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The Devil is in the Details 3/212021: Still no transparency with an AmplifyGR project and a new naming of public spaces policy opens the door to the rich getting their names everywhere

March 22, 2021

This is our latest installment of The Devil is in the Details, which takes a critical look at Grand Rapids politics and policies, based primarily on the public record, such as committee agendas and minutes.

There are 2 issues we want to focus on in this installment of The Devil is in the Details, with the first one being the ongoing lack of transparency around the 1601 Madison SE project that is being spearheaded by AmplifyGR. 

As we mentioned in the last installment of this post, AmplifyGR has been pushing this development project since last November, but has failed to identify which company will be located at the 1601 Madison SE property, despite the fact that AmplifyGR has been asking for a $1,943,810 tax break through the Brownfield Development Authority.

On March 17, I sent an e-mail to 3rd Ward City Commissioner Lenear, asking if she knew what company would be located at the 1601 Madison SE property, but as of this posting I have yet to get a response.

In the Southtown Corridor Improvement Authority packet for March 17th, there was new information on the AmplifyGR project. AmplifyGR’s Director Jon Ippel introduced Andy Shannon from MCPC, representing the tenant for the property. Mr. Shannon provided background on the company. However, the document never provides the name of the company. Andy Shannon is the President of Sales for MCPC, which is a Data Protection Company, which leads us to believe that the company that will be occupying the 1601 Madison SE property will be a tech company.

Also worth noting about this project is that Ruben Ramos, who sits on the Southtown Corridor Authority Board, said he would be abstaining from voting on this project. Unfortunately, the document doesn’t provide a reason why Ramos would be abstaining, but that usually means there is a conflict of interest, which often means those abstaining have a financial interest in the project. 

The second issue we wanted to address in this addition of The Devil is in the Details, has to do with a new Parks & Recs policy proposal, which was included in the March 23rd Committee of the Whole packet, beginning on page 63.

The subject of the document listed states, Resolution approving City Commission Policy 1100-11; Naming and Renaming of Parks and Recreational Facilities. A more detailed explanation is referenced on page 66, which states:

These policies and procedures are intended to guide a) any individual or community group that is interested in having a park, building, or major feature named for a significant person, event, or place, b) any individual, group, or business that is interested in having their significant donation (park, building, major feature) named, c) the Parks and Recreation Advisory Board that will be making a recommendation to the department in regard to these requests, d) City Commission members that will be holding public hearings and approving the names of parks and buildings, and e) the Parks and Recreation Department Director and their staff.

Now, part of the documentation states that the naming or renaming of Parks and other public spaces in the City, “are not encouraged and should be entertained only after fully investigating and considering the potential impact of dropping the current name, of which will be included as part of the formal petition submitted.”

However, beginning on page 69, the document then begins to talk about naming and renaming public spaces for Major Gifts, meaning financial contributions. Here the document provides some details:

“When a gift is made to the Grand Rapids parks and recreation system that is of such magnitude and generosity that naming of such a new park or recreational facility in honor of or at the request of the benefactor, consideration to naming rights will be considered in addition to the other criteria outlined herein. 

As a guideline but not a limitation, the threshold for naming rights on parks and buildings would include one or preferably more of the following: 

  1. Deeding to the City of most, if not all, of the land on which the park or building to be named will be situated; 
  2. Payment of one-half or more of the capital costs of constructing a park or building to be named (depending on the availability of matching funds or grants); 
  3. Some long-term endowment for the repair and maintenance of a donated park or building; and 
  4. The provision of significant program costs for facilities that will serve parks and recreation program needs.

When reading this, the only thing that I could think of was that the City is willing to consider naming or renaming public spaces based on financial contributions, which almost always means from those who are part of the Grand Rapids Power Structure. Does this mean that we might see in the not too distant future a park or other public space being named after Richard & Helen DeVos? It certainly seems possible, since on page 69 it references naming right for Benefactors – members of the Capitalist Class, and corporations, associations, and other legally created entities making a major gift. 

Of course, this whole trend it rooted in the fact that government bodies have been adopting austerity measures, which are the hallmark of Neoliberalism. Austerity measures include the transfer of public money to the private sector, privatization of formerly public services and deregulation. 

With this new Naming and Renaming of public spaces policy, it opens the door for rich people and corporations to buy naming rights, which would not only be insulting to the public, it would also be driven by the ongoing war that Grand Rapids Power Structure has been waging in this community. This war is being directed at the most marginalized in our community, with concrete material consequences, but it’s also a war being waged against historical memory and forgetting. The more our public spaces are named after those with financial and political power, the more likely we become vulnerable to a sanitized narrative about those who have been exploiting this city for decades. 

How is it that we allow groups like Grand Action 2.0 to get away with the shit they do?

March 21, 2021

There are many definitions of the term stakeholder, but most often, when used by those in positions of power it usually means, “denoting a type of organization or system in which all the members or participants are seen as having an interest in its success.”

The organization known as Grand Action 2.0, recently published their plans/wish list for further development in downtown Grand Rapids, development that is primarily about attracting tourists to the area. In fact, the document is referred to as Venue & Attraction Development for Grand Rapids.

On the last page of this document, there is a listing of all the Interviewed Stakeholders. If we are using the working definition of stakeholder listed above, those included in the Grand Action 2.0 document are almost all groups that would have an interest in the success of the development plan.

What follows is a list of the 57 stakeholders that were interviewed, with a hyperlink included for those who many not be familiar with the entity. However, in most cases the hyperlink takes you to the leadership or Board of Directors of the entity listed, so you can see how in most cases there is a small sector of the community, specifically representing the Grand Rapids Power Structure, which dictate do much of what happens not only in downtown Grand Rapids, but throughout the city.

After that, we want to organize the 57 entities under the following groups: DeVos family run, other entities that make up the Grand Rapids Power Structure, entities with DeVos family representation on its board of directors, businesses that would profit from the Grand Action 2.0 development plans, government entities, stakeholders that were included because of their tourist appeal, and stakeholders that were included because they represent the optics of community.

AHC Hospitality https://www.ahchospitality.com/properties 

Amway https://www.amwayglobal.com/ 

ASM Global https://asmglobal.com/p/our-story

Bluewater Audio & Video https://bluewaterav.com/

Brigham Consulting https://www.brighamconsulting.com/  

City of Grand Rapids https://www.grandrapidsmi.gov/Home 

Colliers https://www.colliers.com/en/about#56bf90ae-53a7-4c31-b4e4-57fc4c0298a4 (Global Real Estate Company)

CWD Real Estate https://www.cwdrealestate.com/ 

DGRI https://downtowngr.org/about/dgri

Dick and Betsy DeVos Family Foundation  https://www.dbdvfoundation.org/ 

DP Fox Ventures https://www.dpfox.com/

Experience Grand Rapids https://www.experiencegr.com/contact-staff/board-of-directors/

Fifth Third Bank https://www.53.com/content/fifth-third/en.html

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park https://www.meijergardens.org/storage/docs/21-024_Board_of_Directors_Web_Update.pdf 

Frey Foundation https://freyfdn.org/founders-and-trustees/

Gerald R. Ford International Airport Authority https://www.grr.org/airport-board 

GR Community Foundation https://www.grfoundation.org/about/trustees-committees 

GR Mobile https://www.grandrapidsmi.gov/Government/Boards-and-Commissions/Mobile-GR-Commission

Grand Action https://www.grandaction.org/who-we-are 

Grand Action 2.0 Executive Committee https://www.grandaction.org/who-we-are

Grand Rapids Ballet https://grballet.com/about/board-directors/

Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce https://www.grandrapids.org/your-chamber/board-of-directors/

Grand Rapids Community College https://www.grcc.edu/about-grcc/leadership-administration/board-trustees

Grand Rapids FC https://grandrapidsfc.com/

Grand Rapids Next Gen Advisory Board https://www.grandrapidsmi.gov/Government/Boards-and-Commissions/The-Mayors-Next-Gen-Advisory-Board

Grand Rapids Opera https://www.operagr.org/board-of-trustees/

Grand Rapids Symphony https://www.grsymphony.org/board

Grand Rapids Urban League https://www.grurbanleague.org/board-of-directors

Grand Rapids Whitewater https://grandrapidswhitewater.org/funding/

Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority https://www.vanandelarena.com/p/about/about-caa

Grand Valley State University https://www.gvsu.edu/boardoftrustees/

Jandernoa Foundation https://www.open990.org/org/383083625/jandernoa-foundation/

John Ball Zoo https://www.jbzoo.org/about/board

Kent County https://www.accesskent.com/Departments/BOC/members.htm

Kent County Hotel Advisory Board https://www.kentcountyhospitality.org/hotel-advisory-board/

Keystone Fund https://keystonefund.org/revenue-source/

Live Nation Michigan https://www.livenationentertainment.com/leadership/

Major League Lacrosse https://majorleaguelacrosse.com/news/2019/2/25/about-mll.aspx

Michigan Travel Commission  https://www.michigan.org/board-members#asset-aid-19976

Midwest United https://www.midwestunitedfc.com/boardofdirectors

Northland United Soccer Club https://northlandunited.org/current-board-members/

NWSL https://www.nwslsoccer.com/leadership-team

Orion Construction http://orionbuilt.com/about-us

Osteria Rossa http://osteriarossa.com/about/

Pioneer Construction https://www.pioneerinc.com/our-team

Premier Productions https://www.premierproductions.com/about

Progressive AE https://www.progressiveae.com/overview/people/

Rockford Construction https://rockfordconstruction.com/team?drawer%5B0%5D=department-corporate

SJC Alliance https://www.scjalliance.com/culture/our-team/

Steelcase Foundation https://www.steelcasefoundation.org/staff-and-trustees/

Terryberry https://www.terryberry.com/about-us/

The Right Place https://www.rightplace.org/about-us/board-of-directors

United Methodist Community House http://www.umchousegr.org/about-us/our-board/

Van Andel Enterprises https://www.linkedin.com/company/va-enterprises-llc

Van Andel Institute https://www.vai.org/leadership/trustees/

Wege Foundation https://wegefoundation.com/trustees/

West Michigan Sports Commission https://www.westmisports.com/board

Western Michigan Hispanic Chamber https://westmihcc.org/board-of-directors/

Who these Stakeholders really represent

DeVos Family run entities – AHC Hospitality, Amway, Dick and Betsy DeVos Family Foundation, DP Fox Ventures and CWD Real Estate (partial ownership).

Other Grand Rapids Power Structure Stakeholders – CWD Real Estate, DGRI, Experience Grand Rapids, Frey Foundation, GR Community Foundation, Grand Action, Grand Action 2.0 Executive Committee, Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce, Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority, Grand Valley State University, Jandernoa Foundation, Orion Construction, Pioneer Construction, Progressive AE, Rockford Construction, Steelcase Foundation, The Right Place, Van Andel Enterprises, Van Andel Institute, Wege Foundation and the Western Michigan Hispanic Chamber. 

Stakeholders with DeVos Board Representation – DGRI, Experience Grand Rapids, Grand Action, Grand Action 2.0 Executive Committee, Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce, Grand Rapids Community College (funding), Grand Rapids Symphony, Grand Rapids Whitewater (funding), Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority, Grand Valley State University, Kent County Hotel Advisory Board, The Right Place, West Michigan Sports Commission and the Western Michigan Hispanic Chamber.

Businesses that would likely profit from the Grand Action 2.0 development plans –  AHC Hospitality, Bluewater Audio & Video, Colliers, CWD Real Estate, Orion Construction, Pioneer Construction, Progressive AE, and Rockford Construction.

Government entities – City of Grand Rapids, GR Mobile, Grand Rapids Next Gen Advisory Board, Kent County, and Michigan Travel Commission.

Stakeholders with tourist and venue appeal – Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids Opera, Grand Rapids Symphony, Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority, and John Ball Zoo.

Stakeholders that are community-based – Grand Rapids Urban League and United Methodist Community House.

The Rich get Richer and everyone else pays for it

In a March 10th WOODTV8 story, it was reported that the Downtown Development Authority (DDA) approved steps to create a new oversight group for the Grand River “development plans.” While the Grand River development plans are not the same as the Grand Action 2.0 Venue & Attraction Development for Grand Rapids document, these projects overlap and involved the same stakeholders, ie, representatives of the Grand Rapids Power Structure. 

In the WOODTV8 story, one DDA board member, Greg McNeilly, had reservations about having “ too many oversight groups over time.” McNeilly, who represents the DeVos owned Windquest Group at the DDA meetings, is also the President of the Michigan Freedom Fund. It’s not surprising that McNeilly, who has been a DeVos operative for years, would verbalize his objection to too much oversight, but he really shouldn’t worry about this, since it is likely that whatever oversight group is put in place, will represent the DeVos and other Grand Rapids Power Structure member interests quite well.

Lastly, as thousands of families in Grand Rapids continue to face eviction, food insecurity and unemployment, the Grand Action 2.0 plans will continue to move forward without a hitch. In fact, those behind the Grand Action 2.0 plans, along with the stakeholders involved in the project, are delighted that so many people are busy just surviving, since that means they are not pissed off and organized against the Grand Action 2.0 plans to use public money to development more of the downtown area, which will lead to expanding the wealth of the members of the Grand Rapids Power Structure. If those who were struggling to survive knew what those in power were up to, it might look a whole lot like what happened on May 30th last year, when the police could not control the thousands of people who mobilized with righteous indignation against police repression and the concentrated wealth that exists within the Capitalist Class in the downtown area. The question for groups doing work outside of the non-profit industrial complex is, “how can we mobilize the disenfranchised to bring down the Grand Rapids Power Structure?

GRIID Class on US Social Movements – Part VIII: Building a Framework for Social Movements and Radical Imagination

March 18, 2021

In the 8th, and last, week of the class on US social movements, we discussed an article by Steve Darcy, which you can find here. 

Darcy’s article has to do with the importance of creating autonomous and independent social organizations/structures that do not rely in the existing Capitalist structures in business, government and the non-profit sector, entities that he identifies as Social Movement Organizations, Class Conflict Organizations and Grassroots-Democratic Organizations. 

In addition, Darcy explores what he describes as a two-pronged strategic framework – the resistance phase and the transition phase. The resistance phase is where we actively work to dismantled systems of power and oppression, using a whole array of tactics in that work. The transition phase is where we work to build alternative structures and a capacity to building the kind of community and society we want to see.

Participants were very engaged with the content from Darcy’s article and we began to discuss what this might look like in a variety of movement-based work.

The second part of week 8 was spent responding to four questions that were meant to engage people around some of the overarching themes raised in the first 7 weeks.

What have you learned about systems of power and oppression in US History, and how they have they have responded – pushed back, against social movements. Here, people discussed the Abolitionist Movement, the larger Black Freedom Struggle and the Labor Movement. Participants addressed how systems of power are always attempting to co-opt movements, present mild reforms – with the hope that it will weaken movements, direct suppression of movements and how systems of power always want to dictate the narrative around this history.

What have you learned about Social Movements, specifically about tactics and strategies that you may not have known before, and how have those tactics and strategies threaten systems of power? One participant made it clear, using the example of labor conflicts that it seems that unless there is significant confrontation, movements will not be effective. Another participant spoke to how the Abolitionist movement used direct action tactics like uprising, killing plantation owners and creating the Underground Railroad, all of which were tactics that used force and were determined by society to be illegal. 

Whatever gains that have been made in the US, how have they come about? Here we discussed Zinn’s analysis that whatever gains we have made, they have come about because of our collective ability to organize and struggle to make the changes we want. Whatever gains we have made was the direct result of movements, never gifts from those in power and never as a result of elections. One of the participants pointed out that the 8 hour work day, worker benefits, etc, were the result of the Labor Movement, not because bosses or owners gifted those things to us.

How does our collective investigation into the history of social movements influence our understanding/participation in current movements? We ran out of time before getting to the fourth question, but there was some discussion about existing movements in the area and ways to get involved. 

As always, facilitating these kinds of conversations is always engaging, always instructive and it is always affirming to watch and listen to people who are grappling with this history and how it impacts their understanding of what is happening in the present. Thank you all for your commitment to this class, your sharing and your insights!

Resisting Enbridge’s Line 3 in the Great Lakes: GRIID interview with Anishinaabe activist Joe Cadreau

March 17, 2021

GRIID – Can you tell us when you will be going to Minnesota and why?

Joe – Yes, I will be leaving the Grand Rapids area on March 25th, heading to Red Lake Minnesota to stand in solidarity with fellow Indigenous people in demanding the shutdown of Line 3. For the last 6 years tribal nations, community and environmental groups in Minnesota have fought to stop Canadian oil giant Enbridge Energy from building the massive Line 3 pipeline in Northern Minnesota, to take oil from Canada’s tar sands region to Superior, Wisconsin.

The pipeline violates several treaties with the Ojibwe people that establish our rights to hunt, fish, and gather along the proposed route. The pipeline would cross 200 bodies of water, including the Mississippi River twice. If built, Line 3 would carry hundreds of thousands of barrels a day of tar sands crude oil — some of the dirtiest oil in the world — and would contribute the equivalent of 50 coal plants worth of carbon pollution to the atmosphere. Its carbon footprint would exceed the entire state of Minnesota’s.

GRIID – How long will you be there and are there any other members of the local indigenous community making the trip with you?

Joe – We will be there for 2-3 days to bring in some supplies and donations and to help uplift and amplify indigenous voices. There is a caravan that will be starting in the UP at the Bay Mills Indian Community and we will be meeting up in Grand Rapids and head to Minnesota as a group, kind of like back in the old days of AIM. As far as local indigenous community members from Grand Rapids, we have five tribal members that are going along with a group of allies. 

GRIID – How important is the resistance of Line 3 to Indigenous people?

JoeI think it is very important after the NoDAPL fight.  NoDAPL proved to us that we cannot rely or trust the federal government to do the right thing, in regards to Indigenous people and treaty rights. Line 3 would violate the treaty rights of Anishinaabe peoples and nations in its path — wild rice is a centerpiece of Anishinaabe culture, it grows in numerous watersheds Line 3 seeks to cross. It’s well-past time to end the legacy of theft from and destruction of indigenous peoples and territories. Add the fact that ALL pipelines leak, this is non-starter for us as Anishinaabe, as the Dakota Access line proved!

I also think it’s important to understand that historically, we Anishaabek people earned our livelihoods off these wetlands and water sheds, from fishing, and fur trapping, to wild rice harvesting and land conservation. A historical fact that is often lost, is that Anishinaabe people were the people who discovered and plotted the trade routes in every water way and river from the Mississippi River eastward. These lands are not only sacred to our life ways, but also hold significant cultural meaning. I cannot stress enough the importance of resistance to Line 3 and Enbridge as a corporation. 

GRIID – Why do you think that the resistance to Line3 hasn’t received the same kind of attention from both the news media and climate justice groups, as Standing Rock did?

Joe – I believe the lack of attention to Line 3 has several factors, the first being that this fight has been on-going in the courts for the last 6 years. Secondly, I believe that mixed messaging from state leaders, particularly the governor has played a major role, and never under estimate the power of money and influence that Enbridge utilizes. And lastly, the current social climate in Minnesota, with police brutality on Indigenous and Black community members, the George Floyd murder, and the missing and murdered indigenous women movements, people are pulled in many different directions. Add on the pandemic and coverage becomes even more thin. 

As legal cases continue to play out, long standing grassroots resistance to the pipeline have entered a new phase with public actions in multiple locations and dozens of arrests of peaceful water protectors. Native American Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) organizations have led the movement with groups like the Giniw Collective, Honor the Earth, Rise Coalition and Gitchi Gumi Scouts leading public actions along the construction route along with organizations including MN350 Action and Northfield Against Line 3.

GRIID – Are you able to talk about what you will be doing when you take part in the Line 3 resistance? If, so please share.

Joe We are basically going there to help uplift and support Indigenous voices in whatever way that they need and tell us. We have some supplies and donations that we are also bringing to the Red Lake Treaty Camp. However, actions are progressing as Enbridge was given a permit and as the ground thaws, they have begun to stage pipeline and equipment along the route for construction. Some actions that happened over the last 2 months, included Indigenous women (Ogichidda Kwe) chaining themselves to construction equipment, construction of a Medicine lodge along the planned route, and peaceful demonstrations at various sites, where protesters were arrested. 

GRIID – Can you talk about how the Line 3 project is just another form of Settler Colonialism?

JoeThis project Line 3 along with Line 5 right here in Michigan and The Dakota Access Line are living forms of Settler Colonialism. They perpetuate the legacy of colonization and imperialism in the forms of land theft and destruction of a people and life ways in the name of capitalist gains. An easier way to explain what these pipelines mean to me as a proud Ojibwa man would be to compare them to confederate monuments. Just as the confederate monuments were created as a means to demonstrate white supremacy over a group, the pipelines serve the same purpose to indigenous people. A trophy of accomplishment over a people and culture and a constant reminder of that victory. 

GRIID – What will it take for a similar kind of resistance campaign to happen in Michigan against Line 5?

Joe – Well, Line 5 is going to be interesting over the next couple of months. Governor Whitmer has demanded that Enbridge shut down Line 5. Through her office and by executive order it is supposed to be shut down by the first week of May.  In return Enbridge has been defiant and has now employed the powers of PM Trudeau and has promised to take the fight to Washington DC. 

Depending on what happens in May will determine what actions will happen not only in the courts and from the state, but also tribal nations and local grassroots. I believe that actions will only progress here in Michigan if Line 5 is not shut down. Over the last 2-3 years actions of resistance slowly increased over Line 5. From PR campaigns to activist filming and recording Enbridge workers, and even some had camps set up in areas on both sides of the Mackinac Bridge.  

GRIID – In what ways can non-indigenous people be supportive of the Line 3 resistance?

Joe – I have a quote from Winona LaDuke that I want to share, “Frontline leaders and climate activists have called on supporters to join in resisting Line 3. A leading opponent of the pipeline, Winona LaDuke, executive director of Honor the Earth calls the battle over Line 3, “ground zero in the battle over climate change”. “This is the last pipeline. This is the last battle, and that battle is in Minnesota …We expect thousands of people to join us.“

They can also donate to the Red Lake Treaty Camp on Facebook, or you can donate and find ways to support by visiting, https://www.stopline3.org

I think it is important to remember that Standing Rock and the NoDAPL movement were not only effective and impactful because of the many tribal nations that united. Yes that was important. But, the fact that many different cultures, and people came and stood with those tribal nations and indigenous people, also contributed to the success of that movement.

How many people have the police killed in 2021 so far? Asking for Johnny Brann Sr in Grand Rapids and Voice for the Badge

March 16, 2021

As I am accustomed to doing on a regular basis, early this week I checked the Voice for the Badge Facebook page. 

On March 13th, the founder of Voice for the Badge, Johnny Brann Sr. made the following post:

2021 to date

Nationally

62 police officers died/killed

8 suicides

Ya feel good about that – haters of Police?

If you do you’re a sick demented – individual

God Bless our Police

Johnny Brann Sr.

VFB

We are here for you Blue

Some harsh words for those of us who supporting the Defunding of the GRPD. 

I looked in to where Johnny Brann Sr might have got his data on police deaths so far in 2021, especially since he never sources his data. I did an online search and looked at the site called Officer Down Memorial Page, since I wanted to find the most pro-police site I could find. That page has 69 deaths as of the week of March 15th for 2021.

However, upon looking at the list of reasons for police officers dying in 2021, the number one reason was COVID 19, which has resulted in 38 police officer deaths. The next highest is gunfire (11) and then they list a whole bunch of other reasons, which you can see at this link. https://www.odmp.org/search/year

Therefore, more than half of the deaths of police officers have been due to COVID 19, and based on the data from the Officer Down Memorial Page, it appears that maybe 14 police officers have been killed by someone, while on duty, so far this year.

Comparatively, the number of people that police officers have killed across the US so far in 2021 is substantially higher. According to the database that the Washington Post has been using since 2015, the number of people that cops have killed so far in 2021 (under the heading Fatal Force) is 179. 

Based on the data provided by these two sources, there have been 14 police officers that have been intentionally killed, compared to 179 people that police officers have killed during the same amount of time. That is a 12.7 to 1 ratio, meaning for every police officer that is killed while on duty, the cops kill 12.7 people.

Who again, are the sick and demented people Johnny Brann Sr?

GOP proposes anti-trans legislation in Michigan: Every co-signers of the bill has received money from the DeVos family

March 15, 2021

On March 10th, GOP Senators in Michigan introduced legislation that is anti-trans. 

The proposed bill, Senate Bill 0218, was introduced by Michigan Senator Lana Theis and was sponsored by the following GOP Senators: Tom Barrett, Jim Runestad, Roger Victory, Jon Bumstead, John Bison, Kevin Daley, Rick Outman, Aric Nesbitt, Kimberly LaSata, Michael MacDonald, Dale Born and Curtis VanderWall.

The proposed anti-trans legislation would:

“Require that only biological males may compete for a position on and compete on a boys’ high school team in an interscholastic activity and only biological females may compete for a position on and compete on a girls’ high school team in an interscholastic activity; provide for. Amends 1979 PA 451 (MCL 380.1 – 380.1852) by adding sec. 1146a & repeals sec. 1289 of 1976 PA 451 (MCL 380.1289).”

These kinds of bills are being proposed all across the country at the state level and are being supported by three large historically anti-LGBTQ groups, the Family Policy Alliance, The Heritage Foundation, and Alliance Defending Freedom. According to a recent article from Political Research Associates:

Amid a spate of legislation in early 2021 targeting trans-affirming health care for youth and trans and gender nonconforming athletes, Ohio State Representative Jena Powell (R-Arcanum) announced this week that she had signed on to The Promise to America’s Children, a collaborative effort between the Family Policy Alliance, The Heritage Foundation, and Alliance Defending Freedom. The ten principles set forth a vision for childhood in which comprehensive sex education is banned in schools, teachers aren’t allowed to talk about LGBT people, students can openly discriminate against their LGBT classmates and teachers, parents are encouraged to submit their LGBT children to unethical conversion therapy and schools are powerless to protect them, trans student athletes are prohibited from playing sports, trans children are unable to access life-saving trans-affirming care, child-welfare organizations are encouraged to discriminate against LGBT prospective parents, and schools are forced to out LGBT students to their parents, regardless of safety considerations. 

In addition to the national anti-LGBTQ groups that are pushing this type of legislation across the country, all of the sponsors of Senate Bill 0218 have also received substantial campaign contributions over the years from the DeVos family. As we have reported in the past, the DeVos family has consistently financed candidates that take an anti-LGBTQ stance, anti-union, anti-transparency and pro-Neoliberal economic policies that almost always include austerity measures.

What follows are a list of the GOP sponsors of Senate Bill 0218 and how much money they have received directly from the DeVos family or from the House ($1,880,000) and Senate ($1,121,000) Republican Campaign Committees, to which the DeVos family is the number one contributor.

Five things we need to be reminded of after last week’s protest in Grand Rapids

March 14, 2021

Last Monday, the GRPD arrested 8 people during a march organized by Justice for Black Lives, a march that happened on the first day of the trial for the cop who lynched George Floyd was to begin. 

On Tuesday, the 8 people who were arrested held a Press Conference to share their ind=sights on what happened, with the over-arching message that organizers, particularly Black organizers were targeted for arrest by the GRPD.

The GRPD posted their own response to the arrests, using misinformation, double speak and gaslighting to make their point. 

On Saturday, I attended the 1 year anniversary march for when police shot and killed Breonna Taylor, while she was at home and sleeping in her bed. As of today there has been no justice for Breonna Taylor and her family.

The Breonna Taylor march on Saturday had a permit. Someone told me that people not connected to the march organizers offered to pay the fee for the permit, but what is problematic about that is that getting a permit plays into the GRPD’s propaganda. I have spent the past week reflecting on what has happened in Grand Rapids and thought it might be useful to remind us all of important aspects about engaging in protests and revolutionary politics.

1. There have been plenty of people in the last week, along with the GRPD, saying, It’s against the law to march in the streets without a permit. First, the cops always selectively enforce such laws. The GRPD constantly blocks traffic in front of the arena to allow pedestrians to cross the street, even though people could cross during the normal crosswalk designations. More importantly, the GRPD has not arrested a single person during protests that have been in the streets since June 2nd, just two days after the rebellion that took place on May 30th, until last Monday. Lastly, we DO NOT NEED PERMISSION to fucking protest. It’s a protest! 

2. There is No such thing as a peaceful protest when cops are involvedFirst, it is important to come to terms with the use of the word peace, which for many people means the absence of conflict. If we think about peace in terms of a protest, then we have to ask ourselves if there is no conflict. The very nature of a protest, whether we are talking about climate change, US militarism or police violence against black people, there is always an inherent conflict. People protest because some injustice has occurred, because they want to express some grievances, grievances often directed at the very institutions which are at the heart of the conflict. Therefore, we can conclude that a protest cannot be peaceful, since there indeed is a conflict.

Second, it is important that we frame the issue of racism, White Supremacy and the police murder of black people through the lens of power. Systems of power, like police departments, have the backing of the legal system, the political system and propaganda systems like news media, popular culture and schooling, all of which present a general narrative that police are necessary and most of them are “good.” All of these systems of power protect and legitimize police and policing. However, police departments are one clear example of structural violence, which we are conditioned to not think about. As Alex Vitale, author of the book, The End of Policing, states:

Well-trained police following proper procedure are still going to be arresting people for mostly low-level offenses, and the burden will continue to fall primarily on communities of color because that is how the system is designed to operate – not because of the biases or misunderstandings of officers.

Third, the presence of police at a protest, means there are people with guns, tasers, mace, clubs, tear gas, rubber bullets and a whole range of other high tech weapons. As anyone who has ever participated in a protest knows, it doesn’t take much for the police to use any number of these weapons. In fact, one could argue that the police are looking for a reason to use such weapons. However, even if they don’t use these weapons, there is always the threat of their use, which means that whenever cops are at a protest it CANNOT be peaceful.

Fourth, calling a protest peaceful, when protests are anything but peaceful, is a way for the system(s) to dictate the narrative about what is happening. When the police say a protest was peaceful, they mean that those protesting obey their orders, did nothing to disrupt business as usual and often it means that protest organizers cooperate and even collaborate with the police. In fact, one could argue that if this happens, then it is not really a protest, instead it becomes a performance. Such forms of “protests” are almost always organized by white liberals to make other white people feel good about themselves, without having to interrogate systems of power and oppression.

3. Disruption is a long standing tactic within Social Movements. The history of Social Movements is filled with actions – marches, sit-in, strikes, civil disobedience, insurrection – that are designed to be disruptive to business as usual, to what is normative. But here is thing – White Supremacy, poverty, mass incarceration, the climate crisis, rape, structural violence, these are normative, particularly within a Capitalist system. Social Movements disrupt the norm. Social Movement tactics, like blocking traffic, are designed to disrupt business as usual because they want people to be confronted with the grievances that people are making public, like the systemic practice of cops lynching Black people. Movimiento Cosecha often carries a banner with them that says, We’ll stop interrupting your lives, when you stop interrupting ours. What they mean by that is we’ll stop blocking traffic when you stop a system where ICE can take my family members, lock them up and deport them, with a likely outcome that the parent that was arrested will never see their children again, and all of this happens because people do not have documentation.

4. Systems of power and privilege will always push back against calls for radical change. All of the responses we have seen in the past week, from both the GRPD and Grand Rapids City Officials, while infuriating, is expected. Systems of power will always push back against social movements, especially when there are calls for radical systemic change. In fact, one could argue, based on history, that systems of power will often become more entrenched precisely because they feel threatened. We should celebrate this fact, since it means that those in power feel threatened and their push back is a signal that they feel threatened. Systemic and structural change never comes about quickly, nor does it come without sacrifice. We have to be in these kinds of struggles for the long haul and not give in to the temptation of reformism.

5. The GRPD acted exactly how they were supposed. When it comes to how policing happens in Grand Rapids or around the country, we need to come to terms with the fact that they are designed to protect the very systems of power that oppress us. The GRPD arrested 8 people last week and targeted Black organizers because that was a strategic response on their part. None of it is random. 

When dealing with protest movements, the GRPD will use two overarching strategies, Negotiated Management and Escalating Force. Negotiated Management – also called Command and Control techniques – this is when police attempt to negotiate actions, always with the goal to manage it. This often takes the form of cops asking people to get permits to protest, showing up at a protest to let everyone know that they are there to keep people safe, when in fact they are there to manage or control public dissent.

Escalated Force – this is where the state uses surveillance, infiltration, negative press, pre-emptive arrests, protest zones and the use of less lethal weaponry to suppress public resistance. This is what we have seen in Grand Rapids beginning on May 30th, where they have used weapons agains the public, relied on curfews, brought in the National Guard, sought to control the public narrative in the news media and have created the good protester/bad protester dichotomy.

Until we come to terms with these facts, we will continue to view the police as a necessary good and only seek to reform the GRPD. When we speak the language of copspeak – of police reform – we see the world as police do. Police reform is the science of police legitimation accomplished through the art of euphemism. Police reform speaks in a language carefully calibrated to limit our ability to understand police as anything other than an equitable force and indispensable institution.

Ultimately, we have to see that police and policing, even in West Michigan, function to protect power. Black communities have understood this about the US, since the country was founded. James Baldwin, in his famous 1966 essay on policing, referred to policing as a function of an occupying power. The Black Panther Party for Self Defense used the same language several years after Baldwin wrote his essay, always referring to the police as an occupying force.

However, white communities don’t tend to see the police through the same lens, especially white liberal communities like Grand Rapids. As Alex Vitale, in his groundbreaking book, The End of Policing:

For liberals, police reform is always a question of taking steps to restore the legitimacy of policing…………They want the police to be better trained, more accountable, and less brutal and racist – laudable goals, but they leave intact the basic institutional functions of the police, which have never really been about public safety and crime control………..The reality is that police exist primarily as a system for managing and even producing inequality by suppressing social movements and highly managing the behaviors of poor and nonwhite people; those on the losing end of economic and political arrangements.”

Lastly, the 5 points we just laid out are precisely why the GRPD needs to be Defunded.

GRIID Class on US Social Movements – Part VII: The Immigrant Justice Movement in Grand Rapids

March 11, 2021

In the 7th week of the class on US social movements, we looked at the Immigrant Justice  Movement in Grand Rapids, using a chapter from my forthcoming book, A People’s History of Grand Rapids. 

When Grand Rapids was formally founded in 1850, just shy of 3,000 people lived in the city. As was mentioned earlier, the Europeans who came to the area were French, English, German and Dutch, but soon came Polish, Lithuania, Irish, Italians and Jewish immigrants. 

According to Randal Jelks’ book, African Americans in the Furniture City: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Grand Rapids, there were few African Americans in the City in the middle of the 19th Century. According to the archives of Paul I Phillips, an African American leader in 20th Century Grand Rapids, there were 9 African Americans in 1854 and 48 in 1870. However, African Americans did not migrate to Grand Rapids in significant numbers until the 20th Century. 

US immigration policy began to adjust in the later part of the 19th Century, particularly when non-European’s were coming to the United States. The growing Chinese population on the west coast eventually led to the passage of the Chineses Exclusion Act in 1882. This legislation was coupled with growing anti-Chinese sentiment in the US, so much so that white Californians were recruiting other white people to come their state to deal with the “Chinese problem.” According to a December 24, 1885 story in the Grand Rapids Evening Leader, headline, The Chinese Must Go:

Nine members of the Cigar maker’s Union of this city will leave Saturday to join the army that is going to California to help drive out the Chinese. They will meet a train load of tobacco rollers at Chicago going in the same direction. E.B. Griffin, formerly of Michigan, now located in San Franciso, writes that there are situations for about 2,000 cigar makers in that city, the war on the Chinese having been a success. 

Ethnic resentment was used by the Capitalist Class in Grand Rapids to pit Euro-Americans against each other during the 1911 Furniture Workers Strike, but for most of Grand Rapids history this was not the norm.

This is not the case with non-Europeans who came to live in Grand Rapids, where they face discrimination and xenophobia. African Americans faced Jim Crows realities in Grand Rapids in the 20th Century, like red-lining, while Arab Americans who came here faced xenophobia, along with religious discrimination and an increase in anti-Arab treatment, especially after September 11, 2001. 

This is not to say that Grand Rapids doesn’t have a long history of welcoming people who have come to the US with a refugee status. There are numerous agencies in the city that have a decades-long history of providing support and transition to refugees from Vietnam (see Flight to Freedom: The Story of the Vietnamese of West Michigan, by Gordon Olson), people who have fled violence in various African nations, and Haitians who began coming during the politician conflicts between the US and Haiti in the early 1990s.

However, for lots of other people who immigrated from south of the US border, particularly Mexican, Guatemalan, Salvadoran, Honduran and to a lesser degree, Puerto Ricans, Dominicans and Cubans, there has been a different kind of reception.

Mexicans who have migrated to Michigan started coming in the early part of the 20th Century, primarily because of the large migrant labor demand that exists in West Michigan. Mexicans and Mexican Americans have been living and working in West Michigan in the agricultural sector for decades, especially since the Bracero program was begun during WWII. Even after the Bracero program was formally ended in 1964, other temporary visa programs were designed to allow farm workers to come into the US.

However, as the US/Mexican border became more militarized and anti-immigrant organization became more influential (like the group Federation for American Immigration Reform) the amount of undocumented/under-documented immigrants increased across the US and in the Grand Rapids area.

It was in this context that the immigrant justice movement was born. We used a timeline that Movimiento Cosecha GR uses when they do trainings on this topic, which are included here.

Part I of the Immigrant Justice Movement began as a response to proposed legislation in 2005 from Rep. Sensenbrenner, known as the  Border Protection, Antiterrorism and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005. The immigrant community got organized over the next several months and then held a massive protest (10,000 strong) in late March of 2006, which was reported on by the Indymedia site Media Mouse.

However, there was no immigrant-led entity to maintain the necessary organizing, plus many in the immigrant community got behind the candidacy of Barack Obama and the Democratic Party’s proposal of Comprehensive Immigration Reform. The Obama campaign promised Comprehensive Immigration Reform, but never delivered on this promise and many immigrants became disillusioned by electoral politics, along with the fact that roughly 3 million undocumented immigrants were deported under the Obama/Biden administration. 

After the election of Donald Trump, there became a renewed interest in immigrant rights, in part because of the overtly anti-immigrant rhetoric of the new administration and some of the early policy positions. More importantly, the immigrant justice movement now was being led by immigrants and immigrant groups like Movimiento Cosecha. This was all discussed in the class as Part II of the Immigrant Justice Movement.

As the Cannabis Industry is booming in Grand Rapids, what about Reparations for the War on Drugs?

March 10, 2021

I was driving on US 131 the other day to run an errand and I noticed that maybe one third of the all the billboards on both sides of the highway were advertisements for Cannabis.

This is not surprising, as we have been monitoring the Grand Rapids City Planning Commission and City Commission meets over the past few years, and rarely does a month go by where either Medical Marijuana or Recreational Cannabis facilities are getting approved. 

The Cannabis industry is booming, with news media outlets jumping on board to give attention and promote the products. Today (Thursday), MLive is a virtual seminar on the cannabis industry, with seven different panelists. This event is sponsored by the cannabis industry and according to MLive, “The event is intended for current industry leaders and business owners, as well as those wishing to be thought leaders in the cannabis trade.”

With the decriminalization of cannabis, why wouldn’t you want to get in on an industry that will make billions? 

As always, I have questions. First, only until recently, if you were selling cannabis, in any quantity, you would be arrested. Now, some people get to put up billboards to advertise cannabis. I say some people, since the cannabis industry seems is rapidly embracing the Capitalist model, where profits are God and chain cannabis stores will soon be like McDonalds. 

Second, we all know that when cannabis wasn’t legal, that Black and Brown people were disproportionately arrested and incarcerated for cannabis possession and distribution. According to a recent report from the ACLU entitled, A Tale of Two Countries: Racially Targeted Arrests in the Era of Marijuana Reform, the racial disparities in marijuana arrests is still happening.

As reported in the previous section, the total number of people arrested for marijuana possession, and rates of arrests, have decreased in all legalized states and most decriminalized states. These rates decreased for both Black and white populations, yet the racial disparities in arrest rates persist. In every state that has legalized or decriminalized marijuana possession, Black people are still more likely to be arrested for possession than white people.

Now, if arrests rates for marijuana continue to disproportionately affect Black people, then the next logical question to ask is, what is the new cannabis industry doing to address the historical and contemporary War on Drugs?

In looking at the websites for area cannabis retailers, the only one that addresses issues about the War on Drugs is Fluresh and even then there is only mention on their Community Impact page about the Black and Brown Cannabis Guild, which has been doing great work around expungement.

So, it would seem that billions will be made from cannabis sales, by a small sector of businesses (which will likely become more consolidated with time), who have little interest in dismantling the War on Drugs and providing reparations to those most affected. Isn’t Capitalism wonderful. 

Reparations for the War on Drugs – specifically cannabis-related

So what would reparations look like, specifically for the cannabis possession/distribution charges in the War on Drugs era? A good start is what the Black and Brown Cannabis Guild is doing, which is the expungement of the records of those who have been charged with cannabis possession previously. However, expungement isn’t enough.

The Cannabis industry could afford to pay reparations (the Cannabis Industry was worth $61 billion in 2020) to Black and Brown people impacted from the War on Drugs by directly transferring money to people who have been arrested and incarcerated for cannabis crimes. Black and Brown people who have been arrested and incarcerated for cannabis crimes lost money being in jail or prison, lost time being in jail or in prison, and lost opportunities being in jail or in prison. Of course, the state also needs to pay reparations for their role in the War on Drugs, but since the state is regulating the cannabis industry, why not have some of the billions that this industry will make be set aside as reparations for those who have been previous arrested and incarcerated for selling cannabis, particularly Black and Brown people.There is something fundamentally wrong with White people who now want to cash in on the cannabis industry, especially since it is well known that White people wanting to start a business have easier access to bank loans, etc. For those who want to profit off of cannabis sales, especially white people, let’s make them pay reparation!

WXMI 17 talks to cops, museum curators, anybody but the people who organized/participated in the May 30th Rebellion in Grand Rapids

March 10, 2021

The way that journalism, particularly commercial journalism, is produced in this community is both baffling and infuriating.

On Monday, March 8, WXMI 17 posted a news story, in both a broadcast version and a print version, about related to the May 30th Rebellion that took place in Grand Rapids after the police lynching of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

The WXMI 17 story is problematic in numerous ways, but let’s do a simple deconstruction that exposes what is wrong about how commercial journalism is often done. 

First, the premise of the story is that the Grand Rapids Art Museum is now hosting and curating art that was created by a variety of people, art that was created on the plywood that was used to board up windows of buildings in the downtown area the morning after the May 30th Rebellion. Ok, so I get the intention of the story, but that doesn’t make it a good story. First, we never find out anything about the artists who created the images and whether or not they participated in the May 30th Rebellion. Also, there is no indication that the Grand Rapids Art Museum will hold an event or a forum to discuss the images created or what took place the day of the Rebellion. In addition, the story excludes the perspective that says, painting images/messages on the wood used to board up windows in the downtown area was just another way to cover up the realities of what happens during a rebellion. One could argue it is the epitome of West Michigan Nice.

Second, the imagery that the broadcast version of the story uses is deeply problematic. Most of the images are of burning cars and other forms of property destruction, without any context. For instance the cars that were set on fire were cops cars, which was deliberate, since the cops in this context are the perpetrators of violence, both incident specific violence – the lynching of George Floyd – and structural violence, which clarifies the way policing in done in general as a form of violence. Then there was the imagery of the Chief of Police kneeling with protestors. Not only was this a staged PR opportunity for the GRPD Chief, it completely omits the reality that the GRPD had prepared to suppress any serious dissent on May 30th, with cops in riot gear, along with the fact that the police used deadly projectiles that were shot into the crowds on May 30th.

Third, why does WXMI 17 even give Police Chief Payne space to tell his side of what took place, all of which is biased. Payne says, “it began as a peaceful protest and then quickly evolved to a situation where a lot of lives were put in danger.” If the police are present, there is no such thing as a peaceful protest. (See our post from last Summer entitled, Is there really any such thing as a Peaceful Protest?)  Chief Payne’s comments ignore the fact that people had been marching from different parts of the City, while others had been having open mic opportunities at Rosa Parks Circle for several hours. The larger march, which began at 7pm, took the streets and then came to the Grand Rapids Police Department headquarters, where they were greeted by dozens of cops in riot gear. Verbal exchanges took place, but at some point more cops were called in and then fired deadly projectiles into the crowd, thus provoking people. This narrative is not included in the WXMI 17 story, since they didn’t even bother to speak to any of the organizers of the protest or anyone who participated that day.

Lastly, the WXMI 17 story then provides Police Chief Payne with even more air time to talk about how the May 30th impacted the police department and his family. What about how policing in this community impacts the lives of Black, Brown, immigrant and homeless people? Why they hell does channel 17 centered the perspective and feeling of someone who is responsible for perpetrating so much harm on the community on a daily basis? 

None of this is surprising, but that doesn’t make it any less problematic. As we wrote back in November, the GRPD and other Grand Rapids City Officials have been attempting to control the narrative about what happened during the May 30th Rebellion, along with trying to counter the narratives that community-based organizers have been presenting, particularly those seeking to Defund the GRPD.