Rainbow Grocery, the storied San Francisco worker-owned cooperative, is marking its half-century milestone with a community celebration. After 50 years of bucking the big-box trend and sticking to its radical roots, the cooperative is throwing a block party that encapsulates its history and values. This event is slated for August 17 from noon to 6 PM.
Over the years, Rainbow has become more than just a place to find organic produce and ethically sourced goods; it’s part of the city’s cultural identity, especially in the Mission District. According to Mission Local, Yesenia Ochoa, an employee who grew up mere blocks from the store, sees it as a “community center without being a community center.” Ochoa is one of many who contribute to the co-op’s unique charm, where even celebrity families like Benjamin Bratt’s have been spotted over the years.
Rainbow’s persistence as an institution is a clear thumb in the eye to the corporate chains that encircle its location at the border of the Mission District and SoMa. The cooperative’s ethos of equality and shared responsibility is a throwback to the days when food-justice movements were coming into their own, as Gordon Edgar, Rainbow’s longtime cheese buyer, pointed out in a Mission Local interview…