BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18650363
SEQUENCE:18719754
CREATED:20100610T164900Z
DESCRIPTION:NOVATO CAMPUS STUDENT REP. TO STUDENT SENATE (To end of month) - former 
 member of marin green party council + http://www.mpjc.org member + rep for 
 sf north north bay to state party + Co-Creator of  COM Luke's Guild of Arts 
 and Science + Creator of COM Campus Greens 
 \n\nhttp://digitaldaq.deviantart.com/\n\nhttp://twitter.com/davidaquinley\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/06/10/18650363.php
SUMMARY:To Sat. Gulf Coast Oil Spill Benefit while Dining @ Some NY + SF Bay Area Restaurants
LOCATION:Sausalito businessman organizes Gulf of Mexico benefit\nRob Rogers of 
 IJ\n\nDine Out for the Gulf Coast is organized by Jimmy Galle of Sausalito 
 owns Gulfish, a supply company that brings seafood from the Gulf of Mexico. 
 (IJ photo/Frankie Frost) http://www.marinij.com/marinnews/ci_15261428\nFew 
 people have a better idea of just how badly the Deepwater Horizon oil spill 
 has affected business in the Gulf of Mexico than Jimmy Galle, whose 
 Sausalito company, Gulfish, imports seafood from the area.\n\nBut Galle, 
 who launched his business only last year, says his own troubles are nothing 
 compared with those of the fishermen, hoteliers and others whose 
 livelihoods are threatened by the massive spill. That's why he has 
 persuaded well-known restaurateurs in the Bay Area, New York and elsewhere 
 to offer a percentage of their proceeds over the next three days to a fund 
 that benefits economic victims of the disaster.\n\n"If my business was to 
 fail, I'd figure something out. I live here, in a multifaceted society," 
 Galle said. "But if you live on the Gulf Coast, whether you're a seafood 
 shack, a motel or a fisherman, your options are limited. You live and 
 breathe by the bounty of the sea and the sand that's in front of you. It's 
 where they work, where they eat, where they play and where they live, and a 
 lot of them really do hold that coast as dear as a family heirloom, as 
 something sacred.\n\n"The notion of not having it to pass on to future 
 generations is a very scary thought."\n\nDine Out for the Gulf Coast, the 
 fundraising campaign Galle organized, will donate proceeds from 
 participating restaurants June 10-12 to the Gulf Coast Oil Spill Fund. The 
 fund, administered by the Greater New Orleans Foundation, provides 
 emergency grants to nonprofit organizations that 
 benefit\nAdvertisement\nvictims of the oil spill.\n\nParticipating 
 restaurants include Delfina, Front Porch, Nombe, Ozuma and The Slanted Door 
 in San Francisco; Chez Panisse in Berkeley and The Pasta Shop in Oakland. 
 While some restaurants will contribute a percentage of total sales for the 
 day, others will donate the sales from specific menu items or specialty 
 cocktails.\n\n"Our chef, Justin Everett, has a relationship with one of the 
 fishermen down there, and we decided to support this effort with a portion 
 of our seafood sales for those days going to Dine Out For the Gulf," said 
 Chris Fernandez, general manager of the El Dorado Hotel and Kitchen in 
 Sonoma, which is taking part in the event.\n\nU.S. Commerce Secretary Gary 
 Locke declared a national fisheries disaster in the states of Louisiana, 
 Mississippi and Alabama on May 27 as a result of the spill, which has 
 closed about 20 percent of the waters between the mouth of the Mississippi 
 River and Florida's Pensacola Bay to both commercial and recreational 
 fishing. Commercial fishermen in the Gulf harvested more than 1 billion 
 pounds of fish and shellfish in 2008, according to the Department of 
 Commerce.\n\n"I grew up swimming, fishing and crabbing on coastal waters. 
 So it's a personal thing for me," Galle said. "I have some very close 
 relationships with the fishermen down there, and it's hard for me to see 
 what's happening to them."\n\nA former Texas resident, Galle lived on the 
 Gulf Coast until 1995, when he moved to California to work with Grimaud 
 Farms, a gourmet poultry distributor. He has continued to maintain close 
 ties to the area, and built on those ties last year when he established his 
 seafood distribution business in Sausalito.\n\n"Until a couple of months 
 ago, the business was growing steadily, serving restaurants like the French 
 Laundry and Chez Panisse - people who use quality items," Galle said. 
 "We're now in a much more defensive position, where our goal is now to let 
 people know what's going on, and try to get them to support not only this 
 Gulf Coast benefit, but the continued use of Gulf Coast seafood."\n\nGalle 
 fears customers will avoid all seafood now coming from the Gulf - even if 
 it has been certified as clean.\n\n"Over 70 percent of the coastal waters 
 of Louisiana are still available and open right now," Galle said. "In fact, 
 the testing of the seafood now is more rigorous than ever. People see the 
 headlines, and it scares the hell out of them. But if people stop buying, 
 the fishermen are really going to get another whammy."\n\nThat's a concern 
 Terry Sawyer can appreciate. The Hog Island Oyster Co. co-owner saw many of 
 his customers stay away after the 2007 Cosco Busan oil spill in San 
 Francisco Bay - even though his shellfish come from Tomales Bay, which was 
 unaffected by the spill.\n\n"It was a major eye-opener of what just the 
 perception of an oil spill can do to your customer base," said Sawyer, 
 whose three Hog Island locations are all taking part in the Dine Out for 
 the Gulf benefit. "So many people will be scared away, whether it's from 
 the white sugar-sand beaches of the Gulf Coast or the product coming out of 
 the Gulf, even though the area to the west isn't currently being 
 affected."\n\nSawyer sees other parallels between the 2007 San Francisco 
 spill and the situation in the Gulf - from the frustration of well-wishers 
 searching for some way to help to the proliferation of scam artists looking 
 to take advantage of that goodwill.\n\n"We had questions (for the Dine Out 
 benefit) as to where the money was going to go, and who will handle the 
 disbursement. And we were satisfied with what we found out," Sawyer 
 said.\n\nhttp://www.gnof.org/gulf-coast-oil-spill-fund/disaster-on-the-gulf-coast/
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/06/10/18650363.php
DTSTART:20100612T170000Z
DTEND:20100613T050000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
