The city has received an offer to buy the area known as Pocket Park at Front and Franklin Streets to be used as a food court. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

The city has received an offer to buy the area known as Pocket Park at Front and Franklin Streets to be used as a food court. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

City negotiating lease to bring food carts to Pocket Park

Food cart owners also hoping to lease former Gastineau Apartment property

The idea of food carts coming to downtown’s Pocket Park moved one step closer to reality Monday.

The City and Borough of Juneau Assembly voted to start a negotiation process with David McCasland, the owner of Deckhand Dave’s food cart, to work out a short-term lease for McCasland to put a food court in Gunakadeit Park (also known as Pocket Park).

McCasland’s long-term vision is to rent or own the whole area, including the former spot of the Gastineau Apartments, but he said after Monday’s CBJ Assembly meeting that this is a good starting point.

“This is, I guess, just a stepping stone toward something greater,” McCasland said. “This is only a small part of the project. At least it’s going in the right direction and hopefully it keeps going.”

McCasland applied to the city this summer to purchase the property, stating that Pocket Park can provide a space for food carts to go if they no longer have a place when the property next to the downtown library (known as the Archipelago Lot) is redone. Morris Communications (the former owner of the Empire) owns the majority of the Archipelago Lot property. CBJ’s Docks and Harbors Department has developed a plan for the property that includes space for food carts, an expansion of the USS Juneau Memorial, retail spaces and more.

Assembly member Wade Bryson pointed out that the development plans for the Archipelago Lot haven’t been approved by the Assembly yet, so Deckhand Dave’s moving elsewhere is putting the cart in front of the horse.

Multiple CBJ committees agreed that a short-term lease is a more attractive option for the city. City Manager Rorie Watt told the Empire in October that he would like to see a package deal where Pocket Park and the former Gastineau Apartments land end up being sold to a developer who puts housing on the property.

The city just settled a lawsuit with Kathleen Barrett (the owner of Gastineau Apartments, LLC) for $1.5 million. Barrett is working through Dave d’Amato, who makes legal decisions for her, to sell the property. Much of d’Amato’s time right now is taken up by repairing the Bergmann Hotel and the 401 Harris Street property that Barrett owns and that were recently vacated. Both properties had drawn considerable police attention due to parking violations and suspected drug activity in recent years.

McCasland and Watt have both said that they have talked with d’Amato and Barrett but it’s been hard to reach any kind of agreement with them so busy with the other properties.

At Pocket Park, McCasland said Monday, there would be room for his food cart and for the Crepe Escape food cart.

Not all of the Assembly members agreed that the city should start negotiating for a short-term lease. Assembly members Mary Becker, Bryson (who owns nearby Subway) and Loren Jones voted against it. Jones said that to serve food on CBJ property, an applicant has to provide infrastructure such as water and bathrooms, and it’s going to be costly for McCasland to do that.

“I doubt that on a year-to-year lease he’d be willing to put in the kind of money for the infrastructure that would be required by us and the other businesses surrounding it,” Jones said.

McCasland said after the meeting that he’d be willing to install that kind of infrastructure if he ends up working out a lease with the city. Watt will head up the lease negotiations for the city.

Another lease negotiation

The Assembly members unanimously agreed to start negotiations with Juneau Composts! to work out a lease for the waste disposal company at the gravel pit near Home Depot in Lemon Creek.

Juneau Composts! owner Lisa Daugherty applied this summer to lease the land so she could move the business to a more central location. Her current operation is about 25 miles out the road. Composting is the process of breaking down organic matter such as yard waste or food waste into soil, and Daugherty told the Empire last month that she picks up waste from about 140 people and eight businesses.

One of the main aims of composting, Daugherty explained, is trying to divert waste from Juneau’s landfill, which is quickly filling up. Capitol Disposal Landfill Manager Eric Vance told the Empire in October that the landfill is likely to be full in about 20-23 years unless the city finds ways to divert waste elsewhere.


• Contact reporter Alex McCarthy at 523-2271 or amccarthy@juneauempire.com. Follow him on Twitter at @akmccarthy.


Lisa Daugherty, owner of Juneau Composts!, talks about her year-old business on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018. Currently locationed out the road near mile 25, Daugherty is working to lease city land in the Lemon Creek area to expand her business. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

Lisa Daugherty, owner of Juneau Composts!, talks about her year-old business on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018. Currently locationed out the road near mile 25, Daugherty is working to lease city land in the Lemon Creek area to expand her business. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

More in Home

Left: Michael Orelove points out to his grandniece, Violet, items inside the 1994 Juneau Time Capsule at the Hurff Ackerman Saunders Federal Building on Friday, Aug. 9, 2019. Right: Five years later, Jonathon Turlove, Michael’s son, does the same with Violet. (Credits: Michael Penn/Juneau Empire file photo; Jasz Garrett/Juneau Empire)
Family of Michael Orelove reunites to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Juneau Time Capsule

“It’s not just a gift to the future, but to everybody now.”

A skier stands atop a hill at Eaglecrest Ski Area. (City and Borough of Juneau photo)
Two Eaglecrest Ski Area general manager finalists to be interviewed next week

One is a Vermont ski school manager, the other a former Eaglecrest official now in Washington

Anchorage musician Quinn Christopherson sings to the crowd during a performance as part of the final night of the Áak’w Rock music festival at Centennial Hall on Sept. 23, 2023. He is the featured musician at this year’s Climate Fair for a Cool Planet on Saturday. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
Climate Fair for a Cool Planet expands at Earth’s hottest moment

Annual music and stage play gathering Saturday comes five days after record-high global temperature.

The Silverbow Inn on Second Street with attached restaurant “In Bocca Al Lupo” in the background. The restaurant name refers to an Italian phrase wishing good fortune and translates as “In the mouth of the wolf.” (Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire)
Rooted in Community: From bread to bagels to Bocca, the Messerschmidt 1914 building feeds Juneau

Originally the San Francisco Bakery, now the Silverbow Inn and home to town’s most-acclaimed eatery.

Sam Wright, an experienced Haines pilot, is among three people that were aboard a plane missing since Saturday, July 20, 2024. (Photo courtesy of Annette Smith)
Community mourns pilots aboard flight from Juneau to Yakutat lost in the Fairweather mountains

Two of three people aboard small plane that disappeared last Saturday were experienced pilots.

A section of the upper Yukon River flowing through the Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve is seen on Sept. 10, 2012. The river flows through Alaska into Canada. (National Park Service photo)
A Canadian gold mine spill raises fears among Alaskans on the Yukon River

Advocates worry it could compound yearslong salmon crisis, more focus needed on transboundary waters.

Waters of Anchorage’s Lake Hood and, beyond it, Lake Spenard are seen on Wednesday behind a parked seaplane. The connected lakes, located at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, comprise a busy seaplane center. A study by Alaska Community Action on Toxics published last year found that the two lakes had, by far, the highest levels of PFAS contamination of several Anchorage- and Fairbanks-area waterways the organization tested. Under a bill that became law this week, PFAS-containing firefighting foams that used to be common at airports will no longer be allowed in Alaska. (Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Bill by Sen. Jesse Kiehl mandating end to use of PFAS-containing firefighting foams becomes law

Law takes effect without governor’s signature, requires switch to PFAS-free foams by Jan. 1

Bartlett Regional Hospital’s crisis stabilization center during its unveiling on June 14, 2023. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
Bartlett Regional Hospital shuts down programs at recently opened Aurora Behavioral Health Center

Crisis stabilization program halted at center due to lack of funds and staff, officials say.

Most Read