“It is something that I am constantly thinking about: how can I pay my staff so that they can also live in the community? How can I make sure that our rent doesn’t skyrocket? I mean store rent, let alone housing costs. Image by the author.įor Depp, the danger of losing her business comes not only from online retailers like Amazon, but also from local pressures like a heavy tax burden and rising rent. So we are definitely affected by what’s happening,” says Hannah Oliver Depp, the owner of Loyalty Books (formerly Upshur Street Books).įront of Loyalty Bookstore. “Sankofa is an institution, holding down representation in gentrifying Washington, DC. While new black-owned bookstores have opened in neighborhoods undergoing change, their owners recognize that they too are in a precarious situation. All the new things being built, are not being built for us’ newcomers are saying: ‘Please do not let our presence wipe away the vibrant culture that first attracted us to the District.” “Longtime residents tell the Councilmember: ‘We don’t recognize our neighborhoods anymore. When rents or property taxes increase, it puts tremendous pressure on our long-time small business owners,” Fazzini says. “Gentrification is hitting lower Georgia Ave, which affects small business owners just as much as residents. Ultimately more programs, and more funding for existing help like DC’s Main Streets initiatives, are necessary to retain local businesses. Tom Fazzini, Deputy Chief of Staff and Communications Director for Nadeau, believes that a tax abatement will help Sankofa, but he says it’s not enough. "Black Books Matter" pins at Mahogany Books. We have relationships with black publishers around the country…so that authors have a network,” Shirikiana says. The idea then evolved an expectation of good film as good literature. “We wanted to have a place where we could sell DVDs or videos, at that time, by ourselves and by other filmmakers of color around the world. With her husband Haile Gerima (also a filmmaker), they opened the store in 1998 following the success of their 1993 film of the same name about finding and returning to one’s African roots. And historically, development has been at a cost to black communities and communities of color,” says Shirikiana Aina Gerima, a filmmaker and co-owner of Sankofa. “We are caught in the mix of this whirlwind of development. These local retailers can have trouble paying their taxes, and may be forced to move or shutter as a result. While there are major incentives for new developments to “revitalize” underinvested areas, such help is not always available for existing local businesses. Image by the author.Īt a public hearing on June 3, Sankofa’s owners plan to seek a 10-year tax abatement through a bill introduced by Councilmember Brianne Nadeau (Ward 1). Joy is herself an entrepreneur, as the owner and editor of Our Black Book magazine. Inside of Mahogany Books in Anacostia with employee Christina Joy. Owners say community support is what enables them to remain neighborhood establishments. Nonetheless, many of DC’s black-owned bookstores are thriving-notwithstanding rising rents, increased tax burdens, and tight profit margins. Discriminatory finance practices, such as being charged higher rates for bank accounts and mortgages and facing extra scrutiny by potential lenders, disproportionately harm black business owners. Besides the historic violence of forbidding enslaved people the right to literacy, would-be black business owners continue to be blocked from accessing capital. These black-owned bookstores are important to celebrate for many reasons, including the resilience they represent. A number of them are black-owned, including Charnice Milton Community Bookstore at Busboys and Poets in Anacostia, Loyalty Bookstore in Petworth, Mahogany Books in Anacostia, Sankofa Video, Books & Cafe in Pleasant Plains, and Walls of Books in Park View. Image by the author.ĭC has about 20 independent bookstores. "Haile's picks": Books recommended by Sankofa's co-owner, Haile Gerima. Now its owners are petitioning the District for relief. Higher property values in the area have driven up the store’s tax burden to more than $30,000 a year. But rising property values are taking a toll on some local shops.Ĭonsider the plight of Sankofa Video, Books & Cafe in the Pleasant Plains neighborhood on Georgia Avenue, a few blocks from Howard University. Monsignor Geno Baroni, from the Anacostia Community Museum’s A Right to the City exhibitĭespite fears of the death of bookstores, independent brick-and-mortar shops have seen a surge in popularity across the US over the past decade, including here in DC. Neighborhoods are the building blocks of cities. “People don’t live in cities: they live in neighborhoods.
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