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$
NOVEMBER 3, 2023 | VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 23
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Shelters can help homeless people
by providing quiet and privacy, not
just a bunk and a meal. Page 5
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
JANE REILLY
PAGE 3
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
HUNGER and
HOMELESSNESS
AWARENESS WEEK
EDITION
Magnus the Entertainer addressing the
Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners
during public comment. He was
one of 21 speakers who addressed the
lack of shelter in the County.
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
GROUNDCOVER
hunger + homelessness awareness week
CALENDAR
SHELTER ASSOCIATION'S FILL THAT TRUCK!
Friday, November 10, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Kroger (2647 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor)
Help us fill a truck with items requested by the Robert J. Delonis Center. This event
directly benefits Shelter Association clients as it gives them access to things like
new winter coats or new socks!
DELONIS CENTER HEALTH and WELLNESS FAIR
Monday, November 13, 2-5 p.m.
Delonis Center (312 W Huron Street, Ann Arbor)
This free community event at the Delonis Center is designed to support clients and
others by encouraging healthy lifestyles, preventing and managing disease, and
connecting to community resources. Vendors will set up display tables, promote their
brand and product, and show their passion for supporting vulnerable populations.
This event is free to any member of the community. To become a vendor, please
contact Alondra Burne at burnea@washtenaw.org.
GROUNDCOVER SPEAKS OPEN MIC
Friday, November 17, 6-8 p.m.
Argus Liberty Cafe (325 W. Liberty St., Ann Arbor)
Join us this November in honoring Hunger & Homelessness Awareness week at
Groundcover News' third open mic event! Come listen to community members share
writing, poetry and stories from the street. This is a FREE event. Everyone is
welcome.
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
CREATING OPPORTUNITY AND A
VOICE FOR LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WHILE TAKING
ACTION TO END HOMELESSNESS AND POVERTY.
Groundcover News, a 501(c)(3)
organization, was founded in April
2010 as a means to empower lowincome
persons to make the
transitions from homeless to housed,
and from jobless to employed.
Vendors purchase each copy of our
regular editions of Groundcover
News at our office for 50 cents. This
money goes toward 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
Simone Masing — intern
Hunter Johnstone — deputy editor
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Beverly Boss
John Buckley
Jamie Cameron
Natalie Florence
Cindy Gere
Alexandra Granberg
Mike Jones
Joshua Lee
James Manning
Ken Parks
Jane Reilly
Heather Ross
Denise Shearer
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Dimensions (W x H in inches)
5 X 3 or 2.5 X 6.5
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PROOFREADERS
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VOLUNTEERS
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Robert Klingler
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CONTACT US
Story and photo submissions:
submissions@groundcovernews.com
Advertising and partnerships:
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Mon-Sat, 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
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Additional 20% discount for money saving coupons
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ON MY CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
More McDonald’s, Wendy’s and
affordable restaurants should be
in downtown Ann Arbor
There are a lot of low-income
Jane Reilly,
vendor No. 611
In one sentence, who are you?
Janie Reilly, Groundcover vendor
No. 611, journalism busker and
peace advocate.
Where do you usually sell
Groundcover News? At the
corner of Wells and Packard
(across from Argus Farm Stop)
and at the Ann Arbor YMCA.
When and why did you start
selling Groundcover? August 31,
2023 as a part-time job while
searching for a full-time job.
What is your favorite thing to
do in Ann Arbor? Sit under the
trees by the U-M Diag and feed
the squirrels.
What words do you live by?
Do what's right, anyway. Every
day. All the time. No matter what
everyone else is doing and especially
when I don't want to. Obey
the law. This is a mix of ideas from
filmmaker and actor Spike Lee
and Saint Teresa of Calcutta, also
called Mother Teresa.
What is your superpower?
Kindness.
If you could do anything for a
day, what would it be? Have a
career as an airline pilot.
What motivates you to work
hard selling Groundcover?
Trying to make the GCN mission
statement of "promoting action to
build a just, caring and inclusive
society" a reality.
What's the best thing about
selling Groundcover? I am fully
alive when upholding our rights of
freedom of speech and of the
press.
What are you likely to become
famous for? I've been infamous.
Today, I prefer to live quietly.
people in downtown Ann Arbor. I
don’t think there are a lot of people
who are rich that walk around
downtown Ann Arbor. Especially
people who try to help themselves
and sell Groundcover. There are
volunteers too who work downtown
and they are not rich. People
who work at daycares, schools and
libraries are probably not rich
either. My point is there should be
some Wendy’s and McDonald’s in
downtown Ann Arbor.
There should be Kentucky Fried
Chickens in downtown Ann Arbor
too. And I think there should be
places that have low-cost food and
drinks because there are a lot of
working people who do not have a
lot of money. People who come
downtown just to get out of their
homes don’t have a lot of money and
they need somewhere to hang out or
too. I think there should be places
that are low-cost like toy stores.
I think it is very important to have
DENISE SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
go shopping and they can’t buy anything
because they don't have
enough money.
And when things are at a high
price all the time, when people don’t
have enough money to buy anything,
it makes them sad and
depressed and do things that they
shouldn’t be doing and go to jail or
prison. There should also be lowcost
thrift stores and coffee shops,
low-cost places in downtown Ann
Arbor and I think there should be
low-cost movies like Briarwood Mall
used to have. They should bring back
dollar theaters! I think that would
give a lot of people hope and make
them happier and enjoy themselves
so they don’t feel the need to do
things they shouldn’t be doing and
getting arrested.
I think if people could afford things
better, that would give them hope
and encouragement to do good
things like help people in the community
and help themselves. I think
the community would look and be
better and safer if we had more lowcost
things for people to enjoy and
meet their basic needs. The world
would be much better.
3
Kid’s farm fun: Take a day-trip to
Jenny’s Farm and Cider Mill!
One of the largest and oldest
local farms is in Dexter. It’s called
Jenny's Farm Stand & Cider Mill
on the outskirts of Dexter. This is
one of the best and most fun farms
for kids. They have a petting farm,
pony rides and some of the best
jams, salsas and pickled vegetables
as well as baked goods. Jenny’s
offers apple cider and happy
donuts as you look at all the goodies
they have to offer.
The pony ride is one of the highlights,
as kids get to ride a real horse.
donkeys and draft horses; some animals
are not pettable.
As I recall, pies are freshly made.
CINDY GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
Chickens and rabbits roam free. The
farm has rabbits, goats, sheep,
My favorite from Jenny's Farm is the
amazing jams they make — raspberry,
peach, strawberry and blueberry.
What I truly love is raspberry
jam on toast in the morning with a
warm coffee and a hot slice of apple
pie. The drive to Jenny’s is fun on the
riverside along the Huron River. The
colors are fun in the fall splendor.
So come take a nice mini vacation
for a day on Jenny’s Farm!
Discrimination
ROBERTO ISLA CABALLERO
Groundcover vendor No. 347
Sometimes when you go to the store to use the bathroom
you must buy something — if you don’t buy
something, you can’t go inside. The other thing, while
you go to the store you have to leave your backpack
and other stuff outside. Sometimes those working in
the store look at you with your backpack and they
think you want to steal something from the store.
When I need to go inside to ask for something, those
at the store don’t ask if I speak English or Spanish, they
just ask where I’m from.
On Saturday, October 21 at 10:30 a.m. I went out to
the Home and Garden to buy a folding shopping cart.
I need the cart to put my stuff in and lock it. These
people in the store say they don’t have a shopping cart.
They look at me like I’m estupido. Maybe they think I
don’t have the money to buy the shopping cart. I say
thank you very much. I will put all this into the
Groundcover.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOMELESSNESS
HOUSED: How housing changed John's life
JOSHUA LEE
Groundcover contributor
Housing is more than just a roof over
one’s head. It is a source of stability,
security, dignity and hope. For many
people who have experienced homelessness,
getting housed is a life-changing
event that opens up new
possibilities and opportunities.
For this article we interviewed John,
who recently moved into permanent
supportive housing (PSH) in Ann
Arbor. PSH is a type of affordable housing
that provides long-term rental
assistance and supportive services to
people who have disabilities and/or
chronic homelessness. We asked John
how housing has impacted his situation,
and what are the things that eased
or hurt the transition from the street.
John’s story
John, 54, was homeless for over 10
years. He used to sleep in a tent near
the Huron River where he faced harsh
weather, harassment and isolation. He
suffers from bipolar disorder and
post-traumatic stress disorder, which
made it hard for him to find and keep
a job.
He moved into his PSH apartment in
February 2023, after being referred by
the Shelter Association of Washtenaw
County. He said that housing has given
him a sense of peace and comfort.
“I feel like I have a home now. I can
sleep better, I can cook my own food, I
can watch TV, I can relax. I don’t have
to worry about where I’m going to
sleep or what I’m going to eat. I don’t
have to deal with the stress and danger
of living on the street,” he says.
Housing has also helped him
improve his mental health and access
other services. He receives case management,
counseling, medication and
transportation from Avalon Housing,
the nonprofit organization that operates
his PSH unit. He also attends a
peer support group at Home of New
Vision, where he meets other people
who have experienced homelessness.
He said the most helpful thing for
him was having supportive staff who
cared about him and his well-being.
“They treat me like a human being, not
like a number or a problem. They listen
to me, they help me with my goals,
they encourage me. They are like
family to me,” he said.
ment living.
Still, it was hard to adjust to apart“It
was hard to get used to having
neighbors, rules and responsibilities.
It was hard to trust people, to open up,
to ask for help. It was hard to feel like I
deserved this."
One thing that changed for him was
his friend group. He used to hang out
with other homeless people who
shared his struggles and interests.
“We would talk about basketball,
especially old school early 2000s basketball.
Rip Hamilton was my favorite
player from that time; he was a great
shooter and defender who played for
the Pistons from 2002 to 2011. We
would watch highlights of his games
on YouTube. We would admire his
skills and compare his achievements
to other all-time greats. We would also
share tips on where to find food, shelter
or other resources,” he recalled.
After he moved into his apartment,
he lost contact with most of his homeless
friends. Some of them were happy
for him, but others were jealous or
resentful.
“Some said I was lucky or privileged.
Some of them said I was betraying
them or forgetting them. Some of them
said I was no longer one of them.”
He still misses his homeless friends
sometimes but he also made new
friends at his PSH unit and his peer
support group. They also share his passion
for basketball.
“We still talk about basketball. We
still watch highlights of Rip Hamilton’s
games. We still admire his skills and
achievements. But we also talk about
other things, like our health, our goals
our challenges,” he says.
Another thing that changed for him
was his ability to follow his current
favorite team. The “Lebron-James-led”
LA Lakers. When he was homeless, he
had a hard time following his team as a
fan, due to lack of access to coverage.
“It was frustrating not being able to
watch their games live or catch up on
their news and stats. I had to rely on
word of mouth or public sources,
which were often unreliable or outdated.
I felt like I was missing out on a
lot of excitement and joy,” he said.
Now that he has a TV and an official
address, he can watch his team play on
his own screen and receive newspapers
and magazines that cover their
see HOUSED page 14 
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Factors of homelessness, part one
For years, I was stewing about how
people treated each other, particularly
how people treated the poverty-stricken
and the homeless. I didn’t
want to see people suffering. But at
the time I didn't want to be part of the
solution, either.
While stewing in disgust at the way
humans treat other human beings, I
posted a rant on Facebook. I then
decided to jot down ideas on factors
of homelessness, shelter issues and
the money behind it all. Here is my
initial list:
Reasons for
Homelessness
1. Job Loss/Low Wages,
• Financial instability/job loss
(Living wage vs minimum wage)
• Insufficient federal/state aid
• Lack of sustainable wages meeting
cost of rent,
2. Abusive Relationships
• Insufficient mental health care
3. Substance Use and Abuse
• Drug promotion vs rehab and
recovery
• Lack of affordable one-year drug
rehab centers for the poor
4. Parenting/Disabilities,
JAMIE CAMERON
Groundcover vendor No. 612
end homelessness
9. Selfishness
• Human to human selfishness,
10. Where is the HUD money?
• Private companies, organizations
and shelter CEO profits
I will save shelter issues and the
money trail for later articles of this
series.
I selected three websites for background
research: HomelessResourceNetwork.org,
generated 17 points.
HumanRightsCareers.com,
• Relationships
of an abusive
nature
• Abusive and neglectful
parenting
• Chronically homeless children of
homeless parents
5. Incarceration
• Institutional mindset
• Incarceration and recidivism
• Lack of public bathrooms leading
to CSC violations and incarceration
6. Transportation/Car Issues,
• Cost of repairs
7. Talent Development,
• Lack of development of individual
potential
8. Governance,
• Politicians unfufilled promises to
ArlingtonLifeShelter.org yielded ten
factors each.
People Housed First
The first item is that of wages, job
loss, not enough federal/state aid,
unemployment/ underemployment,
and a lack of sustainable wages such
as a living county wage. A minimum
wage is for children, not adults. Minimum
wage combined with part-time
hours will not meet the cost of living.
We’ve had chronically unemployed
people without personal or job development
programs.
Jobs are at will, and so workers are
subject to job loss at any time, for any
and
reason. Poverty means being a lost
paycheck away homelessness.
Current Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families combined with EBT/
Bridge card does not meet the needs
of those at the poverty level. In fact,
for a family of three, it barely covers
one-third of the cost of living. The
main problems with wages are threefold:
low and stagnant wages, consumer
price indexing and
non-sustainable wages to meet an
individual’s cost of living.
At the same time in history as low
and stagnant wages, we have an
ever-widening canyon between wages
and housing costs. Housing requires
credit checks, income verification
and deposit of up to three months
rent. Rent-to-income ratios lead to
housing discrimination.
In every state, fair market rent combined
with minimum wage equals no
housing for many. As for those with
disabilities, housing is often difficult
to obtain and maintain, due to stagnant
SSI or SSDI wages not being
adjusted for the consumer price
index. For many frontline workers, it’s
not a game. Job loss due to
see FACTORS page 15 
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HOMELESSNESS
Shelters should help homeless people
by providing quiet and privacy, not
just a bunk and a meal
NATALIE FLORENCE AND
HEATHER ROSS
The Conversation
The City of Phoenix set heat records
in the summer of 2023, with high
temperatures that topped 110
degrees Fahrenheit for 31 consecutive
days and at least 54 days in total.
In such conditions, providing basic
services — including cool spaces —
for people experiencing homelessness
is lifesaving.
In 2022, 420 people — many of
them unsheltered — died in Phoenix
from heat-related causes. Estimates
are not yet available for summer
2023, but given this year’s extreme
conditions, the toll is expected to be
higher.
For the past two years, we have
worked as researchers with the
Human Services Campus, a 13-acre
complex in Maricopa County, Arizona,
where 16 nonprofit organizations
work together to help people
who are experiencing homelessness.
The campus includes Central Arizona
Shelter Services, Phoenix’s largest
homeless emergency shelter, which
assists 800 people experiencing
homelessness on any given night.
Our work includes talking with staff
and clients to better understand their
challenges and identify possible solutions
that draw from our work in the
fields of architecture, health and
social innovation.
Dormitories at CASS protect residents
from extreme heat with a bunk
to sleep in, day rooms for socializing,
case management services, sanitary
shower and restroom facilities. However,
CASS struggles to provide dignified
spaces that offer privacy, storage
space and quiet environments.
People need this kind of environmental
support in order to battle
recurring physical and mental health
issues that often accompany homelessness
and can hinder or prevent
healing.
Overflowing shelters
As of 2022, the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development
estimated that the U.S. had nearly
600,000 homeless people nationwide,
with about 60% living in emergency
shelters, safe havens or
transitional housing. The other 40%
lived outdoors or in places such as
abandoned buildings and public
transit stations.
Homeless centers must conform to
architectural standards for emergency
shelter. These standards have
historically been influenced by institutional
building design, which prioritizes
attaining minimum
conditions needed to keep people
alive. Today, many homeless shelters
struggle to provide even that level of
care.
The Human Services Campus was
originally constructed in 2003 to provide
consolidated services and a
coordinated entry plan for people
experiencing homelessness. However,
it was intended to be part of a
larger system of shelters, not the sole
service provider for Phoenix’s estimated
9,000 homeless people.
The city’s homeless population has
grown, in part because of unprecedented
rent increases and a lack of
affordable housing. During this summer’s
heat wave, nearly 1,200 unsheltered
homeless people lived on
sidewalks surrounding the campus,
many in tents, with limited access to
bathrooms and sanitation facilities.
Homelessness and
mental health
When asked about the causes of
homelessness, policymakers and
members of the public often point to
mental illness and addiction, as well
as a lack of affordable housing. They
tend to pay less attention to the
underlying impacts of past trauma
other than noting that many women
become homeless to escape domestic
violence.
In a 2005 study, an alarming 79% of
homeless women seeking treatment
for mental illness and substance
abuse reported experiencing a past
traumatic event such as physical or
sexual abuse. More recently, a 2020
study showed that nearly two-thirds
of homeless women and almost half
of homeless men reported that they
were homeless because of trauma.
Shelter design can affect homeless
people’s ability to recover from past
trauma and to battle addiction and
other mental health issues that perpetuate
cycles of homelessness.
For example, one woman who currently
lives in CASS told us about
trying to get a full night’s sleep while
living in a day room where the lights
were kept on around the clock and
there was constant activity. Because
she had several bags of personal
items that were too big to store in the
dormitory, she could not get a bed
there.
“When they don’t turn the lights
down at night, I start to feel like my
body is vibrating,” she said. “I start to
see people walking around, and I’m
see SHELTERS page 9 
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!
Job Search Toolkit
If you’re embarking on a job
search, AADL’s virtual toolkit
stands ready to assist! Packed
with links to beneficial websites
and resources, it’s a free guide
that equips patrons with essential
tools and knowledge to navigate
the competitive job market.
See all the toolkit has to offer at
aadl.org/services.
FEATURED EVENT
5
General view of a homeless encampment in downtown Phoenix as unhoused people receive
medical care from Circle The City's mobile medical unit on the 14th day of temperatures rising
to 110 degrees Fahrenheit in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., July 13, 2023. REUTERS, Liliana Salgado
Sunday, November 19 • 2pm
Downtown Library
Winter is coming! Stop by to try
on and pick up a new-to-you coat
for the season. The Library will
be accepting coats and jackets
at all locations from September
8th–November 17th. We will not
accept items on the day of the
event.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
MAKING CHANGE
The public has spoken: "We need shelter now!"
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
It was standing room only at the
Washtenaw County Municipal Building
on Wednesday, October 18. Most
attendees were wearing the same sticker
on their chests: “I support more funding
for winter…”
When public comment began, there
was no question what the increased
attendance at the Board of Commissioners
meeting was supporting. A
banner painted with “Shelter Now”
was raised for all Commissioners to
read.
If you’ve been following Groundcover
News recently, you’ll recall two articles
written by Jim Clark, vendor No. 139,
about the grassroots campaign, entitled
“Shelter Now,” organized around three
demands to expand and improve sheltering
services in Washtenaw County.
21 members of the homeless community
addressed the Board of Commissioners
during public comment. Read
some of their comments below, advocating
for shelter.
CALEB POIRIER
“Having talked with folks who keep
track of the census of the people who
are attempting to get into the shelter,
there is a 140-person-long waiting list
to get into the shelter. This was made
real to me earlier this week with a
young woman (...) who has two twins
in her stomach, several months pregnant,
[and is] currently living under an
overhang. Some folks feel that it’s only
appropriate to house folks once they
have a child, but I think that while
you’re pregnant is a very dangerous
time to be unhoused, and she is one of
those 140 people who is unhoused.
Currently there’s a disparity between
the amount of services provided
between Washtenaw County’s two
sister cities where a majority of the
population lives, in both Ypsi and Ann
Arbor. In Ypsilanti there is a rotating
shelter that’s supposed to move from
faith community to faith community
like it does in Ann Arbor, and that
rotating shelter does not
rotate
because there’s only one faith community
that has signed up in Ypsilanti.
There has been an ask made of a multitude
of faith communities in Ypsilanti
to participate with the shelter in
accomplishing the rotating shelter
there. So this is an ask to everyone who
has friends in a faith community of any
kind, or knows of buildings that are
open, to consider reaching out to the
shelter to make that happen.”
COLLIN SPRY
“I just came here to speak from the
heart. I’ve been homeless since 2019
when my wife died in a car accident.
She was the last family that I had, and
without her, I’ve had nobody. I’ve been
living on the streets of Ann Arbor basically
because Ann Arbor is a special
community. I’ve been all over the
country via freight trains, and I’ve seen
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Magnus the Entertainer addressing the Washtenaw County Board of
Commissioners during public comment. He was one of 21 speakers
who addressed the lack of shelter in the County.
all different walks of life, and this place
is an anomaly. There is what I would
call an actual homeless community.
There are people here that actually
take care of each other. We’re like
family. And then there is a community
that takes care of our community.
People like Peggy, Gracie, Cynthia,
look out for us in ways that nobody
else around the country I’ve ever seen
see PUBLIC next page 
׉	 7cassandra://F3xNt4WIaV5PHeICiIfcTrCPKw7IquTTQCoo7rwQ_6USw` eCFX 6ߟ?׉E$NOVEMBER 3, 2023
MAKING CHANGE
Churches are critical for winter sheltering
TESS ROUSTER
Groundcover contributor
The Delonis Center, operated by the
Shelter Association of Washtenaw
County, is the only fixed location shelter
for individual adults in Washtenaw
County, and it only operates as an
emergency nighttime shelter during
the winter months. The need for
winter shelter is greater than what the
Delonis Center can accommodate.
Moreover, unsheltered homelessness
is rising and predicted to continue
rising due to lack of affordable housing
and cessation of COVID-era government
aid.
Because there is not enough space
at Delonis and because it is not open
for daytime shelter, SAWC also offers
a rotating nighttime shelter for men
and a rotating daytime warming
center through faith communities in
Ann Arbor.
As of October 6, the congregations
hosting the nighttime rotating shelter
include: St. Mary Student Parish,
Genesis/St. Clare's/Temple Beth
Emeth, First Congregational Church,
Keystone Church, First Baptist Church
of Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor Friends
Meeting, St. Luke Lutheran, First
Presbyterian — Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor
Christian Reformed, Zion Lutheran,
St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church
and University Lutheran Chapel.
Additionally, Journey of Faith, Zion
Lutheran, First Baptist and St. Mary’s
Student Parish are also hosting the
rotating Daytime Warming Center.
Ypsilanti has historically offered
more affordable housing options than
Ann Arbor. Simultaneously, there is a
higher concentration of poverty and
a lower concentration of resources
and opportunities in Ypsi. As a result,
long-term residents are getting hit
especially hard by the dramatic rises
in housing costs, and the resulting
rise in homelessness.
This past summer, there were 15-20
individuals using the awning outside
of Growing Hope on S. Washington St.
due to a lack of shelter options.
There are currently only two locations
offering emergency shelter in
Ypsilanti this winter: St. Luke's Episcopal
Church will provide nighttime
and the Freight House will provide
daytime shelter Monday through
Thursday. Unless other community
organizations step up to offer space,
there will be no shelter options Friday-Saturday
in Ypsilanti this winter.
There is an urgent need for congregations
and community organizations
to step forward to support
people experiencing housing crisis by
filling the gap in winter shelter in
Ypsilanti, and for funding to cover the
additional staffing. SAWC will provide
staff to anyone able to any organization
able to provide a facility.
You can help by asking your congregation
or organization to host temporary
shelter this winter. If your
congregation or organization is interested,
you can email Dan Kelly at
kellyd@washtenaw.org.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
 PUBLIC from last page
do. Unfortunately this has been a
rough summer, though. There’s been a
lot of bigotry. We’ve been pushed
around, bullied, thrown out of every
different place. We were at the Plaza.
The police came in the middle of the
night, threw us out, threw all our stuff
in the trash, kicked some kid in the
head. And then we all moved down
under (...) Fuller bridge because we
had no other options, where the bulldozers
came and tried to bulldoze all
of our stuff. And we stood there. We
would not let them touch our things
because that’s all that we have. (...) It’s
been an unfortunate event to see this
bigotry aimed at people who have
nothing. (...) It continues to blow my
mind. But, I still support this community,
and I think it’s a very beautiful
place. Very special. So really all I
wanted to say today is that decisions
that are made today, just know that, as
hard as this summer has been, the
winter is going to be even harder, and
lives are really at stake here.”
MAGNUS THE ENTERTAINER
“What happens when you close your
door at the end of your night? And
where must the homeless and
unhoused lay down to recharge for the
next productive day? These are questions,
right? (...) What do we think will
help? These are some of the questions
that I ask myself while going through
these changes as a professional (...).
Well, not one individual program can
solve these issues, alright? Not one
program. It has to be all of us together.
(...) Number 1: Funding the rotating
shelter. In 2020, I was in the rotating
shelter myself, and I was also in the
Delonis shelter at the same time. As
someone who was building a career
while in this position, there are a lot of
things that could have happened that
would probably stop a person. But
because of the rotating shelter and
Delonis working together, a lot was
achieved on their part, and the community
that they serve. Another thing,
keeping people alive, right? So it’s not
just about giving a person a place to
live, it’s not just about giving a person
something to get through the day, it’s
about actually keeping people alive.
Because that’s what these services are
doing, ultimately, breaking into new
permanent housing solutions. So a lot
of times we think situations like this
have many layers to it unfinished!"
"COUNTRY" MIDDLESTADT
“I’m going to tell you, our system’s
been broke. It’s been broke for a while.
And you know what? You’re not gonna
fix it when you’re not (...) looking at the
fact that most of the people that are
homeless within our community
either have mental health or drug or
alcohol issues. If we don’t deal with
these drug and alcohol issues and
mental health issues, we’re not going
to fix our community, okay? We’re just
going to be lying to ourselves. We have
a shelter. We call it Delonis. Well I’m
going to tell you that Delonis is basically
more so of a (...) release center
and a drug den. It’s also used at times
for human trafficking. We need to fix
that issue, okay? And that’s coming
from somebody that is homeless in
your community and is currently (...)
doing five years of probation and has
a lifetime registry for trying to take
drugs off of your streets. Now, do I
think that we need another shelter?
Yeah, we definitely need a 24 hour
shelter. We need a safe place for
mamas and babies. We need safe
places for children. (...) We don’t have
that. (...) If you’re homeless living on
the street, and you’re living in a tent,
well, hopefully one of the local officers
don’t (...) see your tent because what
are they going to do? They’re going to
tag it ‘You’ve got 48 hours or we’re
throwing your stuff away’. And by the
way, it’s a $500 fine if you’re caught. Do
you think your homeless individual
can pay $500? (...) Why don’t we fix
what’s broken and not try to create
something new? Cause we don’t need
to create something new. We need to
fix what we got. Now, I’m surely not
(...) happy with HAWC that hasn’t
been operating on our housing that’s
preventing these agencies from doing
their job.”
JOHN KERGESTAL
"I live in a homeless camp in Washtenaw
county. I just want to start off by
saying I’m truly grateful for the Delonis
Center. There’s been plenty of times
that I would have froze to death if it
wouldn’t have been for them, and for
them feeding us. I also want to say that
I’m grateful for the Sheriff’s department
because there is a certain Sheriff,
that I’m not going to mention names,
that does welfare checks on our camp,
and personally makes sure that we’re
okay. (...) Although he gets on us about
drinking and whatever once in a while.
But he still cares, and he doesn’t want
to arrest us. He doesn’t want to take us
to jail or anything. He just wants to
make sure everything’s okay. And I
hope that the City and the County will
continue to fund the Robert J. Delonis
Center because somebody like me
truly depends on it.”
STEFANI CROUSE
"Earlier today, I attended my, I think,
fifth eviction hearing this year. Every
month I’m able to figure it out. I’m
lucky. I have some ability to do that.
However, this has been going on all
year because there is no relief, right?
There’s no place to go to ask for help
right now and be able to actually get it.
So we’re just figuring it out. In fact, my
situation wouldn’t even be considered
an emergency because my late rent is
in the month that we’re in. But it’s
every month. So I’m paying $250 extra
every month because I’m paying for
late fees and attorney fees to show up
in court to have it dismissed. I’m not
the only one going through this. I live
in an apartment complex that is geared
towards low-income people. I have
watched my neighbors move out in
droves. There are empty, naked units
all over in my complex … and I don’t
understand what’s happening. I am
currently paying about almost $1,600
a month in rent to continue to live
there because I can’t pay it on time.
There are so many of me out there, and
I just wanted to voice that tonight.
Because my biggest fear is that one of
these months, I’m not going to be able
to figure it out, and I will become one
of those people waiting for a bed for
four to six months. And I don’t think
that’s okay. And I don’t believe that
any of you do either. And you have an
opportunity to do something about it.
Especially for those of us who live in
Ypsilanti. And I’m talking about the
women. Because the things that
happen to us when we go homeless are
unspeakable. And we need you to step
up for us. Please … do something."
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ieCHX 6ߟm׉E!8
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
POVERTY
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Injustice of Place: Uncovering the Legacy of Poverty
in America, in conversation with Luke Shaefer
You might recognize the names Luke
Shaefer and Kathryn Edin from the
cover of “$2.00 a Day: Living on Almost
Nothing in America,” which in 2015
reframed conversations on family poverty
in the United States, ultimately
leading to the expansion of the Child
Tax Credit in 2021.
Shaefer, Edin and Timothy Nelson’s
newest book, “Injustice of Place:
Uncovering the Legacy of Poverty in
America” now looks at poverty from
the macro-perspective of place,
instead of person. They developed an
assessment method called the “Index
of Deep Disadvantage,” which calculated
the 100 most disadvantaged and
advantaged places in the country.
Through data-driven, historical and
immersive research — conducted
between 2019 and 2022 — they have
come to important conclusions about
the origins and solutions to inequality
in the United States.
Lindsay Calka: How does understanding
— and addressing — the 100
most disadvantaged places improve
well-being and poverty across the
country?
Luke Shaefer: The problems that we
have didn’t appear out of thin air. I
think we often proceed like that’s true,
but often, the challenges we have are a
decade, a century in the making. This
book focuses on a set of communities
— the most disadvantaged 100 and
200. I think the lesson is that, when you
want to understand why things are the
way they are, you really have to recognize
the history is broader and can be
used in many different communities.
A second argument in the book is
that when we think about poverty, we
usually are problematizing the individuals
experiencing it. In this book we
really try to make the case that there’s
a collective problem that things are the
way they are not just because of the
actions or the circumstances of the
families at the bottom of the economic
ladder, but those are tied to people in
the community far up the economic
ladder, really to society as a whole, so
we should broaden the scope of what
we’re looking at and who benefits from
the way things are, to a much broader
part of the population.
LC: Your 2015 book “$2.00 A Day,”
was critical for the expansion of the
Child Tax Credit. Who needs to get
Injustice of Place in their hands?
What outcomes do you hope it
supports?
LS: The nice thing about the first
book was that there was a simple solution:
providing cash can be an effective
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
similar. So, how can poverty be the
result of some family in 2016, 2019,
2023, making the wrong decisions, if
we’ve seen the same patterns for 150
years?
I think the book tries to make the
way to reduce poverty.When we think
about the things we do for poor families,
I think the litmus test is “will this
benefit them more than just giving
them the money that would be used to
provide the service that we want to provide
them.” In “The Injustice of Place,”
we don’t have [just] a single policy
solution.
I’m a big believer in cash transfers.
We saw the impact that can have during
the COVID pandemic — the expanded
child tax credit and the economic
impact payments, the stimulus payments
— were hugely successful. I’m a
full believer in that, but I think this
book really suggests many different
avenues that we need to be thinking
about, including local government corruption.
The people who are running
the communities that have the most
need, how much are they looking out
for the folks at the very bottom?
Social infrastructure — how much
are there opportunities in any given
community for people to gather and to
have cheap fun together where they
can make connections and use those
connections to build supports for finding
jobs, and role models, and whatever
it is? The book really calls us to try
to reduce community violence, and
makes the argument that by expanding
economic opportunity, that’s going to
be one of our best ways to impact community
violence. The downside is that
there’s a lot of avenues in, but the good
side is that, I think, communities can
really focus on the things that there’s
the most energy and infrastructure for.
LC: How do you see — or have you
seen already — the conclusions of
this book influencing popular understanding
of poverty in the United
States? In other words, what myths
are you busting about poverty?
LS: So many of the challenges we
have can be traced back to a century
ago, or a century-and-a-half ago. Early
in the book, you see our map of deep
disadvantage for the Deep South compared
to a map of the concentration of
slavery in 1860, and they’re pretty darn
case that we have to look at ourselves
as a society, and re-think where the
change has to come from. And, I think
we saw that with the safety-net stuff
that we did during COVID. We gave
people a lot of money through the child
tax credit, and also through the economic
impact payments, expanded
unemployment insurance; lo and
behold, the number of Americans with
bad credit fell to an all time low. People
used that money to pay off their debt;
they used it for food; they used it for
essential expenses; they used it for
rent. That sort of flies in the face of all
of our concerns about giving people
money and, more broadly, trusting
families and empowering them to
make their own decisions.
LC: We know stark inequality is a
characteristic of Washtenaw County
— but this community can hardly be
considered one of the "forgotten
places of America." How would you
apply the findings of this book to our
local policy landscape?
LS: I think of Washtenaw County as a
real microcosm of our economic and
social changes. Ann Arbor has always
had more money than Ypsilanti, but
the divide was not as great half a century
ago. Over that period of time,
we’ve seen the decline of the industrial
economy, and I think Ypsi has really
been impacted by that. The increasing
rewards of the top knowledge economy,
Ann Arbor has really been a beneficiary
of that. So, if you want to sort of
understand inequality and poverty in
the United States, I think Washtenaw
County is a great place to do it because
you have this, like, growing stratification
between two places.
I think understanding how our systems
kind of leave out a place like Ypsilanti,
too, is clear. So, it’s not a rural
place, but when you look at philanthropy
for example, there’s more philanthropic
dollars going into
organizations in Ann Arbor because
that’s where the money is. People like
to give to their community, and so less
money goes to Ypsilanti, or folks who
are struggling in more rural areas in
Chelsea or Dexter. You really see this
mis-match between the need and the
resources. A lot of what’s playing out
here is playing out across the nation.
LC: If you were to study this community
with the same methods conducted
in the book, where would you
start in Washtenaw County?
LS: The thing I am most disappointed
in about Ann Arbor is I think Ann Arbor
as a community likes to think of itself
as very progressive or liberal, but a lot
of our actions suggest we’re not willing
to do our part in addressing the
inequality that we have — as a small
community, and as a county. I think
that can take the form of affordable
housing and services for folks who
have challenges. So, “What can we do
to even out the work of really taking
these challenges seriously with the
resources we have?” is our question
going forward. Is Ann Arbor really
going to do its part?
It’s not like Ann Arbor does nothing.
It hosts the Delonis Center, and that’s
great, but how much actual action have
we seen as a community in Ann Arbor
on making housing more affordable? I
don’t think there’s really been any.
And, if you plotted the agencies that
help Washtenaw County, and those in
our county who are really having challenges,
how many of them would be
located in Ypsi, would serve people in
Ypsi? And how many would be in Ann
Arbor? You know, how many would be
in other parts, and is that reflective of
everyone sort of coming together to
address the challenges? I think not.
Who should be paying for it? Where
should things be located? You know,
we want it to be as accessible to the
people who need it as possible, but we
also don’t want Ypsilanti to bear all of
the challenges of that work. Ann Arbor
should be an equal partner.
Luke Shaefer, Ph.D. is a U-M Professor
of Social Work and Public Policy and
the inaugural director of Poverty Solutions,
an interdisciplinary, presidential
initiative that partners with communities
and policymakers to find new ways
to prevent and alleviate poverty.
׉	 7cassandra://dxQmaX_7OIxWQ2U11fQ4uCkOZa43QBOia0Z83_Op_14Q` eCFX 6ߟA׉ENOVEMBER 3, 2023
RESISTANCE
Talking truth to power
Those words ring a bell in many-aheart
that aspire to freedom and justice.
When I wrote “The People Are the
Power,” I was referring to labor power
which is put on the auction block and
sold to investors in the bureaucratic
chain of command. You get wages
based on what the market can bear
and investors are at the head of the
trough in a feeding frenzy.
There is a collective ruling class that
is dedicated to maximizing return on
investment. Anything goes if it makes
the profit they feel entitled to. The
supremacism of those who speculate
on our labor power has a degree of
arrogance that is threatening all life on
the planet. I saw a bumper sticker
recently that read: “EARTH FIRST, WE
CAN DESTROY THE OTHER PLANETS
LATER!
Of course, the moon is a base on the
way to Mars. If you look at the accumulation
of power at the top of the chain
of command it may look invincible,
unless you remember that selling your
labor makes you a wage slave. If your
work serves other people’s projects in
which you have no voice, you are being
exploited and oppressed by the class
warfare that defines capitalism.
insecure are likely to be looking at
and/or experiencing homelessness.
“Home free” as they say in Seattle.
Groundcover News is an important
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
Therefore, our collective work builds
the war machine that plagues humanity.
Divide and conquer is the war
game. Tyrants and oligarchs are cultivated
or destroyed depending on the
commodity market and the profiteering
obsessive-compulsive disorder. Is
it a cancer or a vampire that uses our
vital energy to pursue endless war?
Life source energy gives birth to
human beings and the ability to
work,which is commonly known as
labor power. I prefer the expression
“the all good expanse of primordial
purity” when referring to the source.
Self-determination starts with taking
responsibility for the results of your
labor. Those of us who are financially
voice from the street as we learn to tell
the truth as we experience it and focus
on the corruption of power as it goes
up the chain of command to those
seeking unlimited power. The gods of
capital are impermanent. We know
from science that everything is in
motion and is interrelated in a way
characterized as impermanent. Death
is our constant companion, reminding
us that all actions have results and a
happy death comes from constant
preparation to develop a courageous
heart and wise compassion. Most of us
are beginners and are fortunate to
have access to a variety of spiritual
friends. Choose them carefully and
take them to heart. Nalandabodhi is a
good place to tune in. Search that and
explore.
We have learned that peace of mind
does not come from the absence of
struggle, but from absence of confusion
and uncertainty. We can develop
engaged struggle as the path to peace
and justice. Whatever arises is reality
in this moment. Every crisis is an
opportunity to look into the void as it
stares back at you. If you become
accustomed to the void while focusing
on the breath and detaching from distractions,
you may experience the
clear light nature, at least some sense
of the natural world at peace with
itself.
I am thinking out loud about things
I have not mastered, but I hope the
intention to experience the power of
truth and benefit all life comes to fruition
with abilities we can share as we
learn about freedom and our innate
power to benefit self and others. Practice
makes perfect, so let’s start wherever
we are and aim for complete
enlightenment. “Ye shall know the
truth and the truth will set you free,” as
Jesus taught.
Not all truth tellers are crucified but
do not be surprised if the inquisition
comes to your door. Remember Thich
Nhat Hanh who said, “Meditate on
your worst enemy until you see yourself
in them.” Then you, too, can speak
truth to power in a way that shows the
power of the truth and the great going
beyond that leaves nothing behind.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
9
 SHELTER from page 5
not sure if they are even really there.”
Routinely sleeping less than seven
hours per night can be harmful to
health. It lowers immune function,
increases chronic pain and raises the
risk of heart disease, high blood pressure,
diabetes, stroke and death. For
homeless people battling mental health
challenges, addiction and past trauma,
rest and recovery are essential to getting
back on their feet.
CASS staff have tried to create healthier
sleep spaces, such as dorms that
remain dark, quiet and cool at all times.
Priority access goes to people with jobs.
These sections can house only about a
third of CASS’s residents, leaving others
to sleep in dorms where there is more
noise and light.
More supportive spaces
Simply feeding people and providing
them with places to sleep is a major
challenge for shelters in cities where
homelessness is rising. But some have
found ways to think more broadly.
In San Diego, Father Joe’s Villages, a
nonprofit network with a central
campus and scattered-site programs,
houses more than 2,000 people nightly.
San Diego’s more temperate climate
makes it less urgent to maximize the
number of people they shelter indoors,
so staff at Father Joe’s can use its decentralized
design to create shelters with
private and quiet spaces.
The Father Joe’s network includes
multiple smaller-scale facilities where
clean bathrooms are easily accessible
and homeless people can use basic
amenities like laundry and storage. One
example is Mary’s Place, a collection of
diverse shelters that provides emergency
and long-term support in smaller
facilities modeled after the simplicity
and comfort of a home.
People experience less stress and can
more easily navigate the challenge of
ending their own homelessness when
they can get a restful night’s sleep in a
quiet environment, with spaces that
allow them some privacy. We are
encouraged to see other U.S. shelters
moving in this direction — but there’s a
long way to go.
Steps toward better design
To address the lack of privacy at
CASS, we have proposed subdividing
the day room into more private spaces
to accommodate activities like online
telehealth appointments, counseling
and job interviews. To tackle the longterm
impacts of overcrowding, we also
have recommended introducing sanitation
amenities, such as laundry
facilities, “hot boxes” to sanitize clothing
and bedding, more bathroom facilities
and reliable trash removal to
reduce the spread of infection and pests
such as bedbugs and lice.
For new facilities, designers could
consider small changes, such as
increased storage and more diligent regulation
of temperature, light and noise.
Hospitals, nursing homes and retirement
communities have found many
ways in recent decades to use design to
support patients’ health. Many of the
same concepts can be applied to
emergency shelters and help turn these
facilities from institutional warehouses
into spaces of health and opportunity.
Natalie Florence is a Ph.D. candidate
in humanitarian design and infrastructure
studies at Arizona State University.
Heather Ross is a clinical associate professor
in nursing and clinical associate
professor at the School for the Future of
Innovation in Society, Arizona State
University. Courtesy of The Conversation
/ International Network of Street
Papers
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ieCHX 6ߟo׉E10
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
POLITICS
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Palestine rally at Congresswoman Dingell's office
calls for ceasefire, no more funds for Israel
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
Monday October 23, a pro-Palestine
rally — organized by the Palestinian
Youth Movement, U-M Graduate
Employees' Organization and Students
Allied for Freedom and Equality
— took place in front of Congresswoman
Debbie Dingell’s Washtenaw
County Office. The main message from
the participants at the rally was a call
for a ceasefire in Gaza and to denounce
the United States' support and aid to
Israel. The rally was peaceful and
informative. It was one of the many
rallies and protests that took place
these last few weeks around the world
following the Hamas attack on Israel
on October 7. These protests showed
support in solidarity with the people of
Palestine and set the stage for a major
protest and demonstration in Washington
D.C on November 4.
Heidi, a participant at the rally, said,
“This is an obvious injustice, we all
know that colonialism and ethnic
cleansing are wrong, and yet our government
sends money every year to
aid and abet it and now we sit by and
watch innocent people die en masse.”
Another participant at the rally,
Galen, said, “This term the Israeli
called ‘mowing the lawn’ is a euphemism
for murder and another iteration
of what we have seen for decades
now, the end game is the same innocent
people dying, and I’m not for
that.”
Top image: Speaker from Yemeni Liberation Movement addressing
crowd at rally. Bottom images: Protestors standing in solidarity, listening
to speakers and preparing to shut down Washtenaw Avenue in
nonviolent protest.
by Izzy Hedin-Urrutia
׉	 7cassandra://BdIgvCDyVv0fUkULCxurn5QxIBTeISdDFeTmjaEybtoW` eCFX 6ߟC׉ENOVEMBER 3, 2023
POLITICS
Cartoons are a depiction
of our actions
There is no doubt that cartoons —
from children’s books to political cartoons
— bring valuable life lessons.
With records indicating that more than
1.6 billion people live in inadequate
housing worldwide, how is homelessness
being represented through satirical
cartoons?
Titled “How America Solved the
Homeless Crisis,” this cartoon by Pat
Bagley depicts how many turn a blind
eye to homeless people. It begins with
stigmas around the homeless that
MAY THET NAING
U-M Student contributor
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
Dick Wright, Cagle Cartoon, 2023
dreamt of spending our adult lives
freezing in cold weather? This is the
reality of homelessness. With people
living on the streets being more vulnerable
to fatal cases of frostbite, it is
reported that 700 people experiencing
homelessness yearly are killed from
hypothermia in the United States. This
does not include other deadly conditions
homeless people experience,
including unsanitary living conditions,
stress, violence, inadequate food and
limited access to health care.
The Signe Wilkinson piece brings up
Pat Bagley, The Salt Lake Tribune
an important question: “Who does
homelessness concern?” Though the
obvious answer is everyone, all of us
often get lost in shifting the blame onto
others. As portrayed by the cartoon,
the time spent figuring out whether
Democratic or Republican states have
the highest amount of homeless
people residing there could also be
used to see the bigger picture — how
do we solve the problem of 582,000
people experiencing homelessness in
all of the United States?
Homelessness is everyone's concern
because the issue is a vivid reflection
of the state of our society. Significant
reasons behind homelessness include
lack of access to affordable housing
due to ever-rising house prices,
domestic abuse, limited employment
opportunities, addiction and mental
illness. The most extreme problems
people face globally are all interconnected.
Just as income disparity drives
homelessness, homelessness drives
poverty rates. Perhaps we should begin
to see these effects of homelessness as
a wake-up call — a call where we start
to recognize that this is all of our
problem.
These cartoons are just the tip of the
iceberg in displaying the difficulties of
those without a home. Nevertheless,
through satirical art we can come to
acknowledge the true acts of ignorance
and disregard many have toward
homelessness. In many historical
movements, art has done a beautiful
job of drawing attention to social
issues.
But what should follow art? Collaborative
long-term effective action!
Signe Wilkinson, The Philadelphia Inquirer
many people believe that homeless
people
are
all
lazy
or
violent
criminals.
The act of simply “drawing curtains”
on the homeless, as indicated by the
cartoon, can be interpreted as a reflection
of policies that fail to address the
root causes of homelessness. For
instance, in Detroit, initiatives to deal
with the issue led to the creation of a
housing services helpline where
people can call in to receive legal
resources for evictions or report poor
rental conditions.
Since its launch, however, the service
has been described as a “dehumanizing
experience” as users
highlight long phone wait times, insufficient
operating hours, and frequently
being informed that there was no local
shelter they could be placed in.
As children, we had dreams of pursuing
any career we wished to, but who
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ieCIX 6ߟrנeCHX 6ߟq N"̼9׉Hhttp://www.learncpronline.netGׁׁrנeCIX 6ߟw 9ׁHmailto:tact@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈ׉E12
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PSA
Narcan saves lives!
JANE REILLY
Groundcover vendor No. 611
Fentanyl, an illegal opioid drug,
looks like aspirin, sidewalk chalk, and
candy like Skittles or M&Ms.
Opioids can also be prescription
drugs such as Oxycontin, Percocet,
Vicodin, methadone and other legal
drugs that reduce pain and promote
feelings of pleasure and relaxation.
High school, college, professional and
weekend athletes often take prescription
painkillers as well as people with
muscle, back and joint pain. These
legal opioids also are addictive and
fatal.
Being a first responder does NOT
mean condoning drug use. A first
responder saves lives and prevents suicide,
murder and accidental death.
Dr. Gina Dahlem, a Clinical Associate
Professor of Nursing at the University
of Michigan and a family nurse practitioner,
ran a Naloxone Training session
on Saturday, Oct. 7 at Mercy House in
Ann Arbor. Dahlem serves as Nurse
Practitioner at Packard Health/Shelter
Association of Washtenaw County.
Dahlem teaches opioid overdose prevention
regionally and nationally.
Narcan, the brand name for Naloxone,
reverses opioid overdoses. Narcan
works on dogs, too.
If you suspect an overdose or find
someone unconscious:
1. Arouse: Shout their name, shake
shoulders vigorously and perform a
sternal rub;
2. Check for signs of overdose:
Slowed or no breathing, blue lips and/
or fingernails, unresponsive to pain
(the sternal rub is uncomfortable);
3. Call 9-1-1;
4. Give Narcan by placing the nozzle
in a nostril and pushing the plunger;
5. Provide oxygen by giving rescue
breaths, two breaths initially then one
breath every five or six seconds; give
CardioPulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)
or follow dispatch instructions from
9-1-1 on speaker phone;
6. Narcan again if they are still unresponsive
after two to three minutes.
Repeat Narcan in two to three minutes
if the person does not resume
breathing. If you must leave the person
unattended or if the person vomits,
place the person in a recovery position,
lying on his or her side. Stay with the
person, if it is safe to do so, until help
arrives.
Dahlem explained that opioids
adhere to nerve receptors in your
brain. Opioids inhibit and then stop
you from breathing. Narcan replaces
the opioid on the brain receptor and
prevents more opioids from
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Photo sourced from News Nation Now.
attaching.
"The effect of the opioid is that it
slows down the drive to breathe,"
Dahlem said. "Every second counts."
Dahlem said fentanyl is a synthetic
man-made opioid that can be manufactured
in any laboratory. Fentanyl is
so strong the effect can last up to three
hours. The effect of Narcan only lasts
30-120 minutes.
It is important to call 9-1-1. Narcan
only works on opioids.
"If it's used on an unconscious individual
with no opioids in their system,
then it's like squirting water up their
nose," she said.
Dahlem said the police are trained
responders and they look at the event
"not as a criminal investigation but as
a medical emergency." The Michigan
Good Samaritan Law was changed in
2014 to include Narcan.
"You are protected under the law for
helping," Dahlem said. "No matter
what happens, you did the right thing
because you responded."
Dahlem passed out free Narcan kits
which included naloxone nasal spray,
gloves, a face shield and an instruction
pamphlet. Narcan kits are $45 over the
counter at drug stores — but Groundcover
News suggests accessing Narcan
for free at the Ann Arbor District
Library Downtown branch. Free kits
and free web-based and in-person
training are available at www.overdoseACTION.org.
Free web-based CPR
training is at: www.learncpronline.net
The website for opioid overdose and
naloxone training and resources was
developed collaboratively by the University
of Michigan School of Nursing,
Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office and
Home of New Vision.
׉	 7cassandra://aY-qxlARFDqKRu4PTk7Ge4oW0ifiue1ApK9ec-puaR4U` eCFX 6ߟF׉E@NOVEMBER 3, 2023
PUZZLES
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
CROSSWORD
from the International Network of Street Papers
1
9
12
14
16
19
24
27
30
32
39
42
45
48
53
54
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
past monthly issues.
• 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
topics of homelessness and poverty
while providing sources of income for
the homeless. I will try to help in this
effort and spread the word.
If you would like to report a violation
of the Vendor Code please email contact@groundcovernews.com
or fill
out the contact form on our website.
ACROSS
1. Instrument that registers
movements of the heart
12. Governments run by many
individual experts in their own
fields
14. "Let them eat cake" is misattributed
to her
16. "Gladiator" setting
17. "What's the ___?"
18. Victorian, for one
19. Alone
20. Kidney deposit
23. "-zoic" things
24. "Do the Right Thing" pizzeria
owner
25. For all to hear
26. High up
27. "Star Trek" rank (Abbr.)
28. Stallion, once
29. Puts down
30. Official who investigations
complaints against the
government
32. Islamic ruler's decrees
35. Auditory
36. Dash lengths
39. 18-wheelers
40. Cousin of a raccoon
41. Police, with "the"
42. Not "fer"
43. Wed
44. Federal law applied against
the Mafia
45. ___ Khan
46. Title for some monks
47. Rocket fuel ingredient, for
short
48. Cord cutters forgo this to
save money
53. Complexity
54. Recklessly wasteful
DOWN
1. Breakfast choices
2. Breezing through
3. Perlman of "Cheers"
4. Letters from your parents?
5. Charged particle
6. Columbus Day mo.
7. Pulverized
8. Bring up
9. Pimples
10. Type of graph or dessert
11. They're straight, slangily
12. Clan plaid
13. Attack by plane
14. Expert pool shot
15. Bridge positions
20. People with poor hygiene
21. Fragrant tree resin
22. In the open air
23. Brio
25. High points
26. Old-timey counters
29. Accord
30. Father of Balder
31. Polaris, for one
32. Sir ___ Newton
33. Jamaican music genre
34. Friendly
36. Snob
37. Computer shortcuts
38. Faint
40. Photo capture device
43. Engine
44. Like dough that's ready to be
baked
46. Balance sheet item
47. "A Postcard to ___" (Jens
Lekman song)
49. Calif. airport
50. Head, for short
51. Info available at 49-Down
52. Relax
49
46
50
51
52
43
47
33
34
40
44
35
25
28
31
36
41
37
38
29
20
21
22
26
17
23
18
10
11
13
15
13
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
INJUSTICE
Discrimination is a common practice
Every day we make assumptions
about the world around us, and the
people in it who we inevitably cross
paths with. We assume our assessments
to be completely accurate no
matter how different the reality may
actually be. We may even become
angry at any attempt made to point out
we are not as infallible as we would
like to think. This is definitely a shortcoming
a majority of people share, and
yet, we parade around this notion that
we have abolished discrimination and
embraced true equality. We have
become quite adept at lying to ourselves
that we’ve obtained a fair and
just world. This article covers only one
small wave in the ocean of discrimination
that is still in practice.
You have heard the saying “all walks
of life,” and I believe that the walk of
life you’re in plays a significant part in
how prevalent discrimination is in
one's life experience. In a world that
holds wealth as the all-important
factor in life, then the perceived measure
of success you have will play a role
in how much discrimination you will
 HOUSED from page 4
performance.
“It’s amazing to see them in action
and cheer for them. I can also read
about their stories and insights in the
sports columns and magazines. I feel
more connected and informed as a
fan. I feel more alive and happy as a
person.” He continued, "Basketball is
more than just a game for me. It’s a
source of motivation and entertainment.
It’s a part of who I am and what
I love. It's the most important thing …
it is a source of hope during the calm
and storms of life,” he says.
Another thing that changed for him
was his diet and hygiene. When he was
homeless, he used to cook and eat
exclusively processed foods, which
were cheap and convenient, but
unhealthy.
“I didn’t have much choice or control
over what I ate. I ate whatever I
could find or afford, which was mostly
canned, frozen, or packaged foods.
They were high in salt, sugar, fat, and
preservatives. They made me feel sick
and sluggish,” he said.
Now that he has his own kitchen, he
has encouraged himself to learn how
to cook with natural unprocessed
foods, which are fresh and nutritious,
but more expensive.
“I have more choice and control over
what I eat. I can buy fruits, vegetables,
grains, meats and dairy products from
the grocery store or the farmers
market. They make me feel healthy
and energetic,” he says.
or use a homeless shelter for their
address. Understandably there is a risk
of contracting a serious disease in
these environments, but it’s an
extremely small and unlikely one. This
is simply another act of discrimination
towards the income-challenged.
Since we live in a society that worJAMES
MANNING
Groundcover vendor No. 16
face. If you’re wealthy, you face little if
any discrimination and daily challenges.
But if you are poor, discrimination
and the challenges it brings will be
a constant element in your life. You
can also find it in just about everything
you do. This even includes donating
plasma for a little extra income.
Plasma clinics are one way for
people who are financially challenged
to supplement their income. However,
for “health and safety reasons,” they
often have policies barring people who
have recently been incarcerated and/
He is glad that he has found a way to
improve his diet and health. “Eating
well is more than just a habit for me.
It’s a source of wellness, satisfaction
and enjoyment. It’s a part of how I take
care of myself and what I value."
Another thing that changed for him
was his access to a shower. When he
was homeless, he had to rely on the
YMCA hours and YMCA voucher from
Delonis Center, which were limited
and inconvenient.
“I didn’t have much privacy or comfort
when I showered. I had to wait in
line or rush. I had to use whatever soap
or shampoo they provided, which
were often low quality or harsh on my
skin and hair. They made me feel dirty
and uncomfortable,” he says.
Now that he has his own shower, he
can shower whenever he wants and
however he likes, which is flexible,
convenient and without luxury cost.
He is glad he has found a way to
enhance his hygiene and self-esteem.
“Showering well is more than just a
routine for me. It’s a source of cleanliness,
relaxation and confidence. It’s a
part of how I present myself and what
I respect,” he said.
Another thing that changed for him
was his ability to cope with the summer
heat and the bugs and malicious free
agents (both homeless and housed)
who were in full swing during the
warm season. When he was homeless,
he had to endure the high temperatures
and the insects that bothered
him constantly. He also dealt with
threats of violence or theft from other
ships money it's only natural we deem
wealth as a virtuous, good and pure
thing. And sadly society deems that
those without it are immoral and
unhealthy. And nothing screams poverty
louder than being or having an
association with homelessness. Hence,
plasma clinics will deny the opportunity
to make a little extra money to
those who could use it the most.
Until money and the entire concept
of wealth itself are totally abolished,
discrimination will be a prevalent factor
in how our society operates. Injustices
will continue to be doled out to the less
fortunate, further diminishing their
chances of having a prosperous life. The
fact that poverty is viewed as a negative
element and those who are afflicted
with it are getting what they deserve, is
people who wanted to take advantage
of him or harm him.
"It was miserable living on the street
during the summer. It was hot and
sticky. There were mosquitoes, flies,
ants, spiders and other bugs everywhere.
They would bite me, sting me,
crawl on me or get into my food. There
were also people who would harass
me, rob me, beat me up or worse. They
would target me because I was vulnerable
and alone. They made me feel
scared and helpless," he said.
“It’s wonderful living in my home
during the summer. It’s cool, dry and
comfortable. There are no bugs inside
my home. There are also no people
who can bother me or hurt me inside
my home. If there are any outside, I
can lock my door or call the police for
help. They can’t touch me because I
have rights and security,” he said.
a point of view that should be absent
from human conscience and morality.
Many of us grow tired of this hypocritical
behavior that serves to broaden the
divide of classes. We grow tired of the
knowledge that it will take our collective
race the loss of nearly everything
to achieve the kind of unity required to
identify what is truly important and
work towards a better world and future
for society as a whole.
Unfortunately, this kind of phoenix
rising from the ashes scenario is
unlikely to happen and plasma clinics
will continue to employ their defective
policies towards the homeless. Sadly,
the discrimination people face is a
common and daily occurrence in our
lives. It has been and will be a tool for
the affluent to project their intolerances.
It will always remain a barrier
to those on the receiving end of prejudice.
This is the way things are and
they are unlikely to change, but so long
as people are fighting for a fair and
better world, that particular dream will
never fade. So don’t ever give in to
despair and give up on a better world.
He is glad that he has found a way to
survive the summer with ease and
safety.
“Staying cool and bug-free is more
than just a luxury for me. It’s a source
of relief, comfort and peace of mind.
It’s a part of how I enjoy myself and
what I appreciate,” he said.
He is still working on overcoming his
fears and doubts, but he is hopeful for
the future.
“I want to be more independent,
more productive, more happy. I want
to give back to the community, to help
others who are in need. I want to live a
normal life,” he said.
John’s story is one of many examples
of how housing can change lives for
the better. He is grateful for the opportunity
he has been given, and he hopes
that more people who are homeless
can find their way to a home.
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS
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A G A D O M
C A B L E T E L E V I S I O N
E L A B O R A T E N E S S
E X T R A V A G A N T
N I T R O
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
׉	 7cassandra://wEUfHl7kwVXwsAsrFjahfwEhxspin8JJ9Otm5KrCUnkQ` eCFX 6ߟI׉E NOVEMBER 3, 2023
JAIL CORRESPONDENT
Let’s talk about jail in Washtenaw County
Hi, this is vendor #583, and I want to
talk about jail in Washtenaw County.
We’re locked down here pretty much
all the time. We have two times we get
out. For 18 hours we’re locked down.
That’s a long time. I’ve been working
on a class, that helps me to get out
more — if we’re not on complete lockdown
like I was a few weeks ago.
It’s harder to be a woman in jail
because we get work cards and still
have a lockdown. Guys get to work and
they clean the whole jail and they get
to go outside. Girls have a harder time.
We have mental health services here
which we do not have much access to.
There are no one-on-ones. Court helps
get us to rehab.
You have to use this “kiting” [an
informal request or complaint system]
on everything. Say you want to talk to
someone like the chaplain, or the
mental health workers. They give you
this “kite” and you fill out your first
name, last name, what block you’re
from. Mine is G. You get a pen, and you
have kite paper, and then mental
health sends you some coloring pages
or crossword. Keeps you busy. The kite
system is our way to complain on any
issue. You send the kite, and it goes in
the care of the officers; they don’t have
to accept your kites. Then medical has
their own kiting system to see the doctors
and to get meds or see the dentist.
Doctor visits are now $10 and dentists
$10. We have a dayroom TV.
As I was saying, there are two times
you get out. There are two levels. Level
time. We can buy coffee, pop, clothes,
underwear, socks, boxers, shampoo, or
body wash in jail, lol. We wear all white
to go to bed in, white T-shirts, socks
and our long johns. It’s a very cold and
hard place to be in.
Once you’re locked down it’s very
BEVERLY BOSS
Groundcover vendor No. 583
1 gets out in the morning, and the
second level gets out in the afternoon,
and then we’re all locked down after
that. Today I got out from 1-3:30 p.m.
Back out 8-11:30. That is our long day.
Short days are 8:30 a.m. till 11 a.m.,
4:30-7 p.m. And if you’re lucky you get
classes while you’re locked down :) We
have to wear shower shoes and uniforms
and only get to wash clothes
once a week.
Back to the work card mentioned in
the first paragraph: if you work, the
hours add up and you could earn early
release. But it's still up to the judge. We
can have a tablet that you can use as a
phone and watch videos or podcasts,
but we have to order them from the
store with money. Say your family
wants to put money on your account.
Your family puts money on the commissary
(it’s new, now, so it’s called
eXpressAccount.com). You take the
money, buy a movie or something else,
and put money towards your store
where you can add it to your phone
hard. Some don’t have family or
friends, and you feel like you’re forgotten
about. Lots of girls and guys have
mental health problems and nowhere
to go. It's a very sad, hard, cold place
to look at yourself. You look forward to
mail from outside, you look forward to
being visited and a little money on
commissary. It’s all every jailmate
looks forward to, a phone call. The
struggle in some jails is needing a
phone call and having no kite, no one
to help you out, and so you beg other
jailmates to help with phone calls. It
took me three weeks to get a hold of
my dad.
The jail up north [in Standish, Michigan]
is very cold and very hard and
you feel no hope and it feels like you’re
forgotten.
Thank God I have Groundcover
News. I would never have had anyone
to reach out to in isolation but for
Lindsay at Groundcover News. It has
been a big blessing to me. Like a sister,
she never left my side and has gone
above and beyond to help me out.
Washtenaw Camp Outreach has been
amazing. The help and support I have
been getting has been so much appreciated.
I could never really show how
much it means to me. I have been
blessed to be a Groundcover vendor. I
have family I never had before and a
job that helps me to grow, with life’s
ups and downs. I also want to thank
the readers and customers for their
support. You guys are amazing to me.
That's it on jail. I’m going to say bye
“till next time.” It takes a village to raise
a baby and I think it takes a village to
help people with mental health issues.
People outside jail [on the street] need
a hand. Our push, our kind word or
hug, our prayer, our ear, someone to
listen to you, compassion. We need to
lift people up, and some have more
than others. Start helping someone
you see on the street; people need
people. I don’t want to be forgotten in
a cold place. I feel love and worth now.
I am working on me, and I have family
and friends and support.
This is my “kite” to my readers, my
hope. I started at Groundcover News
and you let me have a voice. I once did
not have one. I am nothing without
you and Groundcover. I want more
mental health and help for “the veterans,”
and more love and joy to spread.
So if you see someone down outside,
just a kind word can go a long way —
letting street veterans know they are
cared about and not forgotten. It’s not
all about money — it’s thought, companionship,
fellowship, that people
need.
Over and out. Groundcover News
salutation, vendor No. 583.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
15
 FACTORS from page 4
discrimination and housing discrimination
hurt many, leaving them
homeless. Perhaps a possible solution
for the current chaotic state of affairs
could be a rise in open co-op housing,
similar to that for university
students.
There are two types of underemployment:
visible and invisible. Visible
underemployment
is
underemployment in which an individual
works fewer than full-time
hours in their chosen field. Invisible
underemployment refers to the
employment situation in which an
individual is unable to find a job in
their chosen field, and is paid much
lower than their customary wages.
“Not in the Labor Force” is actually a
third type of underemployment in
which individuals cannot find suitable
work and quit the labor force
altogether.
In 2020, the underemployment rate
skyrocketed after the market crash.
The combination of underemployment,
stagnant wages and job layoffs
contribute
to
homelessness.
Mind Your Own Mental
Health
It is estimated that up to six percent
of all American adults suffer from
some type of mental health issue.
Among the homeless, this rate rises to
20-25%. Although Washtenaw County
has remarkable mental health services,
many individuals go untreated,
sometimes in combination with substance
use. Mental illness sometimes
is just the way the brain is wired, and
is biochemical in nature. Thus, mental
illness is not the individual’s fault.
Soldiers returning from World War
I, WWII, Korea and Vietnam had
mental issues termed as Shell-Shock,
now known as post traumatic stress
disorder. This contributed to homelessness,
and was sometimes tied to
domestic abuse and job loss, leaving
Know When to Quit, it’s
Not Legit
A common stereotype of the homeless
is that they are all addicted to
alcohol and/or drugs, which is false.
However, it is true that among the
homeless population the rate of substance
use is disproportionately high.
In 2017, the National Coalition for the
Homeless found that 38% of homeless
people were dependent on alcohol,
while 26% used it alone or in combination
with other substances. In some
cases, homeless people have even
turned to using crack, meth or heroin
in order to obtain Social Security Disability
payments. While this is a fraud,
it is because that may be the last
option for obtaining housing.
Now that Fentanyl and other synthetic
drugs are on the street market,
the rates of addiction and death are
poverty and
some individuals or families homeless.
As many as 200,000 veterans are
living on the streets today.
on the rise. I feel that random drug
testing at the shelter should be mandatory,
and a program like Celebrate
Recovery should have meetings at the
Delonis Center and/or the Commuinty
Mental Health Annex. This
can help individuals break their
addiction.
This is the end of my first article on
the ten categories and 17 factors. Still
to come is discussion of shelter issues
and the money trail from HUD (federal
Housing and Urban Development)
down to local authority.
Stay optimistic, keep your chin up,
you matter. You are loved. Thank you
to my supporters!
To be continued …
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[16
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Quick shrimp curry
JOHN BUCKLEY
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
1 frozen package of those little dinky
shrimp (cooked)
1 onion, chopped
1 can cream-of-whatever soup
(shrimp, chicken, mushroom, celery)
1 or more teaspoons of curry powder
Directions:
Sauté the chopped onion in butter or
oil for a few minutes until it starts getting
translucent.
Stir the curry powder together with
the concentrated soup.
Dump the soup-curry mixture and
the shrimp into the pan with the
onions. Stir it all together until the
shrimp is heated through.
NOVEMBER 3, 2023
Let’s use West Park
bandshell for democracy
SCOOP STEVENS
Groundcover contributor
The West Park bandshell was built
during the Great Depression and
received funding from the Works Project
Administration. It became part of
the park in 1938 and has served as a
focal point for community and charitable
events. Now it needs to be converted
into a political assembly
platform and West Park needs to be
renamed Democracy Park.
America’s founding fathers established
a constitutional plutocracy that
gave “we the people” just enough
democracy not to revolt. We are in a
new age now that requires citizen participation.
Converting the bandshell
into a political assembly platform
where people would learn how to be
responsible citizens by hearing
speeches, debates and discussions on
public affairs would foster a democratic
movement. People would be
participants in democracy by exercising
their First Amendment right to
assemble peaceably and this would
lead to genuine community
development.
The 1960s was a revolutionary era.
There was a vibrant civil rights movement
and a passionate anti-war movement.
During this time many bands
played at the bandshell including the
Grateful Dead. These were the good
old days for many, but we must stay up
with the times by using the bandshell
to help create a democratic
movement.
For more information about the
city’s planning process for the West
Park bandshell, visit www.a2gov.org/
departments/Parks-Recreation/
administrative/Pages/WestParkBandshell.aspx
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12/3/2023
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