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Massage Envy Spa opens on Plymouth Road in Ann Arbor

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Jonathan Schwartz and his brother Michael pose for a photo in the lobby of Massage Envy Spa on Thursday, May 9, 2013.

Melanie Maxwell I AnnArbor.com

A national massage and spa chain opened its doors Thursday in the Traver Village Shopping Center on Ann Arbor’s Plymouth Road.

Franchisees Jonathan and Michael Schwartz opened Massage Envy Spa at 2611 Plymouth Road, in the space vacated by Tree Town Toys and Rider’s Hobby. First Martin Corporation owns Traver Village.

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Massage Envy Spa at 2611 Plymouth Road Ann Arbor.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Based in Arizona, the massage chain operates about 880 locations in 47 states. There are four other locations in the Metro Detroit area.

The Schwartz brothers — who grew up in Birmingham, Mich. and both attended the University of Michigan — called Massage Envy a “perfect fit” for the Ann Arbor area. Jonathan owns two Massage Envy locations in Florida.

“Ever since I opened (in Florida) I thought Ann Arbor was a perfect fit and it just took us five years to make it happen,” Jonathan said.

Michael added: “Geographically, we love the convenience (of Traver Village). You can have a massage and go get a cup of tea or coffee at Espresso Royale. You can get a message and go do your grocery shopping (at Kroger).

The 4,600-square-foot space in Traver Village is separated into 14 rooms and a front desk and retail area. The studio offers customized massages and facials using Murad skincare products, along with enhanced therapies like a sugar foot scrub, aromatherapy and deep muscle therapy.

An introductory one-hour massage costs $49, and an introductory facial is $59. Massage Envy’s wellness program costs $59 per month and includes one service, with a $10 charge for a facial. A one-hour massage for a non-member is $78. (See more on pricing)

“We’re taking massage out of this pre-conceived notion that it’s only for special occasions or the well-off who can afford it, and bringing it to everybody and making people realize it can be part of your monthly wellness regime,” Jonathan said.

Massage Envy Traver Village hired about 15 employees, and is still accepting applications. (Apply online) Massage Envy offers an online training portal and continuing education options for its employees.

Jonathan and Michael said they would like to open a second location in another Ann Arbor neighborhood.

Massage Envy’s hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday.

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.


Ypsilanti resident launches Michigan pride website Mitten Stretcher

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Ypsilanti resident Mark Serra recently launched his website, Mitten Stretcher, in hopes of connecting Michigan residents with each other.

Courtesy Mitten Stretcher

Do you have Michigan pride?

If so, an Ypsilanti resident has launched a new website, Mitten Stretcher, with a social networking component for Michiganders near and far to connect and promote community pride.

“I’m a lifelong Michigander and while spending time all over the state, I realized that people from here are a little bit different than other places,” Mitten Stretcher founder Mark Serra said. “People are so proud and with a lot of the ups and downs we’ve seen, it’s nice to see a lot of the positive things happen. I just wanted to be a vehicle to showcase those things.”

Serra said he started formulating the idea for the website, which launched April 29, about two years ago.

“The idea really started about two years ago and we kind of put the pieces together and started to take this thing from an idea to something real,” he said.

Serra’s website was designed to connect individuals who live in Michigan, as well as those who may have moved out of the state and are still interested in following what’s going on here.

For those who no longer live here, Serra said the site has a component called Mitten Pride Worldwide, that features people originally from Michigan.

“I was thinking there are so many people that had to leave the state of Michigan for some reason, job or economy, but they’re still proud to be from here and they don’t get the opportunity to see all of the good things happening here,” Serra said.

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The Mitten Stretcher website has several components to it, including a social networking site.

Courtesy Mitten Stretcher

Serra said the site promotes Michigan pride, tells the story of the communities in the state, and pushes for continual development and progress.

“We’re trying to capture positivity from all regions,” Serra said. “We think southeast Michigan is powerful.”

The social networking component of the site, Mitten Stretcher Community, which will soon be rebranded as Mitten Connect will allow people to actually get in touch with each other.

“I think it’s more valuable than just telling the story,” he said. “People are always looking to connect on common bonds they may have. People are trying to connect more meaningfully now and that Michigan tie, I thought it would be valuable to use that. This is a reminder that the door to Michigan is always open.”

In line with keeping everything local, Serra had VC Web Design, an Ypsilanti company, design the website.

“I made the decision to work with VC Web Design after having several conversation with companies and individuals who do this stuff and they understood it better than anyone,” Serra said. “We’ve had a great experience with working with them.”

Later this year, Serra said his company will become official corporate partners with the Eastern Michigan University Athletics Department.

“We’re very excited about what’s happening and what’s going to happen,” Serra said. “I think this thing can grow in ways that we can’t even imagine right now.”

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

Powerball jackpot tops $200 million for 3rd time in 2013

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It may not be the safest Mother’s Day present, but a Powerball ticket again has the potential to bring in huge sums of cash.

If you can match the five numbers and the red “power” number drawn, it could be the best gift ever.

The game’s jackpot topped a quarter of a billion dollars again when no winners had the exact match for the numbers drawn on Wednesday. With the top prize now at approximately $270 million, this is the third time this year and the seventh time since last May that the winner will take home more than $200 million, according to a report in the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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AnnArbor.com reporter Ben Freed bought a few Powerball tickets in November. He won a grand total of $0.

Joseph Tobianski | AnnArbor.com

According to the Inquirer, between 2007 and 2009 the Powerball lottery averaged six months between $200 million jackpots.

The odds of winning the top prize have remained steady at one in approximately 175 million, but increased ticket prices and guaranteed jackpot increases have helped up the stakes for what has become America’s top lottery.

A $587 million jackpot last November captured the nation’s imagination and led to a spike in ticket sales as well as articles and blog posts reminding you just how unlikely it is to win. Two other jackpots in the past year have topped $300 million.

In a highly un-scientific AnnArbor.com poll conducted in November, a plurality of readers said $250 million was their threshold for buying a Powerball ticket. The next drawing is at 11 p.m. Saturday, when we'll find out if any lucky Ann Arborites have big surprise for Mom.

Tickets may be purchased until 9:45 p.m. Saturday, according to the Michigan Lottery.

Ben Freed covers business for AnnArbor.com. You can sign up here to receive Business Review updates every week. Reach out to Ben at 734-623-2528 or email him at benfreed@annarbor.com. Follow him on twitter @BFreedinA2.

The Color Run Ypsilanti: Party atmosphere overtakes city as 15,000 dash through streets

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Participants get doused with color during The Color Run in Ypsilanti Saturday.

Daniel J. Brenner | AnnArbor.com

Bonnie and Ed Penet watched Saturday morning as people of all shapes and sizes doused in a kaleidoscope of colors crossed the finish line at The Color Run in Ypsilanti.

The Penets didn't have to go far. The run ends in Riverside Park, a stone's throw from their home.

"Last year our house was pink, and this year it will be blue," said Bonnie Penet with a smile. "This run is great for morale and for businesses."

Smiles were abundant just about everywhere in Ypsilanti Saturday as the city was awash with color and abuzz with people enjoying The Color Run. This was the second year for the event, which drew an estimated 15,000 participants and an untold number of spectators.

Parking spaces were almost nonexistent, but that was of little consequence. It was a day for walking and running, and the mood was definitely upbeat.

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Runners celebrate in Riverside Park after The Color Run in Ypsilanti Saturday.

"People come for the weekend and it's good for downtown retail stores and restaurants," said Ed Penet. Penet and his wife own MIX, the Michigan Avenue store that sells new and used clothing and accessories.

Runners were treated to music, food vendors, and a very festive atmosphere.

Runners must wear white shirts at the start of the race and must be covered in colors by the end of the 5K course. Each kilometer has a designated color, and runners got blitzed with colors by volunteers as they ran through various color run zones.

"This was just an enjoyable run," said participant Hadear Miho from Farmington.

"You get good exercise and can dress up," said Emily Malinowski, a participant from Northville, who said she plans to do it again next year.

So does a trio of tutu-wearing. Jen Peruski of Midland, Amber Rimkus of St. Claire Shores and TIna Dzikowski of Eastpointe said the event was awesome and added color to their day.

"You've got to have fun in life," said Rimkus.

Spectators also got in on the fun. "I"m here to support a friend who's running," said Sharon Maxfield from Northville, who was literally supporting her friend's baby on her back and her own baby in front.

Robert Schamberger was poised with his camera waiting for his wife to run by. They came to the race from Adrian along with sons Jacob, 7, and Luke, 2.

At its Ypsilanti debut last year, The Color Run brought in close to $2 million in visitor spending, said Debbie Locke-Daniel, executive director of the Ypsilanti Area Convention & Visitors Bureau.

"We have the same number of runners this year, but we think it's bigger because we're pushing harder and offering specials at restaurants," said Locke-Daniel. "We estimate about 1,200 hotel room nights from visitors coming from more than 100 miles away."

Many of the city's businesses opened earlier than usual. Among them was the Tower Inn Cafe on Cross Street.

"Business is good for a Saturday morning," said employee Matt Tatosky. "So far today I haven't had a table that hasn't ordered beer."

At the Ugly Mug Cafe on Cross Street, there was a line to the door all morning.

"We're selling a lot of coffee, water, and bagel sandwiches," said general manager Eric Mullins. "We would push for doing more stuff like this"

Race participant Oren Sagher from Ann Arbor had just one complaint. "I just wish the race were longer," he said. "I hardly had time to warm up!"

Lisa Carolin is a freelance reporter for AnnArbor.com. Contact the news desk at news@annarbor.com or 734-623-2530.

2 Ann Arbor seniors named U.S. Presidential Scholars among 141 students nationwide

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Two students from the Ann Arbor Public Schools recently were named among an elite group of high school seniors.

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Ann Arbor Huron student Valerie Peng returns the ball in a tennis match against Pioneer in May 2012.

Angela Cesere | AnnArbor.com file photo

Daniel Rothchild from Pioneer High School and Valerie Peng from Huron High School have been recognized as U.S. Presidential Scholars.

Just 141 students nationwide received the honor for 2013, out of an initial pool of more than 3,300 seniors.

The U.S. Presidential Scholars Program is not a scholarship program, but rather a recognition program.

Winners receive an expense-paid trip to Washington, D.C. and are presented with a medallion in commemoration of their achievements during an award ceremony sponsored by the White House. The 2013 ceremony will take place June 16.

U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who made a visit to Ypsilanti Monday, announced the 2013 Presidential Scholars Program winners earlier this month.

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Pioneer senior Daniel Rothchild

Courtesy of John Rothchild

"Presidential Scholars demonstrate the accomplishments that can be made when students challenge themselves, set the highest standards, and commit themselves to excellence," he said. "I'm honored to celebrate their creativity, hard work, and community service, and I encourage them — and all students — to continue to showcase the capacity for greatness in our nation's young people."

Typically, there are just two winners from each state — one boy and one girl — making the odds of having two Presidential Scholars from a single school district quite small. However, Michigan had three students selected this year, Rothchild, Peng and a female student from Traverse City Public Schools.

Candidates for the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program are determined by outstanding performances on the College Board ACT and SAT exams. The candidates then undergo a rigorous screening and application process that includes several essays; evaluation of their high school transcripts, academic and artistic excellence; as well as looks for evidence of community service, leadership and a demonstrated commitment to high ideals, according to its website.

Both Peng and Rothchild also recently won $2,500 college scholarships through the National Merit Scholarship Corporation's annual competition.

Danielle Arndt covers K-12 education for AnnArbor.com. Follow her on Twitter @DanielleArndt or email her at daniellearndt@annarbor.com.

Sidetrack in Ypsilanti set to reopen for dinner after sprinklers drench kitchen

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The Sidetrack Bar and Grill was expecting to reopen about 5 or 5:30 p.m. Saturday after the sprinkler system went off in the kitchen, forcing the restaurant to close for several hours as staff and others hustled to clean up the mess.

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A broken belt set off the fire suppression system at the Sidetrack Bar and Grill in Ypsilanti, but the restaurant expected to reopen for dinner Saturday night.

“Within a half hour we had everything under control,” said owner Linda French. She said the response from firefighters, the health department and professional cleanup workers called in was amazing.

French and her staff had opened the business at 56 E. Cross St. early hoping to capitalize on a big crowd after The Color Run in Ypsilanti Saturday. When the sprinklers went off about 9:30 a.m., they had to close after serving only a few people. But both French and her daughter, Jessica, said they were grateful for the response and just happy they’ll be able to open in time for the evening rush.

Ypsilanti Fire Lt. Mike Kouba said a belt broke in the ventilation hood in the restaurant and activated the sprinkler system at 9:36 a.m.

The Fire Department response was complicated by the day’s events, Kouba said. “We had to get our tower down to river street in the middle of The Color Run,” he said.

Despite that, the response was prompt, said Jessica French. She couldn’t say enough about messages of well wishes she got from people who stopped by the restaurant and about the Fire Department response.

“The Ypsilanti community is an amazing place and I was so impressed with how quickly the Fire Department got here.”

She also praised her mom and the way she helped everyone stay organized as they worked to get the restaurant ready for reopening.

“I definitely learned more in one day here than I could have in a long time,” she said.

Images from The Color Run Ypsilanti

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It's called the happiest 5K on the planet, and The Color Run in Ypsilanti Saturday lived up to its billing.

An estimated 15,000 runners dashed through the streets of Ypsilanti, getting doused along the way with colored powder at several color zones spaced throughout the course.

AnnArbor.com photographers Courtney Sacco and Daniel Brenner captured these images.

Smiles abound as Ann Arbor police and fire departments hold open house and award ceremony

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Residents explore displays on Fifth Avenue between the Ann Arbor Justice Center and Ann Arbor Fire Department Saturday during the departments' open house.

Kyle Feldscher | AnnArbor.com

Usually, when there is a large presence of police officers and firefighters in the middle of the street, there are concerned looks on their faces.

Not so on Saturday.

The Ann Arbor Police Department and Ann Arbor Fire Department gathered for an open house and awards ceremony Saturday, honoring civilians and officers alike and opening their doors to the public. The day included the Ann Arbor Police Department’s first award ceremony since 2011, a vehicle extrication demonstration by the Ann Arbor Fire Department and a small ceremony honoring a Good Samaritan who helped save a man’s life last fall.

Ann Arbor Police Chief John Seto, who also serves as the public safety administrator for the city of Ann Arbor, started off the awards ceremony praising his officers and the civilians being honored.

“I want to thank you,” he said, adding, “it’s not about the money or fame, it’s about the one-on-one contact.”

In the lobby of the Ann Arbor Justice Center, 301 E. Huron St., and with a backdrop of the Ann Arbor Fire Department’s new Tower 1 truck, about 75 people gathered for the awards ceremony. Ann Arbor police Lt. Ed Dreslinski started off the awards honoring officers who reached their fifth, 10th, 15th, 20th and 25th years working for the Ann Arbor Police Department.

Among the people who were honored for 25 years of service in Ann Arbor were Detectives Chris Fitzpatrick and Dave Monroe and Police Services Specialist Kathy Flynn. Flynn would also be named the department’s Professional of the Year later on in the ceremony.

Two civilians were honored for acts in the past year. Rolfe Carlson was given the Chief’s Civilian Award for helping a police officer apprehend a man who was resisting arrest near the Blake Transit Center on April 20, 2012. Chai Montgomery received the Chief’s Civilian Award for his role in the arrest of a bank robbery suspect on Dec. 5, 2011.

Montgomery was the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority driver who notified police that bank robbery suspect Lorenzo Patterson had got on his bus to escape the scene of a robbery at the TCF Bank, 125 Briarwood Circle.

Among the police personnel honored was Pastor Mike Wentzel, the department’s chaplain. Dreslinski said Wentzel was on his way north for a holiday trip on Dec. 23, 2011, when he was learned of the death of Eastern Michigan University Police Chief Greg O’Dell, a former deputy chief with the AAPD who had many friends at the department.

“Pastor Wentzel turned his car around and stayed until all Ann Arbor Police Department members were taken care of,” Dreslinski said, also praising Wentzel for his work comforting the widow of a man who was killed in a car accident at Maple and Dexter Ann Arbor roads in 2012. Wentzel received two professional excellence awards and a unit citation.

Other award winners from the ceremony were telecommunicator Tara Gilles (Gaye Limon Award for civilian bringing exemplary contributions to the AAPD), Sgt. Lyle Sartori (Command Officer of the Year), Officer Stephanie Kjos-Warner (Life-Saving Award) and Officer Geoff Spickard (Officer of the Year).

“Geoff is involved in training almost everyone,” Dreslinski said, while reading comments made nominating Spickard for the award. “He is exceptional in almost every capacity.”

After the awards ceremony wrapped up about noon, police officers and firefighters entertained members of the community on Fifth Avenue between Huron and Ann streets. Children were allowed to practice using a fire extinguisher on a small, controlled blaze. Displays included the Washtenaw County Metro SWAT Team’s vans and equipment and a giant, inflatable Ann Arbor fireman who was a hit with everyone.

Ann Arbor firefighters tore apart a car as a part of their vehicle extrication demonstration. For about 45 minutes, Lt. Carl Hein showed a crowd that swelled to about 100 people the various ways a car must be torn apart to save a person’s life.

Hein said there are usually 13 people who respond to an extrication call, but the demonstration only had four firefighters — and then three, once one firefighter had to leave for an active call.

“People ask, ‘Why send 13 people?’” Hein told the crowd. “Because I’m saving someone’s life.”

Firefighters knocked the windows from the car before removing the hood, doors, roof and lifting the dashboard during the display. Hein said usually the process takes about 20 minutes and varies depending on the crash.

“All of the things we’ve been doing are based on what the patient needs,” Hein said.

After the extrication demonstration ended and the car was sufficiently dismantled, Ann Arbor Fire Chief Chuck Hubbard led a small ceremony honoring John Hassen.

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John Hassen (center) stands next to Ann Arbor Fire Chief Chuck Hubbard and is surrounded by family as he's honored with the AAFD's Life Safety Award.

Kyle Feldscher | AnnArbor.com

Hassen was near the intersection of Sunnyside Boulevard and Seventh Street at 3:30 p.m. Nov. 10 after the University of Michigan played Illinois in football. Hubbard said an Illinois man driving a vehicle suffered a heart attack and his wife steered the vehicle into a tree to stop it.

Hassen jumped into action when he saw the crash and performed CPR on the man until medical personnel and firefighters could arrive on scene. Tom and Michelle Black, New York residents who could not be at Saturday’s ceremony, worked with Hassen to save the man’s life.

Hubbard praised their actions and said Ann Arbor needs more people like them.

“Their efforts made a huge difference,” Hubbard said. “That’s what we need more of, citizens stepping in and making a difference.”

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


Fire burns wooded area near Dexter-Huron Metropark

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A wooded area near the Dexter-Huron Metropark burned Saturday afternoon before firefighters could extinguish the blaze.

Scio Township Fire Chief Carl Ferch said the fire was discovered about 3:15 p.m. by two boys who, with help from their father, used shovels to try to put the fire out. It was on the south side of the Huron River, across from the park, Ferch said.

It took firefighters until about 5 p.m. to extinguish the blaze. About 3/4 of an acre of a wooded area between the river and the railroad tracks burned, Ferch said.

Ferch said he did not know who owns the damaged area. There were no injuries.


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The Color Run Ypsilanti video: A story in pink, blue, orange and yellow

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More than 15,000 people participated in The Color Run in Ypsilanti on Saturday.

The morning dawned brisk, with a long line of traffic to get even remotely close to the starting line. Upon arrival, people huddled together for warmth in suspense for what the next five kilometers would have in store for them.

The typical electronic and popular hip hop songs wear thumping. Kids and adults, bicyclists and strollers, people with neon green hair and others with ordinary black, blond and brunette styles were all set to start.

The countdown finished and the participants were off at a leisurely pace down North River Street. Off in the distance, the runners approached the first "color station" where a cloud of powder rose into the air. It was pink. There was a barrage of sprays, pours, throws, and dumps of colored powder.

The fun wasn't over. Three color stations and a trek down Michigan Avenue later, the runners crossed the finish line and entered Riverside Park for refreshments, merchandise, and a bright, loud concert.

Freeze watch issued for Ann Arbor area

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If you were thinking of spending your Sunday afternoon setting out some pretty petunias or begonias, think again.

The National Weather Service has issued a freeze watch for all of Lower Michigan from late Sunday night through Monday morning. A cold front moving into the state even brought snow to the Traverse City area Saturday.

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Frost could damage tender plants overnight Sunday

MLive photo

There’s none of the white stuff in the forecast for the Ann Arbor area, but it’s going to feel mighty cold after several days of temperatures in the 70s over the past week.

After a low around 36 Saturday night and a high rising only to around 48 Sunday, temperatures will dip below freezing Sunday night. Areas of frost are possible after 2 a.m. Monday morning. The weather service predicts an overnight low of 30.

The cold and frost is likely to ruin any tender annuals already set out, so plan to cover them if you got the gardening bug early this year. Flowering fruit trees could also be damaged by the cold.

It’ll be breezy on Sunday as well, with winds gusting to 32 mph.

Monday will be warmer with a high near 54, but another cold night is in store Monday night, with the low dipping to 39.

Tuesday will bring a chance of showers with a high near 61.

We’ll get a serious warm-up Wednesday with sunny skies and a high of about 80.

Showers and thunderstorms are possible Thursday and Friday with highs in the 70s.

For updated weather forecasts and conditions any time, check AnnArbor.com's weather page.

New Ann Arbor in Concert group presenting inaugural show 'Ragtime'

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A rehearsal for "Ragtime."

photo courtesy of Ann Arbor in Concert

Having directed casts of one hundred-plus in past Burns Park Players musical theater productions (among others), Mike Mosallam is used to being at the helm of large-scale performance groups.

But since his newest venture, Ann Arbor in Concert (which he formed with music director and fellow U-M grad Eric Lofstrom), recruited more than 100 volunteer singers, musicians and musical theater performers to present “Ragtime: The Musical” in a concert format, Mosallam’s been personally breaking new ground.

“Nothing I’ve done in the past exactly fits this bill,” said Mosallam. “Nothing’s been this epic. … And I can’t express enough how excited I am to do this. Eric … called me during rehearsal yesterday and I was in tears.”

Mosallam was listening in by phone because the former Ann Arbor resident now calls Los Angeles home. (Mosallam is working with the acting and staging in the weekends leading up to A2IC's one-night performance, while Lofstrom is rehearsing and polishing the music through the week.)

“Professionals come together and put together a show in a few weeks,” said Lofstrom. “With most community theater groups, it’s a 3- or 4-month process. So part of this process is introducing amateur folks to a professional schedule.”

PREVIEW

”Ragtime”

  • Who: Ann Arbor in Concert
  • What: An ensemble of more than 100 singers and musicians - which will feature several University of Michigan school of music, theatre and dance students and alumni - will perform the book (by Terrence McNally) and score (by Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty) from the 1988 Tony Award winning show, based on E. L. Doctorow’s novel about three families in turn-of-the-century America as they face wealth and poverty, freedom and prejudice, hope and despair.
  • Where: Michigan Theater, 603 E. Liberty St. in Ann Arbor.
  • When: Saturday, May 18 at 8 p.m.
  • How much: $25 for general admission, $50 for the VIP section, and $15 for students and seniors. Tickets can be purchased at the door, or in advance via Ticketmaster, 1-800-745-3000, or www.a2ic.org. For more information, visit the website or call 734-786-3868.
Not that all of A2IC’s performers are amateurs. Featured players include U-M grads like Clark Baxtresser (playing Younger Brother), who was music director for Team Starkid’s two national tours and four productions; Adrienne Pisoni (Mother), who recently played Anne in Performance Network’s “A Little Night Music”; and current U-M students Imani Mchunu (Sarah) and Kimberly Hay (Evelyn Nesbitt), among others.

“We hosted auditions, and people really came out,” said Lofstrom. “We were shocked the first day. We held auditions in December, and we were expecting very few people. We’d posted announcements in places actors and musicians look to, and we turned around and 70 people had signed up. … I take a lot of pride in the fact that these are local folks. They’re all volunteers.”

This includes the orchestra, with musicians who don’t often get opportunities to play musical theater scores.

“Plus, since it’s a concert, they’re on stage, and not tucked away in a pit,” said Lofstrom. “Because in this format, there’s more emphasis on the music and the words, … they also don’t have long gaps where they just sit there. That’s one of the reasons that we chose ‘Ragtime.’ It’s almost an operetta, in that there are very few times when the orchestra is not playing. … It’s an epic show, and the music is amazing.”

Based on E. L. Doctorow’s 1975 novel of the same name, “Ragtime” - with lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, music by Stephen Flaherty, and a book by Terrence McNally - follows the lives of three American families at the turn of the 20th century: a Harlem musician and the woman he loves; upper-class suburbanites; and Jewish immigrants from Latvia.

The Broadway premiere production of “Ragtime” earned 13 Tony Award nominations in 1998, winning four, and starred Brian Stokes Mitchell, Audra McDonald, Marin Mazzie, and “Glee” star Lea Michele, among others. The score features various musical styles of the period, including ragtime, klezmer, marches, waltzes, banjo tunes, parlor songs and anthems.

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Eric Myrick, University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance student, rehearses "Ragtime."

courtesy of Ann Arbor in Concert

In A2IC's show, all the songs will be performed with a large chorus and orchestra on stage, with the principals performing their roles (with minimal staging) in the front.

And although this is A2IC’s first presentation, Mosallam and Lofstrom hope to make it an annual event, if not a company that presents a concert 2 or 3 times a year.

“We want this to become an event that people in Ann Arbor look forward to,” said Lofstrom. “We want it to be something people put on their calendars every year. … One of those special evenings that people look forward to.”

Mosallam and Lofstrom are already anxiously awaiting A2IC’s inaugural show, since they started talking about staging something like this concert a decade ago.

“We talked about how to do really big shows in a format that’s not done all the time, and not something you see every day,” said Lofstrom. “We talked about it and we talked about it, and we never did it, until finally we said, ‘Let’s just do it.’ And we were crazy enough to think we can pull it off.”

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

Ann Arbor needs to consider affordable housing as market-rate housing prices climb

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Ann Arbor has endured a lot of changes during the 10-plus years after officials decided to develop a downtown parking lot into a public-private, mixed-use development that would bring more residents downtown.

The result of that effort is now taking its place on the city skyline, as Ann Arbor City Apartments prepares to take reservations for its 155 units.

Many of the changes are known and obvious to anyone who’s spent any time here at all, and many also have let Ann Arbor grow as a business and entertainment destination.

But amid a recent report that rental rates for the apartments will top out at about $2,675 - except for the 16 units set aside as affordable under federal income guidelines for the city - we think it’s important for the city to consider a few of them:

  • The demolition of the former Y - and its very-low income housing - amid promises to replace those bedrooms near downtown.
  • The loss of the failed Near North affordable housing project on the northern edge of downtown.
  • The redevelopment near campus that’s resulted in high-priced student housing.
  • The expectation that some neighborhood rentals on the fringe of the “student area” will return to single-family homes, taking some of the lowest-priced student housing out of the city’s mix.
Ann Arbor has always been an accessible town that’s valued diversity. These changes in its housing stock - especially as for-sale housing values climb along with demand - create a vulnerability for the city.

While we support many aspects of downtown development - including Ann Arbor City Apartments - we also caution that this town needs strong advocates for affordable housing in and near downtown. The solution won’t be easy. But the cost of not listening to concerns about our housing mix could result in the city turning into a gentrified enclave and losing the essence of what drew many people to this town in decades past.

Readers share lessons learned from Mom

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We extend a thanks to all the mothers out there who have made a difference in the lives of those around them. To recognize this Mother's Day, we asked readers to share a lesson they learned from mom.

In addition to the photos and lessons featured above are some other submissions we've received over the past few days. Have a lesson or memory of your mother you'd like to share? Post it in the comments below or submit it using this form.

When I was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer, I realized the unpredictability of life and initially gave in to constant despair. It was then that my mom taught her greatest lesson- that happiness is not based on an absence of problems. Rather, it is all about our approach in dealing with harsh difficulties. Her hand in mine, she remained steadfast and strong, as I learned to do, with her wisdom as guidance.
-Tracy Carbary

Besides being a loving, interested and available mother with a quick smile, she could pack a suitcase tighter than a can of sardines! We lived overseas during Dad's sabbatical leaves and I observed how she fit items for a family of six into two suitcases. My family comments on my ability to fit anything extra into a suitcase, car, whatever, and I always thank Mom for that perspective.
-Margy Howes

The greatest lesson and the greatest gift that Mom taught and shared with her children was the Gospel of Jesus Christ
-Linda Morrison-Harmon

My mother read to me almost every night as a child. this love of reading which she gave me, I have been able to pass on to my daughters, and also my granddaughter. I love you, mom! Rest well!
-Madeleine Baier

To get an eduction!
-Chuck Blackmer

Participate in life with your children. She engaged me in local government and lobbying for causes. She marched in a Vietnam anti-war protest with me. We drank flaming Drambuie at a fraternity suite party. And so much more.
-Karen Hart

How to sweet talk a police officer out of giving her a ticket (It didn't work when i tried it)
-Matt Phillips

Trust - You Give - Only to people who are trustworthy.
-Herm Steinman

To love your family.
-Marcus Melendez

Getting old is not for the faint of heart!
-Heidi Dodson

Related: See more "Lessons from Mom" submitted from around the state to MLive.com

Three years after son's death, father returns to golf course they last played and finds closure

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Three years ago, Bob Lemasters and his son Renden Lemasters played a round of golf at Ann Arbor Country Club. The front-nine was busy that day, so Bob and Renden played the back and finished their round on hole No. 9, a Par 3.

Bob stuck his tee-shot that day, parred the hole and won the friendly match. Renden left the course that night and stayed at a friend’s house. He was supposed to meet his father the next day. They had made plans to go to Mexican Village in Detroit for Easter weekend.

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Bob Lemasters, right, and his son Renden Lemasters on New Year's Eve 2009.

Photo courtesy of Bob Lemasters

But instead of Renden ringing the doorbell the next morning, the phone rang at 6 a.m. It wasn’t Renden, but the Ann Arbor Fire Department. Renden had been pulled from a house fire on State Street in Ann Arbor and was fighting for his life at the University of Michigan Trauma Burn Center.

It was a fight Renden would lose. On April 3, 2010, he died with his family by his side. He was 22.

Bob Lemasters returned to Ann Arbor Country Club to retrieve his son's ball from the first hole. Their tradition was to play the first hole last and the second hole first because they lived halfway up the fairway and cut right through to home when they were done. With their match done, they hit their tee-shots and just left them. Bob found the ball on Easter Sunday, the day after Renden's death, and vowed never to play the course again.

Save for a memorial scramble a month after Renden’s death, it was a promise Bob kept.

Until last week.

Since the fire

Much has happened in the time between Bob’s rounds at the Ann Arbor Country Club, and for Bob, much of it has been sadness.

The Ann Arbor man had been a club member for 20 years and played countless rounds of golf there with Renden. But after his son's death, the memories were too painful, so he stayed away.

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Deanna Lemasters, pictured above at a 2010 Ann Arbor City Council meeting, and her husband Bob became advocates to ban couches on porches after Renden's death. Officials said an upholstered sofa contributed to the severity of the fire.

Ryan J. Stanton | AnnArbor.com

“There have been a lot of miserable days since, to be honest,” Bob said quietly, pausing as he choked up. “You just try and do the best you can for your other kids ”

Bob also has done much with other parents and their children in mind since Renden’s death, becoming an advocate for the Ann Arbor city ordinance that banned couches on porches, commonly referred to as “Renden’s Law." The blaze that caused Renden's fatal burns spread quickly to the whole house once an upholstered sofa on the porch caught fire.

Bob said even if it prevents just one parent from feeling the way he did, then those efforts were worth it.

“It’s just the wrong order of life to have a child go before you,” Bob said. “He wasn’t an angel - he was like all college kids, but he was definitely in a good place - and it just doesn’t make sense to you as a parent.”

Returning to the course

Bob and his wife Deanna tried to get out for a round of golf at Stonebridge on Thursday, May 2, but had no luck finding an opening. They called around to three courses before Bob finally said he wanted to go to Ann Arbor Country Club.

“I said ‘are you sure, I thought you said you never wanted to go back there?’” recalled Deanna, Renden's stepmother. “He said, ‘I think it’s ok, let’s try there.’ ”

“I was a little apprehensive about going out to the course, but I said it’s been three years,” Bob recalls.

It was time.

Despite the fact that the four other courses they had called were all completely booked - Deanna and Bob were able to enjoy their round with practically no interruption.

“There was nobody out there, didn’t see anybody else for seven holes, we basically had the course to ourselves,” Deanna said. “It was totally wide open.”

“The whole day was just kind of surreal. We couldn’t get on any of the courses and then there’s nobody (at Ann Arbor Country Club),” Bob said. “I think it was just the fate that we were just meant to go back to that course that day.”

While Bob and Renden were good for 18 holes when they would play, Deanna describes herself as “more of a nine-hole kind of golfer,” so Bob and Deanna would end on the last hole father and son had played together.

Deanna feared the round might be too much for her husband. Renden would have turned 26 on Thursday, May 9, and the three-year anniversary of his death had just passed. But as the two approached No. 9, Bob and Deanna talked about it being Renden’s final hole and everything seemed just fine.

Bob teed up his ball and swung away.

“Renden - he was such a fun loving kid, I know he has probably looked down at me several times over the past three years and said ‘Dad, stop being sad and live life,’ ” Bob said. “But it’s been hard to do.

“Some tough times over the past few years. A parent’s worst nightmare.”

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Bob Lemasters holds his hole-in-one ball and a picture of his son Renden, which he keeps with him always.

Photo courtesy of Bob Lemasters

The hole was in the back of the green, so Bob couldn’t quite see where the ball ended up, but Deanna had.

It was in the hole. Bob had just hit his first-ever hole-in-one.

“He hit the ball and I’m watching it hit the green and I see it rolling right toward the stick, I said, ‘ah, it’s going to go in!’ He didn’t believe me, he thought it rolled off the back of the green and I said, ‘no, I (saw) it drop, I (saw) it drop!’ ” Deanna said.

Driving up to the hole, Bob still couldn’t believe it. He checked behind the green to see where his ball had rolled off of the green before finally checking the cup.

Bob had stayed strong throughout the round, but when he saw his ball — “Ren” written on the side, to remind him not to take the game too seriously — sitting in the hole, the tears finally came.

Niagara Falls.

“I just immediately kind of lost it,” Bob said. “I’m not as spiritual as my wife, but I have no other way to explain that then my son had to be somewhere helping that into the hole.”

“Afterward Bob thanked Renden, not for the hole-in-one, but just for a sign that things are good,” Deanna said. “Just for saying ‘Dad it’s all fine, we’re all going to be together again one day and be happy again.’ ”

To the bar

It’s one of the most backward traditions in all of sports, After a hitting a hole-in-one, a golfer is to report to the clubhouse and buy everyone a round of drinks. This is not a friendly suggestion. It is a requirement.

While logic would suggest it should be the golfer who has the drinks bought for him, the tradition is what it is, old as the game itself.

And Bob would be damned if he wasn’t going to honor it.

While most golfers might hope for an empty bar when finishing a round after an ace, Bob and Deanna made sure of the opposite. After crying together and calling their children, Bob and Deanna called some close friends, told them the news and had them meet at the Ann Arbor Country Club.

Before Renden’s death, Bob said he might have done the same to brag about the shot, to pump his chest up a bit. Be man of the moment. But now he just wanted to share a happy moment with his wife and closest friends and share memories of his beloved son.

A $200 bar bill later: mission accomplished.

“I’ve thanked Renden 10 times probably for the hole-in-one since then,” Bob said. “Not because of the hole-in-one, because as I’ve said, those sort of things don’t really mean as much after you go through something like lose a child.

“I thanked him for the actual sign.”

Pete Cunningham covers sports for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at petercunningham@annarbor.com. Follow him on Twitter @petcunningham.


Susan Martin's mission: Boost EMU enrollment, graduation rates and finances

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EMU President Susan Martin at the Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center during a basketball game against Western Michigan.

AnnArbor.com file photo

While there have been some bumps along the road during Eastern Michigan University President Susan Martin's five-year tenure, regents credit her with creating a more stable college environment, and for that they've awarded her a two-year contract extension and a raise.

The eight-member Board of Regents also said it's solidly behind her and not looking back. "I am focusing on the future," said Regent Jim Stapleton Friday as the Board of Regents approved the contract extension.

The contract renewal, which includes a 2.7 percent raise and a year of sabbatical, comes a year after the regents' executive committee placed a letter in Martin's personnel file reprimanding her for arguing with an alumnus at a bar and "acting in a way that was inappropriate for your position."

That incident does not detract from what Martin has accomplished, regents said.

"If you look at where Eastern was when Dr. Martin and our old board took over, and you see where we are now, there's no logical person who wouldn't see that we're a better place," he said. "We have a lot of things we need to improve on, we have a lot of areas where we can grow but we're a better place today than we were five years ago."

Martin came to the university on the heels of two controversies: a student murder coverup and overspending on renovations to the president's house. Each controversy caused a president to resign. When she arrived on campus, enrollment was declining and buildings were falling apart. Simple things like Internet service in on-campus dorms, which sat largely unfilled, did not work.

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Susan Martin

"When Dr. Martin came to the university, it really was at a time that I think required healing and development," said Board Chairwoman Francine Parker, who was one of the three regents on the executive committee to sign the May 2012 letter of reprimand:

"One of the things I credit her with is being a galvanizing force, bringing people together on issues, not skirting them, working to make the university about growth. looking at our academic programs, looking at our infrastructure."

EMU figures

  • 18,927 undergraduates enrolled in fall 2012
  • 4,620 graduates enrolled in fall 2012
  • 3,531 freshmen enrolled in fall 2012
  • Average undergraduate is about 24 years old
  • 88 percent of students are from Michigan
  • 3,761 students living on campus
  • Average faculty salary is $77,900
  • $290.6 million 2012 budget
  • $66.5 in 2012 state appropriations
  • $11.5 million raised in fiscal 2012, $2 million over goal
  • 37.2 percent six-year graduation rate
  • 12.9 percent four-year graduation rate
Since coming to campus, Martin has increased undergraduate enrollment by 9.5 percent, although graduate enrollment has declined, and this year she poured $400,000 into furniture for on-campus dorms in order to convert single rooms into doubles and house more students.

Regents say they want continued focus on increasing enrollment and renewed focus on growing EMU's limited financial reserves through spending cuts, innovative resourcing and fundraising. Graduation rates, which sit below 38 percent for six-year students, also need to improve.

"We're always worrying about gathering up funds and people making contributions, but also just continuing to just improve the academic performance and the opportunity for students to succeed," said regent Mike Morris, who also sits on the executive committee.

EMU is in the midst of overhauling its advising program as a way to help students coordinate their class schedules and take the necessary classes to complete their majors within a timely manner. Officials are hopeful improvement in advising will increase graduation rates. The school is also looking for ways to make it easier for students to transfer to EMU.

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Eastern Michigan University's spring 2013 graduating class.

Daniel Brenner | AnnArbor.com

Martin said she's looking forward to new accomplishments, while she savors the past five years.

"It's just been a wonderful experience. A daunting, challenging, impossible, undoable job but great," Martin said of her tenure, during which state funding has declined by nearly $12 million.

"I am a more experienced president. I've got a more experienced team and I think we have some new board members that are bringing a tremendous amount of ability to the board," she continued. "We're in a really good place and we're going to get a lot done."

EMU has a $51 million endowment, and Martin said she will shift more of her time to fundraising over the next two years in order to grow the school's cash reserves. A lack of sizable reserves has been an impediment in budget and facility planning, Martin said.

"We really need to work to build up our endowment, our reserves and also be building a budget that has more room in it," she said.

Board relations

With regents reprimanding Martin for alcohol consumption in May 2012 and placing a mixed performance review in her personnel file in October 2012, Martin's contract renewal seemed somewhat uncertain throughout the past year.

In September 2012 board chair Roy Wilbanks, who has since retired from the board when his term ended in December, told the Detroit Free Press that he was unsure whether he would vote to renew Martin's contract.

Parker, the current board chair, said she considered the letter of reprimand and October performance review basic governance.

"For me, a board — any boss that you have — you discuss things when you have issues," she said. "It's actually refreshing that we ask the questions and raise concerns and want to talk about issues that are of relevance to the university. We're doing our job."

Regent Beth Fitzsimmons, who has served in her role for two years, said she had no issues with Martin's performance.

"I never thought it was a problem," she said.

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Francine Parker

Melanie Maxwell I AnnArbor.com

For Martin's part, she said the board has been "supportive of the administration" at EMU over the past five years and said the board was moving into a new era. She noted that while board involvement is still high, she has been given more autonomy as she gains experience in her role.

Details of the new contract

The two-year extension raises her salary to $300,000, up from from $292,200.

Martin was hired in 2008 under a three-year contract, which was extended by two years in 2010. Parker said the board decided a two-year extension was appropriate.

"We just did two years. Five seems too long; one is never enough," she said. "This is a changing environment in terms of where we are as a university and things we want to do."

Martin's contract stipulates that she is required to live in the president's house on the Ypsilanti campus and that she receive use of a university car.

The contract also appoints Martin as a full professor with tenure —the highest faculty rank possible— of accounting in the business school. It grants her a 12-month sabbatical when she steps down as president, whether she retires or her contract is terminated by the board. If she returns to the university as a professor, for her first year, she will make 10 percent more than the highest salaried professor in her department.

Martin will not be entitled to the sabbatical or faculty position if she is fired for just cause. Among reasons Martin can be fired for just cause is any conduct constituting "moral turpitude" and that "would tend to bring public disrespect, contempt or ridicule upon the university," according o her contract.

Per her previous contract, Martin is eligible for a $10,000 performance bonus in July 2013, to be awarded at the discretion of the board.

Kellie Woodhouse covers higher education for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at kelliewoodhouse@annarbor.com or 734-623-4602 and follow her on twitter.

Q & A: Eastern Michigan University President Susan Martin on challenges, accomplishments and goals

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Eastern Michigan University President Susan Martin during the school's spring commencement April 28.

After receiving a contract extension on Friday, Eastern Michigan University President Susan Martin said she's "a more experienced president" who has a lot of ideas for her next two years at the Ypsilanti college.

As she sat at a table in her office, next to the green bike she rides around campus, Martin talked with AnnArbor.com about the atmosphere on campus when she arrived five years ago, what she sees as the greatest challenges she'll face over the next two years and her relationship with the school's governing board.

Below are excerpts of an hour-long interview with Martin that took place on Friday afternoon. For a comprehensive look at the renewal and Martin's plans, check out the related links above.

Q: When you came to Eastern in 2008 what was the school like?

A: When I came in 2008, the school had had four presidents in five years —two interims, two presidents. There were reputational issues on campus because we had had a death on campus and the manner in which it was handled. There were concerns about the big house I live in and how much money we spent on it. We had been declining in enrollment. We had been in fall 2002 at 24,505 students and when I arrived in fall 2008 we were at 21,972. The place was pretty run down, it was over 160 years old. We have over 122 buildings, 70 acres of roof, a lot of which were leaking. We didn't have a lot of money and we hadn't been raising money and there were several holes on the leadership team.

... It was quite daunting.

Q: What are ways you've increased enrollment?

A: It's a combination of things. We wanted to keep college affordable. Michigan was having such a severe economic time and our students really do work their way through. It is difficult for them to pay their way through college, so we've kept it affordable, we've increased financial aid.

... We had paperbound processes. This fall we had over 12,000 applications. All of that paper coming together and being moved around, people ... they'd be waiting a long time to hear from us because it took a long time to process the papers, so we now have an automated admissions system.

Q: How have you changed student advising?

In the student center you will see opening up in June we're going to have a new advising center right in the food court. It will be designed a little bit like an Apple store, in that there will be an entrance and there will be people there to triage you with questions

We're looking at possibly this fall at having a transfer student center... You just wander in here and if you come to [the center] you can get all your services, instead of going from this building to that building. We're trying to eliminate that and make it easy to come here.

We'e added a new software... Whatever hour students are up in the night they can just go online and it well tell them how much credits they need to be graduate. It's been automated so students can self advise.... We've hired some new advisers.

Q: You were saying that there was a reputational gap when you started. How have you tried to remedy that?

One of the things that was an unintended effect of doing the 0-0-0 campaign (EMU did not raise tuition or fees in 2010) was it really ignited our image as being competent managers. Alumni were saying 'Wow what's my school,'... where before they were kind of down.

It dramatically improved our reputation. I think we benefit from that to this day In Lansing, state legislators said 'How did they do that?' And I said, 'Well, I am an accountant and I use my No. 2 pencil a lot.' It's not easy but we did it and other people weren't doing it so they thought: 'They must really have their act together.'

Q: What are your goals for the next two years?

A: We've been engaged in a strategic planning exercise, which we're coming to the end of. Eastern doesn't need to be reinvented. We know who we are, but I think we need to do a better job of saying who we are and what we believe in.

If we have scarce resources, how can we allocate our resources so that we're enabling our students to get through with proper advising so they don't waste credits. They get through in a timely manner, they're emerging to get jobs in Southeast Michigan or Michigan as whole so they'll have a great life and contribute to the economy. That's what it's all about.

We're very focused in everything we can do to improve our service to our students, develop our employees to be great servants to our students. We have a lot of paperbound processes. Admissions was just one. We have a lot of things we can do to be more efficient with technology so we need to dig through all of that and automate that. ... We need to think about how much technology we want to deliver our instruction in. Our students probably need more online courses to help them with degree completion because they work so much to get through school.

Q: What about the school's graduation rate? (EMU has a 12.9 percent four-year graduation rate and a 37.2 percent six-year graduation rate.)

A: Last year we had 5,076 new students, 2,595 of them are traditional freshmen so they will count in our graduation rate. From the first moment the other half of that incoming class walks on campus, they will never count in our graduation rate. So from day one they won't count.

We should be able to get a graduation rate that is up above 50 percent. We are improving our persistence rate. When I first came here the freshmen that came, we only had 71 percent the next year, well that went up to 76 percent. So now we're getting a stronger academic profile in our incoming class. We're doing some more advising, we're doing some more support stuff to help people here. Those rates should move up too.

We're going to watch all of these and actively figure out what we can do to influence [these rates]. [If a student leaves without completing their degree] and they have debt, that's terrible. We don't want that to happen, so the board and I and the leadership team, we're really committed to taking a lot of the little things we do and knitting that into a really strong process.

Q: How has EMU felt the effects of dwindling state funding?

A: It has been difficult because we don't have significant reserves. ... We've had to shift healthcare costs. ... It was very difficult the year we got the 15 percent cut because we had not done the big tuition increases. I found myself in Lansing begging for a 10 percent cut. I said we don't have room [in our budget].

We did end up laying off 40 people, which at a university that's pretty much unheard of. It was very difficult and a very painful thing for the campus. ... I would look at those sheets and we would talk trying to figure out how we could minimize the impact on those people and how soon could they get called back, because we have over 1,900 employees so openings occur. But it was probably one of the hardest things I've ever had to do.

Q: You've been a strong supporter of the school's athletic program, why?

A: The decision to be a Division 1 school was made many years ago. We have a 30,000-seat football stadium. We're not going to teach history 101 in it. We need to figure out how to be competitive. We're not going to fill all 30,000 seats every Saturday, but we're in southeast Michigan. We have over 100,000 alumni in Michigan alone, so it's not unreasonable to think if we were competitive that we could fill the stadium for some of the games or have a much larger crowd to help support football and some of the other sports.

... I am a little shocked that the male presidents before me didn't have our major sports more competitive, but I am determined to fill these venues. I am determined that we will win and make these sports more revenue generating and competitive. ... It can also add an excitement and pride to the school.

Q: What about your decision to feature the former Huron mascot on the inside of band uniforms?

A: The purpose of welcoming the Hurons back is to try to put this issue behind us. Many alumni were a little alienated at the time [the mascot was changed]. It's been a long time. We were Hurons for 62 years, so we want to welcome those Huron alumni back.

Q: What would you consider some of the most difficult moments of your tenure?

EMU figures

  • 18,927 undergraduates enrolled in fall 2012
  • 4,620 graduates enrolled in fall 2012
  • 3,531 freshmen enrolled in fall 2012
  • Average undergraduate is about 24 years old
  • 88 percent of students are from Michigan
  • 3,761 students living on campus
  • Average faculty salary is $77,900
  • $290.6 million 2012 budget
  • $66.5 in 2012 state appropriations
  • $11.5 million raised in fiscal 2012, $2 million over goal
  • 37.2 percent six-year graduation rate
  • 12.9 percent four-year graduation rate

A: I would say the financial difficulties have been daunting, and they have been continuous. I spend an incredible amount of time on it. I think that is going to ease as we've gotten now more stable enrollment growth, but it has been challenging because we want to do so much to fix up the place. I will be shifting more of my time to fundraising because we have 150,000 alumni that love this place and we want to get them to help support us.

When you have a student death, as a president you take it personally. You identify with the family, it's very hard. You're a large university, it's going to happen [but] it breaks your heart.

(Martin was referring to the death of EMU student Julia Niswender, who was found dead in her off-campus apartment Dec. 11. Police have ruled her death a homicide.)

Q: How is your relationship with the Board of Regents?

A: It's great. I really have their full support. I am delighted they extended my contract. We've got a full plate of things to do. They're an accomplished group and they're very committed to Eastern. I think we're looking forward to the future and excited that we've got a good team here.

Q: Have there been times of tension?

A: Any president would tell you that the board relationship is complicated and you don't always agree, but in the end this board [usually comes to a consensus]. This board has always had a consensus vote on the budget. I think there's only been one vote, on room and board, that had one negative vote in the time I've been here and that's all I can recall.

I do appreciate the fact that when I first started the board sent me to the Harvard seminar for new presidents. [The board chair] insisted on sending me to something every three months to be developed. That was invaluable. They have sent me to a lot of things. These jobs are tough at any institution and board people are very busy. These are tough times for universities, there are a lot of complicated issues. There are lawsuits, there are protests, there are all kinds of things going on and they take their jobs very seriously.

It's always a challenge for presidents to improve their skills at serving the board and keeping them well informed and making them feel comfortable when they vote on things, that they've had the right information to make that decision. But together I would say across the past five years I am very proud of them. They've dealt with a lot of tough stuff, they've been very supportive of the administration.

[The level of board involvement] varies by board member and changes over time too. When I came, to be fair, they had had turnover in presidents and they were very concerned and we had a lot of problems. We were declining in enrollment. It's not a surprise that the board would be much more involved at that time and much more engaged, because I had never been a president. But over time, we've seen that change quite a bit.

(A letter was placed in Martin's file by the Board of Regents executive committee in May 2012, reprimanding her for getting into an argument at a bar with an alumnus, drinking and acting unpresidential. Martin sent an email in July to all EMU students and staff informing them of the incident.)

Q: What was the impact of that incident?

A: I come in as president every day, and it's my job to lead the institution through things and I made a decision to put this [issue] out and to move on with the university and I think we had a lot of work to do and we did move on. ... That's in the past and was evidenced by the fact that the board came and had a special meeting just to reappoint me today.

Q: Did you think the letter was warranted?

A: I am not going to talk about that. I said at the time I respect their right to issue the letter.

Kellie Woodhouse covers higher education for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at kelliewoodhouse@annarbor.com or 734-623-4602 and follow her on twitter.

U-M Health System has some of the highest charges in the state, but patients rarely face them

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The University of Michigan Health System has some of the highest hospital charges in the state, according to a set of new data released by the federal government this week.

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The University of Michigan Health System's campus in Ann Arbor.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com file photo

But that doesn't mean patients or their insurance companies are paying those charges. Both Medicare and most commercial insurance reimbursements are calculated using formulas that don’t factor in the charges. Patients then pay whatever's left after the insurance or Medicare payments.

The federal government’s Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services attempted to shed light on hospitals’ charges by releasing a massive data set on average figures from Medicare patient data.

The data is available under provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010.

Experts contend that the data can’t be taken at face value, and doesn’t help consumers in making decisions on where to go for health care as it doesn’t include hospital quality and safety considerations.

However, the data does add to the national dialogue on the practice of hospitals tabulating charges when they’re typically irrelevant to everyone except the most vulnerable patient: The uninsured.

The charges, which continue to rise each year, have become out of touch with the costs that a hospital actually incurs for procedures, officials contend.

The numbers

The newly released data averages charges from hospitals across the country for a set of top 100 inpatient diagnoses in Medicare patients from 2011.

In Michigan, the most expensive hospital charge is for ventilator support for 96 hours or more at the University of Michigan Health System: $203,249. That’s about $70,000 more than the second-highest charge at a Michigan hospital for the procedure - which can be found at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, where $134,511 is the charge.

Just a few miles away from UMHS’s Ann Arbor campus at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Superior Township, the charge is $119,767 for the same procedure.

And the lowest charge in the state for ventilator support — $41,199 — is at Garden City Hospital in Garden City.

The disparity between hospital charges is strikingly evident across the board.

For small and large bowel procedures, UMHS also ranks at the top of the pack in Michigan with a charge of $188,881 — about $40,000 more than the hospital with the second-highest charge for the category, which is Sinai-Grace Hospital in Detroit.

St. Joseph Mercy Ann Arbor charges $96,349 for the procedure. The lowest charge in the state is $39,838 at Marquette General Hospital.

For pneumonia treatment, Karmanos Cancer Center in Detroit has the highest charge at $24,466, and Mecosta County Medical Center in Big Rapids has the lowest charge at $6,172.

Here’s what hospitals in Washtenaw County list as charges for pneumonia treatment:

  • UMHS: $21,888
  • St. Joseph Mercy Hospital: $14,498
  • Chelsea Community Hospital: $8,856

Here are hospital charges from Washtenaw County facilities for joint replacement:

  • UMHS: $40,588
  • St. Joseph Mercy Hospital: $36,266
  • Chelsea Community Hospital: $24,649

The most expensive charges in the state for joint replacement are at Detroit Receiving Hospital and University Health Center in Detroit at $63,590, and the least expensive is a $17,752 charge at Tawas St. Joseph Hospital in Tawas City.

UMHS is at the national average for hospital charges, said Chief Financial Officer Paul Castillo, plus or minus several percentage points.

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Paul Castillo

Courtesy photo

“The University of Michigan Health System has a very reasonable profile compared to the national average,” Castillo said. “If I were comparing us to other academic medical centers, we would be well below the national average. … We should be compared against national academic medical centers.”

Hospitals all have very different contexts and burdens, Castillo said, citing teaching costs, the number of uninsured and poor patients they serve, as well as the degree to which the patients who are arrive are sick.

“Clearly U-M has a different mission than most,” said Rick Murdock, executive director of the Michigan Association of Health Plans.

Murdock explained the teaching facility status of UMHS, and the referral system that brings in sicker patients for treatment alters its cost structure.

The figures are not useful or relevant for most consumers, said Marianne Udow-Phillips, director of the Center for Healthcare Research & Transformation.

“It’s a little misleading,” she said. “If you have health insurance, you’re not going to face charges or even the total payment.”

The more relevant question is quality, Udow-Phillips said.

“It’s a very small slice of a picture,” Udow-Phillips said. “It doesn’t help consumers to figure out where the value is. … As a consumer, you want to know where you’re going to be treated with the most effective outcomes.”

Reimbursements

In addition to having some of the highest hospital charges in Michigan, UMHS also has one of the highest Medicare reimbursement rates in the state, according to the government’s data.

But, they’re not directly correlated.

The reimbursement rate for Medicare and for most commercial insurers— including Blue Cross Blue Shield, which insures about 70 percent of patients with private insurance in Michigan — is calculated on a formula independent of hospital charges, Udow-Phillips said.

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Marianne Udow-Phillips

Courtesy photo

For some smaller rural hospitals with limited services, hospital charges are used to calculate reimbursement rates, Udow-Phillips said.

Medicare’s formula has a series of metrics used to determine reimbursement. There’s a base payment established by Medicare for each type of diagnosis, which is adjusted based on the average wage.

Ann Arbor’s base Medicare reimbursement is at the national average, Castillo said, putting it higher than the base reimbursement that Detroit hospitals receive.

Hospitals qualify for more Medicare reimbursement if they treat a disproportionally larger share of the population that’s not able to pay for health care.

UMHS qualifies in that case, Castillo said, which garners UMHS an additional 17 percent more than the base reimbursement.

UMHS’ status as a teaching hospital also guarantees an additional 37 percent more reimbursement, Castillo said.

“To the extent that you treat a disproportionally higher poor population, and to the extent that you’re a teaching hospital, you’ll get Medicare support for those activities,” Castillo said.

Even with the combined 54 percent increase from the base payment for Medicare reimbursements, the figure only covers about 90 percent of the hospital’s cost for the service, Castillo said — meaning UMHS loses money on Medicare patients.

The Medicare reimbursement is typically less than that of private insurers, Castillo said.

However, the Medicare system does pay more to hospitals for specific patients that are considered to be outliers — in essence, sicker patients who require more than a standard routine of care for a diagnosis.

As UMHS receives a high number of referrals of patients who are the “sickest of the sick,” Castillo said UMHS does receive those additional surplus payments from Medicare.

Charges

A hospital’s charges for a procedure are the same across the board — no matter if the patients are uninsured, under private insurance or on a federal, state or local program.

However, charges don’t reflect what the hospital’s actual cost is to perform the service.

“Over the years, the charge structure has simply tried to keep it moving at the rate of inflation (in the health care market),” Castillo said. “The charges have less relevance to what (hospitals) get paid, but we continue to inflate them.”

It’s a practice conducted at hospitals across the country.

For UMHS, Castillo said the charge is about double the cost of the service.

“Charges (have) largely lost (their) relevance in the health care world, because what we get paid will be determined by Medicare and by commercial insurers,” Castillo said.

About 30 years ago, charges were used by many insurance companies to determine patient deductibles and premiums — which changed during the last wave of health care reform under President Bill Clinton’s administration, Udow-Phillips said.

Those that do face the charges — which tend to increase annually, based on hospital market rates — are the uninsured.

Cost-shifting

Patients without health insurance may not pay their medical bills, leaving hospitals with uncompensated costs they must find ways to cover.

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Rick Murdock

Courtesy photo

In 2011, UMHS provided $197 million in uncompensated care — a figure that includes unpaid patient debts, as well as the gap between state and federal health plan reimbursements and the cost of care.

Those uncompensated costs can work themselves in to consumer insurance premiums, leaving patients paying for their insurance to help foot the bill of the uninsured.

“This continues to be a part of our whole cost-shifting issues that we have with different providers,” Murdock said. “There’s definitely uncompensated care costs — those are paid for by premiums in private insurance.”

An analysis conducted by CHRT found that one percent of the expense of a private insurance premium is due to hospitals’ uncompensated care costs, Udow-Phillips said.

Murdock said the real question is if those costs are being fairly shifted to each insurance provider.

As hospitals continue to increase their charges year after year in accordance with the market, the problem is that the uninsured patient is saddled with an inflated debt, Murdock said.

“We should focus on why we have these charges,” Udow-Phillips said. “The only people that get billed these ... amounts (are) the uninsured — and that’s wrong."

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

Controversial 413 E. Huron project at top of Ann Arbor City Council agenda Monday

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The Ann Arbor City Council will resume its May 6 meeting at 7 p.m. Monday night with its final consideration of the site plan for the 14-story high-rise building proposed for 413 E. Huron St. in downtown Ann Arbor.

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Ann Arbor resident Widd Schmidt made this poster to show the proposed 413 E. Huron project -- identified by the light yellow building -- in relation to its neighborhood.

Courtesy photo

The project — which the council previously attempted to block with a moratorium on downtown development — has caused the council to re-evaluate its zoning ordinances and drawn hundreds of people to public hearings.

The council has delayed voting on the issue several times — once at the request of the developer, Carter, which is based in Atlanta.

The project is also before City Council without the endorsement of the city's Planning Commission. In February, the project failed to gain enough votes for the commission to recommend the site plan and the demolition of three buildings that sit at the corner of Division and Huron streets now.

The proposed high-rise building would take the place of a vacant 10,300-square-foot building, a former Papa John's pizza store and a house, and would sit next to the Sloan Plaza condominium complex.

The final vote on the issue has been dragged out through the council’s last three meetings, as lengthy public hearings on multiple topics, including 413 E. Huron prompted the adjournment of the April 15 meeting in the middle of the agenda at 3 a.m.

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A rendering of the proposed building in relation to the existing neighborhood.

Humphreys & Partners Architects

The 413 E. Huron public hearing continued at the May 6 meeting, when again residents from across the city turned out to speak against the project for about an hour and a half.

At 11:30 p.m. May 6, the council moved to go in to recess right before it was set to take up the 413 E. Huron Site plan, with the contingency that the item would be the first on its agenda at a special meeting at 7 p.m. Monday.

Part of the public commentary at the May 6 meeting included a coordinated group of 15 residents who presented a booklet of ways they claim the 413 E. Huron project violated zoning ordinances.

Mayor John Hieftje and Council Member Christopher Taylor, D-3rd Ward, have previously said that the city attorney’s office has advised them that the developer would have legal justifications to bring a lawsuit against the city, should council vote down the site plan.

Neither Hieftje nor Taylor would elaborate on what those justifications would entail.

Similar public opposition to a downtown development project arose with the introduction of City Place apartments to South Fifth Avenue.

The Ann Arbor City Council heard from countless residents and some city officials who felt the development was out of character with the surrounding neighborhood.

Ultimately, City Council approved the development and City Place opened to residents in 2012. A row of homes on Fifth Avenue was demolished to make way for the project.

The Ann Arbor City Council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in the second-floor council chambers at City Hall at 301 E. Huron St.

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

Pedestrian suffers minor injuries in hit-and-run

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A woman was injured in a hit-and-run Saturday evening in Ypsilanti.

According to police, the woman was walking across the street around 6:30 p.m. in the 300 block of South Prospect when she was hit by a man driving a green car.

The pedestrian suffered minor injuries.

Further information was not immediately available from police Sunday morning.


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