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Events Featured Northside News

Live on the Drive 2015 Lineup

The moment you’ve been waiting for is here! The Live on the Drive 2015 lineup is an incredible slate of Minneapolis-based musicians you won’t want to miss. Mark your calendar for June 11th, July 9th, and August 13th from 6-8pm (rain dates the following Thursdays for each). With out further ado…

debbie duncan 025Debbie Duncan – June 11th

Debbie Duncan may be considered the upper Midwest’s “best-kept-musical secret”, but she has become a local legend and treasure in her home of Minneapolis. Her personality, vitality, and versatility all contribute to that fact. She is a terrific entertainer, and this is certainly part of her appeal. Most importantly, however, “she’s a superb vocalist, probably the finest in the area.” [Bob Protzman, St. Paul Pioneer Press]

[button link=”https://www.facebook.com/events/295743600613515/” type=”big” color=”green” newwindow=”yes”] RSVP for Debbie Duncan concert[/button]

tokiwrightToki Wright – July 9th

Blend soulful yet futuristic music with intelligent writing and you have Toki Wright.  Wright has over 1 million Youtube views, albums with Rhymesayers Entertainment, Top 20 charting on MTV for multiple videos, and an extensive and successful tour history. Now operating fully independent with Soul Tools Entertainment, Wright is making a major impact in the shifts in music how music is presented.

[button link=”https://www.facebook.com/events/452829104883005/” type=”big” color=”green” newwindow=”yes”] RSVP for Toki Wright concert[/button]

2843409 (1)Javier Trejo – August 13th

Javier‘s musical influences range from old-school country and Tejano music to R&B and Rock ‘n’ Roll. His self-titled album presents Bossa Pop original songs inspired by the music of Antonio Carlos Jobim, Jerry Garcia, Manu Chao, Arto Lindsay, Flaming Lips, David Gray, and RL Burnside. Javier Trejo’s songs transcend genres to create an intimate sound that seduces the listener.

[button link=”https://www.facebook.com/events/1003477656348090/” type=”big” color=”green” newwindow=”yes”] RSVP for Javier Trejo concert[/button]

 

 

Categories
Community Development

Planting for Pollinators: How Raingardens Can Help

butterflyMetro Blooms just scheduled a free raingarden workshop in the Heritage Park Community Room on Wednesday, June 10th from 6-9pm just south of Cleveland. We have additional workshops scheduled throughout the city as well if residents are interested in a different date/location.  At the workshop residents will learn about pollinator plants and raingardens and then have time to meet 1:1 with a Landscape Designer and Master Gardener to discuss their own property. Residents can register for a workshop at metroblooms.org

Learn more about why Planting for Pollinators is important…

In a world without bees, your next plate of food would have considerably less variety. By some estimates, one of every three bites of food we take depends on pollinators like bees. Pollinators are the small creatures—among them bees, butterflies and hummingbirds—that carry pollen from plant to plant as they forage, unknowingly performing an important step in the production of fruits and seeds.

In recent years, we have observed severe declines in various pollinator populations. Honey bees are a key example. According to the USDA, beekeepers lost an average of one-third of their colonies every winter from 2006 to 2011. In the last couple of decades, the monarch butterfly population has declined 90 percent in North America.

This is worrisome. Consider the following: more than 80 percent of plants depend on pollinators for survival. In this country alone, bees and other insect pollinators contribute more than $24 billion a year to the economy.

Why are pollinators disappearing? A leading cause is lost habitat. Quite simply, many pollinators no longer have the food and other resources they need to survive. They are also vulnerable to pesticides, in ways that are currently being studied.

While this problem exists globally, we can act on a personal level to help solve the problem. Our gardening practices can create urban habitats that attract and sustain pollinators. Choosing native plants is a step in the right direction: pollinators and plants that evolved in the same areas generally benefit one another. For example, milkweed attracts bees and butterflies. To reproduce, monarch butterflies actually need milkweed because it is the only plant their caterpillars eat. Practices on this scale can establish pollinators in our own backyards.

Which brings us to raingardens, one of our favorite topics. Metro Blooms teaches people how to plant raingardens as part of our mission to promote gardening, beautify the community, and help heal the environment. These shallow depressions, planted with native vegetation, allow stormwater to be cleaned naturally as it soaks into the ground, diverting polluted runoff from our waterways.

Creating raingardens that are also habitats for native pollinators is, quite simply, smart design. The raingardens help clean and preserve natural bodies of water and function as habitats for bees, butterflies, and other insects and small animals that pollinate. In turn, the pollinators, just by doing what they do, help the raingardens thrive so they can work efficiently to clean our water.

Learn more at one of our eco-friendly raingarden workshops.  This year we will offer lots of information on designing raingardens for pollinators: metroblooms.org/workshops.php

By Aleli Balagtas

Aleli Balagtas is a freelance writer interested in gardening ecologically.

Categories
Events Featured

Live on the Drive is right around the corner…

Summer is on everyone’s mind right now and it’s on ours too as we put the final touches on our 8th annual summer concert series, Live on the Drive. Mark your calendar for June 11thJuly 9th, and August 13th. Want to know who the bands are? We’re going to keep you waiting just a little bit longer 🙂 If you want to be the first to know join our email list! We’re excited to offer you a great new line-up and bring back the many things you’ve come to love about our events: Food Trucks, Movies in the Park, Artist Spotlight, and of course free lemonade.

These great events aren’t possible without the help of our sponsor organizations and individuals and the many volunteers. Consider becoming a Sponsor today or sign-up here if you are interested in volunteering before, during or after the event. One great way to help us spread the word is to join our eventLike us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. See you this summer!

Live on the Drive

Categories
Northside News

Join us at the Community Connections Non-Conference Saturday!

non-conference

The 2015 Community Connections nonConference – Creative Engagement and Action using arts and placemaking– will be held on Saturday, March 21st from 9:00a.m. to 3:00p.m., at the Minneapolis Convention Center.

The nonconference is FREE

[button link=”http://www.minneapolismn.gov/ncr/CommunityConnectionsConference” newwindow=”yes”] REGISTER[/button]

The nonconference theme – Creative Engagement and Action using arts and placemaking – is an in-depth look at creative engagement strategies and creative placemaking. Participants will be immersed into a experiential atmosphere where they will gain the skills and strategies to take creative placemaking techniques back to their own community and do it from start to finish.

The nonConference aims at enabling participants to:

  • Gain practical skills and tools to improve engagement and planning efforts;
  • Explore common challenges that most small organizations face;
  • Share ideas and approaches used to address challenges and bring solutions; and
  • Meet others, build new relationships and “broaden the table” around common goals and interests

Why a nonConference?

  • You’ll be challenged and interested: You will be learning by seeing and doing rather than sitting and listening to presentations.
  • You determine your own schedule: Come and go as you please during the times of 9:00am – 3:00pm.
  • There will be engaging Learning Labs: Learning labs replace the typical workshops, there are only 8 of them and they rotate throughout the day so you can attend the ones you like.
  • Interaction is key: This is the meat and potatoes of the conference. The Village Square is where you get to meet other participants and interact.
  • Everyone can participate: Language is often a barrier for participation from members of cultural communities in Minneapolis. Having many visual interactions allows for everyone to feel welcome.
  • The conference is family friendly: If not having a babysitter is preventing you from attending, you can bring your kids with you. We won’t have formal child care, but we will have a few family friendly activities in the Village Square.

This year’s nonConference is being planned by the Community Connections Conference Workgroup made up of representatives from Neighborhood Organizations, the Neighborhood and Community Engagement Commission (NCEC) and City Staff. Members of the workgroup are, Rita Ulrich, Cathy Spann from Jordan Area Community Council,  Kerry Cashman from the Seward Neighborhood Group, Amanda Vallone from Windom Community and Owner of beARTrageous, Kenya McKnight and Kirk Roggensack from the NCEC , Greg Simbeck from CPED and David Rubedor, Cheyenne Brodeen, Christina Kendrick and Jack Whitehurst from the NCR Department.

Categories
Crime and Safety Featured

Save the Date Cleveland Spring Clean May 9th

spring clean bannerSpring is in the air and we want to work together to make Cleveland the beautiful place we all know it to be. Join your friends and neighbors on May 9th for a spring clean and celebration. We’ll meet at the end of our blocks along Lowry Avenue were you’ll receive gloves, pickers and bags from Team Captains. Together we’ll walk the blocks from Lowry to Dowling picking up litter, tidying up and helping make the neighborhood sparkle. We’ll finish with a celebration lunch complete with music and resource tables. It’s going to be a great event and we hope you and your neighbors can make it out to join us. In the spirit of friendly competition, there will be a prize at the end for the street (Penn-Xerxes) with the highest turn out, so invite your neighbors!

We’re in need for Team Captains for each block, so please consider volunteering!

[button link=”http://connect.clevelandneighborhood.org/spring_clean_up_2015″ type=”big” color=”green”] Register for Spring Clean Today![/button]

or RSVP on Facebook

Categories
Northside News

Plant a tree today!

images

Starting Monday, March 9, in wards 3, 4, 5 and 6, the City of Minneapolis is offering more than 1,200 three- to eight-foot trees for only $25 each. If you don’t know which ward your property is in, you can look it up.

Mark your calendar now. Order your tree online at www.treetrust.org or call 952-767-3886. You must pick the trees up on May 16, 17, 18 or 19 at the Minneapolis Impound Lot. Trees are available for Minneapolis property owners including residents, businesses and nonprofits.

Choose from several varieties and sizes of trees, including fruit trees. First-come, first-served – order early for best selection. Limit one tree per property, maximum three properties.

Monday, March 23, the trees go on sale citywide.

Healthy trees look beautiful in your neighborhood, increase property values, help clean the air you breathe, absorb carbon dioxide, save on your energy bills with strategic planting, keep the city cooler in the summer, provide homes for wildlife and help manage stormwater.

Please pass along this information to your neighbors!

Please contact Cleveland neighborhood Association if you have any questions or comments about the process. Contact us via call  at 612-567-1262 for any questions!

Categories
Community Development

Cleveland Tiny Fields Expands!

72120324We are excited to be expanding Tiny Fields in Cleveland this year to up to 12 spots! The Tiny Fields Project distributes boulevard vegetable garden kits to Cleveland Neighborhood residents on a pay-what-you-can model with a maximum cost of $30 to start a new tiny field. Each kit includes enough seed and seedlings to plant a boulevard or alley with a variety of vegetables, a guide to vegetable gardening, and help to till and install new beds. Families participating then follow along using social media and learn throughout the season. Learn more at the Tiny Fields website or Apply Today!

-From Kelly Maloney, Volunteer Tiny Fields Coordinator

Categories
Featured Northside News Youth

“Drive-in” Movies in the Neighborhood – March 28th

drive-in movie carJoin your neighbors March 28th at 1pm for a fun afternoon creating ‘cars’ out of boxes and going to a “drive-in” movie in the neighborhood. We’ll some movie theater snacks and we’ll watch a series of short children’s films.  Wear clothes you can get messy in and parents are welcome to join in, participate and watch the films as well! A great way to kick-off MPS spring break as a family!

March 28th

1-3:30pm

Lucy Craft Laney School

3333 Penn Ave N

[button link=”http://connect.clevelandneighborhood.org/drive_in_movie_for_families” type=”big”] RSVP Today![/button]

or on Facebook

Categories
Committees

Let’s talk about Penn and Lowry – Community Development Committee

snap 2015-03-03, 08_55_50We hope you can join us for the Community Development Committee held at CNA Office on Monday, March 9th at 6:30pm. We’ll be talking about Penn and Lowry Avenue and the development opportunities that you as a resident would like to see there.
If you haven’t attended a committee in a while we’d like to know why, please take our brief survey.

Agenda:
  • Penn and Lowry Visioning – Share your input and ideas with our team of Urban Planning students from the U of M who are helping CNA create a tangible vision for what the community would like to see on the commercial corridors of Penn and Lowry Avenue. Your input is critical to advocating with the city and county for what we as a neighborhood want to see in the community.
  • Property Tax Assessments – Are we being over taxed? A brief discussion on this article from the Star Tribune and input on whether the neighborhood should take any action to advocate change at the city level on it’s assessments.

RSVP HERE! See you next Monday at 6:30pm!

If you have any questions please send us a quick reply email or call 612-588-1155
Categories
Featured Northside News

Submit your Event for 30 Days of Community

Untitled3Spring is right around the corner and April marks the launch of our second annual 30 Days of Community, a chance to get out of hibernation, participate in community events, see what’s happening across the northside and get your neighbor muscles working as you prepare for a summer of connecting with friends, family and community. 30 Days of Community will promote a different event happening on the northside each day in April and right now we are on the look out for community events that we can get the word out about. Do you have something happening that you or your organization is hosting in April? Submit your event now on our 30 Days page and we’ll help you promote it all through the month of April along with several other Northside neighborhood organizations. Submit your event and learn more here. We’ll see you in April!