Convenience or Scourge?


The letter is as follows:
My name is Christopher Siano. I'm the owner of [a home on] Johnson Park. I came to Buffalo in 1997 as a student at the University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning. When I completed my undergraduate and graduate studies I made the decision to stay in Buffalo because I believed in what the city had been and what it could be. In 2005 I bought my house on Johnson Park and began a full gut rehab of the home.
As a young, educated professional who has chosen to stay, buy a home and make a life here I feel I've made a commitment to this city.
As you know, there was a shooting outside the West Side Market last night. The West Side Market is a constant source of trouble in the neighborhood. Frankly, I am tired of it. NO ONE SHOULD BE EXPECTED TO LIVE ON A BLOCK WHERE PEOPLE ARE BEING GUNNED DOWN IN THE STREET.
You as elected officials need to take action to close this store.
You can ignore this call for help but be advised: if you loose people in my demographic (why would anyone want to stay in the city and live like this?) you will loose the economic future of this city.
Siano further explained his stance to BRO:
The community has been at odds with this business for years because they are constantly doing things that undermine our safety and quality of life.
When I bought my house in 2005 there was loitering and fights in front of the store. They sell single cigarettes and single beers in close proximity to Hutchison Technical High School. They have a building that has gang tags on it that they don't bother to paint over. Now we have gun violence. The owner refuses to work with the West Village Renaissance Group to improve the conditions in and around the store.
This is a business that preys upon low income communities. They sell junk food, cigarettes, beer and lottery tickets to people who barely have the money to support themselves. I view the city's tolerance of this as a form of soft racism.
Though the incident on Wednesday was a result of the store-owner being victimized, there is a question as to whether or not the store draws, promotes or helps to create a seamy element on any given day. Does a store that sells individual cigarettes and single small cans of beer create problems in a community? Do people like Siano, who invest in a community, have the right to set a standard for the types of business that they allow? Haven't we been here before, and what is the breaking point?

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crc
Scourge.
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sbrof
Isn't he just a man who sees a market and caters to it. Isn't that the American dream. Sure it would be nice to clean up his property a bit but realistically if they close this store the problematic people are just going to go to the next closest store. I can buy single cans of beer at my corner store on N Pearl & Allen and no ones been shot at there. (that I know of at least) The people who work there are good people trying to make money just like anyone else around.
Closing it solves nothing but pushed the problems around. Just like demolishing vacant homes. psuh around the problem enough and you don't have a problematic street or neighborhood but a whole problematic region and everyone is fearful when they will come to their block. Like the racial issues in the 1960's.
How about the city instead focusing on services, schools, education, job placement, skills training etc. The sorts of things that give people options besides crime to make a living. No one wants to be a crook, they usually don't feel that have any other options.
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bison716
More police = less violence! And I also agree with sbrof on this one. Sell your house Chris and move to another part of town.
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Martin
These stores such as this and even the one mentioned by sbof "Bills Deli" do nothing for the neighboorhoods they are located in, they do not cater to most of the area residents, but actually draw people from other area's for check cashing, beer, scratch tickets etc. These are the customers who drop their liter on my street, piss between cars and homes and constant pan-handeling. Bills Deli, as the one mentioned in this article does next to nothing to stop loitering, drug deals etc [ they even pee next to the garbage can outside Bills deli front door] I have met with Brian Davis about this Deli [Bill's] nothing more from him then idle threats from him to the owners, so good luck Christepher as I can assure you the city will do little or nothing. My heart goes out to you as there is nothing worse than as a tax paying, employed home owner being made to feel like a second class citizen.
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Martin
...yea thats the answere, sell up and move instead of trying to clean up an area...how stupid is that statement?
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chris69
First of all if its any kind of market then that entire front of the store should be windows so customers and owners know what is happening on the street. Its not just about making it pretty or pedestrian friendly
Secondly just about every store has some kind of camera to watch for robberies and shoplifters so if you want to be in this business then put more cameras outside to survey the sidewalk and street
those two things alone would limit anything happening to a drive by and even then many wouldnt take the chance for risk of having their license plates on tape. sorry but its not the business...neighborhoods need grocery stores and such....but if these stores dont have crime deterents outside the store then its their liability too. In case store owners didnt know...your liable up to the property line and thats why property owners have to shovel the sidewalk...which means you are liable for your customers includes sidewalk occurrances....so get those friggin cameras outside and scare off these criminals before they even approach the store.
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RaChaCha
We had a lot of similar problems here in RaChaCha with "problem businesses" - often located on corners, and almost always preying on the low-income - and still do, but to a smaller degree. Several years ago we instituted a new city-wide business certificate/license system which involves the accumulation of points for nuisance problems like those described by Christopher. Get too many points, and action is taken, up to and including revocation of the business license at which point the business is effectively shut down. Sure, some determined nuisances have tried to continue operating, say under a relative's name, but eventually the system catches up. The additional level of enforcement and administration of the program is largely self-funded by an increase in the business license fee. This program gives our City, neighborhood associations, and citizens who care (like your Christopher) a mechanism for cracking down on businesses and owners like this who may simply not care about anything other than a threat of closure.
If Buffalo doesn't have a program similar to this (or does, but is not enforcing it or working with neighborhoods to implement it), check out the program in RaChaCha, and get your council members involved. One of the Buffalo Control Board members is a former Rochester City Council member who worked on setting up the program - a very decent fellow who I'm sure would be open to talking about getting something similar going in Buffalo.
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sbrof
Hey I like Bills Deli, talk about convenience. Where else can I go in 30 seconds to get 3 cans of tomatoes, some fresh onions and a box of pasta in the eleventh our of my goulash escapades. In fact I think these stores are critical to creating livable, walkable and sustainable neighborhoods. Not all of us can have the income to afford a car and a trip to the coop or even tops for milk.
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Martin
sbrof...I agree about having a deli close by, if I had my way we would see a deli, butcher,bakery and green grocer on Allen. That is what city living is.
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JohnnyWalker
Some cities license everything and I mean everything (bars, restaurants, gas stations, newstands, Deli's etc.) thru a special use permit (SUP) process. The permit is granted with an an expiration date.(similar to an ABC licensce, but less frequently ). When it is Time to grant a renewal, the public has input to the process. Sometimes special requirements are add to the SUP like no selling of individual beers.
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GogglesNan
Capital idea, Bison 716. Completely gut and rehab a house, sell it at a loss, then move to another part of town. Let this neighborhood go right down the crudpipe. On a more serious note, Chris, if I have to walk 10 minutes to buy a loosie, I will be very upset with you.
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Perry
Just drive by Bill's Deli any time of the day...there's always 3 or 4 scumbags hanging out, panhandling, littering, peeing on the building...it single-handedly it totally sets the tone for that neighborhood. I lived on North Pearl for 8 years. While it was way easier for me to go into Bill's Deli, I would walk further down to the Allentown Trading Company and give them my business. LIttle bodegas, such as Bill's Deli, ruin neighborhoods. Urban Roots had the same problem in their neighborhood too. But those Roots people are so crazy (in a good way), they chased those bastards out...and I believe have plans for a coffee shop.
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DJK
We didn't just "chase them out", Perry. The Urban Roots cooperative bought the building, and became their landlord. As they say, "money talks..."
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snotnose
Yeah, so there's not enough stores like it for people to go to? There's seven just like this one within 1 and a half blocks away, then there's Tops 2 blocks away, then you could go further - say three blocks and you'd find five more stores like this. So don't even try to say this place is needed. Why do they go in there? Cheap loosies, 40 oz bottles of piss water and lottery. There's no decent food on the shelves in this place, no fresh anything. Yeah, this scumhole really contributes to the 'hood.
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Dionysus
"...there's always 3 or 4 scumbags hanging out, panhandling, littering, peeing on the building..."
I walk past this store pretty much every day, and I've never seen 3 or 4 people peeing/littering/panhandling. I do often see 3 or 4 guys hanging out; usually they're black, and usually wearing hoodies. I don't automatically assume that they're "scumbags" though.
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Frankenberry
I performed in the New Phoenix theatre which is right next door to the market. We used to call it the Ghetto Mart! Our dressing room overlooked the street in front of the store and one day while I was getting ready for a show I wittnessed a major drug bust. A police officer was pointing a gun at a guy telling him to get down on the ground. The police officer had the guy laying face down on the street kneeling on his back while cuffing him while at least 8 unmarked police cars all pulled up at the same time. The whole thing was surreal. It's a shame that this place is still open!
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smythie
Um, wait a second...Didn't many people living on the East Side just abandon it and "move to a different part of the city" when they didn't like what was going on there? Seems to me that was a huge factor (admittedly only one of a few factors) in the down fall of the East Side. Better yet, why don't people move to a different part of the city and then keep the houses and then rape them for all they're worth by renting them out and never keeping them up: "Sure, the neighborhood's not good enough for ME to live there, but I'll rent out the place and never maintain it and make tons of subsidy money off of it". Yeah, way to make a neighborhood absentee landlord or "flipper" friendly.
And look, I'm all for neighborhood markets...And I'm not talking a "hipster mart" that sells organic toilet paper along with everything else that most of us can't afford. But, let's face it. I'm sure this place is selling a bunch of crap in terms of food with little or no nutritional value. I'm thinking along the lines of a mini Guercio's
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Perry
Dionysus - the people hanging out in front of Bill's Deli are all races and sexes too! Like I said, up until 18 months ago, I spent 8 years walking in front of that place everyday...stepping over garbage, feces, fending off people wanting money, intimidation...then what would you call them? I prefer to call them scumbags, because all they do is take from society.
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InformedOne
I concur again with sbrof being a resident of N. Pearl and a young employed professional actively involved in economic development in the City, I enjoy being able to stop in the market at the corner of Pearl and Allen for a single coldie on the way home. Yea the more consistent clientelle may look slightly different than me and occasionally shake me down for some spare change but it is no big deal. I have been homeless myself and no what a difference a few quarters can make with going hungry for the day or not. The fact is we choose to live in an urban environment and as such by its definition folk of different ethnic, social and racial backgrounds live in close proximity. I think few would argue that this adds to the spice of urban life. Yea occasionally you encounter low lifes peeing inbetween cars and litttering, but it is no different than white suburban punks coming downtown and doing the same thing on Chippewa on Saturday night or at Bills games. To think that we can somehow legislate behavior by banning all single beer can sales or such, people buying eight dollar shots of Patron n the pub behave the same way, just at different times of the night. Does that make it any better, no but most of us are either asleep or not aware of these actions. To think we can police the crap out of every corner and solve every social issue is unrealistic. Unless of course you buy into the present administration's course of action and believe we can kill every member of the "axis of evil" and solve global issues. Education, opportunity, empowerment and employment are the keys to addressing urban issues.
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NewBuffalo
Lack of POLICE to enforce loitering. Lack of POLICE patrols. Buffalo NEEDS more police presence. Bring back officers "walking the beat", add more patrol cars. GET THE STATE TROOPERS OFF THE THRUWAY WRITING TAX GENERATING TICKETS and have them help POLICE the city. Problem solved. If this store was in Amherst the police would sit in front of the building every day. In Buffalo call the police and they show up a 1/2 hr later and say to you: what do you expect in ths neighborhood. Most cops live in the burbs and don't care about the city. sad but true. make them live in the city if they are hired as police officers. Then they will care.
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smythie
Good idea, NewBuff.
By the way, not to veer off topic, but did you all know that a purse being stolen out of a car is newsworthy?: http://www.buffalonews.com/258/story/254001.html
This is comical...and the fact that anyone left that stuff in their car is even more comical. Way to make people want to come to the city, Buffalo News! Kudos!
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smythie
When did Buffalo become Mayberry? Ha!
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Martin
Interesting...guess I am not the only one sick of these dumps that pass themselves off as Deli's. I do like the ides of renewable permits, capital idea, that gives everyone a fair chance to make it...or not.
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sbrof
I go by this place everyday and actually it is one the few places on allen that I don't get hit up for change. Usually people asking for money loiter around the bars at the west side of allen. The people at this store usually just nod and say good day.
I agree that cops on the beat are needed. The city ius hiring what? 160 more cops.. I would love to see many of them patrolling all the major commercial streets on foot. Tonawanda, Allen, Grant, Jefferson, Downtown, Hertel.
Nothing helps to increase ones sense of safety when you can always see a cop floating around. But then again that in one more step into the Bush / Brown 1982 Police State dreams. I do think a residence requirement is necessary as well as the whole education piece that is missing.
If we want to harass these establishments how about force them to make some cosmetic changes. Open a couple windows let some light in, clean up a bit more. Don't allow them to advertise so much. Who knows they will probably get even more business.
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WTF
This kid came all the way from Tonawanda to knock off this deli. Why? How did he know that it would be worth it? This pond scum place is known for the drug sales as mentioned by Frankenberry and a hell of a lot more. And it lies between two schools. It has a history of neglect and bad behavior and not trying to follow the law. The people who own in that neighborhood obey the law, why shouldn't the people who own this market? unless you know the whole story, wait before you tell people to sell their homes they care so much for and get the whole story. why should this guy sell after doing all that work. It's people like him who are making a difference and making the city better. Keeping this deli open only creates bad business and makes neighborhoods decline.
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sbrof
"Just drive by Bill's Deli any time of the day...there's always 3 or 4 scumbags hanging out"
Thats some big presumptions in the 6 seconds you have driving by.
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Tesla
Hmm.....I guess my comment was deleted....probably because I said that dreaded F-word....nazis.
We need to get rid of this store....sure we need more police....but that's only one thing we need.
There was a drive-by shooting at The Family Food Mart less than a football field away from where I live on Auburn a few months back.
These stores do not care/contribute to the neighborhoods they're in in a positive way whatsoever.
As a good friend of mine explained to me..."These stores used to be owned and operated by people who actually cared about the neighborhood"
They didn't just sell expired food, alcohol, cigarettes, and scratch tickets.
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Tesla
By the way.....there usually is at least one person hanging around Bill's.
Every time I've walked down in that neighborhood...people ask me for smokes...or money.
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RisingDamp666
These bodega owners are way ahead of the promotional curve: it's not violent homicide, it's "viral marketing".
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MikeInWNY
Christopher, buy the store, put in a gourmet food line and start a pool to see how fast you go broke. The store owner has property rights.
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11111inBlo
Just another example of why i hate poor people
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Tesla
Property rights has nothing to do with it....grow up.
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Starshine
No one has a right to negatively impact a neighborhood in the process of earning a living. You would NOT believe some of the things I've witnessed in relation to this particular market, which is also one block away from an elementary school, and another from a high school.
Actually, a market with more food items with some upscale stuff added in would do quite well here. I've seen this one charge full price for a moldy lemon!
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BROKEEPSBLOCKINGME
Oh how id love to have a butcher, baker, and candlestick maker right up the blvd where i can set me carriage and let the horses hydrate whilst i play a hand of rummy and imbibe a shot of whiskey at the saloon... Ahhh the old days, considering noone likes change
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tdimatteo
Bill's Deli, there are people loitering in front of this place more often than not. Would the ban of single beers prevent some of the issues that plague Allentown? The pan handling, the public urination and defacation, etc.... I think the place of choice for urination is right next to the AA office during the summer is always smells like hot piss!
What position does the AA take on such issues? In the last two years the only thing I witnessed the AA do is water the hanging baskets and the planters on the corners and hang wreaths during the holiday season. Speaking of planters over the summer the one in front of Cathode, the rim was covered in a black oily substance to prevent people from siting on it, I assume to keep people from loitering.
I spend most of my time on the east end of Allen. I can tell you there is no shortage of pan handlers or hustlers. I am constantly saying NO to the pan handlers and chasing hustlers from in front of the building where I have an apt I rent.
So where does the AA stand on quality of life issues ? Would the neighborhood be better off with out Bill's Deli? There's always the Allentown Trading Co and there will be the new market on Elmwood and North.
Do we need an increased police presence? Yes. I read in a previous post that by request of your/ our common council member he/she can have the Buffalo Special Police patrol the streets. http://www.buffalorising.com/story/buffalo_special_police_on_patr . They did this previous in Black Rock and Riverside. So if you live, work, play in the Allentown area and are concerned about quality of life issues . I suggest you call Brian Davis at 851-4980 or e-mail him at brdavis@city-buffalo.com or send him snail mail at 1408 City Hall 65 Niagara Square Buffalo, NY requesting that you want the Buffalo Special Police to patrol the area.
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icecreamsub
sounds like a job for Captain Chaos....where's Dom DeLuise when you need him?
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RisingDamp666
He's in the back of the limo with his driver. They are both..."indisposed" at the moment...
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pgf1948
Really funny...
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kelly
At the risk of being crude, you don't know how happy you can be for the existence of someplace like Bill's until it's 1 or 2 AM in Allentown, you don't own a car, the last bus went by an hour ago, and you realize with horror that the box of tampons in your bathroom is empty. As much as we bitch about these stores you can't eliminate them without providing an alternative. On the West side and in Allentown it isn't as big a deal, since we do have Tops on Niagara, Wilson Farms, at Elmwood and Summer, and now a new market where DVD Dot was, but on the East side what are people supposed to do? If someone can't afford a car they most likely can't afford a cab ride just to buy a gallon of milk or whatever, and honestly, the bus system isn't great. Transfers and waits in the winter when you can't even see most of the stops is bad enough for someone young and able bodied, what about an elderly person, or a parent who has to deal with a couple kids and a stroller? The problem is a lot bigger than the corner delis, they're just an easy scapegoat.
Oh, and allentown trading co. is not a reasonable alternative to any of the corner stores. They have one shelf of food that isn't Hostess, chips, etc, and it's not even 4' tall. You'll actually find a lot more by way of groceries at any of the corner stores. They're a gas station... they just look fancier.
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tdimatteo
Walgreens is open 24/7.
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al-alo
sorry kelly, for some reason, i cant relate.
:)
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allentowndiva
Walking to the store this morning is a great example of how nasty Bills is, huge amount of trash blowing around and the first looser of the day walking out with the "40ozer" in hand and it is ....8am Kelly, you need to stock up on tampons me thinks!
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Martin
Kelly, Bills closes at 10pm, so I do not think you are buying tampons there at 1am.
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Matthewjohnp
Kelly might be breaking in and stealing them.
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SLEEPL8
Do people really poop on the sidewalk on Allen? If so I wanna hear some of the stories...
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JoeS
I live on Johnson Park and often work from home, so I see my share of customers of this store. What I see most are people drinking out of a paper bag as they walk through the park or sit on the steps. I doubt it's OJ or Snapple. See Martins first comment for a very accurate description of these places.
Having said that, the owners still have a right to be in business if there is a market for what they offer and it's not my place to determine what the customers purchase. BUT the WS Market is SUPPOSED to have a security guard on duty as a conditon of its license. Thank the city for not enforcing that even though it's written on the actual license.
And Bison716: People like Chris are the reason certain blocks and neighborhoods are improving in an otherwise dirt poor city. Stop by this spring and check out what he has accomplished.
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benfranklin
Sleep... There are corners of parking lots, and some alleys (both adjacent to property I own), that if you don't trim back the bushes periodically, people will use these areas as 'temporary' homes. Anything someone does in a home, they'll do here. Drink, have sex, and yes, go the bathroom. If you keep an area clear of shrubs, or anything else that would impede a cop from seeing it passing by in their car, you'll have less of a problem. With the removal of the rooming houses, the problems have shifted from daylight 'people who don't know any better', to night time, 'I'm drunk and I'm going to do whatever I need to do, where ever I want..."
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sbrof
I dunno, it still seems that these places serve an important need to the community. Whether it is 8am or 10pm they are very convenient and offer stuff that a gas station doesn't.
If we are worried about loiterers we should be focuses on cops, get them walking the beat. If we are annoyed about the litter.. well how about a cop write a Fing littering ticket once and a while to someone. I see people throw shit out of their car windows almost on a daily basis.. you can't tell me cops don't see it happening also. if they were walking / biking the beat I bet they would see it happen much more often.
If that doesn't work fine the owners of the establishments to clean up a bit more. They clean up about every day or two but those places generate a lot of trash. Same as any fast food joint. Walk near any McDonalds. The trash along highways and roads near them is constantly littered with their waste. We are not calling for the utter destruction of every fast food joint in town. The end product is that Cops DO NOT give out littering tickets so people litter. Not the businesses fault.
We should even go so far to say they need to spruce up their storefronts a bit more. remove some of the boards, signs etc. But saying that they places generate the social problems of the people that use them is pointing the blame in the wrong direction.
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Dionysus
"Anger or hatred is like a fisherman's hook. It is very important for us to ensure we are not caught by it." - His Holiness The Dalai Lama
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snotnose
sbrof, they may not generate the issues, but they perpetrate and perpetuate the issues. serving alcohol to those already drunk, without proper ID, that's what perpetrates and perpetuates. those are issues that are supposedly overseen by laws from the state liquor board and other govt entities. if they break the law in serving the overserves, selling loose cigarettes, etc, why so we have to abide by the law? and if we don't abide by the law, what happens to our society? not only in buffalo, but the nation? it only takes a small seed to grow a plant that can take over a garden. think about it.
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Genghis
Isn't great I don't live in Buffalo anymore? Buffalo sux.
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Tesla
You're about as mature as your name suggests sir.
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artbuff
Corner stores are part of what makes us (Buffalo) a real city. In NYC, this is where you shop, because the bigger grocery stores are far away, and who has a car? Many people living in Buffalo do not have cars, and depend on these places for day to day needs. Yes they are a place for people to buy beer, cigarettes and junk food.
The corner store across the street from my house is run by a friendly Yemeni family, with a limited number of additional employees. It is a center of the neighborhood. Everyone goes in there, and the employees/ owners know them all by name. I honestly feel safer knowing that there are always people across the street aware of what is going on. When I first moved into my house 5 plus years ago, there was some drug activity hanging around. Neighbors pushed the store owner to be more active about keeping this stuff off their stoop. In return for their personal "policing," they got more families and customers stopping there, knowing it is relatively safe.
But of course, no it does not look like Wegmans in Amherst. It looks like a corner Deli in Soho. Well used, worn out, and a source for whatever the neighbors need to buy.
Try having a conversation with the owner, and ask him to carry your favorite beer so that you can conveniently by a six pack yourself. You will feel better for it. I did.
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snotnose
artbuff, get off the gas. this store has had their drug clientele threaten the good neighbors, has not adhered to any of the laws that were on their license, only sells candy, cigarettes, beer, malt liquor, and dusty cans of old beans, single cigarettes, single diapers, and doesn't know how to say no to a buck or two from anyone who is obviously drunk already. they allow loitering, cars with bass blasters blaring in front, do not remove tagging until forced, have been up on administrative charges, have hidden drug dealers in their back room when the cops come around, have been closed down before, and lied about the requirement for security. the movement by the neigbors started like what you said about the store across from your house and all that happened were threats and property damage. these people are not neighborhood friendly and have laughed during hearings at city hall. read what the others who live there have said, not just the people who have no idea where the place is and just want to seem toleranting.
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snotnose
ya know, looking at your avitar, artbuff, i realize i'm talkin to an airhead. sorry for the reality check.
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billo
I think its a terrific store.
If the neighborhood does turn around the neighbors will enjoy the convenience. I would want to live near a place that sells single beers or loosies. If someone doesn't like that, move to the suburbs or a gated community (I suspect they actually have more of a problem with the people purchasing these items then the store selling them...racists).
The main point is that this is a signal to the criminal element that next time they decide to rob a convenience store they can think about whether they'll leave it with a wad of cash in their pocket or their body in a bag.
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Martin
In reading this thread I have not seen one mention of race BILLO. Guess you just assumed that one yourself. As far as Bill's goes, the problem we have is with losers of all backgrounds.
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nonono
I am speechless Sirs!
There is nothing I could possibly add to this enlightened and scholarly examination of contemporary corner scourge.
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billo
I *did* assume it MARTIN, I thought I made that clear in my post. And not that I care, but race was mentioned in the thread in a post by Dionysius.
You are entering the no spin zone!!!
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11111inBlo
So how many of the bars around the Chippewa area that have had problems with violence have had their liquor license taken away? I don't know the actual number, but the answer is ALL OF THEM. The basement and Sensations are just two examples (if I remember right). Why don't these places just get their licenses taken away. They can stay open but take away their ability to sell beer and cigs. See what happens.
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Tesla
I got it wrong.
I was talking about the Bill's at Grant+Hampshire.
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snotnose
1111inBlo, excellent idea. The neighbors asked about eliminating the beer sales during a meeting in 2005 when the store was being allowed to reopen but the store management said no, that it would cut to far in to what they were making. So it is obvious that that is where they make theiur money.
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dumbgirl
I really think it is funny that this market has a poster of the guy who couldn't stand the smell of his rotting foot since he smoked too many cigarettes, but they sell cigarettes. Anybody else see the irony here?
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11111inBlo
Snotnose,
Interesting that this was left up to the owner. I'm not surprised that they said no. In my example of the downtown bars losing their licenses, I believe that Mayor Masiello has asked the state liquor authority to revoke them. The liquor board doesn't take violence lightly. Perhaps Mayor Brown could take a similar initiative with these types of stores when they are presenting problems to neighborhoods.
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nonono
is it always OR ? is it never AND? convenience OR scourge?
why cant it be both?
now, if you can combine the words allentown "association, scourge, and smoking victim with rotting aromatic foot into one BR headline"........ your talking Pulitzer people!
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nonono
(please pardon the morning after quotation marks).
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buffalogal
Yes, neighborhood stores are a valued part of the Buffalo tradition. I grew up running to the corner store for my mother (Camillos at Lovejoy and Wagner) from the time I was about three years old. Going to Frannies on Metcalfe near Fleming was a much anticipated treat of visiting my grandparents. I can recall the exact lineup on the candy shelf, the order of the deli case, the pickle barrels and looking away from the picked pigs feet in the big jar. My husband and I still do our regular shopping at Guercio's and Meating Place because these kinds of places are so important to our community. But West Side Market is none of the above. Their stock in trade is beer, cigarettes and whatever else ... when we moved into the neighborhood my husband ( a retired Fed) took one quick look and pronounced it off-limits. I've followed closely and supported the neighbor battles with the location - they are not looking to suburbanize the neighborhood - but stabilize it and make it work. This place brings nothing but continued trouble. It's time for City Hall to stop looking the other way and remove the festering sore this place is on our community.
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Joshua
buffalogal - may I ask, why the place is "off-limits." I can make assumptions but I choose not to.
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buffalogal
Off limits because of the loitering of individuals clearly inebriated, because of the lack of real inventory, because of the unchecked grafitti , the lack of windows- the kinds of things that basically spell trouble. If your inference is that the statement is any kind of veiled racial or profiling comment - you don't know my husband or I at all. Bad news is bad news, pure and simple. There is no service being provided to the neighborhood at this location with the current ownership. A real neighborhood store with an owner commited to providing service to the spectrum of the neighborhood is a welcome, colorblind proposition. It would be greeted with open arms and would likely enjoy much success..
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