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U-M and MSU deadlocked in Make-A-Wish fundraising competition

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The University of Michigan and Michigan State University are deadlocked in their most recent competition - the Make-A-Wish Collegiate Fundraising Challenge.

As of Friday, $10,000 has been raised with nearly equal amounts coming from each school. As a result, student organizers are extending the competition through the end of March.

Money raised by U-M students will help grant wishes to children at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, while money raised by MSU students will benefit children in the Lansing community.

U-M senior Brandon Yanik came up with the idea for the "Make Blue and Green Wishes Come True" fundraising event after learning about Make-A-Wish from his dad, Dr. Greg Yanik, a pediatric oncologist at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital.

The average wish costs $5,000. Brandon Yanik's goal is for the collegiate competition to raise between $25,000 and $50,000

Donations can also be made online. For Blue wishes, go to http://friends.wish.org/022-000/page/Wolverine-Kids/Make-a-Blue-Wish-Come-True.htm. For Green wishes, go to http://friends.wish.org/022-000/page/Spartan-Kids/Make-a-Green-Wish-Come-True.htm.

Lisa Carolin is a freelance reporter for AnnArbor.com.


Ypsilanti-Willow Run merger exciting, exhausting to watch

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As a relatively recent graduate of the formally recognized Ypsilanti Public School District, observing the restructuring of the merged Ypsilanti Community School District is both exhilarating as well as exhausting.

Consolidating the school districts feasibly is responsible while the affects are disheartening for those who have invested their energy inspiring youth. Our youth deserve the opportunity to develop skills that are universal yet unique to their abilities.

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Willow Run, left, and Ypsilanti high schools could be used differently if the new consolidated Ypsilanti Community Schools district decides on a small learning communities model of secondary education, rather than a comprehensive high school model.

AnnArbor.com

Most participants engaged in the attempt to build a unified school district are envisioning coordinating resources that ensure our youth are empowered individuals interested in contributing to the better of Ypsilanti.

The primary focus of adults in our community should align with impressing the idea of championing the importance of exceptional programming, retaining brilliant educators and utilizing facilities in district to optimize our students educational experience.

I hope Ypsilanti enthusiast also commit to being innovative in their attempt to market the new school district to appeal to the needs of our residents. For the sake of our children let's continue to passionately preserve the heritage of Ypsilanti and honor each other's opinion.

I encourage those of interest to join an advisory committee to assist in defining what are the needs of Ypsilantians.

D’Real Graham is a graduate of the Ypsilanti Public School District and a resident of Ypsilanti.

Ann Arbor man at U-M emergency room drives away in ambulance

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A Huron Valley Ambulance vehicle is back in circulation after being taken for a joyride late Friday by a man waiting in the University of Michigan Hospital's Emergency Room.

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A man drove away in a Huron Valley Ambulance vehicle late Friday.

The man, who was waiting to be seen, drove away in an ambulance that was parked outside at 11:30 p.m. Friday.

U-M police spokeswoman Diane Brown said the driver of another ambulance saw the man drive by and didn't recognize him. The HVA employee reported the incident and the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Office caught up with the unknown driver on Huron River Drive near the entrance of Washtenaw Community College.

The vehicle was pulled over and the driver was arrested. He is 19-years-old, from Ann Arbor, but not affiliated with the University of Michigan.

The suspect was taken back to the ER for evaluation. Brown says that it is likely he was intoxicated. He was then taken to jail waiting for charges to be authorized and then arraigned.

Brown says there are likely to be multiple charges against him including unlawful driving away of an automobile.

Further details, including why the man initially sought medical attention, were not immediately clear.

Lisa Carolin is a freelance reporter for AnnArbor.com.

Michigan hockey tops Ferris State in shootout to end regular season, will start CCHA tournament at home

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Updated at 11:30 p.m.

The Michigan hockey team will be fighting to preserve its 22-year NCAA tournament streak when the CCHA playoffs start next week.

And after a 1-1 tie and shootout win over Ferris State Saturday night at Yost Ice Arena, it will start the tournament at home, while riding its longest winning streak of the season.

The Wolverines won their fourth straight game and swept the fifth-place Bulldogs to end the season on a four-game winning streak. Senior captain A.J. Treais scored in the first round of the shootout, and Wolverines freshman goaltender Steve Racine stopped all three Bulldogs shooters.

The Wolverines end the season at 13-18-3, in seventh place in the CCHA. They will open a three-game first-round playoff series Friday against Northern Michigan. Had Michigan lost in regulation or overtime, it would have started the postseason on the road.

And just like they did three years ago, when Michigan wrapped up an unlikely NCAA tournament bid with a CCHA Tournament championship, the Wolverines know that it will take a tournament win to keep the hallowed streak intact.

“I don’t think any person in that locker room has any doubts that we can go on a run or that we can keep winning and keep playing Michigan hockey," Michigan forward Kevin Lynch said. "Everyone believes in that locker room that we can do things that a lot of people probably think we can’t do.”

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MIchigan seniors celebrate a shootout win and Senior Night at Yost Ice Arena on Saturday, March 2.

Andrew Kuhn | For AnnArbor.com

On senior night, it was Treais, who hasn't scored a goal since Jan. 19, who gave the Wolverines the one extra point they needed to move up to seventh place.

“I’m not going to lie, it’s been a while since I put a puck in the back of the net, and even though it doesn’t count, I can still feel that as a goal," Treais said.

Lynch got Michigan on the board eight minutes into the game, when he took a pass from Andrew Copp and tucked a shot into the top corner of the net, over the shoulder of Ferris State goaltender CJ Motte.

After making several standout saves on a first-minute Ferris State power play chance, Racine let up a goal on a deflection in front midway through the second period.

But from there he was lights out, making a pair of standout saves with 11 minutes left in the third, one on a breakaway and the other seconds later on a back-door chance, to preserve the tie before the game went to overtime.

“All year we’ve been complaining about our goals against, and I think it’s pretty clear tonight that our goalie won us the game," Michigan coach Red Berenson said.

In overtime, after the Wolverines couldn’t capitalize on an empty net opportunity in the final minute, Racine stopped a breakaway chance from Ferris State’s Travis Ouellette with 10 seconds left to send the game to a shootout.

The Bulldogs pulled their goalie early, needing the three points of an overtime win to move into position to get home ice advantage.

Racine earned first-star honors after giving up one goal for the second straight game while making 24 saves.

After cycling through three goalies most of the year, Michigan has finally found its hot hand just before the playoffs. Racine has now backstopped Michigan to consecutive series sweeps.

“I was playing a lot in the beginning of the year, and once that kind of goes away you notice that you maybe took it for granted a little bit," Racine said. "I just tried to work hard and get back in there and make the most of my opportunity.”

The four-game win streak to end the regular season gives Michigan a dichotomy heading into the postseason. It's still a seventh-place team with an uphill climb to an NCAA berth-clinching CCHA tournament win.

But it's also a team with a hot riding a hot goalie and a CCHA-high four-game winning streak heading into the tournament.

“I still think we’re a team that has something to prove," Berenson said. Let’s face it, you can’t forget about the 30 games we played before the last four. But nevertheless, I like our team, I think we have a chance to be a team that moves forward.”

Kyle Austin covers sports for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at kyleaustin@annarbor.com or 734-623-2535. Follow him on Twitter @KAustin_AA.

Chelsea's Steve Bleise takes second place to highlight area wrestlers in state finals at The Palace of Auburn Hills

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Chelsea's Steve Bleise watches as Logan Massa of St. Johns has his hand raised after winning the Division 2 135-pound weight class of the MHSAA Wrestling Championships on Saturday, March 2.

Daniel Brenner | AnnArbor.com

Patrick Nothaft for AnnArbor.com

AUBURN HILLS -- Chelsea’s Steve Bleise defied his own expectations at the 2013 Division 2 individual state finals, as the junior took the mat on Saturday with a chance for the 135-pound title.

“Coming in, I didn’t think I was going to make the finals,” Bleise said. “I just planned to show up and wrestle as well as I could. Whatever happened, I was going to be fine.”

When he qualified for the state tournament in 2012, Bleise competed at 119, where he finished fourth.

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Steve Bleise of Chelsea, bottom, during his Division 2 135 pound state title match against St. Johns sophomore of Logan Massa on Saturday, March 2.

Daniel Brenner | AnnArbor.com

A summer growth spurt forced Bleise to adjust to the 135-pound weight class this season, and he still recorded a 45-0 record before suffering a first-round pin to St. Johns’ Logan Massa in the title bout.

Photo Gallery

“Now that I made the finals, I’m disappointed in how I did,” he said. “(Massa) came out ready, and I wasn’t as prepared as I should’ve been.”

With an experience of a state finals match in hand, Bleise has one goal for 2014.

“I’ve only got one more shot, so I’m going to work every day this summer and be as prepared as I possibly can,” he said. “I’ll know exactly what to expect in the finals next year, and I’ll be stronger, quicker, and faster than I was this year.”

Chelsea teammate Mike Hovater took third at 189 pounds after defeating Flint Kearsley’s Robert James in the consolation final. Holding a 42-0 record , Hovater suffered his first defeat in the semifinals to state runner-up Garett Stehley of Lowell, who he defeated in a 2012 match.

“You can’t help but think that it could’ve been me in the title round,” said Hovater, who placed fifth at 171 in 2012. “Maybe I would’ve matched up better than Stehley against (St. Johns’ 189 champion) Payne Hayden.”

Also in Division 2, Ypsilanti’s Kyle Abdellatif finished fourth at 125 after losing a 1-0 decision to Eaton Rapids’ Jaedin Sklapsky in the consolation bracket. The junior, who recorded his 150th win this season, credited his brother Zaid, an Ypsilanti senior state-qualifying heavyweight, for getting him interested in wrestling.

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Ypsilanti's Kyle Abdellatif, left, and Eaton Rapids' Jaedin Sklapsky during their 125 pound third place match in the Division 2 individual state finals.

Daniel Brenner | AnnArbor.com

“We started wrestling in sixth grade,” the younger Abdellatif said. “He’s bigger than me, so we don’t wrestle each other much anymore, but I wouldn’t have gotten into wrestling if not for him.”

Zaid went 1-2 on the weekend, falling just short of the medal rounds.

Dexter's Zeke Breuninger took eighth at 112 after losing both of his matches on Saturday.

In Division 3, Manchester junior Eric Coval finished fourth at 145, with a 5-0 loss to Yale’s R.J. Smith ending his tournament run. After reaching the semifinals, Coval fell behind 4-0 to Lake Odessa Lakewood’s Jordan Bennett and lost a 10-4 decision.

“I knew I needed to get the first takedown, but I came out a little flat in the semifinals, and Bennett got a quick four points,” said Coval, who finished with a 47-9 record. “My goal was to finish in the Top 5, so I’m happy overall.”

Manchester teammate Ben Heuser was seventh at 135.

In Division 1, Ann Arbor Pioneer’s Billy Cobb-Gulley took fourth at 103, and teammate Jahi Hilliard was seventh at 215. Saline also had two medalists in Taylor Ticknor, who was sixth at 112, and Nate O’Sullivan, who was sixth at 135.

Patrick Nothaft is a journalist for MLive Media Group. He can be reached at pnothaft@mlive.com.

Images from the medal rounds of the MHSAA Individual State Wrestling Finals

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Chelsea's Steve Bleise took second place at 135 pounds in Division 2 at the MHSAA Individual state wrestling finals while nine more Washtenaw County wrestlers competed for medals in their respective weight classes.

Daniel Brenner is a photographer for AnnArbor.com.

Ann Arbor native and author Sarah Erdreich to discuss 'Generation Roe'

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Ann Arbor native and journalist Sarah Erdreich, who’s coming to Nicola’s Books on March 7, wrote her book “Generation Roe: Inside the Future of the Pro-Choice Movement” in hopes of not only reaching out to feminists, but also those who are neutral on the issue of abortion.

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This inevitably raises the question: Do such creatures exist?

Erdreich points to an experience she had once on a plane, while seated next to a man who engaged her in a conversation about abortion and reproductive rights.

“He was clearly not the most pro-choice individual, but he was curious,” said Erdreich. “ … He said something like, ‘Don’t women decide to do this without thinking about it? Don’t they just walk in and get an abortion?’ … He’d never faced the situation of someone close to him having or needing an abortion. It was just something he sometimes heard about on the news or in passing. So I always think of people like him, whose opinion of abortion is along the lines of, ‘I wouldn’t get one myself, but isn’t it easy to get one?’”

On the contrary; Erdreich traces, in her book, how a number of states have passed regulations since Roe v. Wade (1973) that severely limit women’s access to abortion, and includes quotes from providers and women who have personal experiences to share.

But what specifically inspired Erdreich, a longtime free-lance writer and editor, to write "Generation Roe"?

PREVIEW

Sarah Erdreich

  • What: Ann Arbor native, women’s health advocate and journalist Erdreich will discuss her new book, “Generation Roe: Inside the Future of the Pro-Choice Movement,” which assesses the history and legislative battles surrounding Roe v. Wade, and how state regulations, following that landmark case, have increasingly limited women’s access to abortions.
  • Where: Nicola’s Books, 2513 Jackson Ave. in Ann Arbor.
  • When: Thursday, March 7 at 7 p.m.
  • How much: Free. 734-662-0600 or www.nicolasbooks.com.
Partly, it was Michael Winerip’s 2009 New York Times article, titled “Where to Pass the Torch?” which asked whether young people would be willing to take the reins as pro-choice activists and abortion providers, as those who got involved with the pro-choice movement in the time of Roe v. Wade grew older and were looking to retire.

But another point of inspiration was Erdreich’s work for the National Abortion Federation.

“In early 2008, I was working for a national abortion hotline here in D.C. (where Erdreich now lives), answering questions, and speaking to women and girls and partners from all around the country," said Erdreich. "They’d call us as a resource, but it provided me with a personal crash course in the reproductive rights that exist, or don’t exist, in this country. I’d lived in Ann Arbor and Boston and New York, then D.C.—all these liberal environments—so I think I'd always thought, ‘Oh, if you need an abortion, there’s always Planned Parenthood.’ But while working at the hotline, I realized how wrong I was. I got all this new information, and I was hearing stories that affected me and made me angry. How this was so hard for so many women, financially and otherwise.”

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Sarah Erdreich

Erdreich was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and her family moved to Ann Arbor when she was 3. After a “brief stint” at Emory University, she returned to Ann Arbor to study creative writing and literature as an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. “Generation Roe” is Erdreich’s first book.

“I started working on it in 2009, so it’s been a long journey, and I was very lucky to have an agent who’s tenacious in the best way possible,” said Erdreich. “It’s not easiest subject matter to sell, obviously. But she believed in it from the beginning. And 7 Stories Press is a great progressive publisher, so this was right up their alley. It's a good fit.”

Jenn McKee is the entertainment digital journalist for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at jennmckee@annarbor.com or 734-623-2546, and follow her on Twitter @jennmckee.

What does the Crisler Center look like before, during and after a rivalry game?

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The Michigan men's basketball team will play Michigan State on Sunday and the Crisler Center will no doubt be packed.

But what does the Crisler Center look like before, during and after a rivalry game? By the time you're in the building, it's usually already filled, and if you're out of the building, by nature you can't see what's going on inside.

In the above time-lapse video, we see Crisler go from empty, dark and peaceful to full, bright and chaotic during February's game against Michigan's other chief rival, Ohio State.

Daniel Brenner is a photographer for AnnArbor.com.


'We've infiltrated': Ann Arbor Spartan fans prepare for U-M-MSU basketball game in their backyard

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MSU fans, like these members of the Izzone, will be out in force for Sunday's game at Crisler Center.

AnnArbor.com file photo

Green, for lack of a better word, is good. Green is right. Green works.

And, there’s a good chance you’ll see a lot of green in the Ann Arbor area Sunday as local Spartans don their favorite color in anticipation of the big game at Crisler Center.

Approximately 8,000 Michigan State University alumni reside in Washtenaw County, making it one of the largest groups of Spartan alumni outside of the East Lansing area. I’m proud to count myself among them. With the Spartans set to take on the University of Michigan Wolverines in their second showdown of the season, I set out to see what some local Spartan alums experience in our area.

Are Michigan fans thumping their chest with all their recent success (save for the last month)? Are Spartan fans talking more trash to their colleagues after the thumping delivered to the Wolverines on Feb. 12 in East Lansing? Is there going to be a full-on dance war in front of Crisler, a la the video for Michael Jackson’s Beat It, before Sunday’s game?

RESIDENT SPARTAN

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Resident Spartan, AnnArbor.com cops and courts reporter Kyle Feldscher.

Joseph Tobianski | AnnArbor.com file photo

AnnArbor.com cops and courts reporter Kyle Feldscher is a Michigan State alumnus and unabashed Spartans fan who occasionally chimes in on the Michigan-Michigan State rivalry from a Spartan living in Ann Arbor's perspective. Check out his previous work:

“Ann Arbor is a great town and the University of Michigan is a fine university,” said Dave Holzman, vice president of the Washtenaw County chapter of the Michigan State University Alumni Association.

Looks like we won’t need any one-gloved mediators in this showdown.

Truth be told, Spartans and Wolverines both seem to have fun with the rivalry in these parts. Holzman and Athena Trentin, two Spartan alums living in the area, are a part of a group who regularly get together to watch MSU games at local establishments. While they usually stick to Spartan-owned bars and restaurants, such as The Arena and Weber’s Inn, the number of MSU supporters in the area helps them feel comfortable.

Trentin said there’s a large group of Spartans employed by one of the last organizations you’d expect: the University of Michigan itself.

“We’ve infiltrated,” she said, laughing. “It was a really nice place to work and the rivalries were fun.”

In the spirit of cooperation, Trentin said she worked directly with Ohio State, Wisconsin and Michigan alumni during her time at the university. She now works at the University Research Corridor, a partnership between U-M, MSU and Wayne State University.

Trentin is a regular at the game viewings put together by the alumni association, and she said the green-clad crowd usually gets a fine reception from the maize-and-blue loving locals. Well, for the most part.

“I’d say it’s 50-50 wherever we go,” she said, recounting a few instances where people have told the group to get lost (I’m sure in those exact words). “We just blow them off.”

The group plans to get together at the Ypsilanti Township Aubree’s, 2122 Whittaker Road, to watch Sunday’s game. Davonn Robinson, a manager at that location, said they could expect a mostly-warm reception from the regulars.

Robinson said a large, mixed crowd is expected for Sunday’s game, just like most other times when the two schools play each other.

“It’s pretty friendly around here,” he said. “A couple guys might rag on you.”

In MSU circles, the respect for the Michigan basketball program is growing, albeit begrudgingly as I wrote last month. Then again, MSU beat Michigan so badly on Feb. 12 that the Spartans played guys who don’t even have names on the back of their jerseys.

And, Michigan just lost to a Penn State team that was previously 0-14 in the Big Ten.

Despite those things, most MSU fans expected to split the season series with the Wolverines. I know that’s what I thought would happen. Holzman agreed with me, but I think he speaks for most Spartan fans when he said it’s hard not to dream.

“I predicted at the beginning of the Big Ten season the two teams would split,” he said.

“I just don’t know now. MSU is better than I thought they’d be, even though the past week has been a letdown. They’ve rested for a week, hopefully Keith (Appling) gets some rest and hopefully they’re motivate to play Michigan. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Spartans win and sweep the season series.”

Time will tell. Go Green.

Kyle Feldscher covers cops and courts for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at kylefeldscher@annarbor.com or you can follow him on Twitter.

Two Ann Arbor women look to boost people's confidence with baked goods business

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Melissa Sundermann and Gingie Gauger of Fresh Baked Confidence, an Ann Arbor baked goods business launched in 2012.

Courtesy photo

Melissa Sundermann and Gingie Gauger believe that fueling people’s minds is just as important as fueling people’s bodies.

So when the Ann Arbor physicians, mothers and entrepreneurs launched a baked goods business in 2012, they decided to make healthful snacks with motivational messages wrapped in the packaging.

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Ann Arbor company Fresh Baked Confidence can make customizable gift baskets for events and holidays.

Courtesy photo

Called Fresh Baked Confidence, the company’s 11 different baked goods are popping up around the Ann Arbor area, from the People’s Food Co-op to Greenhills School and WideWorld Sports Center.

The products have catchy names — like “Believe-in-yourself banana muffin” and “Choc full of goodness granola cookie” — and they are preservative-free with mostly natural ingredients. Two of the products also are gluten-free.

“We’re both physicians, so we care about taking care of our bodies and healthy eating, and we try to do that for our families,” Sundermann said.

Gauger added: “When you look at some products that are available (on the market), you read the ingredients list not knowing what they are. I just feel like there are a lot of unknowns in our consumer industry.”

Similar to a fortune cookie, when customers unwrap Fresh Baked Confidence products, a motivational message is tucked inside. Messages like “The dictionary is the only place where success comes before work” are meant to inspire consumers.

“It’s part of our mission that we strive to empower,” Sundermann said.

Sundermann and Gauger now rent space at Ann Arbor’s Juicy Kitchen restaurant to bake. Eventually, they hope to have their own commercial kitchen.

To help improve the Fresh Baked Confidence’s packaging and marketing plan, students at Michigan State University’s School of Packaging and Univeristy of Michigan’s Ross School of Business are working on semester-long projects that focus on the company.

“It’s a wonderful experience to work with these students who are bright and motivated…we’re really grateful for their help,” Sundermann said.

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Melissa Sundermann and Gingie Gauger, owners of Fresh Baked Confidence, hope to expand into larger grocery stores and grow their gift basket business.

Lizzy Alfs | AnnArbor.com

Once the packaging is improved, the goal is to bring Fresh Baked Confidence products into larger grocery stores and expand throughout Michigan. Sundermann and Gauger also hope to grow their gift basket business to compete with companies like Edible Arrangements. They’ve made customizable gift baskets for sports teams, medical residents at a U-M hospital department and various special occasions.

“Right now, it’s just the two of us, but we’ll quickly be needing to hire part-time employees and possibly interns,” Sundermann said.

Sundermann and Gauger acknowledge the baked goods business is flooded with competition, but they believe their motivational message sets them apart. And they both agree: they won't be selling Fresh Baked Confidence products without the message, even though it would save time and energy.

“We felt like, from the beginning, that’s what made us unique,” Gauger said. “There are a lot of products already out there…our belief is to motivate and nurture your mind and your body.”

The baked goods cost between $2 and $3 and can be ordered on the Fresh Baked Confidence website. Fresh Baked Confidence products also are sold at Ann Arbor’s People’s Food Co-op, Greenhills School, U-Go’s at the University of Michigan Union, Juicy Kitchen, WideWorld Sports Center, Chelsea Farmers Market and the Ann Arbor Farmers Market.

Lizzy Alfs is a business reporter for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at 734-623-2584 or email her at lizzyalfs@annarbor.com. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/lizzyalfs.

Ann Arbor's East Washington Street should stand as a lesson in transformation

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In a town where change can take enormous amounts of time, energy and community debate, one downtown Ann Arbor street continues its metamorphosis into something meaningful.

East Washington Street was a “dead zone” a decade ago when I started business reporting in this community.

It was just a few blocks that connected the incredibly vibrant downtown Ann Arbor to the vitality-laden University of Michigan.

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Sava Lelcaj plans to open a new restaurant on East Washington Street this year.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Yet even amid some business successes - like Arbor Brewing Co. on its western end - the buildings along the street combined to create pockets of inactivity that seemed beyond fixing.

Single-tenant office buildings that closed at 5 p.m. A former Laura Ashley store next to a parking deck. Rental housing. Surface parking. No windows. No reason for anyone to stop. No area to create a sense of place.

Enter a wave of individual private investments during those years, and the blocks are transformed.

Today, there’s an energy on the street that’s fueling the drive of local investors. They’re seeing opportunity. They’re also creating it, by staking a claim to underutilized spaces. And by doing that, they’re effectively expanding the downtown market area.

The most recent example is Sava Lelcaj, who took a risk by opening babo market at the corner of South Division - and now stands ready to start her third downtown business further west in the 200 block of the street.

“I love Washington Street,” Lelcaj told AnnArbor.com reporter Lizzy Alfs.

The owners of Blue Tractor might say the same thing, after buying a building a few years ago, expanding their scope and eventually buying another building downtown so they could move Cafe Habana and further expand.

That’s organic business growth at its best.

East Washington, while building vibrancy, doesn’t fulfill everyone’s vision for the city. Among the changes are two student high-rises, including the one above babo.

Yet the investors who turned the buildings into a collection of destinations have made a difference to this city. Consider McKinley Towne Centre, which extended storefronts along South Division - and generated the foundation of foot traffic that made the retail spaces, like Mani and its sister restaurant, Isalita, possible on East Liberty.

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The exterior of the Blue Tractor BBQ & Brewery in downtown Ann Arbor.

Angela Cesere | AnnArbor.com

Or Jon Carlson and Greg Lobdell, who activated their block with Blue Tractor and the offices above it.

And next comes Lelcaj, adding to the block with her new restaurant.

Beyond that, there are changes on West Washington - Mark’s Carts, the Village Green apartments - that provide a deeper connection for the city, and a still-more vital commercial corridor.

Yet compare that to East William Street: Another underutilized connector street between downtown and the University of Michigan campus.

The mix is different, since there is some public land involved, including the Ann Arbor District Library.

But I can’t help but think: We shouldn’t just celebrate the transformation of East Washington Street. We need to learn from it, too.

Paula Gardner is Community News Director of AnnArbor.com. Reach her by email or follow her on Twitter.

When will Ann Arbor train station project go to a public vote? Council members differ on issue

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Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje still wants to see a new train station built on the footprint of an existing parking lot the city leases to the University of Michigan on Fuller Road in front of the U-M Hospital, where an estimated 30,000-plus people go every day. The project is still in the planning stages and officials haven't completely ruled out re-using the existing Amtrak station site on Depot Street. No matter which site is selected, the project must go to a public vote before construction occurs.

City of Ann Arbor

As the city of Ann Arbor's train station project continues to chug along, a big question mark still hangs in the air: When will the project go to a public vote?

The City Council agreed last fall to eventually put the question of a new Amtrak station on a city ballot before construction occurs, but exactly when that happens isn't decided.

Some argue the project, which has been controversial the past few years as it's moved through the planning stages, should go to voters before any more money is spent.

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City Council Member Jane Lumm, an Independent who represents the 2nd Ward, continues to question the push for a new train station.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

"The city should not have spent the substantial amounts we have on the project already without a clear mandate from the community," said City Council Member Jane Lumm, an Independent who represents the 2nd Ward and questions the need for a new train station.

Lumm estimated the city already has spent about $2.7 million of residents' money, counting money spent on consultants, and studies and sewer and water main improvements along Fuller Road, the city's first choice for where to put the new station.

Mayor John Hieftje said the $1.34 million worth of utility work done on Fuller Road had been planned for a long time and was needed regardless of any potential train station project there.

"The work provided much-needed improvements for the medical center, Fuller Pool, and, as I recall, 30,000 Northside residents," he said.

Lumm now questions the latest projections that show the city might have to spend another $9.4 million in local dollars for design and construction.

"Where is that local money going to come from for the upfront capital cost? Don't know that," she said. "How about any incremental costs for operations? Don't know that either."

AnnArbor.com put the question of the timing of a public vote on the Ann Arbor Station project to all 11 members of the City Council this past week. Nine responded, and their answers varied widely.

Their answers suggest there likely won't be a public vote this year.

Council Member Christopher Taylor, D-3rd Ward, questioned the logic of going to voters before completing the final design.

"The investment to design an adequate Ann Arbor train station will be money well spent," he said. "It makes no sense to put an incomplete proposal before the voters.

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Fellow 3rd Ward Council Members Christopher Taylor, left, and Stephen Kunselman, right, see the train station issue differently. Taylor is in favor of completing a $2.6 million final design phase before going to voters. Kunselman said there's no need for council to include a new train station design in the city's fiscal year 2014-15 budget since there still remains, in his opinion, a great deal of ambiguity about the location and funding sources for a new train station.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

"We cannot develop a financing plan without a final design. No one, neither voter nor council member, would be able to make an informed decision about a new train station without a final design."

The city's tentative capital projects budget shows a $2.6 million line item for final design in the fiscal year starting July 1, 2014.

The city is counting on 80 percent of those funds coming from the federal government, leaving roughly $520,000 tentatively planned to come from the city's general fund.

The city's staff acknowledges the final design is unfunded at the moment. For the project to move forward, the preliminary engineering and environmental review phase — costing more than $3 million — must be completed with a determination to head into final design on a specific site the federal government will help choose.

The city received a $2.8 million federal grant for the work that's being done now, and voted in October to chip in another $550,000 from the city's general fund cash reserves as a local match.

The actual construction cost of a new train station, estimated at $44.5 million, is another piece that remains unfunded, though the city expects the same 80-20 split between federal and local dollars.

For now, the city is assuming $35.6 million in construction funds will come from the Federal Railroad Administration, leaving an $8.9 million placeholder in the city's general fund in 2015-16.

The city's staff expects to work with other potential funding partners to meet the local match for construction, according to a recent memo shared with council.

Hieftje said he's not discouraged by critics who question whether federal funds will be forthcoming for eventual construction of a new train station in Ann Arbor.

"They're building and working on stations across the state along the rail line," he said of the federal government's interest in rail in Michigan. "There's absolutely no reason to believe they're not going to be prepared to (fund a station in Ann Arbor). They've already given us the first stage funding and are working closely with our people. There's absolutely no reason to believe that they won't be following through with upgrading the stations, particularly the busiest station in the state."

Council Member Sumi Kailasapathy, D-1st Ward, said the city first must decide whether there is majority support on council for spending general funds for a train station, wherever it might be located.

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Council Member Sumi Kailasapathy, D-1st Ward, said the city should be cautious about spending any more general fund money on a new train station.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

The city has focused heavily on the site on Fuller Road — on the footprint of what's now a paved parking lot in front of the University of Michigan Hospital — but it hasn't completely ruled out re-using the existing Amtrak station site just a stone's throw away on Depot Street.

If there is support for spending more money, then the city needs to wait for the FRA to approve a site for that train station, Kailasapathy said.

"Only after the FRA has made a determination, and only if the FRA recommends the Fuller Park site, should we ask voters to approve the use of that parkland for a train station," she said.

"While we wait for these things to happen, we should spend no more general fund money planning or preparing for a train station," she added.

Kailasapathy said it's possible the current council, which has a few new faces, does not support spending any further general funds to plan or build a train station.

Since the council last voted 8-2 to spend the $550,000 from its general fund cash reserves, Kailasapathy, Sally Hart Petersen and Chuck Warpehoski have joined the council's ranks.

Petersen, D-2nd Ward, said an appropriate time for a public vote would be after the conceptual planning and before the final design.

She said it's noteworthy that the first phase of the contract with SmithGroup JJR, one of the city's consultants, requires a conceptual plan workshop, public meetings, and conceptual designs of both the Fuller Road and current Amtrak site plans.

"So, the public can expect to weigh in on the conceptual design before its completion and before any voting," she said.

Warpehoski, D-5th Ward, said he hopes the city will pursue other sources of funding to help make up the local match for the next phases, so the general fund contribution will be much less.

He pointed out the council isn't being asked to make any additional funding allocations for the train station project in the coming fiscal year that starts July 1.

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Council Member Chuck Warpehoski, D-5th Ward, said he sees two logical windows for a vote: Either after the environmental review work that's being done this year, or after the final design work expected in 2014-15.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

"So I don't see it as a factor as we pass this year's budget," he said.

Warpehoski said he sees two logical windows for a vote: Either after the environmental review work that's being done this year, or after the final design work expected in 2014-15.

One concern Warpehoski said he heard from voters during the library bond debate last fall was the lack of a design or final plan for the new downtown library the bond would have funded. The result was that the $65 million bond proposal was defeated with less than 45 percent in favor.

"Given that concern, my preference would be to bring this to the voters when we can have all the relevant questions addressed: Where will it be? What will it look like? Who else is contributing funding?" Warpehoski said, suggesting he wants to see the city proactively look for funding partners so it's not on the hook for more than half the final design costs.

Council Member Sabra Briere, D-1st Ward, noted the resolution the council approved last fall stipulated the project would go to voters "at or before the completion of a final design."

Briere said the already-funded work being done includes a recommendation about the location, and the federal grant the city received contains enough funding for preliminary designs.

"So, after the environmental assessment is completed, but before more money is spent on a final design — that seems to be the meaning of the resolution," she said.

Briere said she believes the public vote must take place before any final decisions are made regarding the location of a new train station.

Hieftje told AnnArbor.com in an interview this past week the $520,000 from the general fund for final design is only a rough estimate, and it actually could be more than $700,000. He said it's not written in stone which will come first — the final design or the public vote.

"For one thing, we don't have a good determination of what the match will be for the final design, because if the FRA frankly chooses the Fuller Road site, then the design work that's already done greatly reduces whatever match is required," he said. "It looks like the maximum would be about $700,000 and change, but again that could be split between our partners."

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Council Member Sally Hart Petersen, D-2nd Ward, said an appropriate time for a public vote would be after the conceptual planning and before the final design.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

Hieftje said there are two ways to look at the timing issue.

"Some people believe that if you don't have a complete design, it's really not fair to voters to say, 'Hey, you really don't know what you're voting for.' Others believe you don't need the complete design," he said. "But again, if it came back that most of the match was already covered, then why not wait for the full design? And if it comes back that there's a whole lot that we would have to come up with as a city, then we may make the decision another way."

Hieftje said there will be a public vote regardless of which site is chosen — not just if it happens to be proposed on city parkland in Fuller Park.

"Basically it's the federal government's money, so they're going to make a decision on where they spend it," he said. "But we need to get through this stage — the environmental work — before we can make the next decision."

Lumm thinks a voter referendum on the project needs to happen now before the final design is complete. She believes once the design is complete, proponents will argue too money has been invested in a new station not to go forward with the project.

Lumm also continues to question whether the tens of millions of dollars in federal funds for construction of the station will materialize.

"And we continue to spend money on a project where the fundamental need isn't clearly established, at a site that I believe — despite claims to the contrary — is pre-determined, is parkland, and is likely not the low-cost alternative," she said, suggesting there are more pressing city needs and priorities, as well as a great deal of uncertainty regarding regional transportation in Southeast Michigan.

Council Member Stephen Kunselman, D-3rd Ward, said there's no need for council to include a new train station design in the city's fiscal year 2014-15 budget since there still remains, in his opinion, a great deal of ambiguity about the location and funding sources for a new train station.

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Council Member Mike Anglin, D-5th Ward, said he was amazed the train station project was included in the city's updated Capital Improvements Plan without clear direction from council.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

As long as Fuller Park remains the preferred site for a new train station, Kunselman said he doubts the mayor has the necessary support of the majority of council members to even approve ballot language for any initiative to proceed with a new train station.

"Until Fuller Park as a proposed train station site and WALLY are removed from further consideration, and community trust in train transit can be restored, I have no reason to support a ballot proposal asking for community support for a new train station," he said.

Kunselman said he's personally a staunch supporter of inter-city train travel, but it is seems the mayor's "transit by train" initiatives such Ann Arbor Station have created widespread community distrust due to citizen expectations that city tax subsidies will be required.

He predicts any ballot proposal soliciting community support for a new train station — if it even makes the ballot — will be defeated by voters.

Kailasapathy agreed.

"I believe there is a strong possibility that voters will not approve the use of the Fuller Park site for a train station," she said. "For that reason, I believe we should not spend any more money on planning the station until we have permission from the voters."

Council Member Mike Anglin, D-5th Ward, said he was amazed the train station project was included in the city's updated Capital Improvements Plan without clear direction from council.

"At this time, I would not be in favor of building a new train station since we have a train station now that functions well for the community," he said. "City staff time and transportation resources are better placed on providing better bus service, since bus service is more reliable and nimble and therefore able to respond to current and future needs and travel timetables."

The local Huron Valley Group of the Sierra Club has been concerned about the precedent that would be set by building a train station on a portion of Fuller Park, even if it is a parking lot now.

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A westbound Amtrak train to Chicago pulls into the Ann Arbor station on Depot Street in this photo from last year. In the background is the University of Michigan Hospital, where the mayor and other city officials want to build a new train station on Fuller Road.

Melanie Maxwell I AnnArbor.com

Chairwoman Nancy Shiffler said her group continues to support both rail transit and protection of parks, but the question to be presented for a public vote is currently vague at best.

"We want the city to present a clearly defined question to the public for a vote," she said, "including the proposed location, and the city's costs to build and operate, all of which will be best understood after completion of the environmental assessment and preliminary engineering designs, as required by the federal grant accepted by the city in the summer of 2012."

While the Sierra Club has been mostly critical of the project, the Ann Arbor-based Ecology Center has endorsed it.

Mike Garfield, the Ecology Center's director, said his group's position remains unchanged from October when it lobbied council to approve funding the current phase of work.

"I'd be open to relocating the train station development to another adequate site, but I haven't seen an adequate alternative suggested," Garfield said.

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The parking lot along Fuller Road where the mayor would like to see a new train station built. Others, including the local Sierra Club, have been concerned about the precedent that would be set by building a train station on a portion of Fuller Park, even if it is a parking lot now. City officials said the FRA will make the final choice on a location for the station.

City of Ann Arbor

Ryan J. Stanton covers government and politics for AnnArbor.com. Reach him at ryanstanton@annarbor.com or 734-623-2529. You also can follow him on Twitter or subscribe to AnnArbor.com's email newsletters.

2012 year of record adoptions for Humane Society of Huron Valley

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Eager and curious, Kensy sniffed the ground and pulled her handler Mike Barkman of Ann Arbor toward the woods at the Humane Society of Huron Valley in Superior Township.

A terrier and pit bull mix, Kensy, at the age of 4, has had almost as many owners.

Under the careful guidance of the Humane Society staff, Kensy’s sweet, intelligent character will help her find a permanent place to live.

HSHV had a record number of adoptions in 2012: 3,783 homeless and abused animals found homes -- about 152 more than last year -- and 857 were reunited with their families.

The Humane Society is celebrating its adoption success after a nearly rocky start to 2012, when Washtenaw County attempted to cut its $500,000 in annual contract funding for services to the HSHV in half.

Negotiations between the two parties has continued for the past year, and a new four-year contract is on the eve of being signed.

Within the next several years, the new contract would cover the actual operations costs the humane society says it incurs each year for caring for animals under the contract it has with the county.

The contract

Washtenaw County is mandated to provide animal control services by state law, which include housing stray dogs and dogs seized during cruelty investigations. In 2012, 415 reports of animal abuse and neglect were investigated.

Under the contract with the county, HSHV houses and cares for stray animals in the county, and any animals brought to the organization by animal control officers, law enforcement and HSHV’s cruelty investigators and emergency rescue team.

“We are committed to our partnership with the county because we consider it a win-win for taxpayers and our community’s homeless and abused animals,” said Tanya Hilgendorf, executive director of the HSHV. “We have very strong outcomes, a highly effective service delivery system, and are a national model for best practices in animal care and animal cruelty investigations. These are outcomes this community has grown to expect.”

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Humane Society of Huron Valley Executive Director Tanya Hilgendorf holds a calico cat as she poses for a photo at the shelter on Friday.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

The Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners has been debating for the past year if it should care for more than dogs -- as is the only requirement under the Dog Law of 1919, and how much it should be paying to the HSHV for the services it gets in return.

The humane society sides on behalf on the way state animal cruelty laws are written to include "all vertebrae."

The initial proposal to cut the county funding in half did not sit well with the HSHV, and both parties settled on a $415,000 amount for 2012.

In 2012, the HSHV had $66,000 more in expenditures than it had in revenue.

“We anticipated a loss because of a reduction in the county contract in 2012 and made special efforts to increase our fundraising and grants to fill in the gap, but did not completely succeed,” Hilgendorf said.

An analysis conducted by the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Office in conjunction with the HSHV this summer found that the services HSHV provided per the contract it has with the county total a direct cost amount of $591,622 in 2012.

Adding in the facilities costs, technology and administrative overhead into that would equal a total housing cost of $715,893 in 2012, according to the analysis.

The analysis also found that cruelty investigations cost about $235,900 in 2012, and that about $1 million in in-kind services were being provided that would bring the total value of the services the HSHV was providing to the county under the terms of its contract to $2,053,393.

After an evaluation throughout last summer, the commissioners decided late in 2012 to allow county Administrator Verna McDaniel to execute a new contract with HSHV for an amount of no more than $500,000.

McDaniel said she plans to pursue a $550,000 contract, about $460,000 of which will be paid for by the county. The remaining $90,000 will be paid for by select other municipalities in the county, McDaniel said, but those agreements are still pending.

A new four-year contract, which McDaniel initially said would be signed by early January, has yet to be inked.

"Our goal is by next year at least be covering all of our hard costs through the terms of the contract," Hilgendorf said.

The animals

HSHV is the only shelter in Washtenaw County. A total of 5,615 pets came in to the HSHV in 2012.

It has one of the highest save rates out of any shelter in Michigan at 85 percent, according to the HSHV.

The other 15 percent are animals that come in so sick or injured that they can’t be saved and have to be humanely euthanized, said Deb Kern, marketing director for HSHV.

For healthy and treatable animals, HSHV says it has a placement rate of 99 percent.

Part of HSHV’s adoption success is due to a number of targeted programs it employs.

From a free barn cat program that helps find placements for feral cats, to matching senior animals with senior citizens, to discounted adoptions for veterans, the humane society is able to make sure the right animals end up in the right homes.

HSHV helped 1,099 cats through its feral cat program last year, and completed 6,144 spay and neuter surgeries.

The average length of stay for cats is about one month at the shelter.

For dogs, it’s about 16 days. Pit bulls and pit bull mixes take a little longer to find homes for -- about an average of 36 days, Kern said.

Kittens and puppies are adopted so quickly that they “fly out” of the shelter, Kern said.

“Some animals never make it to the website,” Kern said.

During the winter months, fewer to no puppies or kittens are at the shelter. Kern said many people looking for a young animal to adopt will turn elsewhere to find a pet to take home -- including pet stores.

Kern said the puppies and young dogs brought to the HSHV through PetSmart’s Rescue Waggin' each month helps combat that problem.

PetSmart charities pay for the transport of the puppies from points south, where the warmer weather proliferates the puppy production. If they were to stay in shelters in southern states, they would likely be euthanized, Kern said.

The HSHV pays for those animals once they arrive at their shelter, and the number of dogs adopted from the Rescue Waggin’ count toward the total number of animals the shelter adopted out.

Funding

As a non-profit, the HSHV relies heavily on donations and volunteer hours to make its operations work.

Though HSHV knew it would be likely operating at a loss for 2012, it started the year with $11.5 million in unrestricted assets.

Of the $4,679,683 in revenue the HSHV brought in during 2012, $1,512,469 of that was of individual and business contributions, $300,777 from special events, $310,053 from bequests and $118,321 from grants and foundations.

HSHV spends about 86 percent of its funds on programs and services. Seven percent is spent on development, and 7 percent is spent on management.

The HSHV agreed to the decreased compensation in the 2012 contract.

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Courtesy of HSHV

However, with less of a contribution from Washtenaw County for contracted services in 2012, more of the donations are going to general operations than they are for services, Hilgendorf said.

“Donor money should be used for important mission-related services and critical prevention services, like spay-neutering and humane education,” Hilgendorf said. “In the end, we do the animals, the community and our organization a disservice when we allow ourselves to be underpaid.”

HSHV also has contracts with the municipalities of Plymouth and Canton to house their stray animals, which amounted to $1,972 and $47,810 in income for 2012, respectively.

Those contracts don’t cover housing animals for abuse or neglect cases, cruelty investigations or for animals ordered out of a home by the court. HSHV cared for 46 stray animals from Plymouth and 112 stray animals from Canton in 2012.

Volunteers

Volunteers help with a number of operations throughout the HSHV, like cleaning cages, walking dogs, filing records in the veterinary clinic and working charity events.

About 820 volunteers contributed 62,993 hours of service to HSHV in 2012 -- which is the equivalent of 30 full-time employees. They’re a main reason that the organization is able to be successful.

Barkman, who works with Kensy, is one such volunteer. About a year ago, he started walking dogs for two to three hours in the morning several days a week. It’s a busy task - he handles between five to eight dogs in any kind of weather. Each dog at the shelter gets time outside twice a day.

Why does he do it?

“My love for animals,” Barkman said.

Amy Biolchini covers Washtenaw County, health and environmental issues for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at (734) 623-2552, amybiolchini@annarbor.com or on Twitter.

NAAPID at Night talent show rescheduled for March 12

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Students will perform at the 10th annual NAAPID at Night talent show Tuesday, March 12 at Lincoln High School performing arts center, at 7425 Willis Road in Ypsilanti Township.

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NAAPID at Night was postponed from Feb. 11 because of several school closings that day.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com file photo

The event was supposed to take place on Feb. 11, but was postponed due to several school closings that occurred that day.

The talent show features performances by students in kindergarten through 12th grade, from Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Willow Run, Lincoln, Milan, and Saline school districts.

It will be catered by South West Washtenaw Consortium Culinary Arts Students of Saline, Dexter and Lincoln High Schools, under the supervision of instructor Sam Musto.

Food will be served at 5:30 p.m. and the program will begin at 6:30 p.m.


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Kody Klein can be reached at kklein@mlive.com.

Ann Arbor psychologist charged with criminal sexual conduct has hearing adjourned

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David Falkner

Courtesy of WCSO

The 61-year-old Ann Arbor psychologist charged with four counts of criminal sexual conduct had his preliminary examination adjourned to March 28 in the 14A-1 District Court Thursday.

David Falkner's attorney, John Shea, is currently tied up representing Bernard Kilpatrick in the federal corruption trial in Detroit. The jury is still out in the case involving former mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, his father and Bobby Ferguson.

Falkner is accused of having an "inappropriate relationship" with one of his patients. Police say the victim is a woman older than 18 but have not released any additional information about the case.

Falkner, who is free on a personal recognizance bond, faces four counts of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct. Each count is punishable by two years of imprisonment or a fine up to $500.

John Counts covers cops and courts for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at johncounts@annarbor.com or you can follow him on Twitter.


Dusty's Collision owner pledges $75,000 to support Regional Career Technical Center

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A former Regional Career Technical Center student is giving back to the Ypsilanti-based vocational program that he says made him successful at a time when budget cuts have significantly reduced the programs offered.

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A Lincoln student rinses a car at the Regional Career Technical Center in this 2011 file photo.

Courtesy photo

Dusty Whitney, owner of three Ann Arbor auto collision repair shops that bear his name, has pledged to give the center’s auto center $25,000 a year for three years to help keep it up and running for future students. Whitney gave his first check to the program last summer for the 2012-13 school year.

“Over the years I’ve kept a pretty big business, so I wanted to give back to something that kind of helped me get started,” he said. “I think it’s a very important thing. There are some kids that are just hands-on and have certain skills, book work isn’t for everybody.”

Whitney attended the RCTC in the early 1990s and opened Dusty’s Collision at 2418 S. Industrial Hwy in Ann Arbor in 1995.

When he was a student, Whitney said, students were allowed to bring in their own cars to work on. Whitney started by fixing his parents’ friends' cars and then started knocking on doors at homes where he saw wrecked cars out front. He eventually gained a large enough clientele to rent a small shop of his own to meet the demand.

Whitney now owns six auto collision repair shops across the state, including locations in Flat Rock, Temperance and Grand Blanc. He employs 70 full-time workers, some of whom are RCTC graduates.

“When I was in school, I wasn’t a very good student and I got involved with the RCTC and the auto body program and that kept me out of trouble and kept me motivated and interested in fixing cars,” he said. “So I basically was able to start a business right out of high school.”

Facing a budget shortfall, Ypsilanti Public Schools cut five of the RCTC’s eight programs in 2012 — construction technology, child care, health occupations, computer systems technology and graphic arts — saving the district about $500,000, said Sharon Irvine, the district's executive director of human resources.

Collision repair, automobile technology and culinary arts and hospitality management survived the cuts, but RCTC Director Bill Burnette said they are still under threat of being replaced with courses at Washtenaw Community College.

Whitney’s support makes up nearly 25 percent of the auto center’s operating costs and has significantly bolstered the program for the next three years, Burnette said. Whitney, who also serves on the program’s advisory board, has known Burnette since having him as a teacher during his time at the RCTC.

When he heard of the cuts the district was making to the RCTC in January 2012, Burnette said he called Whitney for corporate sponsorship, and Whitney immediately pledged $75,000 over a three-year-period with the possibility of extension.

“His donation has helped provide para-educator support for the program as well as the cost of program administration/supervision,” Irvine said in an email. “It has also provided an instructional supplement to the program.”

Whitney credits Burnette and the RCTC for his training, but Burnette said Whitney was an incredible student.

“He’s an amazing young man and his success speaks for himself,” he said. “He’s made it, and he’s worked hard for it.”

Whitney said he is currently expanding his first shop, Dusty’s Collision, from 15,000 square feet to 25,000 and plans to transform the bigger space into a company headquarters and training facility for employees. He hopes to work with the RCTC to create a training program where auto collision students will be able to spend time at his facility getting hands-on training in a real shop, at no cost to the center.

In addition to the real world experience, Whitney said the training could also lead to full-time employment at one of Whitney’s shops.

“Most of my employees are getting older now, and I need people to replace those employees,” he said. “It’d be nice to give others the same kind of opportunity I was given.”

Erica Hobbs is a freelance reporter.

High-schoolers could get college credits under Ypsilanti Community Schools-WCC partnership

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A proposed new partnership with Washtenaw Community College aims to allow high school students in the Ypsilanti Community Schools district to graduate with college credits or an associate's degree.

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Ypsilanti Community Schools students may have the opportunity to receive college credit from Washtenaw Community College.

The unified Ypsilanti-Willow Run board voted unanimously Thursday to approve the new partnership, which several board members touted as a positive for the newly created district.

The college's Board of Trustees will vote on the partnership next week, officials said.

"This is exciting for me," said board member Daniel Raglin. "I went to WCC and it was a great experience and led me to continue my education. It was a stepping stone I needed. I think they’ll love it."

Board President David Bates agreed.

"I was a student at Washtenaw Community College my senior year at high school and I'm very thrilled to see it come into fruition and can’t wait," Bates said.

One of the goals of the new district is to have all students graduate with an associate's degree, college credit or both.

WCC and the new district will create a joint work team with representatives from both districts and the Washtenaw Intermediate School District to explore programming options. Formal recommendations will be made to the governing bodies for approval, as will a formal agreement outlining the specifics of the partnership.

WCC administration will work with officials from Ypsilanti Community Schools and the Washtenaw ISD to allow students to graduate with college credit or a career credential, achieve or exceed the college readiness scores on the ACT or COMPASS exams, and take college courses while enrolled in high school.

Ypsilanti Public Schools Superintendent Dedrick Martin said he believes this is a "once-in-a-lifetime game changer" for all students.

"That is an opportunity we don’t see very often," Martin said. "It is very exciting to me to see (us) prepare kids for life after high school, whether that's the work force or college."

Katrease Stafford covers Ypsilanti for AnnArbor.com.Reach her at katreasestafford@annarbor.com or 734-623-2548 and follow her on twitter.

Fire-damaged Golden Chef restaurant demolished

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The former Golden Chef, a fire-damaged restaurant in Ann Arbor's Maple Village Shopping Plaza, was demolished mid-afternoon Monday.

According to city records, the building permit to demolish the restaurant was issued March 1, nine days after the permit was first approved.

The restaurant has been vacant since it was damaged in a 2008 fire, after which owners failed to renovate the building to city-issued parameters.

It's unclear whether the permit was pursued by the city or the owners. The city of Ann Arbor's Planning and Development Department could not immediately be reached for comment.


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Winter storm expected to bring more snow to Ann Arbor

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Snow-covered trees form a scenic canopy in Bismarck, N.D., on Monday. Parts of the state received up to a foot of snow, closing schools and creating travel difficulties.

AP photo

Another winter storm is barreling toward the Great Lakes, but the worst of it will miss the Ann Arbor area, forecasters say.

“We’re looking at a storm total of an inch to an inch and a half,” said Rachel Kulik, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in White Lake Township, which does forecasting for all of southeast Michigan.

Most of that will fall between 6 p.m. Tuesday and 2 a.m. Wednesday, Kulik said. The snow will start earlier in the afternoon, but only a couple of tenths are expected before the evening rush hour.

Folks to our west and south will get more snow. A winter storm watch is out for parts of southwest Michigan, northern Indiana and northern Ohio. Some of those, especially in Indiana and Ohio, could get up to 8 inches of snow, the National Weather Service warns. Freezing rain also is possible in some areas.

After the storm passes, the Ann Arbor area is in for a warming trend. By Wednesday afternoon, temperatures will be in the upper 30s. Thursday and Friday will bring sunshine with temperatures climbing again into upper 30s.

The serious warming begins Saturday, when the high is expected to reach 44 degrees under partly sunny skies. A chance of rain and snow showers is in the forecast for Sunday with a high of 46.

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Rebekah Warren leads call for nurse staffing quotas in Michigan

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The Michigan Nurses Association joined Democratic lawmakers Monday in their push to make Michigan the second state to mandate hospital staffing levels, but hospital officials expressed concern the requirement could backfire due to higher costs.

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Rebekah Warren

Democratic Sen. Rebekah Warren of Ann Arbor and Rep. Jon Switalski of Warren recently introduced legislation that would require Michigan hospitals to develop and implement staffing plans and meet statewide minimum nurse-to-patient ratio requirements, depending on the type of patient.

The bills would, for example, require hospitals to have one nurse for every patient in critical care units and one nurse for every four patients in pediatric units. It also would ban mandatory overtime for nurses except in emergencies.

Dr. Laurence Rosen, a health care researcher at Public Policy Associates, said during a telephone news conference Monday that research shows low nurse staffing levels are associated with higher death rates and can also cause patient complications like blood stream infection and hospital induced pneumonia.

Similar legislation has been introduced every year since 2004 but has failed to gain traction, Switalski said.

"Without a doubt, the hospital industry has a firm grip on the Legislature," he said.

California is the only state that has statewide nurse-to-patient ratio requirements. Lawmakers in other states, including Minnesota, have introduced similar measures this year.

Chris Mitchell, senior director of advocacy at the Michigan Health and Hospital Association, which opposes the legislation, said the law in California has shown only "mixed results."

"Hospital leaders reported difficulties in absorbing the costs of the ratios, and many had to cut budgets, reduce services, or employ other cost-saving measures," he said in a statement.

Warren said Michigan has requirements for the number of day care providers that must be present as well as laws that limit the number of hours a truck driver can be on the road.

"When it comes to a life and death situation like we have in our hospital care setting, we are letting our citizens down if we don't talk about the same kind of common sense plan," she said.

But Mitchell said the legislation does not address the bigger issue of state and nationwide nurse shortages.

"Hospitals simply cannot maintain a supply of nurses that do not exist," he said.

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