inside a city-run shelter. According to an April report by Coalition for the Homeless titled "View From The Street:"
"Shelters are considered by many homeless individuals as providing an unacceptably low level of personal security. The incidence of theft, physical attack, or other types of violations in the shelters — whether experienced, witnessed, or simply rumored — clearly contributes to the perception of the shelter system as chaotic and unsafe."

This article at The City documents why some people would rather stay on the streets.

Several of the residents living on Seventh Street are also experiencing substance-dependency issues. (NARCAN kits were spotted in some of the tents.)

On Seventh Street Friday afternoon, Junior was protecting his friend JD's tent and belongings. JD has a 9 to 5 job in New Jersey and wasn't there for the sweep. Junior carefully cleaned everything up, sat with it all, and set it back up when the enforcement team left. 
There's Jonny and Slay, a queer couple who are fiercely protective of one another.
Benny, a leader of sorts along here, issued directions for the others. He's been through this many times before and seemed resigned to the situation. He gave guidance for the others about what can, might and should happen. He was essentially correct. 

Sapphire, the only woman on the block, asked for help finding feminine hygiene products. 

Meanwhile, the sanitation and parks crews were much less discriminating inside the Park, tossing everything they saw along the benches on the southern section ...
This is also where residents witness more frequent open-air drug use (heroin and K2) and dealing.

Back on Seventh Street, the tents returned to their previous locations by nightfall, with the residents wondering when the next sweep might occur.

"Most asked me why they have to play a game like this. The Parks Department sergeant says they have to move their stuff or it will get tossed. The 9th Precinct says the residents can't obstruct access on the sidewalk and their belongings must remain attended to," said Stacie. "So they ended up striking their homes, temporarily moving across the street, and then coming back a few hours later and setting up in the same spots."

As housing advocates told the Times over the summer, these citywide sweeps just move people from one place to another and fail to address the housing crisis and provide stability, recovery and treatment to those who need it.

There won't be a Cookie Walk this Christmas

Organizers have decided not to host a Cookie Walk again this year at St. Nicholas of Myra Orthodox Church on Avenue A and 10th Street. 

Although there wasn't an official reason given for the cancellation, concerns over COVID-19 certainly played a role in this decision. According to an Instagram post from Friday:
After careful consideration, we have come to the unfortunate decision that we must cancel this year’s St. Nicholas Cookie Walk. We hope to be back next year, better than ever. Please have a safe and enjoyable holiday season. Merry Christmas.
The always-festive event, held in early December in the church basement, offers about 75 varieties of homemade cookies and pastries each year. As the name implies, you take a walk around cookie-filled tables and pick your favorites. 

Last year's Cookie Walk, which would have the 12th annual, was also canceled due to the pandemic.

Bar Veloce returns from pandemic hiatus

Bar Veloce reopened in recent days here at 175 Second Ave. between 11th Street and 12th Street. 

The wine bar had been closed since the start of the pandemic in March 2020. Owner Frederick Twomey reportedly decided to keep all of his Bar Veloce outposts closed in the city. 

"It didn't feel right to open, even in some weird edification. My job is to bring people together," he told The Spirit back in August. 

He also updated the interiors of the bars during the closures. 

The locations here (the original circa 2000, expanded in 2011) and in Chelsea and Columbus Circle are open... with the Soho outpost returning soon. 

East Village hours: Daily from 4 p.m. to midnight, with a 1 a.m. close Friday and Saturday. (Reservations are accepted for the communal tables via email: info@barveloce.com.)

Plant-based Mexican cuisine next for 120 1st Ave.

Here's the word about the next tenant for 120 First Ave. — Raíz Modern Mexican.

This appears to be the first outpost for the restaurant. Here's more about them via a LinkedIn profile:
Plant-forward restaurant — featuring burritos, tacos, salads and bowls for health-conscious consumers, served in a ... friendly fast-casual setting. 
The @TradedNY account announced the lease signing the other day.

The last tenant here, Chef Hans Asian Kitchen, closed after just a few weeks in business.

Thanks to Steven for the photo and Upper West Sider for the tip!

Holy smokes! Another accessories store setting up shop, this time on 2nd Street

Signage is up now for Manhattan Smoke Shop here on Second Street east of First Avenue... making it the fifth or sixth like-minded store to open in the neighborhood in the past few months (here and here and here and here, for example). 

And the business is a few feet away from the Deli & Smoke Shop...
... though they distinguish themselves by offering beer and Boar's Head — and White Claw Variety Packs. 

The Manhattan Smoke Shop takes the place of a short-lived taco shop. (Or was it a hookah place?)

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included... (with a reader-submitted post-Halloween pic from 13th Street) ...

• Judge issues a temporary restraining order, halting construction at East River Park (Friday) ... The first sections of East River Park set to close today as resiliency work begins; activists arrested (Monday

• Election results: Rivera, Marte win local City Council races (Wednesday

• A look at 302 E. 2nd St., where a housing lottery is underway (Wednesday

• Work on green space for long-vacant site on 4th Street near the Bowery is underway (Thursday

• Commemorating the 20th anniversary of the eviction of the Charas/El Bohio Community & Cultural Center (Friday

• This is what's next for the former Benny's Burritos space on Avenue A (Monday

• Ho, ho, no! SantaCon slated for Dec. 11 (Tuesday

• USA Super Stores debuts on Houston Street and Avenue D (Friday

• Halloween in the East Village (Saturday edition) ... Halloween in the East Village (Sunday edition

• Outside the Bored Ape Yacht Club pop up on 3rd Street (Tuesday

• New outpost of the Wild Son opens Tuesday on 1st Avenue (Thursday

• 32 Avenue C has been demolished (Tuesday) • Essex Squeeze bringing coffee, juices and smoothies to 5th Street (Monday

• SMØR reopens today after a brief renovation (Saturday

• Jiang's Kitchen signage-canopy combo arrives on St. Mark's Place (Tuesday

• Blank Street is now open at 36 3rd Ave. (Monday)

• Oh-K Dog now officially coming soon on St. Mark's Place (Monday

• The former Central Bar being converted to office use on 9th Street (Wednesday

• A very quick pivot for Chichen Itzá, now going as Tompkins Village Cafe on 10th Street (Thursday

• Noho Food Market hangs the signage on the Bowery (Monday)

... Over at 50 Avenue B, where the Portuguese cafe Joey Bats is opening soon, there's a new mural featuring Portuguese professional footballer Cristiano Ronaldo...
Paulie Nassar created the mural... (thanks to Stacie Joy for the pics!)
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RIP Gary Auslander

Gary Auslander, a local hospitality veteran and longtime resident of First Street, died on Oct. 31. According to a Facebook post by his son Isaac, Auslander suffered a heart attack. 

His friends and loved ones are gathering this evening at 6 at the Lazy Llama Coffee Bar, 72 E. First St., west of First Avenue, to celebrate his life and share stories. 

Auslander's projects included Cajun favorite Baby Jake's on First Avenue and Baby Jupiter on Orchard Street.
He is survived by his wife Susan and sons Jake, Issac and Eli. 

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H/T Dave on 7th; Baby Jake's photo from 1997 by Dave Buchwald.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Saturday's parting shot

A scene from the annual Dias de Los Muertos at Campos Community Garden on 12th Street today... thanks to Stacie Joy for the photo...

On Astor Place, 'The Way Home' aims to educate New Yorkers about the city's housing crisis

"The Way Home," an interactive self-guided exhibition on the city's housing crisis, will be on Astor Place through this weekend. 

Here's more about it via the RXHome website:
New Yorkers will have the opportunity to walk through the maze and learn about the challenges many people experiencing homelessness face in New York City. The interactive maze will educate New Yorkers about the proven solutions the next mayoral administration can take to end and prevent homelessness in New York City. 
For New Yorkers experiencing homelessness, the city's homeless service system is at best, a maze. At worst, barriers like unnecessarily burdensome systems that determine who is deserving of rental assistance and outdated policies that prioritize emergency shelter ahead of permanent housing, keep thousands of New Yorkers, the majority of whom are Black and Latino families, in an unending cycle of homelessness and housing instability.
As CBS 2 reported:
The Department of Homeless Services says people can expect to spend 90 days to a year in a shelter while they apply for affordable housing, but city data shows the average person spends 520 days there, trying to find a home.
CBS 2 has more about the challenges of trying to navigate the shelter system in the search for permanent housing in this report from last night. 

The exhibition — open today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. — has been here since Wednesday after a stop outside Brooklyn Borough Hall.
Here's a video preview...