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Rosalind Grigsby

Old Takoma Business Association

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December 05, 2006

Favorite Treasures

Favorite gifts — Handcrafted jewelry, pottery and crafts, vintage period jewelry, musical instruments

Gifts from near and afarI love this time of year — it lets me explore the nooks and crannies of our small shops and discover great, inexpensive "treasures" that I've overlooked throughout the year. Our shops' theme this holiday, "Unique & creative gifts from near and afar," is evident as soon as you stroll down Carroll and browse through one store after another. The shops are chock full of treasures from both local and international artisans.

Somehow, fine art, distinctive clothing, and hand-made crafts from every corner of the world have made their way to our doorstep. How convenient for us. And how lucky for family and friends on our gift lists!

My family agreed many years ago to keep our holiday gifts "frugal & fabulous," and your family might have the same goal. I find that our Old Takoma shops make it easy to give frugal & fabulous gifts.

Shop Old Takoma — Takoma DC & Takoma Park MarylandMy three nieces love the earrings I give them each year. (My favorite frugal & fabulous jewelry stores: Amano, Magic Carpet, Now and Then, American Craft, Polly Sue's Vintage, Moonshadow, and...whew! Too many to list here!) My brother-in-law will receive one of his favorite gifts: an alternative poli-sci or history book. (Did you know that The Culture Shop next to the Metro station has a great socially-conscious bookstore-in-a-store nestled between the hand-crafted jewelry and pottery?)

A young friend can't get through culinary college without his Crocs shoes and all-cotton socks (they're on the wall by the check-out at TPSS Food Co-op). A neighbor's new porch "needs" a unique Turkish hanging lamp to light up our late-night summer dinners (dozens in a rainbow of colors hang from the Covered Market's ceiling). And my little Shetland Sheepdogs will definitely get stocking stuffers from the Big Bad Woof.

I could go on and on — and I will — but not here. OTBA / MainStreet is compiling a shopping guide that lists all the hidden treasures of the Old Takoma shops, even the "finds" in the back-of-the store display cases.

Look for the guide later this week at our shops and here online at www.MainStreetTakoma.org.

— Bevi Chagnon
Chair, Organization Committee
Principal, PubCom.com

Home for the Holidays — Your Community, Your Money

While shopping for the holidays this year, consider the ripples you make with your choices and your money throughout the community.

As we look for the good deals to stretch our budgets, we also need to consider the broader impact of keeping dollars in the community, circulating through other hands and lives, enriching the character of our town and the experience of living here. The more local trips a dollar makes, the more power it has to change our town.

If you spend your money at national chain stores, about 13% comes back to the community.<br />
However, if you buy from an independent, locally-owned store, 45% of the money stays local.The local multiplier effect refers to the cumulative value money accrues each time it circulates through a local economy. So the dollar used to purchase a birthday present at S and A Beads may be paid, in part, in wages to a student who works in the shop part time, who then buys flowers for a sick friend at Park Florist, which then pays rent to a local property owner, who then gets lunch at Red Line Grill, which then places an order at Community Printing for new fliers, which then…. You get the idea.

Power comes in keeping our dollars local so that the impact they have on a local economy is amplified.

If you buy your holiday gifts on-line, from an Internet giant like Amazon, your money splits town without a backward glance. It doesn’t stick around to take on new forms and live again in another exchange of labor, resources, and brain power. If you spend your money at national chain stores, about 13 percent comes back to the community, primarily through wages paid locally. However, if you buy from an independent, locally-owned store, 45 percent of the money stays local, paid in the form of wages, rent, business with other local businesses, and so on, according to Michael Shuman, Takoma Park author of The Small Mart Revolution: How Local Business Can Beat Global Competition and Going Local.

But that’s just the beginning. Spending locally enriches the community. Local businesses give to sports teams and schools, support runners in charity races, donate to animal rights groups, contribute to our music festivals and much more. Who sponsors your child’s baseball team or soccer team? Just check the back of the team shirts: Amano, House of Musical Traditions, Middle Eastern Cuisine, Now and Then, Summer Delights, American Craft and the list goes on (check www.baberuthnetowrk.com and www.takomasoccer.org for the complete listing).

Local businesses step up to make donations to the Montgomery Blair High School Silent Auction, one of the biggest fundraisers for the biggest high school around, as well as the activities at the elementary and middle schools. Advertising by local businesses helps keep independent community newspapers alive. The Old Takoma Clean-up days that happen in both the spring and the fall are underwritten by local businesses which provide the money for the plants, mulch, tools, and water bottles, as well as many of the volunteers who beautify downtown Carroll Avenue from the Takoma Junction to the Takoma Theatre. Did you think the city government did that? It’s our local businesses and volunteers at work.

And still we haven’t finished measuring the impact of supporting local businesses on our personal lives and our community. The Big Bad Woof hosts pet adoption days nearly every weekend, and has facilitated the adoption of over 100 animals in the last year. Mark’s Kitchen designates at least one day a month where the profits are donated to a local charity, whether it’s the Washington Animal Rescue League or other non-profit groups. Our canopy of trees along Carroll and Laurel Avenues is watered and cared for primarily by businesses who “adopt” them during the hot summer months, when rain water isn’t enough to sustain young trees. Sangha provides performance space for many groups, including student-created theatre performances. Many of our local artists find space to exhibit their works in our shops, like the creative recycling pieces done by Fritzie Seidler and her students in the windows at Salon Jam and the photos or paintings lining the walls at Savory and Everyday Gourmet. The Culture Shop hosts art exhibits as well as readings by local authors.

Communities thrive with the active participation of the people, organizations and businesses in them. Just as we are politically engaged locally, we can also be economically engaged. Supporting locally-owned, independent, small businesses becomes a powerful tool in building a vibrant place to live and by deliberately keeping our spending local, we can magnify the impact of our involvement many times over.

— Roz Grigsby
Executive Director
OTBA—Old Takoma Business Association

December 04, 2006

Fight The Power

As a civilian, I feel I must take this opportunity to thank our locally-based, locally-owned businesses who provide a human face to Main Street Takoma. They pour their time, hearts and fortunes into making our downtown community unique and worthy of celebration. Sometimes it seems that the grand global marketplace is hellbent on a dreary march to the relentless median. The bottom-line, cost-effective, almighty average. That gray center of the bell curve where you’ll find about six billion other people, all drinking the same overpriced turnpike rest stop coffee. Via the internet, if that were at all possible. But that’s not Main Street Takoma. Here, when we talk about value, and what a thing is worth, cost is not always the deciding factor.

Our local shops are our friends, our neighbors, and our families. They care. Don’t expect some dot com out there to sponsor your kid’s softball league. There isn’t a corporate giant out there liable to lift a finger for retired greyhounds, feral cats or any form of poultry concern. If there’s a death in the family, I don’t think any massive internet distributors are going to pitch in to send over a tray of food. No operator on duty will give you a pat on the back or a hug. I’ve seen our merchants do all these things.

So, if you think our Main Street only good for the occasional Sunday morning scone, then I humbly suggest you might just as well drive your gigantic SUV over to Monolithic Coffee and join the other marching minions of the tickytack jihad. And if you believe that there just isn’t anything happening in Main Street Takoma that would be of any interest, then I must say, sadly, that you have my pity. But I’ll bet next week’s paycheck that you haven’t been there recently to check out your misunderstanding.

Main Street Takoma is unique. Exciting. Sustainable. Renewable. It validates. It has value. Welcome to Main Street Takoma. Use Main Street Takoma. Humanity, no extra charge.

John Hume
Design Chair