׉?ׁB!בCט F Fu׉׉	 7cassandra://hymGJ6LZMz0TKbEfFEr9_UcpZnzAyP6FqG_iRnYwwJI }`׉	 7cassandra://zdZi3R0l24BObWEJESvC_N1llZ1eRrT_o7qZtsQQ8SUx`h׉	 7cassandra://ftOiJyJXQby4_mtDR1hzVaXUJyD085ANk5qm0wV-hys-` iL(Rט   Fu׈   m[  ׈EiL(7׉EQ2
$
FEBRUARY 6, 2026 | VOLUME 17 | ISSUE 4
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
YouTube court increases access and
transparency, violates privacy. page 4
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
TERRI
DEMAR
PAGE 3
15 YEARS OF NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Remembering Bob Marley on
his 81st birthday. page 9
A MESSENGER
of ONE LOVE,
ONE HEART,
peace and
justice
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
׉	 7cassandra://ftOiJyJXQby4_mtDR1hzVaXUJyD085ANk5qm0wV-hys-` iL(8iL(7
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://ofqgsY9uqoho5Z8wQH2C9WS8Q3Gd16gIquitrqTt0rA '-`I׉	 7cassandra://Xx30EAGZYEwLteWaCamodoaG8KdXPVIz274mCAZtONM l`׉	 7cassandra://FcL9UJxYOHMwr3lAZYkx4nZxK-RrwGhCiS7Qo69325IL` iL(VנiL(U ؁9׉Hhttp://www.groundcovernews.orgGׁׁrנiL(_ ܁9ׁHhttp://www.groundcovernews.orgׁׁЈנiL(^ 9ׁH "mailto:contact@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈנiL(] w!9ׁH &mailto:submissions@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈ׉Ed2
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER15
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
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
housed, and from jobless to
employed.
Vendors purchase each copy of our
regular editions of Groundcover
News at our office for 50 cents. This
money goes towards production
costs. Vendors work selling the
paper on the street for $2, keeping
all income and tips from each sale.
Vendors are the main contributors
to the paper, and are compensated
to write and report.
Street papers like Groundcover
News exist in cities all over the
United States, as well as in more
than 40 other countries, in an effort
to raise awareness of the plight of
homeless people and combat the
increase in poverty. Our paper is a
proud member of the International
Network of Street Papers.
We are hosting an Ypsi New Vendor Orientation on Wednesday, February 18, 11 a.m.
at the Ypsilanti District Library (Michigan Ave branch - Room 2 in the basement)!
STAFF
Lindsay Calka — publisher
Cynthia Price — editor
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Jim Clark
Luiza Duarte Caetano
Eliza Janssen
Mike Jones
Marie
Dan Miesler
Savon Salvador
Will Shakespeare
Tommy Spaghetti
Steven Swiger
Shawn Swoffer
PROOFREADERS
Susan Beckett
June Miller
Anabel Sicko
VOLUNTEERS
Jessi Averill
Sim Bose
Jud Branam
Libby Chambers
Stephanie Dong
Luiza Duarte Caetano
Jacob Fallman
Ben Foster
Glenn Gates
Robert Klingler
Priya Kothari
Harper Margolies
Margaret Patston
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Emilie Ziebarth
BOARD of DIRECTORS
Anna Gersh
Greg Hoffman
Jessi Averill
Jacob Fallman
Jack Edelstein
Glenn Gates
GROUNDCOVER NEWS ADVERTISING RATES
Size
1/8
1/6
1/4
1/2
full page
Black/White
$110.00
$145.00
$200.00
$375.00
$650.00
Color
$150.00
$200.00
$265.00
$500.00
$900.00
Dimensions (W x H in inches)
5 X 3 or 2.5 X 6.5
5 X 4
5 X 6.25
5 X 13 or 10.25 X 6.5
10.25 X 13
Mike Jones
Hailu Shitaye
Shelley DeNeve
Steve Borgsdorf
CONTACT US
Story and photo submissions:
submissions@groundcovernews.com
Advertising and partnerships:
contact@groundcovernews.com
Office: 423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
Mon-Sat, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Phone: 734-263-2098
@groundcover
@groundcovernews
DONATE,
LISTEN TO OLD ISSUES
+ LEARN MORE
www.groundcovernews.org
WAYS TO SUPPORT
1. Buy the paper, read the paper.
2. Get the word out — We rely on
grassroots marketing. Talk to
people about Groundcover and
share us with your network.
3. Volunteer — You'll learn a lot
about our vendors, the newspaper
and your community. Interested in
volunteering regularly? Fill out the
form on our website.
4. Advertise your company,
organization, event or resource —
see rates below.
5. Follow us on Facebook and
Instagram — promote our posts
and share your favorite articles
and vendor interactions.
6. Donate items — A seasonally
appropriate list of items most
needed at our office and on the
street is available on our website.
Drop off anytime we're open.
PACKAGE PRICING
Three Months/Six Issues: 15% off
Six Months/Twelve Issues: 25% off
Full Year/Twenty-four Issues: 35% off
Only run for two weeks/one issue: 40% off
Additional 20% discount for money saving coupons
׉	 7cassandra://FcL9UJxYOHMwr3lAZYkx4nZxK-RrwGhCiS7Qo69325IL` iL(:׉EFEBRUARY 6, 2026
ON MY CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
Terri Demar, vendor No. 322
In one sentence, who are you?
I am a person who likes to be aware of what's
going on around me, locally and globally, to help
people understand the nature of our times.
Where do you usually sell Groundcover?
On Main Street and surrounding areas.
Why did you start selling Groundcover?
I needed something to fill my time and figured
out I'm good at reporting out the news.
What is your favorite thing to do in Ann
Arbor? Go to the LIVE bar and parks to chill out.
What is your life motto? Keep going to make a
difference in life before I die — I know it sounds
morbid but it's the truth.
What motivates you to work hard selling?
I love it, especially when I am on top of my game.
What's the worst thing about selling the
paper? Having people ignore me while selling
like I have nothing important to say.
If you could do anything for one day what
would it be? Get Elon Musk to take me on his
private jet, out to lunch and SpaceX in Texas.
What is one thing you could eat for the rest of
your life? Pizza like everyone else. I love cheese.
What is your superpower? I never give up. And
the way I connect with people about knowledge.
What are your hobbies? I like to create art —
sometimes I’m good, sometimes I’m bad. I also
Iike to dance and sing by myself. I like to walk a
lot. It helps with my anxiety.
What change would you like to see in Washtenaw
County? Bring karaoke downtown by the
ice cream place. We need a more vibrant atmosphere.
Don’t worry, I would still sell
Groundcover!
What would you do if you won the lottery?
Distribute some wealth among our struggling
community, even Groundcover associates. Maybe
start a UBI program for the poor so they don’t get
kicked out of their homes. I would trust Yousef
Rabhi with the cash to start it.
What's the best way to start the day?
Cheese bacon croissant and a strong cup of
coffee and a walk downtown to my selling point.
What is your pet peeve? I can’t stand stuck-up
people and doctors that believe life isn’t as
important as their ego.
Impressive thing you know how to do?
Be an emcee for karaoke and be funny.
I have high expectations for myself and have had
many roadblocks. That’s caused me much stress
and fatigue but I’ve found a way to keep going
because I’m smart.
SHAWN SWOFFER
Groundcover vendor No. 574
The Sun and the Moon are glistening almost like glitter.
I see rainbows in the sky more than one.
Must be a wonderful day.
I see the flowers with their vibrant colors.
Could I be in love is that why my world is so colorful today?
Must be a wonderful day.
Could you see my world the way it is?
Is it something that only I can see.
Must be a wonderful day.
I feel like like I could drift away with the wind.
The smell of the flowers is in the air.
Must be a wonderful day.
Your image is in the water that I'm looking at.
The smell of your perfume is all around me.
Must be a wonderful day.
Must Be A
Wonderful Day
Winter's Leaves
STEVEN
Groundcover vendor No. 668
The dancing silhouettes of song birds
High in my tree
Break my reverie.
Evening sun
Catching beaks bright orange,
Orange again through their wings.
Animated stained glass
In the lofty reaches of my
Cathedral.
Gently,
Sporadically,
Life’s choir’s chords
Escape down to me,
Through the cacophony
Of Pandemonium's howling autos.
Winter’s leaves,
Perched upon
Winter’s skeletal tree,
They group together
Seemingly pointlessly.
A glance away and
They are gone.
Evidence of them only the
Weight in my chest abated,
Serenity bestowed,
And words,
As life’s Prophet,
I’m compelled to write.
These feelings fleeting,
As Winter’s leaves.
Everything fits
MONIQUE CALDWELL
Groundcover contributor
I love you for the way you steady the world,
how your presence softens the noise inside me.
You are the warmth to my winter morning,
the anchor to my restless tide,
the steady flame to my wandering wick.
You are the harmony to my melody,
the shoreline to my returning waves,
the open sky that teaches my hope to rise.
You are the honey to my tea,
gentle, certain, perfectly blended—
the compass to my journey,
the quiet truth to my searching,
the laughter to my long days.
Loving you feels like recognition—
as if my spirit remembers yours
from a place beyond memory.
With you, everything fits.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
3
iL(;iL(:
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://1ybNlqL5lBnxaDrx1JrHlFBBi0IoRVzgAY53-DnquLg 	=`I׉	 7cassandra://rCclGFeiYemYu56To4JmrsyCUqy_C9x1jnyAd8Q_mSA `׉	 7cassandra://go2TlDjQcsLZpzLKpVr5D_aIzsXimTNGvYl18yOmHNkNI` iL(`נiL(Y 9׉H Ahttp://ypsilibrary.events.mylibrary.digital/event?id=253706%20%20GׁׁrנiL(Z ̤9׉H Ahttp://ypsilibrary.events.mylibrary.digital/event?id=253706%20%20GׁׁrנiL([ 9׉H Ahttp://ypsilibrary.events.mylibrary.digital/event?id=253706%20%20GׁׁrנiL(\ ̽9׉H !http://tinyurl.com/YW021226%20%20GׁׁrנiL(e ̴9ׁHhttp://tinyurl.com/YW021226ׁׁЈנiL(d :9ׁHhttp://life.ThׁׁЈנiL(c 9ׁHhttp://ypsilibrary.events.myׁׁЈ׉E4
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
COURT
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
YouTube Court increases access and transparency,
violates privacy
MARIE
Groundcover contributor
Over the New Year, a local resident
served as a catalyst for this writer to
investigate the current climate of using
Zoom and YouTube for court. The resident
sought community support with
a cyber-stalking situation following
personal information being shared via
YouTube during landlord/tenant court.
The stalker was sending pictures, personal
information, and messages
claiming they had seen the resident on
YouTube court and were offering
“help.” A peer provided assistance mitigating
the situation by helping the resident
change privacy settings on their
social media accounts and blocking
unwanted contact.
According to the Michigan Judicial
Council (MJC) Transparency and
Public Access Live Streaming Policies/
Rules Workgroup Report and Recommendations,
July 2023, there are several
situations when information is
considered protected and should not
be broadcast, which includes, but is
not limited to, information often
shared during landlord/tenant proceedings
and cases involving vulnerable
stakeholders. The MJC is a
29-member panel established in 2021
by the Michigan Supreme Court [MSC]
responsible for planning strategically
for the Michigan Judicial Branch [MJB],
enhancing the work of the courts, and
making recommendations to the MSC
on matters pertinent to administration
of justice.
After speaking with numerous local
community members (who will all be
referred to as “Buddy” to maintain
anonymity), watching several YouTube
court posts, and reviewing accessible
information from the MJB, a pattern
emerged, suggesting some overlapping
viewpoints about the benefits and
weaknesses of Michigan’s current
internet court trends. For those who
have internet access, attending court
online or utilizing online court services
saves time and reduces the cost burden
associated with court activities. For
many, online court access raises concerns
related to privacy and decorum.
For others, the use of livestreaming
aids research and observation of courtrooms
across the country.
The basics of online court
The concept of conducting court
business with the aid of the internet is
not a brand-new concept. All courts at
this time have a website where information
may be obtained and forms
about how the platform operates, a
channel with 1000 subscribers is eligible
for monetization through advertising.
The MSC Task Force report from
2021 suggests not utilizing a platform
that has ads, and ads are among the
options for monetizing YouTube channels.
Task force concerns about ads at
a minimum acknowledges a monetized
incentive for livestreaming court
proceedings. Using a monetized platform
was identified as a conflict of
interest by some stakeholders as it
places profit or finances over the rights
of people in the justice system. At this
time whether the court system is earning
any money is unclear. Investigations
to
gain clarity
Judge Simpson hears a case remotely.
accessed. Zoom court, or remote participation
via the Zoom platform, has
been around for many years, especially
in areas where travel to courthouses is
lengthy. The MSC’s Task Force on Open
Courts, Media and Privacy Final
Report, dated December 2021, defines
Zoom court as participating in a court
proceeding online via videoconference,
without physically being in a
brick-and-mortar courthouse. In addition,
courts in Michigan use YouTube
to livestream proceedings to accommodate
observation (not participation)
by the public.
When COVID-19 hit, a major internet
transition occurred when courts began
livestreaming judicial proceedings via
YouTube, and using Zoom for remote
participation became the norm. YouTube
court refers to the ability to view
activities occurring in a courtroom
either live or via posted recording. The
MSC’s 2021 Final Report states: “To
preserve access to our courts, parties
and their counsel were generally
allowed to participate in proceedings
remotely. To preserve the transparency
of our courts, those proceedings were
streamed online using a variety of platforms.”
Judicial transparency is “the
idea that the public should be able to
observe and receive information
regarding judicial proceedings, including
through media coverage.” To promote
transparency, proceedings may
be streamed online.
Judicial access is “the idea that those
who need recourse to judicial proceedings
should be able to obtain it.” To preserve
access to court participation,
parties and their counsel may be
allowed to participate using the
internet.
Positions on internet court
The rules surrounding the use of the
internet for court appear to be a work
in progress, and according to the 2023
MJC report, providing live online
streaming access is no longer mandatory.
Both the MJB and the community
express ongoing concerns including
misuse of court proceedings made
available
online, monetizing
live-streaming as evidenced by advertising,
and violations of privacy.
The MJC council presented the following
list of stakeholders who require
special shielding in all courtrooms:
• protection of children and vulnerable
adults,
• protection of crime victims and
witnesses,
• preventing disclosure of sensitive
financial details,
• protecting privacy interests of parties,
and
• protecting privacy interests of
jurors.
A 2023 recommendation from the
MJC suggests establishing guidelines
for trial courts for the use of livestreaming,
which include protections for
stakeholders especially those who are
vulnerable, throughout the process, as
well as informing stakeholders in
attendance about livestreaming prior
to being streamed. Amidst ethical
issues and concerns about constitutional
rights, Michigan is utilizing procedures
common in most states.
Currently, the State Court Administrators
Office Michigan Trial Courts
Virtual Courtroom Standards and
Guidelines, dated April 7, 2020, encourages
the creation of a YouTube channel
if a court does not have one. While YouTube.com
provides more information
around
monetization are ongoing.
Public comment
Dozens of community members
were approached and/or observed via
the internet while conducting research
for this article. Perspectives presented
cover many judicial stakeholders, yet
they do not represent all positions nor
every population impacted by the justice
system. While some of the following
real-life examples were transcribed
in real-time, many community members
were engaged in a less formal
interview format with notes written
afterward.
Buddy 1 didn’t know their court proceedings
would be streamed: “[I had]
no clue I was going to be on YouTube
… the housing unit [in the jail] told me
I was on the news … Judge has a YouTube
channel and it was probably
going to be on there … It’s B.S. the way
they will exploit a person.”
Buddy 1 also shared negative consequences
of being on YouTube as
“embarrassment and public humiliation
… the judge kept egging me on,
he’s supposed to be a professional.” On
the positive side, they said, “I have a
good rapport with [the] Judge now. I’m
not going to smart off to a judge again.
I learned a lesson.”
Buddy 2 shared they have never been
in trouble to the extent they had to
appear in court, “but I would not want
to be broadcast … it’s wrong and a violation
of privacy.”
Buddy 3 shared a story where they
assisted a person who escaped a sexual
assault and were coerced into testifying
as a witness. While this buddy’s experience
occurred prior to Zoom and
YouTube court practices being implemented,
they described testifying as
traumatic, as they felt attacked while
see YOUTUBE page 15 
׉	 7cassandra://go2TlDjQcsLZpzLKpVr5D_aIzsXimTNGvYl18yOmHNkNI` iL(@׉EFEBRUARY 6, 2026
COMMUNITY
Thank You Washtenaw County!
GROUNDCOVER STAFF
During the recent cold spell, where
temperatures were near or below zero,
Washtenaw County stepped up and
offered hotel stays for over 50 people
experiencing homelessness. As the
cold snap stretched on, the county
extended the stays for 11 nights! Many
thanks to staffers Tabatha Reynolds,
Ashley Hall and Terrence Williams,
and of course to Administrator Greg
Dill. Gratitude also to the County
Commissioners, including Yousef
Rabhi and Justin Hodge but especially
Annie Somerville, for advocating on
behalf of the community.
Many groups and individuals
letter to the EDITOR
I just have to say how blown away I was by Pedro Campos' poem "Before love learned its name" published in
the January 23, 2026 issue of Groundcover News. Pedro's poems are always good but this one is exceptional. I
felt myself carried along and uplifted, verse by verse, compelled to share with you its effect on me. Please consider
printing it again, perhaps in your Valentine's Day edition.
— Susan Beckett
community EVENTS
ANN ARBOR HAPPY HOUR
GROUNDCOVER
FUNDRAISER
Friday, February 6, 6:30-9 p.m.
LIVE Nightclub, 102 S. First
Street, Ann Arbor. Close out
Vendor Appreciation Week with
the Groundcover crew! Live music
by Corndaddy and The Medicine
Men. Groundcover merchandise
for sale. Admission free.
'IN THE SPIRIT' POETRY
CLASS
Saturday, February 7 11 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. via Zoom. In trying
times, often Spirit is all we can
depend on. Spirit and the ability to
call on it has sustained people of
African descent for centuries. In
this workshop, hosted by Eastern
Michigan University professor Dr.
Toni Pressley-Sanon, we will
explore and celebrate spirit-inspired
poetry by several writers,
both in the United States and
beyond, and then take up our own
pens to add our voices to the
praise repository. Register at:
ypsilibrary.events.mylibrary.digital/event?id=253706
GALENTINE'S
DAY
Saturday, February 7
Main Street, Ann Arbor. Over 25
establishments are participating
offering specials, deals and fun
giveaways throughout the day.
This year’s theme, Rom-Com
Meets Ann Arbor Magic, brings
meet-cute moments, postcard-worthy
photo ops, and
charming in-store experiences to
life.The event features a passport
style small business crawl, where
you can collect stickers from participating
businesses throughout
Downtown Ann Arbor and be
entered to win a giant gift basket
of items.
WINTER SIMMER POTS
WITH GETDOWNTOWN
Saturday, February 7, 2 p.m.
Downtown Ann Arbor District
Library, 343 S. Fifth Ave. Ann
Arbor. Conquer the cold by
making your own winter simmer
pot with TheRide’s getDowntown
program! We’ll provide ingredients
and recipes to create a winter
simmer pot that will make your
home smell amazing. getDowntown
staff will provide sustainable
transportation resources, tips and
tricks on staying warm while traveling
in winter, and hot chocolate.
AADL FIBER ARTS EXPO
Sunday, February 8, 10 a.m. - 5
p.m. Downtown AADL, Ann
Arbor. This fiber-filled day will
have a full slate of hands-on programs,
demos, and presentations,
and a lobby full of local vendors.
You can learn about knitting, crocheting,
weaving, and spinning.
Try your hand at macrame,
embroidery, and more! Vendors
will be on hand selling accessories,
patterns, books, dyes and all
things fiber related!
YPSIWRITES OPEN MIC
NIGHT
Thursday, February 12, 6:30-8:30
p.m. at Ypsilanti District Library
Superior branch, 1900 N Harris
Rd, Superior Township. Writers
are encouraged to share their
work, in whatever stage it is currently
in, with supportive members
of the YpsiWrites community.
All are welcome to attend, read,
listen, and encourage the writers.
Sign up at tinyurl.com/YW021226
A.P. STYLE GUIDE
WORKSHOP
Friday, February 13, 10 a.m. at the
Groudncover office. Learn the
basics of the Associated Press
Stylebook, the newspaper writing
standard. Facilitated by Colleen
Newvine. RSVP by calling
734-263-2098.
Submit an event to be featured
in the next edition:
submissions@groundcovernews.
com
stepped up both to place additional
individuals in hotel rooms after the
County program filled up and to feed
the hotel guests three meals a day.
These include the Daytime Warming
Center, Washtenaw Camp Outreach,
FedUp Ministries and Pastor Anna
Taylor-McCants, MISSION/Purple
House and many many others.
Finally, for assistance with coordination,
meals, transport, guest relationships
and so much more, gratitude to
Corn Williams and LEAF Harm
Reduction.
This week and a half represented an
amazing demonstration of everyone
coming together in compassion and
solidarity.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
iL(AiL(@
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://1ZuDFHEviBoTi8FWzO_T_i2zlsH51WaeuBGL9lgbgCg 
`I׉	 7cassandra://KJebMDxPCd2wbh1YbuurSwrOWaSBSVqR0CY1jh3R2Q0 2z`׉	 7cassandra://96XRQkEiKpDCWLUk40LSfHXbJHj12a9BlaYl6wGOr9kU#` iL(fנiL(h 9ׁHhttp://groundcovernews.comׁׁЈ׉E;6
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
POLICING
Two violent incidents within 48 hours
involving Washtenaw County and city
police have residents questioning
whether law enforcement has become
too militarized. Many in the community
look towards a non-violent crisis
response to neighbors instead of law
enforcement to mitigate harm.
January 4, and January 5, 2026, in
Ypsilanti, law enforcement used what
many thought was unnecessary force
to remove a person having a mental
health crisis. The next day an unarmed
individual, who still hasn’t been identified,
was shot and killed by Washtenaw
County Sheriff Deputies.
The siege on January 4 and 5 involved
the combined police forces of Ypsilanti,
Eastern Michigan, Washtenaw
County, Livingston County, Plymouth,
Howell, Hamburg Township, Shiawassee
County, the state of Michigan
police, and Washtenaw county SWAT,
who surrounded an Ypsilanti resident
for 30 hours because he had a sword in
his own place of residency (see
Groundcover News January 9, 2026).
Ruben Peeler, 53, is still in the hospital
but may be facing numerous felony
charges. Final charges are unknown
while Peeler remains in hospital custody,
because he has still not been
arraigned.
January 20, 20 Ypsilanti residents
spoke in support of resolution 202618,
“A resolution condemning the militarized
policing siege on West Cross
Street, calling for all charges to be
dropped, and demanding immediate
systemic reform,” introduced by Councilmember
Amber Fellows (Ward 3).
The resolution didn’t pass (see
Groundcover News January 23, 2026).
February 3, Ypsilanti City Council
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
Flood said he represents the estate
of a 34-year-old St. Clair man who was
killed by Washtenaw County Sheriff’s
deputies on Jan. 6. The man has not yet
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
Two recent local injustices reveal law enforcement
overreach
been identified.
"Four deputies are on administrative
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
voted to delay a proposed Police Advisory
Commission review of the Ypsilanti
Police Department's role in the
incident.
One day after the stand-off, early
that next morning (January 6), a driver
was shot and killed by Washtenaw
County Sheriff's deputies after fleeing
and crashing in Ypsilanti. Initially,
authorities said the driver was armed,
but later said no weapons were in the
vehicle. January 22, 2026, authorities
in Washtenaw County released dashcam
footage of the deputy-involved
shooting. The footage showed the
chase and shooting that left the
unarmed driver dead after multiple
deputies opened fire on his vehicle.
The deputy-involved shooting happened
on the corner of Michigan
Avenue and Prospect Road. Soon after
the release of the dashcam footage the
family of the victim of the deputy-involved
shooting announced their
plans to sue the Washtenaw County
Sheriff Office for wrongful death.
“This is a fatal O.K. Corral shooting
of a man that did not have a gun, nor
did he post a threat of great bodily
harm or imminent danger as far as
physical harm to another,” said Todd
Flood, a Detroit-based lawyer. “It
should have never taken place,”
reported mLive.
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
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
leave and under investigation, and will
remain on administrative leave while
Michigan State Police conduct their
investigation,” said Washtenaw County
Sheriff Alyshia M. Dyer.
“Law enforcement” refers to government-authorized
agencies and personnel,
such as police, federal agents,
and sheriff's deputies, responsible for
maintaining public safety and order.
These entities investigate crimes,
detain suspects, enforce laws, and protect
property. Their core function is to
ensure compliance with legal regulations
allegedly intended to uphold
justice.
“Crisis response” refers to the immediate
action and strategies implemented
to address and mitigate the
impacts of a critical event or emergency.
It involves planning, mobilizing
resources, providing assistance and
communicating effectively to minimize
harm and to facilitate recovery.
Unarmed crisis response, as an alternative
to law enforcement, is all about
community, ordinary everyday people
come together to help and render aid
to those who are unhoused, those with
mental illness, emotional issues, and
those in distress who struggle with
drug addiction.
There is a noticeable difference
between law enforcement and crisis
response. I went out into the community
and asked a few members of the
community what would be the best
response to an emergency situation
like the stand-off West Cross Street
and/or the deputy involved shooting?
How should law enforcement respond?
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 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
A wooden heart decorated
with flowers installed in the
yard of 1111 W Cross St. invites
neighbors and passersby to
write positive messages for
Ruben Peeler.
Or should crisis response groups play
a bigger role in deescalating tense situations
in their community?
Kimberly Daley, who is a social
worker and an Ypsilanti resident, said,
“The police response to the West Cross
Street stand-off was totally inappropriate.
I don't know if the police should
have that level of military equipment.
We need non-violent crisis response
groups like Care Based Safety (a
non-police team that responds without
guns, pepper sprays and tasers),
but city leaders refuse to fund Care
Based Safety and this is the result.”
Carol Smith lives in the neighborhood
where the police stand-off took
place. “The people in the neighborhood
think the situation was handled
poorly; the poor man was
traumatized.”
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.
׉	 7cassandra://96XRQkEiKpDCWLUk40LSfHXbJHj12a9BlaYl6wGOr9kU#` iL(B׉EQFEBRUARY 6, 2026
LIVING ARCHIVE
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
Vendor experiences with police brutality
GROUNDCOVER
COMMUNITY
Violent, unjust encounters with
police are nothing new for Black
people in America, and these injustices
can be compounded by homelessness.
We sat down and talked with
some of our Groundcover vendors to
hear their experiences with racial
injustice, homelessness and the police.
La Shawn — Envisioning the
future of public safety
The murder of George [Floyd] does
not surprise me at all. I myself have
been a victim of the brutality and mistreatment
by bad people who are and/
or have been employed as police
officers.
I would like to see the day when individuals
who apply to become law
enforcement agents are required by
law to undergo a more thorough
mental health evaluation over a twoyear
period, as well as complete the
National Alliance of Mental Illness
classes. This process should also
require
that
prospective
had my papers in my hand and a small
knife nestled among them because I
had gotten in some fights with some
haters earlier that day and the night
before. A student came out of the
Union and followed right behind me.
I turned and asked him, “Hey, you
want to buy a Groundcover News or
buy me a beer?”
He said no so I continued down the
street. When I got to Dominos, seven
cops told me. “Put up your hands.”
I did. Then they asked, “You got a
knife?”
I said “Yes,” and gave it to them. I
asked what I did wrong.
They locked me up for attempted
robbery. In court, the student said I
held a knife to his throat. My public
defender asked him a series of questions
based on my account and the guy
admitted that I didn’t ask him for
money as part of a robbery. As soon as
he was dismissed from the witness
stand, he ran out of the courtroom for
good.
But I was still charged with armed
officers
receive education from licensed psychiatrists
to educate these individuals
about the numerous symptoms that
are preexistent, those that are triggered
in people who have a mental illness
diagnosis, and symptoms in
people who are not aware or capable
of seeking treatment. I do understand
that it is a dangerous task for the police,
too, when they cannot tell what the
risks are, if any, when responding to an
incident.
In my mind there are just simply
people who choose to do the wrong
thing by abusing authority. Overall, I’d
like to see times where we as a whole
demonstrate respect for humanity.
Last but not least, be more openminded
to things that we may not have
a full understanding of and be willing
to take a deeper look at another’s point
of view.
Matt — How it happened to
me
I was on my way home from selling
Groundcover, on the edge of State St. I
robbery because of the knife. The prosecutor
gave me a choice of facing a
possible conviction and five years in
prison or accepting a plea deal of 18
months of probation in exchange for a
guilty plea to felony attempted robbery.
I took the deal but violated probation
by drinking alcohol. I was in
and out of treatment programs and jail
for the next year, consequently losing
my apartment.
Joe — My experiences
The police had me in handcuffs at
the mall; they profiled me as a drug
dealer. They came up to me and immediately
put me in handcuffs. I asked
them, “Why am I in cuffs?” and they
wouldn’t tell me. They just kept on
saying, “Where the drugs at, where the
drugs at?” I didn’t have any drugs. I
was chained for 12-15 minutes. The
police ain’t nothing but a big ole gang.
We talk about gangs, but the police are
the biggest organized gang out here.
The whole judicial system is.
I wish people stopped the stupid
hatred. I guess this is what we need to
go through to get the love and the
peace. Something tragic has to happen
to get the good out. It’s kinda messed
up. You gotta hit rock bottom to get
back up.
Quincy — Police and
homelessness
The police should protect and serve,
but they go out of their bounds and
overdo it sometimes. If I do have police
contact, I have to have total respect for
the police, because if I don’t, they’ll
screw me up. You never know. Let’s say
I called the police. Everything is
reversed on me. First I’m the plaintiff,
and all of a sudden I become the
defendant. They try to beat me down.
“Wait, I called you guys, why are you
trying to beat on me?” When you resist,
they use force. When they use force,
they abuse their authority. They were
holding George Floyd down by his
neck. Regardless, they were gonna kill
him. He’s choking, let him up.
If I’m getting hurt, there’s not much
they can do to help. If I’m getting
jumped, they won’t get there in time.
The police might be overrated.
Conclusion
When asked to define justice, Quincy
replied, “Justice means free, it means
honor, it means cherishing a moment
of peace within yourself, within the
next being around you. Justice is
essential, it’s being found not guilty. I
could look at that word in many different
perspectives. It means you won
your battle.”
The end to police brutality—the fight
for justice— is proving to be a long,
hard-fought battle. We must continue
to center the voices of those who are
most oppressed in this country when
imagining a future without police.
Originally published in the July 2020
edition of Groundcover News. This was
Groundcover's first printed issue after
pausing print sales in March 2020. The
article was written after the murder of
George Floyd in May 2020.
iL(CiL(B
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://kM5P7mNmVIBtt3FyF4ang3EAuVzja-WKk53XrQr-6UQ 	J`I׉	 7cassandra://-sMKHtp5bDLnBXlZ0Z3QX6HCuNj3QAz1RDqw2Rzzlpo As`׉	 7cassandra://QRNZvd9s-SZN9bQEqKSP503NRmDS4z861Z-ORsdyM6k[` iL(i׉Eh8
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
Avalon awarded Low
Income Tax Credits
for the final phase of
Hickory Way
DAN MEISLER
Avalon Housing
Avalon Housing has been awarded
Low Income Housing Tax Credits
which will bring in approximately
$10,000,000 in tax credit equity for
the third phase of the Hickory Way
Apartments campus in Ann Arbor.
The Michigan State Housing Development
Authority (MSHDA)
announced the awards in
December.
The tax credits will pay for about
60% of the total cost of the project,
which will add 39 one-bedroom
units to the existing 70 units at Hickory
Way. Securing the tax credits will
allow Avalon to move forward in
pursuing the remainder of the funding
needed; depending on how that
process goes, construction could
start in the late summer or fall of
2026, with the project opening to
tenants in late 2027 or early 2028.
“We’re really excited to be able to
add more local housing to help
address homelessness in our community,”
said Wendy Carty-Saxon,
Avalon’s Director of Real Estate and
Development. “We have seen what
a difference it makes on an individual
and community basis!”
Other funding sources for the
project include federal HOME and
HOME ARP projects allocated
through Washtenaw County; the
City of Ann Arbor Affordable Housing
Millage; a payment in lieu of
taxes to the city that lowers the project’s
property taxes; Washtenaw
County Brownfield Program, construction
loans from the Huntington
National Bank and Chelsea State
Bank; and pre-development funding
from the Corporation for Supportive
Housing. National Equity
Fund is the investor limited
partner.
The City of Ann Arbor helped
Avalon acquire the land by exercising
its “right of first refusal” — when
the previous owner sold the plot, the
deed allowed the city to purchase it
before any other buyer. The city
bought the land, and entered into a
purchase agreement with Avalon at
cost, which was approximately
$260,000.
“When so many parts of a community
come together — the federal
level, the county board, the City of
Ann Arbor, and our partners in
banking and finance — we can do
great things to address homelessness
and make sure all of our neighbors
have a safe place to call home,”
said Avalon Housing Executive
Director Aaron Cooper.
Twenty-four of the new units will
have project-based housing vouchers,
meaning rents cannot exceed
30% of tenants’ income. Twenty of
those apartments will be set aside
for people directly leaving homelessness,
and four will also be open
to people who are homeless or at
risk of homelessness.
Avalon provides all
residents
access to support services to help
them thrive, including help addressing
food insecurity, on-site health
care, and transportation to critical
appointments, among others.
When the first phases of Hickory
Way opened in 2021, the rate of
chronic homelessness in the county
fell by 31%.
ELIZA JANSSEN
Big Issue Australia
Home is where the heart is. It’s an
escape from the outside world, or the
freedom to open up and let it in. It’s
somewhere to thrive, to dream or
simply to sleep. A home can be easily
taken for granted — if you’re safe and
secure in a place of your own.
Aristea knows just how important it
was to be given this kind of space. At
the age of 11, she found herself in a
tenuous living situation after her parents’
separation — with her mother
and three siblings, she had to squeeze
into a small private rental. It was overcrowded,
and the family bonds suffered
under the strain.
“For a lot of kids on the margins, you
grow up really quickly, right?” Aristea
explained. “In some ways, you are like
an adult in a kid’s body. It’s a very sensitive
time, when you want the most
amount of privacy, and I had none
whatsoever.”
Breathing room came in the form of
not-for-profit Kids Under Cover, which
works with young people at risk of
homelessness. They built a free-standing
spare bedroom in the backyard of
the family’s public housing property.
“When I got that space from my mum,
our
relationship improved a lot,”
Aristea says today. “I’m not sure that
we ever would have gotten to where we
are now without the studio.”
These studio spaces help to empower
young people to break the cycle of poverty,
while staying close to their families
where possible.
“We always came from a lower
socio-economic background,” Aristea
said, “and we’d had a lot of experiences
with people not validating or believing
our point of view at a time when we
were struggling. So to have Kids Under
Cover come in and meet us where we
were at was really wonderful and
affirming.”
Kids Under Cover is making a real
Hickory Way is an Avalon Housing apartment complex on the
west side on Ann Arbor. It currently has 70 one-bedroom units (50
of which are project-based vouchers).
difference, and like Habitat for Humanity,
Anglicare and other Australian
organizations making room for those
in need, it benefits from the groundbreaking
efforts of the Homes for
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
Inside the Big Issue
Australia's Homes for
Homes
Homes program. Now in its 10th year,
Homes for Homes has been instrumental
in funding life-changing projects
that have provided homes for 400
people and counting.
The idea came from California,
where in the mid-2000s large-scale
property developer Lennar Corporation
began making voluntary contributions
of 0.1 per cent from each of the
units that they sold each year. That was
around $1,000 (USD) per unit, and
with tens of thousands of units sold
each year, substantial sums were funnelled
back into public and affordable
housing.
“If you’ve ever been to California, it’s
hard to ignore the rough sleeping challenges
they face over there,” Homes for
Homes chief operating officer Tracy
Longo pointed out. Inspired by the U.S.
success story but setting its sights even
higher, Homes for Homes was
launched by The Big Issue Australia in
September 2015, with the aim to
inspire Aussie homeowners, construction
companies, real estate agents and
“anyone in the property sector” to help
end the housing crisis in Australia.
Under the scheme, homeowners
register their property, pledging to
donate 0.1 per cent of its eventual sale
price to Homes for Homes. So, a $1
million sale equates to a $1,000 tax-deductible
donation. This is added to a
pool of funds that is used to finance
social and affordable housing projects
across Australia — like those built by
Kids Under Cover.
To date, the social enterprise has
granted almost $3 million to 28 projects
across the country. But Longo is
just as interested in the ripple effect
these projects generate.
“The way I see it, it’s not just the life
of the individual who’s been given a
home that changes,” she said. “It’s
see HOMES page 15 
׉	 7cassandra://QRNZvd9s-SZN9bQEqKSP503NRmDS4z861Z-ORsdyM6k[` iL(D׉EFEBRUARY 6, 2026
HISTORY
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Remembering Bob Marley on his 81st birthday:
Messenger of one love, one heart, peace and justice
Robert Marley was born on February
6, 1945. If we do our math correctly, he
would have been 81 years old now if he
did not pass away on May 11, 1981.
This year, the city of London has
planned a big birthday party for Marley
on February 6. Across the globe,
including some college towns like Ann
Arbor, there will be some form of
get-together at house parties
in
remembrance of the great singer, philosopher
and humanitarian.
Robert Marley, who is known around
the world as “Bob Marley,” is the first
global super-star from the “third
world.” He was born in a rural neighborhood
known as Nine Miles in St.
Ann Parish, Jamaica.
His father, Norval Marley, was a
white Englishman who was a supervisor
of geographic agricultural lands in
upland Jamaica. He was 50 when Bob
Marley was born. Marley’s mom,
Cedella Booker, was a black Jamaican
teenager when Marley was born. In
order to avoid local and international
scandals, the couple quickly got married,
but did not live together.
Bob Marley was raised by his mother
in a poor, rural village. Marley did not
have much contact with his dad. At the
age of 12, Marley and his Mom moved
to Jamaica’s largest city and capital,
Kingston.
Life was tough for Marley and his
mom at Kingston’s public housing
known as “Trenchtown.” During his
early teens, Marley learned to be a
welder so he could help provide
income for his family and help his
mom. Marley got more interested in
the music business. By the age of 16,
he recorded his first song titled “Judge
Not,” which was well received in Kingston.
Marley met a young musician,
Bunny Wailer, in 1962. Marley was
about 17 years old and Wailer was a
young adult who was friends with Marley's
mom. Later that year, they asked
another young musician, Peter Tosh,
to join them in a new band they called
“The Wailing Wailers.”
Why did they call their band The
WILL SHAKESPEARE
Groundcover vendor No. 258
Wailing Wailers? The name was chosen
because they said that they were all
born crying as they grew up in the
slums and ghettos of Jamaica, especially
Kingston. Their song genre of
preference was reggae. Their songs
were a reflection of the poverty, deprivation,
racism and injustice of 1960s
Jamaica. The Wailing Wailers’ first
song, “Simmer Down,” was a number
one hit in 1963 in Jamaica.
At the time, Jamaica’s dance music
was fast frequency music called “scuff.”
However, the Wailer’s reggae song
slowed the beat. The original Wailers
released many influential songs.
Through his music, Marley and his
band members tried to develop visions
of peace and freedom. 1966 was a pivotal
time for the Wailers and Marley. It
was the year the Wailers fully joined
the Rastafarian religion. It was the year
that the Wailers began to grow their
dreads. It was the year that Emperor
Haile Selassie visited Jamaica.
Selassie was regarded as the “Black
King” who had been prophesied by
“Jamaican Hero” Marcus Garvey.
Some Jamaican historians and documentarians
believe that Bob Marley
and many other Jamaicans became
convinced that Selassie was “Jesus
Christ Reincarnated.” The Wailers and
the Rasta elders believed that Jesus
would return with a different name,
and over time began to think that
name was Haile Selassie. After Selassie
went back to Ethiopia, the influence of
Rasta spread exponentially and
rapidly.
1966 was also the year that Bob
Marley met a “Rasta woman” by the
name of Rita. They got married the
same year. Rita became one of the
three female back-up singers of the
Wailers.
1966 was also the year that Marley
decided to migrate and join his mother
in the United States. He was employed
at a Chrysler Auto Plant in Delaware
where his mom worked as an assembly
plant union employee. He wanted to
spend time with his mom and send
earnings to new wife Rita, who still
Bob Marley and The Wailers in the recording studio. Photo from Bob
Katz and Fact Magazine.
lived in Jamaica. After a few months,
Marley left the job and the United
States to continue his music and
song-writing career in Jamaica.
The Wailers felt exploited by the
recording companies in Jamaica.
Because Marley was an iconic and
gifted performer with incredible stage
presence, the musical group changed
their name to “Bob Marley and the
Wailers.” Luckily, in 1972 they were
signed to a London-based recording
company managed by Chris Blackwell,
who was known in the European and
United States music industry.
“Catch a Fire” was their first album
after signing the contract with Mr.
Blackwell. Among the popular songs
in “Catch a Fire,” which was released
in 1973, were “Stir it Up” and “Concrete
Jungle.”
Bob Marley after the
breakup
In 1974, the band broke up. Each
see MARLEY page 13 
9
iL(EiL(D
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://r7ePRHi34CnhYYQKLLvyBVkkWgWYzAo6Prr3viRXcSk G`I׉	 7cassandra://Kx1BEJAFs5zoaOvTptmoplFTpklVQjEkFN19e2kK4go `׉	 7cassandra://Eu02YNW-nwGiD9expaxvtYpm4_m5I8Dg1OuJ7PjTj5cRb` iL(l׉E|10
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOMELESSNESS
People in the neighborhood: Rob
Rob is a friendly man. Very easy to
talk to and loves light and clever conversation.
I’ve known Rob for a few
years now. His health is challenged
and is exacerbated by suffering
through homelessness. Rob is a talented
DJ, I see him on the bus and in
the library with his mixing program on
his laptop all the time. He is a capable
man, even with his health struggles.
“Where were you born?” I asked.
“I am from Dearborn, Michigan,”
Rob replied.
“Did you go to high school?” I asked.
“Yep, I graduated from Three Rivers
High School in 1980,” Rob replied.
“Did you go to college?” I asked.
“No,” Rob said, “I went to a vocational
school to be a sound engineer
and a DJ.”
“What got you into DJing?” I asked.
“My mom. We were in the Grace
Church choir for seven years. I got to
help out on the sound board. I've been
a DJ for 43 years now. I’ve done over a
thousand weddings, and have been up
and down the gentleman’s clubs on 8
Mile in Detroit,” he replied.
“If you could go to college for free
and study any subject, what would it
be?” I asked.
“I would go to Full Sail in Florida and
get a certificate in sound engineering.
Engineering jobs can start at up to
$96k per year,” Rob said with
emphasis.
“Would it be easy to get a job after
the courses?” I asked.
“If I get a certificate, probably,” Rob
replied. “It's a matter of having good
ears. If you don't have good ears, you
can still get a certificate. Those certificates
pretty much just show you know
the basics. A certificate means you
have just enough skills to get a chance,”
Rob continued.
“What kind of places hire sound
engineers?” I asked.
“Usually touring bands. I might find
a studio to work at but I kind of like to
go out on the road. It would be fun to
travel and get paid,” Rob mused. “But
unfortunately there's no opportunities
here. I need to go to Vegas but I don't
want to leave because I like the guys
here. But sometimes you have to make
sacrifices to be where you want in life.”
“What about starting your own DJ
business?” I asked.
“I've had a couple of those. I'd rather
just find a place to work,” Rob replied.
“What was life like for you before all
that happened?” I asked.
“It was OK,” Rob recalled. “I was
working at a club doing what I do. Just
living at the time, trying to make ends
meet, you know, just one thing after
the other. I had a four-year-old car,
turbo with all wheel drive. I was living
with my best friend. He was living his
JIM CLARK
Groundcover vendor No. 139
life, I was living mine. We were working,
driving, shopping and taking in
what life has to offer.”
Then it happened. Rob shared the
moment his life fell apart.
“You said your best friend passed
away?” I asked.
Rob replied, “We went to South Carolina
and decided to get a house. So,
you know, if we didn't find someone to
marry, at least we could help each
other pay the bills. He passed away
and all of a sudden, all the bills were in
my lap. I burned through my savings,
then I crashed my brand new Chevy
after being cut off in traffic. Then my
sister passed away within three weeks
after that. There's a whole bunch of
other stuff that happened then next
thing you know, I’m homeless.”
“All right, so what's going on now?
Tell me about the last two years of your
life,” I asked.
“It's been living in a tent and trying
to make money by donating plasma.
I’m surrounded by people with dangerous
mental illnesses, I’ve had three
surgeries and had to recover in my
tent. I can't really do a lot of physically
intense work. There’s not a lot out here
for broken 60-year-old men,” he said.
“Tell me about the last couple of
days at your camp,” I asked.
“I haven't been there. I've been going
back to check on my tent, but somebody
finally took it out. Somebody
took my tent and took all my stuff out
of it. All my clothes were actually in a
bag ready to go do laundry, so they just
picked them up and took them. You
know, I'm 5'6", 170 pounds. The only
[people] who wear my clothes are
probably girls. You know, so whatever.
I'm a little angry, but I'm over it.”
The clothing Rob was referring to
were things he had gotten for Christmas
from a local hospitality house.
“Where are you with housing? Are
there agencies helping you?” I asked.
“I asked PATH where I was on the list
and they couldn’t give me an answer.
Then I found out I was not on the list,
so finally I had to fucking deal with it.
They've got every little bit of useful ID
and information they need, so I don't
know. I guess with the kidney stones
and bad back and everything else, I
Rob is a career DJ who became homeless after the sudden death of a
housemate and sibling.
must not be a priority. But still. I'm not
gonna let it keep me down. I've crawled
out of the hole a few times. So, you
know, this is just taking a little longer
because I'm older. ”
It is important to note that, like many
others, Rob has been waiting on help
from the government for months. He
was acting responsibly when he was in
South Carolina — working and paying
bills — and then tragedy struck. Was it
his fault his friend died? Was it his fault
his car was wrecked? Was it his fault for
having kidney stones? No, no, and no.
So where is the state? This is what
social welfare programs are for, so why
are so many people waiting months for
help?
Here is some more information
about people recovering from surgery
while experiencing homelessness:
Post-surgical mortality and
homelessness:
People experiencing homelessness
(PEH) are more likely to experience surgical
complications, with one study
finding they have 1.42 times greater
odds of complications compared to
housed patients (American College of
Surgeons).
Homelessness is an independent risk
factor for developing infections and
complications within 90 days of surgery
(U.S. National Library of Medicine).
Reports have documented specific
cases, such as a woman in a Canadian
tent encampment who passed away
after being denied necessary surgery
because she had no safe place to recover
(New Brunswick Media Co-op).
about
“You had surgery recently. Tell me
that. What happened afterwards?”
I asked.
“They (Trinity Medical) just released
me. I had to wait for a bus to take me
back to my camp. No ride, no motel,
nothing. They didn’t even let me spend
the night.”
“Are you recovering okay?”
“I’m still bleeding,” Rob replied.
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
׉	 7cassandra://Eu02YNW-nwGiD9expaxvtYpm4_m5I8Dg1OuJ7PjTj5cRb` iL(F׉E 9FEBRUARY 6, 2026
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
iL(GiL(F
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://4k1vtLMxYdAv-Kq_lK0wJvwrpSDeK-I59_4yv_d-7Es E`I׉	 7cassandra://GGoHTgrGXhctTVOS8pJkWt7vnrlFBXgO5NmK3j33l80 `׉	 7cassandra://tceiIf4yHcggxILnKv-g7yVLcN7CtjFKQid0FwcuBt0Q` iL(rנiL(n #E9׉Hhttp://www.michigan.gov/taxesGׁׁrנiL(o 	̙9׉H @http://unitedwaysem.org/resources/tax-preparation-assistance/%20GׁׁrנiL(p /89׉H @http://unitedwaysem.org/resources/tax-preparation-assistance/%20GׁׁrנiL(q ̐9׉Hhttp://MyFreeTaxes.comGׁׁrנiL(x ̐9ׁHhttp://MyFreeTaxes.comׁׁЈנiL(w !̢9ׁHhttp://MyFreeTaxes.comׁׁЈנiL(v 	̙9ׁHhttp://unitedwaysem.org/ׁׁЈנiL(u #H9ׁHhttp://www.michigan.gov/taxesׁׁЈ׉E12
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PUZZLES
CROSSWORD
International Network of Street Papers
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
ACROSS
1. Candy, informal
5. In base 8
10. Worked the soil
14. On or to the left
15. Choice
16. A rounded knob or protuberance
17. Black cat, maybe
18. Consumed
19. Barbecue entree
20. Creative activity in front of an
audience
23. "-zoic" things
24. Oolong, for one
25. Legislative assembly of Spain
and formerly Portugal
28. A shore onto which a ship could
be blown in foul weather
33. Came down
34. -myalgia, debilitating condition
35. ___ green
36. Device that performs operations,
usually in binary notation
40. "The Three Faces of ___"
41. "Encore!"
42. "Scream" star Campbell
43. A system for broadcasting
words on TV
45. Covered in slices of bacon
47. Amigo
48. Boat in "Jaws"
49. Descriptions of something as
admirable
56. English spelling for the capitol
of Shaanxi province
57. Exploits
58. ___ gin fizz
59. ___ brat
60. Harvard, Yale, Brown, etc.
61. Cork's country
62. ...
63. Like some goodbyes
64. Gets into
DOWN
1. Hoof sound
2. Blood pigment
3. "Your turn"
4. Colored paper thrown at celebration
5. Met productions
6. Forces something into an insuffcient
space
7. South American monkey
8. "Absolutely!"
9. Not shortsided
10. Cry of triumph
11. Bypass
12. Declines
13. Affairs
21. Bauxite, e.g.
22. "Belling the Cat" author
25. Citadel student
26. Antipasto morsel
27. Star in Orion
28. Allowed
29. Black, in poetry
30. ___ out (declined)
31. "The Canterbury Tales" pilgrim
32. Dog-___
34. Cultivated for its linseed and
textile fiber
37. Golden Horde member
38. "You must be at least 21 to drink
alcohol"
39. Made without yeast
44. Namesake for a discovery
45. Tastelessly showy or loud
46. Appear
48. A boorish or aggresive person,
especially an Australian man
49. Copter's forerunner
50. Dalai ___
51. The Jackson52.
Hip bones
53. Assortment
54. Norse goddess of fate
55. Attends
56. "Do the Right Thing" pizzeria owner
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS January 23, 2026 edition
׉	 7cassandra://tceiIf4yHcggxILnKv-g7yVLcN7CtjFKQid0FwcuBt0Q` iL(L׉E FEBRUARY 6, 2026
TAX RESOURCES
tax preparation RESOURCE CORNER
Tax day is April 15! The IRS is already accepting
and processing tax returns; don't wait until the
last day!
If your total income is less than $69,000 you likely
have one or more cash benefits waiting and tax
prep services are at no cost to you. Exact details
vary based on the specific tax credit, your tax
filing status and the number of people in your
household. Some, but not all, tax credits require
that you or your children have a Social Security
Number.
FINDING TAX FORMS
Ann Arbor District Library branches offer physical
copies of various federal tax forms beginning
in late January. Librarians can print additional
forms for no cost. Call (734) 327-4200 for more
information.
Ypsilanti District Library offers tax forms, while
supplies last, at the Whittaker and Superior
branches. Call the library for more information.
Whittaker branch: (734) 482-4110, x2411
 MARLEY from page 9
member pursued a solo career. Bunny
Wailer went his own way and Peter
Tosh went his own way. Marley performed
with a new lineup still using
the band name Bob Marley and the
Wailers.
Marley had his first international
breakthrough in 1975, according to a
Jamaican documentary. The collaboration
with music executive Chris
Blackwell meant that the reggae band
from Jamaica had access to cutting-edge
musical
recording
equipment.
Bob
Marley’s hit song “No Woman,
No Cry” came out of the “Natty Dread”
album. The next year, in 1976, he
released “The Rastaman Vibration”
album. Both albums bore themes of
poverty, slums, oppression, inequality,
injustice and resistance, which were
commonplace in the third world. His
messages include dreams, hopes,
unity, peace, harmony, and above all,
love.
By 1976, there was no doubt that Bob
Marley had become an international
superstar. He was in demand for concerts
in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany,
the United States, and several
more countries. Many reggae music
lovers were rediscovering his older
songs.
On December 28, 1976, there was an
assasination attempt on Marley’s life.
It happened in his house in Kingston,
Jamaica. Marley, his wife Rita, and his
manager were all shot. They survived;
they were lucky. Marley moved to
London at the end of 1976.
Marley and his new Wailers band
Superior branch: (734) 482-4110, x2431
Download necessary tax forms from the Michigan
Department of Treasury website and check
income tax refund status.
www.michigan.gov/taxes
FILING HELP
The Housing Bureau for Seniors
Offering FREE tax return preparation in partnership
with AARP Foundation! Appointments are
offered Wednesdays and Fridays from February 4
- April 10. Trained volunteers will be able to provide
with a full federal and state return or complete
the Michigan Property Tax Credits you
qualify for. Past returns can be completed from
2022 onwards. Call Housing Bureau for Seniors to
schedule your appointment at 734-998-9341!
United Way Southeastern Michigan
Tax preparation services are provided by IRS-certified
non-profit partners, Accounting Aid Society
and Wayne Metro Community Action Agency.
Participation requirements include: make less
members released a very influential
album named “Exodus” in 1977. Its
title song was written in response to
the campaign slogan of Socialist Party
leader Michael Manley, “We know
where we’re going.” Exodus is partly
vision and partly an anthem with a
siren call to all the world to leave the
wickedness of Babylon and return to
the Holy Place of Ethiopia. “We know
where we’re goin’, we know where
we're from. We’re leavin’ Babylon,
y’all, we’re goin’ to our Father’s Land,”
he sings.
In 1978, Marley visited Kingston. He
brought the concept of reggae for
peace and unity. The political disagreements
and election campaigns
got very violent in Jamaica. Marley
wanted Jamaicans to see a symbolic
show of peace and unity. What did he
do? He gave a concert in a big arena
which ended with Socialist Party
leader Manley and Conservative Party
leader Edward Siega (who both served
as Prime Minister) lifting their arms
and shaking hands while Marley was
standing between the two. It was an
important gesture for a peaceful
democracy.
Siega said the following about Bob
Marley after Marley’s passing: “I myself
was a minister in the government,
responsible for art and culture … Bob
Marley captured the popular imagination
of the people. Marley internationalized
Jamaican music. Bob Marley
was successful because of his creative
music. He captured public imagination.
His songs had a message that
transcended race, color and creed. It
dealt with the protests of a large section
of the world.”
than $69,000/year, have a Driver's License or picture
ID, have a Social Security Card or ITIN, live
in Washtenaw County.
Schedule your appointment at unitedwaysem.org/
resources/tax-preparation-assistance/
St. Francis of Assisi Parish
Offers tax help to individuals with limited income
($57,000.00 or less) and simple tax returns. Call
the parish office at (734) 821-2121 to make an
appointment to drop off your return. Services
offered February through April. Assistance also
available in Spanish.
ONLINE FILING
MyFreeTaxes.com
Free online service provided by United Way for
preparing and filing your taxes brought to you by
United Way. Must make $67,000 per year or less to
use this service. Get started today at
MyFreeTaxes.com
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
13
Michael Manley commented that
Bob Marley’s art was very significant.
“He was one of the rare artists to come
around in a generation. Bob Marley
was able to internationalize his songs
and message. Bob could sing about
Zimbabwe and Trenchtown.”
Robert Marley, according to Manley,
was “one of the most articulate ‘troubadours’
of the ghetto.” His caring
about social issues such as poverty,
inequality and injustice was unshakable
and uncompromising.
Bob Marley’s final two albums were
released in 1979 and 1980. “Survival”
(1979) had popular songs such as
“Zimbabwe” and “Africa Unite” and
“Survival.” Marley’s last studio album,
“Uprising,” showcased Marley’s belief
that reggae music came out of Africa
and people like Marley polished the
music and made it famous. Reggae
was indeed a reflection of the stories
of oppressed people in Africa and the
African diaspora.
When the End is Near
Music historians say that Marley’s
last concert performance was at Stanley
Theater in Pittsburgh, Pa. on September
23, 1980. That was around the
time he found out about his illness —
cancer. The diagnosis showed that the
cancer, which started on his foot, had
probably spread to other parts of his
body, and his managers cancelled the
rest of his tours so he could get treatment.
Because of his religious beliefs,
Marley rejected the amputation which
was recommended by his doctors. In
the final stage of his life, from 1980 to
1981, he sought alternative medicine.
It did not work. Treatment at a clinic in
Germany did not stop the cancer from
spreading rapidly. Marley prepared
himself to die in his mansion in
Kingston.
But while trying to get back home, he
passed on at a medical center in Florida,
now known as the University of
Miami Medical School. Marley’s dead
body was flown to Jamaica where he
received a state funeral fit for a national
hero or a prime minister.
They mourned and celebrated Bob
Marley’s life and death all over Jamaica.
His music, his song lyrics were sung
from every corner of the world. There
is no question that Marley’s funeral
was a triumphant event, as mourners
sang and danced to the melodies
which brought hope and comfort to
masses of downtrodden and poor
people across the globe. There is a line
from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar:
“When beggars die there are no comets
seen/ The heavens themselves blaze
forth the death of princes.” Bob Marley
was a global Prince of “One Love,”
which Prime Minister Edward Siega
said meant “the vision of peace and
unity” during his eulogy in 1981.
Bob Marley’s musical accomplishments
are staggering. He was posthumously
inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame in 1994. Marley’s
1977 album titled “Exodus” was designated
album of the 20th Century by
Time magazine in December 1999.
Marley’s song “One Love” was designated
Song of the Millennium by the
BBC. Marley continues to be remembered
all over the world.
iL(MiL(L
בCט   
u׉׉	 7cassandra://LWA_ocLrzTALETmmuduAV_zsU91ccPo6m-LMK8OrQS8 @`I׉	 7cassandra://y2Pk7PSBQtv3DH5WVhYIC-FmY3PVf4goUtBuo3cPX9g 4n`׉	 7cassandra://SHwxMmyc1COWVpbKmxnvIrRNp0_i1PNErg_rKNGTBrcP` iL(zנiL(| 	,E9ׁHhttp://INSP.ngׁׁЈ׉E14
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
SPOTLIGHT
Sugar Man and the origins of SK Rodriguez
TOMMY SPAGHETTI
Groundcover vendor No. 669
Everybody knows Sugar Man right?
If you don't know Sugar Man then perhaps
you missed the greatest Cinderella
story of the 21st century: Artist/
musician makes a record. Record
flops. Record company drops Artist
from label. Artist lives in relative
obscurity 30+ years. Through an internet
connection, Artist discovers they
have millions of fans overseas. Artist
travels to foreign country and receives
a hero's welcome. Artist makes triumphant
return home. Artist lives happily
ever after.
What I just described to you was
documented in the 2014 Academy
Award winning movie "Searching For
Sugar Man," directed by Malik Bendjelloul.
I have to mention Malik's name
because without him this whole comeback
story might have been missed.
It is easy to identify with the artist
Sixto Rodriguez (aka Sugarman), especially
if you're in the music business or
if you just like it when the underdog
wins.
Maybe it was better that Sugarman's
album flopped commercially in the
United States because it preserved his
body for future use. We all know the
down-side of overnight stardom: drug
and alcohol use/abuse; fast living;
overconsumption of food; sex and an
early demise. The road after success is
littered with youthful corpses, i.e.,
Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison, Belushi.
Sugarman’s 1973 record album, Cold
Facts, had music that was danceable
but the lyrics were perhaps too honest
for the average consumer. The song "I
Wonder," while upbeat and danceable,
pondered sex. Pondered Vietnam. Was
written and composed in the early 70s
vernacular. No wonder it didn’t sell
well in the United States in the 1970s.
The title track "Sugar Man" integrated
marijuana, tolerated cocaine — two
subjects the Motown Records subsidiary
was not interested in promoting.
Lets fast forward now to 2026 and we
have Sandra Rodriguez carrying her
father's legacy like an Olympic torch.
The two imposters, Chance and Fate,
lured us together. Necessity wrote the
screenplay. I was looking for a band to
hire for a variety show and after a brief
phone conversation with Sandra
Rodriguez, aka SK, it was clear that her
experience was beyond my own. I
gratefully relinquished my position
and invited SK to produce our "In
Loving Memory" show, a tribute concert
to the late poet activist John Sinclair.
(Wishing to avoid confusion I am
calling Sugarman, "Rodriguez." And I
am calling Sandra Rodriguez, "SK."
That's how they are referred to locally
by friends and family.) Collaborating
with SK made me realize that I was in
the presence of greatness and that I
needed to conduct an interview with
SK for Groundcover News in Ann
Arbor, because Groundcover has a
loyal readership.
TS: How did you get the moniker SK?
SK: The initials of my name Sandra
Kennedy. Rodriguez first called me SK
and I like it.
TS: How did you get into singing as
a career?
SK: I wrote and copyrighted six
songs. When Rodriguez learned about
it he asked me to be his "ice breaker"
and open his shows with my originals.
My first performance was at Barclays
Center in Brooklyn in front of 6000
people.
TS: Wow! What year was that?
SK: 2013.
“Resurgent troubadour Rodriguez —
the subject of the Academy Award-winning
documentary, "Searching for
Sugar Man" — is performing at Barclays
Center on Wednesday, October 9
at 8 p.m. The concert at Cushman &
Wakefield Theater at Barclays Center
continues one of the most remarkable
musical comebacks in recent memory
on Rodriguez’s wildly popular U.S.
tour itinerary. Support acts for Rodriguez
will be Sandra Rodriguez, Susan
Coswill and John Sinclair.” — A press
release at the time.
TS: Were you the "ice breaker" for all
those shows in South Africa and
Australia?
SK: Yes all the shows in Europe,
Canada, the United States, Australia
— I have yet to perform in ZA, I just
announced a tour, trying to make it
there.
TS: ZA?
SK: Republic of South Africa
TS: You were already in ZA. I saw
"Searching for Sugar Man" movie
poster about Sixto Rodriguez.
you in the movie "Searching for Sugar
Man." Was that before Barclays Center?
SK stands in front of
Detroit mural of her
father, Sixto Rodriguez.
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
TS: Yes, and South Africa was before
my dad knew I wrote and sang and
played songs. And the other time he
toured I stayed in the United States
and sent my daughters. They have
been there several times, bless that
man!
TS: Are you excited about going to
ZA?
SK: About the possibility, yes.
TS: Seems like a difficult thing to pull
off. I would be nervous but you've
been there before. You played four
sold out shows in Australia in 2025.
How do you stay relaxed while traveling
such great distances and performing
for large audiences?
SK: I see it as a privilege and a pleasure
and an honor to be there, and
doing music is even more incredible!
TS: Sandra, I wanna call you Sugarmomma.
How do you feel about that?
SK: Not interested in being called
that. My name is SK. Or Sandra.
By this time in our relationship SK
and I had become friends. Unwittingly
I got stranded on the east side of
Detroit. I could’ve taken a city bus back
home (13 miles) but I've already
walked five miles and I'm worn out.
Knowing SK lives somewhere on the
east side I give her a call and she
answers. The angels seem to be on my
side so I press my luck.
"SK. I'm stuck at 8 mile and Gratiot.
Can you swoop me?" In just a few minutes
SK arrives in a squeaky clean
new-looking SUV. After I buckle the
seatbelt SK tells me, "I wanna show
you something ..." Wasting no time SK
drives to the Cass Corridor stopping at
not one, not two but three gigantic
murals painted in Sugarman’s likeness.
Each mural depicting Rodriguez
in a different guitar pose. This is a
drive-by mural tour so it doesn't take
long to observe the murals.
SK steers her SUV down an alley. We
stop and SK gets out of the car. Unlocks
and opens a huge wooden gate. We are
now in a fairytale existence. Looking at
a huge stately home in Wayne State
University’s Woodbridge neighborhood.
Sweeping my head from side to
side I gaze at the perfect concrete, the
manicured grass, the stockade fence
offering neighborly privacy and foliage.
"Imagine the shows we could put
on here," states SK. "This porch could
be the stage." SK unlocks the door and
we enter the unoccupied house.
"Rodriguez bought this house for $100
in the 1970s. It was his lifelong
project."
SK is giving me 'the nickel tour' starting
on the first floor. The walls look
freshly drywalled. No art adorns them.
Sanded hardwood floors
perfectly
level. No furniture at all until we reach
the second story. In the living room
rests a polished black grand piano.
Lifting the key cover I sit down to play
a tune while SK walks around making
sure the balcony windows and doors
are firmly locked. "My sisters want to
sell the house. It's listed for $325,000. I
want to buy them out."
SK leads me into the basement.
There on the floor against the bricked
wall are tools. Hammers, sledges,
crowbars, saws, levels,
all neatly
aligned, perfectly spaced, like it's an
exhibit at Greenfield Village at The
Henry Ford Museum. From this evidence
it's clear that Sixto Rodriguez
was a master craftsman. This house is
symbolic of Rodriguez's music career.
Impressive and enduring. The three
Rodriguez murals are not hyperbole.
Rodriguez is remembered and loved
by everyone around here.
׉	 7cassandra://SHwxMmyc1COWVpbKmxnvIrRNp0_i1PNErg_rKNGTBrcP` iL(N׉E'FEBRUARY 6, 2026
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
 YOUTUBE from page 4
testifying, and would not want the
experience to be broadcast.
Buddy 4 stated, “I don’t agree with
that at all, I didn’t know that [they
broadcast on YouTube]. It is public
knowledge, the public has a right to
know about criminals, but with that
said it doesn’t mean I want to be on
YouTube. It wasn’t meant to be the way
people use it.”
Buddy 5 said it’s the “age we live in,
it's the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA), it's the age of social media.”
Buddy 6 said it “shows what kind of
fraud they is, all the system is is money.”
Buddy 7 said, “It’s the First Amendment
and Fifth Amendment, its FOIA.
I see it as content, but with that said I
wouldn’t want to be on YouTube court.
YouTube is how a lot of people get their
news now. After they get a thousand
subscribers they monetize it.”
Buddy 8: “Zoom court has saved my
life, but it shouldn’t be something that
anybody can access and monetize,
there should be oversight.”
Buddy 9: “Typically I think it's horrible.
This guy was having a horrible time
and people were laughing, it's not
funny. It speaks to the popularity of
true crime. If I was in court and I
wanted my support system to be there
but couldn’t be there physically, it
could have a function.”
Buddy 10: “I think the court system
 HOMES from page 8
generational change that impacts the
outcomes for people around them, too.
It’s incredibly powerful when you’re
able to change the trajectory for someone’s
life by simply giving them what
they need at the time they need it most.”
We know that housing ends homelessness,
but the scale of the problem is
daunting. More than 122,000 Australians
are without a home each night,
and another 1.26 million households
are living in housing stress — spending
more than 30 per cent of their income
on rent or mortgage payments. And
with a critical shortfall of social housing,
there are 640,000 households on
the waiting list for an affordable home.
Longo believes that it will take the
combined efforts of many motivated,
connected movements to make a lasting
impact, and Homes for Homes is
taking the long view: seeking enduring
rather than quick-fix solutions, and
new brick-and-mortar sanctuaries
rather than emergency triage options.
Longo outlined the need for a
“healthy ecosystem,” with housing
options existing on a continuum.
“You’ve got social housing, affordable
housing, private rental and then private
ownership,” she said. “It’s really critical
should be abolished. I’m not comfortable
with it [YouTube court]. I think
they play to the camera.”
Buddy 11: “Law teacher at school
uses it. They show the live courtroom
to the students to show how the court
system works.”
Buddy 12: “It’s f***ed-up, they [the
police] profiled me off of that. ‘We
know what you are in court for,’ because
I got in trouble. It's supposed to be
innocent until proven guilty, now it's
guilty until proven guilty.”
Buddy 13: “COVID brought it to light
when everything went virtual … YouTube
is broadly used in a way to embarrass
people and I don’t like it. I don't
like all the viral, stressful, emotional,
hard on public display for entertainment
... different people have different
comfortability … people have a right to
view … using it as entertainment I am
personally in disagreement with …
there are sensitive issues, people are
going through things ... using their
plight for entertainment.”
Buddy 14: “I don’t think you should
be allowed to put a very private, intimate,
life-altering experience out for
display like reality TV … mental shame
and anguish … people haven’t even
been given due process. It robs them of
a sense of justice that they can participate
in justice fairly.”
Buddy 15 clarified they didn’t know
they were being broadcast. It’s “21st
century modern times and everything
that those sectors are in harmony, and
that those most vulnerable are given an
opportunity to move through the
system when they’re financially positioned
to do so.”
The dream for Homes for Homes, as
it ticks past its first decade, is to see the
recipients of its projects grow into a
position where they might give back
themselves, signing up to pay 0.1 per
cent forward — good housing karma
incarnate!
“In time, I would hope to see that,”
Longo said. “In the next 10 years, I’d
love for [Homes for Homes] to get to the
point when it’s just understood to be
part of the buying and selling process
in Australia, in the same way we talk
about safety measures like wearing a
seatbelt or a helmet.”
“With my background, I think from a
very early age, I realized the power that
advocacy actually has,” Aristea said. By
the end of September, she will be admitted
as a solicitor, working in criminal
law — using the “talent for self-advocacy”
that she discovered through
securing her family that studio, and
applying it for the benefit of others.
Empowered by her own experience of
finding the right housing at the right
time, she can speak to the cracks that
she’s seen in the system.
so to some extent things are recorded.
What I couldn't imagine in a million
years is that it would be taken into a
public domain so quickly and publicly.
It’s a lucrative content-making opportunity
off of parading people around
like legal Jerry Springer, and unlike talk
shows, real outcomes with real cases,
real lives affected forever. The bottom
line is there is money to be made from
this content and as long as that’s the
case we will keep seeing these types of
exploitative practices. Like with everything,
the internet could be used for
good or bad. It streamlines bottlenecks
that have long been there, but there is
a cost to people’s safety and privacy.”
Post-pandemic court
COVID-19 launched a permanent
shift to rely more heavily on internet
access to court business. However,
concerns remain about how current
practices balance constitutional rights.
At this time courts rely heavily on State
Court Administrator Office’s 2020
guidelines and standards. While the
guidelines explicitly state Zoom and
YouTube are not the only acceptable
platforms, the directions do explain
how to utilize them. In 2023 the MJC
recommended SCAO add updates to
the standards and guidelines for
live-streaming settings to decrease
trauma.
A recent review of Washtenaw
“A lot of people who end up in front
of the criminal justice system were victims
first, who often didn’t have the
adequate support that they needed
when they were younger,” she reports,
“and the rates of criminalization in
people who have experienced domestic
violence as youth are sky high.”
Aristea said that her family’s humble
Kids Under Cover studio felt way bigger
on the inside, providing her with a place
to study, decompress or escape — without
actually having to leave the family
and face an uncertain future alone. “It’s
that step towards independence that’s
actually prolonging childhood,” Aristea
said of the young people who are
granted their own studio spaces, “and
it’s keeping them at home for longer.”
Today, she is a fierce critic of governmental
neglect of public housing. “The
reality is that there’s no viable alternative.
You’re converting a system that
helps working-class families, that supports
migrants and domestic violence
victims, and a lot of those people who
would be appropriately placed in public
housing are going to end up
homeless.”
Longo feels the same, claiming that
in a perfect world, her role at Homes for
Homes would not exist. “But the reality
is that there’s been under-investment
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
15
County judges listed on the MiCOURT
Virtual Courtroom directory suggests
not all Washtenaw County courtrooms
currently have a working YouTube link,
nor do all judges with a working link
have the 1000-subscriber threshold for
monetization. The judges without a
YouTube link and those with fewer
subscribers appear to handle a larger
load of cases relating to protected and
vulnerable populations such as juveniles,
families, personal protection
orders and specialty courts. However,
an inspection of the MiCOURT Virtual
Courtroom Directory and washtenaw.
org indicates that both state and county
information about courtrooms and
judges sometimes need updating.
At this time, a FOIA request is in
progress, with the goal of gaining clarification
surrounding whether courtrooms
have monetized livestreaming
and how the revenue is being utilized.
According to a Michigan Courts News
Release from November 6, 2025, written
by John Nevin, titled "A New Era for
Michigan’s Trial Courts: Transformative
Funding Model Proposed," efforts
are underway to change court funding
aiming to “eliminate financial conflicts
of interest, ensure fair and stable funding,
and expand equitable access to
justice for all Michiganders.”
In the release is a summary
see YOUTUBE page 16 
in social, affordable housing for multiple
years, and it can’t be solved by one
organization, one government. There
has to be multiple levers and strategies,
and Homes for Homes is one of those.”
Ten years in, the scope and impact of
Homes for Homes continues to evolve,
with renters now involved in the process,
too — donating 0.1 per cent of their
monthly rent. So too, the sale or lease of
offices, retail outlets and factories.
With a number of projects in the
works, one of the closest to Longo’s
heart is The Cornelia Program, which
gives at-risk women in Victoria the
accommodation and specialized help
to stay with their newborn babies.
It sounds a million miles away from
some kind soul selling their pile of bricks
— but it’s not, Longo said. “We’re looking
at how the entire community can be
part of the solution, how we’re all able to
link arms in support of this cause.
“It’s allowing us to grant funds across
a diverse variety of different organizations.
We want to tackle long-term outcomes
for people who need housing.
It’s seamless and it’s simple, but it goes
a long way to making a difference for
people on the margins.”
Courtesy of The Big Issue Australia /
INSP.ngo
iL(OiL(N
בCט   Fu׉׉	 7cassandra://WTmUiy2lUH7kwat9uOckE3FytzVQsIYDQc6dFmssJsY `׉	 7cassandra://PmkKoRO6_tetRYBGgPrLgdGfou3xGC5IdThEvJQ4p0c͌*`h׉	 7cassandra://S98Avwczj6T9yK1B75OoxwfWb2NspUsIIxns1ONBjcQ)3` iL(}נiL( d9ׁHhttp://PEOPLESFOOD.COOPׁׁЈ׉E16
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Hot chocolate
LUIZA DUARTE CAETANO
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
4 cups whole milk*
1/2 cup cocoa powder
1/2 cup sugar
8 oz dark chocolate, chopped finely
Optional toppings: marshmallows,
whipped cream
Directions:
Bring milk to a simmer on medium-low
heat.
Whisk in cocoa powder, sugar
and chopped chocolate. Keep on
low heat until chocolate melts
completely and everything is fully
combined.
Add preferred toppings in each
glass. Makes four servings.
*Substitute a plant-based milk for
a just-as-good dairy-free verison!
Help vendors stay warm during this extra-cold winter by donating
hand warmers, toe warmers and hot chocolate packets. It
makes a big difference when working long hours outside! Drop
off to our office anytime during our daily hours, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Coordinate a pick-up by calling 734-263-2098. Thank you!
SAVON SALVADOR
Groundcover vendor No. 273
This is our song: “Happy Scopes is
here today. Read it, laugh and smile
all day! Happy Scopes is here today!”
Capricorn (Dec 22-Jan 19): Your
qualities and craftsmanship are
spectacular — expect nothing but the
best from the avenue of choice and
chance.
Aquarius (Jan 20- Feb 18): Those
broken promises are mending. Don't
let that temper ruin the peace around
you. Maybe focus on what’s right in
front of you.
Pisces (Feb 19-Mar 22): Escape
from your hardship and the past. Try
to hunt the kinder heart you have.
Stay in one lane and complete it; you
will have better results.
Aries (Mar 21- April 19): Wear
loose clothes and you will slide into
that new position. You have so much
to look forward to. The new moon is
going to energize your body, mind
and soul, so don't miss out.
Taurus (Apr 20-May 20): Don't be
unsure, but gardening your responsible
hands will for sure work. Try out
a self-pamper day. The spa awaits
you.
Scoripo (Oct 23- Nov21): Insight
about assessing research about what
is aiding you. Dedicate and challenge
yourself to overcome that which is
superficial or small.
Sagittarius (Nov 22-Dec 21): There
are theories about what you may do
new or what your new move might
be, but keep it to yourself. They don’t
need to know the results until the
final product or decision.
FEBRUARY 6, 2026
February Happyscopes
Gemini (May 21- June 20): Yes,
you learn quickly, however, learn to
not chat with the wrong crowd. It’s
time to write your own song and tune
and let someone else listen to your
creation.
Cancer (Jun 21-July 22): A good
meal in solitude will help open your
mind. Taking a step back to recreate
yourself is always important.
Leo (July 23-Aug 22): Your heart is
golden, but who is going to shine it
when it’s dull or dusty? Gain and give
at the same time — it is a cycle.
Virgo (Aug 23- Sept 22): Become
that animal within your finances and
secure your future.
Libra (Sept 23 - Oct 22): Don't be
afraid to let your guard down, cool
kid. Your bravery will be rewarded
with true friendship.
 YOUTUBE from page 15
USE THIS COUPON ANYTIME
$5 OFF
NATURAL FOODS MARKET
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
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
3/30/2026
suggesting a framework for the future
of internet court taken from India’s
experiences, dated July 2025, written
by L. Gupta, published in The Legal
Youngster, and titled Judicial Transparency
Vs Privacy: An Analysis of Live
Streaming of Court Proceedings. In
the article Gupta says a judiciary’s
credibility relies on public confidence,
which “hinges on transparency and
accountability.” Seven safeguards and
recommendations follow: 1) Selective
streaming which only streams proceedings
“involving constitutional
interpretation, public interest litigation,
and significant legal questions,
with cases involving family, vulnerable
populations or sexual offenses
excluded;” 2) Anonymization and
blurring measures to protect identities;
3) Content regulation where a
time-delay may be utilized to filter
inappropriate or confidential material;
4) Training and sensitization for
judges, lawyers, and court staff to
handle streamed proceedings with
decorum and professionalism; 5)
Technological infrastructure that
includes secure and high quality
audio-visual equipment for smooth
streaming; 6) Legal framework that
provides clear guidelines, data protection
principles, and penalization of
misusing content; 7) Archives and
accessibility for recording storage on
official judicial portals with metadata,
categorization, and public access
tools.
Part of Gupta’s conclusion states
livestreaming “has the potential to
revolutionize public engagement with
the legal system, enhance legal education,
and promote institutional
accountability. However, the enthusiasm
for openness must be tempered
with a cautious understanding of its
repercussions.”
Making improvements to the justice
system is in progress, and it is possible
for Michigan courts to improve access,
maintain transparency, protect privacy
— and even achieve MSC’s goal
of making our justice system “a model
for the nation.”
׉	 7cassandra://S98Avwczj6T9yK1B75OoxwfWb2NspUsIIxns1ONBjcQ)3` iL(P׈EiL(QiL(P
,February 6, 2026im[