Author: Zenena Moguel

  • Cooking with Chef Collins: BBQ Cooking Class

     

    By: Alyssa Fedorovich

    At the St. Pete Culinary Center, Chef Patrick “PT” Collins was the guest chef at their BBQ cooking class. Chef Collins is an entrepreneur and owner of Deuces BBQ in Midtown, St. Petersburg. As guest chef, he taught the students the importance of cooking as a trade as well as the art of cooking of BBQ. The program is designed to help at-risk youths learn a trade that is in demand as well as assist them in finding a job in the culinary industry. The video covers Chef Collins class as he taught the youths to cook BBQ.

  • New film ‘Art in the City’ calls St. Pete its home

    BY ERIN MURPHY, Neighborhood News Bureau

    ST. PETERSBURG – With museums, music, murals and more, the city of St. Petersburg’s thriving arts scene offers tourists and locals alike a place to escape, enjoy and find inspiration. For Cranstan Cumberbatch, who serves as co-producer, co-writer, co-director and actor in the new film “Art in the City,” St. Petersburg is also home.

    Read more…

  • Campaign revolutionaries: Two radical candidates hope to shake up St. Pete politics

    Campaign revolutionaries: Two radical candidates hope to shake up St. Pete politics

    By Indhira Suero Acosta

    Eritha “Akile” Cainion, running for City Council 6, and Jesse Nevel, for Mayor, addressed the Tropicana Field’s future and housing issues during a rally held on April 9, 2017, at the St. Petersburg Uhuru House.

    Eritha “Akile” Cainion, a 20-year-old activist who works as a cashier at a local shoe store, launched her campaign for St. Pete City Council’s District 6 seat on March 6 in front of the recently shuttered Midtown Walmart Neighborhood Market.

    Jesse Nevel, the national chair of the Uhuru Solidarity Movement — a group of white activists that supports the efforts of the African People’s Socialist Party (a.k.a. the Uhurus) — entered the race for mayor, on March 8, 2017, standing in front of Tropicana Field.

    Read more…

  • Academy Prep Sixth Grade Students on Water Conservation & Lead

    Academy Prep St. Petersburg (APSP) sixth grade students tested the water in Midtown St. Petersburg to check for the presence of lead in the water. They made a few discoveries and wrote a water conservation article in Steam Magazine and broadcasted their reports.

    “Lead is severely dangerous. It is dangerous because it can hurt people in many ways. For many adults, lead can cause high blood pressure and memory problems (“Lead Poisoning and Health,” 2016) For children, this can cause behavior disorders, effects on brain development, anemia, and hypertension (“Lead Poisoning and Health,” 2016). Lead can be found in paint and water. It is dangerous when found in the water because people cook and drink the water. Water needs to be clean because that’s the main resource and used to keep people healthy and hydrated.”

    Read full article and view broadcast video here.

  • Colorful cast vies for Gulfport Council seats

    Colorful cast vies for Gulfport Council seats

    GULFPORT — When voters go to the polls on Tuesday, they will decide whether to reward two City Council incumbents with another two-year term.

    One incumbent has drawn token opposition. The other has drawn a crowd.

    Linda Bailey filed to run in Ward 2 in November, then essentially disappeared. She did not attend two candidate forums and did not respond to questionnaires that the Tampa Bay Times and a community weekly paper sent to candidates. In an interview, she said she is running just to give people “another name” on the ballot.

    That suggests clear sailing for incumbent Christine Anne Brown, a community activist and teacher who is seeking a third term in Ward 2, which covers the southeast quarter of the city.

    In Ward 4, however, incumbent Michael Fridovich has three opponents. They all criticize him for poorly representing the district, which stretches across the city’s northeast quadrant.

    Although candidates must live in the districts they seek to represent, voting is citywide.

    Written by University of South Florida St. Petersburg journalism and mass communications students, Ryan Callihan, Tyler Gillespie and Devin Rodriguez, this article was published in the Tampa Bay Times. 

    Continue reading this article: Full story here.

  • Young men at Gibbs High School Raise Funds for College Tour

    Young men at Gibbs High School Raise Funds for College Tour

    BY ABIGAIL PAYNE, NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS BUREAU

    The 5000 Role Models of Gibbs High School are providing a biweekly car wash to raise funds for their college tour to Miami, Fla. The program is a dropout prevention, mentoring program that is committed to minority male achievement. The car wash services are available from 12 to 5 p.m. every other Sunday. They had their first car wash on Feb. 5 with the next car wash happening this Sunday.  

    Coordinator, Javaris Green, hopes they can continue this fundraiser so the students can have opportunities to visit more college campuses. One school on that list is the University of South Florida’s St. Petersburg campus. The date is to be determined, but Green hopes the community will come out to support the young men and help them have a rich college-tour experience.

    Partnered with No Limit Detailing, they are offering interior services (cleaning, leather conditioning, carpet shampooing, and wheel and tire care) and exterior services (wash, polish and wax). The charge is $10 per car and $15 per truck. Donations are always welcome. The car wash is located at 534 28th St. South St. Petersburg, FL, 33712. The contact number is 727.648.8540.

  • NNB students get published for MLK Day of Service events by The Weekly Challenger

    NNB students get published for MLK Day of Service events by The Weekly Challenger

    Among the different communities and organizations located in the St. Petersburg, Florida, area, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Jan. 16, was a day filled with celebrations, parades and service. Neighborhood News Bureau students covered these different events throughout the day with a few of the students getting their coverage published in The Weekly Challenger.

    To view the entire coverage from the Neighborhood News Bureau students in The Weekly Challenger, click the link below.

    2017 MLK Day of Service events

  • “Hair by Ahsile” offers free pampering to members of the homeless community on MLK Day

    “Hair by Ahsile” offers free pampering to members of the homeless community on MLK Day

    BY TYLER GILLESPIE, Neighborhood News Bureau

    A bleached-blonde woman sat down in barber Dale Jones’s chair for a free fade on Martin Luther King Jr. Day at Hair by Ahsile.

    “I wish people would say ‘Happy MLK Day,” Jones said as his clippers buzzed, “like they do ‘Merry Christmas’.”

    Barber Dale Jones cuts hair for free as part of Hair by Ahsile’s MLK Day of Service, in St. Petersburg, Fla.

    For the past ten years, the shop has offered no-charge services for the homeless community as part of its MLK Day of Service. This year, the event’s “day of pampering” included washes, cuts, and manicures to go along with free food and clothes.

    Jones has worked at Hair by Ahsile for a little over a year. The shop at 844 49th Street North in St. Petersburg, Fla. is his family. Literally.

    “My aunt owns the shop,” he said. “My uncle is in here, my cousin, another aunt.”

    Jones will turn 37 this week and has two days off after MLK day. He’s looking forward to some fun.    

    “Every year I turn passed 25, the year they say we don’t make it out of the hood,” he said. “We celebrate.”  

    Friends for over 40 years

    Pastor Deborah Hill became friends with Brenda Gilbert in the sixth grade. In the years after their high school graduation, Hill

    Brenda Gilbert, owner of Hair by Ahsile in St. Petersburg, Fla., cuts hair as Pastor Deborah Hill looks on. The two have been friends for over 40 years.

    left for the military.

    After 20 years of service, she came back to the St. Pete area and quickly re-connected with Gilbert. 

    “Our visions are similar,” said Hill. “We both have a passion for helping those who are disadvantaged.”

    By noon on Hair by Ahsile’s MLK Day of Service, Hill’s New Hope of Glory Ministries church van had picked up four loads of 15 people from various homeless shelters.

    “When people can’t get their hair done – it does something to them,” she said. “The fact they’re able to receive the service makes a difference.”

    Throughout the day, Hill and other volunteers filled multiple roles: ran desk, shampooed, and served food.

    “On this day, you fit in where you can,” Hill said. “Everybody has to pull up their sleeves and work together.”

    Inner beauty

    Pastor Anthony Jones shampoos Carol Kapelke’s hair during the MLK Day of Service in St. Petersburg, Fla.

    Pastor Anthony Jones helped Carol Kapelke out of her wheelchair and into the shampoo station. As he began to massage her temples, Kapelke touched a scar on her forehead.

    “This is from surgery,” she said, “and this – this is from last night. I fell on the concrete.”

    Kapelke closed her eyes.

    “I look like an old woman,” she said. “All I see is the lines.”

    As soon as the words left Kapelke’s mouth, Pastor Deborah Hill – at the nearby shampoo station – turned to her.

    “You’re beautiful,” she said. “That’s just you telling yourself that you’re not.”

    Hill leaned closer to Kapelke.

    “Say I am beautiful,” she said. “Say I am somebody.”

    Kapelke’s voice, quiet at first, grew louder.

    “I am beautiful,” she said. “I am somebody.”  

    Moving to Florida

    Dawn Herman, 54, always knew she wanted to become a graphic designer. In the 1990s, she went to one of the first Macintosh

    Dawn Herman gets her hair cut by Phylicia McQueen as the stylist’s daughters Anilah and Angalee talk to them at Hair by Ahsile, in St. Petersburg, Fla.

    training schools in Atlanta, Georgia. Herman worked at a big printing company after that then moved around the country with her Air Force husband.

    The couple ended up in Mississippi, and Herman worked for ten years as a graphic designer at a university. Then, she went through a divorce and decided to move to Florida.

    Eventually, she said, she found work in the art department at a newspaper.

    “We went through a lot of changes with the internet,” she said. “They thought they could save a lot of money outsourcing work.”

    As newspapers around the country re-worked business plans, Herman said she got fired in 2012.

    “It really threw me for a loop,” she said. “I lost everything – my job, my house, my car. Everything went to hell in a handbasket.”

    Herman had no family in Florida and nowhere to go. She ended up on the street.

    “It can happen to anybody, honey,” she said. “It’s one paycheck. It’s so quick.”

    Herman found a spot in Pinellas Hope tent city for the homeless. Herman, who has back issues, has had difficulty finding work and is currently applying for disability.

    But she has hope.  

    “Today is the happiest I’ve been in a long time,” she said after she got her hair done. “To be out with regular people doing regular things. It’s a good day.”

  • MLK Essay Contest celebrated community and inclusion

    MLK Essay Contest celebrated community and inclusion

    BY EVELYN GUERRA, Neighborhood News Bureau

    Tyna Middleton, the Enoch Davis Center Senior Advisory Council Secretary, and Virginia Scott shared a hug before Scott gave the event history. Scott is the president of the St. Petersburg Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Organization, Inc. She has been part of the organization since this event began 32 years ago.

    The Martin Luther King Jr. High School Essay Contest bring students from various high schools to participate, and Scott emphasized how important it is for these students.

    “The youth are contributing to the community and society,” Scott said. “These students want to do it; they want to make it good.”

    She also said that this is an important event because of the kind of how the general public can act.

    “All of the years are about young people beginning to serve,” Scott said. “To become more of an individual in a society where you follow your peers.”

    Contribution to society

    At the 32nd Annual MLK Essay Contest, Virginia Scott, President of the St. Petersburg Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Organization Inc., spoke to the attendees about the history of the event.

    Scott has been involved since the very beginning and enjoys to hear what the students write every year.

    “The youth are contributing to the community and society,” Scott said. “These students want to do it; they want to make it good.”

    The event is hosted by the Enoch Davis Center and is sponsored by a few other groups such as the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.

    First speech

    Deondrick Harper delivered his speech first. He is in 10th grade at Gibbs High School and was unsure at first.

    “It went pretty good,” Harper said. “I was nervous at first, but after I got some of my essay out I felt more comfortable.”

    Harper wrote his piece on which Martin Luther King Jr. techniques society can use for peace and justice. He covered recent police brutality and how he thinks we are closer to eliminating racism than we think.

    Harper noticed that what he thought was most important about this contest in the community.

    “We’re letting people know what is going on in the world, it is the most important win or lose,” Harper said.

    Harper was awarded honorable mention at the end of the night and $25.

    Life of a hero

    Aysiah Pagan, a sophomore at Gibbs High school, presented second. “I was nervous because of stage fright but I think it went well,” she said.

    Pagan wrote her essay on how love should be our race, and peace be our religion.

    “We’re remembering what MLK did and what he died for, we’re remembering to have love in this world,” Pagan said.

    She was awarded third place for her essay and given $75.

    First prize

    Daniela Pepe, a ninth grader from Gibbs High School, was the third student to present her essay for the MLK High School Essay Contest.

    Pepe spoke about how silence is poison to a good cause. She was trying something different.

    “I am used to singing at school, but not public speaking, so it’s a new experience,” Pepe said.

    Pepe thinks this local essay contest is doing good things.

    “Everyone that writes this essay is trying to resolve the conflict,” Pepe said.

    Pepe received first place in the essay contest and won $200. She also won two tickets to sit at the annual MLK Leadership Breakfast, Monday.

  • Historic Women’s Organization Hosts “Hidden Figures” Screening for Local Girls

    Historic Women’s Organization Hosts “Hidden Figures” Screening for Local Girls

    BY GRACE CUNNINGHAM, Neighborhood News Bureau

    The St. Petersburg Alumnae Chapter of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority hosted a screening of the film “Hidden Figures”  Friday night in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Following a red carpet entrance and photo opportunity, the theater at Cobb Luxury 10 at Tyrone Mall, in St. Petersburg, Florida, was filled with local girls and women from the community. Introducing the film, which tells the true story of three black women who worked on the main projects for NASA during the 1960s, were several guest speakers.

    All of the guests work in the field of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)  and encouraged the young women in attendance to reach for the seemingly impossible.

    Though the theater was a bustling scene permeated with laughter, the event addressed other issues currently presented to young black women.

    “No matter what they face, they can overcome sexism, racism – whatever it is – and be whatever they want to be,” said the event’s master of ceremonies, Loretta Thompson.