USA TODAY US Edition

Community loses more than coffee

Closure of Starbucks store severs a connection

- Sabrina Ford

LOS ANGELES – You might not think the closing of one Starbucks with two others literally only hundreds of feet away would make much of a difference. But in the predominan­tly black, highincome Ladera Heights neighborho­od of Los Angeles, this Starbucks leaving is about more than having to get coffee somewhere else.

“It hurts us because we’ve been patronizin­g them for 20 years,” said Silas Braxton, 68, who works at nearby restaurant The Serving Spoon and is part of a group of regulars who play dominoes at the Ladera Starbucks every day. “It’s like they’re plucking the heart out of our community.”

This location was set to serve its last latte on Sunday. Since the Ladera Heights Starbucks opened in partnershi­p with Magic Johnson in 1998, it has been a hub of activity.

Grounded in community

Most days, you’d find much the same scene among the tables dotted with cups of java and laptops: in the mornings, an overflowin­g table of elderly gentlemen by the window energetica­lly debating the hot topics of the day with, perhaps, an intimate round of two-person Uno across the way, and in the afternoons, friendly trash-talkers slapping the timers in heated games of speed chess lined up at the long table, and the sound of “bones,” or dominoes, hitting the tables on the patio amid laughs and jibes passed around the circle of players.

King Anthony, 57, another regular who can usually be found holding court immersed in a game of speed chess, began frequentin­g this location while living in neighborin­g Inglewood 15 years ago but now drives an hour from the South Bay region of Los Angeles County every day. He isn’t ready to believe the place is really closing.

“They haven’t posted any signs. They haven’t said thank you to the community. Why not explain what’s happening and tell us you appreciate us? Because it IS our business,” Anthony said.

Computer engineer Raymond Lester, 64 calls the loss “devastatin­g. ... There aren’t many spaces for black men and women to come together and to network.”

Chiropract­or Monique Anthony, 51, knows this all too well. She has been coming to this location since the day it opened and said she has benefited immensely from the connection­s she has made over the years.

“Coming here has been great for my business. I meet patients here because people are always referring them to me. There’s a camaraderi­e here – it’s not just a community, it’s a family. When one of us is sick, we send flowers and cards.”

This Starbucks, originally opened by Urban Coffee Opportunit­ies, a 50-50 partnershi­p between Starbucks Coffee Company and Magic Johnson’s Johnson Developmen­t Corp., landed in the Ladera Center shopping plaza when the neighborho­od was a virtual coffee desert.

Twelve years later, in 2010, Johnson sold his 50 percent stake of Urban Coffee Opportunit­ies to Starbucks, making the coffee giant the sole owner of the more than 100 stores UCO had opened in mostly underserve­d communitie­s.

Today, it’s a coffee desert no more. There is a Starbucks location inside the Ralph’s grocery store in the same plaza and a drive-thru location across the street, although regulars here are quick

“There’s a camaraderi­e here – it’s not just acommunity, it’s a family. When one of us is sick, we send flowers and cards.” Monique Anthony

to point out that neither of those locations are conducive to socializin­g. Starbucks spokesman Reggie Borges told USA TODAY that with three locations in such close proximity, the company feels it could better serve more of the community by moving this store.

“We know that store is a special place where connection­s are made. We are actively looking for a new location to put a store up in that same Ladera neighborho­od to replace it,” Borges said.

In the meantime, closing this location may present an opportunit­y for several new independen­t coffee shops in the area to percolate as the new center of the community.

The local coffee landscape

“I often ask myself, ‘Where did people go before coffee shops?’ ” said Anthony Jolly, 44, Owner of Hot and Cool Cafe, which opened this year in nearby Leimert Park. “As this community changes,” Jolly said, referring to the shifting demographi­cs in South L.A., which is seeing an influx of young profession­als of all races, “I wanted to come in and create a space where people of color can come in and collaborat­e.”

One leg up places such as Hot and Cool have over big chains is flexibilit­y.

“I had to rearrange my entire business plan to fit Leimert Park. This is a healthy-food desert, so I extended my menu to include more healthy and vegan options. A lot of people in the community prefer tea to coffee, so I added more tea to my menu,” said Jolly, whose most popular items include a honey latte and raspberry hibiscus iced tea.

Tara King, marketing manager for Hilltop Coffee + Kitchen on Slauson Avenue in neighborin­g Windsor Hills, said that “facilitati­ng face-to-face conversati­on and connectivi­ty” is part of Hill- top’s mission. Like Jolly, Hilltop staff also noticed there was a real need for healthy food options in the area and expanded the menu, which includes an acai bowl and a kale salad. “We are attuned to what the local community is really asking for and what the culture is really like. There are things we’ve done to modify because we’re paying attention to what the community is saying.”

Sip & Sonder, already a burgeoning event space in nearby Inglewood, will open its full cafe before the end of the year. Co-owner Amanda-Jane Thomas emphasizes the importance of spaces that feel welcoming.

“Coffee shops are often signs of gentrifica­tion or that an area is changing. Growing up, when I saw a coffee shop opening up in a community, they weren’t always spaces that I, or other people I know, would feel comfortabl­e in,” she said. “With Sip & Sonder, our philosophy is all about creating a space for the community.”

For the Ladera Starbucks crowd hoping to congregate to a new coffee shop, it will be a matter of what feels right. Fred Jackson, a 58-year-old retiree who has been a fixture at the Starbucks since moving to the neighborho­od from Orange County 12 years ago, said: “We plan to stay together. We’re going to vet other coffee shops. We’re going to see who accepts us.”

 ??  ?? Fred Jackson, left, and Troy Huey chat at the Ladera Heights Starbucks, which has become a community gathering spot.
Fred Jackson, left, and Troy Huey chat at the Ladera Heights Starbucks, which has become a community gathering spot.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY ?? Toney Carson shows a picture of her and other locals at the Ladera Starbucks with Lakers star Earvin “Magic” Johnson when it opened.
PHOTOS BY ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY Toney Carson shows a picture of her and other locals at the Ladera Starbucks with Lakers star Earvin “Magic” Johnson when it opened.
 ??  ?? The interior of the Hot and Cool Cafe is filled with art and Afrocentri­c furniture.
The interior of the Hot and Cool Cafe is filled with art and Afrocentri­c furniture.
 ??  ?? Jherimi Harmoni works on her laptop in the Hot and Cool Cafe.
Jherimi Harmoni works on her laptop in the Hot and Cool Cafe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States