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$
JANUARY 24, 2025 | VOLUME 16 | ISSUE 3
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Warning: homeless people at work.
page 6
FELICIA
WILBERT
#234
ASK YOUR
VENDOR:
WHY DO YOU
SELL THE
PAPER?
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
February 3-9, 2025 is Vendor Appreciation
Week!
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
Street photos by Barry Chattillion
• 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
GROUNDCOVER
Screen printing at
the Groundcover
office 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
I
Bring a shirt or fabric
item!
Thank you Wolverine
Street Medicine for
free wellness services!
THURSDAY 2/6
celebrity selling
Some familiar faces will be selling with
Groundcover vendors around downtown A2
during the morning and afternoon!
• People's Food Co-op
• Main and Liberty
• North U and State Street
• 4th Ave and Liberty Street
• Argus Farm Stop
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HAPPY HOUR
DANCE PARTY
@ LIVE, 6:30-9PM
proceeds go to Groundcover!
SUNDAY 2/9
Ypsi vendor meet +
greet at Bridge Cafe
217 W Michigan Ave
10 a.m. - 12 p.m.
If you would like to support any of the Vendor Appreciation Week activities, email lindsay@groundcovernews.com. Follow along on social media for updates!
PROVIDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR
SELF-DETERMINED 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.
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
Michelle Lardie-Guzek — intern
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Elizabeth Bauman
Jim Clark
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Jonathan Glass
Mike Jones
Ken Parks
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Felicia Wilbert
PROOFREADERS
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Elliot Cubit
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Dimensions (W x H in inches)
5 X 3 or 2.5 X 6.5
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10.25 X 13
Zach Dortzbach
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VOLUNTEERS
Jane Atkins
Jessi Averill
Sim Bose
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Glenn Gates
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Max Wisgerhof
Melanie Wenzel
CONTACT US
Story and photo submissions:
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Office: 423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
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Phone: 734-263-2098
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Spa day
FRIDAY 2/7
JANUARY 24, 2025
february 3-9, 2025 VENDOR APPRECIATION WEEK
MONDAY 2/3 TUESDAY 2/4
SATURDAY 2/8
׉	 7cassandra://JZvukbBrQXZiaII8Cx7Az77M8QVo_0og4_V8ZT5xVRYR2` gnK޳׉EJANUARY 24, 2025
ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
Why do you sell the
paper?
It’s a helping hand up. It’s a
very lucrative job that allows
you the freedom from the 9-5
routine. It also reminds readers
how precious the newspaper
can be. Groundcover encourages
vendors to be creative!
— Felicia Wilbert, #234
I love working with people. I
love meeting students!
— Juliano Sanchez, #174
I became a salesman at a
young age and so I can sell any
product ... and I especially love
this product. I need money, too!
— Joe Woods, #103
To have my own money in my
pocket!
— Roberto Isla Caballero, #347
To pay bills and to socialize
with others.
— Mike Jones, #113
January is one of the most challenging
months of the year, but
January can also be enjoyable. In
January you can do a lot of selfcare
for yourself and can do a lot
of care for others, too. You can
buy something nice and good for
your friends and family. You can
also make snacks and goodies for
your family. Similar to during the
holidays, you can write loving
cards to your friends, and you can
do self-care like decorating and
baking things for yourself and
others.
In the month of January, focus on
other goals that you set for the New
Year, even if it’s having a better attitude
toward your life and people. I
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Joyful in the month of January
staycation at home with the ones
you love or just yourself.
I feel sorry for people who don’t
DENISE SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
like to listen to old folk music and
old music from the 50s, 60s and 70s.
I like to be with friends and do staycations
at home. I like to watch
movies and be with people who I
trust.
It’s also good to have a
have a place to be. I wish I could be
someone’s friend who doesn’t have
a place to be and share things with
them, but the world is not that easy
and trusting so I can't do that easily.
I wish there was a way to comfort
and be a friend to people who are
down. I also like to be a good friend
all year round, not just during the
winter months. We would stick
together and go out to movies and
watch movies together.
These are the joys of January I can
think of right now, other than that
January can be an early Valentine’s
Day.
dear GROUNDCOVER VENDORS,
Mike Jones, your persistence in becoming an accomplished writer and generous human being
inspire me!
Shelley, thank you for your ongoing dedication and service to Groundcover News!
Every other Friday I am excited to open up the issue and see what is inside. The paper is getting better
and better and I love that I never know what to expect. What a gift Groundcover is to our city! Thank
you to all the writers who have contirbuted and all the vendors who make it available to purchase.
Joe — it has been amazing to watch you grow and flourish this past year. I'm proud to be your friend!
Felicia, your infectious enthusiasm for Groundcover News, writing and your family make the world
a happier place.
Hailu, thank you for relentlessly promoting the Groundcover mission.
Shoutout to Will Shakespeare — who I first met at Mercy House. Your ever friendly attitude and
ever-moving mind never cease to amaze me!
Thank you Wayne for encouraging me to get involved with Groundcover. I'm very happy to be here!!
From Sim.
To all vendors: Thank you for the work you do!
I know that selling papers all day isn't easy but
the conversations I've had with some of you
have broadened my world and I'm always
touched by the joy and heartbreak in your stories
while reading the paper.
Terri Demar might be the funniest vendor out there. #isaidwhatisaid
3
B-Man, your style
is iconic!
Jim, the effort and initiative you bring
to improving yourself and Groundcover
is truly remarkable and impressive.
Thank you for ALL you do for this
community.
La Shawn helps me think more critically,
be kinder, and in a lot of ways,
know myself better.
The world is a better place
because Ken Parks is in it.
love, YOUR CUSTOMERS
I love Denise's writings
and drawings!
Dear Panda, I love what a go-getter you are.
Along with your artwork, I’ve been happy
to turn my money over to you to buy a Groundcover!
And to benefit from your knowledge of
Ann Arbor through your articles.
When I lived in Ypsi, I would drive specially to Kerrytown to buy a paper from Schillington!
gnK޴gnK޳
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
VENDOR VOICES
No way home
Standing on the corner, I’m not
invisible. I notice how you cross over
to the other side to avoid me. Those of
you brave enough to walk by me, as
you approach, are expecting me to ask
you for something. You see the situation
before you, I am holding this smile
and a newspaper. Don’t be a Snooby!
(A person who looks down on others.)
You assume the worst because you
don’t know my story. However, along
with being a hard worker, I have always
been a generous, kind, loving and
easy-going person. That’s why I was
taken advantage of!
I thrust myself into writing because
it’s the only thing that can’t hurt or be
taken from me. Growing up in Detroit,
my mother always told me how my
father was abusive to her. At the age of
four I was told to go upstairs and hide.
I was not the hiding type.
I stood there and watched when my
father broke into the house and was
swinging a hammer at my mother’s
lover. She was at the top of the stairs
with me. I remember her tossing a gun
to her lover. He caught the gun and
correctly.
I always felt a void, longing for a
FELICIA WILBERT
Groundcover vendor No. 234
emptied it on my father! That left me
not knowing one side of my whole
family.
I blocked the memory; however, I
often had a recurring dream about the
house on Cadillac Street. She married
Carl (the lover). He was very abusive
to me and my two brothers. He knew
my sister had a different father. My
mother was quite the lying cheater as
far as her marriage vows. Carl never
abused my sister. I grew up believing
what my mother declared to be the
truth about my dad. As a child you
believe in your parent or parents.
You’re naïve, expecting to be guided
close-knit family. At 21, I had a baby
— the first grandchild in the family. I
always told my mother we were supposed
to be loving and good to each
other, considering we have less than
100 family members. Trusting your
mother is a risky thing these days. You
would never expect your mother and
sister to be part of a church cult. It’s
painful for me to express. However, it
must be told: raping and trafficking
your own grandchild — even having
him hypnotized, thinking he would
never remember what happened to
him. It probably would’ve worked if
only she would have left him alone.
Fortunately for us, a guilty conscience
never rests.
In 2014 my son was shot four times
in his back with a .22 caliber gun. My
mother and the church cult were
hoping to silence him. I thank God he
made it through. Relocating from Florida,
where we lived, was my first experience
of being homeless. My state of
mind was fragile. I did not have anyone
who I could talk to or trust. I was shattered
and felt alone. This was my only
child, fighting for his life. My family
showed up at the hospital pretending
to care. Only checking to see if he was
going to pass. Who could I trust considering
my mother had just called me
on that Monday before my child was
shot and warned me that my child
would be shot?! I had to be strong for
my child and my grandson, never letting
them see me cry. Holding back all
tears, squinting through all the fear!
The final nails that were supposed to
annihilate and destroy me and my
family occurred in 2022. My sister
invited us over for Fourth of July. They
set us up, my only sister and her husband.
Knowing that their nephew (my
son) is transgender, and was still healing
from the last episode in his life, they
gender-bashed him, and threatened to
kill him and his son (my grandson).
Even our other relatives would not tell
the police the truth. My sister pressed
charges against my son for pulling his
see NO WAY HOME next page 
JANUARY 24, 2025
People in the neighborhood: Nate's story
In an article titled “Engaging the
homeless paranoid patient” on the
National Library of Medicine website,
it is reported that the estimated percentage
of homelessness caused by
mental illness, particularly schizoaffective
paranoia, is around 23%. People
with this disorder are distrusting of the
medical community for their own reasons,
but one common and very real
reason they don’t like the healthcare
system
is
because
of
forced
medications.
Nate is a 6’6” white male in his mid
40s. He was diagnosed with bipolar
manic/depression and schizophrenia
at the age of 15. Currently homeless,
Nate has made a life of managing his
mental health and surviving his
condition.
Nate started his story, “People think
I’m intimidating, but I'm really a nice,
gentle guy. I moved to Dexter, Michigan
with my family in ‘86 from Austin,
Texas, where I was born. My father was
really abusive, so I moved to Ann Arbor
to live with my mother at the age of 12.”
Nate is the second oldest of two brothers
and has two younger sisters. He has
a dog Cash, whom he loves and who
keeps him honest.
I asked, “How did you become
homeless?”
Nate answered, “I’ve been on SSI
since just out of high school and have
been homeless off and on ever since.
My mental illness makes it hard to stay
in one place. I’m staying in shelters
and day centers right now. The last
time I became homeless was recently.
I was calling the police about some
issues I was having, but they said I was
just being paranoid. As a result I was
arrested and that's when the court
decided Community Mental Health
needed to intervene.” That intervention
resulted in him losing his
apartment.
“How is your medication being managed?”
I asked.
Nate replied, “I’ve been on medications
for the last fifteen years. Community
Mental Health stripped me of the
medications I was on and started over;
which is just mind boggling.”
I asked, “Was this court-ordered?”
“Yes,” Nate said. “They took away
medications that were working, which
JIM CLARK
Groundcover vendor No. 139
only made my paranoia worse. Now
they are trying to build me back up [on
a new medication]. It’s been over a
year now. I’ve been telling them for
months that I have depression and
need help. They just recently put me
on Wellbutrin [an antidepressant]
which was about a month ago. Meanwhile,
all they had me on was an injection
and a sleeping pill.”
“Tell me about the injection,” I
continued.
“It was a medication they introduced
to me and asked if I would take it. I
can’t remember precisely if I was yea
or nay, but it didn’t sound good. The
CMH worker said I was mandated by
the court to do what they say to do, so
I was going to get the shot. I was pissed
about it and rightfully so. I am the best
advocate I can be with my other doctors;
we had good medications and
they took that away,” he replied.
I asked Nate whether the injection
was forced on him, and he said, “Yes.”
I then asked, “What happened next?”
“I asked the CMH worker to look up
the Invega shot and she told me a lot
of bad things about it, “ he said. “She
said I might have to be hospitalized.
There are permanent things that can
happen if one is not taken off carefully.
I’ve gained a lot of weight, more than
forty pounds since they started injecting
me.
Nate outside Purple House.
“The court won’t let me off of it, but
I’m told I’m getting an apartment
soon. So I’m hoping by showing them
I’m paying bills and staying sober and
not calling the police they will see I’m
doing better and reconsider.”
Finally, I asked, “If you were handed
a golden opportunity, what would it
be?”
“To have better healthcare.”
I added, “If you could have a free ride
to college, what would you study?”
Nate’s answer was: “I would like to
get a degree in cyber security.”
׉	 7cassandra://kSgicNeynR7iAG9RQdy8_beX_MDfUJIAKrnxCSlscyUO` gnK޵׉E:JANUARY 24, 2025
ANN ARBOR
Ann Arbor put $1 million aside to
brace for Trump's administration
changes, but is it enough?
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
ANNA GERSH
Board President
On December 16, 2024, Ann Arbor
City Council voted 9-1 to pass a contingency
fund of $1 million to prepare
for president-elect Donald J.
Trump’s coming administration.
On January 20, 2025 Donald J.
Trump was sworn into office. Concerned
citizens and those in local
and state government are waiting to
see what he will do concerning many
issues. On January 21 we already
started getting answers. He pardoned
all those who were convicted
in the January 6 insurrection. He has
put a “freeze” on immigration and
he has signed a collection of executive
orders, some of which have
already triggered legal push back.
Americans and individuals around
the world are worrying about these
as well and other actions including
pulling the United States out of the
Paris Climate Agreement (again!)
and the World Health
Organization.
Trump has been saying what he
will and will not do all throughout
his campaign. He pledged mass
deportations of immigrants and
steep cuts to education and other
departments. He’s created a Department
of Government Efficiency, a
presidential advisory committee to
help him select as many opportunities
as possible to cut spending,
although we believe he is still making
plans to continue cutting taxes for
the super wealthy and bloated corporations
who have made record
profits in recent years. Former President
Joe Biden and Senator Bernie
Sanders have warned of excessive
concessions to the rich like Elon
Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff
Bezos. They warn of a world where
the super wealthy will have greater
influence on government in the
United States. This transparent new
order was on full display at the inauguration
where these billionaires
stood on the dais with the incoming
president and his family.
As a result of uncertainty about
federal funding for local human services,
Ann Arbor City Council voted
9-1 to actively prepare for President
Trump — but will that be enough?
This $1M was set aside and taken
from the $2.8M that was approved
by council from
general fund
reserves. This $2.8M was to be used
for many planned projects including
strengthening our energy alternatives,
public safety support, parking
subsidies to city employees and
improvements to the James L. Crawford
Elks Lodge, one of the City’s
bicentennial legacy projects.
City
Administrator Milton
Dohoney said at the city council
meeting that part of the reason for
wanting this set-aside is that “we feel
the need to be proactive in this
instance; we’re talking about a
coming uncertainty and we don’t
know the speed with which it will
come. Anything can happen.”
Groundcover News reached out to
the city administrator for an interview
to discuss both the limitations
and the goals of such an allocation.
Mr. Dohoney responded personally
but declined an interview, stating
that without knowing what sorts of
requests might be made on the
funds, he wasn’t prepared to guess
how this million dollars might actually
be spent.
Ann Arbor Mayor Chistopher
Taylor, lacking details, said funds
could be used in a multitude of ways
like “immigration and city projects.”
He also went on to say the city is
seeing a surplus in their funds due
to property taxes coming in above
budgeted amounts and more money
coming in from marijuana businesses.
With extra money, the city
has voted to invest in city projects
and city employee pay and now this
set-aside can help us address potential
emergency funding.
“We have put aside $1 million so
that we are able to be responsive to
the needs of our residents in the
event that the directionality from the
federal
government
changes
quickly,” the mayor said.
Ann Arbor Councilwoman Jen
Eyer says the all-Democrat City
Council is trying to be proactive and
there’s no underlying political
motive.
We decided to hit the streets and
see how the residents of Ann Arbor
were feeling about the $1M reserve.
We started at the heart of the city, 5th
and Liberty, found a good spot out
of the wind and asked passers by if
they’d mind sharing their thoughts
on this action with our readers.
Here's what they said.
Bradley: I voted for Trump this
time; I think he was making a lot
more sense. Am I nervous he’ll make
a lot of cuts? If we voted him in,
that’s the best we can do.
John: That’s insane. A lot of people
come here for help. Ann Arbor does
a lot more than a lot of places, and I
think the sentiment is great, but if
there are real needs it won’t be
enough.
Sophia: I guess I don’t know
enough about it to have an opinion.
I want to know what the city plans to
do with the money.
Greg: It’s a great gesture, but it’s a
drop in the bucket.
Sunday, February 9 • 10am–5pm
Downtown Library
 NO WAY HOME from last page
gun and holding it up in the air after
her husband threatened to kill him
and his son. She stated to the police
that she wanted to help him.
We have been scraping constantly,
dodging all the crap thrown at us by
the State: taking his Social Security
away for two years without any
explanation and constantly denying
his appeal. We've had to move from
state to state trying to find help. All
with no family support. My cousins
insult me, calling me dumb. Several
have said to me, “Don’t worry —
when you find out you're gonna kill
them!” Now I know why; I was too
blind to see what my mother and my
sister were doing all along. I have
always believed and said: time tells
everything, so you better be good,
because time will tell on you! Pray
for us, it’s going to be a battle!
Author's note: Thank you Truth Or
Lies fans I apologize for the delay. I
was writing my third book. A comedy
mystery “The Ad-Dam Fam,” available
on Amazon. Granna was a True
story. Please help me and my family.
We are homeless once again asking
for your blessing. Vendor number
234.
This fiber-filled day will have a full
slate of demos and presentations,
with a lobby full of local vendors.
This year we’re focusing on
the history and origin of fiber
arts. Drop-in for a sampling of
fiber arts projects and hands on
quilting, spinning, and weaving
activities! View the 2025 vendor
list and more at aadl.org/aafax.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
What’s
Happening
at the Ann
Arbor
District
Library
Open 10am–8pm Daily
Hang out in any of our five
locations across town, browsing
books, magazines, newspapers,
and more, or check out movies,
CDs, art prints, musical
instruments, and home tools—
you name it! Study and meeting
rooms, fast and free WiFi, and
plenty of places to sit and hang out.
Unusual Stuff to Borrow
There’s more to borrow at AADL
than books, music, and movies.
To name a few, there are games,
telescopes, stories-to-go kits,
and home tools. Check out these
unusual yet handy items during
your next library visit.
Fifth Avenue Press
AADL founded Fifth Avenue
Press in 2017 to support the local
writing community and promote
the creation of original content.
The imprint publishes works by
authors who live in Washtenaw
County. Consider submitting
your finished manuscript to Fifth
Avenue Press today at fifthave.
aadl.org.
FEATURED EVENT
5
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
EMPLOYMENT
Warning: homeless
people at work
ELKA CHAMBERLAIN
Groundcover contributor
My January writing assignment was
simply, “working while homeless.” The
vagueness of this prompt was exacerbated
by the fact that I immediately
began bubbling ideas and angles
reflective of my work and life experience
with homelessness. As I began
talking to people I quickly found
myself feeling overwhelmed with all of
the important intertwined issues
needing to be covered. To develop the
story, I reviewed published information
about the intersectionality of
homelessness and employment, spoke
with dozens of people about their
working-while-homeless experiences
and then pounded the pavement to
follow up on leads based on community
members' input and federal guidelines
in the literature. I found there is
the need to address the stigma that
homeless people are lazy, don’t want
to work, or should try harder, as well as
the need to dispel the myth that having
enough income or resources automatically
equates to housing stability and
a better quality of life.
To begin the process of contradicting
the stereotype that homeless
people are lazy, don’t work and need
to try harder, I present three significant
findings. First, according to a 2021 article
published by the University of Chicago,
53% of the sheltered homeless
surveyed had at least some form of
formal employment within the year,
and 40.4% of the unsheltered surveyed
had formal income sources. The
second statistic, found on a HUDstamped
fact sheet about the Workforce
Innovation and Opportunities
ACT of 2014, states as many as 90% of
homeless people want to work.
Thirdly, everyone I spoke to this month
either does have some sort of income,
has had some sort of income over the
past year or is working towards increasing
income, with half deriving that
income from paid employment. Part of
my journey with researching this topic
was recognizing that some of current
research is based on biased, out-ofdate
sources. Research, available for
free from the University of Chicago,
claims most homeless-related studies
are heavily dependent on data that is
local, outdated, self-reported and/or
taken from government sources such
as the U.S. Census, the Point-In-Time
Count, and other safety-net statistics.
When considering how to share the
results of currently vulnerable community
members’ experiences with
working while homeless, I had to make
difficult decisions related to how to
retell their stories. After my pavement
experience, which included traumatic
interactions with the Veterans Administration,
Shelter Association of Washtenaw
County, Michigan Department
of Health and Human Services, Social
Security Administration, and Michigan
Works, I found myself in tears
buying $8 eggs, reading the contents of
a fresh spinach box (bought at a
Bridgecard discount), and pondering
when silicone and natural flavoring
became curry ingredients. I woke the
next morning to a scattering of multiple
unworking stoves, frozen water
and a nonfunctional Buddy Heater. I
decided to refer to my direct sources as
“Buddy” in an effort to help honor
anonymity requests.
When struggling with how to organize
community members’ feedback
related to employment I considered
the MDHHS Housing and Homeless
Services link, which claims they work
Arielle has worked at 7-Eleven since September 2024, while
experiencing homelessness in Ann Arbor. Because of the
insufficient pay, she has to seek a second job.
to “make homelessness rare, brief, and
one time … with the goal of moving
them [individuals and families] into
stable housing as quickly as possible
and providing the supports needed to
achieve permanent housing stability.”
Despite the division’s goal, overall
homelessness is increasing, available
community supports are not sufficient,
and the community’s overall
housing stability is declining.
One of the myths about homeless
people is that they don’t have enough
money and therefore they need more
job skills.
To dispel the myth that it is always
true that people experiencing homelessness
have a need to increase their
job skills, consider that some Buddys
who reported only one episode of
homelessness reported that it was
during a transitional phase to completing
further education.
While opportunity for education and
skills training may be a great option for
some, unfortunately, many employment
programs are for specific groups
such as youth, people with disabilities
and veterans. A recent visit to the
Michigan Works office was somewhat
disappointing. When this writer asked
the only worker visible about employment
support for the homeless, the
only result was a pile of flyers for jobs
including the Wayne County Sheriff's
Office, University of Michigan Health
System, and Kroger — all of which are
places many homeless people are
already ineligible for because of mandatory
background checks that reveal
past invovlement with the carceral
system.
Despite the existence of employGeorge
Clark serves lunch out of the Fed-Up Food Truck, where
he works part-time. He struggles to cash, and therefore use, his
paycheck without a bank account. Photo submitted.
ment opportunities, several factors
were described as barriers to obtaining
employment. Many people
described multiple forms of discrimination.
One example of discrimination
is based on sharing the same address
known to be utilized by homeless
people. One Buddy explained they
knew they were being discriminated
against because when they tried an
alternate address they started getting
call backs immediately.
Transportation is another barrier, as
it is often necessary to travel for both
training programs and higher-paying
employment. While there may be
potential for support to address transportation
needs; these processes often
take longer than employers are willing
to wait. A Buddy shared they are currently
unable to repair their vehicle,
which is impacting their training
schedule. One Buddy shared an experience
where they rented a car for work
expecting the cost of the car would be
offset by travel reimbursements, only
to not earn enough money to cover
anything;
this led to an eviction.
Another Buddy explained if they had
had a vehicle they would easily be able
to get a job in maintenance earning at
least a living wage, but the need to
travel beyond public transportation
service areas and after hours is prohibitive
for them.
A major challenge shared by several
people was lack of a telephone and/or
internet to apply for jobs and communicate
with prospective employers.
Not having access to a consistent
phone or internet service also makes
navigation more difficult and
time-consuming. While there is potential
to obtain a government phone, that
process presents such barriers as
requiring access to technology, identification,
proof of eligibility, a shipping
address, or email — or a person has to
be lucky enough to run into one of the
people distributing phones out of their
trunk.
Another challenge is a lot of jobs
won’t allow you to apply without government
ID, or will insist on original
copies of IDs before starting employment.
One Buddy complained that
they couldn’t cash checks easily
because ID is required to start a bank
account. It is a challenge that if you
lose your ID or it gets damaged or
stolen, there is a cost to get it replaced.
see WORKING page 8 
JANUARY 24, 2025
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TRANSPORTATION
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
VENDOR VOICES
I hereby resolve ...
When asked about my New Year’s
Resolutions, I replied, “to finish what
I started.” I’m not talking about the
end of my life, though I am getting
closer. There are projects I want to
finish before I die, and finishing my
autobiography is the big one. I got as
far as the 6th grade and have 70-some
years to go.
Since my birthday is the Day of Che,
October 8 is a double celebration. On
my 80th, a good number of us watched
“Finally Got The News” at the State
Theater, and on my 82nd a smaller
number watched “Salt Of The Earth” at
the Friends Meeting House. For October
8, 2025, I hope to watch “The
Motorcycle Diaries” with you as part of
the celebration. In the words of Che,
“We are realists, we dream the impossible,”
and “At the risk of sounding
ridiculous, it must be said that the true
revolutionary is guided by great feelings
of love.”
I think you will love this film. Robert
Redford affirmed the importance of
the original language to get the feel of
the story and good subtitles for the
meaning of the spoken word. It’s an
artistic treat. This will be another potluck
social, probably the Sunday
before or after October 8, and I hope to
have good news on the progress of the
autobiography, as well as a shared
sound system so everyone can hear.
Washtenaw Community College said
they have no classes for that but do
have systems available for students.
They recommended I work with my
hearing aid, smart phone and an app,
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
so it’s off to hearing aid technicians.
Meanwhile, my life's work continues.
Maybe we will have a “Greenhouse
Hostel” as a model for tiny houses in
the context of the Accessory Dwelling
Units ordinance. City planning commission
members were at the Groundcover
office and we
discussed the
inclusion of permaculture design into
the permit and inspection protocol.
This process needs follow-through.
If we learn composting to deal with
all our waste, it will revolutionize waste
water treament. Our base camp on
Corrizo Comecrudo land in Texas used
wood shavings as the first step in our
bathroom bucket. It was odorless and
the first step in composting human
fecal waste. These are the changes that
Mother Earth will welcome as we learn
the lessons of climate chaos and create
an interactive friendly environment for
ourselves and all sentient beings.
Taking responsibility for the results
of our actions is the big challenge we
face. If we engage in the struggle for
freedom, the stages of the path will
promote our creative labor to work on
the transformation of our lives. We will
learn to move the money from war to
meeting human needs. Discovering
who we are will be a grand learning
experiment. The impermanence of
our bodies will be welcomed as we
learn to heal and prepare for a timely
death when that time comes. Untimely
death will be with us for some time, so
ongoing prayer for those surprised by
death will help us in this collective
transition which of course has individual
experience at its heart. To be fully
present, you have to do it yourself, but
you don’t do it alone.
Those of us experiencing aging in its
last stages will be welcomed as we
learn to embrace life without the
denial of death. It will be OK to die in
celebration at this new kind of birthday
party. When we experience life
and death as a seamless whole, our
awareness will be on the path to full
and complete awakening.
Writing about these matters steps
beyond our ability to think. Our understanding
of the nature of the mind is in
a collective gridlock due to obstacles
that are encouraged by a culture of
control through a chain of command
with which you must be in compliance
or face the death penalty. I learned
much from Mumia Abu Jamal. His
book “Live from Death Row” is a classic
of prison literature. Prison Radio
will deepen your educational experience.
Keep in tune with the Prisoner
Creative Arts Project. The University of
Michigan promotes this exhibit which
I hope will feature art from Guantanamo
and Israeli prisons. I had the
great honor of giving my copy of
Mumia’s most famous book to Assata
Shakur (Black freedom fighter and
auntie of Tupac) when the Pastors for
Peace Caravan to Cuba met with her in
the 1990s. Her presence is deeply
empowering.
I hope we all can share something
about our resolutions for 2025. Many
of us want peace with justice in our
time. How are we doing?
Health is the issue of our day. Physical
and mental health run hand-inhand.
When both do well, peace will
be that much closer. Dr. Jack Kruse’s
advice on sunlight and reducing
bluelight stress is a good place to start.
He has an excellent post at his own
podcast, “Sun Education.” Learn about
heteroplasmy, charge density and the
light choices you make. It will improve
mitochondrial function, that is, energy
production.
Let us tune in to the simple living
that promotes health. Feed your mind
the awareness that arises with a natural
breath. Find the teachers who
help you reach the next level of awakening.
They are ready for you. One of
them, Ernest Becker, wrote “The
Denial of Death” and “Escape From
Evil.” His intellectual honesty and
clarity will open your mind to the possibility
of science as a lifestyle. Facing
reality and embracing our power will
be a big change. The adventure is happening
now!
JANUARY 24, 2025
 WORKING from page 6
Low-wages and under-employment
are frequently cited as causes for
homelessness. Shockingly, of the
people I surveyed, not a single homeless
person was working at a job earning
minimum wage. Some examples of
current or recent hourly wages were
$15 on the lower end at Burger King;
Shelter Association and FedUp
employees reported earning approximately
the local living wage at around
$19; and hourly wages were reported
as high as $23 at We the People Opportunity
Farm. As of December 2, 2024,
MSHDA’s Washtenaw County Payment
Standard for a one bedroom is
valued at $1,357 and a two bedroom at
$1,618. An individual working fulltime
at $23 an hour could find a one
bedroom and qualify based on income
and someone working full-time at $15
could share a two-bedroom or find a
studio. Unfortunately, most with
formal income reported not being
offered enough work hours to be considered
full-time.
Another disappointing realization
made during the process of talking
with the Buddys was that many people
who are eligible for SOAR (SSI/SSDI
Outreach, Access, and Recovery) are
not even fully linked to services. SOAR
is a special expedited process to apply
for social security benefits only available
to those experiencing or at risk of
homelessness who have a serious
mental illness, medical impairment,
and/or co-occurring substance use
disorder.
One Buddy shared that they had
received benefits since the age of 12,
yet they went to prison (for a crime
they didn’t commit) and since being
released have been without any financial
means. At this time this person has
recently started the process of getting
linked to services through Community
Mental Health. While not everyone
with a substance use disorder and/or
mental diagnosis qualifies for SOAR,
some Buddys do attribute homelessness
and lack of employment to not
being supported during a time of
crisis. Another Buddy who was recently
approved for SSI/SSDI reported he
hired a lawyer to help and it still took
years.
Some people who are employed fall
under the category of gig workers. This
category refers to those who may have
some income, but they are likely working
for cash or at least don’t get a taxable
paycheck. In this category, some
Buddys report sex work, selling drugs,
mowing lawns, snow removal or hard
labor. Some Buddys reported DoorDashing
or using their trucks for odd
hauling; however, both of the individuals
do not have running vehicles at
this moment for Uber or Lyft.
One Buddy shared they donate
plasma, explaining there are two companies
in the community, Octapharma
and Biolife, that have a twice-weekly
donation schedule and earn about $60
each time they donate. The challenge
with donating plasma is donation
requires identification, an address
which cannot be a homeless shelter,
and it may cost up to $4 to access
deposits at an ATM.
I would like to thank the dozens of
people I spoke with this month about
their working while homeless experiences.
I wish I had enough space to
include more of the dialogue and will
continue to carry the memories from
our discussions.
As a working homeless person, I
would like to express my gratitude to
my local support network, which
allows me to wash laundry twice a
week, shower daily, get propane to
keep me warm and have options to
cook allergy-friendly foods. Thanks
also to the community of my alma
mater, Eastern Michigan University,
who helped me achieve my undergraduate
dream of practicing social
work from the comfort of my tent with
a classic car parked near it.
׉	 7cassandra://Fd1AFImqm3lxzyJi9oSHBen7hz1F5VipWkgy3ZavEYYP` gnK޹׉E	JANUARY 24, 2025
PUZZLES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
CROSSWORD
International Network of Street Papers
9
Groundcover Vendor Code
While Groundcover is a non-profit,
and paper vendors are self-employed
contractors, we still have expectations
of how vendors should conduct
themselves while selling and representing
the paper.
The following is our Vendor Code
of Conduct, which every vendor
reads and signs before receiving a
badge and papers. We request that if
you discover a vendor violating any
tenets of the Code, please contact us
and provide as many details as possible.
Our paper and our vendors
should be positively impacting our
County.
• Groundcover will be distributed
for a voluntary donation. I agree not
to ask for more than the cover price
or solicit donations by any other
means.
• When selling Groundcover, I will
always have the current biweekly
issue of Groundcover available for
customer purchase.
• I agree not
to sell additional
goods or products when selling the
paper or to panhandle, including
panhandling with only one paper or
selling an issue more than 4 weeks
old.
• I will wear and display my badge
when selling papers and refrain from
wearing it or other Groundcover gear
when engaged in other activities.
• I will only purchase the paper
from Groundcover Staff and will not
sell to or buy papers from other
Groundcover vendors, especially
vendors who have been suspended
or terminated.
• I agree to treat all customers,
staff, and other vendors respectfully.
I will not “hard sell,” threaten, harass
or pressure customers, staff, or
other vendors verbally or physically.
• I will not sell Groundcover under
the influence of drugs or alcohol.
• I understand that I am not a legal
employee of Groundcover but a contracted
worker responsible for my
own well-being and income.
• I understand that my badge is
property of Groundcover and will not
deface it. I will present my badge
when purchasing the papers.
• I agree to stay off private property
when selling Groundcover.
• I understand to refrain from selling
on public buses, federal property
or stores unless there is permission
from the owner.
• I agree to stay at least one block
away from another vendor in downtown
areas. I will also abide by the
Vendor Corner Policy.
• I understand that Groundcover
strives to be a paper that covers
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while providing sources of income
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If you would like to report a violation
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please email contact@
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ACROSS
1. Literally, "for this"
6. "Eh"
10. Mosque V.I.P.
14. Jungle climber
15. Figure skater's jump
16. "Buona ___" (Italian greeting)
17. Artist's stand
18. Try for a part
19. "Don't bet ___!"
20. One who doesn't go with the flow
23. Batman and Robin, e.g.
24. Dressing ingredient
25. Staple for every teenage boy's
room
30. Deposit on teeth
34. Action film staple
35. Largest pelvic bone
37. Electron tube
38. Expert
40. Capital of Pas-de-Calais
42. Baby holder
43. Blow
45. Watch
47. Former French coin
48. Overlay
50. Idaho changed one of these
from 420 to 419.9 to discourage theft
52. Sonata, e.g.
54. "Walking on Thin Ice" singer
55. Frosh, e.g.
61. Small ox
62. Leave port
63. Addition symbol
65. Bagpiper's wear
66. "Aeneid" figure
67. "Farewell, mon ami"
68. Bridge toll unit
69. Ashcroft's predecessor
70. Rush's drummer Neil
DOWN
1. A pint, maybe
2. "Buenos ___"
3. "And ___ thou slain the
Jabberwock?"
4. Iroquoian language
5. Kidney stones
6. Often stunning, colorful garment
from the Indian subcontinent
7. Beasts of burden
8. Keisters
9. Behind the times
10. Related chemically
11. Children's ___
12. Bone-dry
13. "Welcome" site
21. Aussie "bear"
22. "Good grief!"
25. Winter Olympian
26. Blue hue
27. Computer woe
28. An ICBM
29. Jewish festival
31. Bit of statuary
32. "Bye"
33. Disprove
36. O. Henry's "The Gift of the ___"
39. Current
41. Grain storage container
44. Binge drink
46. It gets taken off before a photo
gets taken
49. Baby bottle
51. Hair ointment
53. Close call
55. Alternative to Windows
56. Former Steelers coach Chuck
57. Animal with a mane
58. "Not to mention ..."
59. "Mi chiamano Mimi," e.g.
60. At no time, poetically
61. Alias
64. "For shame!"
gnK޺gnK޹
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
RECOVERY
JONATHAN GLASS
Groundcover contributor
What do you get when you combine
a single mom of two young children,
nearly no resources, and a recently-beaten
addiction? If your heart is
in the right place, and you’re willing
to do the work, you get anything you
set your mind to!
Glynis Anderson beat insurmountable
odds to have the effect of a tidal
wave — wiping out substance use disorders,
mental illnesses and destigmatizing
those who society has
marginalized. This month Anderson
is retiring from her CEO role at Home
of New Vision, a multi-million-dollar
non-profit agency she founded that
services Washtenaw and Jackson
counties. This is her story.
When you tell the story of a woman
like Glynis Anderson, it’s not just her
story you tell — you tell the stories of
the million people she helped. While
helping a million people may seem
like hyperbole,
it’s probably a bit
modest. A little of Glynis lives in every
life she’s touched, directly or indirectly.
The old Gaelic blessing, “May
the devil not know you’re dead until
100 years after you die,” can be modified
to, “May the devil never know
you retired!”
Glynis Anderson opened the gates
of hell for countless souls and facilitated
their releasing themselves from
it. In doing so, she gave them the
resources to succeed. With professional
help and through the recoveree’s
own self-efficacy, thousands
upon thousands have removed the
shackles of addiction and moved to a
life of freedom. If it’s true that injustice
anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere (MLK Jr.), then anyone
who lightens the burden of another
lightens the burden of the whole
world. In measurable ways, Glynis
Anderson has changed the world.
The clinical director at Home of
New Vision, Wendy Klinski, attributes
her own success to Anderson’s help.
Anderson helped Klinski open Monroe’s
Engagement Center in 2018,
which over the years has helped thousands
of people. Engagement Centers
are short term treatment centers, usually
day-by-day, that get people off
the street to take a hot shower, wash
their clothes, sleep in a warm bed,
and seek more permanent treatment
options. Anderson pioneered the
engagement center model that’s been
adopted across Michigan. All freestanding
engagement centers in
Michigan have Anderson’s fingerprint
upon them. Klinski said, “If it wasn’t
for the innovative work that Glynis
Anderson has pioneered in Ann
Arbor, I wouldn’t have been successful
in my career in Monroe.”
If Glynis hadn’t chosen to advocate
for those in need, it becomes the
premise for the classic film, “It’s a
Wonderful Life,” where an angel
shows George Bailey what the world
would have been like without him.
What if Glynis Anderson had decided
to make lots and lots of money without
working for the welfare of
society?
Those who went on to have families
of their own, in sobriety, are grateful
Anderson chose a magnanimous
path. Some alumni from Home of
New Vision became business owners,
nurses, florists, personal trainers, you
name it. One notable alumni is an
advocacy director at the state level
and a former director of Constituent
Affairs at the U.S. Senate. Lives have
been changed and destinies forever
altered because of the efforts of one
woman and a dedicated team of likeminded
professionals. Today, Home
of New Vision is 85% - 90% staffed by
those in long-term recovery. Anderson
dedicated her life to proving that
with enough TLC and patience, anybody
can recover if they want it
enough!
Anderson knows well not to despise
small beginnings. Home of New
Vision began with one female client
in 1996. The agency hadn’t officially
opened, but Anderson lost no time in
welcoming the woman. According to
operations director DaMira Anderson,
“Glynis did not want to lose this
woman or that woman’s chance for
recovery, so she invited her to stay on
our couch until HNV could officially
open.”
Friend and business partner Robbie
Renkes joined Anderson in 2001.
According to Renkes, “That was when
Home of New Vision’s growth began
to snowball into an avalanche. However,
it wasn’t for several years that we
hit the turning point financially.
Before that there were times we were
really struggling. We would sit around
the table and decide who would get
paid that week. If someone’s mortgage
or car payment was due, they
would get paid and the rest of us
would wait another week. To this day,
there are two payrolls at Home of New
Vision, on alternating Fridays. Still,
there was a therapist who practically
worked for free for a long time named
Barbara Nordman. I think she eventually
got all her pay, but Glynis
"We took anyone with a
willingness to be
helped"
— Robbie Renkes,
on the early days of running
Home of New Vision
with Glynis Anderson
JANUARY 24, 2025
Celebrating the career of recovery visionary Glynis
Anderson
named a conference room after her in
the Ann Arbor office. That was the
secret to our success, dedicated,
hard-working people.”
Anderson and her dedicated team
built Home of New Vision by hand,
brick by brick. Reminiscing about the
early days, Renkes said, “Glynis and I
used to go to garage sales to find
things to furnish the transitional
homes with because we didn’t have
the money to go and buy things at the
store. That wasn’t in the budget.”
Renkes laughed as she recalled an
email she wrote out of frustration. She
and Anderson had asked a favor and
were disappointed with the refusal.
Renkes wrote, “I can’t believe they’re
not willing to do this. My God! You
and I have moved so much furniture
on our own that we should have 'Two
Women and a Truck' tattooed on our
asses!”
Anderson and her team of recovery
pioneers bore a great deal on their
shoulders. As they opened recovery
house after recovery house, there
were several residents who couldn’t
pay and had nowhere else to go.
Renkes remembers, “But we took
anyone with a willingness to be
helped.” If the business was in the red
that month, Anderson somehow got
HNV through the financial trouble.
Putting people ahead of profits is
Anderson’s calling card.
There are many competing programs
that do not adhere to a “people
first” policy according to Renkes.
There used to be, and still are, some
treatment programs that are abusive.
Anderson didn’t want to be like those
agencies and took an entirely different
approach, one of honoring and
respecting the individual and giving
as many chances as they needed
within reason.
Renkes said, “These places would
-
frequently abandon people in their
recovery because of a relapse. Sometimes,
these agencies would put
people out in the middle of the night.
But Glynis didn’t see the sense in discharging
people for relapsing; rather,
Glynis would increase their level of
service. A big part of Glynis’s legacy is
meeting people where they’re at,
engagement over time and creating a
safe haven. She will always be there
for people.”
Anderson’s professional accomplishments
include a broad range of
academic accolades, prestigious
awards, and speaking engagements.
Recognizing the need for safe, structured,
and nurturing environments
tailored to unique needs, she was
inspired to create a program that
would provide women and their families
the tools to heal and succeed.
Despite being in early recovery and a
single parent, Anderson pursued
higher education with relentless
determination, earning an Associate
degree in Criminal Justice, a Bachelor’s
Degree in Human Resource
Administration, a Master’s Degree in
Social Work, and a Certified Addictions
Counselor (CACII) license, and
that was the foundation for a lifetime
of service.
Anderson was inspired by the words
of former first lady Betty Ford, “Until
we expand treatment opportunities
for women and tailor programs to
their specific needs, we will make
little progress in helping addicted
women recover from drug and alcohol
dependency.”
Anderson’s impact extends beyond
Home of New Vision. She is a parttime
lecturer at Eastern Michigan
University’s School of Social Work
and has been a guest lecturer at the
University of Michigan’s Medical
School. She is a board member for A
Brighter Way, an advocacy group
helping the formerly incarcerated
reenter society and get work. Home of
New Vision received the prestigious
SAMHSA grant in 2008. The SAMHSA
grant only goes to eight agencies in
see GLYNIS next page 
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HISTORY
 GLYNIS from last page
the United States. This milestone
solidified Anderson’s
role as a
national leader in behavioral health.
Anderson has left the organization
in good shape by working with her
successor over the years, and
Heather Williams has been named
the next CEO for Home of New
Vision. Renkes said, “I was glad she
got the nod. She’s the perfect candidate.
I think she’ll maintain the spirit
Glynis infused into the agency.”
Thank you Glynis for all your sacrifice
and hard work. Anderson got
clean in 1990, and it helps to realize
that everything in this article, and
many, many other stories that aren’t
in this article, were done by one
woman in recovery from a substance
use disorder. Undoubtedly, there
were dark days and nights between
her sobriety date and her retirement
that could have stopped her, but she
kept going!
Because of her tenaciousness and
perseverance, Anderson’s career is
one for the history books. If you’re
reading this and you have a use disorder
or mental health illness, and
life’s become unmanageable, there
is hope! You can recover too.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Coconut cluster pie
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
2 eggs
½ cup butter, cubed
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
3/4 cup milk (any type, or heavy
cream)
1 cup + 3 tablespoons flaked coconut
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 frozen pie crust
Whipped cream, for serving
Add the milk and blend. Stir in 1 cup
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350F. In a large
bowl, beat the eggs lightly. Cut the
butter into small cubes and add to the
bowl along with the sugar. Set an electric
mixer to medium speed and mix
until blended. Add in the flour and
blend again.
coconut flakes and vanilla. Pour the
coconut custard into the pie shell. Top
with the remaining coconut flakes, you
can toast if desired.
Bake for 45 to 50 minutes, until firm.
Let the pie cool for 1 hour before slicing
and serving. Top with whipped
cream.
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,January 24, 2025glˁDjR