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$
MAY 1, 2026 | VOLUME 17 | ISSUE 10
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Sentenced beyond bars: the fight for
justice at Women's Huron Valley.
page 8
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
FELICIA
WILBERT
PAGE 3
15 YEARS OF NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Augustine, Marie, Steve, and Brandy
(left to right) on a Saturday with tea and
sack lunch in the courtyard of YDL
Michigan Ave, while conducting
research about library support services.
A library of support. page 10
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
MAY 1, 2026
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׉	 7cassandra://tv9XPilpSsHRtUPZwUfSTk21H-ww0I2en4fkr_382R0R` iI;=$C׉EEMAY 1, 2026
CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
Cold thoughts
CAROLE HITTINGER
Groundcover vendor No.
701
This world that we live in is
Felicia Wilbert,
vendor No. 234
In one sentence, who are you?
A loving, giving mother and gramma.
Where do you usually sell
Groundcover?
4th and Liberty Street.
When and why did you start selling
Groundcover?
2015. Became homeless due to a tragedy. It
was a chance for stability.
If you could go anywhere in the world,
where would you go?
Back in time to the signing of the
Constitution. I would let them know the
effects of the lies they created. And how
they harmed people generations into the
future.
If you could go back or forward in time,
where/when would you go?
1810 to find out who my great, great
granddad’s parents were.
What’s your hottest take?
Groundcover is a job not a handout!
If you could have dinner with one
person in history, who would it be?
George Washington.
What is the best day of the year, in
your opinion?
My birthday!
Books or movies?
Both of my books, "Billy Don't Kill Us" and
"3333 Mystery," need to turn into movies!
What is your favorite thing about
yourself?
I am blessed to be able to change
employment when it's necessary.
Would you make a good world leader?
Yes.
Is social media a net positive or
negative?
Good when it is utilized correctly!
way too much, at times. It
reminds me of times in my life
which I have long prayed to
never relive. I am disheartened
more and more every day by
thoughts of what may happen
next, or worse, what already
has. Justice seems so far from
our grasp, even as the land of
the free. I am angered and confused
so often. Yet, I will not let
this keep me down, nor my
loved ones.
While it seems impossible —
very hard at best — we all must
persist. This is neither the life
nor love that God would want
for ANY of us.
God is a loving and forgiving
creator, no matter your personal
religious beliefs. Some
religions wait still for their
savior in human form, and
others for his final appearance.
I do not believe it really makes
a difference what others believe
in. We are all in this together,
and we’re all creations of God
—a higher power if you will, or
parents if not. The division we
feel is across the board, yet so is
God's love. This is often overlooked,
but that love can bring
us together. Of that fact I am
sure.
While I do believe we all have
free will of our own, we often
forget that judgment is not our
job. I should clarify: in most situations.
There are some who
earn a paycheck to serve as
judges and the like. While there
needs to be some order, far too
much is beyond our human
ability to control. So why must
we continue to judge?
I know that God does not
hold grudges: that is human
nature alone. While nature
seems to hold bias like us
humans, it is truly incapable of
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
3
having emotions. Our actions
may be up to us to decide, but
grace is something only God
seems to extend, these days at
least.
It is shameful and silly to
think of so many examples, just
this past week, in which
humans thought that they had
the right to throw stones, or
even cause harm. Some share
only angry words or looks based
on another human's beliefs. I
have even heard fellow Michiganders
claiming credit for
freezing temps.
Chuckle I must, and pray
even more. I will continue to
pray for mercy and grace to flow
between us all. God allows us
all to change, learn and grow,
for our entire lives. While some
refuse, I know it is part of the
experience of being alive. I
know we ALL can come
together and realize that judgement
is not something we
should offer each other. Only
love. I still believe love and time
can heal all, if we persist.
Opinion: Origins of the USA
SCOOP STEVENS
Groundcover vendor No.
638
The 1772 Somerset vs. Stewart
court case was the writing on
the wall that slavery was coming
to an end in Great Britain’s 13
North American colonies. Since
all of the colonies had slave
owners who profited from slave
labor, preserving the institution
of slavery was the cause that
united the colonies to secede
from Great Britain.
Was taxation without representation
really the cause that
united the original 13 colonies
to secede from England? The
fact of the matter is, the colonies
were well-represented. The
taxes imposed were to pay for
the 7 Years War (1756-63) that
the colonies benefited from.
The taxes were not onerous and
did not hinder commerce. Preserving
the institution of slavery
was the cause that united the
colonies to secede from
England.
Great Britain ended slavery in
their colonies in the 1830s.
Slave owners were compensated
for releasing their slaves
and newly freed slaves were
given land to start their new
lives as free people. This would
have happened in America if
the colonies had not seceded
from Great Britain. Therefore, it
seems clear to me that preserving
the institution of slavery
was the real cause that united
the colonies in the War of Independence
against Great
Britain.
In 1861, 11 southern states
entered into a confederation in
violation of Article 1 Section 10
of the United States Constitution.
President Lincoln put an
army in the field to bring these
rebelling states back into the
Union, which would preserve
the institution of slavery
because this was the purpose of
the United State’s existence. As
the war dragged on, the original
purpose of the war was no
longer tenable; this led President
Lincoln to issue the Emancipation
Proclamation on
January 1, 1863.
The Civil War only then
became a war to free slaves.
This was when the United States
of America really came into
existence as a nation.
Poems by Jason Church
Vocab: Diligent
Rain sleet snow still he went.
Postal workers sure are diligent.
Vocab: Prodigious
You want to go dig he up?
Absolutely no way.
That would take all day.
That guy is prodigious.
Vocab: Stultify
When she goes walking by,
We get them bulging eyes.
She has a way that just stultifies.
Looking better than a cheeseburger
and salted fries.
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ʍ`I׉	 7cassandra://WeCL8B9UDnI6ibSmmtbJUe8pFrtHDfaT2YGdlvs9KBI 6`׉	 7cassandra://-FCvREMfmT3IkN80bGFi9CJQhCjmw-MkbI3ikbblJlQQc` iJ;=$tנiJ;=$k TT9׉H #http://aaacf.org/news/housing-studyGׁׁrנiJ;=$l 	̣9׉H #http://aaacf.org/news/housing-studyGׁׁrנiJ;=$m <9׉H 5http://www.washtenaw.org/4497/Job-Developers-AllianceGׁׁrנiJ;=$n <9׉H 5http://www.washtenaw.org/4497/Job-Developers-AllianceGׁׁrנiJ;=$o 9׉H @http://www.wccnet.edu/succeed/entrepreneurship-center/index.php/GׁׁrנiJ;=$p 9׉H @http://www.wccnet.edu/succeed/entrepreneurship-center/index.php/GׁׁrנiJ;=$∁ M[9ׁHhttp://aaacf.org/ׁׁЈ׉E"4
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
OPINIOIN
Executive order directs HUD to cut Section 8
spending
STEVEN
Groundcover contributor
On March 2 of this year, the U.S.
regime currently in power proposed
draconian alterations that would
essentially end housing subsidies, also
known as Housing Choice Vouchers,
or Section 8. The federal Housing
Choice program is the largest affordable
housing program in the country,
funded by the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD).
Ending Section 8 would affect more
than 3 million people, half of whom
are children. This puts all of them at
increased risk of falling into homelessness
because the pompous pumpkin
POTUS said cutting rental aid by 40%
and putting a two-year limit on benefits
for able-bodied people would
“Make America Affordable again.” Is
he trying to make real estate more
affordable for the already-bloated
predatory landlords through the inevitable
evictions of the working class? Is
that going to, as the administration is
crowing, make them more self-sufficient?
Many landlords oppose this
plan as well, preferring to keep longterm
government-subsidized, reliable
tenants for longer than two years.
“Establishing Flexibility for Implementation
of Work Requirements and
Term Limits.” That's what the plan is
called. Government double-talk at its
finest — a long, obscure title with big
words saying nothing. This is a directive
to HUD to get around Congress
who already rejected the plan. The
“flexibility” is that the states will have
more flexibility on how to spend the
smaller amounts of money they will
receive. Similar to how the states can
spend welfare money. Maybe they’ll
spend it on poor people’s rent even if
they don’t have to? Unlike how they
diverted the welfare money when it
was awarded in the same way.
To find out what it actually means I
read "The Federal Register." "The Federal
Register," I recently learned, is the
official daily journal of the federal government
used to announce notices of
proposed rules (allowing public comment),
final rules (changes to the law),
presidential proclamations, and executive
orders. I want to make sure you
notice that it is open to public comment.
Comments are open until May
1, 2026 on this issue.
After Googling “The Federal Register,”
it was my top choice. I was greeted
by an avalanche of data. The current
issue, published April 6, 2026, has 101
documents from 42 agencies consisting
of 474 pages. If you don’t know
what to call what you're looking for,
good luck finding it. But I did know
what I was looking for. I typed in the
name of the proposal and found it.
There are only 228 comments as I write
this. This topic that will affect millions
has less comments than I routinely get
on Reddit. This forum should be talked
about more and engaged with more.
I’d never heard of it until this week. I
urge people to comment. Whatever
you think, show them we are paying
attention.
Most of the people affected by HUD’s
plan are employed — brutally underemployed,
but employed. Deborah
Thorpe, deputy director at the National
Housing Law Project, said in a statement,
“This proposal is based on false
and harmful stereotypes, rather than
concrete data or best practices, it
ignores the fact that most participants
in federal housing programs who can
work do in fact work. Saving enough to
move off of assistance takes a long
time and a lot of support.”
As of 2023, 50%, more than 22.6 million
renters, were cost-burdened,
paying more than 30% of their income
on living expenses. This includes more
than 12.1 million who are severely burdened,
spending more than half of
their income on housing and utilities.
Between 2019 and 2023 the share of
renters with cost burdens increased in
43 of 50 states. More than half of all
renters were cost-burdened, which
indicates paying more than 30% of
income on rent, in 13 states and in 50
of the 100 largest metro areas.
Trump is asking HUD to cut rental
aid by 40%. Where is he planning on
spending all that sweet, sweet
poor-people money?
The cost of the current war-crime,
based on the Pentagon’s briefing to
Congress was $11.3 billion for the first
six days plus $1 billion/day ongoing.
As housing costs have grown, many
households have less money available
to cover other necessities. In 2023,
renters with incomes below $30,000
had a median of just $250 per month
left over after paying for housing. Many
are forced to make difficult spending
trade-offs between crucial needs,
employment RESOURCE CORNER
JOB DEVELOPER'S ALLIANCE
A collaborative of 10 community
organizations with the mission to
help those underserved job seekers
find suitable employment. The clients
are invited to two events per year to
help connect them with employers.
Washtenaw County agencies that are
represented in the JDA: Ann Arbor
Housing Commission, Bureau of Services
for Blind Persons, Washtenaw
County Office of Community and
Economic Development, Department
of Corrections - Women's Huron
Valley, Jewish Family Services, Michigan
Ability Partners, Michigan Rehabilitation
Services, Path For Ability
Vocation Enterprise, Work Skills Corporation,
and Washtenaw Community
College Career Services
www.washtenaw.org/4497/
Job-Developers-Alliance
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
(In the basement of Bethlehem
United Church of Christ)
734-263-2098
contact@groundcovernews.com
Office hours: Monday through Saturday
11a.m. - 3 p.m. New vendor orientations:
Tuesday and Thursday 10
a.m. A street newspaper which offers
employment to people selling it:
those experiencing homelessness or
poverty.
MICHIGAN WORKS
304 Harriet St., Ypsilanti
734-714-9814
Mon.-Wed.-Fri.: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.;Tuesday:
8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sat. and Sun.:
Closed. Resource room with computers,
printers, and copiers; Unemployment
pairing — once an active
resume is on the state's website;
Direct lines to the unemployment
office; Workshops; Job fairs twice a
month (first and third Thursday of the
month); Large annual job fair, often
held in May; Helps to train entry level
workers so they can move up in positions;
Variety of adult programs
(depending on needs and wants);
Younger youth (14-17 years): out of
school and in-school job options;
Older youth (18-24 years): summer
employment in partnership with
U-M; Tuition assistance; Car repair
and insurance assistance depending
on the program; Work clothing; Mileage
to get to/from work/school; Outreach
programs: resume training for
those exiting jail; Free background
checks; Assistance with the $30 for
GED classes — must be enrolled in a
MI Works program.
WASHTENAW COMMUNITY
COLLEGE ENTREPRENEURSHIP
CENTER
The team is available via phone at
734-249-5880, or email at entrepreneurship@wccnet.edu,
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Monday - Friday except for holidays
and closures. Explore their website
at: www.wccnet.edu/succeed/entrepreneurship-center/index.php/
The
Entrepreneurship Center at Washtenaw
Community College is a welcoming
resource hub that supports
individuals in developing their entrepreneurial
capacity. Through thoughtful
conversations, partnerships, and
programs, those at the college and in
the surrounding communities are
inspired and driven to actively grow
their ventures as professionals, social
innovators, or business owners.
MAY 1, 2026
including healthcare, food and retirement
savings, according to the 2023
Consumer Expenditure Survey. In
those circumstances, how does one
save for a deposit on a new apartment,
let alone find an apartment that is
close in cost to a vouchered apartment
in two years? If you have an answer
that works please email Groundcover
News and I’ll write about it.
He’s coming for you, too, middle-class
readers. While households
with lower incomes constitute the bulk
of burdened renters, the strain is
creeping up the income ladder. Fully
83% of renters earning under $30,000
were cost-burdened in the most recent
data, including an astounding 67%
with severe burdens. But burden rates
were also over 70% for renters earning
$30,000-$44,999, an increase of 15 percentage
points since 2001. During the
same period, burden rates doubled to
more than 45% for renters earning
$45,000-$74,999.
Lots of statistics to crunch here.
These are big numbers. This issue
affects millions of our fellow citizens.
People doing it right. Working people.
The goal posts of the American Dream
keep getting moved further out of
reach. Nobody should have to choose
between food or medicine. Retirement
savings are a thing other people do. My
$250 a month doesn't stretch as far as
I’d like. Dentists? Doctors? Mental
health medications? Nope, just rent.
Editor's note: Readers who miss the
May 1 deadline to share public comment
are encouraged to contact their
federal U.S. representatives.
׉	 7cassandra://-FCvREMfmT3IkN80bGFi9CJQhCjmw-MkbI3ikbblJlQQc` iI;=$K׉EMAY 1, 2026
OPINION
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Pallet home proposal shows Ann Arbor doesn't have
the language to address the rent crisis, and that's
intentional
JAY COOPER
Groundcover contributor
At the December 8, 2025 planning
session, Ann Arbor City Council
heard a report from the Ann Arbor
Area Community Foundation on the
rent crisis. The report (aaacf.org/
news/housing-study) doesn't call the
situation a rent crisis, they call it a
"problem" of "affordability" and
referred to "the clear shortage of
rental units for higher-income renters"
as the reason "an unusually large
number of units came online in 2024.”
When reports on housing use language
like this, when they claim
“Single mother families in particular
tend to have incomes that create significant
affordability challenges,"
they are redirecting the blame of the
rent crisis away from landlords. There
is one reason for homelessness, and
that is rent. So long as rent exists,
there is homelessness, and without it,
homelessness disappears. To say that
"affordability challenges" are created
by people's incomes is to wildly twist
reality.
At the very same December 8 planning
session, City Council heard a
proposal for building a village of
shacks. Hank Kelley, the City’s deputy
planning manager, and Supportive
Connections director Johnathan Laye
made the presentation. Supportive
Connections is the City of Ann Arbor's
social support program.
They don't call them shacks, they
call them "pallet homes.” According
to a December 2025 MLive article on
the pallets, Kelley said, "Even pets are
welcome," as if that's some kind of
bonus and not an inherent feature of
housing since the dawn of humanity
that's only recently been put behind
a paywall by landlords.
A village of shacks in Ann Arbor, if
we're entertaining the idea they'd
ever build such a thing, would be
better than the tents (or worse conditions)
people are currently living in,
but it does not solve homelessness
because homelessness is created by
rent, and it doesn't address rent.
Shacks aren't meant to address
homelessness. They didn't propose a
location for the shack village. If they
had, history gives us the data to predict
that scene: the gentrifiers crying
over property values, their unsubstantiated
fearmongering about capital
flight and crime, as the project
gets pushed into less and less viable
locations, compromises shave away
value, activists get distracted fighting
a losing battle over scraps of a project
that was never meant to succeed.
Proposing a village of shacks to
address homelessness is an insult.
There are plenty of vacant homes to
house people. The reason the city
won't put people up in those homes
is because it breaks the illusion that
rent is valid. They don't want people
who aren't paying ungodly high rent
to live in those homes. Those homes
are not for people, they are landlord
investments meant to generate billions.
Those homes are especially not
for the class of people they're trying
to exterminate. Those homes are to
attract "higher-income renters" for
the next wave of rent ratcheting. This
is settler colonialism. You and your ilk
are not desired on this land.
In November, Johnathan Laye and
police chief Andre Anderson proposed
SPROUT, a joint unarmed
response project between Supportive
Connections and police. "Unarmed
response" is corrupted language. The
people did not ask for unarmed
response, they asked for "unarmed,
non-police response." Just as "opensource"
deliberately subverts the politics
of free software to co-opt its
benefits for the wealthy, just as free
breakfast was perverted into meanstested
"free and reduced lunch
options," just as guaranteed pensions
were replaced with fickle 401(k)s,
every real proposal for positive
change is perverted, corrupted,
stripped of its value. It is then resold
to you as a means-tested, bureaucratically
crippled neoliberal half-measure
that masks the source of the
problem and serves the wealthy (the
source of the problem).
Anyone coordinating, collaborating,
cooperating with police is not
working to solve homelessness as
police are the landlord's legbreakers.
When rent is past due, it's the police
that landlords send to your home
with guns to get you off the land.
When the bank forecloses on you, it’s
the police they send with guns to get
you off the land.
Abolishing rent is the solution to
homelessness. Saying so scares some
people, people who don't pay rent, or
people who have been convinced that
abolishing rent will somehow hurt
their prospects, but be not afraid of
abolishing rent, because you have no
prospects. Statistically speaking, you
will never own a home; any money
you think you can squirrel away will
be taken from you by ever-ratcheting
rents and stagnant wages, as well as
wartime gas prices, inflation, shrinkflation,
automation, high-speed stock
gambling, the coming AI bubble
crash, and/or when the firehose of
vibe-coded malware "pwns" your
bank. Billionaire landlords are insulated
from these things. They own a
diverse range of capital that feeds
them income, your income, which
they reinvest into more parasitic capital
investments that steal more
income.
Have you asked your boss to raise
wages? How did they respond? If you
haven't, how do you expect they
would respond? Lackluster income
does not create "affordability challenges."
You are kept underpaid to
keep profits up. Your rent will increase
until you are priced out, then you will
be replaced by a slightly wealthier
class of people, who will suffer the
exact same exploitation just with
another zero on the check, and so on,
as robber barons eat the city alive.
Understandably most people are
afraid of confronting the real villains
creating the rent crisis. After all, when
your name and face are on your facebook
account, naming and shaming
your landlord could get you evicted;
police might show up at your door
and kick you out of your home, then
where would you be? Maybe then
you'd be homeless.
The only proven method of taking
on landlords to get tenant protections
is the same as the only proven method
of taking on employers for worker
protections, unity and solidarity en
masse. You alone will never have
more sway over your government
than billionaire landlords. You alone
will never have the power to stop a
team of armed police from kicking
you out of your home. You alone will
never convince your employer to pay
you a living wage. If you want housing
security, if you want a world without
homelessness, you must organize
with fellow tenants to protect each
other, and eventually, to abolish rent.
5
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
COMMUNITY
People in the Neighborhood: Travis
JIM CLARK
Groundcover vendor No. 139
Let’s meet our neighbor Travis.
“Tell me about yourself, where are
you from?” I began.
Travis replied, “I came from the
Commonwealth of Virginia. How y'all
doing, Yankees?”
“Doing very well, thank you!” I
answered and then followed up with
this question, “What was your childhood
like?”
Travis thought out loud. “Childhood.
You know, looking back, I'm not sure
what childhood I was supposed to
have. I'm from Virginia where smoking
tobacco, smoking cigarettes, is just a
fact of life. I remember getting burnt
by cigarettes in the kitchen of my parents'
house. I grew up with parents
who were cigarette-smoking alcoholics
and stuck in a house which was
loaded with nicotine. They were always
addicted to something. I was raised to
be sick without realizing it. But I'll
admit, I was lucky. I wasn’t abused
(except for the cigarette smoke) and I
got to grow up with nice things. Unfortunately,
only nothing lasts forever,
even here in the land of the free.”
“Why do you say that?” I asked.
“Because in 1996 I got hit by a car
and almost died,” Travis replied without
hesitation.
“Oh no! How did that turn out?” I
asked.
“Well, here's the thing,” he replied, “I
don't know. I'm not sure because that
was back in 1996 and traumatic brain
injury*, head injuries and concussions
weren't a thing. They could not give me
anything [pain meds] as a kid. But for
some reason, they started giving me
psychiatric medication.”
Travis continued, “People keep
trying to slap me with that
label
because they want to tell me no human
is illegal unless you are medically disabled
or in some aspect invalid. Are
you familiar with that word? In-vuhlid?
As in medically invalid? The truth
is, I'm sorry to say, that I am iatrogenesis
incarnate, a victim of the medical
error epidemic. That is why I'm here.
Yes, medical errors were what brought
me up here to Michigan. And that's
why I ended up houseless in the city.
Because I got hit by a car.”
“But then you couldn't get it, the
medical care?” I asked.
“Well, here's the reason why.
Because I was branded by the system,
OK?” he challenged.
“Branded in what way?” I asked.
“If you are labeled with a mental illness
for any reason, no matter how
valid or sound it is, guess what? You
are dead to rights in the same way a
felon is. OK. In fact, even worse than a
felon because at least a felon can get
the conviction expunged. When it
comes to mental illness, for some
reason, that's a designation that always
makes me a potential criminal,” he
replied.
Travis pivots slightly left. “Don't you
mean thought criminal? Oh, where do
I get this wacky idea? George Orwell,
1984. Welcome to the future.”
“How did your experience with
being unsheltered happen?” I asked.
“Like a lot of millennials, I ended up
a boomerang baby. It was tough living
with my parents, it did break down; we
couldn't get along and I ended up
having to leave. When I got up here in
Michigan, I was basically homeless. I
stayed at the Victory Inn until it was
shut down. It was a nasty tobacco den,
just like Delonis, just like my childhood
home,” he replied.
“What happened after Victory Inn?”
I asked.
“After Victory Inn, I languished here
in the county,” he answered, “and
while I did have some outside help
trying to get money and whatnot, it
isn’t easy when you don't have private
property, which makes it difficult to
store food and other necessities for
your benefit.”
Travis continued, “So that's why I
ended up homeless here. I stayed outside
because the Delonis Center was
not an option. Sleeping outside was
cleaner. It was decent in 2022 and
2023. During those winters it was still
tepid enough to sleep through, not like
the following winters. I slept outside in
a sleeping bag in Argo Park under
some awnings and buildings. As long
as there wasn't heavy precipitation, I
was good. I was able to get motels
when I needed them, like when there
was heavy snow.”
“Are you homeless now?” I asked.
“Homeless? Okay,
see, I'm not
homeless, I never was because, well,
George Carlin, home is an abstract
idea. Home is what you make it, Joe
Dirt, and that's why this house is not
your home. Get it? Please, no, not
homeless. I was indeed houseless and
indigent and having a difficult time
finding a place to stay. But I can't say
'homeless’ because it turns out that's
a legal designation,” he replied.
“That’s an interesting point of view.
Do you know from night to night where
you're going to sleep?” I asked.
“Yes. I do have a residence. I'm only
poor because my conditions have not
improved, even though I got the housing
I needed. It's deeply ironic that the
place I'm living in was no better than
the Delonis Center,” he replied.
“So houselessness was in the past,
not currently,” I clarified.
“My houselessness status does not
change in any real way for some
reason. I've come to find that in Washtenaw
County, I perpetually have the
label of homeless under my name if I
MAY 1, 2026
commit a crime, and that's the way it
is,” Travis replied. Now he becomes
more emphatic. “It’s almost like they're
subjecting me to third-estate policing
or broken-windows policing. Why am
I a criminal? Just because I'm homeless
and houseless? Oh, am I a landless
peasant? Sure. Do you get the picture
yet, Yankee?”
Travis added, “I do have housing,
yes. I had to go through Avalon Housing
to get it, and they made it the worst
nightmare ever. I'm at my second unit
now. The last unit, let's just say that
ended when a Karen called. Why
would you send police SUVs to me?
I'm on my front porch, hitting my vape,
because someone said I was talking to
a tree.”
“What were you and the tree talking
about?” I had to know.
Travis fired back, “If you must know,
this tree was just trying to warn me
about all the Karens around here. If
you would just talk to them [the trees],
you would probably know that.”
*Signed into law on July 29, 1996 by
President Bill Clinton, the Traumatic
Brain Injury Act of 1996, known as “the
silent epidemic,” was
specifically
designed to address the under-recognized
public health crisis of civilian
brain injuries.
Reflections on saying 'yes' to the warming center
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
Another winter has come and gone.
Thank you to Zion Lutheran Church,
Ann Arbor Friends Meeting House,
First Presbyterian Church of Ann
Arbor, Lord of Light Lutheran Church,
St. Mary’s Parish, First Congregational
Church of Ann Arbor, First Baptist
Church of Ann Arbor, and the Freight
House in Ypsilanti for successfully
hosting the 2025-26 Daytime Warming
Center.
This is a reflection on the May 29
First Presbyterian Church discussion
on hosting the Daytime Warming
Center for the first time, and its impact
on their congregation. On short notice,
First Presbyterian Church of Ann
Arbor committed to hosting the Daytime
Warming Center for the unhoused
for two weeks in December.
According to their website, "First
Presbyterian Church is an inclusive
and diverse faith community, led by
the Holy Spirit, who welcomes people
of all ages and backgrounds to come
together to explore, nurture and
deepen their faith. Through worship,
shared discussion, participation and
service, we aim to make God's love felt
throughout our congregation, and
community, and echo throughout the
world. Our challenge is to serve God
with joy and to bear witness to God's
transforming love made visible in
Jesus Christ."
The Warming Center started this
season on November 10, 2025 and finished
on March 27, 2026. On March 28,
while hosting a Groundcover News
stand at the Dance for Mother Earth
Powwow, I ran into Resident Pastor
Sarah Rutherford of First Presbyterian,
and she informed me about the church
having a discussion about having said
"yes" to the Daytime Warming Center.
I couldn’t make the discussion in
person, so Pastor Rutherford sent me
a YouTube video of it titled, “Exploring
The Faith / Learning from our Experience
of saying Yes to the Warming
Center.”
In this YouTube discussion Jane
Dutton, a former professor for forty
years who focuses on compassion in
the workplace and a First Pres Church
member, explored how this experience
affected First Pres volunteers
individually and the church community
as a whole. Dutton shared
see YES page 11 
׉	 7cassandra://LGHBvCAi-kGagLCaNYGUnGSU7kAjzfG3YeRQyWvvRBQQ` iI;=$U׉E:MAY 1, 2026
COMMUNITY
content CORRECTIONS
In the April 17, 2026 edition of Groundcover News, in "Pinball Pete's comes to the heart of Ann Arbor," the
owner of Bill's Beer Garden was incorrectly named. Scot Greig is the owner of Bill's Beer Garden.
In "Disability Revolution Club" a sentence regarding the original leadership of the club was erroneous quoted,
and physically redacted from many copies.
community EVENTS
APPRENTICESHIP FAIR
Friday, May 1, 4 - 7 p.m,Ypsilanti
High School. This annual fair, organized
by the Job Developer's Alliance,
is aimed at high school
students and adults looking to find
apprenticeships. Attendees have the
chance to learn more about apprenticeship
programs where participants
would learn a skill or trade
under a professional in the field on
the job. Please register in advance:
www.bit.ly/4iVB6xY
MAY DAY DINNER IN HONOR
OF FARM AND FOOD
WORKERS
Friday, May 1, 4-7 p.m. Tantre Farm,
2510 Hayes Rd, Chelsea. Everyone is
invited to a deep local dinner. Free to
farm and food service workers for
their most valuable work. Asking $10
per eater donation. Offered by community
farm chef Kori Kanayama and
guest chef Farmer Richard Andres.
YPSI MAY DAY
Saturday, May 2, all day.
11 a.m., 9/11 Memorial (Cross/
Perrin), May Day march.
12-4 p.m, Frog Island Park, Workshops
and discussions. It’s a potluck,
bring things to share! Childcare
will be provided.
4-7 p.m. Frog Island Park, Assembly
of neighborhood assemblies. Come
speak with local popular assemblies
and neighborhood rapid response
groups. Share best practices, lessons
learned, updates and goals.
8-10 p.m. Frog Island Park,
Documentary film screening of "The
Elements of Mutual Aid." The world
premiere of the first episode of a
4-part docuseries on liberatory
mutual aid.
PAPER PAPER ART BOOK
FAIR
Saturday, May 2, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and
Sunday, May 3, 12-5 p.m. Cluster
Museum, 307 N Main St. Ann Arbor.
Paper Paper is an independent art
book fair in its first year, organized
by artists and held in an independent
art space. The fair brings together
contemporary artists, small presses
and independent publishers working
in printed and bound formats. A Zine
Swap will also be featured, and
anyone is welcome to come peruse,
contribute, leave and take a zine
during the fair.
YDL REPAIR CLINIC
Saturday, May 2, 1:30-3 p.m. Ypsilanti
District Library-Michigan Ave,
Program Room. Bring your broken
zippers, fraying hems, busted bags,
and battle-worn jeans. Repair Clinic
is free, drop-in, no appointment
needed! Just show up with the thing
that needs saving.
A2 ROLLER DERBY
Saturday, May 2, 4:30-8 p.m. Buhr
Park Outdoor Ice Arena, 2751 Packard
St Ann Arbor. Home Gamer #1:
A2 Roller Derby vs. Detroit. Doors
open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 5
p.m. and 7 p.m.
STAR WARS DAY
(OBSERVED)
Sunday, May 3, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Ann
Arbor downtown library, 343 S. Fifth
Ave. Ann Arbor. "May the Fourth Be
With You!" You don't need to travel
to a galaxy far, far away to celebrate
Star Wars Day. Just come to the
Downtown Library! We will have
photo ops, games, crafts, screenings,
music, and more! Costumes
are welcome, but please leave
lightsabers and blasters at home!
THE ROAD HOME SCREENING
Thursday, May 7, 6 p.m. Michigan
Theater, 603 E. Liberty St., Ann
Arbor. The Road Home is a documentary
exploring mental health,
housing insecurity and homelessness
in Washtenaw County, highlighting
community efforts and
challenges. Local organizations face
fragmented responses, funding cuts
and limiting support. The film's goal
is to unite stakeholders, raise awareness
and inspire collective action to
ensure compassionate, sustainable
solutions. Reserve your free ticket at
marquee-arts.org
SUSHANNA SHAKUR "MEMORIES
OF MY REVOLUTIONARY
BROTHER"
Saturday, May 9, 2-4 p.m. Blackstone
Bookstore, 214 W Michigan
Ave, Ypsilanti. Join author and lifelong
Detroit activist Shushanna
Shakur as she discusses and signs
her personal memoir about her
influential brother, Chockwe
Lumumba — the revolutionary
attorney, organizer and former
Mayor of Jackson, MS. He earned
national recognition for unwavering
fight for the freedom and
empowerment of his people.
REVOLUTIONARY FOOD
GATHERING
Saturday, May 9, 5-7 p.m. Ann
Arbor Friends Meeting House,
1420 Hill St., Ann Arbor. Potluck
and discussion to discover who we
are in relationship to our food, the
earth and each other. Hosted by
Groundcover News and Purslane
Commons.
CINETOPIA FILM FESTIVAL
Saturday, May 9, 5-7 p.m. Michigan
Theater. Cinetopia brings audiences
and filmmakers together to
celebrate bold cinema, independent
voices, and films you cannot see
anywhere else. Experience a
curated lineup designed by people
who love film as much as you do.
As one of Michigan’s premier film
festivals, Cinetopia brings together
independent films, Michigan-made
shorts, and fresh voices from
around the world. Every selection
is chosen for originality, perspective
and impact.
marquee-arts.org/cinetopia/
DANCE INTO ACTION
Saturday, May 30, 4-8:30 p.m. hear.
say brewing, 2350 W. Liberty St.,
Ann Arbor. Presented by Pilar's
Foundation. Uniting to benefit local
immigrant families. Live music by
Jive Colossus, Killer Diller, Backbeat
Manifesto. Food and drink
from Pilar's Tamales and hear.say
brewing. Purchase tickets at pilarsfoundation.org
or inside Pilar's
Tamales.
Submit an event to be featured
in the next edition:
submissions@groundcovernews.
com
GET TO
KNOW YDL!
WHERE TO FIND US:
Online at ypsilibrary.org
Call us at 734-482-4110.
TO GET YOUR LIBRARY CARD:
1) Fill out the easy online form at
ypsilibrary.org/library-cards.
2) Call 734-482-4110
3) Or stop by any YDL location!
DON’T HAVE A DRIVER’S
LICENSE? We can work with
a variety of IDs to get you your
card.
Seed Library
All locations
(including Bookmobile)
There are more than 200 unique
varieties of fruit and vegetable
seeds in our Seed Library. Come
to any location, including the
Bookmobile, to check out our
selection, or donate your own
extra seeds.
FEATURED EVENT
Spring Native
Plant Swap
Sat. | May 16 | 11am-12pm
YDL-Whittaker
Drop by and exchange your
favorite native plants with
fellow gardeners. Bring your
own plants to share and leave
with new treasures for your
garden!
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
MOTHER'S DAY
GEMMA BONNEY
U-M student contributor
“Fix it or shut it down!” rang out from
the small crowd gathered on the curb
outside of the Central Campus Classroom
Building (CCCB) on U-M
campus on April 10. The statements
"Mold = State Sanctioned Death Sentence"
and "Free Krystal Clark!" were
written across posterboards and displayed
to the public. Cars and a Blue
Bus honked in support, and several
people driving by looked on in curiosity,
unaware that at a correctional facility
just 8.6 miles away, there are
approximately 1,800 women living in
an unsafe environment. Mothers fighting
for improved healthcare and living
conditions. Daughters fighting for
their lives.
Two hours prior to this scene, about
40 people got plates of food and found
a seat in Room 0420 of the CCCB. They
were gathered there for a Lunch &
Learn, before a rally for Justice For
Women at Huron Valley.
The event was put on by three organizations
including the sociology
department’s Project Community
course; Survivors Speak, a nonprofit
with the goal “to give the voices back
My Mother ...
The outstanding and wise woman,
she never gives up hope and never
gives in, but faces many obstacles
silently. She is my favorite character.
She is known as Felicia Wilbert,
“Truths or Lies” author to you, but she
is known to our family as Mother,
granny and friend. My mother cleans,
cooks, tussles our obstacles while writing
at late hours feeding her fans literature
fantasy stories, whether true or
false.
People told her she was stupid, ugly
and wasn’t going to make it and I, her
son, encouraged her to focus, breathe
and launch because she is beautiful,
creative, and she is going to make it!
They were haters and they couldn’t
read anyways. She laughed with confidence
knowing I believed in her. I
needed her for many years, for her
knowledge and strength to complete
my essays because I would undergo
writer’s block.
In the summer, Mom would give me
real lemonade squeezed down to the
pulp, add sugar, add water and chill it
with some ice cubes to help me, and in
the winter mama’s hot cocoa with caramel
drizzled around the coffee cup,
warm milk on the stove, cocoa powder
with whipped cream and gummy
SAVON SALVADOR
Groundcover vendor No. 273
bears with sprinkles on top to warm
me up. And it worked, I would write
like I was making a song featuring
Drake. Moments when I was down,
she always slid money to grease my
pockets but never overstepped; I
would sort clothes and mysteriously
there was money in my pockets.
My mother went through dark times.
We didn’t always have lights, but we
had candles to meditate. She didn’t
even buy anything for herself unless
she knew we were covered and that
was her rerunning clothes. She just
asked God in prayer, “Lord, after all
my financial obligations are resolved,
may I buy myself some Bath and Body
Works so that I may smell outstanding.
Amen.“ Who wouldn’t love someone
to those who have been unjustly
silenced;” and Michigan Innocence
Club, a student-led organization based
around innocence work and the criminal
justice system. During the information
session, attendees heard about
the conditions at Women’s Huron
Valley correctional facility (WHV),
along with the story of one woman in
particular: Krystal Clark.
WHV is the only women’s prison in
Michigan, and the conditions are horrendous
on every front. As was
explained at the Lunch & Learn,
women with health issues are repeatedly
given inadequate care, or denied
it altogether. Their medication is not
being given, their dosage is reduced or
substitutions are made to their original
prescription.
Women have complained about the
mold infesting the prison, and there
are reports of inmates being ordered
to clean it off the walls without masks
on, and workers painting over it in
order to pass inspections. One woman
was in need of mental health assistance
and upon request was denied
access to the help she needed. She saw
guards place bets on her likelihood of
committing suicide before later taking
her own life. Overall, the facility is
costing women their mental and physical
health, when it should only be
their time they are losing.
Krystal Clark is experiencing health
complications due to the mold in the
prison. Clark has been incarcerated for
over 13 years, and in that time, her
health has visibly deteriorated. In 2023
it was found that Clark had the mold
Aspergillus growing out of her ears and
in her lungs. This common mold can
cause diseases “including localized
infections, fatal diseases [and] allergic
responses,” according to the National
Library of Medicine. The mold in her
ears is visible, and growing to overtake
her ears. She is having a hard time
breathing, among other issues, and
her face is drooping, contributing to
the visible difference in her health.
Clark is in desperate need of help, and
the group championing her cause has
recognized that the best person to save
her now is Michigan Governor
Gretchen Whitmer.
Whitmer has the ability to provide
medical clemency, which is a type of
executive pardon. If provided to Clark,
she would serve the rest of her sentence
outside of jail, and would be able
to seek the life-saving care that she
needs.
MAY 1, 2026
Sentenced beyond bars: the fight for justice at WHV
This campaign is about more than
just Clark’s health and freedom — the
broader goal is to get the facility shut
down. The women in the prison and
the organizations outside who are
working on this do not want to see
other women suffer the way Clark has.
Anyone can help. People can find
links to the emails of the Parole Board
as well as Governor Whitmer on the
website for Clark’s freedom at this
freekrystal.com/support/
see KRYSTAL page 13 
who is unselfish and wholeheartedly
supportive? I couldn’t trade nobody
else with my mother because she was
just that caring.
When you see her on Liberty Street
in Ann Arbor, uplift her, give her a
smile and the biggest hug you can.
Because she has had rocks thrown at
her instead of marshmallows. She has
had family and friends turn on her
because she had a vision and purpose.
She cried at night because she didn’t
think there was any help, hope or
desire. Her heart sank because they
attacked us and wanted to kill her only
child and world. She lost everything to
build her son back up and keep her
only grandchild alive but also safe.
That’s why she writes, because I told
her to write about her pain.
I want you to do that for me, supporters.
Don’t be rude, be kind and
supportive to Felicia Wilbert. I want
you to look at your trials and tribulations
and reflect on what has happened
in your life and reach out and
know that as mothers and fathers you
can always make it — just try because
my mother did it!
I love you Groundcover, I love you
Felicia Wilbert — because that’s my
Mother.
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TRANSIT
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
9
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
LIBRARIES
A library of support
MARIE
Groundcover contributor
Over the past few years I have traveled
the country, and while doing so
visited several libraries. During my travels,
I have experienced library staff
attempting to restrict my library use
and staff treating people in the library
differently based on background.
One library, located in a small town
along the northern bank of Lake Huron,
upset me so much I painted a sign that
said “solid rights protest” and began
wearing it around my neck while in the
library. When the head librarian
returned after a week of being out due
to illness, I was surprised to be reunited
with a family friend of nearly three
decades. For about a month, the librarian
and I often enjoyed at least one
allergen-friendly meal together a day,
while I participated in library activities,
was introduced to library patrons,
combed through books in an extensive
art collection and painted.
Sometimes I opted to paint inside
and sometimes I sat outside under the
gazebo erected in a small park across
from the log cabin style library. When
the library was closed I enjoyed the
nearby nature trails, watched the
comedy of the season’s water fowl and
attempted to identify different foliage.
Experiencing discrimination and
prejudice in this small yet beautiful
library sent me on a mission to continue
visiting libraries while traveling,
and to better understand the experience
of unconstitutional barriers to
equitable access to library resources. In
the process, I discovered that Ypsilanti
District Library (YDL) was the first
library in Michigan to have a full-time
licensed social worker on staff. Unlike
most libraries, YDL is working to eliminate
or at least decrease access barriers
to resources, especially for underserved
populations such as the homeless,
housing-insecure, elderly, those living
in poverty,
formerly incarcerated
patrons, those experiencing an emergent
need or those experiencing a crisis.
Library social work programs may be
thought of as an extension of more traditional
resource access. Unlike traditional
library staff, a library social
worker is an extension of the library.
They are resource experts with specialized
training to help with a trauma-informed,
culturally-responsive
approach that often extends beyond
the walls of the physical library.
YDL’s Library Care Coordination
(social work) Program began assisting
patrons in January 2025, at YDL’s Superior
branch, with a few EMU social work
interns, under the guidance of EMU
professors. The social work program at
YDL began operating with funding
secured for three years, each year contingent
on approval, through the
Washtenaw County Community Mental
Health’s portion of the Public Safety
and Mental Health Preservation Millage.
By April 2025, their first full-time,
licensed clinical social worker, Kat
Layton, had been hired, and was available
when the Michigan Avenue branch
reopened after lengthy renovations.
Services are available at all
three
branches of the YDL, however the
Michigan Avenue branch presents with
a higher need and demand. YDL’s LCC
program recently entered its second
year of the three-year grant.
The American Library Association
has a code of ethics and a Library Bill of
Rights, to help guide making informed
decisions and drive professional
improvements “in this changing information
environment.” YDL recognized
that many libraries have policies that
limit library access especially for marginalized
populations such as the
homeless. One example is requiring a
qualifying address, or excluding specific
addresses known to belong to
agencies that serve the homeless such
as the Delonis Center.
Some libraries such as those at the
University of Michigan Undergraduate
library and the Duderstadt offer
24-hour access, which can only be officially
accessed by MCard (U-M identification
card) holders. Numerous
Washtenaw County residents have
complained about U-M library staff
profiling, accosting, assaulting, looking
through belongings and trespassing
patrons who are using the library as
intended during operational hours.
Therefore, it appears U-M and other
libraries are regularly violating patrons’
constitutional rights to safely and equitably
access publicly funded library
resources. YDL is reported to have trespassed
or limited access for some
patrons; however, according to YDL
patrons and staff, these restrictions are
often related to violence or drug use
while on library premises. Fair access to
library resources may benefit from federal
intervention, similar to formal
mandates to desegregate libraries
during the 1960s.
YDL is not the first library in the
country to introduce social work. The
move is modeled after successful efforts
including San Francisco, Utah, Minnesota,
and New York. San Francisco, in
2009, was the first library in the country
to have a full-time social worker. One
library system in Arizona opted for a
nurse who could address physical
health needs on-site and facilitate
access to medical care. According to
EMU interns for the 2025-2026 school
year, other libraries in Michigan have
recently started similar social work
YDL's Eastern Michigan University social work interns for 2025-26
school year, Ashley and DesaRay, during a resource fair at YDL.
programs, including Plymouth, Monroe
and Grosse Pointe.
Ryan Dowd, a well-known shelter
director and advocate for serving
homeless patrons from the Chicago
area, stated, “Staff at public libraries
interact with almost as many homeless
individuals as staff at shelters do.”
Several published resources, local
library staff and patrons recognize and
value how important libraries are for
accessing resources, obtaining guidance,
and seeking shelter from the
elements.
YDL staff across all of its branches
expressed positive feedback related to
training developed by Ryan Dowd and
from hiring professionals with expertise
related to de-escalation, trauma
debriefing after traumatic experiences,
mental health, and substance use.
Library staff feel that, with the addition
of social workers, clerks and librarians
are better able to manage the expectations
of their more traditional assigned
roles, while the social workers are better
equipped to identify needs, eliminate
barriers and link patrons with community
resources best suited to those
needs before they escalate.
More than a year into its inception
the LCC program has grown from a few
interns compiling paper resources a
few hours a week at the Superior
branch. At this time, the library now has
a resource table and a white board that
is updated weekly, and has transitioned
from scheduled appointments
to
include regularly scheduled drop-in
times. A major accomplishment in 2026
was the addition of an interactive online
resource list on the YDL website, so
physically obtaining paper resources
during library hours is no longer
necessary.
Since January 2025, the LCC program
-
grew from a few patron contacts at one
branch, to over 1300 documented interactions
across multiple branches,
according to the last quarterly grant
report. These documented interactions,
however, are known as not fully representative
of the true number as numerous
contacts are under-documented. At
the end of March, EMU was still waiting
for Institutional Review Board approval
for its formal evaluation process. However,
the YDL community speaks highly
of program growth and meaningful
impact for all patrons.
Services currently available include,
but are not limited to, quick access to a
hygiene drawer, housing advocacy for
both the unhoused or housing-insecure,
meals, clothing and obtaining
identification from the Secretary of
State. During the first year of the LCC,
YDL became a Fare Deal Authorized
Agency through AATA; expanded
resource fairs; and continues to build
its partnerships with
local
organizations.
Layton explained, “Coordinated
events and bringing outside partners
into the library meet people where they
are at.”
Social workers, clerks and librarians
expressed they are grateful to have supports
in place to better serve patrons in
a deliberate and meaningful way in the
community instead of being limited to
confines of the library.
Older patrons have benefited with
help navigating discrimination related
to housing, as well as questions related
to obtaining and maintaining healthcare.
Homeless patrons or those living
in poverty have been assisted with
transportation, phones and paperwork.
Patrons who were not born in the
United States have been assisted with
obtaining replacement documents,
addressing language barriers and
obtaining immigration paperwork.
They can feel better knowing the community
is willing to support them as
evidenced by the response to a recent
ICE raid across the street from the
downtown YDL branch. During the
April raid, ICE agents stopped traffic,
and ICE whistles were reportedly heard
being blown across several city blocks.
One patron, who is a homeless young
adult, stated, “Most of the resources we
already know about. The difference is
that Kat doesn’t just give you the piece
of paper for you to figure it out. Kat gives
you step-by-step instructions, and
see LIBRARY next page 
MAY 1, 2026
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RECOVERY
Dear
Alcohol,
MARQUETTA Q CLEMENTS
Groundcover contributor
Dear Crack,
I love that I hate you
I hate that I love you
Placed not a dime above you
Honestly, I trust you
How do you break and build me?
Capture but I feel free
Puppet Master
Along you string me
I just want to feel peace
Can’t heal unless the pain sinks
Choose you over my dreams
Choose you over family
Alone and weak, I’m Bambi
Conquered fears without thee
Surrender all, Defeat
With sobriety I am King
With you, I can’t see me
I’d probably end up 6 deep
Scared to go beneath
God please protect and mold me
A fiend that’s the old me
You no longer control me
I miss you, I claim boldly
But I will not let you hold me
Goodbye dear friend, I’m worthy
Is this love?
Is this real?
I gave you all of me
You don’t seem to to care how I feel
I accomplish a goal
Celebrate with you as a meal
You pick a fight with my emotions
And I destroy everything I’ve built
Why do you hurt me?
Why do I let you?
I feel ashamed that I kept you
Misused and abused
Everyday I regret you
I’m boo boo the fool
And today, I accept the truth
This toxicity is poison
I choose me
I am woken
I admit I am broken
Tunnel vision, I am focused
I choose God
And I noticed
This life chapter I’m closing
I am free
 YES from page 6
insightful, impactful stories and
reflections from volunteers who
served our unhoused neighbors.
This discussion helps to discern
how faith-based organizations can
make a difference in their community
through engagement projects
like hosting the Daytime Warming
Center.
I watched the video in full and
was impressed by the discussion
and the impact it had on this place
of worship and its congregation.
Dutton led the discussion where
church members listened and participated
in meaningful dialogue.
Throughout the presentation
Dutton showed video interviews of
Church member volunteers who
expressed their experiences journeying
into the unknown. During
these interviews one can observe
that the interviewees experienced
meaningful purpose from hosting
the DWC.
In one of the interview sessions,
Pat Gilbreath expressed that she
felt as if, "We were not just helping
them, we were helping ourselves ...
We felt kinda like the Grinch. Our
hearts grew three sizes because the
response received from our
unhoused neighbors was amazing.
It made us feel wonderful."
A different volunteer, Andy Price,
said with a hint of emotion during
the interview, “I’ve enjoyed talking
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
to you these past couple of weeks,
but I hope I don't see you here next
year.”
Pastors interviewed included
Associate Pastor Melissa Anne
Rogers, Associate Pastor Mark
Mares, Resident Pastor Hanna
Richards, and Resident Pastor
Sarah Rutherford.
Church volunteers interviewed
included Pat Gilbreath, Daine
Knibbs, Andy Price, Daine
Tamblyn.
The first interview was with Resident
Pastor Rutherford. She set the
scene on how they became the host
for the DWC. Rutherford explained
how there were several meetings
with DWC staff in preparation
before actually hosting the DWC.
From December 8-19, during
record low temperatures, First Pres
utilized 45 church member volunteers
for the two-week period.
“Hosting the DWC on short
notice stretched us logistically, but
as we reflect on the experience
afterwards, I am overwhelmed with
gratitude for the gift of hosting our
neighbors. It was a blessing for our
congregation to grow in Christ’s
love for all people,” said Resident
Pastor Rutherford.
Shoutout to Lead Pastor David
Prentice-Hyers and a big thank you
to all who volunteered at the Daytime
Warming Center.
Stigma vs. Everybody
DAVID CRANE
Groundcover contributor
We say we want to be seen.
But being seen is exposure.
So we represent the version that won't get rejected and call it
growth.
Don't confuse survival with healing.
We don't thrive in chaos; we adapt to it.
Intensity feels like home.
Peace feels like a setup.
We don't fear being misunderstood.
We fear being understood.
Being seen doesn't free you —
It removes your excuses.
Paid in Silence
DAVID CRANE
No one claps when you choose restraint.
No crowd gathers when you swallow anger and let it die unnamed.
But somewhere —
in the quiet architecture of your own mind —
a foundation sets that no chaos can collect from.
 LIBRARY from last page
makes sure you have what you need
to accomplish it. She will tell you
exactly what buses you need to take,
and makes sure you have the bus
fare to do it ... I would really like to
start a youth group for teens and
young adults that teaches de-escalation
and actively gets them
involved in the community through
activities. It’s harder to get two
people to become friends than it is
to get two people to fight.”
Kat explained that her goals
included “not just helping people,
but assisting them so they will be
able to help someone else accomplish
the same task in the future … I
wasn’t trying to completely reinvent
the wheel. The goal is to prevent
duplication of services, identify
gaps, and serve as a resource hub.”
Like San Francisco, YDL hopes to
eventually have peers integrated
into the programming. (Peers are
people with lived experience who
receive training to use their experiences
to help others navigate similar
situations.)
On April 15, during its monthly
board meeting, YDL trustees
announced they had hired a new
licensed social worker. Kat transitioned
this quarter to a new job
developing programming with the
state. During a recent interview, Kat
shared she cried several times after
making the very difficult decision to
move on to the new opportunity.
According to the YDL Board of
Trustees, the new library social
worker, Tommy, is scheduled to
begin work on May 4, and is
expected to be working full-time by
the end of the month.
Arguably, Kat was a great fit to
help “kick-start” YDL’s library social
work program, as she was already
well-known and trusted by the
community members she was serving.
The new social worker, according
to the Board of Trustees, has
years of experience in the field and
has a spouse who is a librarian.
While the personnel may change
and there may be modifications to
the program we can’t currently predict,
the
social work pilot will
continue.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
TECHNOLOGY
MAY 1, 2026
AI digital transformation: community interests,
socio-technological impacts and the future of work
From the perspective of ethics and
human values, Professor Eric Swanson
of the U-M Philosophy Department
and Anja Sheppard, PhD student in
Robotic AI at the University of Michigan
College of Engineering, have
shared their ideas.
Will: What is Artificial Intelligence
(AI)?
Anja: Generally, we define artificial
intelligence as something that mimics
human intelligence, and when people
think about AI, they might think about
ChatGPT. There is actually a debate on
whether this counts as artificial general
intelligence because ChatGPT,
which is an LLM (Large Language
Model), has not accomplished human
reasoning. LLMs are very good at generating
language. If I ask it to write an
essay for me, it would sound very
human-like. But the underlying ideas
of the essay may not be factually correct
or make sense. And this is the reasoning
gap that I was talking about.
Will: Why do interdisciplinary
researchers call AI “digital
transformation?”
Anja: I think people are thinking
about AI as a transformation or a revolution
because it is going to substantially
change how people live, learn
and work. Just think about the internet,
which similarly revolutionized the
way we live today.
Will: What is the difference between
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)
and Robotic AI (RAI)?
Anja: So, the big challenge for robotics
is actually physically engaging with
the world. Robots have to safely operate
to complete physical tasks. This
involves understanding sensory information
such as from cameras, microphones,
radars
and lidars
(light
detection and ranging). This differs
from AI like ChatGPT because robotics
have to understand more sensors and
they have outputs, with physical commands.
ChatGPT takes in text and outputs
texts. It is a fundamentally harder
problem to design AI for robotics.
Why? Because there is far more textbased
information on the internet
which can help us train AI like
ChatGPT than there is data about
robots. You cannot use the internet as
a source of training data for robot AI.
Will: A couple of years ago, ChatGPT
made a huge splash in the mass media
and the high tech world. Tell us more
about what ChatGPT is. What are the
benefits? What are the
consequences?
Anja: ChatGPT is a LLM. It is very
good at generating texts. But the drawback
is that it is not always trustworthy
WILL SHAKESPEARE
Groundcover vendor No. 258
because it is prone to hallucination, or
making things up, basically. [There
are] benefits, for one example, in programming
or coding, ChatGPT is very
good. This makes programming a lot
more efficient, and less tedious. In
general, people see it as a tool that
improves efficiency. As a consequence,
improving efficiency can take
away some of the humanity in our
work. For example, in the arts, what
does it mean to watch a movie written
by an AI versus made by human
beings?
Will: Our readers may want to learn
more about how AI would displace
many jobs, especially factory work and
other occupations such as engineering,
writing, journalism, legal researchers,
librarians, teachers, movie roles,
healthcare or hospitality services.
Anja: The jury is still out on this. We
are still trying to understand how AI
will impact the workforce. There are
already reports of entry-level programming
jobs being out. So, coming
up with strategies to mitigate a huge
loss of jobs is really important. The federal
government has a job to do: protect
people from displacement by
regulating the AI industry.
Will: What is the future of AI technology
in American society within the
next two years? Within the next five
years? Within the next 10 years?
Anja: I do not think I have a good
answer for this. I just say that AI will
impact pretty much everything we do.
Questions asked of Dr. Eric
Swanson
Will: What are the general and specific
impacts on American society of
AI? Any hope for Gen Z students who
major in computer science?
Eric: Great question! Current AI has
two impacts on American society, culture,
and work that I especially want to
highlight.
The first is that AI really isn’t the sort
of thing that makes commitments to
people. Instead, its outputs are more
like a prediction that is influenced by
Anja Sheppard (left), PhD student in Robotic AI at the University of
Michigan College of Engineering, and Professor Eric Swanson
(Right) of the U-M Philosophy Department have shared their ideas on
AI from the perspective of ethics and human values.
what people in general want to hear.
By contrast, a person generally has a
point of view that involves certain
commitments. One person’s point of
view involves being a farmer, another
person’s involves being a physical
therapist, and their expertise and
experience influence their commitments.
AI isn’t anything like that. It’ll
be interesting to see to what extent
people embrace or reject a form of life
that doesn’t have the kinds of commitments
that we do.
The second impact involves what the
French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre
called ‘seriality.’ When we relate to
each other in a ‘serial’ way, Sartre says,
we are anonymous to each other and
interchangeable with each other. We
don’t have any shared project or goals.
It’s like waiting for a bus; our actions
are organized by waiting in a line, but
your project of getting where you need
to go isn’t really related to my project
of getting where I need to go. We don’t
share projects or goals with current AI
at all; we treat it serially and its treatment
of us has lots of serial properties.
Of course, in some ways it’s good for AI
to treat us anonymously! But I wonder
whether the influence of AI will make
people treat each other as interchangeable
in new ways. This might
make people less inclined to make
commitments to each other, and I’m
not really sure what that would look
like. I myself suspect that it would be a
sadder, less meaningful world, but
perhaps another interesting perspective
is that it would be a freer one.
Will: In view of the divergent views
of AI from the mass media, what is the
public interest? What are the ethical
concerns from the perspective of
public values?
Eric: Another great question, and it
interacts with the first!
In part because AI doesn’t make
commitments and we don’t make
commitments to it, and because our
interactions with it are relatively serial,
it’s pretty easy to just throw it at a problem
and see what happens. It’s not like
it’ll get mad at you or resent you in any
meaningful way! And going back to
your first question, you can just tell it
that it’s overreacting if it does produce
mad sounding text, and close your
browser if you want! People do ignore
and dismiss each other, but it’s not as
easy to do. And people who know you
could just ask AI will sometimes resent
you not just asking AI. But the drudge
work involved with trying and failing
to make progress on problems is absolutely
crucial to becoming an expert
on something. It’s going to be a real
challenge to figure out how to balance
the availability of a shortcut with the
importance of struggling to understand.
So much in philosophy is the
struggling to understand — better
understanding the nuances of the
question you started with without necessarily
answering every aspect of it. I
hope AI use in colleges and universities
doesn’t make that seem less valuable
than it is.
History of AI
The online magazine "Tableau" discussed
the origin and development of
artificial intelligence. It is suggested
that AI can be traced to the Ancient
Greek period of 400 B.C.:
“The idea of ‘artificial intelligence’
goes back thousands of years, to
ancient philosophers considering
questions of life and death. In ancient
times, inventors made things called
‘automatons’ which were mechanical
see AI next page 
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MOTHER'S DAY
A Mother Attending
Her Daughter's Prom
A Mother attending her daughter’s Prom
What anticipation
To see Her wearing her glorious head covering
on her, anticipating Prom day
Then her full length Dress
that reflects Her First, her true Accomplishment Shine
And that is to cover Herself while working on her true Self
Her Worth!!!
The way She stands on that stage and smiles
For Her true accomplishments are,
Her knowing that to this day
It took awhile...
Now She has made Her goals Realities!!
Yet, I Knew that...
Although I was made to be absent from your,
Head Start, Elementary, and Middle School Graduations...
I will be on Time for all of the preparations and
Wanted as Well as Needed Presence for
My Baby Girl’s upcoming Prom
Who has become More of A Beautiful Young Lady, Always My Baby Girl,
My Precious, Beloved Daughter!!!
With "A Mother Attending Her Daughter’s Prom!!!"
 AI from last page
and moved independently of human
intervention. The word ‘automaton’
comes from ancient Greek, and means
‘acting of one’s own will.’ One of the earliest
records of an automaton comes
from 400 BCE and refers to a mechanical
pigeon created by a friend of the
philosopher Plato. Many years later,
one of the most famous automatons
was created by Leonardo da Vinci
around the year 1495.” Search the “Tableau"
website for more information.
AI as we know it today was born
between 1950 and 1956. The maturation
of AI was from 1957 to 1979. Some
scientists give credit to mathematician
Alan Turing for the computer science
programming language which revolutionized
systems technology during
and after World War II. After Turing,
there were several scientists. Edward
Feigenbaum and Joshua Lederberg
were some of the early people who in
1965 created the first “expert system”
which is described as a form of AI “programmed
to replicate the thinking and
decision-making of human beings.”
The Lawrence Livermore National
Research Lab of UC Berkeley discussed
the topic, “The Birth of Artificial
Intelligence (AI) research in terms
of key eras and concepts.” The lab suggested
that symbolic AI started in the
1950s to the 1980s with a focus on
using logic and rules to represent
knowledge. The machine learning of
the 1990s focused on algorithms that
allowed computers to learn from data.
The third key concept (2010 to the
present) focuses on deep learning
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
 KRYSTAL from page 8
There are sample emails written out right there on
the website for anyone willing to take a few short minutes
to copy and paste a message. Writing physical
letters is also helpful, and the Governor's address is
listed on that same page. More information is listed
on the website for anyone interested in learning more
about Krystal Clark, Women’s Huron Valley correctional
facility or how to be involved in their cause.
Just before heading out, Clark spoke to the people
LA SHAWN COURTWRIGHT
Groundcover writer
there rallying via a phone call. People were moved not
only by the pain in Clark’s voice and words, but also
by her resolve to continue to fight. She is a victim of
an unjust situation and a clear violation of the 8th
Amendment — the prohibition of cruel and unusual
punishment. As Washtenaw County Commissioner
Yousef Rabhi proclaimed during the rally, Clark was
sentenced to time behind bars, not to lose her health.
Her debt to society was not to be paid for with her life.
Clark extended her gratitude to everyone in the room,
and provided those participating with a greater sense
of what their voice was being used for. They all filed
outside and held their signs proudly while demanding
that the state “fix it or shut it down!” Krystal
Clarks's family has organized a fundraiser to support
her medical care upon release, www.freefunder.com/
campaign/medical-help-4-krystal
which features a subset of multi-layered
machines which work together as
neural networks to process complex
data,
learn from the data, and act
independently.
In 1956, at the Dartmouth University
conference on Alan Turing’s work on
machine intelligence, John McCarthy
coined the term “AI.” The bottom line,
according to the Lawrence Livermore
National Lab, is that “early research
focused on symbolic reasoning, followed
by expert systems in the 1980s,
eventually shifting to machine learning
and deep learning driven by big
data, leading to the current era of
“Generative AI.”
IBM.com provides the definition of
Generative AI: “Generative AI, sometimes
called gen AI, is artificial intelligence
(AI) that can create original
content such as text, images, video,
audio or software code in response to
a user’s prompt or request.” It continues,
“Generative AI relies on sophisticated
machine learning models called
deep learning models - algorithms that
simulate the learning and decision-making
processes of the human
brain. These models work by identifying
and encoding the patterns and
relationships in huge amounts of data,
and then using that information to
understand users' natural language
requests or questions and respond
with relevant new content.”
Community interests and
concerns
Recently, the news media, social
media and college communities have
been talking about AI. Today, the
American public and Washtenaw
County residents are trying to digest
and make sense of all the new headlines
— good or bad?
On March 16, 2026, some Groundcover
News writers, vendors, and volunteers
attended the Eastern Michigan
University “Generative AI” conference.
In Ann Arbor, at the University of
Michigan, there have been several
meetings and conferences on AI in
recent times. Across the U-M campus,
many students and faculty members
have been talking about the AI effects
on young people’s careers and employment
prospects.
From the government perspective,
AI must be regulated because of the
effects on children and teens. Parents
have expressed numerous concerns
about chatbots like ChatGPT, GEMINI,
and CLAUDE which have negative
influences on the lives of young
people. The Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) has launched an inquiry
into chatbots which act as companions
to consumers. The FTC has issued
section 6(b) orders to seven companies
that operate consumer-facing
chatbots. Below is the FTC’s regulatory
statement:
“Protecting kids online is a top priority
for the Trump-Vance FTC, and so
is fostering innovation in critical sectors
of our economy,” said FTC Chairman
Andrew N. Ferguson. “As AI
technologies evolve, it is important to
consider the effects chatbots can have
on children, while also ensuring that
the United States maintains its role as
a global leader in this new and exciting
industry. The study we’re launching
today will help us better understand
how AI firms are developing their
products and the steps they are taking
to protect children.”
From the business perspective, AI is
a bonanza for efficiency and profitability.
For the manufacturing industry,
robotic AI has helped the bottom
line by the adoption of Lean manufacturing
which increased the use of
robots as a tool in the production process.
U-M professor Jeffrey Liker is well
known for his research and book titled,
“The Toyota Way” about the Lean process.
The Silicon Valley and Wall Street
business ventures are bullish about
the transformation of business organizations
and market capitalization of
AI-related products. Computer chip
manufacturer NVIDIA and other hightech
companies are talking about
multi-trillion dollars in the value of
their stocks. They have said very little
about high-tech workers who will be
displaced or fired.
There is a belief that AI will change
everything in business and society.
How can we deal with the issues of
massive AI data centers and rising
consumer energy costs?
AI is spreading like wildfire. We urge
communities such as Washtenaw
County to hold community conversations
on AI, human values and the
future of work. Questions about AI
need to be explored and answered in
high-engagement meetings. Sharing
ideas and feeling empowered can go a
long way to help our society deal with
the challenges and potential impacts
of AI.
13
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PUZZLES
CROSSWORD
International Network of Street Papers
Fool Moon
EMERI JADE BEY
Groundcover vendor No. 660
In April’s teasing, temperamental light,
When winter loosens but won’t quite concede,
The streets of Ann Arbor bloom overnight
With papier-mâché dreams and riotous creed.
FestiFools rises—half jest, half lore—
A carnival stitched from wit and glue,
Where giants wobble and spirits roar
In colors no ordinary springtime knew.
A dragon of headlines bends through the square,
Satire stitched in its shimmering scales;
A politician puppet with windblown hair
Trips over punchlines the crowd unveils.
There’s laughter loud as a Midwest sky,
Children pointing at creatures absurd,
While elders grin as the fools go by—
Truth disguised in the ridiculous word.
ACROSS
1. "We're #1!," e.g.
6. Low-___ diet
10. Computer architecture
acronym
14. Kind of ticket
15. ___-Altaic languages
16. "What's gotten ___ you?"
17. Pricker
18. Japanese soup
19. Hardly haute cuisine
20. Clerical drudges
23. "___ Flux"
24. Couch
25. Laborer who moves bricks
(Brit.)
28. A Judd
30. "___ we having fun yet?"
31. Pristine
36. Drop, to an editor
38. Cow chow
39. French Sudan, today
40. Commiserator's words
45. Mother Teresa, for one
46. Whip
47. Fit as a ___
49. Mark over a long vowel
52. Worse than fair
53. Sophomore, e.g.
57. Old European capital
58. ___ Bowl
59. Flooded
62. Coagulate
63. Carbon compound
64. Bar offering
65. Does some tailoring
66. Regard
67. Neuters
DOWN
1. Short order, for short
2. "___ Baby Baby" (Linda Ronstadt
hit)
3. Above
4. Current
5. Open rear seat in old cars
6. Spice in Indian cooking
7. Husk
8. Coarse file
9. Loose garment pulled in at
the waist
10. Conservative doctrine
11. Arm of the sea
12. Cache
13. Small woods
21. N.Y. neighbor
22. 18-wheeler
25. Muslim pilgrimage
26. After-lunch sandwich
27. Kosher ___
28. Civil rights org.
29. Chemical compound
32. "___'s the breaks!"
33. Full house, e.g.
34. Jewish month
35. Sup
37. Petitions
41. God with a hammer
42. Slouched over
43. Roswell sightings
44. Organic matter used for fuel
48. Draft
49. Soil enricher
50. Like an old woman
51. Kind of drive
52. Church song
54. "Clair de ___"
55. ___ vera
56. Houston acronym
60. Diffident
61. Towel stitching
Groundcover News is seeking more crossword writers! If you are interested
in contributing crosswords to our paper on a regular basis, please
reach out at contact@groundcovernews.com
The air tastes faintly of paint and rain,
Of cardboard kingdoms and clever deceit;
Each step a dance on the edge of the sane,
Each float a question rolling down Main Street.
For here, the world is turned askew,
Not broken—just tilted to help us see:
That folly, when it’s honest and true,
Is another form of clarity.
And when the last grand puppet dips from view,
And the drums fade soft into memory’s pool,
Ann Arbor returns—yet somehow new—
Forever marked by the wisdom of fools.
MAY 1, 2026
Liz dressed in a fuzzy purple monster costume enjoying the Fool
Moon street party with her friend.
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS April 17, 2026 edition
C A R D I O G R A P H
T E C H N O C R A C I E S
M A R I E A N T O I N E T T E
A R E N A
U S E
S T A G S T O N E
S A L
E N S C O L T
E R A
E R A S
A L O U D A L O F T
A B A S E S
O M B U D S M A N
I R A D E S O T I C E M S
S E M I S C O A T I
L A W
A G I N M A R R Y R I C O
A G A D O M
C A B L E T E L E V I S I O N
E L A B O R A T E N E S S
E X T R A V A G A N T
N I T R O
׉	 7cassandra://XCjsdp220vFEQhCLg2n78oWyvTXdn9XNSDq3YJtT8gEPe` iI;=$`׉E4MAY 1, 2026
SPRING
Reinforced spring recollections
GREGORY MAISONVILLE
Groundcover contributor
A tea at Moka coffee house after
Easter mass at St. Mary’s Student Parish
has me in a pleasurable remembrance
of yesterday’s merriment at Hash Bash.
The “He has risen” philosophy ties in
well with the buoyant atmosphere of
business and the recreational bliss
awarded now to tokers. Much alike to
Christ’s early following, an underground
wave of resistance has solidified
for a superior society and negated the
former mainstreamesque views of
closed-mindedness.
Hard not to notice the similarities of
the clusters of followers today at church
with the groups of tokers yesterday, all
of whom wear the faces of expectancy
for want of a notable difference in
thought — dismissing the heavy-handedness
of our society to the foils of yesteryear,
and the building blocks of
mercy and forgiveness laying claim to
our constructive approach to a future
merged with the earnest appreciation
of our elder-taught timeless altruisms,
albeit mixed with their deficiency of
morality at times in the past.
Like most people, spring is a very
important time for me … March 17 celebrating
my Irishness, the 22nd being
my 10-year sobriety date from my drug
of choice — alcohol; the 26th my 55th
birthday; April 1 and the Artemis 2
launch to the moon; Hash Bash and
Easter. All was incorporative of my
individual specificities that define who
and what I am in a mental pragmatic
semblance of what my future holds
from the melancholic to euphoric past.
A typical example would be my substantive
prayers for those astronauts
making it safely into space, due to the
nightmare of when a vice-principal
knocked on the door of Mrs. Guest’s
11th grade French class to inform us of
the tragedy that would shape our views
on space exploration for decades to
come. (Mrs. McAuliffe and crew will be
with us always.) Now the recently
launched Artemis is poised to irrevocably
bind the younger generations to
the magnitude of space exploration
and colonization ... what a wonderful
world, Louis Armstrong and Ray Bradbury
would say.
Back to the Hash Bash, where a drone
about 200 feet to the northeast was seen
as speaker after speaker filled the crowd
with the problems of our forlorn federal
government attitude towards any
change, any despondency like the sentence
of John Sinclair, quickly flitters off
like the pigeons flying around from the
rooftops or my first bumble bee of the
season floating past. I’m perched on
the ramp of Hatcher’s graduate library.
The view is excellent, and after a joint
the size of two fingers crammed into the
large side of a conical tube is inhaled, a
placative relaxation assumes control.
Speakers of note were a handicapped
woman who got the crowd in her grasp
with a furor of freedoms mixed with
some salty language that made me
smile. The next, a man in a top hat and
scarf who was clearly a staple of Hash
Bash for years. “Why did it take our government
50 years to realize pot doesn’t
kill anybody?” Sound question and a
pupil of his I was. You do a lot of thinking
high, and I could tell I was on good
ground — ground covered before my
birth. Even their footprints of fight and
freedom still hold against the test of
time's magnanimous hold.
I lit a cigar, a luxury for a homeless
man like me, careful not to send an ash
on the people below like I did earlier.
Then came my two high points of the
day. First: a man called Tom Lavigne
took the podium. He is a lawyer who
currently spearheads the fight for marijuana
legislation and acceptance. I
immediately noticed his verbiage was
prepared and insightful, and recollections
of my own turmoils won or lost
filled the fanciful mind I now participated
in, as each of his fist pumps
swayed those who remained to cheer
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
15
and applaud. I hope someday to honor
his speech and to fight with any society
that displays authoritarian proclivities
to settle human debate.
Second was the jam band that I was
unable to get the name of, but who lived
up to the status of opening act of Hash
Bash. Instantaneously I was whisked
into a Deadhead feel of imaginary tiedyed
shirts and dresses dancing in all
the empty spots — a veritable Woodstock
played out in my high but harmless
mind. The singer gave quite a
speech, holding up a small sequoia for
testament to his belief in growth and
renewal. I pranced mentally, and wobbled
physically, LOL, a little with the
music and scheme of things.
In the middle of a very capturing
groove of the fourth song, sprinkles of
rain tingled my nose and alerted us that
the looming dark cloud sneaking up
from behind the library was going to
have the final say … by the end of the
song it was pouring.
Many hung around since the cloudburst
was over and gone in 20 minutes.
So I put up my U-M blue and maize
umbrella and struck out down the
ramp, my confidence fully restored in
the rogue fundamentals that made this
country what it is. That all should fight
for what you believe in so that peace
may be attained through the salient
stewards of equality, freedom of religion
and person, and the spirit of
what’s best for all and harmful to none.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
An adapted family recipe
for lasagna
AMANDA GALE
Groundcover vendor No. 573
This recipe originated from a Dearborn,
Mich. Ford Motor Company cafeteria
kitchen at which my Beloved
Granny worked when I was a little girl.
Ingredients
1 box lasagna pasta
1 jar Prego spaghetti sauce
2 cans tomato sauce
2 Lb ground meat with finely
chopped garlic and onions
1 Lb ricotta cheese
1 egg; mix ricotta cheese and egg
together
2 packages mozzarella cheese
Parmesan cheese
Directions
Prep a tasty sauce for pasta; ie, a
sauce you use for spaghetti, Prego for
example. Fry finely chopped onions
and garlic; when onions are clear on
surface, though ‘filmy’ within, add the
ground meat and cook until meat is
cooked. Add the ground meat along
with the finely chopped onions and
garlic to a large, round boiling pot that
has the pasta sauce (such as Prego) and
two cans of tomato sauce already simmering
in it. Alternate simmering and
boiling pasta as necessary, ie, with the
ground meat and onions and garlic also
w/in it; cook about two hours until all
is fully cooked.
Meanwhile, boil the Lasagna pasta
strips for about five to ten minutes, until
pasta is bendable (pasta does not have
to be fully cooked at this point, only
bendable).
Start layering when pasta is cooked
enough to bend and drained, put one
layer of pasta in a baking pan, then put
a layer of sauce, on that put some ricotta
cheese, then a layer of mozzarella, and
a little bit of parmesan cheese. Repeat
layering as before and continue with
layers until your layers are complete;
Place pan in oven when layers are done,
for about 1 ½ hours at 325 degrees.
ENJOY! :) !!
Some additional possible adaptations
for lasagna, from Amanda
Alternately, ground meat and finely
chopped onions and garlic can be mixed
together, formed into meatballs and
cooked that way and then added to
sauce. Variations of cheese combinations
can be used, such as shredded
cheddar with or without mozzarella,
and Romano with or without parmesan.
My Family added dried rosemary and
dried basil, along with Parmesan and
Romano at intervals right into the sauce
— it gets absorbed and greatly brings out
the flavor. Additional toppings such as
mushroom, hickory smoked, applewood,
or honey ham chunks, chicken
chunks, olives, and green pepper can
also be used/included. It’s probably
BEST to boil the Lasagna strips, though
Lasagna can also be baked directly if
water-immersed in baking pan. Sometimes
Lasagna might need to be baked
at 350 degrees for three hours — especially
if not pre-boiled and/or depending
on oven.
MAY 1, 2026
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
NATURAL FOODS MARKET & DELI
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
MAKE MEALS YOU LOVE!
Fresh ingredients to
$5 OFF
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
5/30/2026
By Amanda Gale, Groundcover vendor no. 573
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