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Headlines: Seacoast Local and our members in the news

Read all about it...  

(H)EAT in Foster's Daily Democrat http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111210/GJBUSINESS_01/712109985/-1/FOSNEWS

Our Executive Director talks about Plaid Friday on NHPR, Listen here: http://www.nhpr.org/post/plaid-friday-go-local

Portsmouth Herald Article on Plaid Friday! http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20111123-BIZ-111230346?cid=sitesearch

Green Alliance Plaid Friday Article: http://www.greenalliance.biz/blog/archives/201111/plaid-friday-offers-local-alternative-black-friday-mayhem

Foster's Daily has another great article on Plaid Friday! http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111121/GJBUSINESS_01/711219999/-1/FOSNEWS

Great article by the NH Businesses for Social Responsibility http://www.nhbr.com/news/940420-395/local-retailers-don-plaid-to-counter-black.html

Fishtival is one of the most effective ways we know to connect our community with our endangered local fishery. Learn more about how changes are threatening our fleet in this story about Fishtival at fosters.com.http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110926/GJNEWS_01/709269951

Independent business alliances in dozens of cities across the country are organizing events like Buy Local Week,Buy Local Month, and New Orleans Unchained.

Independent brewers are multiplying and gaining market share against the big beer brands. 

The New York Times on why independent pharmacists matter.

Buy Local: Good for community and bottom line: "Over the course of six years something has been happening and it's not just driven by us," said Phil Philbrick, whose Fresh Market works with more than 100 local vendors to supply a wide variety of fresh and new products, reports Michael McCord in the Portsmouth Herald.

Buying local is easier than you think: The Montgomery News writes about why the 10% Shift matters to their community.

Putting Wal-Mart's "green" moves in context:  What journalists and even environmentalists so often fail to do in reporting on Wal-Mart's sustainability announcements is to provide some context, writes Stacy Mitchell in Grist.

Consumers buy into "buy local': More groups are forming to send shoppers to home-grown independent businesses, says Business Week.

Buying local on a large scale: From Cleveland to Tempe, economic developers are convincing institutions with big spending power to shift more dollars to small businesses in their communities, saysBusiness Week.

Buy Local is focal point for new Somersworth mayor:  Buy local. Strive for sustainability. And sign up for a committee (especially if you're a woman or have no experience). That was the message Mayor Lincoln Soldati presented to his constituents as he presided over his first regular City Council meeting Tuesday night, after he won in a landslide during the November election, writes Jason Claffey in Foster's Daily Democrat.

Why to shop locally this holiday season: "You can make a list and you can check it twice, but it's still good to get out there and pound the pavement in search of the serendipitous. Portsmouth is a most awesome place to do that. I scored so big I had to make three bag-laden trips back to the car," writes a Seacoast blogger, reminding us of something we take for granted, but shouldn't. Read all about it in this Portsmouth Herald editorial urging all of us to get downtown without further delay!

Fashion's Latest Trend: Buy Local: Although plenty of models in funky T-shirts and jeans, slinky lingerie and glamorous evening wear sashayed down the runway, the real star of the third annual Fashion Up! show was the "buy local" philosophy behind the event,  writes Nancy Cicco for SeacoastOnline.

Local businesses boost our outlook: Stacy Mitchell spoke to a crowd of 120 people at South Berwick Town Hall about the economic logic of fostering a diversity of small businesses in our business districts. Hosted by Smart Growth South Berwick, Seacoast Local and Kennebunk Savings Bank, the researcher contends the growth of small businesses is essential to all communities interested in cutting fuel costs and carbon emissions and creating meaningful jobs. Listen to the audio archive on Portsmouth Community Radio (starts about 10 min. along), or read Jason Claffey's article about this "Making the Connection" event in the Oct. 25, 2008 issue of Foster's.   

It's All About Connections: A business, an organization and a church have made the connection between what each is doing individually and how, if they work together, it could benefit the entire Seacoast community. Read more about this alliance between RiverRun Bookstore, Seacoast Local and the South Church Green Sanctuary program in Deborah McDermott's Earth Matters column in the Portsmouth Herald.

Seacoast Farmers Help the Hungry: Rising food costs prompted Seacoast Local, Seacoast Eat Local and Slow Food Seacoast to work with Seacoast Growers' Association Farmers to collect weekly donations at the farmers market that will help provide healthy, fresh food for Cross Roads House, the state's largest emergency and transitional shelter. The story has been covered in the Portsmouth Herald, The Wire and at NH.com. Donations mainly come from local farmers, but the public is encouraged to share a bit of each week's produce purchases, too.

McKibben urges climate action now: More than 350 people filled South Church in Portsmouth on a recent Sunday afternoon to hear pioneering environmental author Bill McKibben give a charged talk about the role community action can take in steering the course of global climate change. The event was part of Seacoast Local's "Making the Connection" speaker series. The author of "The End of Nature," first published in 1989, is working with others globally to call all elected officials to action at 350.org. Read more about it in the the July 21 issue of Foster's Daily Democrat or the Portsmouth Herald. A full interview with McKibben appears in the July 16 issue of The Wire

An Emphasis on Community: In 2006, a group of citizens in the coastal region of New Hampshire and southern Maine came together to confront an array of interrelated pressures, including skyrocketing property prices, that threatened to drive out local businesses, artists, and musicians, and, in the process, destroy the area's unique atmosphere and rich community life. While the campaign shares much in common with similar initiatives around the country, Seacoast Local stands out as an exceptional model in its efforts to highlight the support that local businesses provide nonprofit organizations and to encourage businesses to contribute even more to the community. Read more about it in the June 2008 issue ofHometown Advantage.

Celebrating in the street: Were you in Market Square for the Seacoast Local festival? Area residents and visitors were treated to live music, dance and comedy, while in the center of the street was an interactive sculpture titled the "Morphing Localasaurus," created by festival committee members and local teacher Anna Nuttall, writes Gretyl Macalaster in the July 8, 2008, issue of Foster's Daily Democrat. "It is a good way for people to hear about us," said Hilary O'Neil, a Families First community outreach worker. "It is just a super opportunity to get information out." Read the article.

Message to holiday shoppers: Locally owned businesses support the communities that support them—that's the message Seacoast Buy Local participants are trying to get across during the busiest shopping season of the year, writes Shir Haberman in the Dec. 2, 2007, issue of the Portsmouth Herald. The difference is due to four factors: local payroll, local procurement, owners' profits and charitable giving—and the list of nonprofits supported by this business sector encompasses virtually every helping agency in the region. Read the article.

An all-local Christmas? Yes, you can! Three years ago, inspired by the quality and dedication she found at area farmers’ markets, Seacoast resident Karen Lawrence decided to buy “local only” for Christmas. Seeking unique gifts, she found that changing her habits changed her. Learn how she did it in her interview with The Wire on Nov. 28, 2007. Read the article.

It's your town, you decide: Big-box developers are lining up to tap into the regional draw of places like Rochester, Greenland and Seabrook. While these stores generate tax revenue, jobs and shopping options, many residents are beginning to question the true cost of retail chains. How do these chains affect the local economy, environment, public services and other factors essential to the health of Seacoast communities? Pat Law interviews community activists, town officials and big-box economics expert Stacy Mitchell in the Oct. 31, 2007 issue of The Wire. Read the article.

It's the LOCAL economy:  How about think globally and buy locally? This variation is being taken seriously by Seacoast Buy Local, a growing, grassroots organization of local, independent business people who are determined to produce a dynamic economic impact, writes Michael McCord in the September 2007 issue of Seacoast Ventures. Read the article

Seacoast Local Festival raises non-profit awareness: Five-year-old Emily Carleton of Kittery can get a rubber band around a lobster claw, so long as the lobster is made of rubber, too. She learned that trick of the trade from naturalist Beth Moore, who works at the Seacoast Science Center in Rye. Moore sat behind one of about 20 booths along Pleasant Street in Portsmouth at the Seacoast Local Festival on Saturday. Reporter Chloe Johnson describes the scene in the Sept. 10, 2007 edition of Foster's Daily Democrat. Read the article.

New members invited: Seacoast Local has launched a membership drive for the "Buy Local" program, writes Jeremiah Turner in Foster's Daily Democrat. Read the article.

Go native: One Seacoast resident challenges us all to eat locally during the month of August, reports Karen Marzloff in The Wire on August 9, 2006. That's hardly a hardship in a region where farmers work to bring seasonal produce to an array of weekly farmers’ markets, and craft producers make ciders, cheeses, ice creams, and wines. But tracking down these resources adds to the challenge and doubles the fun.  Read the article.