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$
MARCH 10, 2023 | VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 6
YOUR DONATION BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Non-police crisis response piloting
in Ypsilanti. Page 11
ASK YOUR VENDOR:
WHAT GOAL ARE
YOU WORKING
TOWARDS RIGHT
NOW?
GARY ROBINSON, #224
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Boober seeds bearing fruit — Kevin
helped me and so many others.
page 8
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
Kevin Spangler, Groundcover vendor No. 307 and founder of Boober Tours, driving a pedicab in
downtown Ann Arbor. Photo credit: Barry Chatillion.
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
from the DIRECTOR's DESK
Friday, March 24, we invite writers (and
future writers!) with lived experience to a
workshop on building narrative power. The
workshop will be led by journalist and poverty
solutions advocate Lauren Slagter.
"Op-ed" might techincally stand for
LINDSAY CALKA
Managing Director
If you attended Street Wisdom, the
Groundcover News open mic honoring
Hunger and Homelessness Awareness
Week, you already know our writers and
vendors have a lot more to say than just
what meets the page. Street Wisdom packed
the house and had a lasting impact on many
who attended. Ever since that Friday in
November at Argus Farm Stop, we’ve been
excited to secure another time to share
space as a community.
At the end of March, Groundcover News
will be hosting a two-part event entitled
“Hear Me Out.”
"opposite the editoral page," but here at
Groundcover we consider the "op-ed"
simply a powerful tool for communicating
informed opinion to large audiences.
Together we will practice linking our own
compelling stories and experiences to
quantitative data and calls to action in
order to inspire social change. Come with
an idea, or a piece already written. Even the
best writers need an editor!
The day after that, Saturday, March 25, 6-8
p.m. at Argus Farm Stop (Liberty Cafe) we
invite all community members to an open
mic where workshop participants will speak
out, reading the individual projects borne
out of the workshop. Time permitting, we
will open the floor to everyone to speak on
their experiences with social injustices.
Hear Me Out — you don’t want to miss
this one!
A GROUNDCOVER NEWS
COMMUNITY OPEN MIC
MARCH 25TH, 6-8PM
ARGUS FARM STOP, LIBERTY CAFE
Join the Groundcover News community for another open mic
centering on community perspectives on social injustices!
A WORKSHOP ON BUILDING
NARRATIVE POWER
MARCH 24TH, 2-4:30PM
ANN ARBOR DISTRICT LIBRARY
DOWNTOWN BRANCH - FREESPACE
Join journalist Lauren Slager and Groundcover News for an
op-ed writing workshop at the Ann Arbor District Library.
Link lived experience with a call to action to inspire change
in your community!
Participants will be invited to speak at the following open
mic and publish in Groundcover News.
MARCH 10, 2023
HEAR ME OUT!
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
Jim Clark — vendor manager
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
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ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
What goal are you
working towards right
now?
Getting a car, then getting an
apartment.
— Gary Robinson, #224
I am working towards getting
my t-shirt business off the
ground, I’m working to be a
better person and trying to educate
myself on financial
literacy.
— Joe Woods, #103
Ultimately, I’m working
towards being somebody that
my kids to look up to. Right
now that means selling the
paper more and stabilizing my
life.
— Sean Almond, #561
My goal is to graduate from
college, to get my journalism
and audio engineering associate's
degree.
—Mike Jones, #113
That’s personal.
— James Tennant, #174
Peace in my life.
— Larzell Washington, #128
I got a voucher so I’m working
on getting an apartment.
—Mansell Williams #96
To be here. I'm working to be,
and stay, present in my own
life.
—Ken Parks, #490
I'm working on getting my
dental health figured out and
working on getting housing!
— Glen Page, #407
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.
St. Patrick’s Day is a great, festive
holiday. It’s a good reason to have
fun. It’s a good excuse to eat good
corned beef sandwiches.
It’s a
good excuse to eat potatoes for the
day. St. Patrick’s Day is also a good
day to make corned beef stew. And
it’s a good excuse to drink green
lime punch, if you don’t want to
drink beer.
Green is one of my favorite colors
and people wear a lot of green on
St. Patrick’s Day. I love to go to St.
Patrick’s Day parades and see a lot
of beautiful clothing and beautiful
things.The last time I went to a St.
Patrick’s Day parade was in the 90s.
It was in downtown Detroit. I had
just made a new friend; she was
with one of her friends and we
went to the parade. Dennis Archer
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
The joys of St. Patrick's Day
I like to make beautiful St. Patrick’s
Day artwork. I love going to
St. Patrick’s Day parties with my
friends.
I love Irish music, too. St. PatDENISE
SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
rick’s Day music is soothing for
when you are just relaxing at home,
or doing housework. St. Patrick’s
Day music is good when you are
partying, too.
St. Patrick’s Day can also be a
was the mayor at the time and he
waved at me. I saw men in kilts,
which is like a man’s skirt. I saw
women in beautiful crocheted
green hats. Afterwards we went to
a restaurant and had corned beef
sandwiches. That was a good day.
spiritual holiday because St. Patrick
was a saint. It can also be
romantic — just like Valentine’s
Day — because you can celebrate
it with people you love. Both St.
Patrick and St. Valentine were
saints.
I always love celebrating both
holidays!
3
Truth or lies: King Charman the
leprechaun
In the year 1600 BC, King Charman
Plenza was ordered by the
Forest Fairies to wed by St. Patrick’s
Day.
Queen Zia of the fairies warned
him if he did not wed, all would be
lost. The kingdom would fall and
the forest would disappear and he
would turn into a leprechaun. The
king laughed and insisted that this
was a tall tale.
Four days before St. Patrick's
Day, Zia appeared before the king
pleading for him to find a bride.
King Charman was a young, handsome,
playful man, who never took
his responsibilities seriously. The
morning of March 17, 1600 BC,
King Charman awoke feeling energetic
and curious. Eager to fulfill
his kingly duties he walked to his
dressing table and looked in the
mirror. He saw no one. The king
thought, “What is the meaning of
this?” He looked again; still he
could not see himself.
Just as he was speaking, the king's
hands and feet turned into a leprechaun
form.
The king called for his servant
Oswaw. King Charman told Oswaw
that he could not see his reflection
in the mirror. Oswaw said, “Hold it,
what have you done with King
Charman? You will be beheaded!”
The king said, “What do you
mean? I am the king!”
Osawa said, “The king is not a
leprechaun.”
up camp. The trio would often venture
out on camping trips.
Charman watched from a short
FELICIA WILBERT
Groundcover vendor No. 234
The king hollered, “Oh no! I am a
leprechaun; the fable has come
true, oh no!”
The castle started rumbling, then
it started sinking. The king hollered
for everyone to flee the castle. As he
ran outside for cover, he noticed
the forest starting to disappear.
King Charman was all alone within
an hour, as if he never existed. The
forest was gone. King Charman sat
on a stoop and cried out for the
fairies. The fairies were gone with
the forest. King Charman went into
hiding. Time passed.
Decades passed, centuries
passed, still Charman stayed
hidden.
In the year of 1300 BC, Charman
was hiding in the redwood trees
(they were his favorite). He heard
voices and Charman jumped up to
go see where they were coming
from. It was Judy, Trina and their
cousin, Regina, who were setting
distance. He was curious about the
tents they were putting together.
He noticed Regina; her hair was a
golden red and she had green eyes.
Charman fell in love, constantly
watching her. He decided to leave
her a path of flowers leading to the
river.
Regina would wash the dishes at
the river twice a day. She noticed
the path of flowers, laughing, wondering
who placed them there.
Charman knew he had only one
chance to woo her. The next afternoon
he placed her a bouquet of
flowers by the river. She noticed the
flowers, giggling, wondering who
left them.
He finally got up enough nerve to
speak to her. He said, “Hello my
name is King Charman.” She looked
and did not see anyone. He then
said, “Can you find a four leaf
clover please?”
Regina laughed and said, “Who
is asking?”
“King Charman, I am!”
“Where are you?” Regina asked.
Charman said, “You must find a
four leaf clover in order to see me.”
Regina asked, “How would I find
that clover?”
Charman said, “Over there, just
look through the grass, you will
see KING CHARMAN page 7 
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOUSING
Imagine paying thousands of dollars
for various fees months before
living in your apartment. This is the
reality for Ann Arbor renters. In addition,
tenants experience a lack of
maintenance,
instability,
renewal
struggles, landlords dodging legislation,
and waitlists, not to mention
immense cost!
Finding a place to rent is vital for
those who aren’t ready to invest in a
house. Over the past decades, deceitful
landowner tactics have made the
process of finding housing extremely
difficult and downright unfair.
I sat down with Zachariah Farah,
University of Michigan alumnus and
current member of the Ann Arbor
Renters Commission, to discuss these
landlord tactics. As a member of the
Central Student Government, he was
approached by the Graduate Employees'
Organization’s Housing Caucus
for support in changing the city’s
Early Leasing Ordinance.
The ELO determines when a landlord
can ask for renewal. At the time,
landlords had the liberty to ask for
renewal only 70 days into the present
lease term. If you were to decline this
renewal opportunity, your home
could be rented to a new tenant. This
was a pressure tactic by landlords.
With only 70 days in your unit, how
would you know whether you want to
SAMIHA RAHMAN
U-M student contributor
necessary.
Nowadays, what happens if you do
agree to renew your lease? The landlord
must accept your wish, regardless
of how many individuals are on a
waiting list. In 2022, Ann Arbor passed
Right to Renew, requiring landlords
to make a good faith renewal offer to
current tenants. If landlords don’t
comply, they are required to pay a
two-month relocation stipend. This
law is designed to prioritize the stability
of current tenants.
continue living there or not?
CSG drafted an amendment to the
Early Leasing Ordinance, which was
passed by City Council in 2021.
Although CSG and GEO were requesting
the time be extended to 210 days
into the lease, they were only able to
get the date amended to 150 days,
offering light reassurance that your
unit won’t be shown or rented out to
someone else.
Upset landlords immediately
dashed to find loopholes. Landlords
implemented waitlists, exploiting
prospective tenants, charging them a
“waitlist fee” with no guarantee for a
unit. Landlords take advantage of
desperate students and residents
looking for extremely limited housing,
creating a sense of false hope and
charging more money than
MARCH 10, 2023
The Ann Arbor rental market is a pretty scary place
GEO’s Housing Caucus is also starting
conversation around rent stabilization
to help fight the ridiculous cost
of rent. However, in Michigan, municipal-level
rent control is preempted
by state law. Many tenants around
Michigan are seeking a reversal of the
state-level preemption. This would
allow cities to have control and start
acting right now to control the high
cost of rent.
see RENTAL page 7 
GET CONNECTED
The Renters Commission is looking to fill two vacant tenant seats.
Individuals belonging to historically underrepresented groups are
encouraged to apply. Applications are especially welcomed from
individuals with disabilities, individuals who have experienced
housing insecurity, individuals who have enrolled in low income/
Section 8 housing, or individuals belonging to racial and ethnic
minority groups. Applicants need not be renters, though some personal
experience with renting or struggling to rent is preferred.
You can read more about the Commission here:
a2gov.org/renterscommission
To apply, please fill out this application form:
http://a2gov.legistar.com/Page.aspx?M=Q
If you have any questions, please email
renterscommission@a2gov.org
Housing issues and solutions in northern Michigan
Housing shortages plague the entire
state of Michigan but the causes —
with the exception of NIMBYism (Not
In My Back Yard) — and solutions vary
by locale.
It is difficult to find suitable sites to
build on around Ann Arbor. In northern
Michigan it is difficult to find the
skilled tradesman needed to build
housing. Ironically, that shortage of
workers is due in large part to the lack
of affordable housing.
Rural areas also often have greater
difficulty getting approved for Low
Income Housing Tax Credits. (The federal
government offers tax credits to
private investors like banks that use
that money to help finance the construction
of low-income housing.)
“There has to be some kind of funding
that usually comes from the state
or federal level to subsidize it a little
bit, just because it's so expensive to
build,” said Corey Monroe, development
coordinator for Haan Development
which is building 60 units of
affordable housing on Emmet St. in
Petoskey. They received assistance
SUSAN BECKETT
Publisher emeritus
The cost of living there is high, too —
from the Petoskey-Harbor Springs
Area Community Foundation’s Emmet
Housing Solutions Fund after they
were denied the tax credit funding.
In vacation destinations such as
Grand Traverse, Charlevoix and
Emmet counties, 32% of housing is
non-homestead (rental properties or
second homes) and the cost of an average
house ranges from $500,000 to
$600,000, depending on the county.
Across the ten counties served by the
non-profit Housing North, 40% of the
population is rent-burdened.
comparable to that of Washtenaw
County — but they generally lack services
such as public transportation
that help make ends meet. Exceptions
include Boyne City which offers
Monday through Saturday daytime
pickup and drop-off anywhere in
Charlevoix County, and Traverse City
which has public buses Monday
through Saturday. Both have consistently
made choices to maintain livability
for a large cross-section of
residents.
Some remedies to the affordable
housing shortage could be implemented
this year. American Rescue
Program Act funds for shovel-ready
projects should include projects that
increase the housing stock for low and
moderate income families.
A renter’s tax credit, issued monthly
by the IRS, could help some middle-income
year-round residents afford to
rent properties that are typically occupied
just a few months each year by
vacationers, or only during the school
year by college students. It would also
provide relief to the multitude of low
and middle-income renters whose
rent exceeds 30% of their income.
Currently, the primary beneficiaries
of our tax code are wealthy individuals
and corporations, often at the expense
of those with lower incomes or little
wealth. Congress spends approximately
$200 billion per year on housing,
but the majority of that goes to the
highest income households through
benefits like the mortgage interest
deduction. The wealthiest seven million
households in the country receive
more housing assistance through tax
credits than the 55 million lowest-income
renters, according to a 2017 article
in The Hill.
There are four new Michigan laws
granting municipalities greater power
to offer tax-reduction incentives to
build affordable housing within their
boundaries. Maybe that will persuade
some developers to build for ordinary
people instead of the wealthy. And
maybe it’s time to adjust the federal tax
code to discourage the ownership of
multiple houses.
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HOUSING
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
ARTS + CULTURE
MARCH 10, 2023
Installation image of Dopamine Dressing by
Charlie Edwards.
Dopamine dressing is so much more than putting
on a pretty outfit
It’s no secret that wearing clothes
you love drastically changes the outcome
of your day. Allow me to present
the idea of dopamine dressing: the act
of putting on clothes that make you
happy.
I explored this concept after visiting
the University of Michigan Museum of
Art in February to see YehRim Lee’s
new exhibit with the same name.
What is dopamine dressing really?
Dopamine dressing consists of putting
on brighter-colored clothing with
a personal, meaningful backstory to
boost your mood. Its goal is to allow
believers to have more freedom in
their fashion choices and challenge
them to be bold. While not scientific
by any means, the intention behind
dopamine dressing is extremely
powerful.
With such a title, I expected the
UMMA’s Dopamine Dressing exhibition
to be filled with brightly colored
clothing. I was instead surrounded
with 21 neon and pastel clay sculptures.
Initially alarmed, I truly experienced
the idea of dopamine dressing
in action. This begs the question, does
the experience of dopamine dressing
— or art in general — bring one
happiness?
At the small but mighty exhibit, I was
able to spend a small chunk of my day
exploring this question.
Lee’s use of color and sculpture
entranced me. With most pieces being
around two square feet I was able to
see the level of detail and thought put
into every curve and color layer.
ANGELINA AKDIS
U-M student contributor
Some of my favorite pieces included
“Three Hearts are Trouble” and “Wall
Flower Green #2.” The amount of detail
associated with each layer of paint and
overlap of clay was astounding. Each
time I walked around to look at a piece
I found a new detail or section that
intrigued me. Even though the room
was relatively small, I could stay there
for hours examining each sculpture
from every angle. I was struck by how
the production of dopamine transcends
the act of dressing or viewing
art.
YehRim Lee, a Chinese ceramic
artist, uses her art to capture the
human condition. With a goal to have
viewers look closer at life through her
art she uses multiple painted layers
and complex structures to challenge
their thoughts. When I looked at her
pieces I could see this in her colors. As
a result of her constant re-firing technique
I was prompted to think about
constant human evolution — not only
in style but in evolving tastes — reflecting
how our dopamine triggers are
consistently evolving.
After exploring, I’ve come to the conclusion
that it is the intentional experience
of wanting happiness that
brings you dopamine in the first place.
As seen in Lee’s exhibit, happiness
comes in many shapes and forms.
Walking around the small but colorful
room exploring the intricacies of each
piece I was brought happiness. I, however,
truly enjoy exploring art. This
may not bring others the same
satisfaction.
At the very least Dopamine Dressing
further shows me how art has the ability
to evoke emotions, inspire new perspectives,
and bring people together.
Whether it's through the beauty of a
sculpture, the excitement of live performance,
or the thought-provoking
messages conveyed in a film, art can
play a significant role in promoting
well-being and happiness for those
who engage with it. I highly recommend
carving out 30 minutes of your
day to view it!
Dopamine Dressing is on display
until August 2023 and free to view.
YehRim Lee in her studio. Photo credit: U-M Penny Stamps School.
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CONTINUED
 KING CHARMAN from page 3
find it.”
Regina laughed, and proceeded to
find the clover, thinking one of her
friends was playing a joke on her.
Regina reached down, and grabbing
a handful of grass, searched through
it. Finally after five minutes she found
a clover, holding it up saying, "I found
one!”
Charman said,
“You won't be
scared, will you? I'm a leprechaun."
“A what! A leprechaun doesn't exist.”
Charman explained what happened
to him, waiting for her reaction.
Regina told him she would not be
scared, she wanted to see a
leprechaun.
The king came out of hiding. Regina
looked and said, “You are real!”
Charman remembered he was running
out of time. He had two days
before St. Patrick’s Day. He asked
Regina if she would grant him a favor.
Regina said, “Maybe, what is it?”
Charman said, “Will you marry
me?”
She said, “What? Marry you? You
are a leprechaun!” said Regina.
Charman explained how he would
turn back into a twenty-five-year-old
man if she married him. He told her
he only had two days left, and to
please help him. Regina thought
about what he said, laughing and still
Thank you Truth Or Lies readers,
"The Unexpected Valentine,"
published February 10,
was based on a TRUE story.
However, the places and
names were changed.
not believing Charman. However she
wanted to see if it was real, and agreed
to marry him.
He said, “If you put on this ring you
would be my wife.” The ring was a
green four leaf clover encased in
twenty-carat gold. She looked at the
ring. Her heart pounded; she placed
it on her ring finger. Regina looked at
Charman: he started to transform
right before her eyes.
“Thank you, my love,” King Charman
Plenza said, “and you will be
Queen Regina Plenza.”
He asked her to wait at the river
while he went to retrieve his ancient
treasure of gold, diamond and gems.
Once he returned, Regina could not
believe her good fortune. Every St.
Patrick’s Day he gave her a new gem
for rescuing him. Their union lasted
through ten decades. Forever loving
each other!
 RENTAL from page 4
Different cities have different
situations, so providing individual
freedom is most sensible.
Farah also discussed some of
the Renters’ Commission’s work
surrounding rental fees. The list
seems endless — security deposits,
waitlist fees, application fees
and even a no-hassle fee (a real
thing).
Farah expressed his disappointment.
“These are hundreds of dollars
people are not going to get
back,” he explained. “We want the
city to regulate those.”
The Renters’ Commission is
currently analyzing these fees to
provide the council with a report.
Landlords claim tenants will
receive all of these fees back;
however, often this does not
happen. Tenants often must
resort to extreme lengths, like
threatening legal action, to be
heard.
Tactics like simply being assertive,
or underutilized resrouces
like small claims court and the
Student Legal Services at U-M can
save tenants hundreds of dollars.
If you are waiting on obtaining a
fee/security deposit back or have
been waiting for over a month to
have something repaired, U-M
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
students have access to free lawyers
waiting to provide free legal
advice that might prevent the
need to go to court.
Those who aren’t U-M students
can email the Renter’s Commission
at KVanderLugt@A2gov.org
for assistance. Landlords are also
required to provide a physical
copy of the “Rights and Duties of
Tenants” booklet when tenants
move in, with noncompliance
subject to a $500 fine.
So how did this problem of
acquiring fair housing within Ann
Arbor even come about in the first
place? One factor is that the University
of Michigan is rapidly
increasing the population of Ann
Arbor, with more students, staff,
and faculty every year. One solution
is for the University to pay its
fair share by contributing to the
affordable housing fund, a city
fund that supports the construction
of lower-cost housing within
the city to accommodate the
growing population. The University
is not living up to its responsibility,
and definitely not using
its full ability, considering its considerable
endowment and the
prominent role they have played
in this complication.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
BOOBER TOURS
MARCH 10, 2023
Boober seeds bearing fruit — Kevin helped me and
so many others
I hadn't spoken with Kevin Spangler
in quite some time. I met him when I
was homeless. He gave me a job, gave
me some inspiration, gave me some
hope. He taught me some valuable,
memorable lessons (mix LSD, pedicabs,
foreign exchange students,
Buddha, swimming, nakedness,
Barton Pond, but that's another
story...).
The night we spoke five months ago,
he was tired. To be a Boober driver is
not the easiest job, if only because of
the schedule — awake when bar nightlife
begins (around 9 p.m.), cabbing
through this time till usually 3 or 4
a.m., and then the wind-down takes an
hour or two simply from the exercise
and the excitement. Then up for the
games, or campus events, catching
naps in between.
When you’re in rehabilitation (as
anyone who has been through addiction
knows), sleep time is treasured
moments whenever you get them.
Most of the employees when I worked
for Spangler were either just out of jail,
had felonies, were homeless or were
trying to get clean. Besides this,
employees would try to keep the
enthusiasm that the owner held and
expected. “Boober Tours, the only
way!” was the common greeting.
He was the example. On each cab
read “Boober Tours, the only way!” He
asked his employees before being
hired to do one thing: “Give me two
lists, 1) one hundred reasons to stay
sober and 2) one hundred reasons why
drugs screwed up your life.” I personally
only got to 40 or so on each list. He
still hired me.
Seeing him tired was rare for me.
This Kevin was a bit different. The glow
behind the eyes was still there, simply
dimmed. I know this was the same
man who with a conscious mind tried
to better himself in some way each day
while determined to possibly inspire
any of the many individuals he came
into contact with on a daily basis,
direct reflections of his Buddhist
practices.
“Advertising,” he said. His eye had a
different spark which, good or bad,
was there. His new book was “Rising
Out of Depression and Going up the
Royal Road.” I asked about the telling
of his story and sharing this with customers.
Most of the sayings that were
printed on the middle compartment of
the pedicab for any passenger to see
were now taped or painted over — his
business being just that, a business.
He had a number of drivers, people
who wanted to work, who loved to
earn that money and now had Boober
DAVID WINEY
Groundcover contributor
as a job not just to get by or to start
over, but as their main income.
I asked him about the new bike
lanes, his current employees, his
thoughts on the growth in Ann Arbor.
He now has 15 regular employees. Two
years ago, kids would line up to drive
for him during a football game.
All his vehicles are now electric! I
love this as I was a bit lazy and loved
the electric bikes, always vying for
them. I bet he would love them
humanly operated, but the physical
prowess to do such takes an athlete,
and to keep employees with the enthusiasm
he does, the electrics make it
easier. And of course, the environment,
another main reason for his
business. Residents rent his cabs
(groups, family or friends or students,
6+ seaters) to shop at the local stores,
all on a cab (electric) to cover greater
distances than one would do in a car.
It is simply smart.
It's taken me five months to write
this, simply because Boober Tours was
in the middle of changing their shop
location again. Any small business
person knows the difficulties of renting
a place in any city; with the growth
of downtown Ann Arbor in the last few
years, renting as a human for personal
use or renting space as a business, is
still very difficult.
This is Boober's Tours' third location.
The business and Kevin have outgrown
the previous two locations. He must be
doing something right. Right?
I questioned a volunteer at one of
the University of Michigan museums
and asked her if she had ever been on
one of the rickshaw cabs, the people
who ride around on bicycles with a cab
on back. She laughed. She had some
friends visit from out of town, a bit of
money in their pockets, and she convinced
them to ride a “Boober Cab” —
they thought it would be a waste.
Similar to every ride I had as a driver,
the passengers always loved the experience.
She said the same! They probably
could have taken a limo or
something; they took a “Boober Cab"
and loved it!
Illustration by Jeanelle Mapili
I would guess every business has its
growing pains and tries to remain true
to its ideals. Those who know where
Kevin came from, where he is today,
and how many people he helped —
giving them a job when no one else
would — would be proud of him.
In this short history of Ann Arbor,
not a blink in anything (his Buddhist
teachings affecting me?) and to have
Boober Tours be a current landmark in
my time with Ann Arbor and U-M in
itself is a great accomplishment. I
know he helped me and many others
during our time in recovery. Those
people will be affected for the rest of
their lives. I also know that anyone and
everyone who does take a ride from
Boober loves it!
I asked him, “Kevin, what is your
current goal?”
“A moral self-governing society in
the next 50 years.”
That sounded pretty f-ing great to
me. To quote Joni Mitchell and her
words from her song “California:”
Reading the news
and it sure looks bad
They won't give peace a chance
That was just a dream some of us had
It — Boober Tours — was just a
dream Kevin had. I believe Joni was
talking of a bigger picture. Those
1960s-1970s hippie activists took on
the whole pie, knowing it would take
years, but still they planted seeds in us
that have been growing for years.
Seven years sober he has now! Congrats
Kevin!
CALL FOR
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edition magazine that will highlight exceptional people in
our community ... however you choose to define exceptional!
Choose someone and either interview them, write a
biography or discuss with them what it means to be an
active member of our community. Be creative in your
methods to convey their story or message!
Like all of Groundcover News publications, everyone is
invited to submit!
DEADLINE: MARCH 20TH, 12PM
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P.a.
P.S.
Per pro.
Per se
Percent
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Q.E.F.
Q.v.
Seq
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Ult
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Versus
Videlicet
Viz
9
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
THINK ABOUT IT
Does the system work?
I am talking about the current
system: its political economy and
ideological foundation, the culture
and social system we all have been
socialized into. It’s called “growing
up,” getting in compliance, that is. The
December 30, 2022 issue of Groundcover
News has an article I wrote,
“Mother Nature’s Last Call,” which
talks about our current geological age
of humans and capitalism as the
anthropocene.
The victory of capitalism over feudalism
was a centuries-long struggle
for private property to replace the
remaining commons as the dominant
political economy. Feudalism privatized
indigenous commons but created
a social contract that gave peasants
some rights to the land they lived on
and worked. Private property is now
regarded as the foundation for civilization
and the creation of wealth.The
social contract of feudalism viewed
land use as some shared responsibility.
The peasants had to give the lords
a share of the crop but had rights to
live on the land and benefit from their
plot.
When the growing business class
saw the profits possible from sheep’s
wool spun in the textile mills, they
began the ideological, judicial and
police/military campaign promoting
the virtues of private property and the
need to drive the peasantry off the
land. You may have heard of the enclosure
laws and vagrancy laws which
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
revolutionary changes from feudalism
to capitalism as an important advance
in social evolution, preparing the way
for the next revolutionary leap to
socialism and then communism as we
fulfilled the vision of sharing that is
deep in the heart of humanity. “From
each according to their ability, to each
based on their contribution” is the
ethic of socialism. “From each according
to their ability, to each according
to their need” is the ethic of communism.
The struggle is intense.
So is the system working? The capicreated
large numbers of refugees.
Many Scots went to Ireland following
promises of land; as their numbers
grew, the overflow went to “the new
world” as the settler class that supported
the privatization of indigenous
land.
Land-hungry peasants flooded
“America” and became working class
or settlers on indigenous land. The
Indian wars began with the arrival of
Europeans and coincided with the
slave trade. Investing in violence for
land and slaves was the business of
the colonial phase of capitalism. The
lure of profit brought many into “the
pursuit of happiness,” as it was called.
Capitalism is still evolving as it privatizes
your time with many wonderful
appearances of happiness that
seem irresistible. There is no doubt
that capitalism has created amazing
productive capacity.
Marx wrote positively about the
talism of this epoch is designed to
create large amounts of wealth, measured
in capital, by extracting from
nature and producing goods and services
by human, animal or robot labor.
This market mechanism, in which
everything is a commodity for sale
and speculation, has regular crises but
is able to play financial games that
basically move wealth from the
bottom to the top. It is designed for
that purpose.
There is constant tinkering with the
financial flow but the main current
creates a wealth gap that has unbalanced
the world towards war as the
solution to any looming economic
crises. Sanctions have done more
damage than the nuclear weapons
which are prepared to destroy the
world upon command.
We are in a life and death struggle.
Natural law will overrule human law
as
our
dysfunction
continues.
Therefore, climate chaos. We are at the
point of no return, greatly addicted to
our comfort zone.
Definitely time to take a breath and
reconsider reality. Do we have the
nerve to consider a new social design
that makes good work fun, productive
and beneficial? Enough said. Time to
work on redesigning our lives, especially
towards “Democracy at Work”
in the words of Richard Wolf’s Course
on Capitalism.
What did World War II resolve? The
people wanted the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights; the capitalist
class wanted war. Hollywood was
attacked first. “Salt of the Earth,'' an
unsurpassable movie (and book) tells
the story of this war. It has intensified
since Star Wars (the Strategic Defense
Initiative) and full spectrum domination
warfare focused on information
control. The capitalist designers and
defenders have large amounts of
money for their campaign which
amounts to a war on the working class.
If you say anything you will be accused
of class warfare.
We have all the resources we need,
particularly our ability to face reality
as death approaches. People — foremost,
young people — have some
sense of big changes coming as the
ideological wheels of fascism and
communism are turning. It is time to
talk intergenerationally about what
we want to do.
MARCH 10, 2023
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CRISIS RESPONSE
ALEXANDRA GRANBERG
Groundcover contributor
Last month, Care-Based Safety, a
grassroots group, announced that
they have secured funding to pilot an
unarmed, non-police crisis response
program in Ypsilanti in mid-2023 –
the first of its kind in Michigan,
according to the group.
How the program – for now referred
to by CBS as the Future Program –
will look is still evolving.
Some elements will likely be
included: mobile response groups on
the streets and transformative justice
tools – with focus on individual and
community healing rather than punishment
in the face of violence.
Another element will be an urgent
response program through a public,
7-digit phone number, separate from
911 and with no referrals to police.
Washtenaw County’s mental health
department currently provides a
similar service for mental health
crises – but unlike CBS’s hope for the
Future Program, that is a police
collaboration.
CBS has asked several impacted
groups for local feedback. They have
also consulted similar, successful
initiatives in cities across the US.
The idea is that the pilot will inform
a model that can be scaled up and
later implemented in all of Washtenaw
County. Any existing actions
here would not be duplicated by
existing departments. Rather, the
program seeks to fill a gap.
No violence, no police
Last summer CBS broke out from,
and is functionally independent of,
CROS, Coalition for Re-envisioning
Our Safety. CROS was formed in
April 2021, after the Ann Arbor City
Council passed a resolution to create
a new, unarmed public safety
program.
CROS focuses on advocacy; CBS on
research, program design and
fundraising.
While the resolution made no
mention of independence from
police, CROS and CBS intend to
create such a model.
“An unarmed response is not a true
unarmed response unless it is
unarmed non-police,” Hoai An
Pham, a CROS member, said in an
interview to Hour Detroit.
Crucially, CBS response teams
would not handle active violence
involving guns or non-consensual
domestic issues. It would address
issues such as conflict de-escalation
and wellness checks, involving for
example mental health, overdose,
post-violence situations and
complaints.
Despite this, concerns about a
non-police response have been
voiced by Washtenaw County Sheriff
Jerry Clayton, among others. One
worry is that a seemingly non-violent
situation can escalate into violence,
requiring police.
According to a data review by the
New York Times, however, it appears
only a fraction of policing is devoted
to handling violent crime. Citing the
review, CBS writes that most emergency
calls are about “interpersonal
complaints, traffic-related issues,
wellness checks and medical calls.”
No police, no violence
Homelessness and mental illness
are often more prevalent among
incarcerated people than in the general
population.
Members of CBS and CROS want to
see a system that focuses on community
well-being – preventing rather
than criminalizing problematic
behavior. In CBS’s strategic plan
published in February, the group
states:
“We believe in a future where
public health programs and infrastructure
are resourced, including
the creation of new, care-based programs,
making policing and
state-sponsored punishment
obsolete.”
Ideally, the new program will not
be connected to police at all, providing
an alternative to crises.
But Natalie Holbrook,
a CBS
member and spokesperson based in
Ypsilanti, and part of the American
Friends Service Committee, says she
would “personally prefer 911 calls
related to hunger or mental health
crises to be directed to the program,
over what is happening now.”
A Washington Post investigation
from 2015 showed that every fourth
person who was killed by police suffered
with mental illness. The AA
City Council in its proposal states
some of these deaths occur “where
the deployment of police officers was
not necessary.”
Some police are also concerned
about this. Among them, though not
alone, is former Ann Arbor Police
Chief Michael Cox, who told the
Michigan Daily that mental health
training is inadequate – and that
therefore it is not ideal to send police
to deal with mental health calls.
Mayor Christopher Taylor has said
explicitly that police are overworked,
forced to deal with situations best
dealt with by unarmed personnel.
Violent failure
Reform remains the popular go-to
among both local and federal politicians,
when advocating change in the
police system. But attempts at reform
– whether material, intellectual or
organizational – have proven insufficient
in the past.
Body cameras, a type of material
reform, were introduced on a wide
scale shortly after police fatally shot
Michael Brown in Ferguson in 2014.
Three years later a study showed that
the increased surveillance had not
prevented police from using unwarranted
violence. When police killed
David McAtee in the summer of 2020,
they had simply turned off their
cameras.
Chokeholds had already been
banned in New York for 20 years, when
a police officer choked Eric Garner to
death in 2014. The case drew attention
and drove police reforms around the
country.
Five years before George Floyd died
under the knee of now-former policeman
Derek Chauvin in Minneapolis,
the city had carried out these types of
reforms. Among them was a warning
system to detect problematic cases
within the police force. Chauvin, with
17 complaints filed against him at the
time, had evidently escaped this.
Inherent violence
CBS states that re-training or reforming
police “is not a viable solution,
given that the underlying purpose of
policing is fundamentally different
from the underlying purpose of providing
direct care.”
Driving CBS and abolitionism, both
of which have roots in the Civil Rights
movement, is the idea that policing as
a system is inherently violent.
In the words of abolitionist leader
Mariame Kaba: “Everywhere,
have
they
suppressed marginalized
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Non-police crisis response piloting in Ypsilanti
populations to protect the status quo
… When a police officer brutalizes a
black person, he is doing what he sees
as his job.”
The police and mass incarceration
systems, they mean, are not broken
but working as they were designed to
– leaving nothing to “be fixed.”
While CBS is informed by research
and statistics, its members are also
people of the community who in some
way have been impacted by the current
system, or love somebody who
has been harmed by police – as is the
case for Holbrook.
She believes the state is incapable of
providing the care and protection that
a community can. Holbrook dreams of
strong neighborhoods that look after
themselves; sharing power, “rather
than handing it over to the state,”
which, she says, “takes individual
power away.”
“We simply want something else to
rely on. A system rooted in care and
compassion.”
A river runs through it
So far, funding for CBS efforts comes
from the Michigan Justice Fund with
the Community Foundation for Southeast
Michigan, and United Way of
Washtenaw County.
At the time of writing, CBS is in the
process of hiring two co-directors to
head the pilot in Ypsilanti. The co-directors
will help develop the program
based on community feedback, as well
as years of research and interviews
with experts.
In April, CBS hopes to finalize the
design in order to put the program to
practice this summer. After that, the
group will dissolve, having fulfilled its
function – passing on the leadership to
the new response team and Future
Program.
Read more about the proposed program
and background at linktr.ee/
carebasedsafety
11
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Baked caramel popcorn
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
5-7 quarts popped popcorn
2 cups brown sugar
½ tsp. salt
½ tsp. vanilla
1 cup butter
½ cup light syrup
½ tsp. baking soda
Directions:
Melt butter and stir in brown sugar,
corn syrup and salt. Bring to a boil,
stirring constantly. Once boiling, leave
for 5 minutes without stirring. Then
remove from heat.
Add baking soda and vanilla.
In a
very large bowl, pour over popcorn
and mix well. Spread onto 2 shallow
layer large cooking sheets. Bake at 250
degrees for one hour, stirring every 15
minutes. Cool and break apart.
Store in an airtight container.
Such a special treat, you won’t be
able to stop eating the corn!
MARCH 10, 2023
Holy Thursday, Mass of the Lord’s Supper: April 6th 7pm;
Good Friday: April 7th Stations of the Cross 12pm; Veneration
of the Cross 1:30pm
Easter Vigil: April 8th, 8:00pm
Easter Sunday: April 9th, 8:30am, 10:30am, 12:30pm;
2:30pm Spanish Mass (no 5pm evening Mass)
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,March 10, 2023dv ?UŎ|