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$
MAY 15, 2026 | VOLUME 17| ISSUE 11
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Surrounded by robbers and thieves.
page 9
VENDOR
NO. 560
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
ANDREW
WHITE
15 YEARS OF NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
At the Ann Arbor District Library downtown's
front Lobby Shop, Silky Grooves,
shoppers will find affordable vintage
clothing, vinyl records and other retro
knick knacks.
Big steps for small
business. page 5
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER15
MAY 15, 2026
PROVIDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR SELFDETERMINED
INDIVIDUALS IMPACTED BY POVERTY,
PRODUCING A STREET NEWSPAPER THAT GIVES A
PLATFORM TO UNDERREPRESENTED VOICES IN WASHTENAW COUNTY,
PROMOTING AN ACTION TO BUILD A JUST, CARING AND INCLUSIVE
SOCIETY.
Groundcover News, a 501(c)(3)
organization, was founded in April
2010 as a means to empower lowincome
persons to make the
transitions from homeless to
housed, and from jobless to
employed.
Vendors purchase each copy of our
regular editions of Groundcover
News at our office for 50 cents. This
money goes towards production
costs. Vendors work selling the
paper on the street for $2, keeping
all income and tips from each sale.
Vendors are the main contributors
to the paper, and are compensated
to write and report.
Street papers like Groundcover
News exist in cities all over the
United States, as well as in more
than 40 other countries, in an effort
to raise awareness of the plight of
homeless people and combat the
increase in poverty. Our paper is a
proud member of the International
Network of Street Papers.
STAFF
Lindsay Calka — publisher
Cynthia Price — editor
Anabel Sicko
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Elizabeth Bauman
Teresa Basham
Lena Buhl
Pedro Campos
David Crane
La Shawn Courtwright
Shelley DeNeve
Cindy Gere
Mike Jones
Rachael Lanier
Cisse Love
David Mitchell
Marie
Ken Parks
Haniyah Siddiqui
Laurie Wechter
PROOFREADERS
Susan Beckett
June Miller
VOLUNTEERS
Jane Atkins
Jessi Averill
Jud Branam
Libby Chambers
Stephanie Dong
Ben Foster
Glenn Gates
Jacob Fallman
Robert Klingler
Aklesia Maereg
Margaret Patston
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Emilie Ziebarth
BOARD of DIRECTORS
Anna Gersh
Greg Hoffman
Jessi Averill
Jacob Fallman
Jack Edelstein
Glenn Gates
Mike Jones
Hailu Shitaye
Shelley DeNeve
Steve Borgsdorf
CONTACT US
Story and photo submissions:
submissions@groundcovernews.com
Advertising and partnerships:
contact@groundcovernews.com
Office: 423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
Mon-Sat, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Phone: 734-263-2098
@groundcover
@groundcovernews
DONATE,
LISTEN TO OLD ISSUES
+ LEARN MORE
www.groundcovernews.org
WAYS TO SUPPORT
1. Buy the paper, read the paper.
2. Get the word out — We rely on
grassroots marketing. Talk to
people about Groundcover and
share us with your network.
3. Volunteer — You'll learn a lot
about our vendors, the newspaper
and your community. Interested in
volunteering regularly? Fill out the
form on our website.
4. Advertise your company,
organization, event or resource —
see rates below.
5. Follow us on Facebook and
Instagram — promote our posts
and share your favorite articles
and vendor interactions.
6. Donate items — A seasonally
appropiate list of items most
needed at our office and on the
street is available on our website.
Drop off anytime we're open.
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ON MY CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
Andrew White,
vendor No. 560
In one sentence, who are you?
Love me or hate me, I’m me.
Where do you usually sell
Groundcover? Outside Cherry Republic,
on the corner of Main and Liberty
Streets.
When and why did you start selling
Groundcover? In all honesty, I don’t
know when I started. The reason why is
so I can have an income.
What is your favorite spot in Ann
Arbor? Hanging out on State Street or
the U-M Diag.
What words do you live by?
Just keep 100.
What motivates you to work hard
selling Groundcover? The ability to
make money and to conversate with
people.
What was your first job? I worked as a
bagger at Kroger.
What’s the best way to start the day?
A cup of coffee and a morning smoke.
What is a small thing that makes your
day better? When people actually talk
to me when selling Groundcover.
What is your pet peeve? When
someone forgets to give me back my
lighter.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Earth Day reflections — so many
lessons, so few listening
Earth Day is a very important
time to show respect for all that
the sacred earth has given to
humanity. This is not a religion;
it's an homage to what
has been giving the bounty of
life we have on this planet. As
a Native American I was honored
to do a speech at the Earth
Day event this year, 2026. What
was hard to grasp was the fact
we had a very small group of
people in attendance. Each year
the gathering for this sacred time
is smaller and smaller.
As I look deep into the past we
have many examples of humanity
over-harvesting, taking too
much and depleting the land. All
one needs to do is go to places
like parts of Africa. The greatest
example is the Sahara Desert,
once a vibrant tropical land with
diverse animals. The people
lived as we do now, with towns
and cities. Other locations are
the Middle East when Babylon
was a vibrant diverse location
with trees and land and water —
yet now much of that location is
dry and depleted. Madagascar
was an amazing sustainable
land with many trees and good
land to grow, yet now it’s all
blown to the winds with sickness
all around. We can then go to the
great lands of India. In the northern
provinces the dust makes it
CINDY GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
sap. Burdock and sorrel
plants and ferns. Acorns and
pine gum are some of the
alternative foods we have in
Michigan. Tribes have in the
past been sustained exclusively
by acorns, the one-stop
shop tree. The Earth provides
if we take a closer look at what
is possible.
Real rejuvenation is coming
to pass in areas of depletion
such as China and the reforhard
to breathe and nothing
grows, yet only 100 years ago the
land was thick with vegetation
and people living in harmony.
America suffered a massive dust
bowl that created real suffering.
Mother Earth has a delicate
this
balance and we forget
repeatedly. The winds of change
happen fast! All the old nations
and lands, they too felt invincible
and full of freedom. Mother
Earth gives freely yet we use
unnatural chemicals to feed the
world, creating chemical-resistant
insects. Must we play out
the warning of Atlantis? Do we
not know the end of that story?
Can we make real change for a
better world in harmony with
nature as organic farms do each
and every day? Mother Earth
provides the foraging lands for
the humans with grains such as
wild rice. Deer meat. Wild maple
The "Mighty Mac"-kinac Bridge
SHELLEY DENEVE
Groundcover vendor No. 22
Did you ever wonder about the
Mackinac Bridge being maintained?
Who has the nerves of steel to do such
a job? There have been many who
braved the height of this phenomenon.
Over 11,000 workers have worked
on the project since construction
began, with a high volume of daily
workers on-site.
The bridge was designed to replace
the ferry service connecting Michigan's
Upper and Lower Peninsulas.
Construction began in May 1954 and
was completed in 1957, opening to
traffic on November 1, 1957. The fivemile
structure took over three years to
build at a cost of $99 million. It was
designed by Dr. David B. Steinman.
Approximately 90 full-time, permanent,
intermittent and seasonal staff
members operate and maintain the
"Mighty Mac." The team of employees
include engineers, maintenance workers,
painters, bridge inspectors (steeplejacks),
mechanics, electricians,
welders and toll booth staff. The staff
maintains the structure 24/7, providing
services such as towing, snow
removal, and the bridge camera/radio
communication systems. They also
provide a driver-assistance program
for individuals who are nervous about
driving across the bridge.
Six workers lost their lives in connection
with the Mackinac Bridge: five
during its construction (1954–1957)
and one during maintenance in 1997.
The five construction fatalities
included deaths from a scuba diving
accident, a fall into a caisson, a drowning,
and two from a fall from a temporary
catwalk. Enough about that
depressing information.
So when was the last time you
crossed the bridge? For me it’s been
over 30 years, when I crossed on foot.
I did the Labor Day walk on the bridge.
We got up at three or so in the morning,
drove to Mackinaw City and
parked our vehicle. We got on a bus
and we crossed the bridge to St. Ignace.
Then we walked back to Mackinaw
City. As we drove over the bridge to St.
Ignace, we saw the sunrise — it was
beautiful. As day broke we started
walking the bridge. I was kind of apprehensive.
Walking the bridge took a
while. I don't remember how long it
took, but I remember how beautiful
the day was when we got back to Mackinaw
City.
I look back now and think how brave
I was. Right now I would probably
freak out. I wish I could go visit it now
estation of their deserts and the
re-grow projects across the
world.
China and India,
In African countries,
deserts are
being reforested. This is truly
essential for Mother Earth, for
our own survival. Each and
every one of us needs to pick a
project and help with what we
can. The seventh generation of
your family will benefit from
making a powerful choice right
now, whether it’s here in Michigan
or across the world. Everything
starts with commitment
and determination. What we are
doing in the long term is what
matters for each of us in every
way. It takes just one additional
drop of water to create a flood or
make a desert into a sea. Soft
movements for real change, that
is real honor to Mother Earth …
She is waiting …
Kulema kungfu panda.
just to see how nervous I would be
going over it. You know it’s a shame
that I haven't been up there since then.
It's only 4-5 hours away. My two kids
had to see the bridge with other
people; other unexpected life circumstances
prevented my husband and I
from going at the time.
Oh, I wanted to go and visit it but my
husband at the time was too busy
working two and three jobs, and drinking.
The drinking was his life force. The
jobs he worked barely kept us afloat. It
makes me angry and sad that I let this
happen. Maybe the fairly new car I
purchased recently can get me there
this summer. Right now I'm having
trouble with this car and my mechanic
can't seem to figure out what exactly is
causing the problem. It seems like
there is always something preventing
me from doing what I would like to do.
Walking the bridge again and silently
thanking the workers is at the top of
my list.
3
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory
of Donna Marie
McGaughy
Donna Marie McGaughy, Groundcover vendor No. 310,
passed away in April 2026.
We remember Donna as small but mighty, full of stories
and songs. She was often found on 4th Ave, with Angel
(her stuffed monkey) enjoying a cigarette or selling
Groundcover News.
"No matter what was going on in the day, Donna was
always happy — even if she was actually sad. She loved
everybody and always had a smile on her face. She was a
kind-hearted, caring person. I called her 'Little Bit.'"
— Cindy Gere
She will be missed by the Groundcover News family,
and her neighbors and friends at Courthouse Square in
downtown Ann Arbor.
She is survived by her daughter.
Donna and Angel
If you don’t know,
now ya know!
I’m Donna & I have my sidekick Angel,
We’re here to hang out
With my family
With the Groundcover sisters and brothers.
If you don’t know anything about me,
just ask my girl Panda and she will let you know more about me
Groundcover has welcomed me & helped me a lot with financing.
I appreciate everything they do for Angel & me.
Just ask Panda about Angel & me
Because if you don’t know,
Now ya know.
Originally published in the January 10, 2025 edition of Groundcover News
community EVENTS
CINETOPIA FILM FESTIVAL
Saturday, May 13-17, 5-7 p.m. Michigan
Theater. Cinetopia brings audiences
and filmmakers together to
celebrate bold cinema, independent
voices and films you cannot see anywhere
else. Experience a curated
lineup designed by people who love
film as much as you do. As one of
Michigan’s premier film festivals,
Cinetopia brings together independent
films, Michigan-made shorts
and fresh voices from around the
world. Every selection is chosen for
originality, perspective and impact.
marquee-arts.org/cinetopia/
SPRING BAG SALE: FRIENDS
OF THE ANN ARBOR DISTRICT
LIBRARY
Saturday, May 16, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m..
Friends of the Ann Arbor District
Library, 265 Parkland Plz.
Sale of used books, puzzles, CDs,
and other items. $5 per bag.
HURON RIVER DAY
Saturday, May 16, noon–4 p.m
Riverside Park, 1000 Canal St., near
downtown Ann Arbor.
The afternoon festival will feature
hands-on activities and games, live
animals from Leslie Science &
Nature Center, a kids' area with
inflatables and face painting, a craft
area, local eco-friendly exhibitor
tables, food trucks and live entertainment.
Noon: Festival opens; live
music by Hullaballoo Band
1 p.m.: Belly dance performance and
lesson by Karma Belly dance
2 p.m.: Live music by Margo Solomon
teen band from Neutral Zone
3 p.m.: Alexander the Magician 4
p.m.: Festival concludes.
YPSI FLEA MARKET
Sunday, May 17, Ypsilanti Freighthouse,
100 Market Pl, Ypsi.
Show and sale of vintage items ranging
from the early 1930s to the 1990s,
featuring clothing, jewelry, furniture,
records and more. Concessions.
Free admission and parking.
REVOLUTIONARY FOOD
GATHERING
Tuesday, May 19, 5-7 p.m. Ann
Arbor Friends Meeting House. Potluck
and discussion to discover who
we are in relationship to our food,
the earth and each other. Hosted by
Groundcover News and Purslane
Commons.
WOMEN’S WILDFLOWER
WALK: ANN ARBOR PARKS
AND RECREATION ENVIRONMENTAL
EDUCATION
Tuesday, May 19, 5:30-6:30 p.m.,
Scarlett-Mitchell Nature Area,
Scarlett Middle School parking lot,
3300 Lorraine. Adults age 18 and up
invited to take a 1-mile hike to learn
about and look for wildflowers. Free,
preregistration required at tinyurl.
com/a2parksrec
POEMS FOR THE PEOPLE:
CELEBRATING 30 YEARS OF
ANN ARBOR POETRY &
COMMUNITY
Friday, May 22, 7-9 p.m. Pioneer
High School Schrieber Auditorium,
610 W Stadium. Poetry readings by
2025 National Book Award Winner
Patricia Smith, along with Ross Gay,
Hanif Abdurraqib, Shira Erlichman,
Sarah Kay, and other local poets and
youth poets in honor of the retirement
of longtime PHS creative writing
director, and award winning poet,
Jeff Kass. Tickets $15; $5 for students
of all kinds. Purchase in
advance at
bit.ly/poemsforthepeople
THE ROAD HOME SCREENING
Thursday, May 28, 6 p.m. EMU Student
Center, 900 Oakwood Street,
Ypsilanti. The Road Home is a documentary
exploring mental health,
housing insecurity and homelessness
in Washtenaw County, highlighting
community efforts and
challenges. Local organizations face
fragmented responses, funding cuts
and limiting support. The film's goal
is to unite stakeholders, raise awareness
and inspire collective action to
ensure compassionate, sustainable
solutions. After the film finishes,
there will be a 4-5 person panel of
speakers and a moderator from various
commumity organizations.
DANCE INTO ACTION
Saturday, May 30, 4-8:30 p.m. hear.
say brewing, 2350 W. Liberty St.,
Ann Arbor. Presented by Pilar's
Foundation. Uniting to benefit local
immigrant families. Live music by
Jive Colossus, Killer Diller, Backbeat
Manifesto. Food and drink from
Pilar's Tamales and hear.say brewing.
Purchase tickets at pilarsfoundation.
org or inside Pilar's Tamales.
ANNUAL TASTE OF ANN
ARBOR: MAIN STREET AREA
ASSOCIATION
Sunday, May 31, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.,
Main St. between William and
Washington Streets. A chance to
taste entrees and desserts from
more than 30 downtown restaurants
and cafes. Also, kids' activities and
live music TBA. Free admission.
Food tickets, $1 each (items range
from 1-6 tickets each).
Submit an event to be featured
in the next edition: submissions@
groundcovernews.com
MAY 15, 2026
׉	 7cassandra://8hnNJM9FuiUmIGgwYbZjJKzATMq-uaw7k0hkgomjynsP` j1\^D^׉EZMAY 15, 2026
LIBRARIES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
What’s
Left: Wander + Gather storefront offers cards, stickers, calendars, mugs and more adorned with
illustrations by owner Maia Hausler. Right: At Silky Grooves shoppers will find affordable vintage
clothing, vinyl records and other retro knick knacks.
Big steps for small business
HANIYAH SIDDIQUI
U-M student contributor
Walk into the downtown Ann
Arbor District Library on any given
afternoon and you might notice
something unexpected tucked into
the lobby. The faint crackle of a vinyl
record. A full bouquet of fresh flowers.
A handwoven textile draped
across a display table. These are not
decorations. They are small businesses
run by real people who, until
recently, had no affordable path to a
storefront of their own.
The Ann Arbor District Library
launched its Lobby Shops pilot program
last summer, transforming
three vacant suites into low-cost
retail spaces after the Friends of the
Library Bookshop relocated to Scio
Township. Monthly rent is set at
$250 for the largest suite and $100
for each of the smaller ones, rates
that stand in sharp contrast to typical
downtown prices, where commercial
rents can reach several
thousand dollars per month depending
on location and size.
The demand reflected this gap.
Sixty-three applicants competed for
just three available spaces.
The businesses selected to inaugurate
the program reflect a deliberate
range of backgrounds and products.
Silky Grooves, a vintage reseller that
has operated since 2019 through festivals
and pop-ups, now occupies
the largest suite with its collection of
records, retro clothing, toys, and collectibles.
Co-owner Hannah Jacobsen
described the opportunity as
surreal, noting that a permanent
downtown storefront had previously
felt unattainable. Another suite was
occupied by Gardens Within, which
offers locally grown flowers, houseplants,
and handmade pottery from
regional artisans. The third space
belonged to JFSMade, a collective
supported by Jewish Family Services
of Washtenaw County, featuring
handcrafted goods created by refugee
entrepreneurs who have historically
relied on farmers markets and
temporary venues. (See Editor's
note below for times for the currrent
participating shops.)
For JFSMade, the storefront represents
more than a place to sell
products. As Market Coordinator
Mibrak Tewolde explained, the
space serves as a bridge between refugee
experiences and the Ann Arbor
community, highlighting both cultural
expression and economic resilience.
That perspective underscores
the broader significance of
the
program.
Groundcover News has consistently
reported on the structural
challenges that limit economic
mobility, particularly for those operating
on the margins. One of the
most persistent barriers is access to
affordable commercial space. While
the Lobby Shops initiative does not
resolve this issue entirely, it offers a
tangible example of how public
institutions can expand their role. A
library, in this case — a library is not
only a place for information but also
a platform for opportunity.
At the same time, the program is
not without its constraints. AADL
representative Rich Retyi acknowledged
that physical space is the primary
limitation, noting that
additional capacity would allow for
more participants. The six-month
tenancy model also places pressure
on vendors to establish a customer
base quickly before their term
expires, which can make it difficult
to build lasting customer relationships.
Furthermore, the setting itself
presents challenges. A library lobby
does not function as a traditional
retail corridor, and casual visitors
may not always translate into consistent
sales.
Public libraries have long served
as access points for knowledge and
resources, particularly for those who
might otherwise be excluded.
Extending that mission to include
commercial opportunity represents
a meaningful evolution. For vendors
such as those involved in JFSMade,
the value of a downtown presence
extends beyond immediate revenue,
offering visibility, credibility and a
sense of belonging within the local
economy.
The Lobby Shops can only operate
during regular library hours, and are
open to all visitors without the need
for a library card. This accessibility
reinforces the program’s underlying
principle of lowering barriers for
both entrepreneurs and the community
members they hope to reach.
In a city where access to commercial
space is often determined by
financial resources, the presence of
these small businesses within a
public library stands out. It creates a
space where opportunity is not
exclusively tied to wealth, but
instead shared more openly.
Whether the program expands will
depend on what the library learns in
the coming months. For now, three
small businesses continue the quiet,
persistent work that is entrepreneurship.
They show up daily, present
their work, and trust that the community
will meet them there.
Silky Grooves Vintage & Vinyl
will be open until the end of May;
shop Thursdays 12-6 p.m., Fridays
2-6 p.m. and Saturdays 2-6 p.m. IG:
@silkygrooves
Wander + Gather is open Thursday
and Friday 3-6 p.m., Sunday
12-4 p.m. IG: @wandergathershop
True Timbuktu will be open Saturdays
and Sundays 1- 6 p.m. IG: @
trutimbuku
Happening
at the Ann
Arbor
District
Library
Open 10am–8pm Daily
Visit any of our five locations
across town to browse books,
magazines, newspapers, and
more. Check out movies, CDs, art
prints, musical instruments, or
even home tools—you name it!
Enjoy fast and free WiFi, study
and meeting rooms, and plenty
of comfortable spaces to relax or
hang out.
Public Computers
The AADL has public-access
Internet computers available for
use by both cardholders and noncardholders
at all five locations.
Each station has USB ports,
headphone jacks, and some of the
fastest WiFi speeds in town!
Byte Club
An exclusive club for AADL SUPER
FANS and library people like you!
Byte Club will help you connect
deeper with the Library you know
and love, and share special sneak
peeks of new things coming soon.
The first rule of Byte Club is that
you tell everyone about Byte Club!
Ready to join? Visit aadl.org/
byteclub to get started.
FEATURED EVENT
5
Wednesday, June 3 • 11 AM–4 PM
• Downtown Library
VISIONS features a variety of
exhibitors demonstrating the
latest products & services for the
blind, low vision, & physically
disabled. Enjoy presentations on
topics related to vision health,
services, & assistive technology.
Learn more at aadl.org/visions.
j1\^D^j1\^D^
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HEALTHCARE
U-M hospital is failing homeless patients
Editor's note: The opinions expressed
in this article are of the author's own
and not that of Groundcover News, as
Lanier indicates.
University of Michigan Hospital has
never given me, personally, any problems.
The care I have received any time
I’ve been there has been above average
and well worth the visit. They knew I
was homeless and didn’t discriminate
against me for anything … until I
became an emergency contact for a
friend. Then I learned that Officer
Fransisco Holguin could use a few lessons
in manners, and the hospital staff
needs a lesson in Patient Affairs. Also,
I have come across three individuals in
the same situation that I am as
unhoused persons, whose treatment
borderlines neglect or abuse from U-M
medical staff and security.
Jeannie J., a single mother of three,
was admitted into U-M hospital for a
lung infection in early April. Her caseworker
lied about an available bed at
the Delonis Center, stating Jeannie had
a bed there and could be discharged.
One call to the Center revealed this
was a lie. Then she lied about the closure
date of the Daytime Warming
Center, stating it was April 15, Jeannie’s
discharge date, when it was in
fact the 12th and had already closed. I
was a patron of the warming center
and can confirm it closed on the 12th.
Her condition was treated by a doctor
Michael Mashab (there might have
been a last name of Keone), who felt
her recovery was sufficient. He later
discharged Jeannie on April 15, which
Jeannie felt was too early, especially
not having housing or a safe place to
fully recover, thanks to the laziness of
her caseworker. (There was another
caseworker involved who tried to help,
but her efforts didn’t land the end
result she was hoping for.) The doctor
also threatened removal by security if
she refused to leave.
Jeannie appealed the decision for discharge
and was ultimately denied staying
any longer without having to pay
$3,500 per day. She left the hospital and
met me back at the Delonis Center to
discuss details of her visit. This sparked
my interest in writing an article. We also
discussed how she had been discharged
to a Havenwyck Hospital in
Pontiac before, where she was raped by
another patient, but no one received
consequences. The police took a report
and something happened to the investigation;
either it was completed and
rendered inconclusive results or otherwise
halted by local police. You will see
why I included this hospital in another
part of this article.
The next day, my friend Steve D. was
assaulted in the early morning by a
group of minors who had been going
I told him I was Lux’s emergency contact
and Lux was still on property and
I wanted to speak with someone to
keep them from “trafficking” her to
another county, I was not allowed to
know where she was going to be transferred.
I got Holguin’s name and ended
up leaving.
I called U-M Patient Relations and
RACHAEL LANIER
Groundcover vendor No. 695
around pepper spraying people at
random. He called for emergency assistance.
The police took a report and
caught up to the group of children and
proceeded to inform Steve of his
options. When he went to U-M for help,
they cleaned his eyes (not very well),
then they discharged him the same
night and threatened removal by security
if he didn’t leave. There was no case
work for housing or other resources.
Caseworkers apparently are only
employed at U-M for status and looks.
I say the hospital didn’t clean his eyes
well enough because I myself met with
him later that morning only to see an
orange crust around both eyes and hear
his complaints of soreness. I gave him
some baby wipes and offered to put his
story in this paper as more evidence
that U-M is abusing or neglecting the
unhoused. I think it’s urgent to inform
unhoused persons of the maltreatment
at this hospital and offer suggestions for
another facility that will maintain the
practice of treating unhoused patients
with dignity and respect.
I have another friend, we’ll call her
Lux, who had been off her psych medicine
for three days and was starting to
regress. Her symptoms were hallucinations,
audio and visual, and tremors,
all from a brain injury she incurred
as a child. She drove both of us to U-M
hospital where I, at her request, signed
her into the Psychiatric side of the
Emergency Department, giving my
information so I could be her emergency
contact. I left feeling as if she
would be cared for properly and a few
days in the hospital would definitely
help everything.
I got a call from her later stating the
hospital was going to transfer her to
another psych ward outside of Ann
Arbor, against her wishes, and that she
wanted me to come up there and discuss
options. While I was at the hospital,
I was promised a chance to speak
to Lux, which was ultimately changed
to speaking to a caseworker, which
ultimately led to Mr. Security Officer
Fransisco Holguin telling me to leave
because I had no reason to be there.
He stated that Lux was a grown woman
and that she could call me when she
got where she was going. Even though
spoke to a house manager whose
name I didn’t quite hear, and explained
that Lux had a support system here,
that she only needed her psych meds
refilled, and that sending her away
from Ann Arbor meant she wouldn’t
be able to come back for her car or any
of her friends. Being unhoused means
when you find people who don’t take
advantage of you,
those people
become friends. I was promised a call
back and never received one. This goes
back to a lack of accountability
because: who will ever know? She was
homeless anyway.
Lux was transferred to Havenwyck in
Pontiac, the same facility I mentioned
above that already had a history with
Jeannie. Lux called me to let me know
she had arrived and that a caseworker,
Scott, would be assigned to her.
Throughout her stay there, she was sexually
assaulted by a male nurse while
threatening her with an injection. She
did report the assault, but who knows if
that hospital would be doing any kind
of investigating. Jeannie didn’t get any
justice, Lux will probably see the same
result. She also requested help from the
Easter Seals assistance organization,
who never called me as her emergency
contact
to discuss her plan of
discharge.
Her Havenwyck caseworker Scott
called me only hours away from her
discharge instead of making contact
earlier in her stay at his facility, to plan
her return to Ann Arbor. I didn’t
answer the call, so Havenwyck decided
she would be discharged to a shelter in
Oakland. Lux called me as soon as she
was at the Hope Shelter and wanted
help getting back to Ann Arbor. She
stated the shelter staff were kind and
professional but that area of Pontiac
had a bad reputation and she was still
fearful. I had been fortunate enough to
have some money and a friend in
Detroit who Ubers for a living. He went
immediately to get her and she arrived
in Ann Arbor around 9:30 that night.
She came to the Delonis Center to get
some gear out of storage and went to
go get her car that was still parked at
the hospital. U-M “trafficked” Lux to
Oakland county with the knowledge
she didn’t readily have the means to
return to Ann Arbor. It’s almost as i
U-M Hospital has an agenda to “rid”
Ann Arbor of any and all unhoused
persons. I make that statement on my
own without any affiliation to Groundcover
News, so if someone wants to
sue, you come for me and me alone. I
got you, darlin’.
Another friend of mine, who is also
an unhoused person, is Robin N. She
had a blister on her foot that burst,
causing extreme pain. She hasn’t had
much luck finding shoes in her size,
not good ones anyway, as the last pair
she received were used and actually
speculated to have caused the massive
infection inside her foot. She had
already been cleaning the site, as it
wasn’t her first blister. Only it kept getting
worse from walking, and had
begun to become more of a hole
instead of just a popped blister. Days
later, she had so much pain coming
from her foot that she called an ambulance
to take her to the U-M Emergency
Department. They examined
her foot and advised her to keep it
clean, gave her some pain medicine
similar to Ibuprofen, and discharged
her the same night.
Some days later at the Delonis
Center, all the while taking care of her
sore foot as instructed,
the pain
became so intense that, with a little
convincing from myself and another
friend, she opted to call the ambulance
again. She had already been wearing
the other pair of used shoes for a few
days at this point. When emergency
services arrived, we asked our caseworkers
to please instruct the drivers
to take our friend to St. Joseph’s (Trinity
Health Ann Arbor Hospital in Ypsilanti)
for treatment.
Discrimination, maltreatment, or
more possibly neglect from medical
staff at U-M would only make things
worse at this point and we didn’t want
her to lose her foot. We all feared she
would have been threatened with
removal by security and she already
couldn’t walk anymore. We were
already aware there was a history of
U-M mistreating unhoused persons
based on the real experiences already
detailed in this article of people I know
personally.
When she first arrived at St. Joseph’s
she was pulled into surgery as her foot
was so infected. They had to fillet her
foot open on the top to allow for drainage.
It was debated whether or not she
would lose her big toe. Thankfully,
their treatment plan worked. She was
treated for diabetes as well, so this
could have ended badly for her if her
concerns and pain had been dismissed
or she were discharged the same day
again. Her foot has been sewed up and
she is expected to make a full recovery
at a facility in Ann Arbor.
I have written this article as a cry for
see HOSPITAL next page 
MAY 15, 2026
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HEALTHCARE
The business of healthcare
There are many variables in the
living equation for the formula of life.
The solution to this formula is seen by
the decisions we make that determine
how we live our lives. Some of us just
live life one day at a time in a passive
state and make excuses for our poor
decisions. Everywhere we go we witness
the painful results in the lives of
those who reside in a passive state of
mind. This article is written to give
hope to those who have a need for
someone to come into their lives and
walk beside them and gently guide
them onto the road to a healthy
lifestyle.
With great pleasure and pride let me
introduce you to Mr. Daniel VanAssche.
I met Dan during the brutally
harsh winter of 2025/26. I was living at
the Robert J. Delonis Center where
space was limited due to the overwhelming
demand for a warm place
to stay to avoid the life-threatening
effects of being left out in the sub-zero
temperatures that were all too
common during our recent winter. My
daily survival routine included visiting
the warming centers that rotated
throughout Washtenaw County. It was
during one of those visits that I had
the honor of meeting Dan.
I was charging my phone and warming
up to coffee and an abundance of
delicious food donated by countless
organizations and individuals who
went above and beyond to make sure
that I was safe, clothed and fed with
enough to make it through the day.
You can only imagine how your health
can suffer when you are living every
day in survival mode. Then I looked up
and noticed a new face in the crowd.
This unassuming man simply sat quietly
among us and blended in and was
 HOSPITAL from last page
help among the collective of unhoused.
Please help us alleviate our burden of medical
maltreatment and neglect from U-M Hospital.
As I stated before on my own, this
hospital mistreats or neglects unhoused, IF
they don’t turn around and traffic them to
random facilities outside of Ann Arbor. I look
forward to seeing someone in court over this.
I’m ready. I propose a petition to the city of
Ann Arbor. Please allow funding for a medical
facility for unhoused and low-income
only. This city has multiple streams of
resources for the unhoused, but no real solutions.
NO housing without being allowed to
remain homeless for up to two years per
HAWC (Housing Access of Washtenaw
County). (Editor’s note: This seems to have
improved lately, for many.) No jobs that pay
a living wage or allow for one employee to
work more than one job, because the
ever outwork me, and I will never
quit.” Dan grew into a man with the
heart of a lion and a work ethic that
compels him to put in long hours and
sleepless nights to get the job done.
“After high school I applied to sevDAVID
MITCHELL
Groundcover vendor No. 661
welcome. During my walk to the free
clothing closet I went past his table
and introduced myself.
We shook hands, then we sat
together and enjoyed a cup of coffee
and a life-changing conversation. Of
course we talked about sports and the
news of the day, you know, just anything
to pass the time. Then our conversation
elevated when we touched
on topics directed to healthy living
and how to make the transition from
homelessness to living healthy,
wealthy and wise. First things first, in
order to be wealthy and wise, you have
to be healthy. Then, like magic, we got
down to business, and for the next half
hour we exchanged information that
led me to take aggressive action to
improve my health and live a better
life.
Here's a little more about Dan. Born
in Wyandotte, Mich., and raised in
Taylor, Dan is a home-grown Metro
Detroiter who grew up with all the
toughness and strength that comes
with living in the Motor City. Dan said,
“I was raised to live by the golden rule,
do unto others as you would have
them do unto you.”
Dan went on to say, “I was never the
biggest or the fastest, but nobody will
eral colleges and landed at Eastern
Michigan University.” Dan added, “My
initial interest was to study criminology
with the goal of pursuing a career
in law enforcement.” While in Ypsilanti,
Dan’s thirst for knowledge continued
to grow. “I found myself taking
business courses at Washtenaw Community
College, and that is where I
discovered my gift for helping people
through the application of business
principles for healthy living.” Dan
soon found career success. “I was
blessed to land a job at Quicken Loans,
then Rocket Mortgage.” Dan’s love for
people led him to perform as a top
producer in underwriting.
Working in the mortgage industry
Dan watched his hard work reap the
fruit of providing housing for his clients
throughout the region. “I learned
at an early age that no one wins in
business working alone.” Dan went on
to say, “All of my success came as a
direct result of working together as
part of a team. I believe success is
measured by your ability to build
healthy relationships by placing the
needs of others before your own.”
While our conversation led to a
number of interpersonal discoveries,
I found out that for the past five years
Dan has focused his energy on building
the business of the Diversity Insurance
company. Dan told me, “My
office is based
in Saline, but
my time and
life are spent
companies demand loyalty and open availability,
even though it’s never enough hours.
Join us in asking that the city of Ann Arbor,
or the county of Washtenaw itself, provide us
with our own medical center. All the resources
for this collective are here. We need a hospital
with better-trained and more compassionate
staff and security.
If that isn’t an option, move all the resources
to another part of Michigan, like Oakland
County, since U-M wants to displace us there
anyway. We could just go have our meals and
shelters over there. We could get our clothes
and used filthy shoes from over there. We
could go and have our fake interviews from
employers and ghost job postings from over
there. Then your medical case workers won’t
have a job to do and your doctors and security
staff can just show up and put forth any
effort into their housed patients. Problem
solved, right?
Or we could try to solve the problem here.
working among the people throughout
the region.” Dan is an expert in
helping people pay for healthcare.
“I’m licensed and certified to provide
my clients a complete portfolio that
covers all insurance.” Dan takes the
time to listen to and assess your needs.
In the end you come away with a plan
of action that is doable and
affordable.
My 30-minute introductory conversation
with Dan led to meetings
throughout Washtenaw County where
we participated in the mutual
exchange of ideas and information all
directed to improving my health and
quality of life. I now have an affordable
insurance provider that allows me to
receive a thorough dental examination,
complete physical examination,
an optical exam, and my own primary
care physician.
Talking with Dan literally changed
my life. I just met with my primary
care physician, Dr. Shahnoor Amin,
MD, PhD, who attended The University
of Illinois Medical School. Dr.
Amin said, “Mr. Mitchell, you are in
excellent health, just continue to exercise
and manage your diet and you
will be fine.” Wow, what a difference a
friendly conversation can make.
Now the warming centers are all
closed for the season, but my new
friend Daniel VanAssche is open for a
conversation about the business of
healthcare. I strongly encourage you
to call Dan directly at 734-502-8666, or
reach out to him through email to dvanassche@diversityins.com.
This will
be a conversation worth having.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
VOTING RIGHTS
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
In the process of creating social
change, fundamental ideas are implemented
through the arts, through journalism,
through organizing and
mobilizing efforts with vigorous action
to achieve a great purpose. But, in The
United States of America, one good
way to solidify progress is to enter a
court of law to present and plead one’s
case to make social change a reality.
Civil rights law consists of federal
and state statutes, amendments to the
Constitution and regulations designed
to protect individuals from discrimination
and guarantee equal treatment
in areas like employment, housing,
education and public accommodations.
It enforces protections against
discrimination based on characteristics
such as race, color, sex, religion,
national origin and disability.
Regarded as the legislative crown
jewel of the civil rights era, the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 was enacted as a
comprehensive tool meant to undo the
political hold of Jim Crow policies in the
South and related discriminatory structures
nationwide. Congress adopted
the law to ensure that states followed
the 15th Amendment’s guarantee that
the right to vote not be denied because
of race. The law fundamentally opened
political opportunities for Black and
brown communities to participate in all
aspects of the political system on an
equal basis.
Gerrymandering is the deliberate
manipulation of electoral district
boundaries to give one political party,
incumbent, or group an unfair advantage.
By using techniques like "packing"
(concentrating opposition voters)
and "cracking" (diluting them),
map-drawers reduce competition,
ensure predictable election outcomes,
and distort representative democracy.
Racial gerrymandering is illegal. The
Voting Rights Act mandates that when
a minority group is sufficiently large,
geographically concentrated, and
politically cohesive, a district must be
MAY 15, 2026
Civil rights law and weakening the Voting Rights Act
Gerrymandering uses the tactics of "packing" or "cracking" to give
one political party an unfair advantage. Image from MIT Election Lab
drawn to allow them to elect candidates
of their choice.
April 29, 2026, the Supreme Court of
the United States struck down a voting
map in Louisiana, and with it dealt a
blow to the landmark civil rights law.
The decision opened the door for other
states to redraw their congressional
maps in ways that could affect elections
for years to come.
The Supreme Court decision in Louisiana
v. Callais significantly weakened
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act
by shifting the standard from proving
discriminatory effect to proving intentional
discrimination, which is difficult
to do. This makes it harder for voters to
challenge racially gerrymandered
maps. The ruling, as described by the
American Civil Liberties Union,
enables states to adopt maps that
dilute the voting power of Black and
minority communities.
I talked with a fellow Groundcover
see VRA next page 
Poor People’s Campaign brings new life to MLK Jr.’s
vision
LAURIE WECHTER
Former Groundcover Human
Services Director
In 2017, National religious leaders,
Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II and the Rev.
Dr. Liz Theoharis declared a National
Call for Moral Revival of the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr.’s Poor People’s Campaign.
King’s movement was cut short
by his murder 50 years ago. However, a
1968 initiative that King had planned to
conduct was carried out this summer
from May 14 to June 28. Thirty-five
states participated in the 40 days of protests
and direct actions.
Fifty years after King’s death, 140 million
Americans are poor or low-income
and 43 million people are living below
the poverty line, living with ecological
devastation, systemic racism and an
economy harnessed to seemingly endless
war. The Poor People’s Campaign
now beckons our nation to take the
higher ground. It calls upon our society
to see the predicaments of the most vulnerable
among us and seeks to halt the
destruction of America’s moral vision.
The Campaign works to continue Dr.
King’s legacy of gathering citizens
across the nation to take a stand on
major issues affecting all Americans,
but particularly poor people and people
of color.
During the National 40 Days of Moral
Action, hundreds of church and union
members and concerned citizens
marched singing songs, carrying signs
and demanding a massive overhaul of
the nation’s voting rights laws, the
implementation of new programs to lift
up Americans living in poverty,
increased attention to ecological devastation,
and renewed measures to
curb militarism and the war economy.
Among the protesters, 85 people —
many of them leaders from temples,
churches, synagogues and mosques
— were arrested for trespassing. This
amounted to blocking doors and parking
lots of government buildings in
Lansing, and stopping the Q-Line tram
in Detroit. These acts have garnered
media attention and have shown our
neighbors that it is possible to have a
voice in the public arena.
The Poor People’s Campaign hopes
to increase its ranks over time, just as
the leaders of the Civil Rights movement
did 50 years ago. At present, Campaign
members are canvassing citizens
to get out and vote — and to vote “Yes”
on nonpartisan Proposal 2 in the
November 6 midterm elections. Proposal
2 will stop the unfair practice of
drawing voting district lines that
empower one party and deny representation
to a substantial number of poor
and non-white voters (aka gerrymandering).
Proposal 2 will establish a Citizens
Redistricting Commission made
up of four Democrats, four Republicans
and five unaffiliated voters to redraw
these lines and allow Michigan voters
to be truly represented.
Please join the effort to create a more
just Michigan and America for all!
To get involved, go to: www.poorpeoplescampaign.org
or www.VotersNotPoliticians.com.
Originally
published in the September
2018 edition of Groundcover
׉	 7cassandra://_cCZTBMAP_RlUSd2ftk-TW1_dPqKEYqicPS_yUFF4eUWq` j1\^D^׉E{MAY 15, 2026
EXPLOITATION
Surrounded by robbers and thieves
Most of us have keys to protect our
homes and belongings. If you lose
something, the first question you hear
is “Did you have it locked up?” The
implication is that if you did not then
the loss is your fault. When my trike
was stolen someone checked my
“almost-lock” and undid it.
At 211 E. Davis, where I live in Avalon
housing, if you leave anything in the
dryer it can disappear. Most of my
towels, smart wool socks, big comforter
blanket and more have been
taken. What is the problem here?
There is a bumper sticker that says,
“Before the white man came there
were no police or prisons, no unemployment,
hunger or homelessness.
The white man thought he could
improve on that.” In capitalist culture
we are surrounded by a climate of
shortage, even when there is an oversupply.
How can we still believe this is
reality-based?
The recent “Living with Treaties”
conference at the University of Michigan
explained how the treaty process
was the main player in privatizing
indigenous land. Privatization of
public resources continues as the cult
of wealth accumulation extends its
reach into every nook and cranny. The
investment class now talks of social
security as an entitlement and how
much better it would be if investors
were in charge. Investors are the core
of the ruling class and now practice
neoliberal imperialism. Hedge funds
and other techno-financial innovations
show that financial capital is
supreme over industrial capital and
can thrive by destroying industrial
capital. The working class elected Bill
Clinton who then signed NAFTA, the
North American Free Trade Agreement,
which funneled investors to
Mexico. In the global economy to maximize
profits, China became the place
of choice and jobs went from Mexico
to China, joining the Apple I-phone
 VRA from last page
board member and volunteer, Jacob
Fallman, who is a lawyer for Sugar Law
Center. Sugar Law’s work seeks to
amplify the voices of low income workers
and their communities.
Jones: What made you get into civil
rights law?
Fallman: It always made sense to be
a lawyer for the people. When deciding
what I wanted to be when I grew up, I
decided I wanted to be a lawyer. Civil
rights lawyers, I looked up to in our
society because they are fighters and
they represent the people.
Jones: What type of work do you do
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
and others in a profit frenzy. So, you
can say that bosses are thieves who
will sell your job to the lowest bidder.
“The Earth’s Greatest Enemy” is a
great documentary on the U.S. military
and the damage they cause. In it you
meet the people of Okinawa, the main
U.S. military base in Japan, who protest
the poisoning of their community.
Of course this poisoning is made possible
by the thieves who channel unbelievable
amounts of tax money to the
corporate arms of the war machine.
There is no way at this time to put a
padlock on your income tax so it can
prioritize people. There is a Move the
Money coalition on this issue.
It may look like the power of the corporate
state is invincible but a closer
look shows that our labor power is the
foundation of society. Please do a critical
reading of “Preparing For a General
Strike" and “Winning a General
Strike,” two of my many Groundcover
News articles that help us face reality
and choose the path of freedom. Earth
Day 2026 had some good presentations
on this theme. Ann Arbor Community
Commons will continue many
collaborations and extend it to Indivisible
and the NO KINGS rallies.
Change and impermanence are in
full play. Take a breath and look where
you can do something good. Small
things count. I hope the Ann Arbor
Coalition Against War restarts the
Friday evening vigils by the post office
at Sugar Law?
Fallman: We seek to help in areas of
unfair employment practices, inappropriate
development deals, environmental
harms, and a range of
discriminatory corporate and government
policies. I work in administrative
law to make sure the government follows
due process and respects people’s
rights when it comes to people getting
their unemployment benefits.
Jones: What are your thoughts on
the Supreme Court decision to strike
down the Voting Rights Act and what
do you think we as a nation can do to
remedy and reverse this decision?
Fallman: The decision is
Picket line outside Ypsilanti Transit Center, in solidarity with
theTransit Workers Union's ongoing bargaining with the AAATA,
on May 1, International Workers' Day. Photo submitted.
at Fifth Ave and Liberty soon. I will be
there sooner or later. Come and greet
Alan Haber with his sign “Abolish the
Whole War System.”
Bosses and war go hand in hand to
steal natural resources and labor
power. The vast destruction of the
environment happens as wage slavery
carries out the orders of the ruling
class. We have yet to learn how to use
our labor responsibly. Compliance
culture cannot allow this.
The Transit Workers Union (TWU)
has been working without a contract
for a month now. All of TheRide bus
drivers and support staff are not
allowed to go on strike by Federal law.
Negotiations are stalled as management
wants to cut maternity leave
benefits and not give a cost of living
wage increase. I lost my Gold Card
which gives seniors free rides on the
AAATA, and when I went to replace it,
I discovered the picket line at the main
office on Industrial. Please support the
TWU.
As we learn to take a natural breath
and focus our awareness on reality we
will discover new ways to live in solidarity
with life itself. Let’s breathe
together from earth to sky and live
fearlessly. The etymology of the word
“conspire” means breathe together.
heartbreaking, but in a lot of ways it was
not surprising that the court took this
step with a 6-3 conservative majority
that put the nail in the coffin in the process
of reversing hard-fought gains won
during the civil rights era. We won the
rights we enjoy today, that are being
attacked right now, by being out in the
streets, and willing to fight for our
rights. Not just that, but people need to
be informed about things that are going
on around them. The decision that
recently happened in the Supreme
Court is from a lack of paying attention
and from the capitalist forces around
us. If we are to win back our rights or
win better rights that we should have
The Conspiracy to Save Lives was my
first political work in Detroit beginning
in 1969. It was a defense committee for
the Berrigan brother priests and others
who poured their blood on draft board
files. They were charged with conspiracy
to destroy government property.
Look around and listen to what
speaks to you. Practice until we get it
right!
The Common Good is a group
inspired by the work of Peter Block.
Some 120 people, including me, gathered
in Cincinnati May 4-6 to share
and learn about connecting and building
the world we want to live in with
the courage to care about ourselves
and others, beginning in local neighborhoods
and understanding that the
future is local.
“Our future is local” is the slogan of
Argus Farm Stop. Their popular coffee
is locally processed and brewed. I
meet some wonderful people there.
By appearances, we’re surrounded
by robbers and thieves. But if you look
beyond appearances, we are surrounded
by buddhas and bodhisattvas
and every kind of holy being. We can
learn to breathe together and move
together.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
9
had long ago, we are going to need a big
movement like those in the past, if not
bigger, to put the powers that be in their
place and assert people's power.
Jones: There is a Michigan constitutional
amendment Proposal 2 (setting
up the Independent Redistricting
Commission) that removed the power
of redistricting from legislators in 2018
and gave it to a citizen commission —
will that still be in place after the
SCOTUS ruling?
Fallman: Yes, that will still be in place
for the foreseeable future and will continue
to determine what legislative districts
will look like here in Michigan.
(See page 8 for more details.)
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
RECOVERY
DAVID CRANE
Groundcover contributor
In Washtenaw County, compassion
has become a public language. It
appears in mission statements, grant
proposals, awareness campaigns and
policy discussions. We speak often
about helping the vulnerable, reducing
stigma and meeting people where
they are.
Yet for many of us living inside that
reality, another truth exists: people are
still slipping through the cracks while
the systems built to help them continue
to expand.
I know because I am one of them.
I am approaching three years in
changed my habits,
recovery.
I
changed my thinking, and rebuilt my
life through discipline, accountability
and persistence. Anyone who has
walked that road knows recovery is not
a slogan or a single decision. It is daily
work, often done quietly and without
recognition.
That is why it can be difficult to watch
progress become invisible.
Too often, our public conversation
celebrates stabilization while overlooking
transformation. If someone
reduces harmful behavior, that can
absolutely be a meaningful step forward.
Harm reduction can save lives,
reduce immediate danger and create
opportunities for change.
But when survival becomes the
highest goal, recovery risks becoming
secondary.
The message many of us hear is this:
staying in the cycle is understandable,
but asking to be recognized for leaving
it is inconvenient. Accountability is
treated with suspicion. Standards are
dismissed as judgment. Long-term
change becomes less compelling than
short-term crisis management.
That imbalance matters.
When communities focus only on
managing emergencies, they can unintentionally
create systems that sustain
suffering more effectively than they
solve it. Programs multiply. New initiatives
launch. Careers advance. Funding
grows. Yet many of the people
these efforts are meant to help remain
trapped in poverty, instability, addiction
and despair year after year.
Meanwhile, those who have fought
to rebuild their lives can feel unseen.
This is not an argument against harm
reduction. Preventing overdose matters.
Preserving life matters. Treating
people with dignity matters.
But dignity should not end at
survival.
Real dignity means believing people
are capable of growth, responsibility,
healing and independence. It means
investing not only in keeping people
alive today, but helping them build a
life tomorrow. It means valuing treatment,
sober housing, employment
pathways, mentorship and leadership
from people with sustained recovery
experience.
Washtenaw County is filled with
intelligent and compassionate people
MAY 15, 2026
Invisible process: recovery in the harm reduction era
who want to help. But good intentions
alone are not enough if visible homelessness
rises, addiction persists, poverty
deepens and hopelessness
spreads. Those outcomes should
prompt honest reflection, not automatic
self-congratulation.
We need balance.
Support harm reduction, yes. But
support recovery with equal seriousness.
Measure success not only by
crises managed, but by lives rebuilt.
Ask whether programs are producing
progress or simply preserving the need
for themselves.
Most of all, stop overlooking the
people who chose change.
There are many of us in this county.
We may not fit the preferred narrative
of permanent struggle. We may not be
the loudest voices in the room. But we
exist, and our lives are proof that transformation
is possible.
A community that forgets how to
recognize recovery may eventually
forget how to create it.
Between abstinence and acceptance
LENA BUHL
Trott-War street paper
Courtesy of Trott-War, a street paper
in Germany, INSP.ngo.
Many of those affected by addiction
never seek help. The mental barrier is
hard to overcome, and the journey to
the door of the clinic is a long one. But
there are places where this door is
wide open; places where people listen
and encourage each other with honesty,
where nobody has to lie anymore.
One of them is in Stuttgart — at the
Blue Cross.
The first Blue Cross Society was
founded in Geneva back in 1877. Eight
years later, the movement arrived in
Germany, where it celebrates its 140th
anniversary this year. The founders
took inspiration from the Red Cross
and saw themselves as “stretcher-bearers
venturing onto the battlefield of life
to rescue the victims of alcoholism and
the pub life.” That is why they chose the
cross as their symbol.
In the Anglo-Saxon world, the color
blue has traditionally been associated
with the temperance movement. The
Blue Cross is now active in almost 50
countries worldwide.
Back in the 19th century, members
were still required to sign a pledge of
abstinence from alcohol. Nowadays,
however, the aim is not necessarily to
achieve abstinence, but rather to bring
about a positive change in a person’s
substance use and psychosocial situation.
The Blue Cross Centre in Stuttgart
attempts to achieve this through
addiction counseling, supported living
services, self-help groups and activity
groups.
Generally speaking, we describe a
condition as an addiction when the
craving for a particular behaviour or
substance is so intense that it significantly
disrupts the person’s life. Addiction
can manifest itself in various
ways: through the use of substances
such as alcohol, recreational drugs
and medication, or through behaviours
such as gambling, eating and media
use.
However, the point at which people
turn to the Blue Cross varies greatly.
Some come after just a few months;
others take 30 years. “The sooner, the
better,” emphasized Benjamin König,
head of the Stuttgart office. Caregivers
also receive support from the Blue
Cross: in 2025, 15% of all those receiving
counselling were relatives. Some
people try to persuade their loved ones
to seek counseling. Sometimes it
works, sometimes it doesn’t.
König prefers not to speculate on the
likelihood of a successful recovery
from addiction: “Of course, the sooner
you seek help, the easier it is,” he
admitted. “They say the first year or
two are the hardest. And you’re on
your own at times. You have your
self-help group and the addiction support
center, but, unlike in clinics, there
isn’t a therapist you can call whenever
you need. Those who still have a functioning
support network around them
simply have it much easier.”
As well as therapy, it is the self-help
groups in particular that give people
strength. Self-help groups are associations
without professional leadership,
consisting
exclusively
of people
affected by addiction. Although each
group organizes its meetings slightly
differently, they are all centered
around the sharing of personal experiences
and current challenges — it’s
about openly discussing what’s on
your mind, asking questions, getting
advice and learning from others. This
helps people to gain new perspectives
and develop a greater awareness of
certain issues.
At the same time, it helps people to
keep their feet on the ground and
avoid falling into the trap of complacency;
it fosters awareness of the reality
that addiction is a lifelong struggle,
even after many years of sobriety.
There is a palpable sense of trust
-
among the members of the Blue Cross
group in Bad Cannstatt. Every Wednesday,
they host a safe space where
attendants can be heard, supported
and encouraged, no matter where they
are on their journey.
“It’s as if I can finally recharge my
batteries on Wednesdays, after they’ve
been draining a little bit every day of
the week,” said one of the members.
“I’m not really the whistling type, but
I’m practically whistling all the way
home this evening after our meeting.”
The Blue Cross Center is not a facility
that provides physical warmth,
whether through its premises or its
meals. Instead, what it aims to do as an
addiction support service is to offer
human warmth.
“Addiction is a highly stigmatized
issue. Some people might be afraid
that they’ll come in here and learn that
they’re full of flaws, that they’re doing
everything wrong, and that they’ll have
to sit through a sanctimonious lecture
before getting help,” said König. “So,
hopefully, they’ll be pleasantly surprised
by the warm welcome they
receive.
“We all have the odd bad day, of
course. But it’s important to me that
we convey a sense of calm. There are
people who are very, very nervous and
have sometimes taken years to come
and seek help.”
Even today, there is a lack of openness
and acceptance in society when
it comes to dealing with addiction. The
term “inclusion” is commonly used in
the field of support for disabled people
— but it’s a concept that should extend
far beyond physical or mental impairments.
It relates in equal part to people
see ACCEPTANCE next page 
׉	 7cassandra://wUwgEPYpHfCdhcD7J4efylZ-YgcdNtkGRJ5g-2C3BDgP=` j1\^D^׉EMAY 15, 2026
OPPORTUNITY
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
More than a newspaper: how Groundcover vendors
are rebuilding lives and community
JONATHAN GLASS
Groundcover contributor
When Bridget Gotham talks about
Groundcover News, her excitement is
immediate and contagious. “I meet
new and amazing people every day,”
she said. “I wish I had started sooner.”
For the past six months, Gotham
has worked as a vendor for Groundcover
News in Ann Arbor, selling
newspapers throughout the community.
What began as a leap of faith has
become a source of stability, purpose,
friendship and hope.
Now, she wants others to experience
the same opportunity.
A job with freedom,
dignity and purpose
Groundcover vendors purchase
newspapers for 50 cents and sell them
for $2 plus the occasional tip, keeping
the difference. Many vendors develop
loyal regular customers, and every
conversation becomes a chance to
connect with the community.
Gotham now sells around 100
papers each week.
“I love that I can work on my own
schedule,” she said. “It’s the freedom
of self-employment I like most.”
But Groundcover offers more than
income. Vendors and contributors
gain work experience, professional
references, community support, and
access to local resources throughout
Washtenaw County. Writers, poets,
and community storytellers are also
encouraged to contribute articles and
creative work to the paper.
For many people facing housing
 ACCEPTANCE from last page
with mental health conditions, offenders,
sex workers and those in need of
housing.
Many of these people face exclusion,
and this is precisely where greater
acceptance and open-mindedness are
needed. Experience shows that even
small steps towards greater visibility
are met with a great deal of prejudice:
the Blue Cross Center’s inquiries to
restaurants and retailers regarding
partnerships often go unanswered.
Finding somewhere to live is also
virtually impossible, especially in
cities like Stuttgart. The mere suggestion
of setting up a houseshare for
former addicts usually results in an
immediate “no.” One of the visitors
from the Blue Cross group sums it up
like this: he wouldn’t “come out” as an
alcoholic today; the fear of rejection is
too great, and the social stigma too
deep-rooted.
As another person put it: “When
someone is diagnosed with cancer,
they are met with compassion. When
someone is experiencing addiction,
they are met with judgement.”
It is important that everyone is given
a genuine opportunity — an opportunity
in the labor market, in community
life and in their local neighborhood.
And that they are greeted with a smile
on the street. After all, those struggling
with addiction are not just fighting
against a substance, but often against
a society that is too quick to judge.
Translated from German via Translators
Without Borders.
insecurity, unemployment, mental
health struggles, or major life transitions,
Groundcover can become a
pathway forward.
Before joining
Groundcover,
Gotham worked as a security officer.
After being assaulted on the job, she
left the field and spent a long period
unemployed.
“It scared me,” she said.
Family members helped support
her while she searched for a new
direction. A friend and fellow vendor,
Mary, encouraged her to look into
Groundcover, but it took time before
Gotham felt ready to walk through the
doors.
When she finally interviewed at
Groundcover’s office inside Bethlehem
United Church of Christ, she
found something unexpected:
encouragement. “The process was
welcoming and hope-inspiring,”
Gotham said.
Even with prior sales experience,
she admitted the idea of working
independently was intimidating at
first. “I wasn’t sure if I’d be good at
this,” she said. “But I tried, and I am
good at this.” That willingness to take
a chance changed everything.
Opportunities beyond
selling papers
Groundcover vendors are not only
salespeople — they are journalists,
poets, advocates, artists and community
leaders. Many vendors contribute
stories, essays or poetry to the
newspaper and are compensated to
do so. Contributors can also participate
in “Groundcover Speaks,” an
audio storytelling project that allows
writers to record their work for additional
compensation.
For vendors balancing tight budgets,
every opportunity matters.
Gotham herself has become
increasingly active in the community.
She now participates in outreach
events and is helping build partnerships
with organizations that support
mental health and recovery services.
At a recent fundraising event hosted
by Fresh Start Clubhouse Gotham
gave tours, connected with guests,
and sold newspapers — proudly representing
Groundcover and the
people behind it.
For anyone nervous about becoming
a vendor, Gotham offers simple
advice: “Hold up a paper and let
people come to you.” She says most
people learn quickly. Success comes
from consistency, kindness, and
conversation.
Sometimes a person may not have
the ability to pay. Sometimes they
may be having a rough day. Gotham
doesn’t let rejection discourage her.
“In those cases, I might give away a
free paper,” she said. “A lot of times
that person becomes a regular after
they see what we’re doing.” That spirit
of patience and human connection is
what makes Groundcover different.
Ask Gotham what Groundcover
means to her now, and she answers
without hesitation: “Friends.
I’m
always in good company with friends.”
For many vendors, Groundcover
becomes more than work. It becomes
community — a place where people
support one another, rebuild confidence,
and discover new purpose.
Bridget Gotham, vendor No. 674
Gotham says she would love to see
more people join as vendors. “The
more papers Groundcover sells, the
more people it can help,” she said. She
also hopes to see expanded resources
for people experiencing homelessness,
mental health challenges, and
substance use disorder throughout
the area.
Looking for a fresh start? Groundcover
News is actively welcoming new
vendors and contributors. No experience
is necessary. If you enjoy meeting
people, telling stories, writing, or
simply want an opportunity to earn
income while becoming part of a supportive
community, Groundcover
may be the place to begin again.
For people searching for purpose,
community, and a chance to move
forward, Groundcover is more than a
newspaper.
It’s a new beginning.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
POETRY
MAY 15, 2026
What does Ann Arbor have in common with the
poet and novelist, Paul Laurence Dunbar?
CISSE LOVE
Groundcover contributor
I am truly honored to share with
readers of Groundcover News about
the historical significance the name
Dunbar brings to Kerrytown. Before
discussing the area’s new asset,
Dunbar Tower, let's visit the life and
times of the poet and novelist Paul
Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906).
Dunbar is considered one of the first
black poets to earn a living as an artist
while establishing a national and
international reputation. His 1899
published poem, “Sympathy,” in the
collection of “Lyrics of the Hearthside,”
is the first instance of the well-known
lyric, “I know why the caged bird
sings.” Maya Angelou, who has openly
given full credit to Paul Laurence
Dunbar, is well-known by most people
for this lyric in her poem “Caged Bird”
(1983), in the collection “Shaker, Why
Don’t You Sing?”
Dunbar is an example of the American
dreamer … a descendant of parents
who overcame the oppression of
slavery with service and education. He
was an exceptional student, the editorin-chief
of his school paper and the
president of the literary society at
Dayton Central High School. Segregation
in the 1800s had obstacles and
barriers that forced Dunbar into
manual labor rather than attending
college. Paul Laurence Dunbar pursued
his writing as a poet and novelist
and was able to earn a living through
direct sales, partnerships and expanding
into various forms of art. Dunbar’s
claim to fame is his writing style, which
excellently paints pictures in English
and dialect associated with enslaved
Americans. After the personal loss of
his wife, and illness, Dunbar passed
away at the age of 33. The richness of
his life cannot be summarized and
justly captured in such a short paragraph.
All over the country, you will
find schools and centers like Ann
Arbor’s Dunbar Community Center.
At an earlier time in Ann Arbor history,
the Dunbar Community Center,
formerly located at 209 N. 4th Street,
was the answer to surviving segregation.
The center later expanded to 1009
N. Catherine Street where it could provide
housing for laborers working for
the University of Michigan. With the
help of other community-centered
partners, the Dunbar Community
Center’s name was changed to the Ann
Arbor Community Center, and it still
stands to this day, now at 625 N. Main
Street. We commend them for providing
valuable programming for children,
supporting families with a
clothing closet and emergency food,
and more, inspired by the contributions
of Paul Laurence Dunbar.
I must state that as a writer and new
resident in Ann Arbor, I am dedicated
to continuing the legacy of a meaningful
presence and supporting the vulnerable
in my community. I feel right
at home and appropriately so in
Dunbar Towers, the newest residential
addition to Ann Arbor’s landscape,
recently built on the Catherine Street
site that once housed the Dunbar
Community Center.
If you have strolled down Catherine
Street near 4th Avenue, you might have
noticed the new maize-and-blueadorned
six-story building, and new
faces about town. Ann Arbor Housing
Commission has partnered with
Avalon Housing to create something in
Ann Arbor that is a first of its kind, providing
project-based housing to artists
and some of our most vulnerable community
members. As someone who is
presently a resident of Dunbar Towers,
I can share transparently that this
experience is life-changing. Dunbar
Towers offers affordable housing to
local artists, remaining true to its
namesake, and at the same time it has
removed some of our most vulnerable
residents from harsh living
conditions.
Residents and the community will
be able to build and explore more art
in suite L, adding wonderful
Paul Laurence Dunbar
opportunities to build community and
experience creative expression. Both
residents and local artists have
adorned the building inside and out
with beautiful murals and expressions
of the iconic area of Kerrytown.
Please be sure to visit the murals the
next time you are out for a stroll near
the Detroit Filling Station, No Thai or
the Farmer’s Market.
I hope your curiosity is piqued and
your imagination even more so. I invite
neighbors to embrace the people,
bring your artistry to the community
space, and please be kind to those new
faces. Help them experience what it
means to be in Ann Arbor, with the
same midwestern kindness and
strength we’re known for as one of the
nation's most educated cities. See you
around town.
Gourmet on the Beach: A Tale of Three Rivers
MARIE
Groundcover contributor
Pass the Salt
I laid down on just the right spot
In the sand
Below the spitting mesquite.
Until my siesta was disrupted by a hiker passing by.
The man offered me a bottle of iced agua.
After the Kool satisfied the parch of the blazing
summer sand,
I noticed a prick more gentle than a pear.
My shrink wrapped fruit salad
Once nested in stretched arms.
Was now the leftovers from a one eared
groundskeeper.
The Marlboro men arrived
One eye on the fly,
And the other on a canoe.
A single pan between us,
As they served me as canapes.
The Sault
I parked rear end
Near the base of Bear Bridge.
As I peered into the water,
I caught the glint of a tag lodged deep into the
fin.
I drudged up trees forming an apex lined with
birch paper.
Dumb and Dumber rolled through in tandem,
While on their Bud Light tree decorating spree.
Raggedy Ann and Andy dropped by for their
lost lure.
In its place were the ingredients for castiron
peach cobbler.
A vet with six wounds enjoyed salmon corn
cakes,
Sprinkled with shredded cheese and served
with instant coffee,
Only recently pulled from the depths of cargo.
Rock Salt
She was captured near the banks of old
fieldstone.
Sentenced to churning, spinning, bobbin, and
cranking
While sitting upon a tuffit.
Within a view from the train of scary toys,
A derailed caboose exposed a tiny gem packed
for the rapids.
High atop the newly named tower suite,
A double rainbow arched through the mist,
As it rose from the banks of the arboretum.
A pillow fight brought the need for another
groundbreaking sight.
They rubbed two sticks together as they
proofed fresh bread.
Then fell into the iris bed.
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POETRY
Woodstock
PEDRO CAMPOS
Groundcover vendor No. 652
Disregard destination
I follow my instincts
against the river
reaching higher ground
for a better perspective
breathe in, breathe out
I say to myself
the air gets rare and cold
a cloud passes by
obscuring my vision
sunset sunrise
I saw trouble, so I ran
urges to move on
breaking boundaries
grab my bag and leave
my honor with me
here I am
turning stones into stairs
leverage along the way
free as a bird
trails open as I walk
the bears and the bees
I’m going for
the honey sources
coyotes, eagles, snakes
my new gang now
I get around
what I understand
from experience
commit and persist
you shall prevail
sunset sunrise
there’s a special joy
in being proud
of the Man
I’ve become
values shared in life
I climb the mountain
high enough to
fall deep into myself
suddenly, back to earth
keep it simple
sunset sunrise
Pure air, spring water
good conversations
some mystery
a little adrenaline
lots of adventures
nature’s power
On river flow
Once again
I’m on my own
Sunset sunrise
silence is filled
by the living
sounds from the forest
not to fear
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Beautiful Woman, Broken
Heart
LA SHAWN COURTWRIGHT
Groundcover writer
I am a beautiful woman with a broken heart
Everyone I love and those who love me
Have been taken away from me
This is not how I ever imagined
My life would come to be
my near future
splashes ahead of me
refreshing waterfall
smoke rises
from my pipe
high on the mountain
sunset sunrise
later stars come out
followed by
my magnetic moon
yes, this all
belongs to me
that’s who I am
It brings me joy
how blessed I am
I am here
everywhere I am
someone else
but same
cause I know
this is the closest
to God
I’ll ever be
sunset sunrise
precious moments
better memories
for my self
learned my lessons
now give me time
mountain lion season
starting now
Shame especially on you Ronnie!!
You are very wicked
To torture our daughter
My baby
I can not have another child
How can you look at her
Look at yourself in the mirror
What you have done and continue to do
Is tortuous to both her and me
You lie and put me and my name down in the mud
While destroying me inside
And your own daughter, your flesh and blood
Yes, I am a beautiful woman still
With a broken heart
Not only you, but a whole lot of my family
That I was only good enough for
When and if they were in need
Now, I sit alone a lot now
I will never look at anyone else the same
you understand
This is way beyond anything fathomable to me
This is worse than any nightmare
I am living in a wake state of the most horrible things
Yet, I am a beautiful woman,
hoping to mend my broken heart
before it bleeds out
From all of the many, many,
continuous horrors beset on my precious babies and me
Yet, I'll never give up, I am a strong
BEAUTIFUL WOMAN, with a
BROKEN HEART
13
Beach
SHAWN SWOFFER
Groundcover vendor No. 574
As I walk along the beach I see seashells and sand dollars all over.
As the water rushes up to kiss my toes and my feet the sun is shining.
I feel the warmth of the day welcoming me to my morning.
I can hear and see seagulls flying overhead; in the distance there are dolphins swimming in their pods.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PUZZLES
Beautiful on the Inside
Victor Schmitt
MAY 15, 2026
ACROSS
1. Trouble
4. Like some personalities
7. Eve's garden partner
11. Club relative, for short
14. The "I.V." of I.V.F
16. Pixar movie that takes place
during the day of the dead
17. Put on
18. Certain inlaw
20. Place to get pampered
21. White of the U.F.C.
22. Île-de-France city
23. Full of back talk
25. Columns with a slant?
27. Filmmaker Spike
28. Word with pot or pork
29. Club ___ (resort chain)
30. Track and field event for Armand
Duplantis
34. Dom's counterpart
35. Laura of "Jurassic Park"
36. At some point
37. Set one's sights, say
41. Most neat
43. "That's my cue!"
44. Earned
47. Chi-town airport code
48. One of around 250 in Sue—the
most complete Tyrannosaurus rex
fossil ever found
51. Compressed computer file
extension
54. Bulls in a bullfight
55. Sign on some bathroom doors
56. Davis of "Thelma & Louise"
58. Colorful parrot
59. They might be peddled
61. "___ mate!" (Aussie greeting)
62. G.A. airport
63. Generous souls... or a hint to 18-,
30-, and 48-Across
66. Tee follower
67. Play start
68. Country on the Gulf of Finland
69. They're handed to bouncers
70. "Africa" band
71. "___ and Chicken" (90s Cartoon
Network show)
72. Central
DOWN
1. It can be conventional or infinite
2. Like some books
3. Made flush
4. "___ be my pleasure!"
5. "Shoot!"
6. Compound pronoun contracted in
the south
7. Accomplish, as a goal
8. Dippin' ___ (frozen ballpark treat)
9. One of the rockets in "pocket
rockets"
10. Tasty tad
11. Low-pitched part of a song
12. Mouths along to a song
13. Airplane meal's platform
15. Apple tablet
19. One of the seven deadly sins
24. Tic Tac alternative
26. Tater
28. Toe affliction
31. First Family after the Bushes
32. It's in the eye of the beholder, in
a saying
33. Fetch
34. Spanish title
37. Help
38. Aped
39. Fancy pieces of eyewear
40. Sigma follower
42. Remnant
45. Medical-themed nintendo game
46. Film critic Robert
49. "...and?!"
50. "Hold on..."
51. Equine hybrid with striped legs
52. Bad place to be caught
53. Biweekly date for many workers
57. Big name in frozen waffles
58. When doubled, a tropical fish
59. Unit on a light bulb
60. Meh
64. Green prefix
65. "Victory is mine!," in text speak
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS May 1, 2026 edition
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RESOURCES
employment RESOURCE CORNER
JOB DEVELOPER'S
ALLIANCE
A collaborative of ten community
organizations with the mission to
help underserved job seekers find
suitable employment. The clients
are invited to two events per year
to help connect them with
employers. Washtenaw County
agencies that are represented in
the JDA: Ann Arbor Housing
Commission, Bureau of Services
for Blind Persons, Wash-tenaw
County Office of Community and
Economic Development, Department
of Corrections - Women's
Huron Valley, Jewish Family Services,
Michigan Ability Partners,
Michigan Rehabilitation Services,
Path For Ability Vocation Enterprise,
Work Skills Corporation,
and Washtenaw Community College
Career Services
www.washtenaw.org/4497/
Job-Developers-Alliance
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
(In the basement of Bethlehem
United Church of Christ)
734-263-2098
contact@groundcovernews.com
Office hours: Monday through
Saturday 11a.m. - 3 p.m. New
vendor orientations: Tuesday and
Thursday 10 a.m.
A street newspaper which offers
employment to people selling it:
those experiencing homelessness
or poverty.
MICHIGAN WORKS
304 Harriet St., Ypsilanti
734-714-9814
Mon.-Wed.-Fri.: 8 a.m.-5
p.m.;Tuesday: 8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sat.
and Sun.: Closed.
Resource room with computers,
printers, and copiers; Unemployment
pairing — once an active
resume is on the state's website;
Direct lines to the unemployment
office; Workshops; Job fairs twice
a month (first and third Thursday
of the month); Helps to train entry
level workers so they can move up
in positions; Variety of adult programs
(depending on needs and
wants); Younger youth (14-17
years): out of school and
in-school job options; Older
youth (18-24 years): summer
employment in partnership with
U-M; Tuition assistance; Car
repair and insurance assistance
depending on the program; Work
clothing; Mileage to get to/from
work/school; Outreach programs:
resume training for those exiting
jail; Free background checks;
Assistance with the $30 for GED
classes — must be enrolled in a
MI Works program.
WASHTENAW COMMUNITY
COLLEGE ENTREPRENEURSHIP
CENTER
The team is available via phone
at 734-249-5880, or email at entrepreneurship@wccnet.edu,
9
a.m.-5 p.m. Monday - Friday
except for holidays and closures.
Explore their website at: www.
wccnet.edu/succeed/entrepreneurship-center/index.php/
The
Entrepreneurship Center at
Washtenaw Community College
is a welcoming resource hub that
supports individuals in developing
their entrepreneurial capacity.
Through thoughtful conversations,
partnerships, and programs,
those at the college and in
the surrounding communities are
inspired and driven to actively
grow their ventures as professionals,
social innovators, or
business owners.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Love like the
weather
TERESA BASHAM
Groundcover vendor No. 570
15
Babe I wanna let ya kno,
Never gonna let cha go,
Therez alwayz gonna be a way,
Ya kno I’m alwayz gonna stay,
I love your touch,
I love ya so much,
Therez gonna be,
Upz & downz,
Joy & pain,
I’m alwayz gonna be around,
Through sunshine & rain,
I’m so in love wit you,
I kno youz in love wit me too,
I kno itz all good,
Therez nothing I wouldn’t do,
Ta keep you close ta me,
This love that we found,
Izz so real,
I kno how we feel.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Garlic broccolini
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
2 bunches broccolini (about 1
pound total)
1 tablespoon olive oil
4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1/2 cup water
Directions:
Rinse the broccolini under cool
water and shake off the excess
water. Trim about one inch off the
bottom of the broccolini stems.
Heat the oil in a large skillet over
medium-high heat until it shimmers.
Add the broccolini and sauté
until the broccolini is bright green
and some of the stems and tips of
the florets are lightly charred, 5 to 7
minutes. Add the garlic, salt, and
red pepper flakes.
Continue to sauté until the garlic
is fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add
the water, cover, and cook until the
Broccolini is vibrant green and
crisp-tender; this is about 1 to 2
minutes.
Serve broccolini immediately. A
very easy, quick recipe.
MAY 15, 2026
Navigating new Michigan
SNAP work requirements
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
On March 1, 2026 “HR1” took effect
— and if you receive food stamps, you
need to take action.
HR1, or “The Big, Beautiful Bill,”
installed new work requirements for
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program (SNAP or food stamp) recipients
in select counties in Michigan
without high unemployment, including
Washtenaw County. This is particularly
important for parents of children
14 and older (before, work requirements
only applied to parents of children
over 18), and adults ages 18-64
— previously it was 55.
To satisfy the work requirements,
SNAP recipients must work more than
80 hours monthly, or earn at least $580/
monthly (calculated with federal minimum
wage). Alternatively, SNAP recipients
can volunteer for a certain number
of hours — determined by dividing the
value of their program group benefits by
the Michigan minimum wage. You can
be exempt from the work/volunteer
requirement if you care for an incapacitated
person or a child under age 6 (any
person, not necessarily kin.) If you are
already working or volunteering, you
cannot quit or reduce your hours to
maintain eligibility in another way.
Still, many are eligible for exemptions
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
NATURAL FOODS MARKET & DELI
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
MAKE MEALS YOU LOVE!
Fresh ingredients to
$5 OFF
ANY PURCHASE
OF $30 OR MORE
One coupon per transaction. Must present coupon at the time of purchase. Coupon
good for in-store only. No other discounts or coop cards apply. Not valid for gift
cards, case purchases, beer or wine.
06/11/2026
OFFER
EXPIRES
5/30/2026
and deferrals, including those who are:
pregnant; receiving unemployment or
disability benefits (new application or
appeals); physically or mentally disabled;
attending a qualified (state-supported)
training program half-time or
more; American Indian or Alaskan
Native (up to second descendant if
living in Metro Detroit, verify through
self-attestation); mentally/physically
unfit for working (domestic violence,
unhoused, substance use — verify
through self-attestation
and
documentation) — or if the SNAP recipient
is already complying with the work
requirements for Family Independence
Program.
If you were not aware of these changes,
or have not reported any work or exemption
since March 1, you will not lose
benefits immediately — a person is
allowed three months of not meeting
the work requirements over three years.
If you are concerned about maintaining
access to food benefits, take action by
updating your MIBridges profile and
contacting your local MDHSS office.
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