Thursday, November 10, 2011

DIVE IT TO THE MAN: Freecyclers make a political statement by retrieving food from within our cities Dumpsters.

“It doesn’t smell too offensive, does it?” asks Jeff Emtman as he peers into the open Dumpster underneath the night glow of a street lamp.  Among clear trash bags and miscellaneous boxes, Emtman pulls out a 50-pound bag of rice, five pounds of potatoes, two gallons of milk, a half gallon of butter milk, and a jar of maraschino cherries within ten minutes of looking through a grocery store Dumpster.  

Like many others, Emtman, a student at Western Washington University, has turned Dumpster diving into a regular hobby.  His practice is not solely for economic reasons, but in order to make a political statement.

“I do it for two reasons: the selfish answer, it’s free food.  The non-selfish answer [is] I’m giving a big middle finger to the global economic system of oppression,” Emtman said.

He is one of many in the country who relate to a movement of what is referred to as freeganism, the practice of living by choice in a way that utilizes the minimal dependency on economic means.  Emtman says he is appalled at the amount of waste that is accumulated in the United States and one of his motivations for Dumpster diving is to help reduce what goes into the landfill. 

According to many freegans and websites dedicated to the practice of freecycling, the American society is based on consumerism and obsessed with discarding and replacing goods.  To eliminate some of the waste advocates of the movement dig through business’ Dumpsters looking to recover any food deemed still edible. 

Curtis Himes an employee of Avenue Bread and an occasional Dumpster diver thinks that people feel that there is a lot of waste and try to salvage it. 

As a Bellingham Dumpster hot spot, Avenue Bread is one of the downtown businesses on the freegan circuit.  Along the alley way of Railroad Ave Himes says people mull through the back looking in Dumpsters for any left-over food. 

Himes says he sees people of all demographics poking through the Dumpsters behind Railroad Ave, from middle-aged women, to homeless people, to students, Himes said he has seen it all.  Although Avenue Bread and many other businesses in town try to limit as much food as possible in their Dumpster by donating to places like the Bellingham Food Bank, Himes says he is sometimes amazed at the amount of food people come out with. 

Business, like Avenue Bread, recognize the significance in the no-waste movement, but still discourage people from Dumpster diving.  Like many frequently Dumpster diving gold mines, Himes said Avenue Bread put locks on their Dumpsters in the past. 

Officer Mark Young of the Bellingham Police said businesses discourage people from Dumpster diving because they are concerned about the welfare of the individual and the residual issues that could occur if the individual could get sick or injured.

Young says there is no specific law that restricts people from Dumpster diving in the city, but if a business owner makes a call with a complaint, the individual can be charged with trespassing, littering, or theft.  He also points out that if a person gets sick from Dumpstered food or injured while in the process of retrieving it, the business could be held responsible.

Rusty and unsanitary items left in Dumpsters can be seen as a health issue for those who interact with the material, and Young says one of the health risks while Dumpster diving is the chance of contracting hepatitis.  “I appreciate people trying to make a political statement but you just don’t want to carry around hepatitis with you for the rest of your life,” Young said.

Contrary to Officer Young, Emtman said he, nor has anyone he knows has ever gotten sick from Dumpstered food.  He says the Dumpsters on the route he searches are usually pretty clean and the food he takes out is either has damaged packaging or is barely past the expiration date. 

“It’s not that the product is bad or too old, but the store has received a new shipment and has to replace the older product with the new,” Emtman says of the milk he discovers with a week left before its scheduled expiration date.

Sometimes the reasoning for throwing out food that is within its expiration date is for minor reasons, like a slit or dent in the packaging.  Non-profits like the Bellingham Food Bank are a resource for businesses to donate products with minor defects, but Emtman says this doesn’t always happen.  “Stores can get lazy, and after an eight hour shift who is going to want to work longer to haul a load of food to the Food Bank?” Emtman said.

There is an effort by local businesses such as Avenue Bread to sell or donate extra food to places like the Bellingham Food Bank or Grocery Outlet.  The question that still remains is, if people are able to access this surplus of food for free, why Dumpster dive?

For Emtman he says it’s like Christmas and he finds goods he’d never buy in a store.  Himes says some people are doing it to make a statement, but others are doing it to have fun.

“Sometimes I’ll see kids in the dumpsters with armloads of stuff.  I try to tell them if they need food they can just go to the Food Bank, but they say this is more fun.  They’re just in there having a great time,” Himes said.

Monday, October 17, 2011

SAME SONG, DIFFERENT VERSE: Downtown art gallery, Jinx, changes hands and turns its focus toward offering an all-ages music community for Bellingham.


All-ages crowds have a new place to gather now that downtown music and art venue, Jinx Art Space, made its grand re-opening last weekend, for the Downtown Bellingham Art Walk on Friday, Oct. 8.  Jinx is a music and art collaborative that rents out studio space for visual artist and musicians, and also hosts all-ages concerts for the community. 

After a summer of renovations, the space has now reopened its doors to provide underage musicians with a place to practice and see live music.  Although Jinx still operates to provide gallery space for artists, the new lease holders, Whatcom All Ages Music (WhAAM!) and Make.Shift added rentable practice spaces for musicians.   

Over the summer volunteers gathered at the space to help renovate.  Community members like Carlton Eide donated their time to gut the space and create new practice rooms and a performance area.  In the end Eide says it was all worth it, “we were all doing what we could do to help make the space look fancy, and here we are.” 

Located off Flora Street, Jinx originally functioned for three years as an all-ages music venue and art gallery.  The venue was home to an upstairs gallery as well as a basement workspace that doubled as 14 rentable studio spaces for visual artists and an open performance area for touring and local musicians. 

The space is now home to six practice spaces for local musicians to rent out monthly, along with an hourly rental space doubling as the WhAAM! office and green room for performers.  The practice and studio spaces, which assist in funding Jinx, are rented on a sliding scale.  Jinx is also funded through consistent all-ages concerts that cater to local and touring musicians in Bellingham. 

Toby Reif and Nick Duncan, of local Bellingham band Bowlcut, are one of the many bands now renting space at the new Jinx.  The central downtown venue has so far proven to be an improvement from their previous space located near the Bellingham International Airport.  Duncan comments on the vast physical improvements the space has undergone, “you walk in and it looks a lot nicer.  Before when we were out by the airport we were in a cramped space, now it’s like we’re in a luxury space.  It’s huge!”

Jinx primarily focused on art centered events, but after a growing need for an all-ages music venue in the community, its image began to shift from gallery space to a community music center.  This summer Jinx handed over the lease to local organizations Make.Shift and WhAAM! to transform the space from an art gallery into an all-ages music venue. 

Make.Shift is a Bellingham-based nonprofit that strives to support independent musicians through creative eco-friendly events.  A main attraction of Make.Shift is their bicycle-powered generators that are used to power amplified music.  For some time, the organization has been searching for a space to call their own, but with several agreements falling through the cracks Make.Shift was still in the market for a suitable venue.

During the transition Make.Shift decided to join forces and collaborate with WhAAM!, who had also been searching for a new all-ages venue.  WhAAM! volunteer Zach Wise said that the space couldn’t have come at a better time.  After having several venue options fall through, the collaboration of the two organizations made sense.  “They both realized that they needed an all-ages space to accommodate their common goals,” Wise said.

The two organizations decided to keep the name, Jinx, but update it with a little bit of love and fresh paint.

Not only does the newly renovated venue offer a place for musicians to practice, it also is a space to bring the community together.  “It creates a really cool sense of community because you’ll walk out of your practice space and see other musicians practicing,” Reif said.  With a shift from art to music focused events, Jinx is becoming a hub for Bellingham’s all-ages music scene according to Duncan and Reif.

Bellingham has a history of being the birth place for many bands, such as internationally known musicians like Death Cab for Cutie, Federation X, Idiot Pilot, and many others.  Due the music community that Bellingham embraces, music advocates like Duncan, support the all-ages music scene.  He highlights the community benefits that come along with getting youth through the door, and the ability to provide a safe space for all to connect over one common interest.  Duncan advocates that the space is a great resource not only to the downtown district, but also the city of Bellingham.  “It gives kids something positive to do on a Friday and Saturday night and also brings together a strong arts community that’s not based on if you’re legal,” he said referring to youth who can’t attend shows for people over 21. 

Now as home to regular concerts hosted in collaboration by Make.Shift and WhAAM! the organizations are looking for volunteers who want to help with booking all-ages and eco-friendly events at Jinx.  Both organizations encourage that all are welcome and the space is open for everyone to enjoy.  More information about their events is available at www.jinxartspace.com.