Westside story
Convenience store closure sparks calls for change
Some call it a battle for the soul of the city. Others describe it as a necessary crime-fighting tool. And some are just hungry. Hamilton County District Attorney General Neal Pinkston’s shut down a Westside convenience store Thursday, drawing comments Tuesday from several community members who say prosecutors are criminalizing poverty, and they urged city leaders to start spending money on the oft-neglected, lowincome area.
“Your method of meting out justice on the Westside amounts to carpet bombing innocent men, women, and children,” Kevin Muhammad, local leader of the Nation of Islam, wrote in a letter Tuesday to Pinkston. “You wiped out the only remaining food supply for the people in that area. You are starving the people out. The result is a fast lane to gentrification.”
The statement came hours after Pinkston and Assistant District Attorney Kevin Brown presented two surveillance videos in Criminal Court that depicted gambling and a fight outside the store, which is part of a handful of closed retail shops on Grove Street. Westside Shop is a hotbed of drug deals and other illegal activity, they argue, and must reform its behaviors before it can reopen.
“The state is also fully aware the shop provides a service to the community,” Pinkston said during the hearing. “We’re very mindful of that. There’s not much access nearby for residents of that community, and we’ve discussed that with many people. But while it does provide a service, in our opinion, it needs to be more orderly.”
Judge Tom Greenholtz moved the hearing to May 9 because Westside Shop’s owner was not present to hear the evidence. The store has retained a
lawyer, Douglas Cox, who focused Tuesday on whether the alleged criminal behavior was connected to the owner. In the meantime, Westside will remain padlocked.
Melydia Clewell, spokeswoman for the district attorney’s office, said Pinkston is not starving people and that several residents thanked him and the Chattanooga Police Department officers who boarded up the business last week.
“No one is sure how to solve the issue for the Westside,” Clewell wrote in an email. “That was proven years ago, when the term ‘food desert’ first surfaced. Someone received a small business loan offered by the feds to open a grocery store in the ‘Golden Gateway’ building which sits across from M.L. King Jr. Boulevard from the Gateway Tower and College Hill Courts. It didn’t stay open more than a year, if that. I don’t remember the exact year, but it’s been close to 20 years ago. The problem has gone unaddressed for
a long time.”
Other pastors and activists say that’s intentional because the Westside is prime real estate near the convention center. But poor black families with diminished access to transportation, health care and local food options will take the deepest hit, they say.
That fear is compounded by Buehler’s Market recently shutting down and a longtime neglect
that has bred crime and dilapidation. There’s a closed childcare center, a closed school that runs a few art programs, and a baseball field with muddy puddles near second base.
“There’s a plan in this city for tourism, for people that live on the North Shore,” said Brian Merritt, a pastor at Mercy Junction and the Renaissance Presbyterian Church, which is one block down from the
shop. “If what happened on the Westside happened on the North Shore, we’d be doing food drops. But these are poor people. There are four, five thousand in a low-income area with low-voter turnout who can’t sway the election or make contributions to political coffers.”
The city did not respond to a request for comment.
Inside the Renaissance church, Merritt pointed to a wooden pantry with four cans of green beans, two red apples, two packets of lemon-flavored Jell-O, and a bag of tortellini pasta.
“This was full on Saturday,” he said.
On the other side of the glass, a poster facing the road says, “Access to Food is A Human Right.”
Outside, Merritt ran into Mendon “Jon Jon” Price, a handicapped man with one leg who lives in The Overlook, an apartment complex just up the hill from College Hill Courts and Grove Street.
“Thank God I get family to take me to the grocer,” Price said, “because a lot of people here don’t have that and are limited to this area.”
Muhammad said the Nation of Islam, Concerned Citizens for Justice, People United for Change and several residents have partnered to give away thousands of pounds of fruit and vegetables to people outside the Westside Shop for the past two years. He compared that to Pinkston’s petition, which says police responded about 200 times between January 2014 and April 2016.
“If they had intelligence for two years, you mean to tell me they didn’t know the Nation of Islam and CCJ were giving out free produce for two years? They haven’t called us,” he said.
Muhammad said the next feeding is May 9, and that he’s reached out to the Chattanooga Area Food Bank to see if it can double the amount of produce for the area. But the longterm solution, he said, is allowing people who have been working in that area to monitor the streets in their own patrol cars and start growing healthy food. Muhammad and other community leaders purchased a car and started a similar patrol program in summer 2016 to take back Alton Park from violence, news archives show.
“The government has a responsibility to open up our budget to fund us,” Muhammad said Tuesday. “The police chief should donate us patrol cars where we patrol our own community. We love our own people and they respond to our love.”