Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Successful Day in Court

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

It was a successful day, Wednesday, July 15th at 500 Indiana Avenue for Trinidad Concerned Citizens for Reform, Inc. The Honorable Judge Joseph Beshouri granted an extension for TCCR to redeem the property at 1601 Montello Avenue, TCCR’s planned green job resource center for the community. The building was donated to the community on behalf of TCCR by Wilhelmina Lawson, the nonprofit’s co-founder and Executive Director, but was sold at a tax sale to Embassy Tax Suite after TCCR’s registered agent failed to deliver notices that the property was being taxed by the City wrongfully as though a nonprofit was not occupying the lot.

Beshouri granted the extension on the grounds that Embassy Tax Services had not yet fully served the defendants, namely one Brenda Rose who Embassy Tax Services’ lawyer says they’ve been searching for for the past year to no avail and will serve via public notice as a final effort. Brenda Rose is named on the Deed of Trust.

Beshouri also considered that Ward 5 Councilmember Harry Thomas, Jr. provided a letter of support promising assistance in rectifying the near $15,000 owed in taxes. “I am working diligently with the District’s Office of the Chief Financial Officer to resolve this issue, and I am exploring all possible legislative remedies with our General Counsel and Budget Office.”

It is expected that the next court date, October 7th will result in the loss of the property if TCCR is unable to come up with the monies owed, including more than $4,000 in legal fees by then. Lawson is confident a solution will be found. “The community wants it,” she says of the center.

Risk of Losing

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

The partially renovated liquor store that Ward 5 ANC, Wilhelmina Lawson purchased and donated to the community on behalf of her 501c3 nonprofit organization, Trinidad Concerned Citizens for Reform, Inc. (TCCR) is at risk of being turned over to a new owner this July, likely never fulfilling the vision Ms. Lawson and the community has for it to become a job training and placement center. The risk is especially great for the Trinidad neighborhood given the economic crisis the nation is suffering. When America has a cold, Trinidad has the flu. This Northeast, D.C. neighborhood is one of the City’s most impoverished.

Last summer, Trinidad became notorious in the mainstream media for violence that was reportedly a symptom of an alternative economic structure that plagues residential D.C. In fact, in the ‘80s, Northeast had been home to the City’s largest open air drug market, run by one of the nation’s top three most notorious cocaine dealers, Rayful Edmonds, III. This was just blocks from where MPD instituted military-style checkpoints last year as part of a Safe City Initiative that will also place 30 police cameras in Trinidad.

When Lawson moved to Trinidad in the early ‘90s, she immediately noticed a need to clean up the neighborhood. She co-founded TCCR in 1994 and began by literally picking up trash and evolving to landscaping and running out-of-school time educational and recreational programs that has enrolled more than 100 youths. Her goal: to change Trinidad “from a drug community to a garden community.

While considerable work has been done to “green” Trinidad before the word became stimulus package-mainstream, Lawson knows that to truly create a sustainable environment for the residents of this neighborhood – one of the City’s largest population of under 18-year-olds – jobs are needed. She sits on her porch daily and is asked by young men if she knows of any work.

“In order to continue to the family cycle and life cycle, we need to have jobs and training and education,” Lawson said. “I see it everyday. This is what they’re approaching me about, they want jobs.”

Though TCCR, in partnership with another local nonprofit, DC Greenworks, received a grant from the District Department of Employment Services to employ up to 24 youths beginning in June to plant rain gardens in the neighborhood as part the Mayor’s Green Summer Job Corps, Lawson, and the young men wonder, “What will happen after the summer?”

The former liquor store that sits at Montello Avenue and Queens Street has been a “beacon of hope” for the community. Neighborhood meetings resulted in a plan for the three-story building to be a resource center housing career and academic labs and administrative space that will serve as a training ground for people wanting to enter or re-enter the workforce. However, a faulty registered agent had not been delivering notices of property taxes owed to the City, and a bill has collected beyond Lawson’s means. She had mortgaged her home to purchase the building.

Perhaps had Ms. Lawson been aware, she would have sooner been able to inform the City that the property is owned by her 501c3, and property taxes, now totaling up to $14,000, should not have mounted in the first place. However, as time continued to lapse, the City put the building up for a tax sale and it was purchased by Embassy Tax Services.  Unable to resolve the issue so far, Embassy Tax Services initiated a lawsuit March 2008 in the District Superior Court to foreclose on the property and revoke Lawson’s right to redemption – her ability to buy the property back from the tax sale purchaser. Absolute right to redemption passes after 6 months from the tax sale. Lawson has been to court 3 times asking for extensions as she works to fundraise.

“In our last court hearing, May 13th [2009], the court indicated that it was going to be unwilling to consider further extensions,” explained Ellen Cohen of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, LLP, a local firm that is working the case probono. “We need to come up with the money or TCCR needs to move on and accept that it might lose the property, and we really just don’t want that to happen.”

In order to redeem, TCCR will have to come up with the back taxes owed to the City as well as the $4,300 in legal fees incurred by the Embassy Tax Services. The next court date is scheduled for July 15, 2009.

According to Cohen, Ward 5 Councilmember Harry Thomas, Jr. and his office has expressed a willingness to find an administrative solution at least to the City’s portion of the bill.

Grassroots community activities are being planned and an online campaign is being run on FaceBook.com, GoodSearch.com, and TCCR’s own website, www.TCCRinc.org to help secure the other funds needed, and to continue to generate the resources needed to complete renovations on the building. So far, approximately $100 has been raised.

“I get so excited when I think of the possibilities,” said Lawson. “All it’ll take is just delivering the resources and the support that’s needed.”

Thank you!

Good Search

Monday, May 18th, 2009

TCCR has officially registered with GoodSearch, a Yahoo!-powered search engine that gives our supporters a chance to raise money each time they search the Internet of shop online. TCCR earns about a penny per search to help our efforts in building a green-collar economy in Trinidad, Northeast. Similarly, GoodShop.com, a new online shopping mall, donates up to 37 percent of each purchase. A shopper may select from hundreds of stores including Amazon, Target, Gap, Best Buy, ebay, Macy’s and Barnes & Noble and for every order placed, the designated cause benefits. And, it doesn’t cost the users anything!

Our goal is to earn $10,000 through the site this year which will go towards our building fund for our green job training and placement center. Once renovations are complete, we finally have a home-base for our programs and operations after 15 years of service. This former liquor store will be a symbol of our vision to change Trinidad from a drug community to a garden community as we know with it we will be able to provide and inspire a stable economy, education, and environment for our young people. Imagine a facility where people can learn to be prepared for all the job opportunities being created by the redevelopment of the Florida Avenue Market or the new Walt Disney Co. hotel being built at the National Harbor in Prince George’s County.

TCCR is excited about the prospects of fundraising with GoodSearch. The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation which has earned more than $10,000; The ASPCA which has raised more than $23,000; and The Bubel/Aiken Foundation which supports children with disabilities and has earned more than $12,000.

Be sure to go to www.goodsearch.com, enter “Trinidad Concerned Citizens” and select Trinidad Concerned Citizens for Reform, Inc. (only partial name is allowed for verification process) as the charity you want to support. And, spread the word!


GoodSearch: You Search...We Give!

I’m Dreaming of a Green Summer

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Thank you to the Nebraska Society of Washington, D.C. for bringing their annual Arbor Day celebration to Trinidad! Saturday, April 25th, more than 20 Nebraskans-turned-Washingtonians showed up along with DC Greenworks to help TCCR plant 5 oak willow trees along the 1500 and 100 blocks of Montello Avenue, N.E.

One homeowner, Carla, was especially estatic and neighborhood residents like Mike became impromtu volunteers.

A Greener Future

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

Check out this video message from Van Jones, author of “The Green-Collar Economy” and Special Advisor for Green Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation at the White House Council on Environmental Quality, and our partners in the Mayor’s Green Summer Youth Employment Program, DC Greenworks!


Green Jobs for a Green Future from White House on Vimeo.

Organic & Fly

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Organic t-shirt company, Broccoli City (BC), a partner in TCCR’s efforts to educate urban communities about living green, has teamed up this weekend with the iconic cap company, New Era for an Earth Day celebration and announcement of New Era’s new recycled cap.

Started in 2007 in Greensboro, NC, BC has evolved to a nationwide green movement awareness campaign with a focus on urban communities. In addition to connecting with TCCR to promote sustainable practices, and hosting events in DC, ATL, and LA designed specifically for trendsetters in fashion and in being conscientious citizens, BC utilizes other progressive marketing strategies such as traditional and video blogging and teaching organic gardening methods at a Greensboro elementary school.

“Educating people about going green and the environment is important because how the environment and the earth is changing. The heat that is increasing – due to the fact of global warming – is increasing a lot faster in the southern part of the country,” explains Marcus Allen, one of BC’s founders. Although there has also been increased government support and other mainstream attention given to the issue, still Allen finds, “Most markets in an urban environment – or in a ‘hood – don’t even sell organic products. I think it’s important for us to try to step in and do something about it.”

New Era Cap Company, Inc. is also a trendsetter having originated the “True Fitted” style, the 59FIFTTY. Since its founding in the 1920’s in Buffalo, NY, New Era has become the single most popular cap company, now producing over 35 million caps per year and selling in 40 countries.

 

Thank you to SoJones.com for covering this important event!

From Gun Barrels to Rain Barrels

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

 

Thanks to the Mayor’s Green Summer Youth Employment Program TCCR has successfully solidified a partnership with our outstanding new neighbors, DC Greenworks to create two rain gardens in Trinidad for the benefit of our community and the Anacostia Watershed. The rain gardens provide a natural way to capture stormwater runoff and the pollutants that might otherwise end up in our water supply.

This progressive classroom and field-based training pilot program will be essential in our transformation from a drug community to a garden community as we work with young people to improve our education, economy, and environment.

Through our Green Summer grant, up to 24 young adults aged 14 - 21 will be introduced to environmental issues and solutions, green-collar careers, and gain direct field experience through the installation of rain gardens and designing of a community awareness campaign. Visits to the US Arboretum, Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens, Kingman and Heritage Island Park and other local sites will enhance our learning.

501c3 nonprofit DC Greenworks is metro DC’s preeminent green roof advocate and educator working to provide attainable and affordable low impact development technologies and training.

For more information on how you or someone you know may apply, visit: green.dc.gov/summer and select “Green Summer” as your preferred employment option and “Watershed” as your topic.

The Stars Are All Green

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

The first ever eco-friendly presidential welcome is officially phresh and ghetto with the addition of Minneapolis hip-hop group, JUST.LIVE to the performance bill. DJ Beverly Bond is also listed as entertainment along with headliner Wyclef Jean. The Green Inaugural Ball, presented by Discovery Channel’s Planet Green, features top environmentalists as guest speakers, including: Graham Hill, founder of TreeHugger.com and VP of Planet Green Interactive; Summer Rayne Oakes, model, activist and on-air correspondent for Planet Green; Christiana Wyly, environmental entrepreneur; Margie Alt, Executive Director of Environment America; Gay Browne, founder of Greenopia and Honorable Consul Thassanee Wanick.

Co-producer Stephanie Campbell says, “We are thrilled about the line-up for the evening.  The theme carried throughout evening will be Actions Not Words.” 

Some of that action includes a percentage of the ticket sales benefiting nonprofit partners like the Washington, DC-based 501c3 Trinidad Concerned Citizens for Reform working to create a sustainable future for D.C. residents by building an eco-friendly job training and placement center and developing a local green-collar workforce. Trinidad, a Northeast D.C. neighborhood, became notorious last year for its drugs, violence, and constitutionally suspect police checkpoints. TCCR founder and Executive Director, Wilhelmina Lawson says she wants to present a story of change for 2009. “Our motto is to change Trinidad from a drug community to a garden community.”

Also celebrating Obama’s message of change at The Green Inaugural Ball is art sensation, Ryan Simmons with his eight foot tall Pop Art painting of Barack Obama. ”I’m thrilled to be a part of The Green Inaugural Ball,” says Simmons, “It’s a celebration of real change, a call to action for us all and, I hope, this message speaks through my art as well.” Recycle Runway artist, Nancy Judd, will be showing her ‘Campaign for Change Couture’ collection which includes eye-catching art garments created from recycled Obama campaign posters and flyers.

To purchase a ticket, please visit www.GreenInauguralBall.com or contact Melissa Brouse at 202-367-5575 if you are having problems with the on-line ticket purchases.

TCCR Welcomes President-Elect Barack Obama at the First Green Inaugural Ball

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

We are pleased to announce that TCCR has partnered with DC’s first green event planning company, Event Emissary, to kick off the 2009 Inauguration celebration and in the District because we hope to mainstream the importance of creating a sustainable life for our inner-city neighborhoods. DC suffers from the poorest performing public educational system, unemployment rates that are nearly twice the national average, and recent studies have revealed the dangerous impact living in polluted metropolitan areas has on our health. Sustainability in 2009 has to be a three-fold action plan addressing education, economy and the environment; we can start by being more conscious of how we treat our surroundings. Says TCCR Executive Director, Wilhelmina Lawson, “a clean environment makes a clean mind.”

Catering at The Green Ball will be 100 percent organic. The food waste and floral arrangements will be recycled or composted and the lighting will be energy efficient. Event Emissary is also buying wind power offsets and carbon credits to neutralize environmental costs of transportation. Tickets cost $500 per person. The location is metro-accessible. Special invited guest Wyclef Jean will be performing on the main stage. President-elect Barack Obama, Vice President-elect Joe Biden, former Vice President Al Gore and you have been invited. Please join us.

When: Saturday, January 17, 2009; 8:00p - Midnight

Where: Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW

*TCCR must be selected by ticket purchaser in order to benefit from this event. Please select “Trinidad Concerned Citizens for Reform” when purchasing your ticket from www.GreenInauguralBall.com.

Or, if you are unable to attend, you are welcome to donate now to TCCR:

Thank you!

The People’s Checkpoint

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

In 2009, TCCR hopes to complete environmentally friendly construction on an already partially rehabilitated liquor store TCCR Co-Founder and Executive Director, Wilhelmina Lawson donated to the nonprofit. To afford the donation and achieve her goal of providing a job training and job placement center for the community, Ms. Lawson mortgaged her own home – the current administrative headquarters for TCCR - and put up money from her retirement fund.

Once final renovations are complete, The People’s Checkpoint will provide space for the expansion of TCCR’s services and full engagement of TCCR’s partnerships with the nearby Montello Early Childhood Development Center, which provides many community families with affordable, quality day care, supplemental education, and recreational activities; and with New Community Housing Development Organization (NCHDO), of which TCCR is a founding member. Through NCHDO, Ward 5 residents, officials, and agencies are working to cooperatively reclaim abandoned homes, develop new affordable housing, and help low-income families become first-time homeowners.

TCCR’s service expansions will offer pathways to sustainable economy (linking participants to work in progressive industries such as the “green-collar economy”), courses in sustainable education (health and nutrition classes will evolve to include cooking workshops and yoga for physical and mental fitness), and opportunities to create a sustainable community-wide environment (introducing rainwater gardening techniques and organizing access to affordable methods of energy efficiency).

If you are with an organization that would like to partner with our efforts, please contact us, your work is appreciated!

If you are interested in being a sponsor of the construction site or any of our programs and events, please contact us, your help is needed!

Or, donate now: