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$
JUNE 2, 2023 | VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 12
ASK YOUR
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
A local look at trans people in
homeless shelters. Page 4
VENDOR: WHO
DO YOU MOST
ADMIRE?
TERESA BASHAM, #570
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
trans rights
respect
asexuality
healthcare
gender
expression
shelter
PRIDE
ISSUE
community
transitions
safety
love
Mural by Joey Salamon
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
2023
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idvFז0?HTנdvFז0?HT U9׉Hhttp://www.groundcovernews.orgGׁׁrנdvFז0?HT k9׉H  http://linktr.ee/groundcovernewsGׁׁrנdvFז0?HT ^9ׁH "mailto:contact@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈ׉E2
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
from the DIRECTOR's DESK
this year, and you’re holding it!)
On the day after its print release, I
overheard a conversation about trans
LINDSAY CALKA
Managing Director
In June 2022, Groundcover News
published a special edition for Pride
Month. This was the first of its kind for
Groundcover. Although the publication
had published LGBTQ+ articles and
content before, never had the organization
taken a concerted action intentionally
marketed as such. Almost every
piece was written by or centered
LGBTQ+ people or issues in the local
community. (Spoiler: we did it again
people in the Groundcover office that,
in an attempt to be humorous, was
extremely hurtful. I stepped in to open
up a conversation about the statement
I heard, to inform those in the conversation
how that might be understood
as an offense, a slur or an invalidation
of personhood. We talked about what
the consequences are to sell this paper,
and speak hate, even if out of ignorance,
as a representative of Groundcover
News.
The intersection of homelessness
experience and LGBTQ+ identity is an
important one. LGBTQ+ — especially
transgender — people have a higher
risk of becoming homeless due to stereotypes,
transphobia, hatred and systemic
oppression. Navigating the
system of welfare and survival as a trans
person often includes lack of privacy,
lack of belonging, physical violence,
misgendering, trauma and re-traumatizing
experiences.
Yet, very few people in our workplace
— a workplace for people experiencing
homelessness — identify as LGBTQ+.
It was a wake up call that the Groundcover
News vendor base is not a perfect
sample of the homeless experience as
many members of our community
assume.
Certainly we have a diverse and
unique group of vendors and writers
who challenge stereotypes everyday out
on the street and in their writing. Anyone
with lived experience of homelessness
and poverty can sell Groundcover News,
but that doesn’t necessarily mean everyone
with this experience does. Selling
Groundcover means constantly being in
the public eye, and being in a position to
be ignored or embraced or even reviled,
over and over again.
I thought a lot about what it means
for Groundcover News to publish
another Pride Issue: to speak on behalf
of, and to defend, an identity that most
who work for Groundcover do not hold.
Instead of avoiding this lack of representation
by not publishing a Pride Issue
this year, we chose to do it again, expanding
the contributor base and owning the
reality that we have an obligation as a
street paper to cover these issues and
spotlight the people, organizations and
ideas that are making the community a
better place for everyone.
Because to understand the intersection
of queerness and homelessness is
to better understand homelessness.
And to challenge stereotypes of being
gay, trans or asexual is to challenge stereotypes
of poverty.
Our liberation is bound up with one
another.
JUNE 2, 2023
CREATING OPPORTUNITY AND A
VOICE FOR LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WHILE TAKING
ACTION TO END HOMELESSNESS AND POVERTY.
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.
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.
STAFF
Lindsay Calka — publisher
Cynthia Price — editor
Layla McMurtrie — deputy editor
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
D.A.
Rachel Braun
Ladi Dä
Markona Love
Chen Lyu
Danielle Mack
Layla McMurtrie
Phoenix Oaks
Mira Simonton-Chao
PROOFREADERS
Susan Beckett
Elliot Cubit
Zachary Dortzbach
Anabel Sicko
Sandy Smith
VOLUNTEERS
Jessi Averill
Logan Brown
Luiza Duarte Caetano
Glenn Gates
Alexandra Granberg
Harleen Kaur
Robert Klingler
Holden Pizzolato
Mira Simonton-Chao
Alex Tarbet
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Claude VanValkenburg
Navya Yagalla
Emily Yao
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
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׉	 7cassandra://_ZlLD8evnSDvwXIMu91VIYAlorX-zrnuXi6uUZWw4OcM` dvFז0?HTq׉EJUNE 2, 2023
ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
Who in this world do
you most admire?
Billie Holiday. Despite all she
went through, she still was able
to do what she did, achieve
what she achieved. My favorite
song of hers is "Blue Moon."
— Teresa Basham, #570
In my lifetime, MLK. Among
the living , the 17th Karmapa.
— Ken Parks, #490
Jesus.
— Gary Robinson, #224
Dead: Jonas Salk, Living: Neil
deGrasse Tyson.
— Markona Love, #590
Jesus.
— Tony Schohl, #9
I respect everyone.
— Roberto Caballero, #347
Stevie Wonder.
— Felicia Wilbert, #234
Susan Beckett, for what she
did for Groundcover and her
vision for the organization.
Glenn Gates, for his hard work
and dedication.
— Joe Woods, #103
Lindsay.
— James Tennant, #174
My dad, for all the sacrifices he
made throughout the years.
And Glenn!
— Dan Wilcox, #592
DANIELLE MACK
Groundcover vendor No. 5
Happy Pride Month to everyone!
I hope you are enjoying what
seems to be the end of spring and
the beginning of summer. I have
not written an article since I left
Michigan to get married back in
2013 to another trans woman
named Shelley.
A lot has happened since Shelley
and I were married in Massachusetts,
and quickly moved to California,
her favorite place to live. After a
few years I got a job with TSA, and
just as I was finishing up my training
with TSA, Shelley passed away.
We had made plans to move to Seattle
at the end of that year, plans that
I followed through with. I was born
in Seattle so that area is home to me.
Shelley had lived there before and
liked it. With my federal job I could
transfer anywhere in the country.
I transferred to Seattle in 2017. I
loved living in Seattle, but eventually
my parents and I started
talking again and I chose to move
back to Michigan to try and speed
up the reconnection. My dad’s
side of the family has been in
Michigan since 1865, and aside
from kindergarten, all my schooling
has been in Michigan; but after
so much time on the west coast, I
felt a lot of culture shock moving
back to Michigan in 2018.
I quickly realized my parents and
I get along better with a thousand
miles between us and I wanted to
get back to Seattle. Unfortunately I
ran into some bigotry and transphobia
working at the Grand
Rapids airport. I filed complaints
and did everything I could but
never heard anything back from
headquarters. They tried to fire me
at that airport, but thanks to some
help from the union I was able to
instead get forced into a transfer to
a position and airport I didn’t really
want.
In 2019, I was transferred to
Washington D.C., where I was
eventually able to get things
worked out to get back to working
as an officer and start working my
way back to Seattle. At the end of
that year I was able to get a transfer
to Denver. I loved Denver!
I had my voice surgery to raise
my pitch and trachea shave to
reduce the size of my Adam's
apple done in Denver. In 2021, I
transferred to Las Vegas for six
months, then back up to Seattle. I
eventually left TSA shortly after
moving back to Seattle and found
a job using my degree to work for
the public schools.
I worked for Seattle Public
Schools for about a year and a half
as a special education teaching
assistant, aka paraeducator. My
first year on the job I had a great
team that I loved working with, but
at the end of the last school year
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Transitions since Groundcover
the teacher decided to try something
else. We got a new teacher
that did not seem to like me too
much, and proceeded to make my
work environment very stressful.
I panicked a bit and instead of
requesting a transfer to another
school I just quit and decided to try
working for the federal government
again, for the United States
Postal Service. I hated that job,
decided it wasn’t for me very
quickly and I just went back onto
teaching. I left USPS before my probationary
period ended and was
jobless for about six weeks before I
got hired by the same school district
I started kindergarten in up
near Everett, just north of Seattle.
After all this time I know I want
to live and work near Everett. Last
fall I managed to acquire my dream
car, a 1993 GMC Sierra K1500 halfton
pickup truck, that I am still
making payments on. I am working
my dream job, and currently only
casually looking for my dream
house up near Everett.
Unfortunately I am in a bit of a
rough patch as I don’t get my first
paycheck from this new job until
the end of next month and I am
already behind on quite a few bills
and struggling to make it to that
first paycheck. I am trying all sorts
of things to help myself, but keep
running into problems. There is an
end to the stresses in sight. Now I
just need to get there.
3
Back in the crack
The light was only peeking out,
but at least I could see it, in the distance
— barely — from the pit,
where Uncle Sam wants me/us. It’s
getting crowded down here —- as
the low-income, disenfranchised
population increases daily. There
isn’t even talk of any real solution,
let alone any positive action. They
can’t seem to even slow down the
spread of disparity.
'The Crack' is the fissure that is
What would YOU ask?
If you have a question you would like
Groundcover vendors to answer in this
column, email us at
contact@groundcovernews.com
We will be featuring vendor responses in
future issues.
seemingly impossible for the lower
class to step out of, and what the
middle class is falling into … a never
ending, bottomless pit of despair.
More jobs have more expenses
and complications. How many jobs
does it take to afford to live in a tent
by the railroad tracks? … four. Yep.
How do you get out of a locked
box?! Where's Houdini when you
need him? With all the time and
energy the government spends
But what's the point in wasting
MARKONA LOVE
Groundcover vendor No. 590
creating those walls and locking
your box then hiding the key, you
would think that they would have
just housed people instead.
I could explain how each one of
those walls were created and how
they contained me, but it would be
futile. I’m more interested in the
ways of the ‘winds of change.’ Ya, I
know, that’s vague ...
any more breath on the details of
how the system screws us? Let’s
start acting as a compassionate
community. Government is not
going to save us, it's way too concerned
with self-preservation. We
need to come together, work
together … for each other. We the
people need to see ourselves as a
whole, as One — and start from
there. We need some love and
understanding. We have to find a
way to appreciate each other's
boundaries.
This is the most comfortable and
in control I have felt in years — here,
living in a tent in the woods, next to
the railroad tracks. Here is where I
experience the most disconnection
from the binding system.
I wonder why we can't get parcels
see BACK page 11 
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PRIDE
LAYLA MCMURTRIE
Deputy Editor
According to Health Care for the
Homeless, one in five transgender
people, and 41% of Black trans people,
have experienced homelessness. There
are very few shelters specifically for
trans and gender non-conforming
homeless people, and most of the
resources available cater towards
youth, leaving trans adults suffering.
Shelters are no exception to the hate
that the LGBTQ+ community is often
subject to.
At the Robert J. Delonis Center in
Ann Arbor, where there are 56 residential
beds, women are placed on the
fourth floor and men on the third floor.
Often trans people don’t feel right with
either option, as many feel unsafe in
men’s shelters due to a higher risk of
sexual assault, but can also feel out of
place with cisgender women.
Local trans lesbian Sarah Dunn has
spent time in the Washtenaw County
homeless community since coming out
in 2017 and said that she never felt
comfortable at Delonis. “I didn't feel
safe, even waiting outside, because I
was catcalled. I had some guy trying to
put his arm around me,” Dunn said. “I
was glad that Washtenaw Camp Outreach
was able to put me up at a motel
that night and then I moved into Purple
House the next day, but it was that traumatizing
even just waiting out there
knowing that I could be preyed on.”
Dunn thinks that to prevent behavior
like this, shelters should have a
zero-tolerance policy for predatory
behavior. While Delonis does have a
non-discrimination policy and a way
for residents to file complaints, it
seldom results in aggressors being
JUNE 2, 2023
A local look at trans people in homelesss shelters
exited from the shelter, according to
Housing Director Christina Johnson.
When starting her job at Delonis in
2012, Johnson was glad to find out that
their rule was already that a client will
be placed on the floor matching their
gender identity. But, the system is still
far from perfect. Currently, the center
has no specific protections for trans
people, just a community agreement
poster that emphasizes safety and
respect.
see SHELTER next page 
A few notes on respect: How to ensure you're
treating a trans person with dignity
PHOENIX OAKS
Street Roots vendor
I've noticed that, unfortunately, staff
and volunteers who run non-profits
that serve poor and houseless folks are
often unaware of how to treat transgender
community members with
basic respect. Some are outright
unwilling to use trans people’s correct
names or pronouns. That was my
reason for putting together a presentation
that the following tips were taken
from.
This lack of respect is especially
unacceptable given that trans people
make up a highly disproportionate
percentage of houseless folks. We face
very high rates of discrimination, violence,
family and community rejection,
harassment and suicide attempts
because of transphobia. The last thing
struggling trans folks need is to be mistreated
in places like shelters, service
centers, offices, medical clinics and
places where they get food and use
restrooms.
I’ve experienced incessant misgendering
and other forms of transphobia
by a few people in some of these
places. I’ve also seen trans people get
harassed, discriminated against and
misgendered by staff and other residents
in shelters. I’ve been told by an
employee at a shelter service that trans
men can just go to the women’s shelter
after I raised concerns about trans
men and nonbinary people’s safety in
shelters.
As a trans man, I’d feel extremely
uncomfortable and out of place going
into a women’s shelter (especially
since I pass as male and am legally
male). At the same time, I’d unfortunately
feel unsafe in a men’s shelter,
too, given how high the risk of sexual
assault would be there. Many people
in this community first met me before
I started transitioning.
Don’t get me wrong — trans men
and women should definitely be able
to stay in men’s and women’s shelters
respectively according to their correct
genders, just as they should be able to
use the correct restrooms. At the same
time, given the current social climate,
I believe that trans, nonbinary and
gender nonconforming people need
their own shelter or shelter beds that
they can go to if they feel safer there.
As things are now, the places that serve
folks who are struggling the most are
often not safe or welcoming to us.
The importance of names and
pronouns
• Respect everyone’s right to
self-identify and express however they
wish at any time and in any situation.
• Once known, use ONLY a person’s
chosen name and pronouns, unless
they explicitly want you to do otherwise.
This can be the case when a
person is still in the process of coming
out.
• Don’t justify deadnaming (using a
person’s former name) or misgendering.
Apologize and correct yourself if
you slip.
• Legal names and genders are often
NOT preferred and are not to be considered
people’s “real” names or
genders.
• Don’t
out
anyone without
permission.
Actions, questions and statements
to avoid
• Unequal, stigmatizing, dehumanizing
or awkward treatment such as
staring; ceasing communication;
deliberate deadnaming or misgendering;
sharing medical/anatomical info,
old photos or birth name without the
trans person’s consent; transphobic
jokes or stereotyping; or using mocking
or condescending tone with
chosen name or pronouns.
• Anything invasive or objectifying
about body, presentation, old or new
name or appearance, or transition
process.
• Pressure to do anything that feels
unsafe or dysphoria-inducing such as
calling police, going to a place that
doesn’t feel welcoming, or presenting
as assigned gender for school or a
family gathering.
• Invalidating trans kids’ or youths’
needs or identities by claiming that
they’re too young to know, that trans
pre-teens shouldn’t go on puberty
blockers, or that trans teens shouldn’t
have hormone therapy, etc.
• Anything that treats trans men as
if they’re not real men or trans women
as if they’re not real women. For example,
stereotyping trans men as being
better than cis men as if they’re not
real men and masculinity is inherently
toxic; treating trans women like they’re
men invading women’s spaces; “We
welcome women and trans people” on
signs; and surveys that have “male,”
“female,” “trans male,” and “trans
female” as distinct options instead of
“cis male,” “cis female,” “trans male,”
and “trans female.”
• Regarding nonbinary genders as
less real or unreal; refusing to use gender-neutral
pronouns or the Mx. honorific;
or saying that they/them for one
person is grammatically incorrect.
• Falsely claiming that being trans is
a mental illness, a trend or a personal
choice; falsely claiming that science
supports transphobia; or saying that
being trans is against one’s culture,
religion, feminism or beliefs.
• Performative allyship, tokenism
A self-portrait of Phoenix Oaks,
originally published in the Street
Roots 2019 Holiday Zine.
and inappropriate parading of trans
identities.
• Accusing trans people of being
unreasonable or overly sensitive in
response to their trauma, dysphoria,
or unwillingness to take transphobia;
blaming trans people’s unrelated
issues on them transitioning; gaslighting;
or saying “not all cis people” when
they process their experiences.
• Treating transphobia like a lower-priority
problem to address or a less
serious/real oppression.
• Arguing that trans people
shouldn’t be allowed in certain jobs,
roles or places for their correct genders,
for
example,
sports
teams,
restrooms, the military, teaching, raising
kids, religious/spiritual leadership
and political office; or that trans prisoners
or poor people shouldn’t be able
to have surgery.
Courtesy of Street Roots / INSP.ngo
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PRIDE
Hidden struggles of asexuality
As our society becomes increasingly
aware of the prevalence of
sexual harassment, one particularly
vulnerable group’s experiences still
remain in the shadows. Asexuality is
defined as experiencing little to no
sexual attraction to any gender.
While being asexual is completely
natural, the misconceptions surrounding
the identity cause many
people to view asexual people, or
aces, as broken or less human.
As an asexual person myself, I’ve
witnessed this dehumanization
countless times and am now striving
to document asexual discrimination,
which is called “aphobia.” In February
2022, I posted a form titled “A Collective
Look on Aphobia” to my
aromantic, asexual TikTok, where
over 3,000 asexual and aromantic
people reported experiencing various
microaggressions. The most concerning
result was that 15.3% of
respondants reported experiencing
sexual assault specifically due to their
identity.
I found this shocking and couldn't
believe I hadn’t seen anyone discuss
this massive issue. I decided to interview
one of these individuals to get a
better perspective on the sexual
harassment that many aces face.
Julia (she/they) began experiencing
sexual abuse long before she
learned that there is a word for her
identity. She described her encounters
with a family member who “took
advantage of a lot of my naivety and
my ‘not feeling very sexual' to try to
educate me in ways that were not
appropriate.”
This experience of “educating on
sexuality” isn’t uncommon for asexuals
and is often used as a tactic for
abusive partners to excuse their
actions. Julia also shared her struggles
in college, where men are notorious
for sexual misconduct. “I've had
men get really confused and upset
when I’d be romantic with them but
RACHEL BRAUN
U-M student contributor
not be sexual with them,” she
explained.
These issues only increased once
Julia realized she’s asexual and
started disclosing her identity. Many
people claimed that asexuality isn’t
real or that she must have a physical
or mental disorder. Even partners
who said they were willing to date an
asexual person later tried to coerce
her into sex or claimed they could
“fix” her. “I was dealing with expressing
boundaries and then having
those boundaries ignored or invalidated,”
she said.
She also mentioned that this violation
of boundaries was more painful
than her previous experiences
because it felt like a direct attack on
her identity.
Julia later shared an encounter with
a man she met at a festival. Despite
clarifying that she’s not comfortable
with anything beyond kissing, she
was physically overpowered by him.
“He grabbed me and pulled me
down to the couch and started trying
to engage more sexually,” she
explained. When she repeated that
she’s asexual, he started shouting and
accusing her of being a liar and leading
him on. Julia was eventually able
to push him away and escape, but
many aces aren’t so lucky. In fact,
“corrective rape” is one of the main
forms of conversion therapy used to
“treat” asexuality.
I also asked Julia if she has trouble
 SHELTER from last page
“I'm sure it's still a flawed process,”
Johnson said. “I would definitely say
that the shelter is no exception to all
of the harassment and bullying that
trans folks have to experience.”
Many trans people feel that the best
option would be opening a shelter
specifically for homeless people of
the LGBTQ community. The reason
there isn’t one currently is mostly
because of lack of funding.
“As far as trans and queer friendly
shelters in the Southeast Michigan
area, there's not very many options
for us,” Dunn said. “We do face housing
discrimination unfortunately,
and even at the time that I was
homeless, it was still legal to deny
and evict someone just because of
who they loved, or who they were. I
really think that what I would like to
see, though, is the grassroots organizations
like the LGBTQ organizations
working with the homeless.”
Purple House, which currently
offers shelter for homeless people in
Washtenaw County during the coldweather
months, had a short-term
summer program in 2022 called the
Lavender Project that offered
finding support as a survivor of
sexual abuse due to their asexuality.
She explained that many people treat
her differently from other survivors
because they think her sexuality
needs to be corrected. Furthermore,
she isn’t able to utilize support systems
provided by doctors, psychiatrists
and therapists because they
assume her sexuality is a result of her
experiences.
She explained, “A lot of my trauma
does get written off as ‘you’re like this
because you’re traumatized’ rather
than ‘you’re traumatized because
you’re like this.’” Julia’s experience
with medical professionals is
common within the asexual community.
The pathologization of asexuality
forces many people to lie or avoid
doctors and therapists, furthering the
lack of visibility for sexual abuse.
Julia’s message for people who
don’t believe asexuality is real is,
“Everybody is having their own experience,
and your experience is not
universal. Leave people the space to
live their own lives.”
Julia’s experience is just one out of
millions, but it gives significant
insight into the struggles of asexuality.
Between the sexual coercion,
medicalization and lack of visibility,
being asexual can be an isolating and
terrifying experience. Julia and I
agreed the best action that can be
taken is improved education. By educating
about asexuality, we can create
a future with greater acceptance, visibility
and safety.
As Julia said in her closing remark,
“Asexuals have always been here and
have always been experiencing discrimination
for who they are, and the
only way we’re gonna make things
better is if the queer community
works together as a whole to educate
and live our lives as brightly and
vibrantly as we can.”
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
transition housing specifically for
LGBTQ people and women. However,
the program was only temporary,
and most residents either
transitioned to permanent housing,
moved back to Delonis or elsewhere
when the program ended September
of that same year.
Both Johnson and Dunn said that
they would be happy to see more
programs like this one in the area. “I
was lucky when I was homeless that
the Lavender Project was running,”
Dunn said. “If they were to have
something more permanent like
that, that would be wonderful.”
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o6
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PRIDE
Ypsilanti Pride's big return
Ypsilanti Pride is kicking off Pride
Month from 4-10 p.m. on June 2 in
Depot Town, an event described by
coordinator Kenneth Curtis as “a community
celebration created with intention
and for meaningful connection.”
In 2022, organizers took a break —
but the group has plans to make a big
return this year and continue to grow
moving forward. “Before this season of
planning, a lot of the board members
from previous years decided to leave
the board … I was the only person that
stayed on the board,” Curtis said. “I’m
wearing a lot of hats right now.”
Ypsilanti’s weekend of pride events
will happen from Friday, June 2
through Sunday, June 4, with the big
full day of events taking place on Saturday,
featuring performances from
LGBTQIA+ identifying regional artists
such as DJ Myint, Baddie Brooks and
Fearless Amaretto.
Curtis is a teacher at EMU Bright
Futures and believes that Pride is crucial
to show local youth that they can
be who they are. “It's so important
because our youth is really just so
vibrant and outspoken about their
rights and what they want to see inside
the schools,” Curtis said. “I think that
[Pride] is the only way that we could
foster that behavior and that mentality
LAYLA MCMURTRIE
Deputy editor
of if you really want something, you
have to go fight for it.”
Baddie Brooks, a recent graduate of
Eastern Michigan University and local
trans femme vocalist and trumpeter,
will be opening the stage with her original
music. As they have utilized music
as an avenue to express themselves,
Brooks and other Pride performers are
a prime example to show youth how
important authenticity is.
Apart from performers, local vendors
at Ypsi Pride will include the Jim
Toy Community Center, PFLAG Ann
Arbor, Unicorn Feed & Supply, Best in
Games, Gay Nerd Goods and Ypsi Art
Supply. Other organizations present
will consist of a multitude of local nonprofits,
retail stores, food, arts and
crafts and health and services.
Ypsi Pride advertisement outside of Aubree's in Depot Town.
Following the events on June 2, there
will be after parties at local arcade Best
in Games and speakeasy-style bar
Mash. On June 3, Keystone Arcade and
Bar will be hosting a Pride Afterglow
Party.
“Ypsi Pride represents authenticity
by reaffirming queer culture and drawing
thousands of folks each year out to
express
themselves
is
a unique Pride
freely among
friends and family,” Curtis said, urging
the community to attend the event.
“Ypsi Pride
event
and
highlight!”
JUNE 2, 2023
experience. It is authentic, intentional
and locally supported. Don’t miss this
annual
Ypsilanti
׉	 7cassandra://uspgOYxx6IP6puTsxPtPZgEGCt7pUdyOBmxtgAuoGeAT` dvFז0?HTu׉EJUNE 2, 2023
PRIDE
How Pastor Anna aligns
queer advocacy with faith
CHEN LYU
Groundcover contributor
I first met Pastor Anna Taylor-McCants
near Liberty Plaza. There was a
crowd of volunteers and other people
who stopped for the meals her FedUp
Food Truck provides. In a place that
would otherwise feel desolate, they
packed the sidewalk and the benches
in the park, conversations and laughter
permeating the air.
For Pastor Anna, the first openly
queer pastor at Zion Lutheran Church,
FedUp was literally a vehicle to carry
God's non-judgemental love to community
members who might have felt
alienated by conventional church
practices.
“I recognize that like this building
that you came in for the first time, out
there there are these huge steps, those
are also barriers,” Anna said. “It is a
home for so many people, but also a
barrier for so many others who look at
this space and think, ‘I don't matter or
I'm wrong or I'm going to hell. I feel
bad about myself because of what the
church said.’ So they don't want to be
in this space. And that to me is
heartbreaking.
“Part of my job is to go out and find
those people and say, ‘I'm sorry that
the church hurt you. I'm sorry that the
church was wrong. God does love you,
you are valuable and you are holy in
your whole existence and all of your
queerness.’”
Originally from Tennessee, Anna
navigated a relatively conservative
Christianity landscape and didn’t
come out until she was 26. She said she
was fortunate to find the calling in
queer theology and identify the
denomination she was aligned with.
However, she also related deeply with
the challenges faced by LGBTQ+ members
in the faith community, including
her wife, Monique’s struggle to reconcile
her gender orientation with her
faith when they first met in
Philadelphia.
“God was releasing me from that
harmful theology into something I was
running to that was life-giving,” Anna
said. “For [my wife], she just kind of
rejected everything. And then it took
her a long time, until she met me and
found the Lutheran church, to realize
maybe God is not who she was taught.”
Zion Lutheran Church was adorned
with rainbow heart stickers by Reconciliation
in Christ, symbolizing its
effort to transform into an all-inclusive
church. This journey involves a queer
theology teaching series that highlighted
Bible stories that manifest
God's unconditional love beyond
binary. In Anna’s preaching — from
the creation of earth to the Chronos
time — nothing was ever binary.
As a faith leader, Anna was instrumental
in aiding the transformation to
inclusiveness. However, another facet
of inclusiveness is to reach the members
who don’t welcome the change,
albeit a minority in a progressive city.
Even in Ann Arbor where residents are
no stranger to rainbow flags flying over
church buildings, attendees of Anna’s
church still run the gamut of the political
spectrum. While Anna was uncompromising
in defending LGBTQ+
members, she told me she still needed
Above: Faith leaders Sara Cogsil, Kristin McCarthy, Anna Taylor
McCants and Julie Winklepeck (left to right). Below: Pastor Anna and
her wife, Monique, serving salads from the FedUp Food Truck.
to walk the tightrope occasionally to
make her preaching palatable to those
who might disagree with her views.
“It's a balance of loving the people in
our congregation who aren't necessarily
ready to fully embrace every color
of the pride flag all the time and at the
same time, I have to also love people
like me who need to hear that and
need to hear it from the pulpit, you
know, proclamations that they are holy
and that God loves them,” Anna said.
“I'm trying to care for everyone.”
Outside her pastoral career, Anna is
an active and extroverted community
member who can be spotted in many
public events. She is organizing a
mobile showering facility and, further
down the road, a brick and mortar cafe
as a community “third place” where
community members from all walks of
life could come in and convene anytime
of the day.
“There are no third spaces other than
libraries and parks, and even around
here you pay money to go to some of
the parks,” Anna said. “So we want to
create a third space that is welcoming,
because aside from a library, aside
from a church building, which most of
our buildings are not open 24/7, we
want to create another space where
people can have their needs met.”
Pastor Anna and her wife Monique
will both be attending Ypsi Pride on
June 2 and Ann Arbor Pride in August.
If you see them, say hello!
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HEALTHCARE
Take action to avoid losing Medicaid coverage!
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
Starting in June, Michigan Medicaid
beneficiaries will have to renew their
coverage to comply with federal
legislation.
During the federal COVID-19 Public
Health Emergency, many changes
were made to Medicaid’s eligibility to
prevent Medicaid beneficiaries from
losing healthcare coverage. Since 2020,
there has been a 34.2% increase in
Medicaid recipients.
In Michigan, annual renewals will
begin again in June 2023 and the first
round of terminations of those ineligible
will happen July 1. The renewal
process will happen on a monthly
basis; if you originally enrolled in Medicaid
in October, no matter what year
your coverage began, your renewal will
still happen in October 2023. Passive
renewals for the June cohort began in
April of this year.
Passive renewals are a mandated
process in which the state of Michigan
uses the information it already has on
file — including income verifications
from other programs such as SNAP —
to attempt to renew Medicaid recipients
without any action on their end.
Recipients who were renewed will
receive a letter in the mail stating such.
Still, it is estimated that no more than
40% of current Medicaid recipients
will be renewed during this phase.
The State of Michigan has taken
action to prepare for these changes in
order to assist current Medicaid beneficiaries
with the redetermination process,
and information on the private
insurance enrollment process, should
they no longer qualify for Medicaid.
One of these actions was an informational
webinar held on Wednesday
May 17; the Michigan Poverty Task
Force
facilitated a conversation
between Kim Trent, key staffer to the
Michigan Poverty Task Force, Zachary
Dillinger with the Michigan Department
of Insurance and Financial Services
and Nicole Hudson with the
Michigan Department of Health and
Human Services.
There were three main takeaways
from the presentation:
1. Update your information with
the state. This can most easily be done
through the MI Bridges portal; it is
especially important for those who
changed addresses or phone numbers
during the pandemic.
2. Frequently check your mail and
text messages. Notice of passive
renewal or a renewal form will be sent
through these avenues.
3. Complete the renewal form as
soon as possible upon receipt. This
can be done through mail, phone, in
the MI Bridges portal or by dropping
off the physical form at a DHHS office.
If it is determined that you will lose
Medicaid, or you presume you will
lose coverage this year, taking action
immediately will prevent a lapse of
healthcare coverage. Marketplace coverage
options can be found at HealthCare.gov.
Dillinger emphasized
researching if a plan covers your current
service providers and calculating
not just what your premium cost
would be, but also co-pays for appointments
and medication.
If you find this process of enrolling
for private coverage overwhelming,
free local enrollment help can be
accessed at LocalHelp.HealthCare.
gov. If private options are not affordable
for you, subsidies are available.
Those ineligible for Medicaid might
still be eligible for subsidies to reduce
coverage payments to as low as $10/
month. Apply for a subsidy at michigan.gov/staycovered.
Having
health insurance is important,
not just for when you are sick or
hurt, but also to help you stay healthy
and avoid big medical bills. It is
important that you take action to get
the coverage you need to protect yourself
and your family.
JUNE 2, 2023
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9
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
POETRY
Love in Doublethink
LADI DÄ
Groundcover contributor
Politicians in positions to listen
Twist in visions and stonewalling decisions
Dean Spade, Marsha P., and Rivers
Hold me down ten toes there in the mirror
War paint on my face hide tears of terror
Olay, Maybelline, and Mascara.
Dominated and entangled in violence
But they still feel I should suffer in silence
Racist and anti-poor sentiment
Operate institutional harassment
Prisons, foster care, and public benefits
Taking lives because they can’t pay rent.
And yet that Ol’Sly fox still duping fools
Sarcastic politics of hate and half-truths
In the land of Lady Liberty
Hegemonic Masculinity fears me
Because I violate the norms of gender binary
But this month they’ll celebrate me
Love.
I get this glow from that heart with a hollow hole
I get this booty with a bump from the beat of a tortured soul
There’s just one thing I want you to know
They give my Love in Doublethink I can’t let go.
About the author: I Am Ladi Dä (they/
them). My survival depends solely upon my
Activism. My art is inspired by the daily
experiences of the transgender, gender nonconforming,
and intersex individuals
trapped in the Prison Industrial Complex.
It is meant to keep us inspired and remind
us that everyone knows: "WE ARE THE
STRONGEST INDIVIDUALS IN THE
WORLD." Take it from someone who has
spent over two decades incarcerated for a
crime they did not commit.
JUNE 2, 2023
Love by Love: "Superhuman"
MARKONA LOVE
Groundcover vendor No. 590
As I sat at Blake Transit Center, the
#26 bus pulled up. I won't forget that
bus #26, even though I don't ride it,
because what stepped off that bus completely
altered my perceptions of reality
… my reality … everybody’s realities: A
Caucasian man … maybe 20-30 years
old, physically wasted, slight build,
maybe 80 pounds, with alabaster skin,
whose whole body looked as if it wanted
to curl into a tight ball. His chest and lap
were strapped into an electric wheelchair,
head completely slumped over,
chin to chest; right hand curled, awkward
fist, left hand curled with left
thumb loose to work the joystick controller
for the chair. No other movement
of his body or any apparent communication
abilities.
He was the most courageous person
I have ever seen … every minute he's a
real Superhuman.
I saw my own reality and then
thought, "I've had a situation of great
isolation, but it was merely a sliver of
the complete isolation our Superhuman
is in himself.” So, in a nutshell, I'm
just a big crybaby. How can anyone
feel sorry for themself while special
human beings like this man can't even
complain?
People surrounded the bus entrance
waiting to board, then stood five feet
back, not just to give my new Superhero
space to exit, but they almost all
purposely looked away, turning completely
from him. "WOW!" my mind
and soul gasped. All I could think is,
"How could anyone possibly be more
isolated from, not just human contact,
but from the entire functionality of
society?”
I watched this Superhuman, who
must assuredly be going home. Never
had I seen anybody near his full level
of apparent disability, without an
assistant. As I continued watching
him, expecting him to go home, he
turned the block and headed up and
into the Ann Arbor Library. This man
had business to get done!
Again, I pondered, "This incredible
human being is in a world completely
of his own making. The sheer power
that his mind possesses to construct
that world from a position of passivity
could teach a lesson that might save
humanity."
And this is coming from a relatively
minorly disabled person who gets it.
Myself, I am isolated for different reasons,
but worlds apart from his level of
isolation. I'm not talking about sympathy,
pity or some kind of condescension.
This is about the tremendous
courage, dexterity, awareness and
wisdom to move on like that.
This person navigates through maximum
adversity, alone and isolated as
A column on everyday acts of compassion
if in an entirely different world. With
intimate conversation, we might glean
a better understanding from the residents
of his world who might communicate
wisdom attributed through the
experiences of such a world of isolation.
Navigating that complete isolation
with absolute singularity is rare at
best. No casual conversation here.
Stop staring and start opening your
hearts and minds.
We have so much to learn from this
incredibly gifted individual. It might
possibly be the lesson that could save
humanity; it’s possible that all our
problems could be reasoned justly by
finding humanity's best side.
Personally, I go on getting worse,
driving on through every kind of pain
all at once. Nobody wants to know it all
or go there, be there at that level. I am
destined to die in this obscurity with
all this hidden/ignored pain.
Man, oh man, do I want to ramble on
about this, but the truth is he's the one
with the knowledge. So let's help him,
and others going through that intense
reality and awareness, share this
knowledge … they could save us!
So why don't we start by treating
-
them like our Superhumans because
they are … Make all the concessions
we can possibly make and give them
the opportunity to teach us.
I'll be looking here, there, and everywhere,
to meet my/our Superhero. I
want to know how the rest of us see
him.
Sincerely, All the love from MarKona
Love (with Kona Love)
Author’s Note: We all need to start
sacrificing more, to start helping all
these special human beings, so they can
help us find a way to Peace, Love and
Acceptance … FINALLY! The people
that are looked down upon in society
— the homeless, disabled, low income
and our Elders — these are my special
human beings, the ones who have felt,
witnessed, and shared with others alike
all about the disparagement in humanity.
That's most likely where they get the
empathy that drives them to donate
when they have nothing, volunteer
when weak, ill, and/or exhausted, be
there for a fallen fellow human being
and to show them how to become a
"Special Human Being."
Ken Parks, a mentor to me, made a
point after strongly supporting my article
“What the Street Took,” and took the
position that the article should then be
“What the Street gave Us (Special
Human Beings) … Empathy and Compassion.”
There you are Ken, my close
friend, great writer for Groundcover,
and a leader in activism for all in
despair. Please learn of the many, many
years of his dedication to the disenfranchised.
He is our Superhuman, and
Ann Arbor and Detroit should be raising
him up high.
׉	 7cassandra://VkhJSHB3z-EsPIvQlEcq3k4Ru5gDmJ_qcZDXJxHYQPIM:` dvFז0?HTy׉E#JUNE 2, 2023
PRIDE
Exist and let exist
D.A.
Groundcover contributor
When I hear any language or terms
that are negative and/or dehumanizing,
I think to myself, there are things
that we all have thought about and/or
have even entertained in our own
imaginations that we will never
reveal. Some have even acted on
them, if only once. It is not our job to
judge anyone that is just being themselves.
That includes anyone who
chooses to identify as a person within
the LGBTQ community in our world.
I prefer to just simply say that although
we are similar in many ways, we are
all individuals.
I do not agree that anyone or anything
that a person or numerous
people fear, disagree with, or simply
just reject because they do not understand,
should suffer or come under
any form of attack or assault. The
realm of the unknown consists of
many reactions among people. It
would be wise to respectfully and
humbly ask about what you don’t
understand. Listen to what they are
saying as an individual.
Not all biologically born females
and males who identify as heterosexual
are the same. What is good or said
to be normal to one may feel offensive
and excluding to another who identifies
as LGBTQ. Hatred and violence
should be replaced with love and
guidance.
I had a friend who identified as gay
who used to get chased by some of the
boys in my neighborhood. When they
caught him, he would be carried to
these big beige trash dumpsters and
thrown in. I would run over and help
him get out of the dumpster. They also
called him offensive names while
making insulting references as well.
He would literally cry on my shoulders
as I embraced him with a hug assuring
him of my unconditional love for him.
These attacks added to the hurt he was
experiencing as his mother openly
mistreated and rejected a close, loving
relationship with him.
I had just as much fun — maybe
more — with this friend as any other
when we spent time together. I was
the one person that he could tell
about the then secret relationship he
was having. He'd be so happy to say
things to me he could not say otherwise
at that time in his life. His face
just lit up as he'd be smiling and
talking about his partner back then.
We'd crack our sides laughing
together about those embarrassing
moments in relationships.
I witnessed how he went through
many struggles, suffering from emotional,
mental and physical anguish.
I know that many will come out after
this article, and hopefully we will be
at a place where LGBTQ persons will
be able to express themselves without
harm being actuated upon them.
LGBTQ people require food, water,
shelter to survive just like any other
human being. People, let's stop putting
our opinions before someone
else's well-being.
Being wicked and deceitful is not
the answer either. I know of people
who say that they are holy Christians,
yet, openly curse LGBTQ individuals
behind their backs. The Almighty God
that I understand is a loving, forgiving,
merciful God. He is the only one
who can justly judge. So do me and a
lot of others a favor and check out
your own self before you point a
finger. We all too will be judged by
God Almighty.
On that note, all I'm saying is if you
are compelled by your faith and/or
beliefs, it is better if you offer them
what you believe and leave it up to
that person to choose after that. We
barely have what it takes to change
the things about us that we want to
change and work at. Not one thing
hardly ever comes or manifests overnight
or in a day. So let's begin to
become people who will be examples
of love and civility.
I am very grateful for the relationship
me and my friend had then. I
have not seen my friend for many
years now and miss him very much.
The last time I saw him was on the bus
in the city he and I lived in at that
time. We had lost contact, then were
reunited again that day.
He had embraced his lifestyle and
identified as femme by way of his garments
and apparel. He also wore
some facial cosmetics. He seemed to
be at peace, not bothered by the past
things. I felt relief for him. I will always
love him unconditionally.
Finally, remember we may reveal
our dislike or distaste, or just our lack
of understanding new and/or what is
unfamiliar. Unless it causes any injury
to yourself or others, all we can do is
exist and let exist.
 BACK from page 3
of sovereign land for community
living. I can’t help but think that this
would greatly reduce homelessness
on the streets along with the crime,
hunger, health issues, lack of safety,
and law enforcement work that often
come with that homelessness. It
might lighten the burden that these
problems lay on society.
I imagine a land-sovereign world
where we would be taking care of
each other and our communities, as
a community. There's lots of talk
about this, there have been some
small communes or even other larger
experiments, but we've never been
more in need of these sincere efforts.
Nobody has yet to put this vision into
practice on a large scale. We don't
need one, no, we need many — a
completely new sector in our society,
a multi-economic-class coalition.
The true necessity is in the design of
the structure. We need a complete
Multi-Economic Eco-Village.
The “Michigan EcoVillage,” under
development in Southeast Michigan,
is a model of that vision. Their EcoVillage
project has home models
varying from $180,000 to $900,000+
and 50 affordable housing units. The
village will be using only solar electricity
and one-third of the property
will be dedicated to food production.
The development will be a certified
“Living Building Challenge,” an international
sustainable building standard
that requires buildings to
produce more energy than they are
using. Since housing in our nation
causes approximately 20% of the
nation's greenhouse gas emissions,
the ecovillage’s developers and supporters
hope that this project can
serve as a blueprint for similar netzero
communities around the
country.
It's time; the government has to see
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the obvious solution. Appropriate
workable land, old/seized farms,
maybe land where the presence of
residents would be beneficial to the
local economy … I can go on and on
about the opportunities. I could also
go on and on about the specifics of
how our government/political
system is forcing
us into a two class
society. There is
no saving the
middle class from
that system, so we
create our own
more sure and
acceptable standard
of living. We
need to get back
to a communal
way
of
living,
where we start to
live and respect
each other, as when villages functioned
similar to a family. It could get
us back to caring for and working
with our neighbors — all our
neighbors.
I am also starting a non-profit
called “Kona's Edge,” which will help
repair personal vehicles owned by
homeless people who utilize said
vehicle as their primary source of
income, and provide storage units,
gas vouchers, registration, insurance
and driver's license renewal for
homeless people in transition.
Another program I'd like to start with
my friend and fellow Groundcover
writer Ken Parks is “CoCar” Cooperative
Car Sharing, in which small
groups would share costs for using
vehicles to make money with delivery
jobs, etc.
I'm so tired of alarmists sounding
the bells. Socialism, Communism,
Anarchy… it all sounds like bullshit
to me. All are used as excuses to avoid
the obvious benefits that communal
housing provides to all of society.
There is no true pure form of government;
Social Security, Food Stamps,
and Medicare are all socialist concepts,
and all have had great benefits
to society. But people of higher
income don't understand what
things would look like for them if
those programs didn't exist. They
need to see how changing the current
society will benefit society as a
whole.
Communities have to
come
together because of the government’s
ignorance. Their objectives
are contrary to our solution.
This is your call to action. We are
way overdue for any real progress.
Bring it together, people, and let’s
start raising our voices and demanding
that our government appropriate
suitable property.
This article only scratches the surface
of what is and can be community
living. If you would like more
details about the local community
housing project, you can visit “Michigan
EcoVillage” online to get a full
description of their version. To find
more information on community
living in general, look up CoHousing
or Community Housing on the
internet.
We need support to persuade our
government to appropriate land to
support the building of these supportive
communities. So, some of
you already know the drill…Call your
Congressman, Congresswoman, and
state legislators. But beyond that,
most of all this needs the local community
support, and that means
educating your local officials. Now
(or really yesterday!) is the time for
action — to start walking, to stop
talking … we’ve talked, now let’s do!
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Banana power muffins
MIRA SIMONTON-CHAO
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
2-3 very ripe bananas
⅓ cup melted butter
½ tsp baking soda
A pinch of salt
½ cup white sugar
1 large egg, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1 tbsp chia seeds
1 tbsp ground flax seed
¼ cup chocolate chips
¼ cup peanut butter
(optional) 1 tbsp maple syrup
(optional) 1 tsp cinnamon
Directions:
1. Preheat the often to 350°F and
butter a muffin pan
2. Mash the bananas with a fork and
add your ⅓ cup of butter. Mix until
completely smooth.
3. Mix in the ½ tsp baking soda and
pinch of salt then stir in the ½ cup
white sugar, beaten egg, and vanilla
extract followed by the 1 ½ cups flour.
4. Follow this by adding in your one
power
to the
tbsp chia seeds, one tbsp ground flax
seeds, ¼ cups chocolate chips, ¼ cup
peanut butter, and, if you’re so
inclined, one tbsp maple syrup and 1
tsp of cinnamon.
5. Bake the muffins! Spoon out your
batter into the muffin tin then bake for
20-25 mins (make sure to start checking
on the muffins at about the 15 mins
mark!) You can test to see if your muffins
are done by inserting a toothpick
or wooden skewer in the center of a
muffin. The muffins are done when the
toothpick comes out dry!
6. Remove from oven and cool. Pop
the muffins out and enjoy!
peop
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,June 2, 2023dv?UŎ|