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$
OCTOBER 3, 2025 | VOLUME 16 | ISSUE 21
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Mental illness among the homeless:
the consequence not the cause.
page 10
STEPHANIE
DUNCAN
#66
ASK YOUR
VENDOR:
HOW DO YOU
LIKE YOUR
EGGS?
15 YEARS OF NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Women on the Move protested on
Sept. 9 at Ypsilanti City Hall in
response to the treatment of the
woman at the Beer Cooler.
Beer Cooler employees
assault Black woman.
page 4
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER15
OCTOBER 3, 2025
PROVIDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR SELFDETERMINED
INDIVIDUALS IMPACTED BY POVERTY,
PRODUCING A STREET NEWSPAPER THAT GIVES A
PLATFORM TO UNDERREPRESENTED VOICES IN WASHTENAW COUNTY,
PROMOTING AN ACTION TO BUILD A JUST, CARING AND INCLUSIVE
SOCIETY.
Groundcover News, a 501(c)(3)
organization, was founded in April
2010 as a means to empower lowincome
persons to make the
transitions from homeless to
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Vendors purchase each copy of our
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News exist in cities all over the
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than 40 other countries, in an effort
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ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
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Jud Branam
Monique Caldwell
Ben Foster
Mike Jones
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David L. Putman
Will Shakespeare
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Tommy Spaghetti
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Sim Bose
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Robert Klingler
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Ari Ruczynski
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Max Wisgerhof
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ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
How do you like your eggs?
Poached. — Cindy Gere, #279
Boiled, deviled eggs.
— Denise Shearer, #485
Scrambled.
— Roberto Isla Caballero, #347
I'm not picky. I'm an easy guy!
— Frantz Francois, #601
Scrambled with small minced onions,
a little garlic powder, a little black
pepper and sometimes with cheese.
And well done.
— Felicia Wilbert, #234
In the past I used to like omelettes.
Nowadays, a hard boiled egg is much
better.
— Will Shakespeare, #258
Scrambled with sugar.
— Joe Woods, #103
Hard-boiled.
— B-Man, #172
Scrambled.
— Mike Jones, #113
I just like the fact that they are so
versatile.
—Wayne Sparks, #615
Extra greasy (over easy).
— Jim Clark, #139
Love like the
seasons
MONIQUE CALDWELL
Groundcover contributor
Through winter’s hush and summer’s blaze,
Our love endures the shifting days.
Born of laughter, rooted deep,
In friendship’s soil, its promise keeps.
When storms arrive and tempests roar,
We hold the line, we mend, restore.
Not fleeting like a springtime bloom,
But steady as the autumn moon.
We bend like trees in April rain,
Yet rise again, despite the strain.
In every season, joy or pain,
We find the sun, we start again.
No frost can freeze what we have grown,
No drought can crack this love we've known.
For hearts that first were friends, then more —
Are built to last, through every war.
TOMMY SPAGHETTI
Groundcover vendor No.
669
An open letter to Governor
Spencer Cox of Utah regarding
Charlie Kirk's assasin:
Dear Spencer, I watched your
press conference at the University
of Utah September 12. The
speech was titled "Moral Clarity"
on YouTube (published by
The Washington Post). In that
speech you expressed
unprecedented anger that you
experienced post Charlie Kirk's
murder but you were pulled
back by Charlie's own words.
"The weak can never forgive;
forgiveness is the attribute of
the strong. The only way out of
the labyrinth of suffering is to
forgive. Welcome without judgment,
love without condition
and forgive without limit.
Always forgive your enemies,
nothing annoys them so much."
Spencer, if you truly wish to
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Open letter to Gov. Spencer Cox
quell the rising tide of political
violence and put into action the
words you speak, then it is
incumbent upon you to commute
Tyler Robinson's punishment
to life imprisonment and
do not seek the death penalty.
Please demonstrate the courage
to "forgive without limit."
Sincerely,
Tommy Spaghetti
Groundcover News
3
Beautiful October
October is a beautiful, festive,
colorful month. I like Polish
Polka music; it's soothing and
it sounds good no matter what
you are doing. I’ve seen Octoberfest
on television but I’ve
never done one in real
life.
Good Polish sausage is one of
the foods I like. I would like to
try pierogi, the beef and mushroom
kinds.
October is a month to enjoy
all types of goodies because of
harvest
time. Halloween is a
good holiday, but not for the
spookiness. I like the festivities
of being with friends and
DENISE SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
enjoying goodies and harvest
time. Another thing about Halloween
is you get to dress like
you want to, and be whatever or
whoever you want to be! You
get to watch the babies and
children joyfully celebrate
Halloween by trick or
treating.
The fall leaves are so pretty
in October, too. It’s also a
good time to go to farmers
markets and apple orchards.
It’s also a good time to go to
petting zoos. It’s also a good
time for artists because
there's so much scenery to
paint or take a picture of.
October is a good, cool month.
Chats with AI: Releasing
radiopharmaceuticals and
containing nuclear waste
DAVID PUTMAN
Groundcover vendor No.
679
In a recent conversation with
Google AI, I uncovered the following
fascinating facts:
1. Radiopharmaceuticals
combined with THC and CBD
may be a more effective cancer
treatment than current medicines.
However, to the best of
my knowledge, no research has
been completed on combining
THC and CBD with
radiopharmaceuticals.
2. In principle, the materials
used in 55 gallon borated
polyethylene lead-lined containers
could safely hold 22
quarts of radioactive materials.
Right now, 55 gallon drums are
being used to hold significantly
more than 22 quarts of toxic
waste.
The problems this potentially
poses are environmental, emotional
and personal. If you or a
loved one develops cancer, you
want the best of medicines, and
without properly designed density
to quantity ratios, the radiation
could eventually get out.
We don’t want our fellow men
and women exposed to harmful
radiation, and especially not
the land, dirt, soil or groundwater
either.
I uncovered this all without a
degree in chemistry. All I had to
do was be persistent and ask
the right questions. Google AI is
young, and can only answer to
the best of its knowledge. Persistence
and proper phrasing is
the key to completing your own
education at home.
No longer do our sprawling
schools need to be a place of
fear, intimidation and dangerous
violence. The current generation
can get answers online.
You just have to ask the right
questions.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
YPSILANTI
Beer Cooler employees assault Black woman
An Ypsilanti convenience store was
closed following an Aug. 31 altercation
involving a fight inside the store which
was recorded on video.
The video of the fight between two
employees and a female customer
spread on social media and caused
concern about violence against the
unhoused and mentally ill. The resulting
uproar caused the Beer Cooler at
22 S. Washington St. in downtown
Ypsilanti to close pending
investigation.
Online records showed that police
were investigating a report of vandalism
and simple assault at the shop’s
location. Ypsilanti Police Chief Timothy
Anderson declined to comment on
the incident, citing the investigation as
still open and ongoing.
“Every member of our community
deserves to feel safe, valued and
treated with dignity, regardless of the
circumstances,” Ypsilanti Mayor
Nicole Brown wrote on Facebook. “The
video of this incident has been circulated
broadly, and the visual is disturbing.
Please be mindful of what you are
watching and take care of yourself.”
Brown said she had been in contact
with the store owner and they discussed
accountability and taking steps
toward repairing the community.
The City of Ypsilanti released a statement
about the incident as well, asking
for the public to be patient while police
investigate the incident.
In the video circulating online,
which lasts less than a minute, a
woman is seen throwing items in the
store while cursing. Moments later a
male employee grabs the woman. The
two employees, both men, and the
woman are then seen in the video
wildly flailing at each other before she
is thrown to the ground. One employee
is recorded dragging her out of the
store while another picks up a wooden
stick and briefly holds it up like he is
about to swing. He lowers the stick
after making eye contact with the
camera recording him. The woman is
dragged out of the store as she continues
to kick at the employees and call
them bitches. Someone is heard calling
911 in the background as the
woman is dragged out.
The video ends with the woman on
the sidewalk outside the shop, appearing
to spit at the employees. Someone
is also heard laughing during the
ordeal.
Community organizers have been
vocalizing their concerns about the
incident.
“Let me say this loud and clear. What
happened at the Beer Cooler is a
reflection of the unsafe environment
we have for black women around
here,” Trische’ Duckworth, executive
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
director of Survivors Speak, wrote on
Facebook. “As a black woman, I don’t
feel like my safety is important to the
men of our community. Heck, my biggest
bullies in this work have been
men in this county. Not all, but many.
Seeing this woman get beat like that,
followed by all the dumb comments,
makes me feel even less safe.”
Several social media posts circulated
stating there would be a protest at the
Sept. 9 Ypsilanti City Council meeting
regarding the incident at the store.
Glen Page, Groundcover vendor No.
407, who grew up in Washtenaw
County like myself, told me about the
incident. I went to downtown Ypsilanti
to sell papers at 4 p.m. when I ran into
Glen. He said I just missed a protest at
the Beer Cooler. He explained what
happened and we both expressed our
feelings on the situation.
Two days after the assault, Sept. 2, I
drove by the Beer Cooler to see if the
store was open. A crowd of people was
outside of the storefront with cellphone
cameras in hand, along with the
owner of the Beer Cooler. I parked my
car and got out to get pictures when I
ran into someone I knew who shared
the video with me.
The very next morning, I ran into the
victim of the assault in downtown Ann
Arbor. I told her I was from Groundcover
News and I asked her for an
interview. After she got done lighting
her cigarette, she politely declined my
request. I noticed she had visual face
swelling as I wished her well. I also
asked the Beer Cooler store owner for
an interview or statement, but he
declined.
Tuesday, September 9, “Women on
the Move,” led by local business owner
Mrs. Chapman, held a protest in front
of City Hall before the scheduled Ypsilanti
City Council meeting where protesters
held up signs saying “Enough is
Enough." Mrs. Chapman and “Women
on the Move" attended the City Council
meeting and voiced their concerns,
and asked for a resolution to be
brought before council to protect Black
women, the unhoused and the mentally
ill. No resolution has since been
enacted.
On Sept. 10, two employees at the
OCTOBER 3, 2025
Women on the Move protested on Sept. 9 at Ypsilanti City Hall in
response to the treatment of the woman at the Beer Cooler.
Ypsilanti Beer Cooler were charged by
the Washtenaw County Prosecutor's
Office in connection with the physical
altercation that occurred on August 31,
2025. The Ypsilanti Police Department
investigated the case, with the results
of the investigation leading to the
charges against the two employees.
Two weeks after the incident, the
store reopened.
׉	 7cassandra://WMZE4bVgPOYPXIhmsjrJhYkq9fEQ8yYKHEk0q8dt7DgV` h dx^"׉EOCTOBER 3, 2025
ABUSE
D.A.
Groundcover writer
October is the month that recognizes
Domestic Violence. I want to
include other forms of abuse, too.
I am a domestic violence survivor,
and I have recently been the victim of
other forms of abuse as well. I was in
two abusive relationships; one in my
early twenties, and again in my late
thirties.
First, I'll speak to the relationship
that occurred in my twenties. The man
was 23 years older than me. He was
very kind and generous at the beginning.
I was having some family struggles,
and he seemed to be the kind of
man that I could share a lifetime with
despite the age difference.
Well, I was sadly mistaken. Once I
became pregnant by him, he began to
openly see other women. When I questioned
him about it, he slapped me so
hard that that was the end of that conversation
for that day.
He apologized and promised to
never do it again. Then he took me
shopping and gave me some money,
and for a long time he did not do it —
until after I gave birth to our daughter,
who is in her 30s now.
After I gave birth, he was back to his
cheating ways. Once again, I asked
him about it, and he slapped me and
hit me several times and busted my lip.
Then he told me to shut up and cook
him some dinner. I cooked the dinner
and sucked it up. At
that point, I
Groundcover Vendor Code
While Groundcover is a non-profit,
and paper vendors are self-employed
contractors, we still have expectations
of how vendors should conduct
themselves while selling and representing
the paper.
The following is our Vendor Code
of Conduct, which every vendor
reads and signs before receiving a
badge and papers. We request that
if you discover a vendor violating
any tenets of the Code, please contact
us and provide as many details
as possible. Our paper and our vendors
should be positively impacting
our County.
• Groundcover will be distributed
for a voluntary donation. I agree not
to ask for more than the cover price
or solicit donations by any other
means.
• When selling Groundcover, I will
always have the current biweekly
issue of Groundcover available for
wanted to make it work for the sake of
our daughter so that she’d have a
father, since my father was not in my
life after a certain age, and is not to this
day.
After two years of being abused
about every four or five months, and
once where I had almost killed him in
self-defense, I left. I have permanent
black eyes from him giving me a total
of three black eyes.
I did not indulge in a relationship for
four years after that. I will not be in an
abusive relationship ever again.
I have a daughter who is now 15
years old. I left her dad when she was
seven months old. I later gave him custody
due to losing my babysitting job
when the baby I watched turned about
three and a half and started preschool.
I lost my ability to pay rent and work
because her dad told me that he would
not care for our daughter unless I paid
him. He also got her put into foster
care, thinking that lying about me
would make the court give him
custody.
That backfired on him and she went
to foster care for 16 months, so I gave
him custody to get her out of foster
care. This worked until she turned ten
years old.
I gave birth to her at 41 years of age.
Before she was born, I confided in him
about some terrible and life changing
experiences that happened to me. He
has used that and done everything he
can to hurt me using our daughter.
He moved and isolated her from me
customer purchase.
• I agree not to sell additional
goods or products when selling the
paper or to panhandle, including
panhandling with only one paper or
selling an issue more than 4 weeks
old.
• I will wear and display my badge
when selling papers and refrain
from wearing it or other Groundcover
gear when engaged in other
activities.
• I will only purchase the paper
from Groundcover Staff and will not
sell to or buy papers from other
Groundcover vendors, especially
vendors who have been suspended
or terminated.
• I agree to treat all customers,
staff, and other vendors respectfully.
I will not “hard sell,” threaten,
harass or pressure customers, staff,
or other vendors verbally or
physically.
• I will not sell Groundcover under
the influence of drugs or alcohol.
• I understand that I am not a legal
employee of Groundcover but a
since she turned ten. This is not just
cruel to me, but a very horrible thing
to do to a child as well. I am currently
taking care of that through the courts.
There were some mailing errors and
other aspects of this situation that have
prolonged this process.
I have also been subject to being illegally
taken and injected with drugs
that I wasn't supposed to have been by
medical professionals at hospitals that
I won't name for my own future safety
and well-being. I have PTSD from the
numerous traumas in my life. I am not
court-ordered to take any psychotropic
drugs.
This caused me to have mental episodes
as a result of being illegally
restrained and injected with drugs I
won't name. This mostly occurred
when I became homeless, and after I
suffered some injuries from being hit
by a car on my bike some years ago. I
am much better now and not homeless.
I had to contact medical records
and have and am still taking steps to
correct my medical records.
Even before all of this, I had been
abused physically and had a lot of false
and extraneous charges put on me by
the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti police. I
did not have a criminal history until I
moved to Washtenaw County.
I have reported these abuses to the
superior officers and Community
Mental Health at the jail when I came
in with my arms swollen from my
elbows all the way down to my hands,
and nothing was done.
contracted worker responsible for
my own well-being and income.
• I understand that my badge is
property of Groundcover and will
not deface it. I will present my badge
when purchasing the papers.
• I agree to stay off private property
when selling Groundcover.
• I understand to refrain from
selling on public buses, federal
property or stores unless there is
permission from the owner.
• I agree to stay at least one block
away from another vendor in downtown
areas. I will also abide by the
Vendor Corner Policy.
• I understand that Groundcover
strives to be a paper that covers
topics of homelessness and poverty
while providing sources of income
for the homeless. I will try to help in
this effort and spread the word.
If you would like to report a violation
of the Vendor Code or leave
positive review of a Vendor experience
please email contact@
groundcovernews.com or fill out
the contact form on our website.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
Ways that domestic and other abuses can impact you
I have been assaulted five times and
the individuals were never charged.
Three of the assaults took place at the
shelter here in Ann Arbor. Not one of
the five assailants faced any
consequences.
When you are wrongfully incarcerated
for charges and can not bond
yourself out, you are at risk of losing
everything you have without even
being convicted of a crime.
So, for a lot of the charges, I took plea
deals to get out of jail. This criminalizes
you, changes the whole perspective
of your true person and character
in the eyes of the Department of
Justice.
It also affects your ability to obtain
some housing and a career that earns
a livable wage.
So now, I have very little, if any, trust
in the police, courts and CMH organizations.
Not all individuals are untrustworthy,
but a lot of illegal paperwork
and practices are facilitated by and
through these people. Especially when
you are not economically well off.
As far as relationships: they are not
as important as they used to seem to
me. I will in the present and future
choose to date only a holy man, and try
not to indulge in sexual relationships
until I marry someone, if it happens.
That is my choice.
12/31/2025
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
COMMUNITY LAND TRUST
OCTOBER 3, 2025
Ann Arbor Community Land Trust breaks ground on
permanently affordable housing for critical workers
and families
A community land trust is a nonprofit
corporation that owns land and
leases it to individuals, nonprofit corporations,
and/or government entities,
to live upon (in pre-existing
housing), to build upon or put to best
use. In other words, only housing and
improvements to the land are sold to
purchasers, and future re-sale of the
housing and land improvements is
restricted in unique ways determined
by each CLT.
In event of the future sale of the land
improvements, the CLT reserves the
right to purchase them back. This is
due to the fact that community land
trusts are characteristically defined by
their commitment
to permanent
affordability, permanent responsibility
and expansion. This is informed by
the progressive understanding that
land should not be a commodity, but
instead community owned and operated.
The community land trust model
challenges the American conceptualization
of property rights.
The Ann Arbor Community Land
Trust was established in 2024 by the
Equitable Ann Arbor Land Trust to
serve as a nonprofit developer and
community-led steward of the homes
under its care. A2CLT is a Michigan
501(c)3 nonprofit and a member of the
national Grounded Solutions Network
of community land trusts, as well as
the Michigan CLT Coalition. A2CLT
thus far is focused on building new
affordable housing, although they do
advertise the opportunity on their
website to donate or sell Ann Arbor
properties to the CLT.
On September 20, A2CLT broke
ground on “Townie Homes,” an initiative
that aims to keep Ann
Arbor accessible to teachers, hospital
staff, university employees and
families. With median home prices
now exceeding $550,000, A2CLT’s permanently
affordable homes priced
between $125,000 and $325,000 will
offer long-term stability, equity and
belonging for residents otherwise
priced out of the community.
“This groundbreaking represents not
just a construction milestone, but a
public commitment to equity and sustainability,”
said Executive Director
Sarah Lorenz. “Our homes ensure permanent
affordability through deed
restrictions and ground leases while
supporting Ann Arbor’s climate goals
by reducing long commutes. With
lower housing and transportation
costs, people will have more money,
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
more time and a better quality of life.
We hope that A2CLT will be a new
anchor institution for an affordable
Ann Arbor with stronger social ties.”
A2CLT shared in a September press
release that 500 households expressed
interest in Townie Homes. But who
was eligible to purchase?
A2CLT'S focus is creating local
homeownership opportunities for
critical workers. Eligible buyers for the
lottery must:
1. Have at least one household
member who has worked full time in
person for the previous 12 months as
an employee of one of the following
anchor institutions: City, County, State
or Federal Agencies; University of
Michigan; Michigan Medicine; VA
Hospital; Ann Arbor Public Schools;
Ann Arbor District Library; Ann Arbor
Police Department; Ann Arbor Fire
Department; Ann Arbor Area Transportation
Authority; U.S. Postal Service;
Early Childhood/Child Care
Workers
2. Have household income 30-120%
of the area median income (see Zillow
listings for income brackets for each
home)
3. Qualify for a home loan
Buyers will be selected by lottery.
The first round will be for eligible
buyers whose workplace is within two
miles of the home location. Homes
near work offer the benefits of lower
commuting costs, walking, biking, or
busing to work, lower carbon emissions,
more free time, and stronger
social ties.
Prospective homeowners anonymously
shared what A2CLT’s Townie
Homes would mean for them:
“As a full-time U-M staff member,
nearly half my income goes to rent —
about $2,000 each month — just to live
close enough to campus for my job. A
CLT home would let me stay in the
community I serve, instead of being
forced out by rising costs.”
“I am a single parent with two children
who love their school and friends
here in Ann Arbor. Without affordable
housing, I may be forced to move them
far away. A CLT home would give us
roots, stability, and the ability to keep
our family strong.”
“I was born and raised in Ann Arbor.
Homeownership has always felt out of
reach for me and my family. A CLT
home would make me a first-generation
homeowner in the town I love and
work in.”
“I chose a career in social work
because I wanted to serve this community.
But I can’t afford to live here.
A CLT home would let me plant roots
and give back for a lifetime — because
Ann Arbor is my home.”
“My current commute is 45 minutes
each way. A CLT home in Ann Arbor
would save me hours every day, reduce
my carbon footprint, and let me spend
more time with my children instead of
on the road.”
The lottery for the first group of
Townie Homes closed as of March 31,
2025. Other prospective buyers are
encouraged to fill out the A2CLT Buyer
List form located at www.a2clt.org/
buy so they are on the email list for
new housing opportunities, which are
coming soon.
Can A2CLT keep up with
demand?
In a 2018 report “W(h)ither the community
in community land trusts?”
James Defllipis, Brian Stromberg and
Olivia Williams examined the history
of the CLT movement and studied contemporary
CLTs to determine if the
CLT model has maintained the characteristics
defined in the second paragraph:
commitment to permanent
affordability, permanent responsibility
and expansion. They concluded
that there is strong movement away
from the original values and priorities
of community land trusts and movement
“toward the more technically
practical (and less politically challenging
or transformative) aspects of the
model itself.”
Primarily playing the role as housing
developer, A2CLT does not deviate
from this conclusion. To build its housing,
A2CLT is relying on local investors,
is seeking MSHDA funding, and for the
case of the Townie Homes project, will
use construction loans for the applicants
who are selected through the lottery
process.
In 2023, Michigan House Bill 4375
was signed into law, allowing Michigan
cities with at least 50,000 residents
(in counties not currently home to a
land bank authority) to establish a
local one. This enables Ann Arbor to
establish a land bank, as the Washtenaw
County Land Bank filed bankruptcy
in 2010.
Land banks have a bottomline goal
of encouraging productive use of
vacant or delinquent land. Without
them, land is often sold to speculators
and developers at below market prices.
Reinitiating the Washtenaw County
Land Bank, or starting one for the City
of Ann Arbor, could interrupt gentrifying
forces and direct property to productive
use with this newly established
community land trust.
Additional, alternative methods to
development include partnering with
cooperative ownership models and
redirecting benefits of private development
through the use of inclusionary
zoning.
׉	 7cassandra://rcKBvKNmT0XtD8WKXSdnj7gXEkfYjbwdAdm0WrFirMMQ` h dx^*׉ExOCTOBER 3, 2025
EVENTS
community EVENTS
FIRST FRIDAYS YPSI
Friday, October 3, 5-11 p.m.
Downtown and Depot Town
First Friday food court, Freak Fest,
and normal festivities — explore
businesses to shop exclusive discounts,
attend pop-up events and
galleries featuring Ypsilanti area artists
and performers.
CLUSTER MUSEUM
OPENING
Friday, October 3, 6-9 p.m.
307 North Main Street, Ann Arbor
CLUSTER’s
inaugural
opening
reception of The Dam Broke: A Portrait
on Tyranny, an exhibition featuring
10 artists from Ann Arbor and
Ypsilanti. With work ranging from
robotics, drawing, textiles, art books
and more, this show draws on concepts
from scholar Timothy Snyder’s
book, On Tyranny: 20 Lessons from
the 20th Century. Artists include
Sally Clegg, Kim Debord, Thea Eck,
Heidi Kumao, Rubini Naidu,
Abhishek Narula, Paloma
Nunez-Regueiro, Marienetta Porter,
Jessica Tenbusch and Chien-An
Yuan.
TRASH TALK TOUR
October 3-5, various times
Various locations, including
Kiwanis Thrift Sale, the Big House,
and Recycle Ann Arbor
Put on by Washtenaw Zero Waste
Coalition and ZeroWaste.org. Learn
about zero-waste in Ann Arbor at
these free, family friendly events!
Sign-up at TrashTalkTour.org
WIARD'S ORCHARDS AND
COUNTY FAIR
Saturdays and Sundays until October
26, 9 a.m. – 6 p.m.
5565 Merritt Rd, Ypsilanti
The "Family Fun" destination for
your fall season! One location, many
options: Fresh Cider and Donuts,
apple and pumpkin picking, Country
Store, corn maze, Old West Wagon
rides, mini golf, giant inflates, petting
farm, giant slides, paintball, and
several play areas.
DAY OF CHE
Wednesday, October 8, 8:30-11
a.m.
Argus Farm Stop Liberty Cafe
Join Groundcover vendor Ken Parks
at his "corner" at Argus Farm Stop
(Liberty Cafe) to celebrate his 82nd
birthday and Alan Haber's belated
90th birthday, as well as honor the
Day of Che Guevara. Expect cake,
coffee, community and
conversation!
ECOSTORYLAB
Wednesday, October 8 and October
15, 5-6 p.m. — Online
The Ecology Center's second interactive,
virtual writing workshop
designed for activists, creatives,
nonprofit professionals and students
who believe in the power of
stories to inspire action and imagine
new futures. Gather for guided
prompts, collective reflection, and
shared creativity — exploring how
storytelling fuels movements and
strengthens resilience. Together,
we’ll build community, cultivate joy
and harness the power of words to
shape a more just climate future.
Register at
ecocenter.salsalabs.org/
EcoStoryLabpart2
YPSI PULL OVER
PREVENTION
Saturday, October 11, 10 a.m.- 12
p.m.
Masjid Ibrahim, 315 S. Ford Blvd,
Ypsilanti
Provides free car repairs of lights,
tire pressure and fluids to prevent
unecessary interactions with law
enforcement. Free food, pet food and
supplies, community resources and
more.
YPSIWRITES 6TH BIRTHDAY
CELEBRATION
Saturday, October 11, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
YDL-Whittaker, 5577 Whittaker
Road, Ypsilanti
Kick off this year's "Writing
Together" theme, and meet the
newest cohort of Writers of Ypsilanti
(read more on page 13). Expect writing
activities, great conversation,
and cake! All community members
are welcome. RSVP here:
tinyurl.com/YW101125
A2 ARTOBERFEST
Oct. 11-12, Saturday: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Sunday: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Ann Street and North Fourth Ave.
from Huron into Kerrytown
This intimate and rich celebration of
the arts will feature 90 jury-selected
artists, live entertainment, food vendors
and art activities. Sip, shop, and
savor the beautiful fall weather, talented
artisans, and wonderful tunes.
Get creative with several local partners
bringing you hands-on, art-making
activities in The Gutman Gallery,
with Doodles
Academy, the
Hands-on Museum and more!
PROBILITY ANN ARBOR
MARATHON
Sunday, October 12, 10 a.m.- 12 p.m.
Downtown Ann Arbor, U-M campus
area, Huron River to Gallup park
Submit an event to be featured
in the next edition:
submissions@groundcovernews.
com
26.2 • 13.1 • 10K • 5K • Relay • 13.1 —
Supporting local mental health charities,
participants run through the
vibrant streets of downtown Ann
Arbor, then wind their way through
the panoramic University of Michigan
campus.
PILAR’S FOUNDATION FALL
INTO ACTION
Sunday, October 19, 4-6:30 p.m.
Zion Lutheran Church, 1501 W Liberty
St. Ann Arbor
Fundraising open house with food,
live music and silent auction. Uniting
our community to benefit immigrant
families in need of assistance.
Donation ticket prices: Adults ($50),
teens and students with IDs ($35),
children under six ($20)
Purchase tickets online at pilarsfoundation.org
or in person at Pilar’s
Tamales, 2261 W Liberty St. Ann
Arbor.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
What’s
Happening
at the Ann
Arbor
District
Library
Open 10am–8pm Daily
Visit any of our five locations
across town to browse books,
magazines, newspapers, and
more. Check out movies, CDs, art
prints, musical instruments, or
even home tools—you name it!
Enjoy fast and free WiFi, study
and meeting rooms, and plenty
of comfortable spaces to relax or
hang out.
FALL into ACTION:
Uniting our community to benefit
immigrant families in need of assistance
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2025
4-6:30 pm
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
1501 West Liberty St, Ann Arbor
fundraising open house with food,
live music and silent auction
thank you
for hosting!
DONATION TICKET PRICES:
adults: $50, teens & students w/IDs: $35, children under 6: $20
PURCHASE TICKETS:
in-person: Pilar's Tamales, 2261 West Liberty St, Ann Arbor
@pilarsfound
online: www.pilarsfoundation.org/
PUBLIC WORKS AND SOLID
WASTE OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, October 25, 10 a.m. -1 p.m.
Public Works Unit,
4251 Stone
School Road, Ann Arbor
A free, family-friendly event exploring
the world of public works and
solid waste. Enjoy hands-on activities
to learn about utility infrastructure,
city forestry, street
maintenance, solid waste, recycling
and compost programs; such as
touching City trucks, fixing a water
main break, painting a plow, and
more!
Public Computers
The AADL has public-access
Internet computers available for
use by both cardholders and noncardholders
at all five locations.
Each station has USB ports,
headphone jacks, and some of the
fastest WiFi speeds in town!
Preschool Storytimes &
Baby Playgroups
Join our storytellers on weekdays
inside the library for fun songs,
stories, puppets, and movement!
Visit aadl.org/storytimes to view
a list of upcoming in-person
storytimes and playgroups. You
can also stream and download
our recorded storytimes online at
AADL.TV.
FEATURED EVENT
7
Sunday, October 12 • 11 AM–3 PM
• Downtown Library
Dead Media Day is a celebration
of bygone forms of media,
entertainment, & ephemera. Join
us for a day of vendors selling
vintage & rare pieces of media,
exhibits, hands-on demos & crafts,
and informative talks! Visit aadl.
org/deadmediaday for details.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
THINK ABOUT IT
Make peace with yourself
Human beings generally struggle
with authenticity. We naturally have
great respect for those among us who
are at ease with themselves and radiate
some primordial quality of love
and joy with the confidence that we
are on the path of awakening.
When we feel our survival is at risk,
we may relapse into habitual ego patterns
of self and other, and thereby
lose our own authenticity. This
common egocentric division of reality
into two parts is the ignorance that
creates worlds of suffering and the
confusion that follows.
Among our ancestors and the
teachers that we discover in this life,
we will find the teacher who will help
us recognize the stage of the path we
are in now, and how to mature into a
more complete awareness of reality.
If you follow Einstein’s advice on the
importance of curiosity and imagination,
you will experience reality
with the embrace of solidarity that
surrounds us.
Life embraces life. I say this with
some confidence after nearly 83 years
of stumbling in and out of miracles. As
my doubt returns, I make poor choices
until pain awakens me and I remember
that Love Is The Law. Dion Fortune,
a creative writer from the British
esoteric spiritual tradition, introduced
those words to me.
Before macular degeneration hit
me, I read widely and often. The challenge
of declining vision is tough. It
took a year before I went for help from
a neighbor and the Groundcover community
to open and access a post from
my nephew about functional medicine
and the work of Dr. George
Razakis. I listened to his podcast and
believe it is more advanced science
than the standard operating model in
ophthalmology. When corporations
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
and profits take over the bureaucracies
that oversee public health, it
appears that health is forsaken for
procedures that have become
entrenched due to the wealth that is
extracted in the patient care mandated
by insurance companies and
investors. Of course, I am out on a
limb as I struggle to bring Kellogg
vision care into a collaboration with
the functional medicine of Dr. George
Razakis. Dr. Ravi Vadlamudi, the wellknown
“bicycle doctor” who goes
from patient to patient on a bike, is
giving me a referral. Will United
Health Care recognize that referral?
What is my responsibility for my
declining vision?
My basic dilemma is about writing
my memoirs. Will I finish them before
I die? Groundcover is helping me
write articles with print and keyboard
for the visually challenged. I want the
same setup to do my memoirs. Of
course there is money involved. Will
the system pay for functional medicine?
Will I be able to find support to
get a computer, monitor and keyboard
as an expression of unity in the
community?
In order to finish anything, especially
to do it well, love for what you
are doing is the main ingredient.
Labors of love build unity in the community.
That was the intended point
of my Labor Power article in the Aug.
22, Groundcover News. Our labor
power is awesome, especially when
we collaborate with good intentions.
How do we benefit all beings without
leaving anyone behind? That intention,
when practiced with mindful
awareness, will bring your own peace
of mind to the next step of maturity.
The ability to benefit others and share
peace in the world grows from this
intention. The discipline needed to
make peace with yourself is developed
by paying attention to what you are
doing again and again until it becomes
the natural flow we call “in the zone.”
In 1967, when I met Thich Nhat
Hanh, a Buddhist monk who came
from Vietnam to the United States at
the invitation of the Fellowship of Reconciliation,
I was witness to a man at
peace with himself who could look at
us and the war with great equanimity.
His appeal was simple, “Whatever you
can do to end the war.” Mix that with
Martin Luther King’s "Breaking the
Silence,” and I naturally became a
draft resister.
Eventually the need to resist evil
evolved into projects to do something
good. The peak of this for me was on
The Pastors for Peace caravans to
Cuba. The solidarity we expressed was
greeted with great passion as the
Cuban state and people enthusiastically
greeted us as heroes. It is still
important to resist evil, and the best
resistance is to do something good. I
believe that you can start on your
cushion and meditate on mindfulness
of breath, then mindfulness of mind
as a first step to the awareness that
allows you to do good. Karuna Buddhist
Center comes to mind as a good
place to learn mindfulness with the
goal to benefit all beings, with not one
left behind.
Liberation begins and ends with
paying attention. Making peace with
yourself begins with a natural breath
and finds completion in the Clear
Light of the Void, the all good expanse
of primordial purity (as explained in
the Tibetan Book of the Dead). Stillness
in motion becomes a lifestyle and
the flow becomes your home! As an
expression of peace, you encourage
others to experience their own
authenticity. I look forward to the day
when I really practice what I preach
and fully embody the spirit-filled life.
OCTOBER 3, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://JmC0LV9G73RWkGCH-Hjw0kgIQnfacHo61n0sHAS4wgUP` h dx^,׉E|OCTOBER 3, 2025
INSP
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Obituary for Pope Francis: advocate of the
marginalized, uncomfortable admonisher and
unfinished reformer
FLORIAN STEGMAIER
Trott-War
With the death of Pope Francis, the
world has lost one of its most powerful
moral voices. Jorge Mario Bergoglio,
an Argentinian Jesuit and child
of Italian immigrants, was more than
a bridge-builder between continents.
He was a Pope who stood alongside
the marginalized.
Even his choice of name was programmatic:
St. Francis of Assisi, who
dedicated himself to the poor and the
outcast, became his model. Francis
remained true to his calling. No
sooner than he was elected, he
renounced red shoes, ostentatious
regalia and palaces. He lived in a
simple guest house, spoke of a
“church which is poor and for the
poor” — and meant it literally.
No Pope before him has been so
often in places that others ignore: in
refugee camps, prisons and with
indigenous groups in the Amazon
region or with street children in
Manila, the capital city of the Philippines.
He set up a hair and beard cutting
service, showers and a medical
contact point for people experiencing
homelessness under the colonnades
of St. Peter’s Square. He expressed his
solidarity with street paper vendors.
He had sleeping bags distributed and
invited people in need to eat — sometimes
over 1,000 people at a time.
“Hunger is an insult to God,” Francis
was convinced.
Francis was
familiar with the
wounds of the world. Even as a young
priest, he roamed the slums of Buenos
Aires, celebrated mass in backyards
and accompanied the sick, addicted
and dying. As Pope, he did not lose
this connection. Time and time again
he broke the protocol, talked to
people experiencing homelessness,
kissed wounds and listened.
He wanted a Church that was
“dusty” from going out to the people
— not one that lost itself in sacred
splendour. He felt connected to all
those whom society casts out.
“Migrants are not a security problem,
but people with hope,” he once said.
He called for “bridges instead of
walls” to be built and denounced the
“globalization of indifference.”
He demanded tirelessly that the
Mediterranean should not be a cemetery
— and set an example: through
his trip to Lampedusa, through his
embrace of African refugees and by
welcoming Muslim refugees to the
Vatican. At a time when isolationism
and nationalism were regaining
strength, Francis was an uncomfortable
antithesis — an admonisher for
humanity.
Critic of the system with
biblical fervour
Francis was not a politician, but he
thought politically. His criticism of
the global economic order was clearer
than is typically the case with a Pope.
In “Evangelii Gaudium,” his first written
proclamation, he called a social
system that “excludes and kills
people” immoral.
Unchecked capitalism, Francis said,
does not lead to justice, but to the rule
of greed. He criticised financial speculation,
land grabbing and a lifestyle
that is at the expense of others —
especially at the expense of the people
of the Global South.
For many in Africa, Asia and Latin
America, he was a prophetic intercessor.
His criticism was based on the
Biblical esteem of the poor. When
Francis castigated the excesses of
neoliberal markets, he did so as a
pastor, not as an economist. He
wanted an economy that served life
— not the other way around.
Unfinished reforms and
disappointed hopes
Francis brought together what had
long been separated: environmental
protection and social justice. In his
encyclical “Laudato si’” (2015), he
outlined an ecological theology that
understands the planet as the
“common home” of all people. Climate
change is “a question of social
justice,” he wrote, because it is mainly
the poor who suffer from floods,
droughts and hunger, although they
hardly contribute to the causes.
With this letter, Francis not only
changed the Church’s environmental
ethics, he also brought global attention
to the concerns of indigenous
peoples and the Fridays for Future*
generation. Still, there were many
things that remained unfinished.
Within the Church, there was a lack of
concrete climate targets, and the conversion
of Church properties into
ecologically sustainable spaces proceeded
hesitantly. Critics accused
him of not taking decisive enough
action
against environmentally
Photo by Ashwin Vaswani
destructive structures within the
Church.
The vision of a synodal Church
ready for dialogue remained one of
the guiding principles of Francis’
pontificate. He wanted to decentralize
power in the Church, and give
more responsibility to lay people and
increase participation by women. In
reality, many structures remain
unchanged.
Despite clear majorities at synods
of bishops, he refused to allow priests
to marry or the ordination of women
deacons. Progress
in addressing
sexual violence was also slow.
Although Francis condemned the
“culture of cover-up,” dismissed individual
perpetrators and spoke to
those affected, the systemic consequences
remained half-hearted. Too
often, institutional responsibility has
been individualized without any fundamental
reform
of
clericalism
following.
Contradiction and dignity
Francis was a Pope of contradictions
— one who found radical words,
but often hesitated within his own
ranks. One who appeared humble,
and yet, did not really change power
structures. However, it was precisely
his imperfection that made him so
approachable to many. He was not a
hero of progress, but a man who
struggled, searched, asked questions
— and sometimes failed. He remained
on the side of those who are otherwise
overlooked.
While authoritarian voices in
politics and religion grew stronger,
Francis was a voice of conscience. He
spoke in a language that was understood
— in slums and at climate summits.
His theology was not aloof, but
grounded in the fates of real people:
the refuse collectors of Buenos Aires,
the fishermen in Bangladesh and the
refugees drowned in the Mediterranean.
His attention was focused on
them; he wanted to give them back
the dignity that the world denied
them.
The death of Pope Francis marks the
end of an era of listening, of reaching
out and of serving. His pontificate did
not fulfill all expectations, but it did
set standards: for a Church that does
not rise above the people, but is with
them; for a global community that
faces up to its responsibility for the
weakest.
Francis will be remembered as the
Pope of the marginalized — as a shepherd
who sought the lost sheep before
thinking of dogmas. As a voice who
didn’t give ready-made answers, but
asked the right questions. As a person
who testified with his entire existence
that dignity begins wherever someone
looks — even and especially
when others look away.
*Fridays for Future is a youth-led
and youth-organized global climate
strike movement that started in
August 2018, when 15-year-old Greta
Thunberg began a school strike for
climate.
Translated from German via Translators
Without Borders
Courtesy of Trott-war / INSP.ngo
9
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
LIVING ARCHIVE
OCTOBER 3, 2025
Mental illness amongst the homeless:
the consequence not the cause
In last month’s article,* I talked about
how trauma can have symptoms of
depression. I insisted that homelessness
deserves to be treated as a real
form of trauma. So, this month I will
talk a little more in depth about
depression.
Depression is also common among
the homeless community. Symptoms
of depression are quite common in
someone dealing with issues around
housing.
Signs of depression include:
depressed mood, feelings of sadness
or emptiness, loss of interest or pleasure
in previously enjoyed activities,
significant weight changes, restlessness
or slowing of activities, persistent
fatigue or loss of energy, excessive feelings
of guilt or worthlessness, persistent
difficulty with concentration or
decision-making, sleeping pattern
changes, and suicidal behaviors or
recurrent thoughts of suicide.
Can you picture a homeless guy feeling
unworthy of deserving housing
after being unsuccessful finding a
place to live? Or maybe a homeless
person changing their weight and
sleeping patterns pretty drastically due
to the fact that they don't have a place
to cook a healthy meal and a bed to
rest in at night? In the hectic tragedy
they are living, they are in a constant
state of tiredness — so, how will they
be able to focus enough to make wise
decisions or engage in activities where
they can break free from this chaos
they are living in? This is what reality
really looks like for them! If you can’t
imagine it because you haven’t lived
through the struggle, I am trying to
give you a snapshot here.
More likely than not, a homeless
person might need treatment
for
depression. There are many forms of
treatment available.
Depression treatment often involves
medications that are called antidepressants.
They increase the availability
of certain brain neuro transmitters,
such as serotonin and dopamine.
Another way to treat depression
involves resetting the body’s circadian
clock by spending a night of sleep
SANDRA S.
Groundcover vendor No. 233
deprivation followed by a night of
sleep recovery with an outcome of
improving depressive symptoms.
Other therapies that treat depression
and are more widely accepted include
behavioral activation therapy, interpersonal
psychotherapy, cognitive-behavioral
therapy and
mindfulness-based cognitive therapy.
These therapeutic approaches seek to
help a patient identify problem behaviors
and to learn how to substitute
them with new skills that not only help
them cope with their depression, but
also end up becoming a part of a
healthier lifestyle.
But the commonly known type of
depression (major depression) isn’t
the only one that exists. There’s also a
diagnosis in the DSM-5 called bipolar
disorder, formerly called
manic-depression.
The difference between major
depression and bipolar disorder is
that, with bipolar, typical symptoms
are exaggerated: alongside episodes of
deep depression can come episodes of
grandiosity or extreme self-importance,
decreased need for sleep or feeling
rested after minimal sleep, racing
thoughts or frequent change of topics
or ideas, distractibility that may involve
attention to unimportant environmental
stimuli, increased social, sexual or
work-related activity and physical restlessness
leading to impulsive involvement
in activities like excessive
spending or gambling.
Treatment for bipolar focuses on targeting
the individual’s main symptoms.
This often involves a combination
of medications
(called mood
stabilizers), psychotherapy and educating
the patients and family members
or people who support them.
Such patients must learn the importance
of taking their prescribed medications
and getting into the habit of
practicing their mood-regulation strategies
learned in therapy. Unfortunately,
it is common that patients with
bipolar disorder report discontinuing
their medication because the side
effects seem to them worse than the
symptoms being treated.
If you identify with any of what I
wrote here, whether you are or have
been homeless or not, I urge you to
seek help. There are several clinics in
the area offering financial assistance
for the treatment of these diagnoses,
such as Corner Health for young
people aged 12-25, the Women’s
Center of Southeast Michigan in Ann
Arbor and Washtenaw County Community
Mental Health (734-544- 3050).
The sooner you treat it, the sooner you
will find relief and be back in charge of
your own life.
*Read Sandra's preceding essay "Is it
traumatic to be homeless? Picture the
treatment options" in the October
2019 edition, page 3, available on our
website under: Street News: Archives.
No Smile
Anywhere
RON PAGERESKI
Groundcover contributor
The wind plays in her hair
But seems she doesn't care
Her lover is gone somewhere
He left her so unfair
All she does is sit and stare
At her loved one’s empty chair
But he went she knows not where
A frown shall be the mask she’ll wear
They had been a lovely pair
The pain of loss she'll have to bear
To live alone is quite a scare
A lonely bed will be her lair
Smiles from her will be quite rare
Seems she has not one to spare
Her tears fall everywhere
But it seems she doesn't care.
-
Originally published in the November
2019 edition of Groundcover News.
׉	 7cassandra://LSbSUfqvxEfOBi7gGnhF1W_cCJUqFqEGqkpmjmxoozgY_` h dx^.׉EOCTOBER 3, 2025
MAKING CHANGE
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Michigan Movement students use Project Connect
to serve homeless people in Ann Arbor
On Saturday, Sept. 20, a group from
the student organization known as
Michigan Movement came to Mercy
House, a house of hospitality inspired
by Dorothy Day of the Catholic Worker
Movement, which provides for the
homeless community. As they have in
the past, Michigan Movement used the
concept of “Project Connect” to distribute
clothing, food and essential
care packages to homeless people.
Michigan Movement works with
other student organizations to host
Project Connect where the homeless
can pick up clothes, food, and “MIM
Kits” with essentials such as toothbrushes,
hats, gloves, and Narcan. The
Mercy House 2025 visit was successful,
with both students and the homeless
happy with the interaction.
In 2016, two bright-eyed 18 year-old
freshmen participated at the Poverty
Solutions Workshops held by the
School of Public Policy and School of
Business. They engaged in more
conversations with other attendees,
and made a prudent decision. They
created a student organization and
said that the mission for their prospective
project would be to help improve
the lives of the poor and the homeless
of Ann Arbor.
Those college freshmen were Payton
Watt of Ann Arbor and Hussain Ali of
Milwaukee. My chance meeting with
them during the 2015-2016 academic
year has become a gift that keeps on
giving. The students’ eagerness and
curiosity resulted in their introduction
to Mercy House, Robert J. Delonis
Center, Groundcover News office and
Purple House homeless community
center.
What is Project Connect?
In 2019, Michigan Movement
decided to use a program introduced
WILL SHAKESPEARE
Groundcover vendor No. 258
in the early 1990s in Toledo, Ohio, as a
model. They liked the integrated and
collaborative idea very much.
Below is a summary of the program
provided by the co-founders:
“Michigan Movement (MIM) is a
student-run 501(c)(3) nonprofit
founded and based at the University
of Michigan. We were born out of
urgency; as students living in Ann
Arbor — America’s most educated yet
eighth most economically segregated
city — MIM began as our means of
redressing the disproportionate rates
of chronic homelessness in our community.
Our mission is to aid individuals
and families experiencing
homelessness in Washtenaw County,
promoting dignity, health and catalyze
community engagement along
the way.
“To realize this mission, we apply a
holistic approach that includes providing
basic necessities, education and
employment services, and social advocacy
and community engagement.
Our most significant event each year is
Project Connect, during which students
create and distribute 150 MIM
kits (care packages) consisting of food,
clothing and hygiene supplies. With a
focus on collaboration and innovation,
we have expanded our Project Connect
resources to include medical services
like vaccines, blood pressure and
11
Michigan Movement brought Project Connect to Mercy House's
weekly pancake breakfast. Photo submitted.
cholesterol screenings, vital document
accessibility, as well as preventative
dental exams and haircuts.
“To achieve this, we have enlisted
the help of our local core partner organizations
such as Mercy House and the
Delonis Center. We have also forged
new relationships across the public
and private sectors, with partners
ranging from Infinity Salon to the University’s
Dental School. Through the
addition of music and a free meal,
Project Connect brings in a larger population
of the community and fosters
relationships where students and
members of the community can interact.
The strong relationships we
develop will… allow us to better understand
the needs of our community,
and work to end stigmas and stereotypes
associated with homelessness.”
Toledo’s Tent City homeless
connection
Toledo is an industrial and auto
The Sun Bundle, another U-M student organization, redistributes
athletic shoes to people experiencing homelessness. The Sun
Bundle partnered with MIM during Project Connect.
manufacturing town. It is also an educational
and healthcare center. In
December 1991, the economic base
was still facing the ravages of the economic
crisis and community abandonment
of the 1980s. A group of
about 50 homeless individuals and
family members decided to build a
homeless encampment in an abandoned
downtown mall. It was called
the Portside Marketplace Encampment.
Initially, the city government
wanted to remove the homeless from
the underground tunnel and walkways
of the abandoned mall. However, after
a homeless woman was struck by a
city-owned salt truck, the city changed
its mind. The tragic death of that
homeless woman near the mall made
newsworthy headlines in Ohio and
across the nation. The idea of a “Tent
City" which connects homeless people
with services and programs came into
fruition. When homelessness became
a bigger problem in subsequent years,
communities that want to do a better
job of helping the homeless adopted
the model. Ken Leslie, a former homeless
man and founder of 1Matters,
helped to shape the concept of this
homeless solution. It is an innovative
and comprehensive approach. Services
delivered include the following:
• Medical,
dental and
vision
services
• Food, clothing and hygiene
products
• Assistance in obtaining official
documents such as birth certificates
and state IDs
• Job assistance and other services
to help people transition out of
homelessness.
The spring of 2026 will mark the 10th
anniversary of Michigan Movement’s
founding.
For Mercy House, Project Connect
and other services from Michigan
Movement have meant that the relationship
has been great. The current
co-presidents, Raffael and Sophia, do
not see their time commitment as a
sacrifice. Co-vice president and future
president Sophie said, “We love
coming here to help the community
and see the smiles on the faces of
people who receive care packages.”
The U-M Ginsberg Center for Community
Service and Learning should
be pleased by the fine work of the
Michigan Movement accomplishments.
Former MIM president Lindsay
Calka is now the publisher and managing
director of Groundcover News.
Over a dozen of the MIM students have
gone on to medical schools; one of
see CONNECT page 12 
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
LOCAL NEWS
AADL buys Observer
JUD BRANAM
Groundcover contributor
In a move aimed at preserving local
news coverage amid a fragmenting
media environment, the Ann Arbor
District Library announced plans
September 29 to purchase the Ann
Arbor Observer news monthly.
The move is part of a leadership
succession at the Observer, with Publisher
Patricia Garcia and Editor John
Hilton both retiring after almost 40
years of running the magazine. Media
Director Danielle Jones is taking over
as publisher, and Deputy Editor
Brooke Black is assuming the top editor’s
spot.
The library has been digitizing and
archiving back issues of the 49-yearold
Observer, and it was during preparation
for a 2024 Observer exhibit at
the library that the topic of the publication’s
future first came up, Hilton
said. While plans were in place to
hand the reins to Jones and Black, the
finances were tougher. “It’s not a good
time to ask somebody to take on a
bunch of debt on a print product,”
Hilton said. Instead, the library has
gone beyond preserving the publication’s
past to providing a backbone for
its future.
The library is clearly in good
financial health, with 1.8 mills of permanent
property tax support from a
rapidly growing tax base. AADL
showed a surplus of more than $3 million
in its $22.4 million budget for
2024-25, with property tax revenues
projected to increase by $1 million
this year.
The terms of the sale have not been
announced, but Hilton told WLBY
radio host Lucy Ann Lance Tuesday
that the library will be paying “a similar
amount” to the $625,000 that he
and Garcia paid for the business in
1986. The library’s Board of Trustees
is expected to vote on the final terms
of the deal in December.
AADL Board Vice President Aidan
Sova said in a statement the Observer
is another element in the library’s
suite of community-based information
services, adding that the partnership
is “a perfect fit, aligning local
journalism with the library’s mission
to foster an informed public.”
In August, voters approved plans for
the library to purchase property adjacent
to its downtown location for an
expansion. Library Director Eli
Neiburger said there are no plans for
the Observer to move into library
space, adding that decisions about
real estate will be made by the publication’s
management.
Hilton said the Observer has
returned to profitability since the
pandemic, and Neiburger said
remaining in the black will be the
paper’s responsibility.
“The plan is not for the Library to
subsidize the Observer’s bills,”
Neiburger told Lucy Ann Lance. Neither,
he said, will library officials steer
the publication’s coverage or editorial
direction. “We will become the
owners of the Observer — not the editors
of the Observer.”
OCTOBER 3, 2025
 CONNECT from page 12
them, Sloane Lynch, MD, recently graduated from Tufts Medical
School and is now doing her residency at a local hospital. Co-founder
Payton Watt, finished her Bachelor’s degree with a major in Public
Health and Biology, and a minor in Community Action for Social
Change. She went on to receive a Master’s degree at U-M and is now
a healthcare management consultant. Co-founder Hussain Ali, finished
his undergraduate with a major in dental public health and
master’s in business management and most recently a doctorate in
dental surgery. Michigan Movement's story is one of great kindness,
community service and service learning.
On November 15, the Michigan Movement students will hold
another Project Connect for the homeless at Mercy House. We invite
members of the community and other service providers to show up.
We especially would like to invite the new executive director of the
Shelter Association of Washtenaw County — Ms. Nicole Adelman —
to visit and chat with the students and the homeless individuals, and
our community leader, Ms. Peggy Lynch.
To contact or volunteer with Michigan Movement, visit
linktr.ee/mimovement or email mimovement@umich.edu
׉	 7cassandra://pakPWJzo65OufDcsMSb53mtPPGX5TAh7YPeEb3Bgj0kM` h dx^3׉EOCTOBER 3, 2025
CREATIVE WRITING
YpsiWrites 2025-2026 Writers of Ypsilanti
YpsiWrites, a writing-based nonprofit
that believes everyone is a
writer, is excited to introduce the 2025
Writers of Ypsilanti. YpsiWrites’
theme for the coming year is Writing
Together, and all nine of this year’s
writers embody that theme. Celebrate
the writers at this year’s YpsiWrites
Birthday Party on Saturday, Oct. 11,
from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the
Whittaker Road branch of the Ypsilanti
District Library. RSVP at tinyurl.
com/YW101125.
Below is more information on each
of this year’s Writers of Ypsilanti.
Alexandra Pryplesh (she/her) is a
writer who attends high school in
Ypsilanti and writes philosophy
papers, essays and poetry. She
believes that writing is essential for
human connection and
understanding.
Brandi Wentworth (she/her) just
graduated with her Bachelor’s in General
Studies from Eastern Michigan
University’s College in Prison
program at the Women’s Huron Valley
Correctional Facility. Brandi is co-editor
of “Behind the Wire,” the first college-in-prison
newsletter in the state
of Michigan. She writes short stories
and poetry and finds writing daily in
a journal to be very therapeutic.
Brandi considers revision key to her
writing process and loves watching
her writing change as she rewrites, by
hand, her drafts.
Jared M. Bentley (he/him) lives in
Ypsilanti and is an Eastern Michigan
University alum. He writes long-form
fiction and short stories, including his
book called "Robots, Please," a collection
that humorously
absurdity.
Jihyun Ko (she/her) lives in Ypsilanti
and writes poetry and journalistic
investigative pieces about the
community. She values how deeply
personal moments in fiction and
poetry can also become collective
experiences.
Jim Clark (he/him) is an Eastern
Michigan University alum who lives
in Ypsilanti. He writes op-eds, informative
journalistic pieces and interviews.
You can catch his writing in
Groundcover News, and he enjoys
both the historical importance of
writing as well as its entertainment
value.
John Allen Taylor (he/him) lives in
Ypsilanti and believes there is something
uniquely special about the city.
Poetry is his genre because it lights up
the “dusty, tangled parts” of his brain
like nothing else.
Lee Van Roth (she/they/he) is an
explores
Eastern Michigan University alum
and local journalist whose work
covers Ypsilanti organizations
through a solutions-based lens. They
love the sense of community in Ypsilanti
and how everyone here wants to
see everyone else succeed in whatever
capacity they can.
Stephanie Heit (she/her) lives in
Ypsilanti and codirects Turtle Disco,
a somatic writing space grounded in
Truth or Lies: A found friend
“Hey, did you hear Mom talking to
Auntie Naomi? She was telling her that
we’re going to camp for two weeks.
Then they started laughing,” said
Jizzi-B.
“What is a camp?” asked Cassey.
Jizzi-B said, “I don’t know what a
camp is, however Mom paid her
money.”
“I’m scared,” said Cassey. “We will
be a nine and ten year old lost at camp.
Is camp outside? Do we sleep on the
ground?”
“Calm your imagination down; Mom
won’t let us go somewhere to be lost,”
said Jizzi-B. “Besides, you have me
and I have you. Don’t worry, I heard
it’s lots of fun. I think it’s swimming,
games and arts. That's what Mom told
Auntie. We leave for
camp this
weekend.”
The alarm blared at 4 a.m. “Get up,
time to rise and shine!” said Mom.
“Time to get ready for camp, aren’t you
excited?” Mom asked.
“Yes,” said Jizzi-B.
“No,” said Cassey.
“Don’t worry, it’s gonna be fun,”
Mom said. “If you hurry I will take y'all
to Coney Island for breakfast.”
The girls looked at each other saying
harmoniously, “Coney Island.” “Boy,
Mom sure has strange places planned
today,” said Cassey.
“Just hurry, I want to see this place,”
said Jizzi-B. It was a special day; toast
with egg and cheese with orange juice
from a restaurant named Coney Island.
Mom pulled into a parking space on
the other side of the buses. We were at
the Olympia Stadium, where all the
parents were dropping off their children.
“Are we going camping in that
big building?” asked Cassey.
“No. Now, get your suitcases and
follow me.” Mom walked them to the
bus, hugged and kissed them. “See
you in two weeks,” Mom said. Cassey
and Jizzi-B got on the bus and took
their seats.
All of a sudden Cassey
started crying. “I don’t want to go! I am
scared I want my mommy!”
“Hush, crybaby! I’m here with you,”
Jizzi-B said, grabbing her sister's hand.
“You're scared to have fun. Come on
sis, look out the window. We will be
there soon.”
Camp Tecumsen. The bus driver
instructed everyone to get off and line
up alongside the bus.
“Hello, welcome to Camp Tecumsen
little campers. For the next two weeks
The bus pulled up at
FELICIA WILBERT
Groundcover vendor No. 234
you are little Tecumsen campers.
Everyone group up into fours, let's go.
Until you leave these are your partners.
Never leave a teammate behind,” said
the director.
Jizzi-B, Cassey and one
other little girl were the only ones not
chosen. Cassey looked at the other
little girl and asked her, “What is that
stick you have?”
Jizzi-B tapped her
sister and said, “Don’t be rude.” Cassey
explained that she wasn't rude. “I
don’t understand why she has a stick
with red paint at the bottom,” said
Cassey.
“Hi, my name is Jizzi-B and that's
Cassey asking about your stick. Please
forgive her, she doesn't know that you
are blind.” “What?” Cassey’s mouth
dropped. “I am sorry, please forgive
me,” said Cassey.
“No worries, I am Savianni, and that
happens a lot. People don’t pick me
because I am blind.”
Jizzi-B replied, "Well, today none of
us got picked. However we are a team
now; lets beat them at all the games by
working together. Just because you’re
blind does not mean you can’t win.”
Jizzi-B and Cassey helped Savianni
for the next two weeks. During paint
tag they hid Savianni behind a big
rock, allowing her to tag anyone who
passed by. Even though she could not
see to paint, the girls helped her finger
paint. They even held her hands,
allowing her to go swimming. The girls
had so much fun helping and playing
with Savianni. When the time came
for them to go home, no one wanted to
leave. The girls exchanged phone
numbers hoping to keep in contact.
However over time they lost touch.
Time passed and Jizzi-B was 17 visiting
her Auntie Naomi for the weekend.
Auntie Naomi told Jizzi-B to run
a store errand.
Jizzi-B was walking
down the street of Newport approaching
the Harper Street Bridge, when she
saw a lady cutting tulips from her yard
for a bouquet. She knew the lady was
blind because she had the stick with
the red at the bottom.
Jizzi-B asked her if she needed any
help. “No, but thanks anyway,” the lady
said. She continued on to the store.
However, on the way back,
Jizzi-B
spoke to the lady once again. “You
know I once helped a little girl at camp
who was blind. I don’t remember her
name,
it was an odd name.
All I
remember is we were all scared and
leaned on each other.
It was her, me,
and my little sister Cassey.”
The lady asked, "Is your name
Jizzi-B?”
Thanks Groundcover News
readers! I hope you guessed
the right answer ... "Truth or
Lies: The Invader," published
August 8, 2025, was TRUE.
Look out soon for the Mystery
Lane Reading Game online.
disability culture. She engages in
poetry, essays and movement as
forms of writing. Stephanie believes
writing is “an act of imagination that
can document the past, amplify the
present, speculate the future, and
create mediums with which to engage
the world.”
Tree Hammons (they/them) lives
and works in Ypsilanti. They write
poetry, creative nonfiction, grants
and short stories. Tree loves the
experimental and playful aspects of
writing poetry, such as alliteration or
determining where to put a line break.
To them, writing is important because
it necessitates thinking, and it helps
put words to feelings.
Learn more about the Writers of
Ypsilanti
at ypsiwrites.com/
writers-of-ypsilanti-2025/
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
13
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PUZZLES
CROSSWORD
International Network of Street Papers
OCTOBER 3, 2025
by Anthony Smith
ACROSS
1. Favorite American soda
9. Begin
14. Put on top of
15. Eye
16. Coached
17. Egg on
18. Ace
19. "Absolutely!"
20. Those who swim
21. ___ Spumante
23. Dutch sights
25. Romaine
26. Smelled bad yesterday
28. Straightened
31. Toxic condition
33. Surrounding glows
34. Director Seymour
Hoffman
36. Angel
39. Add up
41. Narrow channel
43. "The Social Contract"
philosopher
46. "Siddhartha" author
47. Bon ___
48. Awfully
50. Level, in London
51. Of the Canadian capital
city
54. Feline
56. Kipling's "Gunga ___"
57. Emphatic, in a way
58. Forceful
60. Alter
61. Some chores
62. Related maternally
63. Gravitational floating of
the Earth's crust
DOWN
1. Direction teller
2. Go too far
3. Monument to someone
buried elsewhere
4. Illustration
5. Sicken with excess
6. Propelled a boat
7. ___ wait (prepares an
ambush)
8. Make sense, with "up"
9. Mailed
10. "Rambling Wreck From
Georgia ___"
11. Each
12. Stroll again
13. Lock of hair
15. Middle Eastern coins
20. Boyfriends
22. Undisturbed
24. Mauna ___
27. Metric measures
29. Our "mother"
30. Closer
32. Relaxes
35. Song of joy
37. Rose Bowl site
38. Snake sounds
40. Boy
42. Wee (Var.)
43. No good
44. Pontiac, e.g.
45. Stomach maladies
47. Wavelike design
49. "Hurray!"
52. "Thanks ___!"
53. Hidden mike
55. Addition column
58. Seven on some clocks
59. Cambridge sch.
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS September 19, 2025 edition
׉	 7cassandra://UMzuSYAQfTEw0qbPhI8BdQmvDJW5Pvirh1ylRL_EkEkZ` h dx^5׉E 3OCTOBER 3, 2025
FOOD RESOURCES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
15
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Sausage gravy
BEN FOSTER
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
1 pound of ground breakfast
sausage
1/2 cup of flour
3 1/2 cups of whole milk
Salt, pepper and cayenne to taste
Directions:
Brown sausage in a medium
sized pot over medium heat until
fully cooked.
Sprinkle flour over the sausage
and stir to combine. Cook for a
minute or two, stirring often to keep
things from burning.
Slowly add the milk (about a half
cup at a time) while stirring or whisking
the mixture. You want that fat
and flour mixture to absorb the milk
and combine to form the gravy.
Keep adding milk and whisking
until you've reached your desired
consistency. Season with salt, black
pepper, and cayenne to taste.
Simmer for a few minutes or longer
if the gravy looks too thin.
Serve over homemade biscuits
(see next issue for recipe).
This is a favorite dish served at the
biweekly Groundcover vendor meeting
and new paper delivery.
OCTOBER 3, 2025
$5 OFF
NATURAL FOODS MARKET
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
SUPPORT
CALL FOR
and understanding
24/7 mental health and substance use support
734-544-3050
LEARN MORE about programs funded
by the community mental health and
public safety preservation millage.
PEER SUPPORT: Artie Tomlin, Valerie Bass, and Marti Schneider
ANY PURCHASE OF
$30 OR MORE
One coupon per transaction. Must present coupon at the time of
purchase. Coupon good for in-store only. No other discounts or coop
cards apply. Not valid for gift cards, case purchases, beer or wine.
OFFER
EXPIRES
8/22/2025
10/31/25
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,October 3, 2025h];E@