State funding increase will help eliminate deficit
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—A state funding increase and other cost-saving measures got the Tecumseh school district a few steps closer to eliminating a potential deficit of up to $215,000 for the 2000-2001 school year.
“We’re $248,000 better off this week than last week,” said Tom Emery, business manager for the district.
The state recently allocated additional money per each K-12 student per for the 2000-2001 school year to school districts including Tecumseh.
Tecumseh schools will get an increase of $63 per student, Emery said at Monday’s school board meeting. Including the increase, the state will now provide $6,098 per student in the Tecumseh school district, he said.
Although the state money is clearly beneficial for the district, it will not immediately change any of Tecumseh’s plans for programs in the 2000-2001 school year. Previously, Tecumseh administrators said despite the looming deficit they still hoped to provide their full slate of new and continuing educational and athletic programs, including the introduction of a “T-1” transitional grade between kindergarten and first grade.
Emery reported that some of the 2000-2001 budget savings resulted from hiring less experienced—but still qualified—school teachers, in addition to the cutting and adjusting of other district costs.
Administrators expect the budget situation to continue to improve.
The goal to focus on now, Tecumseh officials said, is attracting students to the district.
“I’m looking forward to providing great things for kids,” said Richard D. Fauble, Tecumseh superintendent.
Citing a $28 million September bond issue to reconfigure school buildings—which all school trustees and officials support—Fauble said the plan, if passed, would benefit future generations of children and Tecumseh’s steadily growing community.
If more students come to the Tecumseh schools, the state would increase funding to the district.
The community is definitely growing, with up to 30 new housing developments in the works or recently completed in the last year or two, Fauble said.
But school board members have consistently voiced a concern that schools of choice in the area, as well as parochial schools, are attracting potential Tecumseh public schools to pick alternatives.
The game plan, school administrators said, is to plan ahead for growth, keeping the district abreast of competition.
Citing wealthier school districts in the area, Emery said the Ann Arbor school district—a much larger district—gets a few thousand dollars more per student every year, although some of that money comes from locally levied property taxes.
Emery acknowledges that Tecumseh is nowhere near the size of Ann Arbor.
As Tecumseh grows, school officials said, it make sense for the community and adminstrators to be ambitious about securing additional state funding and other grants for school programs.
The more money the district has per student the more likely it is the district has room to plan for additional programs, particularly support programs like the T-1 class, officials said.
The estimated K-12 student population in the fall is 3.230 students. After a slight dip in Tecumseh’s student population during a mid-year count in February, Tecumseh school officials said the informal June count showed that not only were the district’s numbers “slightly up,” but that the district is primed for a modest—yet steady—student growth in the 2000-2001 school year.
Originally published Tuesday, June 27, 2000
Tuesday, June 27, 2000
Thursday, June 15, 2000
Ohio attracts gas shoppers
Ohio attracts gas shoppers
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Sylvannia, Ohio— Michigan motorists joined their Buckeye counterparts Wednesday, lining up by the half-dozen to fill tanks at a Clark station on West Alexis Road.
Ted Martin, a Clark manager, said he sees a lot of cars with dark-blue plates whose drivers are buying gas just across the state line for about 30 cents per gallon less than in Michigan.
Although he doesn’t track how many Michigan cars fill up, he knows his station was “slammed” by customers Wednesday.
Clark charges $1.73 per gallon for regular, compared to more than $2 per gallon in the Ann Arbor area.
“It doesn’t take a brain surgeon,” said a Temperance, Mich., man who wanted to be known only as Joe, as he filled up nine 2.5 gallon containers and his truck’s tank. “The state of Michigan doesn’t care. They’d like to see it stay at $2 a gallon,” he said.
The difference between the states can’t entirely be explained by taxes, although Michigan’s are about eight cents more. It levies 19 cents a gallon as well as a 6-percent sales tax. In a $2 gallon og gas, that amounts to 48 cents in state and federal taxes.
Ohio levies a 22-cent-per gallon state gas tax on top of the federal tax, for a total of 40 cents.
David Littmann, chief economist for Comerica Bank in Detroit, called Michigan’s gas sales tax unethical.
“It’s taxes on top of taxes, he said, adding that he doesn’t expect it to be repealed since it raised $250 million last year.
A pipeline break in Jackson that disrupted one-third of Michigan’s supply could explain the rest of the difference. But at the Sylvannia Clark, Michigan motorists had their own theories.
“It must be a monopoly,” said Paul Never of Temperance. “I can’t believe prices can jump so much,” said Never, a Ford Motor Co., employee, as he filled up his Ford 4-by 4 pickup.
Farther south in Toledo, Shell and BP stations weren’t as crowded. Nonetheless managers reported an increase in Michigan motorists this week.
“They’re just bitter, they’re just angry,” said Becky Merritt, manager of the Shell at Monroe and Secor.
“
Graphic
Average gas prices
Michigan
Current $2.010
Month ago: $1.520
Year Ago: $1.139
Toledo
Current: $1.680
Month ago: $1.458
Year Ago: $1.086
Originally published Thursday, June 15, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Sylvannia, Ohio— Michigan motorists joined their Buckeye counterparts Wednesday, lining up by the half-dozen to fill tanks at a Clark station on West Alexis Road.
Ted Martin, a Clark manager, said he sees a lot of cars with dark-blue plates whose drivers are buying gas just across the state line for about 30 cents per gallon less than in Michigan.
Although he doesn’t track how many Michigan cars fill up, he knows his station was “slammed” by customers Wednesday.
Clark charges $1.73 per gallon for regular, compared to more than $2 per gallon in the Ann Arbor area.
“It doesn’t take a brain surgeon,” said a Temperance, Mich., man who wanted to be known only as Joe, as he filled up nine 2.5 gallon containers and his truck’s tank. “The state of Michigan doesn’t care. They’d like to see it stay at $2 a gallon,” he said.
The difference between the states can’t entirely be explained by taxes, although Michigan’s are about eight cents more. It levies 19 cents a gallon as well as a 6-percent sales tax. In a $2 gallon og gas, that amounts to 48 cents in state and federal taxes.
Ohio levies a 22-cent-per gallon state gas tax on top of the federal tax, for a total of 40 cents.
David Littmann, chief economist for Comerica Bank in Detroit, called Michigan’s gas sales tax unethical.
“It’s taxes on top of taxes, he said, adding that he doesn’t expect it to be repealed since it raised $250 million last year.
A pipeline break in Jackson that disrupted one-third of Michigan’s supply could explain the rest of the difference. But at the Sylvannia Clark, Michigan motorists had their own theories.
“It must be a monopoly,” said Paul Never of Temperance. “I can’t believe prices can jump so much,” said Never, a Ford Motor Co., employee, as he filled up his Ford 4-by 4 pickup.
Farther south in Toledo, Shell and BP stations weren’t as crowded. Nonetheless managers reported an increase in Michigan motorists this week.
“They’re just bitter, they’re just angry,” said Becky Merritt, manager of the Shell at Monroe and Secor.
“
Graphic
Average gas prices
Michigan
Current $2.010
Month ago: $1.520
Year Ago: $1.139
Toledo
Current: $1.680
Month ago: $1.458
Year Ago: $1.086
Originally published Thursday, June 15, 2000
Friday, May 26, 2000
They’re an abandoned but well-loved lot
They’re an abandoned but well-loved lot
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Photo Caption: Orphan Car Show
An Arbor resident Bob Elton will drive his 1937 LaSalle, left, and his 1937 Hudson Terraplane to the fourth annual Orphan Car Show in Ypsilanti’s Riverside Park June 4.
The cars to be shown in the upcoming Orphan Car Show share the distinction of having being discontinued by their manufacturers.
The best thing about Ypsilanti’s Orphan Car Show is that you can see cars you never get a chance to see anywhere else, said Bob Elton, a veteran car collector.
Elton, an Ann Arbor resident, has two 1937 antique cars he’s taking—and driving—to the fourth annual show in Riverside Park next week.
Jack Miller, curator of the Ypsilanti automotive museum and an orphan car-show coordinator, said several hundred people will show dozens of car models at the June 4 event. An estimated 3,000 to 5,000 spectators are expected to attend.
The event, the first of its kind in the Midwest, is called the “orphan” car show because automobiles such as Hudsons, Kaisers, Dusenbergs, Ramblers and Tuckers have been “abandoned” by their parent manufacturer, event coordinators said.
Elton bought his 1937 Terraplane, made by Hudson Motor Car Co., in 1979.
“I bought it in pieces and brought it home in pieces,” Elton recalled. It took nearly eight years to repair the cream-colored car to the point it was fully functional, he said.
“You just keep plugging away at it; you can’t rush it,” Elton said. Luckily for him, the only Hudson parts shop in the world is in Ypsilanti.
“I’ve always liked Hudsons. When I was real little, I can remember the new 1949 Hudson. It was a sleek, bullet-shaped car,” he said.
Elton was so fascinated by the Hudson model, he said, that he used to draw picture upon picture of the car.
He brought his first Hudson—a 1950 model—in 1972 and drove it to a Detroit-area car show. “The more I studied up on Hudsons, the more I learned about them,” Elton said. “They were a small company that did big things.”
Eugene M. Silverman, a Superior Township resident, will show his 1956 Citroen at the show. Silverman said it will be his first Ypsilanti orphan car show.
Silverman enjoys collecting French cars, particularly Citroens. Back in the 1960s, he was in the army and stationed in France. An acquaintance drove up one day in a Citroen and Silverman fell in love with the model, he said.
“It’s lived its life in Paris,” Silverman said of the model he currently owns.
In 1976, Silverman, with his wife, returned to France, and instead of renting a modern car, they bought the 1956 black Citroen.
“This is quite a historic car to the French. In its day—the car was basically built from 1934 to 195700 … it was very innovative,” Silverman said.
Citing the Citroen’s unibody and front-wheel construction, the car was built in a modern way, Silverman said. “In a sense it was a forerunner of what modern cars would be like,” Silverman said.
The car, in its prime, was built to go up to 85 miles per hour but Silverman said he does not drive it faster than 65. With four doors, four seats and a very spacious interior, Silverman said it makes for a “very comfortable ride.” In contrast, Silverman’s other Citroen, a 1923 model which he bought in 1973, was made to go about 30 miles per hour but it is not very stable, he said.
“I wouldn’t dare drive it over 25 miles (an hour),” Silverman said.
The 1923 Citroen, which used to go to Greenfield Village’s Henry Ford Museum displays, has one door and seats two people, Silverman said.
The Ypsilanti Orphan Car Show will also feature Cushman, Indian and Henderson motor scooters and motorcycles along with Federal al-Knight, Garford and Gotfredson trucks, event organizers said.
Company executives from DaimerChrysler and other automotive companies will provide a narration of each company’s history.
The Details
The event will take place June 4 from 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Admission for spectators is $3. For more information, call Jack Miller, curator of the Ypsilanti Automative Heritage Collection at (734) 482-5200 or call the Ypsilanti Area Convention and Visitor’s Bureau at (734) 482-4444. The bureau’s Website is www.ypsilanti.org
Originally published Friday, May 26. 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Photo Caption: Orphan Car Show
An Arbor resident Bob Elton will drive his 1937 LaSalle, left, and his 1937 Hudson Terraplane to the fourth annual Orphan Car Show in Ypsilanti’s Riverside Park June 4.
The cars to be shown in the upcoming Orphan Car Show share the distinction of having being discontinued by their manufacturers.
The best thing about Ypsilanti’s Orphan Car Show is that you can see cars you never get a chance to see anywhere else, said Bob Elton, a veteran car collector.
Elton, an Ann Arbor resident, has two 1937 antique cars he’s taking—and driving—to the fourth annual show in Riverside Park next week.
Jack Miller, curator of the Ypsilanti automotive museum and an orphan car-show coordinator, said several hundred people will show dozens of car models at the June 4 event. An estimated 3,000 to 5,000 spectators are expected to attend.
The event, the first of its kind in the Midwest, is called the “orphan” car show because automobiles such as Hudsons, Kaisers, Dusenbergs, Ramblers and Tuckers have been “abandoned” by their parent manufacturer, event coordinators said.
Elton bought his 1937 Terraplane, made by Hudson Motor Car Co., in 1979.
“I bought it in pieces and brought it home in pieces,” Elton recalled. It took nearly eight years to repair the cream-colored car to the point it was fully functional, he said.
“You just keep plugging away at it; you can’t rush it,” Elton said. Luckily for him, the only Hudson parts shop in the world is in Ypsilanti.
“I’ve always liked Hudsons. When I was real little, I can remember the new 1949 Hudson. It was a sleek, bullet-shaped car,” he said.
Elton was so fascinated by the Hudson model, he said, that he used to draw picture upon picture of the car.
He brought his first Hudson—a 1950 model—in 1972 and drove it to a Detroit-area car show. “The more I studied up on Hudsons, the more I learned about them,” Elton said. “They were a small company that did big things.”
Eugene M. Silverman, a Superior Township resident, will show his 1956 Citroen at the show. Silverman said it will be his first Ypsilanti orphan car show.
Silverman enjoys collecting French cars, particularly Citroens. Back in the 1960s, he was in the army and stationed in France. An acquaintance drove up one day in a Citroen and Silverman fell in love with the model, he said.
“It’s lived its life in Paris,” Silverman said of the model he currently owns.
In 1976, Silverman, with his wife, returned to France, and instead of renting a modern car, they bought the 1956 black Citroen.
“This is quite a historic car to the French. In its day—the car was basically built from 1934 to 195700 … it was very innovative,” Silverman said.
Citing the Citroen’s unibody and front-wheel construction, the car was built in a modern way, Silverman said. “In a sense it was a forerunner of what modern cars would be like,” Silverman said.
The car, in its prime, was built to go up to 85 miles per hour but Silverman said he does not drive it faster than 65. With four doors, four seats and a very spacious interior, Silverman said it makes for a “very comfortable ride.” In contrast, Silverman’s other Citroen, a 1923 model which he bought in 1973, was made to go about 30 miles per hour but it is not very stable, he said.
“I wouldn’t dare drive it over 25 miles (an hour),” Silverman said.
The 1923 Citroen, which used to go to Greenfield Village’s Henry Ford Museum displays, has one door and seats two people, Silverman said.
The Ypsilanti Orphan Car Show will also feature Cushman, Indian and Henderson motor scooters and motorcycles along with Federal al-Knight, Garford and Gotfredson trucks, event organizers said.
Company executives from DaimerChrysler and other automotive companies will provide a narration of each company’s history.
The Details
The event will take place June 4 from 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Admission for spectators is $3. For more information, call Jack Miller, curator of the Ypsilanti Automative Heritage Collection at (734) 482-5200 or call the Ypsilanti Area Convention and Visitor’s Bureau at (734) 482-4444. The bureau’s Website is www.ypsilanti.org
Originally published Friday, May 26. 2000
Wednesday, May 24, 2000
Marsh’s Office Supply: a lot of memories in store
Marsh’s Office Supply
A lot of memories in store
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Bob Marsh decides to move his long-time family business from downtown Ypsilanti to his home.
Bob Marsh remembers back in the 1950s and 60s when Marsh’s Office Supply was open until 9 p.m. on Friday nights and people lined up to buy everything from typewrite ribbons to pens to office furniture.
Ypsilanti’s downtown was a different place then. The booming downtown district boasted three hardware stores, three men’s clothing stores, two women’s clothing stores, three shoe stores, two househould-furniture stores, three jewelry stores and McClellan’s, a five-and-dime across the stress from the office supply store, Marsh recalled.
Old friends and new friends walked in to talk and to buy products from the family business, Marsh said.
A lot has changed in the office-supply business since Thorvald F. Marsh, Bob Marsh’s father, opened shop in 1946. For one, Bob Marsh doesn’t sell typewriter ribbons or calculators, and not too many paper supplies, anymore. Not as many people, particularly new customers, come by either, Marsh said. Still, he said, the store has done reasonably well in recent years.
But because of health reasons, Marsh, 65, decided to sell the retail space at 22 N. Washington St. last year, and the store will close July 1.
Marsh doesn’t allow himself to get too caught up in nostalgia. The office-supply business--like other businesses--has become more specialized, he said.
“You have to reinvent yourself to survive,” Marsh said. “To make any money you have to have a specialty, because competition is fierce,” Marsh said.
For the past 10 years Marsh has specialized in ergonomic or comfortable high-tech office furniture.
The rise of voice mail, fax, computers and other modern convenience will allow Marsh to continue his business, Marsh’s Inc., on a smaller scale from his home, he said.
Marsh doesn’t deny that superstores such as Office Max have affected businesses. Ann Arbor used to have another Marsh office-supply store for a number of years, Marsh said. Both stores featured different products, from greeting cards to computers, back when computers were bulky and expensive. Marsh said he now gets his edge on superstores by specializing in ergonomic office-work stations and “quality” office furniture.
Photo Caption: The expanded use of computers and other technology will allow Bob Marsh to continue his business, now called Marsh’s Inc. from his home. Marsh has sold the retail space at 22 N. North Washington St. in Ypsilanti last year, and the store will close July 1.
Marsh doesn’t allow himself to get too caught up in memories.
Marsh earned a marketing degree from Michigan State University. Then Marsh returned to work for the family business full-time.
Marsh married Rose Marie Marsh in 1959, the same year he started to work full-time at the office supply store. He credits Rose for putting in countless hours in the store, particularly in the past few years.
On a recent day Marsh looked around the store’s walls, which are rapidly becoming bare. It’s starting to feel empty,” he said quietly.
Everything’s on sale. The white-out, the yellow chalk, the mail labels, even the fixtures left on the walls. The sign on the front window says, “50-75% off. All Reasonable Offers considered. Everything Must go.”
The hours he puts into work now are limited, Marsh said. In the next few weeks, Marsh said he has a lot of cleaning and organizing to do. In his office, papers are everywhere but stacked in an organized way.
“I’ve been shredding and ripping and tearing papers,” Marsh aid. “You don’t realize how much you can accumulate in 50 years.”
Photo Credit: Kirk Speer
Originally published May 24, 2000
A lot of memories in store
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Bob Marsh decides to move his long-time family business from downtown Ypsilanti to his home.
Bob Marsh remembers back in the 1950s and 60s when Marsh’s Office Supply was open until 9 p.m. on Friday nights and people lined up to buy everything from typewrite ribbons to pens to office furniture.
Ypsilanti’s downtown was a different place then. The booming downtown district boasted three hardware stores, three men’s clothing stores, two women’s clothing stores, three shoe stores, two househould-furniture stores, three jewelry stores and McClellan’s, a five-and-dime across the stress from the office supply store, Marsh recalled.
Old friends and new friends walked in to talk and to buy products from the family business, Marsh said.
A lot has changed in the office-supply business since Thorvald F. Marsh, Bob Marsh’s father, opened shop in 1946. For one, Bob Marsh doesn’t sell typewriter ribbons or calculators, and not too many paper supplies, anymore. Not as many people, particularly new customers, come by either, Marsh said. Still, he said, the store has done reasonably well in recent years.
But because of health reasons, Marsh, 65, decided to sell the retail space at 22 N. Washington St. last year, and the store will close July 1.
Marsh doesn’t allow himself to get too caught up in nostalgia. The office-supply business--like other businesses--has become more specialized, he said.
“You have to reinvent yourself to survive,” Marsh said. “To make any money you have to have a specialty, because competition is fierce,” Marsh said.
For the past 10 years Marsh has specialized in ergonomic or comfortable high-tech office furniture.
The rise of voice mail, fax, computers and other modern convenience will allow Marsh to continue his business, Marsh’s Inc., on a smaller scale from his home, he said.
Marsh doesn’t deny that superstores such as Office Max have affected businesses. Ann Arbor used to have another Marsh office-supply store for a number of years, Marsh said. Both stores featured different products, from greeting cards to computers, back when computers were bulky and expensive. Marsh said he now gets his edge on superstores by specializing in ergonomic office-work stations and “quality” office furniture.
Photo Caption: The expanded use of computers and other technology will allow Bob Marsh to continue his business, now called Marsh’s Inc. from his home. Marsh has sold the retail space at 22 N. North Washington St. in Ypsilanti last year, and the store will close July 1.
Marsh doesn’t allow himself to get too caught up in memories.
Marsh earned a marketing degree from Michigan State University. Then Marsh returned to work for the family business full-time.
Marsh married Rose Marie Marsh in 1959, the same year he started to work full-time at the office supply store. He credits Rose for putting in countless hours in the store, particularly in the past few years.
On a recent day Marsh looked around the store’s walls, which are rapidly becoming bare. It’s starting to feel empty,” he said quietly.
Everything’s on sale. The white-out, the yellow chalk, the mail labels, even the fixtures left on the walls. The sign on the front window says, “50-75% off. All Reasonable Offers considered. Everything Must go.”
The hours he puts into work now are limited, Marsh said. In the next few weeks, Marsh said he has a lot of cleaning and organizing to do. In his office, papers are everywhere but stacked in an organized way.
“I’ve been shredding and ripping and tearing papers,” Marsh aid. “You don’t realize how much you can accumulate in 50 years.”
Photo Credit: Kirk Speer
Originally published May 24, 2000
Friday, May 19, 2000
Their activism is only natural
Their activism is only natural
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Corinne Sikorski, general manager at the Ypsilanti Food Co-op doesn’t consider herself an in-your-face kind of activist.
At the same time, you could say that Sikorski—and other members of the co-op—are definitely politically involved citizens. Sikorski said she and others practice a low key but effective kind of activism.
The co-op on North River Street in Depot Town isn’t just a place to get high-quality organic spinach, tofu helper or granola mix. It also serves as a place to learn the buzz about what’s going on in the political work of food and agriculture, said Heather Nobriga, a co-op employee for the past several years.
The Ypsilanti Food Co-op, which is celebrating its 25th birthday this weekend, has come a long way sine a small group of people—many who were Eastern Michigan University student at the time—were allotted a bag of available produce each week for $3 in the mid-1970s.
The community feel of the store and the concern that members have for the community and grassroots organizing has remained the same throughout the years, Sikorski said. For the past 25 years, she has been a volunteer, member and then full-time employee for the co-op.
The co-op has grown and now has nearly 2,000 lifetime members and 600-1,000 customers who frequent the store, Sikorski said. Not only has the co-op expanded but the seven-person board has worked to repair the store’s interior. In recent years, Sikorski said they’ve also added new products including ready-made healthy frozen meals.
Sikorski said she finds that once people learn about the co-op they want to learn more about organic food and laws that regulate food, fruits and vegetables and coffee.
For example, customers who frequent the co-op can learn about fair trade for coffee farmers in Central and South America through brochures in the store. These fair-trade companies and cooperatives deal directly with the farmer cutting out the middleman—known to farmers as ‘coyotes,’ who often take and keep the profit for themselves, Sikorski said.
The Ypsilanti Co-op does it business with cooperatives that believe in fair trade an exchange, maximizing the chance that the farmers will benefit from their crops, Sikorski said.
“It’s this kind of activism—on the grassroots level—that helps people become more aware, Nobriga said.
“By having good food—it doesn’t necessarily sell itself—but people try it and realize it is a better product,” Sikorski said.
At the register, customers usually can find a petition on genetically engineered food or another hot-topic food issue when they ring up their purchases. There’s no pressure to sign or not to sign but many co-op members see first-hand that their signatures and grassroots organizing does make a difference, store employees said.
In a recent national effort, Ypsilanti community co-op members played their part in the U.S. Agricultural Department regulations of organic food, Sikorski said.
In 1997, after 10 years of consideration of what is a proper organic product, the Agricultural Department’s guidelines were still not quite right, Sikorski explained. So around that time, 300,000 critics across the country wrote the federal agency objecting to the department putting the “organic” label on foods grown from genetically modified seeds, treated by disease-killing irradiation and fertilized by sewage sludge.
In 1999, the Agricultural Department reviewed the complaints and revised the original guidelines, sin Sikorski said. Now USDA Organic will really mean organic, she said.
“We have a voice,” Sikorski said of Ypsilanti Food Co-op members and the small but important role they played in that issue.
On a local level, the co-op’s main purpose from its inception remains the same—to provide nutritious and organic food options to people in their community, Sikorski said.
This month as part of the store’s promotional May Membership Madness month purchasing a lifetime membership is half of—only $5. Joining is easy, Sikorski said. A $10 non-refundable fee gives a person a lifetime membership, ownership of the store, shopping discounts and voting privileges for board-member elections.
As for Sikorski co-op work might not be exactly what she set out to do as an EMU student in the 1970s, but now she can’t see herself doing anything else.
Saturday Events
The Ypsilanti Food Co-op will hold a pizza bake-off at noon Saturday. Open to everyone; no entry fee or registration required. Just show up with your pre-made, pre-baked pizza in hand. Bring your recipe(s) to share. Pizza will be judged in the following categories” quickest, most nutritious, dessert, cheapest, alternative and gourmet.
The co-op will also hold a general membership meeting along with a Mystery Theatre. The event begins at 6 p.m. at the farmer’s market (The Freight House.) Everyone is welcome to attend. Bring a vegetarian potluck dish to pass or pay $5 admission at the door. For more information, call (734) 483-1520.
Photo Credit: Elli Gurfinkel
Photo Caption: Ypsilanti Food Cooperative regulars Bonny, left, and Carroll Osborn of Ypsilanti check out the bulk-food section in the Depot Town store. Cooperative employees says its main goal is to provide nutritious food for the community.
Originally published Friday, May 19, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Corinne Sikorski, general manager at the Ypsilanti Food Co-op doesn’t consider herself an in-your-face kind of activist.
At the same time, you could say that Sikorski—and other members of the co-op—are definitely politically involved citizens. Sikorski said she and others practice a low key but effective kind of activism.
The co-op on North River Street in Depot Town isn’t just a place to get high-quality organic spinach, tofu helper or granola mix. It also serves as a place to learn the buzz about what’s going on in the political work of food and agriculture, said Heather Nobriga, a co-op employee for the past several years.
The Ypsilanti Food Co-op, which is celebrating its 25th birthday this weekend, has come a long way sine a small group of people—many who were Eastern Michigan University student at the time—were allotted a bag of available produce each week for $3 in the mid-1970s.
The community feel of the store and the concern that members have for the community and grassroots organizing has remained the same throughout the years, Sikorski said. For the past 25 years, she has been a volunteer, member and then full-time employee for the co-op.
The co-op has grown and now has nearly 2,000 lifetime members and 600-1,000 customers who frequent the store, Sikorski said. Not only has the co-op expanded but the seven-person board has worked to repair the store’s interior. In recent years, Sikorski said they’ve also added new products including ready-made healthy frozen meals.
Sikorski said she finds that once people learn about the co-op they want to learn more about organic food and laws that regulate food, fruits and vegetables and coffee.
For example, customers who frequent the co-op can learn about fair trade for coffee farmers in Central and South America through brochures in the store. These fair-trade companies and cooperatives deal directly with the farmer cutting out the middleman—known to farmers as ‘coyotes,’ who often take and keep the profit for themselves, Sikorski said.
The Ypsilanti Co-op does it business with cooperatives that believe in fair trade an exchange, maximizing the chance that the farmers will benefit from their crops, Sikorski said.
“It’s this kind of activism—on the grassroots level—that helps people become more aware, Nobriga said.
“By having good food—it doesn’t necessarily sell itself—but people try it and realize it is a better product,” Sikorski said.
At the register, customers usually can find a petition on genetically engineered food or another hot-topic food issue when they ring up their purchases. There’s no pressure to sign or not to sign but many co-op members see first-hand that their signatures and grassroots organizing does make a difference, store employees said.
In a recent national effort, Ypsilanti community co-op members played their part in the U.S. Agricultural Department regulations of organic food, Sikorski said.
In 1997, after 10 years of consideration of what is a proper organic product, the Agricultural Department’s guidelines were still not quite right, Sikorski explained. So around that time, 300,000 critics across the country wrote the federal agency objecting to the department putting the “organic” label on foods grown from genetically modified seeds, treated by disease-killing irradiation and fertilized by sewage sludge.
In 1999, the Agricultural Department reviewed the complaints and revised the original guidelines, sin Sikorski said. Now USDA Organic will really mean organic, she said.
“We have a voice,” Sikorski said of Ypsilanti Food Co-op members and the small but important role they played in that issue.
On a local level, the co-op’s main purpose from its inception remains the same—to provide nutritious and organic food options to people in their community, Sikorski said.
This month as part of the store’s promotional May Membership Madness month purchasing a lifetime membership is half of—only $5. Joining is easy, Sikorski said. A $10 non-refundable fee gives a person a lifetime membership, ownership of the store, shopping discounts and voting privileges for board-member elections.
As for Sikorski co-op work might not be exactly what she set out to do as an EMU student in the 1970s, but now she can’t see herself doing anything else.
Saturday Events
The Ypsilanti Food Co-op will hold a pizza bake-off at noon Saturday. Open to everyone; no entry fee or registration required. Just show up with your pre-made, pre-baked pizza in hand. Bring your recipe(s) to share. Pizza will be judged in the following categories” quickest, most nutritious, dessert, cheapest, alternative and gourmet.
The co-op will also hold a general membership meeting along with a Mystery Theatre. The event begins at 6 p.m. at the farmer’s market (The Freight House.) Everyone is welcome to attend. Bring a vegetarian potluck dish to pass or pay $5 admission at the door. For more information, call (734) 483-1520.
Photo Credit: Elli Gurfinkel
Photo Caption: Ypsilanti Food Cooperative regulars Bonny, left, and Carroll Osborn of Ypsilanti check out the bulk-food section in the Depot Town store. Cooperative employees says its main goal is to provide nutritious food for the community.
Originally published Friday, May 19, 2000
Thursday, May 11, 2000
She sets a strong record of accomplishment
She sets a strong record of accomplishment
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
When Asia Renning was 2 and a newcomer to the United States, she couldn’t walk, stand or crawl.
Renning, now 19, and a member of the Milan High School cross country and track teams, routinely sets school records, in addition to breaking her own personal times.
In recognition of her athletic accomplishments, she recently won a Yes I can! Award—as did 35 other individuals—from an international agency that honors extraordinary people with disabilities.
Born in South Korea, Renning was adopted and brought to the United States by an American couple, Adair and Jerry Renning, in the early ‘80s. Life in a South Korean orphanage hampered some of her early developmental years, since she didn’t receive any individual attention, her parents said.
Although eventually diagnosed with autism, Renning slowly but surely has blossomed.
Adair Renning said some non-traditional medical treatments, including auditory-integration therapy and allergy treatments, helped Asia through the years. She now loves to ask questions when she meets someone she doesn’t know. It’s not long before they’re swapping stories about good restaurants in town (China One), fruits she likes (strawberries and apples) and how she likes to run (but not stretch.)
Asia Renning has loved to run since she was a little girl, Jerry Renning said.
“Even when she was 10 years old, she was as fast as the wind,” he said.
“Her feet would take off first; her legs were ahead of the rest of the body,” Jerry Renning recalled of their father-daughter jogging trips.
Asia has been a member of the track and cross country teams in the Milan schools since the seventh grade, with the same group of girls.
“It’s fun. It’s happy. Good exercise, good team,” Asia said at a recent track practice at Milan Middle School’s track.
Steve Porter, the track and cross country coach at the Milan schools, said Asia helps the team not only by being one of the top five runners on the cross country team, but also by teaching the other girls about diversity and people with disabilities.
“Asia never ceases to surprise us, both athletically and on team discussions,” Porter said.
“There are no limits. She comes back and does more – so do all the girls.
Asia has faced a lot of challenges in life from the very beginning, Adair Renning said.
For her first two years, Asia whose birth mother died, lived in an orphanage since other family members couldn’t take care of her. Asia was born with Hirschprung’s disease, a failure of the nerve endings at the lower end of the colon to develop.
Because of a lack of medical supplies at the orphanage in South Korea, Adair Renning said, Asia didn’t receive adequate treatment in her early years.
The South Korean social services didn’t even have Asia on their list of “adoptable” children at first, Adair Renning said.
But after seeing a picture of her in an international adoption magazine, the Rennings petitioned to adopt Asia, whose Korean name at the time was Kyung Hee.
After several months and some community-based fundraising efforts, the couple finally brought Asia to their home in Minnesota. Asia’s older sister, Meghann, also was adopted.
Adair and Jerry Renning named Asia for Ae Ja Choi, a temporary foster mother she lived with in South Korea shortly before coming to the U.S.
It was challenging for everyone in the family in the early years, the couple said. But after coming to Milan 14 years ago, the family developed a supportive network at the Milan schools. Asia has come to enjoy her classes, making new friends and learning how to cook, Adair Renning said.
Asia attends a special education program at Milan High School and will graduate in two years.
She also had a final colostomy performed four year ago and now her only health problems are a few food and environmental allergies, Adair Renning said.
Asia may also move out from her parents’ home in the next few years to a group home or an alternate-roommate situation, her mother said.
Asia said she likes track and cross country equally, but Adair Renning said Asia frequently changes her mind about which team sport she likes better. Jerry Renning and [Coach] Porter said they think she likes cross country more since everyone on the team runs the same distance together.
Plans after high school graduation include some short marathons and other competitive running. Asia’s mother said, “Running has become such a part of her life,” Adair Renning said.
Asia’s Records
· 200 meter dash, 36:06 seconds … May Washtenaw County Special Olympics.
· 400 meter dash, 0: 82 seconds … May Washtenaw County Special Olympics
· 1500 meter event, 6:14 May Washtenaw County Special Olympics
· 800 meter event, 2:55 … May 2000 meet at Saline High School
· 1600 meter event, 6:26 … Spring 2000 record
· 3200 meter event, 13:39 … 1999 record
· Best 3.1 mile Cross Country Time, 22:24 minutes … Fall 1999
Other awards
· 2000 Yes I can award recipient
· 1996 Summer Olympics Torch carrier in Detroit
Photo caption: Asia Renning, 19, who is autistic, is one of the top five runners on the Milan High School cross country team. She also helps teammates by teaching them about diversity and people with disabilities, coach Steve Porter said.
Originally published Thursday, May 11, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
When Asia Renning was 2 and a newcomer to the United States, she couldn’t walk, stand or crawl.
Renning, now 19, and a member of the Milan High School cross country and track teams, routinely sets school records, in addition to breaking her own personal times.
In recognition of her athletic accomplishments, she recently won a Yes I can! Award—as did 35 other individuals—from an international agency that honors extraordinary people with disabilities.
Born in South Korea, Renning was adopted and brought to the United States by an American couple, Adair and Jerry Renning, in the early ‘80s. Life in a South Korean orphanage hampered some of her early developmental years, since she didn’t receive any individual attention, her parents said.
Although eventually diagnosed with autism, Renning slowly but surely has blossomed.
Adair Renning said some non-traditional medical treatments, including auditory-integration therapy and allergy treatments, helped Asia through the years. She now loves to ask questions when she meets someone she doesn’t know. It’s not long before they’re swapping stories about good restaurants in town (China One), fruits she likes (strawberries and apples) and how she likes to run (but not stretch.)
Asia Renning has loved to run since she was a little girl, Jerry Renning said.
“Even when she was 10 years old, she was as fast as the wind,” he said.
“Her feet would take off first; her legs were ahead of the rest of the body,” Jerry Renning recalled of their father-daughter jogging trips.
Asia has been a member of the track and cross country teams in the Milan schools since the seventh grade, with the same group of girls.
“It’s fun. It’s happy. Good exercise, good team,” Asia said at a recent track practice at Milan Middle School’s track.
Steve Porter, the track and cross country coach at the Milan schools, said Asia helps the team not only by being one of the top five runners on the cross country team, but also by teaching the other girls about diversity and people with disabilities.
“Asia never ceases to surprise us, both athletically and on team discussions,” Porter said.
“There are no limits. She comes back and does more – so do all the girls.
Asia has faced a lot of challenges in life from the very beginning, Adair Renning said.
For her first two years, Asia whose birth mother died, lived in an orphanage since other family members couldn’t take care of her. Asia was born with Hirschprung’s disease, a failure of the nerve endings at the lower end of the colon to develop.
Because of a lack of medical supplies at the orphanage in South Korea, Adair Renning said, Asia didn’t receive adequate treatment in her early years.
The South Korean social services didn’t even have Asia on their list of “adoptable” children at first, Adair Renning said.
But after seeing a picture of her in an international adoption magazine, the Rennings petitioned to adopt Asia, whose Korean name at the time was Kyung Hee.
After several months and some community-based fundraising efforts, the couple finally brought Asia to their home in Minnesota. Asia’s older sister, Meghann, also was adopted.
Adair and Jerry Renning named Asia for Ae Ja Choi, a temporary foster mother she lived with in South Korea shortly before coming to the U.S.
It was challenging for everyone in the family in the early years, the couple said. But after coming to Milan 14 years ago, the family developed a supportive network at the Milan schools. Asia has come to enjoy her classes, making new friends and learning how to cook, Adair Renning said.
Asia attends a special education program at Milan High School and will graduate in two years.
She also had a final colostomy performed four year ago and now her only health problems are a few food and environmental allergies, Adair Renning said.
Asia may also move out from her parents’ home in the next few years to a group home or an alternate-roommate situation, her mother said.
Asia said she likes track and cross country equally, but Adair Renning said Asia frequently changes her mind about which team sport she likes better. Jerry Renning and [Coach] Porter said they think she likes cross country more since everyone on the team runs the same distance together.
Plans after high school graduation include some short marathons and other competitive running. Asia’s mother said, “Running has become such a part of her life,” Adair Renning said.
Asia’s Records
· 200 meter dash, 36:06 seconds … May Washtenaw County Special Olympics.
· 400 meter dash, 0: 82 seconds … May Washtenaw County Special Olympics
· 1500 meter event, 6:14 May Washtenaw County Special Olympics
· 800 meter event, 2:55 … May 2000 meet at Saline High School
· 1600 meter event, 6:26 … Spring 2000 record
· 3200 meter event, 13:39 … 1999 record
· Best 3.1 mile Cross Country Time, 22:24 minutes … Fall 1999
Other awards
· 2000 Yes I can award recipient
· 1996 Summer Olympics Torch carrier in Detroit
Photo caption: Asia Renning, 19, who is autistic, is one of the top five runners on the Milan High School cross country team. She also helps teammates by teaching them about diversity and people with disabilities, coach Steve Porter said.
Originally published Thursday, May 11, 2000
Cabela’s local megastore to open by fall
Cabela’s local megastore to open by fall
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Dundee, Michigan--Cabela’s is coming.
The national hunting, fishing and outdoor gear retailer will open a huge retail facility in Dundee in September.
Cabela’s officials boast the planned store, the seventh retail outfit in the chain, will become the “top tourist attraction” in Michigan, drawing 6 million visitors or more each year.
The Cabela’s showroom in Dundee is expected to feature everything from outdoor sports, including tents, sport-utility vehicles, clothing, and fishing and hunting equipment. The entire store will encompass 220,000 square feet.
Along with merchandise, the store will showcase stuffed animals from all over the world, much like a museum. Cabela’s will also have an aquarium, a display of antique and prize-worthy guns, and conference space for meetings.
Chelsea resident Don Janowiecki said he has been a faithful Cabela’s catalog customer for at least 15 years.
“I think a lot of people from Michigan and Ohio are going to come to this Cabela’s store,” Janowiecki said.
Bob Wolverton, vice president of the Lenawee County Conservation League, said he plans to go to Cabela’s to see what it’s like once the store opens. Like Janowiecki, Wolverton has received Cabela’s catalogs for years.
Cabela’s officials said another draw at the Dundee store will be an “interactive” laser gun shooting practice ranges where adults and children can practice targeting shooting at taped videos of animals.
The compound hall, built on 150 acres, will also house hotels, resteraunts and service stations in the future, similar to other Cabela’s complexes in rural and semi rural pockets of Nebraska, Minnesota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
“It’s conceivable that our six million (visitors) estimate could be broken. It’s a conservative estimate,” said Cheyanne West, retail marketing manager for Cabela’s Retail.
In comparison, Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall attracts between eight million and 11.5 million people a year, according to Briarwood general manager Marc P. Strich.
West said Dundee was picked as the next site for the Nebraska-based chain, due to a high number of Cabela’s catalogue sales coming in from the Michigan and Ohio areas.
Susy Avery, vice president of Travel Michigan in Lansing, said the agency courted Cabela’s so the company would pock Michigan as its next retail site. Michigan was vying for the store with other states including Pennsylvania and Ohio, Avery said.
Residents of communities near Dundee--including Tecumseh, Saline and Clinton--are preparing for a possible increase in traffic and development as a result of Cabela’s.
Patrick Burtch, the longtime village manager of Dundee, said he’s been contacted by some people who “have a lot of misinformation on Cabela’s”
“A lot of people have problems about the amount of traffic,” Burtch said.
“People get in their mind six-to-eight million Cabela’s visitors means six-to-eight million cars a year,” he said.
But the village manager said most Cabela’s customers and visitors will come in on tour buses or otherwise in groups. Citing a Cabelas’s-sponsored traffic impact study, Burtch said that 3,600 cars--during peak hours--would come off the expressway to Dundee.
“That’s just a small percentage increase,” he said.
Greg Golab, the appointed manager of the Dundee store said the retail outlet hopes to hire between 500 and 500 people. Most employment will come from the local area, Golab said. But several higher-level management positions may be filled with people from outside the state.
When asked whether he anticipates difficulty hiring, Golab said, “It’s definitely going to be an issue.”
The unemployment rate in Dundee, a town of 3,200 is about 2 percent, Burtch said. Nearby Tecumseh, Clinton and Saline have similar low-levels of unemployment, officials said. But Golab said he feels Cabela’s has a lot to offer its employees, citing the company’s compensation and benfits package.
Including Cabela’s catalog staff, the company employs 2,426 people in the United States. According to the Fortune magazine Webs site, Cabela’s revenue in 1998 was $667 million.
Originally published Saturday, March 11, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Dundee, Michigan--Cabela’s is coming.
The national hunting, fishing and outdoor gear retailer will open a huge retail facility in Dundee in September.
Cabela’s officials boast the planned store, the seventh retail outfit in the chain, will become the “top tourist attraction” in Michigan, drawing 6 million visitors or more each year.
The Cabela’s showroom in Dundee is expected to feature everything from outdoor sports, including tents, sport-utility vehicles, clothing, and fishing and hunting equipment. The entire store will encompass 220,000 square feet.
Along with merchandise, the store will showcase stuffed animals from all over the world, much like a museum. Cabela’s will also have an aquarium, a display of antique and prize-worthy guns, and conference space for meetings.
Chelsea resident Don Janowiecki said he has been a faithful Cabela’s catalog customer for at least 15 years.
“I think a lot of people from Michigan and Ohio are going to come to this Cabela’s store,” Janowiecki said.
Bob Wolverton, vice president of the Lenawee County Conservation League, said he plans to go to Cabela’s to see what it’s like once the store opens. Like Janowiecki, Wolverton has received Cabela’s catalogs for years.
Cabela’s officials said another draw at the Dundee store will be an “interactive” laser gun shooting practice ranges where adults and children can practice targeting shooting at taped videos of animals.
The compound hall, built on 150 acres, will also house hotels, resteraunts and service stations in the future, similar to other Cabela’s complexes in rural and semi rural pockets of Nebraska, Minnesota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
“It’s conceivable that our six million (visitors) estimate could be broken. It’s a conservative estimate,” said Cheyanne West, retail marketing manager for Cabela’s Retail.
In comparison, Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall attracts between eight million and 11.5 million people a year, according to Briarwood general manager Marc P. Strich.
West said Dundee was picked as the next site for the Nebraska-based chain, due to a high number of Cabela’s catalogue sales coming in from the Michigan and Ohio areas.
Susy Avery, vice president of Travel Michigan in Lansing, said the agency courted Cabela’s so the company would pock Michigan as its next retail site. Michigan was vying for the store with other states including Pennsylvania and Ohio, Avery said.
Residents of communities near Dundee--including Tecumseh, Saline and Clinton--are preparing for a possible increase in traffic and development as a result of Cabela’s.
Patrick Burtch, the longtime village manager of Dundee, said he’s been contacted by some people who “have a lot of misinformation on Cabela’s”
“A lot of people have problems about the amount of traffic,” Burtch said.
“People get in their mind six-to-eight million Cabela’s visitors means six-to-eight million cars a year,” he said.
But the village manager said most Cabela’s customers and visitors will come in on tour buses or otherwise in groups. Citing a Cabelas’s-sponsored traffic impact study, Burtch said that 3,600 cars--during peak hours--would come off the expressway to Dundee.
“That’s just a small percentage increase,” he said.
Greg Golab, the appointed manager of the Dundee store said the retail outlet hopes to hire between 500 and 500 people. Most employment will come from the local area, Golab said. But several higher-level management positions may be filled with people from outside the state.
When asked whether he anticipates difficulty hiring, Golab said, “It’s definitely going to be an issue.”
The unemployment rate in Dundee, a town of 3,200 is about 2 percent, Burtch said. Nearby Tecumseh, Clinton and Saline have similar low-levels of unemployment, officials said. But Golab said he feels Cabela’s has a lot to offer its employees, citing the company’s compensation and benfits package.
Including Cabela’s catalog staff, the company employs 2,426 people in the United States. According to the Fortune magazine Webs site, Cabela’s revenue in 1998 was $667 million.
Originally published Saturday, March 11, 2000
Wednesday, May 03, 2000
Amoco owners bid goodbye to life of service, The Ann Arbor News
Amoco owners bid goodbye to life of service
By Pamela Appea
The Ann Arbor News
Ypsilanti is about to lose a family-business fixture—the Ottos, who are getting out of the service-station business.
Harlan Otto has been in the service-station business for 40 years.
But Otto and his son Dieter Otto, said the time has come for someone else to run the Bob & Otto Amoco Service Station on Washtenaw Avenue. Dieter wants to go to graduate school at Eastern Michigan University. Harlan Otto, who sold the business to his son seven years ago, said he expects the new owner to take over within two to three weeks.
When Harlan Otto first bought the Amoco station in the 1960s, he sold gas for about 33 cents a gallon. Of course, a lot has changed in the Ypsilanti area since then.
Wastenaw Avenue had about six gas stations in the 1960s, he said, spanning from the Amoco gas station to the Eastern Michigan University campus area.
“They’re all extinct now,” Otto said.
“I’ve been here a long time.”
Pittsfield and Ypsilanti Townships have seen an explosion of growth and, with it, more
businesses.
“When we started here, we couldn’t find a sandwich place,” Otto said of his mechanics and other service-station workers.
Now the stack of menus from several different restaurants, several inches think on the station’s counter, tells a different story.
But the people who come in, the jokes, the stories and the friendship have remained the same over the years, Otto said.
Customers such as Ambrose Vyskocil Jr, an Ypsilanti Township resident, who has been coming to the service station for 10 years.
“Me and Otto can trade stories,” Vyskocil said.
But the service at Bob & Otto obviously is also a draw, he said.
“They’ve always treated me good,” Vyskocil said. “Once you find a place that does decent work, you stick with them.
Vyskocil, at the Amoco station for nearly 45 minutes on Friday afternoon, didn’t need any work done on his red 1993 GMC Yukon. He was just one of many customers stopping by to hold court with Otto and other friends.
Others, including Rosemary Markel, now a Manchester resident and formerly a resident of Ypsilanti Township came to say goodbye. Otto said that Markel has been coming to Bob & Otto’s for years.
The service station and repair shop is named for Harlan Otto and Bob Robinson, a former partner several years before. Otto said he kept the name sine it sounded catchy.
The service station is Otto’s third—and longest [job.] As a teen, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, traveling to the Philippines and Japan during WW II.
Otto, 73, also worked though …
Photo Caption: Dieter, left, and Harlan Otto have decided that it is time to make way for a new owner for Bob and & Otto’s Amoco on Washtenaw Avenue in Ypsilanti. Harlan started the business with a partner in 1960.
Originally Published Wednesday, May 3, 2000
By Pamela Appea
The Ann Arbor News
Ypsilanti is about to lose a family-business fixture—the Ottos, who are getting out of the service-station business.
Harlan Otto has been in the service-station business for 40 years.
But Otto and his son Dieter Otto, said the time has come for someone else to run the Bob & Otto Amoco Service Station on Washtenaw Avenue. Dieter wants to go to graduate school at Eastern Michigan University. Harlan Otto, who sold the business to his son seven years ago, said he expects the new owner to take over within two to three weeks.
When Harlan Otto first bought the Amoco station in the 1960s, he sold gas for about 33 cents a gallon. Of course, a lot has changed in the Ypsilanti area since then.
Wastenaw Avenue had about six gas stations in the 1960s, he said, spanning from the Amoco gas station to the Eastern Michigan University campus area.
“They’re all extinct now,” Otto said.
“I’ve been here a long time.”
Pittsfield and Ypsilanti Townships have seen an explosion of growth and, with it, more
businesses.
“When we started here, we couldn’t find a sandwich place,” Otto said of his mechanics and other service-station workers.
Now the stack of menus from several different restaurants, several inches think on the station’s counter, tells a different story.
But the people who come in, the jokes, the stories and the friendship have remained the same over the years, Otto said.
Customers such as Ambrose Vyskocil Jr, an Ypsilanti Township resident, who has been coming to the service station for 10 years.
“Me and Otto can trade stories,” Vyskocil said.
But the service at Bob & Otto obviously is also a draw, he said.
“They’ve always treated me good,” Vyskocil said. “Once you find a place that does decent work, you stick with them.
Vyskocil, at the Amoco station for nearly 45 minutes on Friday afternoon, didn’t need any work done on his red 1993 GMC Yukon. He was just one of many customers stopping by to hold court with Otto and other friends.
Others, including Rosemary Markel, now a Manchester resident and formerly a resident of Ypsilanti Township came to say goodbye. Otto said that Markel has been coming to Bob & Otto’s for years.
The service station and repair shop is named for Harlan Otto and Bob Robinson, a former partner several years before. Otto said he kept the name sine it sounded catchy.
The service station is Otto’s third—and longest [job.] As a teen, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, traveling to the Philippines and Japan during WW II.
Otto, 73, also worked though …
Photo Caption: Dieter, left, and Harlan Otto have decided that it is time to make way for a new owner for Bob and & Otto’s Amoco on Washtenaw Avenue in Ypsilanti. Harlan started the business with a partner in 1960.
Originally Published Wednesday, May 3, 2000
City Removes limits on trash, items on curb
City Removes limits on trash, items on curb
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Spring cleaning can be a pain. But the city of Ypsilanti is making the change-of-season cleaning a little easier by taking the limit off the number of trash bags and other items residents can put out on their stoop this week.
Normally, city residents are allowed up to three garbage bags and one large household item each week. But this week, city residents can put out their broken couch, that stained, old carpet and that 2-year-old papier-mâché piñata without paying extra for pickup.
Normally, residents would be charged for the extra trash.
“I think it’s a wonderful idea,” said Carey Weihmiller, municipal marketing representative at Waste Management in Southfield, the company that manages Ypsilanti’s trash pickup. Ypsilanti’s spring cleaning has been going on for five years.
Beth Gulyas-Williams, the city’s public works office manager, said pickup was a little slow this week, but the city expects more residents will be hauling out their discarded goods for pickup this week.
Most people appreciate having the grace period for their pickup, she said.
“I think it’s going to be more household items,” Weihmiller said of most residents’ contribution. In other cities Waste Management services, most residents don’t put out a lot more than their usual limit, even during the spring cleanup weeks, Weihmiller said.
“I personally don’t plan on putting out anything different (than usual)” said Joseph Lawrence, one of the founding members of the Ypsilanti Historic Society and an owner of several apartments and houses.
Lawrence, a longtime Ypsilanti resident, said he and his tenants are all avid recyclers. Typically, Lawrence said he and his tenants put out less than their allotted amount of trash.
However, Lawrence commended the city for doing the extra pickup of trash, citing it as a sacrifice given Ypsilanti’s tight budget.
“I know they’re doing the best they can to maintain the pickup service,” he said.
For more information, call the Department of Public Works at (734) 483-1421.
Originally published Wednesday, May 3, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Spring cleaning can be a pain. But the city of Ypsilanti is making the change-of-season cleaning a little easier by taking the limit off the number of trash bags and other items residents can put out on their stoop this week.
Normally, city residents are allowed up to three garbage bags and one large household item each week. But this week, city residents can put out their broken couch, that stained, old carpet and that 2-year-old papier-mâché piñata without paying extra for pickup.
Normally, residents would be charged for the extra trash.
“I think it’s a wonderful idea,” said Carey Weihmiller, municipal marketing representative at Waste Management in Southfield, the company that manages Ypsilanti’s trash pickup. Ypsilanti’s spring cleaning has been going on for five years.
Beth Gulyas-Williams, the city’s public works office manager, said pickup was a little slow this week, but the city expects more residents will be hauling out their discarded goods for pickup this week.
Most people appreciate having the grace period for their pickup, she said.
“I think it’s going to be more household items,” Weihmiller said of most residents’ contribution. In other cities Waste Management services, most residents don’t put out a lot more than their usual limit, even during the spring cleanup weeks, Weihmiller said.
“I personally don’t plan on putting out anything different (than usual)” said Joseph Lawrence, one of the founding members of the Ypsilanti Historic Society and an owner of several apartments and houses.
Lawrence, a longtime Ypsilanti resident, said he and his tenants are all avid recyclers. Typically, Lawrence said he and his tenants put out less than their allotted amount of trash.
However, Lawrence commended the city for doing the extra pickup of trash, citing it as a sacrifice given Ypsilanti’s tight budget.
“I know they’re doing the best they can to maintain the pickup service,” he said.
For more information, call the Department of Public Works at (734) 483-1421.
Originally published Wednesday, May 3, 2000
Tuesday, May 02, 2000
Are Black Girls Growing Up Too Fast? Article for Africana.com
When Nicole Turner (not her real name), then an eight-year-old second-grader, got her period, developed breasts and grew pubic hair all in the same year, she was the first in her class to hit puberty.
That was 15 years ago. Now, early puberty is more common than ever; and some are worried about its possible impact on black girls.
The Chicago resident, now 23, remembers being embarrassed at the time because she had to wear a bra to school.
“Starting puberty sooner does make you grow up faster. You’re not a kid anymore,” Turner said. “My mom was shocked when I first got my period. I’ll never forget the look on her face.”
The trend overall for American girls is that they’re reaching puberty sooner and developing at an early age – some feel too early. But research shows the early onset of puberty is particularly salient among black girls, who, according to some studies, start menstruating and developing as much as two to three years sooner than white girls.
On average, black girls get their periods before age nine. White girls typically start their periods a little later, at around 10. Just 10 years ago, researchers measured the average age of menarche, or first menstrual period, at 12.5 years of age.
In a 1997 University of North Carolina study headed by Dr. Marcia Herman-Giddens, more than 17,000 girls ages 3 through 12 were surveyed during routine doctor’s visits for signs of sexual development.
About 27 percent of black girls started developing by age eight, while only seven percent of white girls had started puberty by that age. About ten percent of the girls in the sample were black, while the rest were white.
In the North Carolina survey, the results of which were published in the medical journal Pediatrics in 1997, researchers reported they found 48 percent of black girls and slightly less than 15 percent of white girls had begun breast or “secondary” hair development — pubic and armpit hair — or both, by age nine.
Surprisingly, Herman-Giddens and her research team also found three percent of the 1,700 black girls in the study showed some sexual development by age three, while just one percent of the 15,300 white girls showed the similar development at that age.
Herman-Giddens, who is now an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina School of Public Health, said she and others she worked with noticed five- and six-year-old girls were coming into the clinic with developing breasts or pubic hair when she was working as a physician’s assistant years ago.
Girls who started puberty any time before the average age had previously been considered “abnormal,” and sent to a specialist for evaluation and possible hormone treatment, Herman-Giddens said. But the study’s results saw the incidence of puberty among younger girls as less an anomaly or abnormality than a trend, with the exception of girls under five.
What’s behind this trend? And if it does seem to affect black girls more than whites, why? Although researchers have raised a number of possible causes – from birthweight to diet to stress levels – none has been proven.
Among the general population, and the parents and educators of girls in particular, the riddle of early puberty is especially alarming within the American context of ever-younger exposure to sex in the media. Girls in our society, many fear, are being forced into maturity before they are ready to deal with it.
Turner said that when she first got her period, as the oldest daughter growing up in a rural Illinois community, she didn’t know what was happening at first. Turner’s mother, who was still in her twenties at the time, took her daughter aside and showed her how to make a mini-pad using toilet paper.
But Turner didn’t actually start using sanitary napkins for some time, because she didn’t know about them or where to get them. “I don’t know why my mother didn’t buy pads for me.”
Turner knew the family’s finances were tight at the time — she had several young siblings — but looking back, she still doesn’t think the family’s tight purse strings was the only reason. Her mother may have been embarrassed, and may not have wanted to believe her eight-year-old daughter was menstruating.
“I feel sorry for all these young girls growing up before they have to,” Turner says.
Dina White, a 28-year-old Maryland resident, remembers growing pubic hair around the age of seven or eight, and getting her period at age eight or nine.
“My body was developing much quicker than the other girls in my neighborhood,” White said.
White thinks a high-fat diet may have something to do with the fact that black girls seem to have a tendency to start puberty sooner.
“I think one difference [between us] is our eating habits. We eat more fried foods, we eat larger portions — but not always a balanced diet,” White said.
Growing up in an all-black neighborhood in the Orlando area, White says she and her friends would always eat a lot of junk food. “I was always a thick little girl,” White says.
“My friends and I ate cookies, chips, Hostess cakes and all that. Then in the summers, when I went to the country to visit my grandma, we ate full breakfasts every day with grits, bacon and eggs, biscuits and sometimes even cornbread,” White recalled.
Researchers like Dr. Frank Biro, professor of clinical pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati, have conducted research that backs up White’s hunch.
The pediatrician found that heavier black girls are more likely to get their periods and develop faster than other girls, including skinnier black girls. Black girls who were “early maturing” were 1.61 times more likely to be overweight at age 15, while less overweight black girls started menstruating at 12.2 years, more or less in the “normal” time frame.
According to the three-year-old study, black girls who were late in maturing were 0.71 times, or much less likely, to be overweight at that same age. The study also pointed out that “early maturing” girls are overweight at an early age, and they may be less likely to lose that weight later on.
But overall, researchers and scientists agree that more puberty-oriented research needs to be done not only on blacks, but also on Latina, Native Americans and Asian girls.
Average age figures for puberty were reached by studying exclusive samples of white girls several decades ago. Now researchers aren’t sure why there is a “puberty age gap” between black and white girls. Researchers say it’s possible that black girls have been developing and getting their periods earlier than white girls for decades, or even centuries.
On the other hand, data from some African countries, like Kenya, show the average age of menstruation falling from 14.4 years in the 1970s down to 12.9 in the 1980s, according to the Population Information Center at John Hopkins University in Baltimore.
No matter the cause, the effects of early maturation may be profound.
An Oregon puberty study surveyed a community sample of boys and girls, including blacks, and found early-maturing girls and late-maturing boys were more likely to have adjustment and behavioral problems than other teens. The implications of the Oregon study for blacks, if the results are duplicated in future research, are significant: poor urban black girls, who live more stressful lives, may menstruate sooner than their wealthier, suburban counterparts. If proven, this could have significant implications on social issues such as teen pregnancy.
Irene Johnson, 31, a Virginia resident, works regularly with elementary to middle-school children on a volunteer basis. Johnson says she feels black girls overall are definitely developing earlier than they did a generation ago, when she was growing up in a town 90 minutes away from Cleveland, Ohio.
Johnson said she is “concerned” that girls are developing as early as they do. Johnson credits today’s parents for telling their kids more about puberty than they did a generation ago, but popular culture still gets in the way. Developed kids, she says, act older than they really are.
“I think girls today are developing a little quicker,” Simmons says.
“I was an exception, but today, I see middle-school girls at the bus stop who look like grown women with hips and butt and breasts.”
Although Nicole Turner says people are more open to talking about sex today, she still doesn’t feel black girls get the information they need on puberty as early as they should.
Puberty101.com, an informational Web site for adolescents, posts an open letter to parents: “Do you think your child is too young to view this Web site? According to recent research, one out of six girls start puberty by age eight.”
D. Sands, a 25-year-old Maryland resident and mother of a two-year-old girl, says she plans on talking to her daughter when she thinks the time is right. Sands says she wishes now her mother had told her more about puberty before it actually happened.
Sands said she got her period at age 11, roughly around the same time as most of her peers. But Sands quickly grew into a D-cup by seventh-grade. An aunt who was a nurse at Howard University Hospitals told Sands at age 16 to seriously consider a breast reduction after the teen reached size 42DD. Later, Sands’ mother counseled her daughter “not to worry about the unsolicited advice,” and the issue was dropped.
Sands says that if her daughter develops in the same way in a couple of years, she will try and give her the information she needs.
White, who now has an 11-year-old daughter, said it’s hard to know all the answers.
“The next generation of black girls — and their parents — will not be as prepared for puberty, especially if they’re getting younger and younger.”
She worries that girls will get their information not from parents and professionals but from their friends. “We have unknowledgeable kids teaching our kids about puberty. And that’s a shame.”
Article originally published on Africana.com, May 2, 2000.
That was 15 years ago. Now, early puberty is more common than ever; and some are worried about its possible impact on black girls.
The Chicago resident, now 23, remembers being embarrassed at the time because she had to wear a bra to school.
“Starting puberty sooner does make you grow up faster. You’re not a kid anymore,” Turner said. “My mom was shocked when I first got my period. I’ll never forget the look on her face.”
The trend overall for American girls is that they’re reaching puberty sooner and developing at an early age – some feel too early. But research shows the early onset of puberty is particularly salient among black girls, who, according to some studies, start menstruating and developing as much as two to three years sooner than white girls.
On average, black girls get their periods before age nine. White girls typically start their periods a little later, at around 10. Just 10 years ago, researchers measured the average age of menarche, or first menstrual period, at 12.5 years of age.
In a 1997 University of North Carolina study headed by Dr. Marcia Herman-Giddens, more than 17,000 girls ages 3 through 12 were surveyed during routine doctor’s visits for signs of sexual development.
About 27 percent of black girls started developing by age eight, while only seven percent of white girls had started puberty by that age. About ten percent of the girls in the sample were black, while the rest were white.
In the North Carolina survey, the results of which were published in the medical journal Pediatrics in 1997, researchers reported they found 48 percent of black girls and slightly less than 15 percent of white girls had begun breast or “secondary” hair development — pubic and armpit hair — or both, by age nine.
Surprisingly, Herman-Giddens and her research team also found three percent of the 1,700 black girls in the study showed some sexual development by age three, while just one percent of the 15,300 white girls showed the similar development at that age.
Herman-Giddens, who is now an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina School of Public Health, said she and others she worked with noticed five- and six-year-old girls were coming into the clinic with developing breasts or pubic hair when she was working as a physician’s assistant years ago.
Girls who started puberty any time before the average age had previously been considered “abnormal,” and sent to a specialist for evaluation and possible hormone treatment, Herman-Giddens said. But the study’s results saw the incidence of puberty among younger girls as less an anomaly or abnormality than a trend, with the exception of girls under five.
What’s behind this trend? And if it does seem to affect black girls more than whites, why? Although researchers have raised a number of possible causes – from birthweight to diet to stress levels – none has been proven.
Among the general population, and the parents and educators of girls in particular, the riddle of early puberty is especially alarming within the American context of ever-younger exposure to sex in the media. Girls in our society, many fear, are being forced into maturity before they are ready to deal with it.
Turner said that when she first got her period, as the oldest daughter growing up in a rural Illinois community, she didn’t know what was happening at first. Turner’s mother, who was still in her twenties at the time, took her daughter aside and showed her how to make a mini-pad using toilet paper.
But Turner didn’t actually start using sanitary napkins for some time, because she didn’t know about them or where to get them. “I don’t know why my mother didn’t buy pads for me.”
Turner knew the family’s finances were tight at the time — she had several young siblings — but looking back, she still doesn’t think the family’s tight purse strings was the only reason. Her mother may have been embarrassed, and may not have wanted to believe her eight-year-old daughter was menstruating.
“I feel sorry for all these young girls growing up before they have to,” Turner says.
Dina White, a 28-year-old Maryland resident, remembers growing pubic hair around the age of seven or eight, and getting her period at age eight or nine.
“My body was developing much quicker than the other girls in my neighborhood,” White said.
White thinks a high-fat diet may have something to do with the fact that black girls seem to have a tendency to start puberty sooner.
“I think one difference [between us] is our eating habits. We eat more fried foods, we eat larger portions — but not always a balanced diet,” White said.
Growing up in an all-black neighborhood in the Orlando area, White says she and her friends would always eat a lot of junk food. “I was always a thick little girl,” White says.
“My friends and I ate cookies, chips, Hostess cakes and all that. Then in the summers, when I went to the country to visit my grandma, we ate full breakfasts every day with grits, bacon and eggs, biscuits and sometimes even cornbread,” White recalled.
Researchers like Dr. Frank Biro, professor of clinical pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati, have conducted research that backs up White’s hunch.
The pediatrician found that heavier black girls are more likely to get their periods and develop faster than other girls, including skinnier black girls. Black girls who were “early maturing” were 1.61 times more likely to be overweight at age 15, while less overweight black girls started menstruating at 12.2 years, more or less in the “normal” time frame.
According to the three-year-old study, black girls who were late in maturing were 0.71 times, or much less likely, to be overweight at that same age. The study also pointed out that “early maturing” girls are overweight at an early age, and they may be less likely to lose that weight later on.
But overall, researchers and scientists agree that more puberty-oriented research needs to be done not only on blacks, but also on Latina, Native Americans and Asian girls.
Average age figures for puberty were reached by studying exclusive samples of white girls several decades ago. Now researchers aren’t sure why there is a “puberty age gap” between black and white girls. Researchers say it’s possible that black girls have been developing and getting their periods earlier than white girls for decades, or even centuries.
On the other hand, data from some African countries, like Kenya, show the average age of menstruation falling from 14.4 years in the 1970s down to 12.9 in the 1980s, according to the Population Information Center at John Hopkins University in Baltimore.
No matter the cause, the effects of early maturation may be profound.
An Oregon puberty study surveyed a community sample of boys and girls, including blacks, and found early-maturing girls and late-maturing boys were more likely to have adjustment and behavioral problems than other teens. The implications of the Oregon study for blacks, if the results are duplicated in future research, are significant: poor urban black girls, who live more stressful lives, may menstruate sooner than their wealthier, suburban counterparts. If proven, this could have significant implications on social issues such as teen pregnancy.
Irene Johnson, 31, a Virginia resident, works regularly with elementary to middle-school children on a volunteer basis. Johnson says she feels black girls overall are definitely developing earlier than they did a generation ago, when she was growing up in a town 90 minutes away from Cleveland, Ohio.
Johnson said she is “concerned” that girls are developing as early as they do. Johnson credits today’s parents for telling their kids more about puberty than they did a generation ago, but popular culture still gets in the way. Developed kids, she says, act older than they really are.
“I think girls today are developing a little quicker,” Simmons says.
“I was an exception, but today, I see middle-school girls at the bus stop who look like grown women with hips and butt and breasts.”
Although Nicole Turner says people are more open to talking about sex today, she still doesn’t feel black girls get the information they need on puberty as early as they should.
Puberty101.com, an informational Web site for adolescents, posts an open letter to parents: “Do you think your child is too young to view this Web site? According to recent research, one out of six girls start puberty by age eight.”
D. Sands, a 25-year-old Maryland resident and mother of a two-year-old girl, says she plans on talking to her daughter when she thinks the time is right. Sands says she wishes now her mother had told her more about puberty before it actually happened.
Sands said she got her period at age 11, roughly around the same time as most of her peers. But Sands quickly grew into a D-cup by seventh-grade. An aunt who was a nurse at Howard University Hospitals told Sands at age 16 to seriously consider a breast reduction after the teen reached size 42DD. Later, Sands’ mother counseled her daughter “not to worry about the unsolicited advice,” and the issue was dropped.
Sands says that if her daughter develops in the same way in a couple of years, she will try and give her the information she needs.
White, who now has an 11-year-old daughter, said it’s hard to know all the answers.
“The next generation of black girls — and their parents — will not be as prepared for puberty, especially if they’re getting younger and younger.”
She worries that girls will get their information not from parents and professionals but from their friends. “We have unknowledgeable kids teaching our kids about puberty. And that’s a shame.”
Article originally published on Africana.com, May 2, 2000.
Monday, May 01, 2000
Eye on Safety-Tecumseh officials aim to reduce district’s bus problems
Eye on Safety
Tecumseh officials aim to reduce district’s bus problems
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—Tecumseh school officials are working to reduce the number of safety problems noted for the district’s buses.
State inspection results for this school year showed eight of Tecumseh’s buses were flagged for repairs—representing 40 percent of the district’s bus fleet. In last year’s inspections, seven of Tecumseh’s buses were given red tags, indicating the most serious violation.
Tecumseh was one of a handful of districts in Washtenaw and Lenawee counties where fewer than 80 percent of the buses passed muster in the past two years.
In comparison, the Milan and Saline districts passed with 95 percent or more of their fleets not receiving yellow or red tags during state inspection. Yellow tags indicate less serious problems.
Wendy Clement—Tecumseh transportation director for Ryder Now First Student, which operates the district’s buses—said the company has taken several steps to avoid receiving the high number of red tags for the state’s next inspection, to take place in 2001.
When state inspectors tagged Tecumseh buses, all red-tag safety hazards were corrected the same day, Clement said.
Some example of red-tag infractions include a burned-out headlight, a missing left rear-view mirror or a missing first-aid kit.
Yellow tag problems indicate a lack of function from a bus high beam, a bus horn that does not sound loud enough or missing items from a first-aid kit.
When the state issues a red tag on a school district bus, the vehicle is grounded until the safety infraction is corrected. For a bus that has been yellow-tagged, the repair must be made within 60 days.
Tecumseh has been served by the privately-owned bus company for the past four years. Clement said buses undergo a safety inspection once every three months or every 3,000 miles. Previously buses were inspected only every four months or every 4,000 miles, she said.
The company also hired a new mechanic, Clement said.
Sue Randolph, a bus driver for the district since 1992, said district buses are the newest buses the district has had in recent memory.
“We don’t have anything that’s over 9 years old. The average age (of our buses is) probably 4 to 5 years old,” Clement said.
Over the past few years, the state’s rating of Tecumseh’s buses has ranged anywhere from excellent to poor. In 1997-1998, Ann Arbor News archives show that none of the district’s buses received a red or yellow tags.
Clement said that the total fleet travels more than 282,000 miles every year.
Clement emphasized that Tecumseh bus drivers have had “zero preventable accidents” this school year. At a recent Tecumseh school board meeting, Clement told trustees that Tecumseh buses sustained two crashes—while empty of passengers—that were not the fault of the drivers.
Tecumseh Schools has 17 routes and a total of 25 drivers serving the district, transportation officials said.
Originally published Monday, May 1, 2000
Photo Caption: Wendy Clement, director of transportation for the Tecumseh Public Schools.
Inspection Record:
A review of how area districts fared in state bus inspections in 1999-2000. School buses are inspected at least once every school year; some districts have not yet been evaluated for this school year.
Red Yellow Pass Total buses
1999-2000 Inspection Results
Tecumseh Public Schools 8 1 11 20
Clinton Community Schools 1 0 10 11
Saline Area School District 1 0 40 41
1998-99 Inspection Results
Tecumseh Public Schools 7 2 11 20
Clinton Community Schools 2 1 9 12
Saline Area School District 1 1 39 41
Milan Area Schools 0 1 19 20
Dundee Community Schools * 16 2 5 23
*In 1997-98, the state gave Dundee school buses five red tags, zero yellow tags, 13 passes for their 18-bus fleet.
Tecumseh officials aim to reduce district’s bus problems
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—Tecumseh school officials are working to reduce the number of safety problems noted for the district’s buses.
State inspection results for this school year showed eight of Tecumseh’s buses were flagged for repairs—representing 40 percent of the district’s bus fleet. In last year’s inspections, seven of Tecumseh’s buses were given red tags, indicating the most serious violation.
Tecumseh was one of a handful of districts in Washtenaw and Lenawee counties where fewer than 80 percent of the buses passed muster in the past two years.
In comparison, the Milan and Saline districts passed with 95 percent or more of their fleets not receiving yellow or red tags during state inspection. Yellow tags indicate less serious problems.
Wendy Clement—Tecumseh transportation director for Ryder Now First Student, which operates the district’s buses—said the company has taken several steps to avoid receiving the high number of red tags for the state’s next inspection, to take place in 2001.
When state inspectors tagged Tecumseh buses, all red-tag safety hazards were corrected the same day, Clement said.
Some example of red-tag infractions include a burned-out headlight, a missing left rear-view mirror or a missing first-aid kit.
Yellow tag problems indicate a lack of function from a bus high beam, a bus horn that does not sound loud enough or missing items from a first-aid kit.
When the state issues a red tag on a school district bus, the vehicle is grounded until the safety infraction is corrected. For a bus that has been yellow-tagged, the repair must be made within 60 days.
Tecumseh has been served by the privately-owned bus company for the past four years. Clement said buses undergo a safety inspection once every three months or every 3,000 miles. Previously buses were inspected only every four months or every 4,000 miles, she said.
The company also hired a new mechanic, Clement said.
Sue Randolph, a bus driver for the district since 1992, said district buses are the newest buses the district has had in recent memory.
“We don’t have anything that’s over 9 years old. The average age (of our buses is) probably 4 to 5 years old,” Clement said.
Over the past few years, the state’s rating of Tecumseh’s buses has ranged anywhere from excellent to poor. In 1997-1998, Ann Arbor News archives show that none of the district’s buses received a red or yellow tags.
Clement said that the total fleet travels more than 282,000 miles every year.
Clement emphasized that Tecumseh bus drivers have had “zero preventable accidents” this school year. At a recent Tecumseh school board meeting, Clement told trustees that Tecumseh buses sustained two crashes—while empty of passengers—that were not the fault of the drivers.
Tecumseh Schools has 17 routes and a total of 25 drivers serving the district, transportation officials said.
Originally published Monday, May 1, 2000
Photo Caption: Wendy Clement, director of transportation for the Tecumseh Public Schools.
Inspection Record:
A review of how area districts fared in state bus inspections in 1999-2000. School buses are inspected at least once every school year; some districts have not yet been evaluated for this school year.
Red Yellow Pass Total buses
1999-2000 Inspection Results
Tecumseh Public Schools 8 1 11 20
Clinton Community Schools 1 0 10 11
Saline Area School District 1 0 40 41
1998-99 Inspection Results
Tecumseh Public Schools 7 2 11 20
Clinton Community Schools 2 1 9 12
Saline Area School District 1 1 39 41
Milan Area Schools 0 1 19 20
Dundee Community Schools * 16 2 5 23
*In 1997-98, the state gave Dundee school buses five red tags, zero yellow tags, 13 passes for their 18-bus fleet.
Sunday, April 30, 2000
Week-long High/Scope conference kicks off Monday, The Ann Arbor News
Week-long High/Scope conference kicks off Monday
Educational think tank hosts workshops and hands-on training sessions on teaching methods.
By Pamela Appea
The Ann Arbor News
It’s been 30 years since educators, school administrators, and others got together at Perry Child Development Center in Ypsilanti to begin a conversation on how early childhood learning—particularly for low-income children—needed to be improved.
Today the High/Scope Educational Research Foundation has grown to a well-known research think tank, but the nonprofit organization continues its ties to Ypsilanti schools and the Ypsilanti community.
At High/Scope’s annual conference this week, starting Monday at the Ypsilanti Marriott Hotel, over 500 educators are expected to attend 75 workshops, seminars and hands-on training sessions to learn the High/Scope teaching method throughout the week.
The group’s method encourages children to be actively involved in learning, as opposed to the more traditional approach of adult-directed instruction, CEO Charles R. Wallgren said.
Wallgren said the conference will include a Tuesday keynote speech by David P. Weikart, president of the organization. Wallgren said Weikart will talk about the group’s accomplishments over the past 30 years, as well as what High/Scope plans for the future.
Event organizers said High/Scope aims to always reinvent itself, coming up with innovative teaching methods for special-needs children or other classroom techniques.
“All of our work is based on research. Its not that we have a warm idea and put (it) into practice … Research is absolutely critical to program development,” Wallgren said.
Typically the High/Scope annual conference attracts educators from Colombia to New Zeland to Canada, according to Anne Hudon High/Scope conference manager.
High/Scope staff said some highlights for this year’s conference include workshops focusing on the arts and related class curriculum tour, a tour of Bessie Hoffman Elementary School, and a two-day Movement and Music workshop.
Wallgreen also noted that Douglas Clements, a professor in the department of learning at SUNY Buffalo in New York will speak at a Thursday luncheon. Clements specializes in youth and mathematics education.
For more information, call the conference manager at (734) 485-2000, Ext. 277. For registration questions, ask for Ext. 228. The High/Scope e-mail address is training@highschope.org. The group’s Web address is http://www.highscope.org/.
Originally Published Sunday, April 30, 2000
Educational think tank hosts workshops and hands-on training sessions on teaching methods.
By Pamela Appea
The Ann Arbor News
It’s been 30 years since educators, school administrators, and others got together at Perry Child Development Center in Ypsilanti to begin a conversation on how early childhood learning—particularly for low-income children—needed to be improved.
Today the High/Scope Educational Research Foundation has grown to a well-known research think tank, but the nonprofit organization continues its ties to Ypsilanti schools and the Ypsilanti community.
At High/Scope’s annual conference this week, starting Monday at the Ypsilanti Marriott Hotel, over 500 educators are expected to attend 75 workshops, seminars and hands-on training sessions to learn the High/Scope teaching method throughout the week.
The group’s method encourages children to be actively involved in learning, as opposed to the more traditional approach of adult-directed instruction, CEO Charles R. Wallgren said.
Wallgren said the conference will include a Tuesday keynote speech by David P. Weikart, president of the organization. Wallgren said Weikart will talk about the group’s accomplishments over the past 30 years, as well as what High/Scope plans for the future.
Event organizers said High/Scope aims to always reinvent itself, coming up with innovative teaching methods for special-needs children or other classroom techniques.
“All of our work is based on research. Its not that we have a warm idea and put (it) into practice … Research is absolutely critical to program development,” Wallgren said.
Typically the High/Scope annual conference attracts educators from Colombia to New Zeland to Canada, according to Anne Hudon High/Scope conference manager.
High/Scope staff said some highlights for this year’s conference include workshops focusing on the arts and related class curriculum tour, a tour of Bessie Hoffman Elementary School, and a two-day Movement and Music workshop.
Wallgreen also noted that Douglas Clements, a professor in the department of learning at SUNY Buffalo in New York will speak at a Thursday luncheon. Clements specializes in youth and mathematics education.
For more information, call the conference manager at (734) 485-2000, Ext. 277. For registration questions, ask for Ext. 228. The High/Scope e-mail address is training@highschope.org. The group’s Web address is http://www.highscope.org/.
Originally Published Sunday, April 30, 2000
Thursday, April 27, 2000
Ypsilanti Cleanup funds lag
Ypsilanti Cleanup funds lag
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Organizers of the Ypsilanti PRIDE community cleanup day are expecting thousands of volunteers to pitch in May 20 to spruce up the community.
They are also confident that individual and corporate sponsors of the annual event will provide the necessary finding.
Financial donations for the fifth year of the cleanup are lagging behind last year.
PRIDE--People Restoring Image and Development the Environment-- has quickly been established as a tradition in the city and township. Everyone from the Girl Scouts and coworkers to families and university students come together to spruce up the community by sweeping sidewalks, picking up trash and cleaning parks.
Laurie Ridenour, this year’s PRIDE co-chairwoman, said the committee has raised $4,800 so far--just enough to cover the cost of T-shirts the PRIDE committee gives to many of the 2,000 volunteers who participate in the service event.
Aimee Bahs, PRIDE treasurer, said fund-raising efforts are about two weeks behind schedule. The PRIDE event, to take place in less than a month, needs an additional $10,000 of donations, for a total of around $15,000.
“I feel confident that the money is out there,” Bahs said.
“People who have donated in the past will do it this year,” she added.
Typically, Bahs said, an individual contributor gives anywhere from $50 to $100. Smaller businesses have given $250-$500, while larger companies donate $1,000 or more. The money is used to defer the costs of the event.
For the first time this year, Bahs said contributors are tax-deductible. PRIDE committee members hope this will be en extra incentive to help get the PRIDE day funds up to speed, Bahs said.
PRIDE volunteers are rewarded with a lunch at Riverside Park that includes entertainment and awards, noon-2 p.m. Also this year a PRIDE Ride--a bus tour of local historical sites--is being offered in the afternoon. This is a project of the Leadership Ypsilanti class from last year.
Ridenour said the event kicks off at 9 a.m. at the downtown Ypsilanti KeyBank. Individuals who pre-register by May 5 get a free PRIDE T-shirt.
Late registration takes place at 8:30 a.m. on the day of the event. Call the PRIDE registration hotline at (734) 434-7391 or send in PRIDE donations to the Ypsilanti Chamber of Commerce, 301 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti, MI 48197.
Originally published Thursday, April 27, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Organizers of the Ypsilanti PRIDE community cleanup day are expecting thousands of volunteers to pitch in May 20 to spruce up the community.
They are also confident that individual and corporate sponsors of the annual event will provide the necessary finding.
Financial donations for the fifth year of the cleanup are lagging behind last year.
PRIDE--People Restoring Image and Development the Environment-- has quickly been established as a tradition in the city and township. Everyone from the Girl Scouts and coworkers to families and university students come together to spruce up the community by sweeping sidewalks, picking up trash and cleaning parks.
Laurie Ridenour, this year’s PRIDE co-chairwoman, said the committee has raised $4,800 so far--just enough to cover the cost of T-shirts the PRIDE committee gives to many of the 2,000 volunteers who participate in the service event.
Aimee Bahs, PRIDE treasurer, said fund-raising efforts are about two weeks behind schedule. The PRIDE event, to take place in less than a month, needs an additional $10,000 of donations, for a total of around $15,000.
“I feel confident that the money is out there,” Bahs said.
“People who have donated in the past will do it this year,” she added.
Typically, Bahs said, an individual contributor gives anywhere from $50 to $100. Smaller businesses have given $250-$500, while larger companies donate $1,000 or more. The money is used to defer the costs of the event.
For the first time this year, Bahs said contributors are tax-deductible. PRIDE committee members hope this will be en extra incentive to help get the PRIDE day funds up to speed, Bahs said.
PRIDE volunteers are rewarded with a lunch at Riverside Park that includes entertainment and awards, noon-2 p.m. Also this year a PRIDE Ride--a bus tour of local historical sites--is being offered in the afternoon. This is a project of the Leadership Ypsilanti class from last year.
Ridenour said the event kicks off at 9 a.m. at the downtown Ypsilanti KeyBank. Individuals who pre-register by May 5 get a free PRIDE T-shirt.
Late registration takes place at 8:30 a.m. on the day of the event. Call the PRIDE registration hotline at (734) 434-7391 or send in PRIDE donations to the Ypsilanti Chamber of Commerce, 301 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti, MI 48197.
Originally published Thursday, April 27, 2000
Thursday, April 20, 2000
Tecumseh superintendent receives favorable review
Tecumseh superintendent receives favorable review
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—When former Superintendent Gerry Pound resigned last year amid allegations he sexually harassed a school staff member, the district and the school board weren’t sure how to get the district back on track.
But Tecumseh schools’ current superintendent Richard D. Fauble, has proven his worth after nine months on the job. Trustee Marc Brown said during an evaluation Wednesday.
Brown said some people may have doubted – particularly in the beginning of the school year – whether Fauble would be right for the job.
“I feel proud, I guess, to say ‘We were right, “ Brown said of the decision to hire Fauble.
“Basically he came into a hornet’s nest and calmed things down,” Brown wrote for Fauble’s evaluation notes.
Six board members rated Fauble on categories such as school reconfiguration, public relations, school curriculum and personal leadership skills.
Trustees rated Fauble by choosing one of the following four categories: exceeded expectations, fully met expectations, partially met expectations, and did not meet expectations.
Five trustees said Fabule exceeded expectations, while one said he fully met expectations for his overall performance.
Fabule said he was honored by the praise, but added that now is not the time to rest.
With the ongoing issue of grade reconfiguration in the Tecumseh schools, a new high school coming in fall 2001 and some significant curriculum changes in all of the schools, Fabule said he will be busy working on making the Tecumseh school district “an even better school district.”
Trustees also credited Fabule for working on goals the former superintendent had set.
“Richard has done an outstanding job,” Brown said.
Other board members complimented Fabule on his accessibility and connecting well with students, staff and residents.
The superintendent started a three year contract in August 1999. His current annual salary is $92, 000.
Board President Eduward Tritt said the board will meet later this year to negotiate a possible salary increase for the superintendent.
Pound, the former superintendent, did not admit wrongdoing but agreed to resign last year to settle an accusation of harassment.
Trustees at the time agreed he could continue to be paid through this school year.
Originally published Thursday, April 20, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—When former Superintendent Gerry Pound resigned last year amid allegations he sexually harassed a school staff member, the district and the school board weren’t sure how to get the district back on track.
But Tecumseh schools’ current superintendent Richard D. Fauble, has proven his worth after nine months on the job. Trustee Marc Brown said during an evaluation Wednesday.
Brown said some people may have doubted – particularly in the beginning of the school year – whether Fauble would be right for the job.
“I feel proud, I guess, to say ‘We were right, “ Brown said of the decision to hire Fauble.
“Basically he came into a hornet’s nest and calmed things down,” Brown wrote for Fauble’s evaluation notes.
Six board members rated Fauble on categories such as school reconfiguration, public relations, school curriculum and personal leadership skills.
Trustees rated Fauble by choosing one of the following four categories: exceeded expectations, fully met expectations, partially met expectations, and did not meet expectations.
Five trustees said Fabule exceeded expectations, while one said he fully met expectations for his overall performance.
Fabule said he was honored by the praise, but added that now is not the time to rest.
With the ongoing issue of grade reconfiguration in the Tecumseh schools, a new high school coming in fall 2001 and some significant curriculum changes in all of the schools, Fabule said he will be busy working on making the Tecumseh school district “an even better school district.”
Trustees also credited Fabule for working on goals the former superintendent had set.
“Richard has done an outstanding job,” Brown said.
Other board members complimented Fabule on his accessibility and connecting well with students, staff and residents.
The superintendent started a three year contract in August 1999. His current annual salary is $92, 000.
Board President Eduward Tritt said the board will meet later this year to negotiate a possible salary increase for the superintendent.
Pound, the former superintendent, did not admit wrongdoing but agreed to resign last year to settle an accusation of harassment.
Trustees at the time agreed he could continue to be paid through this school year.
Originally published Thursday, April 20, 2000
Monday, April 10, 2000
Playground Renovated
Playground Renovated
New structures replaced outdated equipment at Pleasant Ridge
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Saline, Michigan—Members of the Pleasant Ridger Playpark committee, a subgroup of the school’s parent group, said the first phase of its community project was completed last week.
The playground, adjacent to Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, now has several new structures, including a multi-see saw and a 13-ring traverse.
Before renovation began in September, some of the playground’s equipment were not up to state code, said committee member Wendy Beardsley.
Committee member Khris Ortman said some of the old playground equipment was designed and built as far back as the 1950s.
The playground’s old monkey bar and “spider’s web” structure were removed, committee members said. A swing set was renovated and moved to another part of the playground. And the gravel and other hard surfaces were replaced by 12-18 inches of wood chips underneath all new and remaining playground structures, committee members said.
With the aid of volunteers and community residents, seedling trees and bulbs were planted in the park area.
Committee members including Beardsley, Ortman and Melissa Phillips said the challenge now is in raising enough money to complete the next two phases.
“Given the fact that it is a community park, we would like to see area business, civic and corporate help in our quest for funds to build this park.” Ortman said.
Discussions on the park started during the mid-‘90s, said Beardsley, who served as a Pleasant Ridge PTA president. The project finally got under way when a special PTA committee was formed in January.
Beardsley credits the support of Sue Palmer, principal of Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, and other residents and supporters.
Phase two of the park project will include a new handicap-accessible wood structure. Ortman said the committee plans to order the structure, which will include slides, rope games and fort structures, by Feb. 1.
Phase three of the project will focus on developing the playground’s so-called “passive” space. The planned space, located directly behind the elementary school, may include a grassy area, additional trees, a gazebo and benches, committee members said. The area, said playground designer, Jonathan Dreyfuss, will encompass an estimated 20,000 square feet.
Committee members said they’re trying to raise an additional $39,5000 for the final two stages of the playpark project.
“We need money,” Beardsley said.
Ortman said that although all committee members were initially “appalled” at the high costs of playground equipment, they decided to go ahead with the investment.
This equipment just costs a lot of money, especially to make it handicap-accessible. But it absolutely is worth it,” she said.
Ortman said phase two has an estimated cost of $45,000, with an estimated cost of $26,000 for phase three. Anticipated revenue from the school district and the Pleasant Ridge PTA will provide $31,500 in funding by July 2000, Ortman said.
“As we proceed with the phases, we need to make sure we have total support. There may be people who need more information. We do have to take what they say into consideration,” Beardsley said.
But she said that phase three may need to be scaled down if committee members don’t gather enough money.
“If it looks like we have difficulty, we need to rethink phase three,” Beardsley said.
To date, the three-phase project’s estimated cost is $106,000, committee members said.
Originally published 2000
New structures replaced outdated equipment at Pleasant Ridge
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Saline, Michigan—Members of the Pleasant Ridger Playpark committee, a subgroup of the school’s parent group, said the first phase of its community project was completed last week.
The playground, adjacent to Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, now has several new structures, including a multi-see saw and a 13-ring traverse.
Before renovation began in September, some of the playground’s equipment were not up to state code, said committee member Wendy Beardsley.
Committee member Khris Ortman said some of the old playground equipment was designed and built as far back as the 1950s.
The playground’s old monkey bar and “spider’s web” structure were removed, committee members said. A swing set was renovated and moved to another part of the playground. And the gravel and other hard surfaces were replaced by 12-18 inches of wood chips underneath all new and remaining playground structures, committee members said.
With the aid of volunteers and community residents, seedling trees and bulbs were planted in the park area.
Committee members including Beardsley, Ortman and Melissa Phillips said the challenge now is in raising enough money to complete the next two phases.
“Given the fact that it is a community park, we would like to see area business, civic and corporate help in our quest for funds to build this park.” Ortman said.
Discussions on the park started during the mid-‘90s, said Beardsley, who served as a Pleasant Ridge PTA president. The project finally got under way when a special PTA committee was formed in January.
Beardsley credits the support of Sue Palmer, principal of Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, and other residents and supporters.
Phase two of the park project will include a new handicap-accessible wood structure. Ortman said the committee plans to order the structure, which will include slides, rope games and fort structures, by Feb. 1.
Phase three of the project will focus on developing the playground’s so-called “passive” space. The planned space, located directly behind the elementary school, may include a grassy area, additional trees, a gazebo and benches, committee members said. The area, said playground designer, Jonathan Dreyfuss, will encompass an estimated 20,000 square feet.
Committee members said they’re trying to raise an additional $39,5000 for the final two stages of the playpark project.
“We need money,” Beardsley said.
Ortman said that although all committee members were initially “appalled” at the high costs of playground equipment, they decided to go ahead with the investment.
This equipment just costs a lot of money, especially to make it handicap-accessible. But it absolutely is worth it,” she said.
Ortman said phase two has an estimated cost of $45,000, with an estimated cost of $26,000 for phase three. Anticipated revenue from the school district and the Pleasant Ridge PTA will provide $31,500 in funding by July 2000, Ortman said.
“As we proceed with the phases, we need to make sure we have total support. There may be people who need more information. We do have to take what they say into consideration,” Beardsley said.
But she said that phase three may need to be scaled down if committee members don’t gather enough money.
“If it looks like we have difficulty, we need to rethink phase three,” Beardsley said.
To date, the three-phase project’s estimated cost is $106,000, committee members said.
Originally published 2000
Wednesday, April 05, 2000
Playground Renovated
Playground Renovated
New structures replaced outdated equipment at Pleasant Ridge
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Saline, Michigan—Members of the Pleasant Ridger Playpark committee, a subgroup of the school’s parent group, said the first phase of its community project was completed last week.
The playground, adjacent to Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, now has several new structures, including a multi-see saw and a 13-ring traverse.
Before renovation began in September, some of the playground’s equipment were not up to state code, said committee member Wendy Beardsley.
Committee member Khris Ortman said some of the old playground equipment was designed and built as far back as the 1950s.
The playground’s old monkey bar and “spider’s web” structure were removed, committee members said. A swing set was renovated and moved to another part of the playground. And the gravel and other hard surfaces were replaced by 12-18 inches of wood chips underneath all new and remaining playground structures, committee members said.
With the aid of volunteers and community residents, seedling trees and bulbs were planted in the park area.
Committee members including Beardsley, Ortman and Melissa Phillips said the challenge now is in raising enough money to complete the next two phases.
“Given the fact that it is a community park, we would like to see area business, civic and corporate help in our quest for funds to build this park.” Ortman said.
Discussions on the park started during the mid-‘90s, said Beardsley, who served as a Pleasant Ridge PTA president. The project finally got under way when a special PTA committee was formed in January.
Beardsley credits the support of Sue Palmer, principal of Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, and other residents and supporters.
Phase two of the park project will include a new handicap-accessible wood structure. Ortman said the committee plans to order the structure, which will include slides, rope games and fort structures, by Feb. 1.
Phase three of the project will focus on developing the playground’s so-called “passive” space. The planned space, located directly behind the elementary school, may include a grassy area, additional trees, a gazebo and benches, committee members said. The area, said playground designer, Jonathan Dreyfuss, will encompass an estimated 20,000 square feet.
Committee members said they’re trying to raise an additional $39,5000 for the final two stages of the playpark project.
“We need money,” Beardsley said.
Ortman said that although all committee members were initially “appalled” at the high costs of playground equipment, they decided to go ahead with the investment.
This equipment just costs a lot of money, especially to make it handicap-accessible. But it absolutely is worth it,” she said.
Ortman said phase two has an estimated cost of $45,000, with an estimated cost of $26,000 for phase three. Anticipated revenue from the school district and the Pleasant Ridge PTA will provide $31,500 in funding by July 2000, Ortman said.
“As we proceed with the phases, we need to make sure we have total support. There may be people who need more information. We do have to take what they say into consideration,” Beardsley said.
But she said that phase three may need to be scaled down if committee members don’t gather enough money.
“If it looks like we have difficulty, we need to rethink phase three,” Beardsley said.
To date, the three-phase project’s estimated cost is $106,000, committee members said.
Originally published 2000
New structures replaced outdated equipment at Pleasant Ridge
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Saline, Michigan—Members of the Pleasant Ridger Playpark committee, a subgroup of the school’s parent group, said the first phase of its community project was completed last week.
The playground, adjacent to Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, now has several new structures, including a multi-see saw and a 13-ring traverse.
Before renovation began in September, some of the playground’s equipment were not up to state code, said committee member Wendy Beardsley.
Committee member Khris Ortman said some of the old playground equipment was designed and built as far back as the 1950s.
The playground’s old monkey bar and “spider’s web” structure were removed, committee members said. A swing set was renovated and moved to another part of the playground. And the gravel and other hard surfaces were replaced by 12-18 inches of wood chips underneath all new and remaining playground structures, committee members said.
With the aid of volunteers and community residents, seedling trees and bulbs were planted in the park area.
Committee members including Beardsley, Ortman and Melissa Phillips said the challenge now is in raising enough money to complete the next two phases.
“Given the fact that it is a community park, we would like to see area business, civic and corporate help in our quest for funds to build this park.” Ortman said.
Discussions on the park started during the mid-‘90s, said Beardsley, who served as a Pleasant Ridge PTA president. The project finally got under way when a special PTA committee was formed in January.
Beardsley credits the support of Sue Palmer, principal of Pleasant Ridge Elementary School, and other residents and supporters.
Phase two of the park project will include a new handicap-accessible wood structure. Ortman said the committee plans to order the structure, which will include slides, rope games and fort structures, by Feb. 1.
Phase three of the project will focus on developing the playground’s so-called “passive” space. The planned space, located directly behind the elementary school, may include a grassy area, additional trees, a gazebo and benches, committee members said. The area, said playground designer, Jonathan Dreyfuss, will encompass an estimated 20,000 square feet.
Committee members said they’re trying to raise an additional $39,5000 for the final two stages of the playpark project.
“We need money,” Beardsley said.
Ortman said that although all committee members were initially “appalled” at the high costs of playground equipment, they decided to go ahead with the investment.
This equipment just costs a lot of money, especially to make it handicap-accessible. But it absolutely is worth it,” she said.
Ortman said phase two has an estimated cost of $45,000, with an estimated cost of $26,000 for phase three. Anticipated revenue from the school district and the Pleasant Ridge PTA will provide $31,500 in funding by July 2000, Ortman said.
“As we proceed with the phases, we need to make sure we have total support. There may be people who need more information. We do have to take what they say into consideration,” Beardsley said.
But she said that phase three may need to be scaled down if committee members don’t gather enough money.
“If it looks like we have difficulty, we need to rethink phase three,” Beardsley said.
To date, the three-phase project’s estimated cost is $106,000, committee members said.
Originally published 2000
Thursday, March 30, 2000
Bringing gymnastics back to Tecumseh
Bringing gymnastics back to Tecumseh
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—An area gymnastics club has revived pressure on the Tecumseh school board to reinstate gymnastics as a letter sport at Tecumseh’s middle and high schools.
Leo Jubenville, president and proprietor of J & B Gymnastics, an area gymnastics club, said that they’re championing the cause in order to meet the needs of area residents.
Jubenville’s club boost about 400 members, with young gymnasts from Adrian to Milan.
The club has a few dozen middle school and high school age gymnasts who want to do gymnastics as a competitive sport, Jubenville said.
Gymnastics was phased out as a competitive sport in 1991, due in part of the budget crunch the Tecumseh district faced at the time, school board members aid.
But school trustees also said there was a lack of interest in gymnastics at the time, one of the reasons why the district may be reluctant to consider starting a gymnastics team now.
Jane Baker, a coach at J & B Gymnastics, and a former gymnastics coach at Tecumseh High School, said they’ve unsuccessfully approached the school board several times under a past school superintendent’s administration.
According to Baker, a group of parents and other gymnastics team proponents approached the school board in 1991, 1993 and 1999 to protest the phasing out of gymnastics.
Baker, who is Jubenville’s daughter, said proponents of gymnastics as a team sport have two things going for them this time: a new superintendent and a new large high school opening next year. Baker said with the space at Tecumseh’s new high school, school board members might be might be more inclined to see gymnastics as a feasible option for the district.
Another point of resistance on the school board’s end is keeping the balance of girls’ and boys’ teams, Baker said.
At a Tecumseh school board meeting earlier this month, trustees erroneously reported that there were more girls’ sports than boys, a balance the district does not want to upset, due to Title IX considerations, Baker said.
But Jim Gilmore, athletic director at Tecumseh High School, said the district miscounted the number of teams, and that reinstating a girls’ gymnastics team will not upset the balance.
Gilmore said Tecumseh school administrators and school board members “have made no determination” whether or not the school district wants to implement a Tecumseh schools-sponsored gymnastics program.
Gilmore went on to say that the Tecumseh schools are looking at financial considerations, including the cost of equipment, uniforms, hiring a coach, and the possible increase in liability insurance.
Baker said that fund-raising is something most gymnasts’ parents are used to, and she said many would be willing to help cushion some of the extra costs of a gymnastics team.
Baker and Jubenville also said if the high school is willing to explore a co-op sharing agreement with students from nearby smaller communities that might provide an additional means for the district to cut costs.
Photo Credit: Dan Williamson
Photo Caption: Jane Baker, left, Leo Jubenville, center and Carol Cruz are the co-owners and coaches at J & B Gymnastics in Tecumseh. They and others in the area are trying to get gymnastics re-instated as a varsity sport at Tecumseh High School.
Originally published Thursday, March 30, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—An area gymnastics club has revived pressure on the Tecumseh school board to reinstate gymnastics as a letter sport at Tecumseh’s middle and high schools.
Leo Jubenville, president and proprietor of J & B Gymnastics, an area gymnastics club, said that they’re championing the cause in order to meet the needs of area residents.
Jubenville’s club boost about 400 members, with young gymnasts from Adrian to Milan.
The club has a few dozen middle school and high school age gymnasts who want to do gymnastics as a competitive sport, Jubenville said.
Gymnastics was phased out as a competitive sport in 1991, due in part of the budget crunch the Tecumseh district faced at the time, school board members aid.
But school trustees also said there was a lack of interest in gymnastics at the time, one of the reasons why the district may be reluctant to consider starting a gymnastics team now.
Jane Baker, a coach at J & B Gymnastics, and a former gymnastics coach at Tecumseh High School, said they’ve unsuccessfully approached the school board several times under a past school superintendent’s administration.
According to Baker, a group of parents and other gymnastics team proponents approached the school board in 1991, 1993 and 1999 to protest the phasing out of gymnastics.
Baker, who is Jubenville’s daughter, said proponents of gymnastics as a team sport have two things going for them this time: a new superintendent and a new large high school opening next year. Baker said with the space at Tecumseh’s new high school, school board members might be might be more inclined to see gymnastics as a feasible option for the district.
Another point of resistance on the school board’s end is keeping the balance of girls’ and boys’ teams, Baker said.
At a Tecumseh school board meeting earlier this month, trustees erroneously reported that there were more girls’ sports than boys, a balance the district does not want to upset, due to Title IX considerations, Baker said.
But Jim Gilmore, athletic director at Tecumseh High School, said the district miscounted the number of teams, and that reinstating a girls’ gymnastics team will not upset the balance.
Gilmore said Tecumseh school administrators and school board members “have made no determination” whether or not the school district wants to implement a Tecumseh schools-sponsored gymnastics program.
Gilmore went on to say that the Tecumseh schools are looking at financial considerations, including the cost of equipment, uniforms, hiring a coach, and the possible increase in liability insurance.
Baker said that fund-raising is something most gymnasts’ parents are used to, and she said many would be willing to help cushion some of the extra costs of a gymnastics team.
Baker and Jubenville also said if the high school is willing to explore a co-op sharing agreement with students from nearby smaller communities that might provide an additional means for the district to cut costs.
Photo Credit: Dan Williamson
Photo Caption: Jane Baker, left, Leo Jubenville, center and Carol Cruz are the co-owners and coaches at J & B Gymnastics in Tecumseh. They and others in the area are trying to get gymnastics re-instated as a varsity sport at Tecumseh High School.
Originally published Thursday, March 30, 2000
Tuesday, March 28, 2000
Tecumseh addresses coaching grievance, The Ann Arbor News
Tecumseh addresses coaching grievance
By Pamela Appea
The Ann Arbor News
Tecumseh school board members said they hope to speedily resolve a union grievance over hours worked by assistant coaches.
Janet B. Kolleth, an area official of the Michigan Education Association, said she shares the same goal.
But Kolleth charges that Richard D. Fauble, the Tecumseh schools superintendent, did not follow proper union procedure when the grievance was first filed several weeks ago.
Kolleth presented the grievance at the school board meeting Monday night.
When Tecumseh High School’s track team currently has one head coach and two half-time coach positions, Kolleth said it is unclear whether all three coaches are required to work the same number of hours—although the part-time coaches receive substantially less pay.
Fauble said he and Tecumseh Athletic Director Jim Gimore are researching the job description differences between part-time and full-time coaches in other districts for a base of comparison.
But when Kolleth asked, on average, how much more a full-time coach works than a part-time coach, Fauble said he couldn’t answer the question since hours “vary” for all Tecumseh coaches’ schedules.
Kolleth complained that Gilmore was also unable to answer the question during a previous conversation.
Although the original grievant, Scott Banghart, a former part-time track coach, moved to a full-time coaching position in the district, Kolleth said the problem still remains, since the salary discrepancy between part-and full-time coaches continues.
Kolleth said the amount of the discrepancies between part-time and full-time coaches is a “few thousand dollars.”
Kolleth also said the superintendent erred by threatening retaliation – not to a particular individual, but rather to future job applicants – in a recent conversation with the former grievant.
About two weeks ago, Kolleth said Fauble Banghart heard Fauble say that the district would eliminate one of the part-time coaching positions for the track team. Kolleth said Fauble should not be “meddling with union affairs.”
“He should work with the association, not the grievant,” Kolleth said.
But at Monday night’s school board meeting, Fauble said he did not do or suggest anything of a retaliatory nature during the conversation with Banghart.
“I think I’ve been fair. I’ve tried to be fair at all times,” Fauble said.
Edward Tritt, president of the school board, said the school board cannot make a snap decision to make all three track coaching positions full-time.
Tritt said it’s been a “common practice” for the Tecumseh schools to offer full and part-time coaching positions for different school athletic teams.
Kolleth emphasized to board members that the MEA does not want to file a second, presumably more severe, grievance with the Tecumseh school board.
Instead, Kolleth said she hopes to find a solution “that we can both live with.”
Originally published Tuesday, March 28, 2000
By Pamela Appea
The Ann Arbor News
Tecumseh school board members said they hope to speedily resolve a union grievance over hours worked by assistant coaches.
Janet B. Kolleth, an area official of the Michigan Education Association, said she shares the same goal.
But Kolleth charges that Richard D. Fauble, the Tecumseh schools superintendent, did not follow proper union procedure when the grievance was first filed several weeks ago.
Kolleth presented the grievance at the school board meeting Monday night.
When Tecumseh High School’s track team currently has one head coach and two half-time coach positions, Kolleth said it is unclear whether all three coaches are required to work the same number of hours—although the part-time coaches receive substantially less pay.
Fauble said he and Tecumseh Athletic Director Jim Gimore are researching the job description differences between part-time and full-time coaches in other districts for a base of comparison.
But when Kolleth asked, on average, how much more a full-time coach works than a part-time coach, Fauble said he couldn’t answer the question since hours “vary” for all Tecumseh coaches’ schedules.
Kolleth complained that Gilmore was also unable to answer the question during a previous conversation.
Although the original grievant, Scott Banghart, a former part-time track coach, moved to a full-time coaching position in the district, Kolleth said the problem still remains, since the salary discrepancy between part-and full-time coaches continues.
Kolleth said the amount of the discrepancies between part-time and full-time coaches is a “few thousand dollars.”
Kolleth also said the superintendent erred by threatening retaliation – not to a particular individual, but rather to future job applicants – in a recent conversation with the former grievant.
About two weeks ago, Kolleth said Fauble Banghart heard Fauble say that the district would eliminate one of the part-time coaching positions for the track team. Kolleth said Fauble should not be “meddling with union affairs.”
“He should work with the association, not the grievant,” Kolleth said.
But at Monday night’s school board meeting, Fauble said he did not do or suggest anything of a retaliatory nature during the conversation with Banghart.
“I think I’ve been fair. I’ve tried to be fair at all times,” Fauble said.
Edward Tritt, president of the school board, said the school board cannot make a snap decision to make all three track coaching positions full-time.
Tritt said it’s been a “common practice” for the Tecumseh schools to offer full and part-time coaching positions for different school athletic teams.
Kolleth emphasized to board members that the MEA does not want to file a second, presumably more severe, grievance with the Tecumseh school board.
Instead, Kolleth said she hopes to find a solution “that we can both live with.”
Originally published Tuesday, March 28, 2000
Thursday, March 23, 2000
High Marks for school chief
High Marks for school chief
Clinton board gives superintendent top ratings, delays specifics on contract extension and pay hike.
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Clinton, Michigan—Board of Education trustees gave Clinton Schools Superintendent David Pray high marks in his annual evaluation at a school board meeting this week.
Board president Doug Murray said Pray will receive a contract extension, but the particulars of a contract extension or salary increase will be decided late in the year.
School board members rated Pray in six categories on a 1-5 scale, with 1 being the highest score. Pray earned an overall performance rating of 1.3, with all marks placing near the top of the scale.
Pray received the highest marks in the category of relations with the board of education. The superintendent’s lowest marks was for the goal attainment category.
Individual marks were:
v 1.4 in personnel—faculty/administration
v 1.2 in business administration
v 1.3 in community relations
v 1.2 in personal qualities
o in relations with the board of education
v 1.5 in goal attainment.
School board member Wanda Heinz praised the superintendent saying Pray goes “well and above the call of duty” for the district.
Trustee Shirley Campbell said she’s personally pleased with the superintendent’s job performance.
“Mr. Pray has done an outstanding job. I’m sure he will stay if we ask him to,” she said.
Campbell, an outgoing school board member, said she will regret not having the opportunity to work with the superintendent after her term expires in June.
“He is the epitome of what a superintendent should be,” she said.
Pray, who has been the district’s superintendent for the past six years, is paid about $85,000 annually, Murray said.
Pray first taught at the Clinton school district in the 1970s. He moved up to become a principal, first at Clinton Elementary and then at Clinton Middle School.
Originally published Thursday, March 23, 2000
Clinton board gives superintendent top ratings, delays specifics on contract extension and pay hike.
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Clinton, Michigan—Board of Education trustees gave Clinton Schools Superintendent David Pray high marks in his annual evaluation at a school board meeting this week.
Board president Doug Murray said Pray will receive a contract extension, but the particulars of a contract extension or salary increase will be decided late in the year.
School board members rated Pray in six categories on a 1-5 scale, with 1 being the highest score. Pray earned an overall performance rating of 1.3, with all marks placing near the top of the scale.
Pray received the highest marks in the category of relations with the board of education. The superintendent’s lowest marks was for the goal attainment category.
Individual marks were:
v 1.4 in personnel—faculty/administration
v 1.2 in business administration
v 1.3 in community relations
v 1.2 in personal qualities
o in relations with the board of education
v 1.5 in goal attainment.
School board member Wanda Heinz praised the superintendent saying Pray goes “well and above the call of duty” for the district.
Trustee Shirley Campbell said she’s personally pleased with the superintendent’s job performance.
“Mr. Pray has done an outstanding job. I’m sure he will stay if we ask him to,” she said.
Campbell, an outgoing school board member, said she will regret not having the opportunity to work with the superintendent after her term expires in June.
“He is the epitome of what a superintendent should be,” she said.
Pray, who has been the district’s superintendent for the past six years, is paid about $85,000 annually, Murray said.
Pray first taught at the Clinton school district in the 1970s. He moved up to become a principal, first at Clinton Elementary and then at Clinton Middle School.
Originally published Thursday, March 23, 2000
Seniors’ Groups has more to offer
Seniors’ Groups has more to offer
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
The Tuesday Ladies gather faithfully every week at the Ypsilanti Senior Center, an unassuming building tucked away in a residential pocket but close to the heart of Ypsilanti’s downtown.
The place serves as a home, as the sign outside the center says, for the young at heart.
A few, like Gretchen Broach, 89, a retired elementary school teacher, have been part of this seniors’ group for 20 years—close to the time of the Tuesday Ladies’ inception.
But in the past few months, many of the Tuesday ladies say in-house projects that used to come in regularly –including envelope stuffing and bandage-rolling–inexplicably have stopped completely.
A service-based group, the Tuesday Ladies, at least some of them, knit, quilt, sew and crotchet homespun creations that they give away to whoever needs them, including area hospitals and battered women’s shelters.
Several of the Tuesday Ladies have given up sewing and the like over the years due to arthritis and failing eyesight. But that doesn’t mean they don’t want other projects to work on, the women say.
Wanda Schuler, another Tuesday Lady, said of the flow of project the group received from all over the city: “All of a sudden it just stopped.”
Schuler said the dip in volunteer-related requests has hurt the group’s volunteer base as well. A few of the Tuesday ladies migrated to other more active Ypsilanti-area service groups, Schuler said.
Many of the Tuesday Ladies say they also keep themselves busy at the Ypsilanti Senior Center’s other programs and activities—including everything from shopping trips to Tai Chi exercise classes.
But the service component, said Thora B. Keene, program coordinator for the Tuesday Ladies is important to all members of the group.
“We keep active by doing things for other people,” Keene said.
Originally published Thursday, March 23, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
The Tuesday Ladies gather faithfully every week at the Ypsilanti Senior Center, an unassuming building tucked away in a residential pocket but close to the heart of Ypsilanti’s downtown.
The place serves as a home, as the sign outside the center says, for the young at heart.
A few, like Gretchen Broach, 89, a retired elementary school teacher, have been part of this seniors’ group for 20 years—close to the time of the Tuesday Ladies’ inception.
But in the past few months, many of the Tuesday ladies say in-house projects that used to come in regularly –including envelope stuffing and bandage-rolling–inexplicably have stopped completely.
A service-based group, the Tuesday Ladies, at least some of them, knit, quilt, sew and crotchet homespun creations that they give away to whoever needs them, including area hospitals and battered women’s shelters.
Several of the Tuesday Ladies have given up sewing and the like over the years due to arthritis and failing eyesight. But that doesn’t mean they don’t want other projects to work on, the women say.
Wanda Schuler, another Tuesday Lady, said of the flow of project the group received from all over the city: “All of a sudden it just stopped.”
Schuler said the dip in volunteer-related requests has hurt the group’s volunteer base as well. A few of the Tuesday ladies migrated to other more active Ypsilanti-area service groups, Schuler said.
Many of the Tuesday Ladies say they also keep themselves busy at the Ypsilanti Senior Center’s other programs and activities—including everything from shopping trips to Tai Chi exercise classes.
But the service component, said Thora B. Keene, program coordinator for the Tuesday Ladies is important to all members of the group.
“We keep active by doing things for other people,” Keene said.
Originally published Thursday, March 23, 2000
Friday, March 17, 2000
Beyer’s Senior Volunteers: RSVP: Them, it’s short for love
Beyer’s Senior Volunteers: RSVP: Them, it’s short for love
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Inside the cozy gift shop at Oakwood Hospital Beyer Center, Anita Cooper, a Retired and Senior Volunteer Program volunteer, handles the bustle of newcomers with grace and ease.
“We don’t have much left,” Cooper said this week,” although the gift shop’s shelves were still reasonably supplied with candy, magazines and some gifts. “It’s going ... gone,” she said, waving her hand, before helping the next customer.
“It appears as though the same can be said for the Ypsilanti hospital. Oakwood Healthcare System which operates Beyer, plans to close the money-losing facility next month. Cooper and other volunteers are among many who wish it wouldn’t have to be that way.
Along with hospital employees and administrators, many of hospital RSVP volunteers have worked there for years, some for decades.
The hospital’s volunteer work force boasts 45 women who wear pink coats, known as the women’s auxiliary, and eight men known affectingly as the “gold coats.”
All RSVP volunteers are 55 and older. The Catholic Social Services sponsored-program, said RSVP program coordinator Paula A. Dana, provides training, accident and liability insurance, transportation, recognition and expense assistance for service to all their volunteers.
Many Beyer RSVP volunteers said they’ve had a chance to try their hand at everything from the RSVP nursing student’s scholarship program at Eastern Michigan University to the hospital’s emergency room.
“Over the years, I’ve volunteered to do everything,” said Irene Hadley, who said she has worked at the hospital for 28 years, though not always as a RSVP volunteer.”
Hadley, an Ypsilanti Township resident, said that when she ran an area beauty shop in the 1970s, the shop was closed Mondays, and her husband encouraged her to do something on her day off. Hadley said she enjoyed hospital service from the beginning.
Elnora Miller, a coordinator of the women’s auxiliary volunteers, holds the record for RSVP staffers--12,000 hours of service over the past 20 years.
“You’ve got to keep busy,” Miller said.
But even Miller may cut down on her volunteering, which includes a post at the Ypsilanti Historical Museum, when the hospital closes.
Volunteer Bob Collins said that after Beyer closes, he’ll do something different. With plans to drive a van for Belleville-area seniors, Collins said he will find ways to occupy his time.
Although the city of Ypsilanti is disputing the closing of the hospital and is talking with a new group of physicians about continuing to operate the facility, the volunteers said they have come to terms with the closing.
Helen Birdsall, a volunteer for several years, said that many people she has talked to are finding that not working for the hospital will be “really hard.”
An RSVP volunteer of one year, Phyllis Meadows, said she started coming to the hospital to do services as a result of the kind care her mother received at Beyer while a patient.
Volunteers gathered for a good-bye and recognition party Wednesday. Dana encouraged the volunteers to sign up to participate at one of the 125 other RSVP volunteer sites in Washtenaw County.
Volunteer Simon Eaglin said serving at another hospital just wouldn’t be the same. The retired Ypsilanti postal worker, who has volunteered at the hospital for about 10 years, said he plans to work at Beyer until the hospital’s last day.
“I’ll be here till they close the door,” he said. “And I’ll come back the next day to make sure they’re locked.”
Originally published Friday, March 17, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Inside the cozy gift shop at Oakwood Hospital Beyer Center, Anita Cooper, a Retired and Senior Volunteer Program volunteer, handles the bustle of newcomers with grace and ease.
“We don’t have much left,” Cooper said this week,” although the gift shop’s shelves were still reasonably supplied with candy, magazines and some gifts. “It’s going ... gone,” she said, waving her hand, before helping the next customer.
“It appears as though the same can be said for the Ypsilanti hospital. Oakwood Healthcare System which operates Beyer, plans to close the money-losing facility next month. Cooper and other volunteers are among many who wish it wouldn’t have to be that way.
Along with hospital employees and administrators, many of hospital RSVP volunteers have worked there for years, some for decades.
The hospital’s volunteer work force boasts 45 women who wear pink coats, known as the women’s auxiliary, and eight men known affectingly as the “gold coats.”
All RSVP volunteers are 55 and older. The Catholic Social Services sponsored-program, said RSVP program coordinator Paula A. Dana, provides training, accident and liability insurance, transportation, recognition and expense assistance for service to all their volunteers.
Many Beyer RSVP volunteers said they’ve had a chance to try their hand at everything from the RSVP nursing student’s scholarship program at Eastern Michigan University to the hospital’s emergency room.
“Over the years, I’ve volunteered to do everything,” said Irene Hadley, who said she has worked at the hospital for 28 years, though not always as a RSVP volunteer.”
Hadley, an Ypsilanti Township resident, said that when she ran an area beauty shop in the 1970s, the shop was closed Mondays, and her husband encouraged her to do something on her day off. Hadley said she enjoyed hospital service from the beginning.
Elnora Miller, a coordinator of the women’s auxiliary volunteers, holds the record for RSVP staffers--12,000 hours of service over the past 20 years.
“You’ve got to keep busy,” Miller said.
But even Miller may cut down on her volunteering, which includes a post at the Ypsilanti Historical Museum, when the hospital closes.
Volunteer Bob Collins said that after Beyer closes, he’ll do something different. With plans to drive a van for Belleville-area seniors, Collins said he will find ways to occupy his time.
Although the city of Ypsilanti is disputing the closing of the hospital and is talking with a new group of physicians about continuing to operate the facility, the volunteers said they have come to terms with the closing.
Helen Birdsall, a volunteer for several years, said that many people she has talked to are finding that not working for the hospital will be “really hard.”
An RSVP volunteer of one year, Phyllis Meadows, said she started coming to the hospital to do services as a result of the kind care her mother received at Beyer while a patient.
Volunteers gathered for a good-bye and recognition party Wednesday. Dana encouraged the volunteers to sign up to participate at one of the 125 other RSVP volunteer sites in Washtenaw County.
Volunteer Simon Eaglin said serving at another hospital just wouldn’t be the same. The retired Ypsilanti postal worker, who has volunteered at the hospital for about 10 years, said he plans to work at Beyer until the hospital’s last day.
“I’ll be here till they close the door,” he said. “And I’ll come back the next day to make sure they’re locked.”
Originally published Friday, March 17, 2000
Saturday, March 11, 2000
Cabela’s local megastore to open by fall
Cabela’s local megastore to open by fall
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Dundee, Michigan--Cabela’s is coming.
The national hunting, fishing and outdoor gear retailer will open a huge retail facility in Dundee in September.
Cabela’s officials boast the planned store, the seventh retail outfit in the chain, will become the “top tourist attraction” in Michigan, drawing 6 million visitors or more each year.
The Cabela’s showroom in Dundee is expected to feature everything from outdoor sports, including tents, sport-utility vehicles, clothing, and fishing and hunting equipment. The entire store will encompass 220,000 square feet.
Along with merchandise, the store will showcase stuffed animals from all over the world, much like a museum. Cabela’s will also have an aquarium, a display of antique and prize-worthy guns, and conference space for meetings.
Chelsea resident Don Janowiecki said he has been a faithful Cabela’s catalog customer for at least 15 years.
“I think a lot of people from Michigan and Ohio are going to come to this Cabela’s store,” Janowiecki said.
Bob Wolverton, vice president of the Lenawee County Conservation League, said he plans to go to Cabela’s to see what it’s like once the store opens. Like Janowiecki, Wolverton has received Cabela’s catalogs for years.
Cabela’s officials said another draw at the Dundee store will be an “interactive” laser gun shooting practice ranges where adults and children can practice targeting shooting at taped videos of animals.
The compound hall, built on 150 acres, will also house hotels, resteraunts and service stations in the future, similar to other Cabela’s complexes in rural and semi rural pockets of Nebraska, Minnesota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
“It’s conceivable that our six million (visitors) estimate could be broken. It’s a conservative estimate,” said Cheyanne West, retail marketing manager for Cabela’s Retail.
In comparison, Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall attracts between eight million and 11.5 million people a year, according to Briarwood general manager Marc P. Strich.
West said Dundee was picked as the next site for the Nebraska-based chain, due to a high number of Cabela’s catalogue sales coming in from the Michigan and Ohio areas.
Susy Avery, vice president of Travel Michigan in Lansing, said the agency courted Cabela’s so the company would pock Michigan as its next retail site. Michigan was vying for the store with other states including Pennsylvania and Ohio, Avery said.
Residents of communities near Dundee--including Tecumseh, Saline and Clinton--are preparing for a possible increase in traffic and development as a result of Cabela’s.
Patrick Burtch, the longtime village manager of Dundee, said he’s been contacted by some people who “have a lot of misinformation on Cabela’s.”
“A lot of people have problems about the amount of traffic,” Burtch said.
“People get in their mind six-to-eight million Cabela’s visitors means six-to-eight million cars a year,” he said.
But the village manager said most Cabela’s customers and visitors will come in on tour buses or otherwise in groups. Citing a Cabelas’s-sponsored traffic impact study, Burtch said that 3,600 cars--during peak hours--would come off the expressway to Dundee.
“That’s just a small percentage increase,” he said.
Greg Golab, the appointed manager of the Dundee store said the retail outlet hopes to hire between 500 and 500 people. Most employment will come from the local area, Golab said. But several higher-level management positions may be filled with people from outside the state.
When asked whether he anticipates difficulty hiring, Golab said, “It’s definitely going to be an issue.”
The unemployment rate in Dundee, a town of 3,200 is about 2 percent, Burtch said. Nearby Tecumseh, Clinton and Saline have similar low-levels of unemployment, officials said. But Golab said he feels Cabela’s has a lot to offer its employees, citing the company’s compensation and benfits package.
Including Cabela’s catalog staff, the company employs 2,426 people in the United States. According to the Fortune magazine Webs site, Cabela’s revenue in 1998 was $667 million.
Originally published Saturday, March 11, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Dundee, Michigan--Cabela’s is coming.
The national hunting, fishing and outdoor gear retailer will open a huge retail facility in Dundee in September.
Cabela’s officials boast the planned store, the seventh retail outfit in the chain, will become the “top tourist attraction” in Michigan, drawing 6 million visitors or more each year.
The Cabela’s showroom in Dundee is expected to feature everything from outdoor sports, including tents, sport-utility vehicles, clothing, and fishing and hunting equipment. The entire store will encompass 220,000 square feet.
Along with merchandise, the store will showcase stuffed animals from all over the world, much like a museum. Cabela’s will also have an aquarium, a display of antique and prize-worthy guns, and conference space for meetings.
Chelsea resident Don Janowiecki said he has been a faithful Cabela’s catalog customer for at least 15 years.
“I think a lot of people from Michigan and Ohio are going to come to this Cabela’s store,” Janowiecki said.
Bob Wolverton, vice president of the Lenawee County Conservation League, said he plans to go to Cabela’s to see what it’s like once the store opens. Like Janowiecki, Wolverton has received Cabela’s catalogs for years.
Cabela’s officials said another draw at the Dundee store will be an “interactive” laser gun shooting practice ranges where adults and children can practice targeting shooting at taped videos of animals.
The compound hall, built on 150 acres, will also house hotels, resteraunts and service stations in the future, similar to other Cabela’s complexes in rural and semi rural pockets of Nebraska, Minnesota, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
“It’s conceivable that our six million (visitors) estimate could be broken. It’s a conservative estimate,” said Cheyanne West, retail marketing manager for Cabela’s Retail.
In comparison, Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall attracts between eight million and 11.5 million people a year, according to Briarwood general manager Marc P. Strich.
West said Dundee was picked as the next site for the Nebraska-based chain, due to a high number of Cabela’s catalogue sales coming in from the Michigan and Ohio areas.
Susy Avery, vice president of Travel Michigan in Lansing, said the agency courted Cabela’s so the company would pock Michigan as its next retail site. Michigan was vying for the store with other states including Pennsylvania and Ohio, Avery said.
Residents of communities near Dundee--including Tecumseh, Saline and Clinton--are preparing for a possible increase in traffic and development as a result of Cabela’s.
Patrick Burtch, the longtime village manager of Dundee, said he’s been contacted by some people who “have a lot of misinformation on Cabela’s.”
“A lot of people have problems about the amount of traffic,” Burtch said.
“People get in their mind six-to-eight million Cabela’s visitors means six-to-eight million cars a year,” he said.
But the village manager said most Cabela’s customers and visitors will come in on tour buses or otherwise in groups. Citing a Cabelas’s-sponsored traffic impact study, Burtch said that 3,600 cars--during peak hours--would come off the expressway to Dundee.
“That’s just a small percentage increase,” he said.
Greg Golab, the appointed manager of the Dundee store said the retail outlet hopes to hire between 500 and 500 people. Most employment will come from the local area, Golab said. But several higher-level management positions may be filled with people from outside the state.
When asked whether he anticipates difficulty hiring, Golab said, “It’s definitely going to be an issue.”
The unemployment rate in Dundee, a town of 3,200 is about 2 percent, Burtch said. Nearby Tecumseh, Clinton and Saline have similar low-levels of unemployment, officials said. But Golab said he feels Cabela’s has a lot to offer its employees, citing the company’s compensation and benfits package.
Including Cabela’s catalog staff, the company employs 2,426 people in the United States. According to the Fortune magazine Webs site, Cabela’s revenue in 1998 was $667 million.
Originally published Saturday, March 11, 2000
Friday, March 10, 2000
Street exits for new school considered
Street exits for new school considered
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—Tecumseh school officials continue to consider potential locations for a second street exit at the district’s planned high school.
Richard D. Fabule, Tecumseh schools superintendent, said the two most viable options for a second exit are off Occidental Road or off Chicago Boulevard.
Slated to open in fall 2001, the planned high school’s main entrance and exit will be on Brown Street, a decision made by the project architects and the district months ago.
But negotiations for the second exit aren’t advancing as quickly as many have hoped, due in part to stalled communication with a property owner over the Chicago Boulevard option, school administrators said.
The Occidental Road exit would bring up more considerations that have to be taken into account, including additional financial concerns and development of that area, said Tom Emery, Tecumseh schools business manager.
But school administrators said its unclear at this point whether the board is leaning toward one option over the other.
At recent board meetings, where the issue was discussed, a handful of residents have expressed concern with the cost factor of a second exit, in addition to whether the Occidental Road exit is a wise option.
Tecumseh resident Gerald Roslin raised the concern several weeks ago that if the Michigan Department of Transportation doesn’t approve a traffic light on Occidental Road, then the district’s money “would be wasted.”
Edward Tritt, president of the school board, responded at the time that the board hasn’t decided one way or another.
Representatives from TMP Architecture of Bloomfield Hills—the firm in charge of the high school construction—recently echoed Tritt.
“Everyone is very hopeful that the second exit will be identified quickly,” said Eric Geiser, project manager.
Geiser stressed that while the negotiation for the second exit has taken several months, he likens the time frame to buying a home.
Originally published Monday, April 10, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Tecumseh, Michigan—Tecumseh school officials continue to consider potential locations for a second street exit at the district’s planned high school.
Richard D. Fabule, Tecumseh schools superintendent, said the two most viable options for a second exit are off Occidental Road or off Chicago Boulevard.
Slated to open in fall 2001, the planned high school’s main entrance and exit will be on Brown Street, a decision made by the project architects and the district months ago.
But negotiations for the second exit aren’t advancing as quickly as many have hoped, due in part to stalled communication with a property owner over the Chicago Boulevard option, school administrators said.
The Occidental Road exit would bring up more considerations that have to be taken into account, including additional financial concerns and development of that area, said Tom Emery, Tecumseh schools business manager.
But school administrators said its unclear at this point whether the board is leaning toward one option over the other.
At recent board meetings, where the issue was discussed, a handful of residents have expressed concern with the cost factor of a second exit, in addition to whether the Occidental Road exit is a wise option.
Tecumseh resident Gerald Roslin raised the concern several weeks ago that if the Michigan Department of Transportation doesn’t approve a traffic light on Occidental Road, then the district’s money “would be wasted.”
Edward Tritt, president of the school board, responded at the time that the board hasn’t decided one way or another.
Representatives from TMP Architecture of Bloomfield Hills—the firm in charge of the high school construction—recently echoed Tritt.
“Everyone is very hopeful that the second exit will be identified quickly,” said Eric Geiser, project manager.
Geiser stressed that while the negotiation for the second exit has taken several months, he likens the time frame to buying a home.
Originally published Monday, April 10, 2000
Sunday, March 05, 2000
Reinvestment Act helps communities grow with help of banks
Reinvestment Act helps communities grow with help of banks
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Many bankers know giving something bank to the community is a good idea.
Whether it’s dispensing money to help a small Ypsilanti business get started or loaning the funding for a first-time Ann Arbor home buyer, bankers know this: What helps the community, helps local banks too.
But the success of programs like the Washtenaw HomeBuyers Program or putting a low down payment on a new house shouldn’t just be credited to the benevolence of bankers. Its also the law.
The Community Reinvestment Act, a federal law passed in 1977, mandates that banks and other financial lenders give back to the community.
More specifically, the act states that lenders have “continuing and affirmative obligations” to historically “underserved” communities, many of which have low-and moderate-income residents.
While certain aspects of the law have come under fire in recent years, nonprofit groups, activists and many bankers still see the need for it.
“The bankers I know are heavily involved in the community. Its high on their list of priorities,” said Joe Fitzsimmons, president and CEO of Nonprofit Enterprise at Work and a board member of National City Bank of Michigan/Illinois.
The NEW Center houses 20 nonprofits in its Ann Arbor office, in addition to working with hundreds of other groups across the county, like SOS Crisis Community Center and the Hands-on Museum.
Due in part to the law, some bankers serve on the boards of nonprofits as finance director, or they may help raise money, Fitzsimmons said.
Phyllis L. Desprez, vice president and CRA compliance officer at Bank of Ann Arbor, agrees that the act is still needed.
“It’s rewarding to see that there are avenues for people who don’t have the resources to put money down … We are very satisfied with our involvement with community reinvestment,” Desprez said.
Linda Brashears, vice president of community reinvestment at KeyBank, said that during the late 1970s and early 1980s, she came across bankers who thought the CRA meant they only had to put in a token effort.
“A lot of banks thought, “I can just give a donation and that will fulfill my obligation,” Brashears said.
But as community activists mobilized across the U.S., particularly in urban communities, laws became more specific , and banks became more committed to community reinvestment, Brashears said.
Recent federal legislation bolstered community-reinvestment regulation, giving lenders four rating categories to assess how well banks are doing.
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition states that in 1997 and 1998, 98 percent of lenders in the U.S. received a satisfactory or outstanding rating. The other two ratings are “needs to improve” and “substantial noncompliance.”
If a bank doesn’t comply with reinvestment regulation, it may be fined or barred from expanding its lending operations. But reinvestment advocates say with an overall complaint rating, banks across the U.S. may not strive to improve.
In Washtenaw and Livingston counties, most lenders are complaint with CRA standards. TCF National Bank of Illinois in Ann Arbor was given an outstanding rating in 1998, according to information on the Federal Reserve Board’s Website.
But Melvin L. Larson, a member of the now-dissolved Community Reinvestment Alliance of Ann Arbor, argues that still more needs to be done about community reinvestment and affordable housing in the area. At the same time, Larson said Ann Arbor lenders do more to fulfill CRA law than other communities of the same size in other parts of the U.S.
According to the Washington, D.C.-based National Community Reinvestment Coalition, one of the main ways the act has proven its worth over the years is by boosting the rate of home ownership.
The Housing and Urban Development department said the U.S. homeownership rate “rose to a record high” in the third quarter of 1999, with 67 percent of all families owning their homes. In the Midwest, HUD figures show that home-ownership rates increased from 72.1 percent to 72.2 percent in 1999.
A National Community Reinvestment Coalition study found that home ownerships has increased among minority groups, pointing to HUD figures and community-reinvestment programs.
The coalition said that despite an increase in home ownership among Latinos, Blacks and other low-income communities, the percentage of home owners in the group still falls below the national standard.
Dina Sanders, executive director of the Washtenaw HomeBuyers program, said the need for education on home ownership in Washtenaw County is crucial. With poor credit, buying a home may seem to be out of reach for many, Sanders said.
The HomeBuyers Program holds workshops on credit, realtor referral, and mortgages, and works closely with potential home buyers, particularly with low-income families. Seventy-five to 80 percent of the HomeBuyers clients are minorities, Sanders said.
According to Linda Brashears, who is also a board member of the Washtenaw County Community Reinvestment Officer’s Association, one of her main goals now is to help people with bad credit educate themselves on repairing bad credit.
“I see the next push the CRA group really needs to tackle is the credit issues,” she said.
Originally published Sunday, March 5, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
Many bankers know giving something bank to the community is a good idea.
Whether it’s dispensing money to help a small Ypsilanti business get started or loaning the funding for a first-time Ann Arbor home buyer, bankers know this: What helps the community, helps local banks too.
But the success of programs like the Washtenaw HomeBuyers Program or putting a low down payment on a new house shouldn’t just be credited to the benevolence of bankers. Its also the law.
The Community Reinvestment Act, a federal law passed in 1977, mandates that banks and other financial lenders give back to the community.
More specifically, the act states that lenders have “continuing and affirmative obligations” to historically “underserved” communities, many of which have low-and moderate-income residents.
While certain aspects of the law have come under fire in recent years, nonprofit groups, activists and many bankers still see the need for it.
“The bankers I know are heavily involved in the community. Its high on their list of priorities,” said Joe Fitzsimmons, president and CEO of Nonprofit Enterprise at Work and a board member of National City Bank of Michigan/Illinois.
The NEW Center houses 20 nonprofits in its Ann Arbor office, in addition to working with hundreds of other groups across the county, like SOS Crisis Community Center and the Hands-on Museum.
Due in part to the law, some bankers serve on the boards of nonprofits as finance director, or they may help raise money, Fitzsimmons said.
Phyllis L. Desprez, vice president and CRA compliance officer at Bank of Ann Arbor, agrees that the act is still needed.
“It’s rewarding to see that there are avenues for people who don’t have the resources to put money down … We are very satisfied with our involvement with community reinvestment,” Desprez said.
Linda Brashears, vice president of community reinvestment at KeyBank, said that during the late 1970s and early 1980s, she came across bankers who thought the CRA meant they only had to put in a token effort.
“A lot of banks thought, “I can just give a donation and that will fulfill my obligation,” Brashears said.
But as community activists mobilized across the U.S., particularly in urban communities, laws became more specific , and banks became more committed to community reinvestment, Brashears said.
Recent federal legislation bolstered community-reinvestment regulation, giving lenders four rating categories to assess how well banks are doing.
The National Community Reinvestment Coalition states that in 1997 and 1998, 98 percent of lenders in the U.S. received a satisfactory or outstanding rating. The other two ratings are “needs to improve” and “substantial noncompliance.”
If a bank doesn’t comply with reinvestment regulation, it may be fined or barred from expanding its lending operations. But reinvestment advocates say with an overall complaint rating, banks across the U.S. may not strive to improve.
In Washtenaw and Livingston counties, most lenders are complaint with CRA standards. TCF National Bank of Illinois in Ann Arbor was given an outstanding rating in 1998, according to information on the Federal Reserve Board’s Website.
But Melvin L. Larson, a member of the now-dissolved Community Reinvestment Alliance of Ann Arbor, argues that still more needs to be done about community reinvestment and affordable housing in the area. At the same time, Larson said Ann Arbor lenders do more to fulfill CRA law than other communities of the same size in other parts of the U.S.
According to the Washington, D.C.-based National Community Reinvestment Coalition, one of the main ways the act has proven its worth over the years is by boosting the rate of home ownership.
The Housing and Urban Development department said the U.S. homeownership rate “rose to a record high” in the third quarter of 1999, with 67 percent of all families owning their homes. In the Midwest, HUD figures show that home-ownership rates increased from 72.1 percent to 72.2 percent in 1999.
A National Community Reinvestment Coalition study found that home ownerships has increased among minority groups, pointing to HUD figures and community-reinvestment programs.
The coalition said that despite an increase in home ownership among Latinos, Blacks and other low-income communities, the percentage of home owners in the group still falls below the national standard.
Dina Sanders, executive director of the Washtenaw HomeBuyers program, said the need for education on home ownership in Washtenaw County is crucial. With poor credit, buying a home may seem to be out of reach for many, Sanders said.
The HomeBuyers Program holds workshops on credit, realtor referral, and mortgages, and works closely with potential home buyers, particularly with low-income families. Seventy-five to 80 percent of the HomeBuyers clients are minorities, Sanders said.
According to Linda Brashears, who is also a board member of the Washtenaw County Community Reinvestment Officer’s Association, one of her main goals now is to help people with bad credit educate themselves on repairing bad credit.
“I see the next push the CRA group really needs to tackle is the credit issues,” she said.
Originally published Sunday, March 5, 2000
The Chocolate Vault
The Chocolate Vault
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
A Tecumseh institution, The Chocolate Vault offers patrons a chance to savor home-made raspberry cremes, amaretto truffles and double dipped brownies.
And that's just the beginning. Since husband-wife team Jim and Barb McCann opened the Chocolate Vault in 1985, the shop's popularity has drawn customers coming everywhere from Toledo to Windsor. Locals, who are regulars, also support the store, Barb McCann said.
Large corporations commission Chocolate Vault staffers to make end-of-the-year chocolate gifts. Kids in Harry Potter book clubs request custom-made chocolate frogs for the group. The shop's name was inspired by several community banks that the building housed in the 19th century and early 20th century.
And the 110-116 W. Chicago Blvd. address has seen a number of other shops and businesses open and fold in its 150-year history, Barb McCann said. Doctors treated patients in the building, insurance companies did business, and postal clerks sold stamps.
The McCanns also previously operated cake decorating, candy shop and bridal-service businesses from the 1970s to the early 1980s at the same address. But the couple decided to convert to an all-chocolate business by the '80s to simplify everyday operations.
Focusing on selling chocolate and ice cream was the natural next step for them, said Barb McCann.It's the kind of store that makes Tecumseh a destination, said Cindy R. Helinksi, economic development director of the city.
The store gets visited by regulars who must have their weekly truffles or turtles or a pound of mixed chocolates for their relative, said Jim McCann. And the staff are glad to oblige with the requests they get for unusual or specialized chocolate molds orders.
The McCanns have filled orders for 500 chocolate train engines, 1,000 post office boxes, 500 boxes of chocolate with chocolates inside (with the company logo on top of the box) Even a chocolate brain. The Chocolate Vault will do it all.
Despite the old-fashioned community feel to the store, most of the Chocolate Vault's business flows from the Internet, said Barb McCann. Since the Chocolate Vault went on line in September 1998, the majority of the Chocolate Vault's customers haven't even met the McCanns or sipped on a coffee or ice cream shake in the old-fashioned seating room there.
"Fifty-five percent of the candy business is from the Internet," Jim McCann said.
According to Jim McCann, the Chocolate Vault's candy sales total in 1999 was up by 13.1 percent as compared with the previous year. Breaking the numbers down, local sales in 1999 went up by .25 percent, while Web sales went up by 42.5 percent.
Most days are long, said Barb McCann, who routinely works 14 hours a day, 7 days a week. With a few staffers on board at the shop, Barb McCann works a full day on the Web and Jim McCann juggles orders for special occasions like Valentine's Day, working the counter and acting as the technical support."We like what we do" Jim McCann said.
By Pamela J. Appea - News Staff Reporter
March 5, 2000
The Ann Arbor News
By Pamela Appea
A Tecumseh institution, The Chocolate Vault offers patrons a chance to savor home-made raspberry cremes, amaretto truffles and double dipped brownies.
And that's just the beginning. Since husband-wife team Jim and Barb McCann opened the Chocolate Vault in 1985, the shop's popularity has drawn customers coming everywhere from Toledo to Windsor. Locals, who are regulars, also support the store, Barb McCann said.
Large corporations commission Chocolate Vault staffers to make end-of-the-year chocolate gifts. Kids in Harry Potter book clubs request custom-made chocolate frogs for the group. The shop's name was inspired by several community banks that the building housed in the 19th century and early 20th century.
And the 110-116 W. Chicago Blvd. address has seen a number of other shops and businesses open and fold in its 150-year history, Barb McCann said. Doctors treated patients in the building, insurance companies did business, and postal clerks sold stamps.
The McCanns also previously operated cake decorating, candy shop and bridal-service businesses from the 1970s to the early 1980s at the same address. But the couple decided to convert to an all-chocolate business by the '80s to simplify everyday operations.
Focusing on selling chocolate and ice cream was the natural next step for them, said Barb McCann.It's the kind of store that makes Tecumseh a destination, said Cindy R. Helinksi, economic development director of the city.
The store gets visited by regulars who must have their weekly truffles or turtles or a pound of mixed chocolates for their relative, said Jim McCann. And the staff are glad to oblige with the requests they get for unusual or specialized chocolate molds orders.
The McCanns have filled orders for 500 chocolate train engines, 1,000 post office boxes, 500 boxes of chocolate with chocolates inside (with the company logo on top of the box) Even a chocolate brain. The Chocolate Vault will do it all.
Despite the old-fashioned community feel to the store, most of the Chocolate Vault's business flows from the Internet, said Barb McCann. Since the Chocolate Vault went on line in September 1998, the majority of the Chocolate Vault's customers haven't even met the McCanns or sipped on a coffee or ice cream shake in the old-fashioned seating room there.
"Fifty-five percent of the candy business is from the Internet," Jim McCann said.
According to Jim McCann, the Chocolate Vault's candy sales total in 1999 was up by 13.1 percent as compared with the previous year. Breaking the numbers down, local sales in 1999 went up by .25 percent, while Web sales went up by 42.5 percent.
Most days are long, said Barb McCann, who routinely works 14 hours a day, 7 days a week. With a few staffers on board at the shop, Barb McCann works a full day on the Web and Jim McCann juggles orders for special occasions like Valentine's Day, working the counter and acting as the technical support."We like what we do" Jim McCann said.
By Pamela J. Appea - News Staff Reporter
March 5, 2000
Monday, January 10, 2000
The Ann Arbor News, Businesses work hard to get established
The Ann Arbor News
Businesses work hard to get established
By Pamela Appea
Clinton [Michigan.]—Clinton Inn owners Mark and Laurie Pedersen have some advice for those who are thinking of running a business: Don’t buy a nearly 100-year-old inn without thinking a lot of work, time and dedication are involved.
The classic entrepreneur’s dream of opening up a quaint bed and breakfast in the county with a cushy 40-hour work week is just that: a dream, they say. Even with Mark Pedersen’s years of experience in hotel management working at several Hiltons, the couple said being their own bosses in a smaller community like Clinton presents its own set of challenges.
One of the first challenges is how to get a few of the 12,000 daily drivers on the US-12 to stop and check out Clinton.
The Pedersens’ wish isn’t uncommon.
Marilyn T. Weaver, owner of the Wild Swan Shoppe, an eclectic gift and collectibles store, echoes the Pedersens in saying sometimes it feels like a challenge to get drivers to stop and park.
Weaver said she can’t afford to just carry specialty items in her shop. So she carries everything from stickers to Irish-related gifts and crafts to aromatherapy items.
Changing her window display every three weeks is a priority, Weaver said. “People have five seconds to look. I do have people come in—for the first time—who were driving cars by the store,” she said.
Locals come in to look at each new display and support her store by buying gift items, Weaver said. But since Clinton’s population is a little more than 2,500, Weaver said she appreciates the outside support.
Area business owners say it can be challenging to operate a shop or store in a small bedroom community like Clinton where many residents work outside the town and many business owners live elsewhere.
Carl Habrick, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said that many Clinton residents are used to driving to Toledo or Ann Arbor for clothes and big shopping trips.
Clinton could use some diversity in retail businesses, funneling some of the money back into the town, he said. Habrick, who co-owns The Clinton Local newspaper with wife Marianne, feels there is just the right number of eateries and antique and collectibles shops around.
What Clinton needs, Habrick said, are new and different retail busineses like a men’s clothing store and a shoe store. And Weave adds to the wish list of businesses: a hardware store, a bakery and a woman’s clothing store.
Weaver said it can take up to five years for a business to become established, and some potential business owners may feel the risk to too great to open up a business in a smaller community like Clinton.
Newcomers like Hubie’s Jerky and More show there is a market for other stores coming into town.
Tom Huber, owner of Hubie’s Jerky and More, said right now that business could be better. Huber said he hopes to see business improve in the spring and summer time as the weather warms up and more people will go out driving. The Manchester native said he sees a market for quality jerky, especially priced at a competitive level.
“I know it’s a very popular snack good. Everybody thought that, and I began selling it where I work, selling to where I golf. There weren’t any stores available (in Manchester.) My stepson heard about the opening in Clinton and I had two days to decide if I wanted it,” Huber said.
Huber’s store, which has been open for 16 months, sells 12 different varieties of jerky, including beef and turkey jerky, and flavors such as beef teriyaki jerky.
Habrick’s prognosis for Clinton merchants is optimistic. Armed with the support of the Clinton Chamber of Commerce members and the community, Habrick said the goal is to “get things going.”
“Clinton is a growing area and I don’t see a lot of turnover in business … People are taking a chance and finding it a good place to do business.”
Originally published in The Ann Arbor News.
Copyright 1999-2000
Businesses work hard to get established
By Pamela Appea
Clinton [Michigan.]—Clinton Inn owners Mark and Laurie Pedersen have some advice for those who are thinking of running a business: Don’t buy a nearly 100-year-old inn without thinking a lot of work, time and dedication are involved.
The classic entrepreneur’s dream of opening up a quaint bed and breakfast in the county with a cushy 40-hour work week is just that: a dream, they say. Even with Mark Pedersen’s years of experience in hotel management working at several Hiltons, the couple said being their own bosses in a smaller community like Clinton presents its own set of challenges.
One of the first challenges is how to get a few of the 12,000 daily drivers on the US-12 to stop and check out Clinton.
The Pedersens’ wish isn’t uncommon.
Marilyn T. Weaver, owner of the Wild Swan Shoppe, an eclectic gift and collectibles store, echoes the Pedersens in saying sometimes it feels like a challenge to get drivers to stop and park.
Weaver said she can’t afford to just carry specialty items in her shop. So she carries everything from stickers to Irish-related gifts and crafts to aromatherapy items.
Changing her window display every three weeks is a priority, Weaver said. “People have five seconds to look. I do have people come in—for the first time—who were driving cars by the store,” she said.
Locals come in to look at each new display and support her store by buying gift items, Weaver said. But since Clinton’s population is a little more than 2,500, Weaver said she appreciates the outside support.
Area business owners say it can be challenging to operate a shop or store in a small bedroom community like Clinton where many residents work outside the town and many business owners live elsewhere.
Carl Habrick, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said that many Clinton residents are used to driving to Toledo or Ann Arbor for clothes and big shopping trips.
Clinton could use some diversity in retail businesses, funneling some of the money back into the town, he said. Habrick, who co-owns The Clinton Local newspaper with wife Marianne, feels there is just the right number of eateries and antique and collectibles shops around.
What Clinton needs, Habrick said, are new and different retail busineses like a men’s clothing store and a shoe store. And Weave adds to the wish list of businesses: a hardware store, a bakery and a woman’s clothing store.
Weaver said it can take up to five years for a business to become established, and some potential business owners may feel the risk to too great to open up a business in a smaller community like Clinton.
Newcomers like Hubie’s Jerky and More show there is a market for other stores coming into town.
Tom Huber, owner of Hubie’s Jerky and More, said right now that business could be better. Huber said he hopes to see business improve in the spring and summer time as the weather warms up and more people will go out driving. The Manchester native said he sees a market for quality jerky, especially priced at a competitive level.
“I know it’s a very popular snack good. Everybody thought that, and I began selling it where I work, selling to where I golf. There weren’t any stores available (in Manchester.) My stepson heard about the opening in Clinton and I had two days to decide if I wanted it,” Huber said.
Huber’s store, which has been open for 16 months, sells 12 different varieties of jerky, including beef and turkey jerky, and flavors such as beef teriyaki jerky.
Habrick’s prognosis for Clinton merchants is optimistic. Armed with the support of the Clinton Chamber of Commerce members and the community, Habrick said the goal is to “get things going.”
“Clinton is a growing area and I don’t see a lot of turnover in business … People are taking a chance and finding it a good place to do business.”
Originally published in The Ann Arbor News.
Copyright 1999-2000
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