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Back-to-School Block Party provides Athens youth with 100 backpacks full of school supplies

 

http://Back-to-School Block Party provides Athens youth with 100 backpacks full of school supplies

The sounds of giggling children and upbeat R&B and hip hop music played as families lined up to get new backpacks full of supplies at Rocksprings Park Picnic Shelter before the end of the summer. West Broad Farmers Market’s Back-to-School Block Party partnered with the Bhuiyan Foundation to bring free school supplies and excitement to kids in the last days of summer. 

 

The Clarke County School District begins the new school year on Thursday, Aug. 1, 2024. With only a handful of days before kids are back in the classroom, the search for school supplies is in full swing. Alyssa Thomas, the West Broad Farmers Market manager, wanted this event to take away some stress from families and get kids prepared to focus on school.

 

“We have a lot of parents here who are under the poverty line and are struggling and need that extra help,” Thomas said. “And as a community, we are helping our upcoming doctors and lawyers and astronauts, maybe the [future] President.”

 

The Back-to-School Block Party began at 11 a.m. and families arrived promptly to get in line for the free goodies. Students from kindergarten to highschool picked out their favorite backpack color and continued down the line to fill their bag with notebooks, folders, writing utensils, glue and more. 

 

“I like to see their faces and expressions on what they was picking out” Thomas said. “I seen kids trying to match their ruler with their erasers and they book bags and stuff.”

 

The school supplies were provided by the Bhuiyan Foundation, a family-founded nonprofit that serves the Athens community and overseas through charitable donations. Sherryann Bhuiyan, the founder and CEO, has been involved with West Broad Farmers Market since 2015, when she would sell Trinidadian street food. 

 

Since starting  the Bhuiyan Foundation in 2023, the organization has been focused on donations. Sherryann Bhuiyan’s son, Tawhid Bhuiyan, was there to help her during the block party and he said that it’s important to serve local kids.

 

“[To] let [the kids] know that they have some support in the community, and handing out free stuff like this, especially for school, I think is important,” Tawhid Bhuiyan said.

 

During the block party, there were several vendors selling their products from produce to handmade art or jewelry. Young vendors also participated, including 11-year-old jewelry maker Nicola Dunn. It was her second time selling at the farmers market since she started her business: Wildflower Wearables. 

 

High school students working for the Athens Land Trust Young Urban Farmers served coffee and cooked vegetables they harvested. Zacoria Samuels, a rising senior at Cedar Shoals High School, was one of the cooks at the demo table preparing bell peppers, onions and fried green tomatoes.

 

Samuels said that he believes inflation is making it hard for families to afford new school supplies, and that the Back-to-School Block Party “is really helpful [to] give back to the community,” he said.

 

After filling their new backpacks, some children found their way to the kid’s booth organized by Young Urban Farmers and drew with colorful sidewalk chalk or played on the playground. Older kids enjoyed the swing set while some little ones played with a giant connect four set. 

 

Collieace White, a jewelry vendor, always brings her dog, Hapi along with her; Hapi spent the duration of the event making his rounds looking for people to pet him. White also brought her two children who attend school in Habersham county to get supplies and enjoy the games. 

 

“Everything’s so high, rent is high, groceries are high,” White said. “So people need a lot of help with the kids but especially coming back to school. It’s so much to where the kids can kind of get lost in the shuffle, when it’s time to give help.”

 

Brandi McDowell, a mother of eight children ages one to 13-years-old, came with her sister to the block party and brought her kids to get school supplies as well as diapers from the Athens Area Diaper Bank. Her niece, Abigail Brown, is going to be a second grader at Gaines Elementary and she said her favorite thing she got from the giveaway was her colored pencils.

 

At 1 p.m. the Devas Tigerettes put on a dance performance with their peewee team of girls ages four to six. Shoppers and vendors gathered around to watch the four girls dance to a Cocomelon remix song as the Tigerettes founder, Nadeva “Deva” Ham, directed them. 

 

As Thomas introduced them, she emphasized how much courage it takes for kids that little to get up and perform for a crowd of big people. According to Ham, she started the dance team to give the girls an outlet and make a positive impact on their lives.

 

By the end of the event, the supplies had been cleared out and approximately 100 kids walked away with new backpacks and school supplies. Thomas said she felt as though her mission, to put good produce out there for families and bring back a community feeling had been executed. 

 

“They got rid of everything. So that means that we gonna have some very smart children ready to rock out on August 1,” Thomas said.

Mayor Girtz Voices Frustration Over Construction Delays and Rising Costs for The Classic Center Arena, Anticipates August 2024 Opening

Ashtin Barker

Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz gives a presentation to University of Georgia students at a news conference on Dec. 1, 2023 in the Fine Arts Building about the development of The Classic Center Arena. The arena opening has been delayed but is now expected to open August 2024. (Photo/Ashtin Barker)

Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz said he is frustrated with the growing cost of The Classic Center Arena and he is “reasonably confident” that the arena will open August 2024, nine months later than initially anticipated.

Girtz discussed the progress of the arena, surrounding commercial and residential development and its impact on Athens during a Dec. 1 press conference at the University of Georgia.

With the delay in construction, the project total is now projected to be approximately $150 million, he said, with $34 million of funds coming from SPLOST revenue. The arena is partially funded by the SPLOST, an additional sales tax approved by the voters of Athens-Clarke County in 2019, and is also funded by bonds and private fundraising. 

“I learned over 17 years in local public policymaking that nothing ever happens as fast as I would like so I’m gonna be delighted when it comes out of the ground,” Girtz said. “Do I wish that timeline was faster? Absolutely.” 

The arena is predicted to bring 600 new jobs to Athens and have a $33 million annual economic impact.

Athens is home to a historic music scene with venues like the Georgia Theater and 40 Watt Club. Once open, The Classic Center Arena will be the largest venue in downtown Athens with a capacity of 8,500 people.

“If we’re pulling from anywhere, we’ll be pulling shows out of Greenville or out of Charlotte or out of other larger markets,” Girtz said.

Mallory & Evans Development plans include a 1,200-space parking lot, new hotels, retail and dining space. Lane Westbrook, general manager of the downtown Athens Mellow Mushroom, said he thinks the arena will be good for business and bring more people over to the east side of downtown. 

“There’s just many bars, restaurants and retail in this one little bitty area and it’s been that way for as long as I’ve been alive,” Westbrook said. “And, you know, I hate to say it, the strong survive.”

Topics: Concerts, Restaurants, New Jobs, Tourism


Why I Wrote the Story:

The Classic Center Arena is a very large project that is projected to impact Athens in some major ways. Getting the perspectives of those involved with the development of the arena as well as the perspectives of people in the community who will be affected by it is very important. Athens residents should be informed about what is going on in their community and hearing the voice of the mayor and his opinion on the growing cost of the project is important as well. This project is implementing a lot of sustainable energy sources including a large solar array on the roof. I learned a lot about how to report on politicians when writing this story and how to ask good questions.

Sustainability Intern Brings Produce Straight from Farm to Students

Q&A: Sustainability Intern Brings Produce Straight from Farm to Students

Views: 147 Austin Klepper is the Farm to Campus intern for the Office of Sustainability at the University of Georgia. …

Q&A with Austin Klepper published on Grady Newsource.

Why I Wrote the Story:

The Office of Sustainability at UGA has a large group of interns working to make the campus more sustainable. Austin Klepper is one of those interns and his responsibility as the Farm to Campus intern puts him at the forefront of the office’s sustainable food efforts. Austin is a very knowledgeable student who cares a lot about fresh produce and making sure sustainability is attainable for everyone. His insight made him the perfect candidate for this Q&A and really helped spread the information about the Office of Sustainability to the student population.

Community Gears Up for Annual Rivers Alive Cleanup in Athens

by Ashtin Barker

Rivers Alive volunteers enter the North Oconee River in canoes and kayaks. The group spends their morning collecting trash in the river to help improve water quality in Athens. (Photo/Ashtin Barker)

Over 100 Athens volunteers will gather at Dudley Park early in the morning on Oct. 21 for the annual Rivers Alive cleanup event. Volunteer groups will disperse after the kickoff at 8:30 a.m. and spend the day collecting waste from the North Oconee River, Middle Oconee River and surrounding streams.

Rivers Alive is a statewide program created in 1999 to combine several cleanup efforts in Georgia into one unified river cleanup. Several Athens-Clarke County Unified Government offices organize the cleanup, including Keep Athens-Clarke County Beautiful.

“Taking care of the environment in your own community is just really important,” said Stacy Smith, the program education specialist at Keep Athens-Clarke County Beautiful. 

Smith said this event is a great way for the community to ensure cleaner water sources, and  also make recreational spaces in Athens more beautiful. Keep Athens-Clarke County Beautiful committee members look at the 16 sites months in advance to determine if there is enough litter for volunteers to pick up, if it’s safe and if it’s accessible. 

All registered volunteers receive an email before the event informing them of what they need to come prepared with. The kickoff at Dudley Park will provide a T-shirt and breakfast, and volunteers will be equipped with cleaning tools and neon vests.

The Rivers Alive cleanup event has happened in Athens for 25 years. Jackie Sherry, the water conservation coordinator in the Public Utilities Department of Athens-Clarke County Unified Government, said volunteer numbers dipped since the coronavirus pandemic, but they are building back up.

Sherry has organized the event for six years, and this year the committee of organizers have added water quality monitoring and storm drain decaling to the list of volunteer activities at Rivers Alive. 

“It’s very inspiring to see how many people come out and want to help,” Sherry said.

Topics: North Oconee River, pollution, river cleanup, volunteers


Why I Wrote the Story:

My beat covers a variety of different topics in Athens culture and life. The Rivers Alive cleanup is an event centered around community building and sustainability, two very important things in day-to-day life. Writing this preview helped get the word out about this volunteer opportunity and spread hope to people in the Athens-Clarke County area. People want to know that their neighbors care about things like litter and waste management, as well as keeping public parks and waterways clean.