COMMUNITY Story And Photos By Hannah Lester
What draws you in to Side Track — the pay what you want model. What makes you stay — an environment where everyone is welcome.
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avid Bizilia grew up in Opelika. As he grew older, he watched his friends move away to bigger cities in search of opportunities, a bustling atmosphere or careers they didn’t think they’d find in a small town. “I’ve seen so many creative, powerful voices that have been stationed here through school or through jobs and they [say], ‘There’s more for me in LA, there’s more for me in Nashville, there’s more for me in New York. I want to go there because there’s stuff happening there.’ And my heart and my feeling toward that, I saw all the really, really cool people when I was growing up, when I was young and I was like, ‘those are the coolest people I’ve ever seen’ and then they would leave. If that continues to be the case, then there will be no change … there’d be this lack of creation.” But Bizilia, he decided to stay in his home town and create something: Side Track Coffee. A year after graduating high school, Bizilia was working at another coffee shop, which unfortunately closed. Wade Preston, the owner of Prevail coffee, called Bizilia and asked if he’d like to start a cafe in Opelika to fill the
void. The project was supposed to be short-term, Bizilia said. “It was through that summer that I changed a lot and changed directions of where my life was going and how I felt about creation itself, because I had never thought about opening a business before I got that call.” Fast forward to the end of the summer and Side Track was anything but short term. Bizilia’s view on business is certainly not corporate America’s view on business. “Having a business is so lame,” he said. “This is so lame if all I was doing was trying to get money.” Enter the business’ “pay what you want” model. You can walk through the door and pop a dime down on the counter and get a coffee. Or you can hand them a hundred dollar bill. Or, you don’t have to pay anything at all. And Bizilia said he truly doesn’t care how much a customer pays. “We wanted to show people that [they don’t care what you pay] in how we live our life, and how we steward our money with discernment, and with care, and with love and with truth. Not only how we steward money in accepting it, how
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