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Café La Bellitalia on North Sherman Avenue reopens dining room

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By Lauri Lee
Northside Economic Development Coalition

Café La Bellitalia, located at 1026 N. Sherman Ave., reopened their dining room at the end of March for in-house dining. “We are very excited to welcome back loyal customers, and we look forward to meeting new diners who are anxious to venture out to try a restaurant that is new to them after a year of not being able to safely dine in a restaurant,” said Joe Pipitone, the front of the house manager of this family-owned restaurant. Joe’s mother, Josephine, still makes the sauces from scratch and pasta by hand, and his father, Pietro, runs the kitchen.

Due to the intimate size of the restaurant, the dining room was closed in mid-March 2020 because the in-house numbers allowed for serving food meant only a handful of customers could be seated at one time during COVID-19. “We existed during this time on a handful of takeout and delivery orders on Friday and Saturday nights. Our family is excited to return to the restaurant’s large menu and hope everyone visits us once again.” 

The family immigrated from Sicily in 1993 and opened Café La Bellitalia in 2006 to serve authentic Sicilian/Italian food on the Northside of Madison. The sauces, pizza dough and pasta for entrees are handmade for an authentic Italian flavor experience. The popular restaurant is also a regional destination, drawing customers from far and wide. 

The restaurant is open seven days a week. For those who want to order carryout, delivery or catering, visit cafelabelletia.com or call 608-243-1200.

New chiropractor Dr. Cady Roedl joins Madison Chiropractic North

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By Lauri Lee
Northside Economic Development Coalition

Cady Roedl (pronounced katie ray-dull) is the newest Doctor of Chiropractic to join Madison Chiropractic North at 2205 N. Sherman Ave. A recent graduate of Palmer College in Davenport, Iowa, her philosophy melds with that of Dr. Justin Rodriquez and Dr. Robin Beatty. All three doctors are very patient-centered, looking at the person as a whole to return them to the lifestyle they desire as they are helped with the pain issue that brought them in. 

In her high school years, Roedl played basketball for Beaver Dam High School. The team competed in state competition in her sophomore year which captured her the honor of Player of the Year. She finished her high school career as a three-time winner of all-state honors. 

A less pleasant outcome from these years was long-term hip pain. When she went to the doctor, surgery was suggested, which was a move she didn’t want to take. A friend recommended chiropractic, which not only helped her with the hip pain, but also planted the idea of helping others take control of their pain so they wouldn’t have to live with it. 

During the final eight months of schooling at Palmer College, Roedl was accepted for a clerkship at a VA hospital pain clinic in central Iowa. “This training opportunity was invaluable experience that allowed me to work in an interdisciplinary setting alongside a team of providers that included a physical medicine and rehabilitation medical doctor, pain psychologist, physical therapist, interventional radiologist, clinical pharmacist and chiropractor. The medical team worked together on complex cases to help the patient get out of pain and back to their desired lifestyle. I learned so much and was proud to have a part in helping veterans who served our country,” said Roedl. 

As part of the Madison Chiropractic North team, Roedl looks forward to helping everyone with pain or discomfort, not just athletes. Do you sit too long without moving your neck or body while working on your computer for hours on end? Are you looking for a non-drug solution for back or neck pain, sciatica, vertigo or headaches? An appointment can be set up by calling 608-244-0044. 

FEED Kitchens is the 2021 $1,000 Give Back Campaign winner

The Give Back Campaign is Summit Credit Union & Dane Buy Local’s local nonprofit recognition program.

By Sarah Campagna
Summit Credit Union

Madison, Wis. (Mar. 9, 2021) – Summit Credit Union, a member owned financial cooperative announced the winner of the 2021 Give Back Campaign on the morning of March 9. The Give Back Campaign launched in 2013, between Dane Buy Local & Summit Credit Union, who wanted to recognize local nonprofits doing great things in their communities. 

This year’s winner, FEED Kitchens, a project of the Northside Planning Council of Madison, Wisconsin, which provides commercial kitchen space for rent so that food businesses, nonprofit organizations, vocational training programs and individuals seeking to prepare food to sell to the public have a legal place to prepare food, was awarded $1,000. At the onset of the pandemic, when the community was most vulnerable, FEED Kitchen provided over 400 meals daily throughout Madison ensuring families had access to food.

Colin Murray, executive director of Dane Buy Local shared, “We are pleased that the Northside Planning Council and FEED Kitchens was recognized by Summit Credit Union and the annual Give Back campaign this year. Summit Credit Union has been a huge supporter of nonprofits as well as the concept of buying local, for many years. And of course, Dane Buy Local has loved our collaboration with FEED Kitchens on various activities through the years. These two important organizations make us a stronger Dane County community.”

Summit Credit Union’s focus is on building strong & thriving communities, and we are pleased to award FEED Kitchen’s truly impactful and important work.

NPC Executive Director’s Column: April/May 2021

A Year in the Life of a Global Pandemic

A year ago on Wednesday, March 11 at 10:30 am, I sat in a room full of Northside partners — nonprofits, schools and grassroots groups that serve Northside residents — and we reckoned with our new reality. What assets do we have as a community? How do we mobilize if we have to go into quarantine? Who are our most vulnerable residents and how do we continue to support them? While we deliberated, our phones beeped as the University of Wisconsin suspended classes and the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic. That was the last time we were in a room together. 

We didn’t have Zoom accounts yet but had our first virtual Zoom meeting that Sunday, March 15. I know I felt like a deer in headlights, even while I facilitated. Since then, we have met at least 30 times. We have collaborating to bring hundreds of thousands of dollars of COVID support to the Northside in the form of meals, rental and utility assistance.  We have grappled with census outreach and voter registration, increased incidents of domestic abuse, helping families cope with isolation, the murder of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, and the COVID death of a Northside student who had attended our schools.

Now, as we turn the corner, and we see more and more of our community members and workers get vaccinated, I wonder what lessons will remain.

First and foremost, I am struck by our resilience. We have all just lived through a mass casualty event — I will never forget the images coming out of New York City in the early days of the pandemic. But, even more so, I am struck by how resilient and nimble our grassroots level groups were able to be. We reinvented ourselves. NPC, for example, launched FEED To Go on March 19 and delivered over 30,000 meals in 14 weeks to vulnerable residents in quarantine.

We found ways to connect. We learned, with over 850 views of our District 18 candidates Facebook forum, the pandemic made civic life more accessible to some and less accessible to those without high speed internet.

We are now grappling with 2021: when can we come together again? When do our buildings reopen? How long will we continue to wear masks? 

Most of all, I wonder if we’ve learned gratitude — to be thankful for the simple joy of the friends and family that we have not been able to safely enjoy in over a year. I know I am thankful for my community.

Public space shouldn’t be used for private profit

To the Editor,

If last summer was an indicator, this year will be worse for users of the Warner Park boat landing and the Warner Park beach. One big problem is a private company using the boat landing to rent jet skis and pontoon boats. City officials have been made aware of it. This letter is a reminder.

First of all, the boat launch area can get clogged up because of the business. Second, the trucks and trailers of the business, and their customers, take up a large share of the parking spaces. Third, the business is using public space for their private profit. Fourth, jet skis are fun when you are driving them; if you are listening to them all day, every day, not so much.

A run or walk in a city park for a good cause or an event in the public interest is a good thing. A private business whose only goal is to make a profit, whether it is renting boats, having a glow-stick glitter race, or a bouncy house obstacle course, using public land that is for public use is not proper and should not be allowed.

Tim Nelson