10th Anniversary Asian Festival – April 29!

This year’s Salinas Chinatown Asian Festival is going to be special, because we are celebrating our 10th anniversary. Come and join us on Saturday, April 29. The festivities begin with opening introductions and the Lion Dance at 11 a.m. There will be lots of food, produce for sale, entertainment, walking tours, presentations, and a bigger & better car show. MIG, planning consultants for the Chinatown Revitalization Project, will be present at pop-up booths (with translators, if necessary) to get your input and ideas for the revitalization. See you there! 10th Annual Asian Festival Schedule_

ASIAN FEST FLYER IMAGE JPG

An Eye-opening Meeting

The Salinas Chinatown Revitalization planning process is in its beginning stages. Recently, MIG (planning consultants hired by City of Salinas) organized working group meetings with all the stakeholders to get their input.  MIG will also be constructing a website for the revitalization project. On April 5, I attended three of the working group meetings. One was for the Asian Community, one for technical advisors (city planners, police, code enforcement, staff involved with infrastructure, etc.); two other working group meetings occurred that I did not attend.

The final meeting, for Chinatown business and property owners, was the real eye-opener for me, and a reminder of just how multicultural Chinatown has become. Fortunately, the facilitator, Noé Noyola, did a great job of translating in Spanish and English, and making sure everyone had their say.

Most of the business owners who showed up were Latino, and owned auto mechanic and auto body businesses, and a number of their employees came too, still wearing their work clothes. I learned that many were long-time business owners who had been in “Barrio Chino” for 20 or more years. For almost all–as working-class folks–Chinatown offered an opportunity to start businesses because of the low property costs; many of them have managed to maintain their businesses and faithful clientele over the years, despite having to address neighborhood problems related to drug dealing and violence, the homeless, or issues related to zoning, one-way streets, and other infrastructure changes that have created barriers between Chinatown and Downtown. There was some fear that revitalization and up-scaling would push these smaller businesses out.

The discussion was emotional, and many heart-felt opinions were expressed. One of the property owners was Japanese, and related how her family’s life and business was interrupted when they were sent to internment camps during WWII. A Filipino property owner, whose property now houses the Chinatown Health Center used by the homeless, expressed frustration at past efforts to improve the area, curtailed by recession and other failures.

We wanted everyone to know that their presence as business and property owners was important to the neighborhood. I think that one of the auto-body business owners summed up the outcome of the meeting best when he stressed how vitally important it is that everyone show up at these meetings and make their voices heard; that we need to respect each other and collaborate together to make the neighborhood better, not just for ourselves, but for our families and children. As Noé observed, the changes that happen in Chinatown are not limited to Chinatown; they affect all of Salinas.

—Jean Vengua

Chinatown Revitalization Tour with MIG

On December 5, the City of Salinas kicked off the Chinatown Revitalization planning project by giving MIG–its new lead consultant–a tour of the neighborhood and a visit with key stakeholders. You can read a copy of the MIG proposal for Salinas Chinatown Revitalization here.

The tour began and ended at the new Chinatown Health Center, and in between it covered the Haciendas developments, Dai-Ichi Village, Salinas Buddhist Temple, the Learning Center, Dorothy’s Place (House of Peace, Drop-in Center, and Kitchen), Republic Cafe, Victory Mission, and Confucius Church.

For some of us, the visit to Dai-Ichi Village was literally the high point — as we were led upstairs to the roof. From there we were able to get a bird’s eye view of the neighborhood. We walked carefully past the solar panels and vents covering the rooftop, to look out over the edge. That view gave us a perspective that few ever see: Chinatown laid out before us like a living map: Soledad, E. Lake, Bridge, and California Streets; the community gardens, the alleys, and the railroad, which–along with the “urban renewal” creation of one way streets and an underpass–has divided Chinatown from Main St. for decades.

We saw the neighborhood with all its problems and potentials revealed. I think that most of us were seeing the potentials that day–the future Chinatown that we all envision and look forward to.

Below are some photographs:

MIG planning consultants photograph the area during the tour.
MIG planning consultants Noe R. Noyola and Chris Beynon survey & photograph the area during the tour.

 

Jill Allen leads the tour of Dorothy's Place.
Jill Allen leads the tour of Dorothy’s Place.
Tour members visit Dorothy's Place Kitchen
Tour members visit Dorothy’s Place Kitchen
A worker in the Kitchen at Dorothy's Place.
A worker in the Kitchen at Dorothy’s Place.
Prof. Seth Pollack leads the tour into the Community Gardens (City Project Manager Don Reynolds on the left).
Prof. Seth Pollack leads the tour into the Community Gardens (ACE Board member Wallace Ahtye and City Project Manager Don Reynolds on L., ACE Board member Henry Gong on R.).

kickoff-at-dai-ichi_al-baguio-12-2016

ACE Board member Al Baguio on the roof of Dai-Ichi Village.

View from the roof - of Chinatown, the railroad tracks, and downtown Salinas.
View from the roof – of Chinatown, the railroad tracks, and downtown Salinas.