Fabulous Crowd Raises Many Thousands of $$$ During Fire Victim Fundraiser at El Rio

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Last night’s benefit fundraiser for displaced victims of the June 18 Mission Street Fire was a wonderful thing. About 400 Bernal and Mission neighbors turned out to represent, and while the receipts are still being counted, together the event helped raise more than $10,000 — which will now be matched 1:1 by a generous corporate donor.  Plus, additional donations are still rolling in.

As always, El Rio was fabulous and magical, with an eclectic crowd mingling on the back  patio:

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Inside, great bands were playing:

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With a DJ spinning in the stylish main bar:

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The raffle was a big hit:

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This lucky lady won a gen-U-ine painting salvaged from the walls of the fire-damaged 3300 Club, generously donated by the bar’s owners. Quite a souvenir:

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Of course, photos don’t give you a full sense of the scene, so here’s a video tour of El Rio filmed live last night from the Bernalwood Mobile Uplink iPhone:

Remember, even if you missed the fun last night, you can still make a tax-deductible contribution to the MEDA Fire Victim’s fund, right here.

It took a lot of work from a lot of people to make this fundraiser happen, so special thanks go out to:

  • Glamorous Bernal Neighbor Sana Saleem who spearheaded the event
  • Zack Mellette & William Fitzgerald, Google employees who helped organize the event and coordinate the raffle
  • The Mission Economic Development Corporation for managing the tax-deductable fund and assisting with raffle sales
  • Edwin Lindo, for organizing a relief fund, helping with raffle ticket sales, and being a lot of fun
  • El Rio’s Staff for being El Rio, and hosting the event, and donating bar proceeds to the cause
  • Virgil’s Sea Room right next door for hosting the overflow and donating proceeds to fire victims
  • All the stone-cold sexxxy musicians and entertainers who performed
  • All the fantastic local merchants  and donors who contributed items for the raffle
  • Ros and her team from the Red Cross, who have been with the survivors at the shelter since the fire
  • Carrie Grimes, site lead for the Google’s San Francisco office, who sponsored a fundraiser at the company which over 230 googlers supported.

And lastly, a very, very, very special thanks to…

Everyone who showed up last night! It was a beautiful thing to see so many people from all over the political map coming together for a common cause, at a time when our neighbors needed us most. Our community is our strength.

This Day in Bernal History: Remembering the St. Anthony’s Church Fire of 1975

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Speaking of big, sad fires… on this day 41 years ago, a treasured Bernal Heights icon went up in flames. St Anthony’s Church at 3215 Army Street — Cesar Chavez at Folsom, in contemporary parlance — caught fire and burned on June 30, 1975.

Today the San Francisco Chronicle posted a remembrance:

Here’s the story from Chronicle reporter Kevin Wallace:

“Bumbling poor-box robbers may have started it by spilling an altar candle they were using to illuminate their industry.

“In any case, old St. Anthony’s Church, at 3215 Army Street, began burning at 2:50 a.m. yesterday.

“First it was just an eerie glow that attracted the attention of some passing youngsters. They turned up their car radio to deafening volume to rouse the neighborhood with a rock concert alarm, and hollered to the nine priests in the adjacent rectory.

“And right away it was a historic 4-alarm neighborhood event.

“Flames broke into the night sky all down the building’s spine. Above the altar, the blazing transept collapsed. The nave clock stopped at 3:12, a message to posterity.

“The once all-German neighborhood … assembled in hastily selected wardrobes to admire 162 firemen swarming off 47 engines with miles of coiled hoses. The hoses soon flooded Army from Shotwell to Folsom Street and eastward to Harrison, ankle-deep.

Bernalwood has written about the St. Anthony’s fire before, but to reprise; Here’s how St. Anthony’s looked from street level in 1965:

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And here’s the real heartbreaker; check out this spectacular view of the church interior, as seen in 1958:

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IMAGE: Top, Front Page, via San Francisco Chronicle

Thursday! Big, Special Bonus Fundraiser for Fire Victims at El Rio

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There’s a big benefit for the Mission Street fire victims happening tomorrow, Thursday June 30, at the fabulous El Rio, and Bernalwood is a co-sponsor.

This is a great event to shower with copious amounts of your cash, because a generous corporate sponsor has agreed to match all the proceeds collected at the door. That means for every dollar you give, the fire victims will get twice as much of your generosity.  Here are the details:

Fundraiser for Survivors of Mission Fire on Mission St & 29th
Thursday, June 30 at 8 PM – 11:30 PM
El Rio – 3158 Mission (@Precita)

Join us for a fundraiser for survivors of the fire that burned down the homes of 58 people on Mission and 29th.

Door fee will be $10 (but no one turned away). We’ll also do a raffle. El Rio is kindly donating all bar proceeds from 8-12 to the fund.

All proceeds will go directly to the familes and will be matched 1-1 by a corporate sponsor. The Mission Economic Development Agency will process all donations and won’t be charging a fee.

You can also donate online here (with MEDA) and here (with Edwin Lindo).

Virgil’s Sea Room (the bar just next door to El Rio) will also be taking donations at the door. If there’s a long line or you want to wait, sit down and grab a cocktail while still helping our neighbors.

Event line up:

PHOTO: El Rio bowling table, by Telstar Logistics

Today! Shop and Dine on Mission Street to Benefit Fire Victims

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The Mission Bernal Merchant’s Association has been working hard for the last week or so as the organization has rallied to provide assistance to residents and businesses displaced by the big five-alarm fire.

Today, Tuesday June 28, MBMA member businesses are offering special deals to help raise funds for the fire victims, so it’s a great day to shop and dine on our stretch of Mission Street:

Help our neighborhood rebuild!
Mission Bernal merchant fire relief June 28

Since the fire on June 18, our neighborhood has really come together as a community. Among other efforts, many of the businesses in Mission Bernal are doing their part to help out the residents and merchants that were victims of the fire.

On Tuesday, June 28, we encourage everyone to visit your favorite Mission Bernal business to show your support. Go to dinner at your favorite restaurant. Grab a drink at a local bar or get your hair cut.

Get some ice cream at Mitchell’s – they are donating 25% of their sales tomorrow. Buy art at Secession and we will donate 20% of the purchase price directly to the displaced merchants. Cafe 78 is donating 15% of sales, and Blue Plate is donating the proceeds of meatloaf and mac and cheese sales.

Multiple fundraisers are happening through the neighborhood in support of both the merchants and businesses Take a moment to appreciate the community and send positive thoughts for the rebuild efforts!

Participating businesses will have information on how they are contributing, and how to donate to the neighborhood businesses displaced by the fire. You can also donate through our web site, www.mbmasf.org.

PHOTO: Top, 3300 block of Mission Street after the fire. Photo by Jonathan Koshi

Aerial Photo Reveals Devastation from Mission Street Fire

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From street level, it’s been hard to assess the true scale of last week’s five-alarm fire. In part, that’s because some of the damaged buildings are now boarded up. Yet  even before the plywood went up, the fire zone included a lot of interior spaces that are normally hidden behind the facades of the buildings.

To get a clear perspective on the damage done, you need an aerial photo. And now, courtesy of Neighbor Marni and Alan, we have one.

Marni and Alan live behind the Front Porch, and Alan captured the scene in this video taken from his drone.

The screenshot shows the view looking east toward Bernal Hill, as the drone hovered above just above the Front Porch. Here’s an annotated version, for orientation:

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Finally, here’s a sobering view of what this location looked like before the fire, as seen in Apple Maps:

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PHOTO: Burned buildings via video screenshot, courtesy of Alan Musselman

Scenes from the 2016 Cortland “Summer” Solstice Stroll

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The sun was out, the fog stalled over Twin Peaks, and last Thursday evening many smiling Bernalese friends and families headed to Cortland Avenue to partake of the ancient ritual of the Solstice Stroll.

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This being summer, of course, was a little chilly. So Bernalwood’s Cub Reporter insisted we head to Pinhole Coffee, where we’d heard there would be Japanese-style curry. The rumors proved true, the curry was warm, hearty, and delicious, and the Cub Reporter was happy and fortified:

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One BIG news flash occurred when we realized that celebrity Bernal neighbor Terry Milne…

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…. may have actually been separated at birth from his imperial highness Emperor Norton (aka Bernal neighbor Joseph Amster):

2016-06-23 19.57.26Who knew???!!

Although, in the realm of rockstars, no one could touch the little guy we saw jamming with the big kids in front of Healthy Spirits. He was totally feeling it:

Thanks for making it happen, Bernal Business Alliance!

PHOTOS: Telstar Logistics

On the Bright Side, Neighbor Michael Nolan Celebrated His 75th Birthday This Week

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Okay, let’s be straight with each other: This was a rough week. There was that nasty five-alarm fire on Saturday, of course, but that wasn’t the only thing. On Sunday, the Warriors botched the NBA Finals. There was also that shitshow SFMTA meeting David Campos convened on Monday, where a bunch of microphone-hogging nativists screamed that that taking a faster Muni bus is something only a gentrifier would do. Then, to top it all off, Great Britain decided it wants to be more like Texas. Sigh.

One thing made all this bearable, and that was the fact that this week, Neighbor Michael Nolan of Elsie Street also celebrated his 75th birthday.

Neighbor Michael has been in Bernal for a very long time, having arrived on our hill during the wave of post-hippie colonization that took place here during the early 1970s. Indeed, the ultimate proof of Neighbor Michael’s old skool credentials is the fact you can find even him in that seminal group photo taken in 1978 during the original construction of the Esmeralda slides:

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In Bernalese terms, being present in that photo is sort of like being one of the people pictured in that skimpy wooden boat with George Washington as he crossed the Delaware River to swipe Trenton from the British in 1776. Serious. Seminal. Moment.

Anyway, this week Neighbor Michael turned 75, and since he’s still in pretty good shape, he threw himself a big 75th birthday party at Bissap Baobab in The Mission, and filled the place up with a lively cross-section of his local friends.

Neighbor Sarah Rogers wrote a perfect tribute on Facebook that explained why so many people were so thrilled to celebrate the occasion:

Happy 75th birthday/Diamond Jubilee to Michael David Nolan, mayor of Elsie Street, workout-on-the-hill-er, master of new technologies and social media, genealogist/historian, neighborhood activist, slide-builder, former supervisor candidate, constant maker of new friends, Carnaval devotee, and about a billion other things that I can’t remember because my memory is not as good as yours and that all add up to your being the youngest 75-year-old in the history of the world. I think you should go for 75 more.

That sums it up nicely. Plus, even at 75, Neighbor Michael still has the moves. Watch it:

Happy birthday, neighbor, and thanks for giving us something to cheer for this week.

PHOTO: Top, Michael Nolan at his 75th birthday party, by Jack Pitts

Saturday: Community Meeting to Discuss Future of SF Public Library

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The SF Public Library is holding a series of “community conversations” around town to discuss the future of the City’s library system. The next sessions happens on Saturday, morning, June 25 at 9:30 am at the Bernal Library, and you’re invited:

This summer the San Francisco Public Library is embarking on a community engagement initiative throughout the city to ask residents for their views about the public library, its many services and its future.

Through a series of focus groups in each Supervisory District, the Library hopes to gain a greater understanding of different neighborhoods’ challenges and aspirations, and strengthen connections with community residents. We want to find new ways the Library can be of service, and improve our communication to the community about the hundreds of exciting programs the library already offers.

Each focus group will host a targeted audience of residents specially invited to participate as a representative member of the community. You have been referred to the Library as an individual who is active in your local community and as someone who cares deeply about the quality of life for San Franciscans.

We value your time and your opinions and hope you can join us for the Listening Tour event planned for

Saturday, June 25, 2016, 9:30 a.m.
Bernal Heights Branch Library – Meeting Room
500 Cortland Ave. at Moultrie

Please RSVP to PublicAffairs@sfpl.org or (415) 557-4277

PHOTO: Telstar Logistics

Wallet Time: Your List of Fundraising Efforts for Victims of the Mission Street Fire

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NOTE: This post will be updated as new efforts and events are announced.

Last night, a family displaced by last weekend’s five-alarm fire left the Salvation Army shelter where they’ve been living ever since they were forced to flee from their home. Bernal neighbor Sana Saleem reports that the family and their one year-old daughter moved into a local Airbnb provided for free under the company’s disaster recovery program. It’s just a beginning, of course, but it’s an encouraging sign that efforts to help displaced residents and small businesses get back on their feet are gaining momentum.

Simultaneously, a broad array of community members are coming together to raise funds that will assist the victims of last weekend’s fire in a longer-term way. As Bernalwood emphasized earlier this week, this recovery effort is a marathon, not a sprint.  Here’s a summary of how you can contribute to fundraising efforts for the fire victims:

FUNDS
The Mission Economic Development Agency has created a fund for fire victims, and yesterday MEDA launched a dedicated webpage where anyone can contribute.  100% of donations will go directly to tenants impacted by fires in residential buildings in and around the Mission. Added bonus: Donations to the Mission Tenants’ Fire Fund are tax deductible.

Edwin Lindo’s fundraising effort is also continuing. The fund has collected $38,500 as of this writing, with a goal of $100K. Apart from gofundme’s fees, all the donations will go to fire victims.

EVENTS
Friday, June 24, 4 pm – closing @Doc’s Clock (2575Mission near 22nd): This Friday 50% of all proceeds from drinks served at the divetastic Doc’s Clocks bar will go to MEDA’s fire victim’s fund.

Sunday, June 26, 3 pm – 6 pm @Barebottle Brewing Co. (1525 Cortland): Barebottle is having a fundraiser for the fire victims in their gorgeous new brewery and tap room, Sunday June 26, 3-6pm. 50% of all beer proceeds will be donated to fire victims.

Thursday, June 30 8 pm – 11:30 pm @El Rio (3158 Mission near Precita): The Fundraiser for Survivors of Mission Fire on Mission St & 29th will be a great way to have some fun and amplify your impact. The door fee will be $10 with no one turned away, and a generous corporate donor has offered to match all proceeds collected at the door.  The fabulous El Rio team is also donating all bar proceeds from 8pm -12am  to the fund.  There will be music, a raffle, and one very beautiful community coming together to help. Bernalwood is a co-sponsor, and complete details are here.

Wednesday, July 13 @Elbo Room (Tentative): Can’t make it to El Rio next week? Don’t worry about it. This one is just coming together, but the beloved Elbo Room also reached out to Bernalwood with an offer to host a fundraising event for Bernal fire victims. We’ve picked a tentative date, and the rest is TBD, but we’re hopeful a corporate donor will again match donations from the door proceeds . Pencil this in on your calendar, and stay tuned for more details soon.

In addition, InsideScoop created a great summary of fundraising efforts announced by restaurants and bars along our stretch of Mission Street. If you’re hungry, or thirsty, here’s how you can help:

Front Porch: Until July 1, 10 percent of sales will go to fire victims through the Red Cross, as will all profits on the evening of July 5, during a larger benefit. In addition, the restaurant is spearheading a Bucket Brigade (it specializes in buckets of chickens) with gold buckets behind the bar to collect additional cash donations. Nearby Rock Bar will also be participating. The goal is to raise at least $3,300 in honor of 3300 Club.

Ichi Sushi: Starting June 27, all sales from Yuzu Chicken Wings and Lavender Lemonade will be sent to neighborhood funds that support those displaced by the fire. The restaurant also plans to host a fundraising dinner with other chefs in the near future.

Old Bus Tavern: Net proceeds from sales of Pisco Punch (made with Pisco, lime juice, pineapple and clove) will be donated to victims of the fire.

The Pizza Hacker and Blue Plate, located nearby, say they plan to announce fundraising plans soon.

Sidebar: InsideScoop’s article is a great read that provides insight into the close-knit bar and restaurant community in La Lengua.  It also includes this inspiring shout-out for two establishments that swung into action even as the fire was still burning hot:

Restaurants in the immediate area had to close Saturday night, and some began feeding the firefighters instead. Front Porch supplied fried chicken and iced tea, and Good Frikin Chicken set up a table with rotisserie chickens, rice, falafel and homemade mac n cheese.

AID FOR FIRE-DAMAGED SMALL BUSINESSES
Small Business Relief Fund created by the Mission Bernal Merchants Association: MBMA is the merchants’ group along along Bernal’s Mission Street corridor, and the organization is raising funds to help fire-damaged businesses recover, relocate, and start the rebuilding process to get back up and running as soon as possible. Donations to this fund are tax-deductible.

For the small businesses impacted by the fire, today also brought a ray of sunshine from City Hall. The Examiner reports that each small businesses may each receive $10,000 from a special City fund designed to help them get back on their feet:

In response to the fire, Mayor Ed Lee directed the Office of Economic and Workforce Development to activate The City’s Small Business Disaster Relief Fund, which provides emergency money to small businesses affected by the fire. There’s about $200,000 available in the fund. Businesses will take advantage of the disaster relief money, and paperwork is already underway to secure funds for those businesses.

Got all that? Earlier in the week, Bernalwood urged you to keep your wallets and checkbooks warm for future use, and hopefully you now understand why: There are a lot of ways to help the victims of the fire recover. Thanks for your generosity, and special thanks to all the people, companies, organizations, and agencies that have worked tirelessly this week to launch these recovery efforts.

PHOTO: Top, Neighbors displaced by the Mission Street Fire on Saturday evening. Photo courtesy of Sana Saleem

RIP: Bernal Neighbor Carla Jean Johnson

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Photo by Anna Kuperberg

Neighbor Carla Jean Johnson passed away earlier this month. Darcy Lee from Heartfelt knew her well, and tells us why it was such a big loss:

We lost a hero in Bernal. Carla Jean Johnson was an advocate for the homeless, for buildings being safely built in her city, for LBGT rights, the list goes on and on. She was a helper a true caring neighbor who would consult with you on whatever she was knowledgeable about, and that list also goes on and on.

I have asked her about building codes, dog behavior, when our house was moved onto Bernal, how to search the history of Heartfelt’s building….. she was a wealth of information and caring.

My favorite memory of Carla is from long ago, when Heartfelt still sold helium balloons. She would ask if I would open early to blow up balloons for her perfect vintage red truck for the Pride Parade. It was quiet on Cortland and her truck would shine as we tied on the balloons, a palatable excitement that has more meaning today than I even want to think about.

She knew so much and cared even more. A strong woman, an amazing partner to Anna, and in turn, Anna, your journey with your wife is an inspiration that is all about love. Carla Jean you are a true example of how one person can make a difference. My tears for you are big ones, you were a star to me.

Carla previously led the City’s Office on Disability, and Mayor Ed Lee also issued a statement on her passing:

I am deeply saddened by the passing of Carla Johnson, a dedicated City employee for over 27 years and a champion for disability rights in our City.

She has significantly helped to improve the quality of life our residents. In the last six years, she has led the Mayor’s Office on Disability and served as our City’s overall Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Coordinator. Her leadership has been instrumental in expanding the scope of the Mayor’s Office of Disability to become a strategic partner in all major San Francisco initiatives that impact the disability community, including ensuring accessibility in public housing and private establishments, digital communications, software applications, and public events and celebrations, and advocating for pedestrian safety and homeless service delivery.

With a generous heart, kindest demeanor and a life dedicated to public service, compassion and community, her legacy will continue to live on in our City.”

For those who wish to honor her memory and legacy, donations can be made to the Bayview Opera House for two purposes: to commission a public artwork that celebrates the values of equity to be placed on the building’s grounds or to support youth programming. Donations can be made online at bvoh.org, click on “Fund a Dream” or via check made payable to Bayview Opera House, Inc., 4702 3rd Street, San Francisco, CA 94124.

PHOTO: via Anna Kuperberg on Facebook

Hosts Needed as Airbnb Activates Disaster Relief Program for Fire Victims

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The next few weeks will be critical for the 56 Bernal neighbors displaced by last weekend’s big five-alarm fire. Donations have been flowing in, and several fundraising efforts are getting underway to provide longer-term support and rent money. (More on these soon.) But in the meantime, the fire victims must find places to stay, because the current shelter won’t stay open for very long — and besides, it’s rather spartan there.

It’s the kind of situation that makes you think: Hmmmm. If only there was a system that could connect fire-displaced neighbors with the many generous people in the area who would be willing to make extra rooms available for them, for free, on a temporary basis. In other words, if only there was something sort of like Airbnb, but for disaster victims who need interim emergency housing while they search a more permanent place to stay.

Fortuitously, such a thing actually exists, and it’s called… Airbnb. Specifically, it’s Airbnb’s Disaster Response & Relief Program, and it was activated yesterday for victims of the Mission Street fire in collaboration with the San Francisco Department of Emergency Management and the Red Cross. Here’s how Airbnb says the program works:

When disasters strike, we can activate our response tool for a designated geographic area. When the tool is activated:

  • Airbnb automatically Emails hosts in the affected area, asking them if they are able to help
  • Existing hosts and local residents with extra space can host those in need for free
  • All Airbnb bookings in the affected area are fee-free
  • All hosts have access to Airbnb’s 24/7 customer support, Trust & Safety tools, Host Guarantee and other services regularly available to Airbnb hosts
  • We use our networks to provide general disaster response information to guests and hosts

By way of backstory, Bernalwood learned about Airbnb’s disaster assistance program a few years ago, and we remembered it on Sunday, after visiting the Salvation Army shelter on Valencia where some of the fire victims are staying. A friend connected us with the manager of Airbnb’s disaster relief program, and we reached her as she was on her way back from Orlando, where Airbnb had been assisting families recovering from that city’s horrific gay nightclub shooting. On Monday Airbnb was in contact with the Department of Emergency Management, and by Monday evening, the program was ready to go. The email went out to local Airbnb hosts on Tuesday, and  free listings for fire victims began appearing on the Mission Fire disaster page soon after:

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Airbnb’s  program for the Mission Street Fire victims will operate in coordination with the local Red Cross.  Airbnb tells Bernalwood:

Our thoughts are with those affected by the fire in San Francisco over the weekend. We have activated our Disaster Response Tool and encourage our host community in the surrounding area to aid displaced residents with housing.

Right. We encourage that too. Now that things are all set up,  please consider joining the Disaster Response program if you have an Airbnb listing that you can make available to assist a displaced neighbor on a temporary basis. It’s a tremendously neighborly thing to do, at a time when some of our neighbors need it most.

PHOTO: Top, Neighbors displaced by the Mission Street Fire on Saturday evening. Photo courtesy of Sana Saleem

 

No Sign of Foul Play as Investigators Say Fire Started in Cole Hardware Building

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Yesterday, the San Francisco Fire Department held a press briefing at Secession Art and Design to provide an update on the status of the investigation into Saturday’s traumatic five-alarm fire. You can watch a video of the full session here.

ABC7 says so far there’s no evidence of foul play in connection with the fire:

“The building of origin is 3312 which is the Cole’s Hardware store with residential above it. As to the exact spot within that building, that’s still under investigation,” San Francisco Fire Department spokesperson Jonathan Baxter said.

One of the immediate concerns when this fire broke out and one that remains from neighborhood residents is what seems to be a disturbing trend of devastating fires at low income, rent controlled buildings.

But the fire department said they’ve never been able to find a nefarious link to this or any other Mission District fires, so far. “Past fires have been attributed to electrical issues, heating issues and human error issues,” Baxter said.

Some residents were allowed to return home to retrieve belongings.

Officials said 57 people were displaced, and half are from the corner building, a low income voucher hotel.

The property was damaged, but city agencies told ABC7 News it can be repaired so residents can eventually move back in.

Cole’s Hardware will be torn down as a total loss and the same goes for the Playa Azul restaurant building.

Other than the fact that the fire started at an unknown location in the Cole Hardware building, there were few other salient details from the press conference:

  • There were four residential units above Cole Hardware.
  • The exact spot where the fire started in the Cole Hardware building is not yet known.
  • The sprinklers at the Graywood Hotel were operational, and the sprinklers activated during the fire.
  • The fire alarm system at the Graywood Hotel also activated.
  • There were no open fire hazard complaints for the Graywood Hotel or Cole Hardware buildings.

Meanwhile, efforts are continuing to find more permanent shelter for those displaced by the fire, and significant resources are now being applied to the problem.

The Graywood Hotel is believed to be repairable, and the expectation is that residents will be able to move back in once repairs are complete. That’s the good news. The bad news is that repairs may take a long time.

Bernalwood is involved with several efforts to provide assistance to displaced residents and raise funds to help defray their housing costs, and we’ll have more to say about all that very soon. Local merchants are also rallying to help impacted small businesses. It should come as no surprise, but our community has risen to the occasion to provide the assistance the fire victims need. Stay tuned for more detail about additional ways you can help.

PHOTO: Fire scene on the morning after, June 19, 2016, by Telstar Logistics

Thursday: Celebrate Summer at the Cortland Solstice Stroll

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The legend is handed down among Bernalese from generation to generation: Tens of thousands of years ago, in the time of the sages and ancients, a race of wizened elves gathered in the area we now call Cortland Avenue for a gala celebration of the summer season. There was celebration. There was food. There was plenty of drink and glad cheer. And it was good.

Today, the Bernal Business Alliance has revived this hallowed ritual for the modern age, and the 2016 Summer Stroll happens this Thursday, June 23, from 6 – 9 pm on historic Cortland Avenue.

Here are the deets:

The Bernal Business Alliance and merchants will celebrate the solstice at the sixth annual Summer Stroll all along Cortland Avenue in San Francisco’s Bernal Heights neighborhood.

Businesses will stay open later than usual, from 6 to 9 p.m.Thursday, June 23, 2016.Each participant will feature one­night specials, including giveaways, musical guests, treats and food & drink for the evening. Admission is free.

Here are some of the brick­and­mortar and home­based businesses who will be participating:

  • Heartfelt will have Cajun music, cookies and a specially crafted drink! Heartfelt & will be open with a special “sale”!
  • Little Bee Baking are hosting Good Eggs the “online farmers market” out front withinformation about their great service and local artist RaissaTrend will be showing newartwork inside the store.
  • Pinhole Coffee have a far eastern theme for the evening, with Japanese Curry by Chef Michael Black, former Chef and owner of Sebo, and ceramics for sale by Mitsuko Siegrist of the Tsuchikara Pottery.
  • Succulence are hosting an art opening for Cat Johnston whose amazing art will be hanging in the window for the month. They will also have music and wine and cookies.
  • Healthy Spirits will host a small band playing Middle Eastern inspired music as well as
    making some rare beers and whiskeys available from their cellar.
  • Members from the Bernal Business Alliance will be in front of Heartfelt with membership information and helping our neighbors at the Mission Bernal Merchants Association collect donations for the victims of the recent Mission Street fire.
  • Bernal Beast will have doggy treats and chocolate cake for any human companions!
  • Red Hill Station will have Oysters, Oysters and yes, more Oysters!!!
  • Lauren Becker of Recycled Glassworks will be showcasing her new work in slumped, recycled glass.
  • Epicurean Trader will have Bernal local winemaker Bryan Harrington for a free Wine Tasting event.
  • Inclusions Gallery will host an art opening with San Francisco painter Jeffery Roth. There will also be 15% off all handmade jewelry as well as music & refreshments.

Both the Bernal Branch Library and the Bernal Heights Neighborhood Center will also be joining us for the evening.

The Library Staff will be out front of the Library giving away books and small prizes and signing people up for the summer reading program. And across the street, the Neighborhood Center will have plenty of information about their current projects and you’ll be able to sign­up as a member on the spot.

And when you are done with the strolling you can stop by The Lucky Horseshoe for some smooth jazz with Larry Epstein from 8­11pm.

For more information about the Bernal Business Alliance, visit http://bernalbusiness.org.

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PHOTO: Modern Bernalese elves strolling during the 2014 solstice, by Telstar Logistics