One of the 10 principles of journalism is that it must serve as an independent monitor of power.
Now, I don’t claim to be a journalist, more of a media watchdog, but I do engage in movement media. Movement media is reporting and documenting what social movements are doing, which is what I have been trying to do with GRIID since 2009.
However, since I have been monitoring what I call the Grand Rapids Power Structure for nearly two decades, I thought I would start a new segment – Monitoring the Rich and Powerful in Grand Rapids.
The Monitoring the Rich and Powerful in Grand Rapids segments will offer brief commentary on those who have power over others in this community. These segments will not replace my regular reporting on the Grand Rapids Power Structure, since those stories will offer more in depth writing.
As we navigate a second Trump Administration with the likes of Elon Musk, it seems like a perfect opportunity to shed some light on rich and powerful of Grand Rapids, or to frame it the way that radical media from the 60s and 70s would do regarding the Capitalist Class, using the phrase, “up against the wall motherfucker!”
Our first example comes to us from an announcement from the West Michigan Policy Forum, stating that former State Representative Jase Bolger is the new President & CEO of the West Michigan Policy Forum.
Bolger left political office a few years ago and formed the Tusker Strategies LLC group, which represents groups working on public policy changes in Michigan. According to the Tusker website, the West Michigan Policy Forum (WMPF) was Bolger’s only client. In addition to representing the WMPF, Bolger also joined the board of the Great Lakes Education Project, the entity created by Betsy DeVos to undermine public education across the state.
Last November, GRIID posted an article about Bolger and Doug DeVos, who had a video conversation with the WMPF board member Doug DeVos, where they talked about dismantling public education. In that video, Bolger bragged about what he had done to attack public education in Michigan through the state legislature, such as:
- Expanding School Choice options in Michigan, which has always been about the dismantling of Public Education.
- Undermining teachers retirement plans by getting the state to move public school district teacher pensions to a 401K plan, claiming the district would be able to spend more on students.
- Putting in place a system to attack teachers for “under-performing”, based on students grades.
In our second example, there has been more uncritical news coverage of the new DeVos-owned coffee shop, known as the Foxtail Coffee Co. The MLive story does not mention that the cafe is owned by the DeVos family, only that it is part of the Baton Collective.
The Baton Collective is actually owned by Cheri DeVos, which is a commercial real estate and business management company. Cheri also is the founder of Michigan Sports Academies, plus she recently added Otter Air Services as part of the Baton Collective portfolio, which offers concierge charter air travel services. Like the rest of the second generation of the Amway family, Cheri DeVos is always interested in expanding her wealth.
Below is a graphic that has been circulating on social media for a few months, which has a fabulously harsh message for the DeVos family.
On May 11th, MLive posted an article entitled, DeVos Institute program helps 14 Grand Rapids nonprofits build capacity.
The MLive article uncritically centers the work of the DeVos Institute of Arts and Non-Profit Management. The article goes on to say:
Fourteen Grand Rapids area nonprofits are participating in the DeVos institute’s two-year program, Capacity Building: Grand Rapids. It provides participants with personalized consultations, group training sessions, and help with strategic planning and building effective boards, according to a release.
The DeVos Institute website provides us with a framework for what they will be doing with the fourteen Grand Rapids nonprofits that they will be working with:
Our approach is grounded in The Cycle, a practical management framework designed to optimize organizational performance in five essential areas: market position, programming, marketing, governance, and revenue development.
I don’t know about you, but based on what the DeVos Institute says it does, it seems to me that they focus on money, maximizing wealth and expanding wealth. The fourteen groups in Grand Rapids that will be working with the DeVos Institute are non-profit groups and arts-centered organizations. The MLive article lists the following groups:
- Artists Creating Together
- ArtPrize
- Broadway Grand Rapids
- Children’s Healing Center
- Festival of the Arts
- Girls Choral Academy Grand Rapids Art Museum
- Grand Rapids Ballet
- Grand Rapids Children’s Museum
- Grand Rapids Civic Theatre
- Grand Rapids Symphony
- Lowell Arts
- Opera Grand Rapids
- West Michigan Trails
- West Michigan Youth Ballet
Ways in which the DeVos family has undermined local art in Grand Rapids
Being an artist in a Capitalist world is difficult and deeply problematic. When art is seen as a commodity, it loses meaning and it takes from us our ability to see beauty, to imagine, and it diminishes our ability for critical reflection.
When ArtPrize was created by the DeVos family, their goal was never about elevating art, it was about selling the City of Grand Rapids and expanding their wealth. This view of ArtPrize was affirmed by Sam Cummings, CEO of CWD Real Estate Investment, when he said, “Our long-term goal is really to import capital – intellectual capital, and ultimately real capital. And this (ArtPrize) is certainly an extraordinary tool.”
A major outcome of ArtPrize is that it undermined local art and local artists. ArtPrize didn’t pay artists to submit their work for the 2-week spectacle, in fact, they made them pay to submit their work. Many local artists and art venues were negatively impacted, not just during ArtPrize, but for weeks and months leading up to it, since so much capital and so much PR was centered on the spectacle of ArtPrize that artists had to adjust to that world. In addition, local arts councils disbanded and funding sources for art dried up. Hell, even Festival of the Arts was thrown on the scrap heap of the art as a commodity, since it no longer fit the tourist-driven destination that the Grand Rapids Power Structure wants to see.
A second major way that the DeVos family has undermined local art is through their involvement in shaping public policy to promote business interests over the public good. What we have been seeing in Grand Rapids and the US as a whole over the past 40 – 50 years is a push to have local and state governments adopt neoliberal economic austerity policies, which include the following:
- THE RULE OF THE MARKET
- CUTTING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE FOR SOCIAL SERVICES
- DEREGULATION
- PRIVATIZATION
- ELIMINATING THE CONCEPT OF “THE PUBLIC GOOD”
The DeVos family has been part of promoting these kinds of economic austerity measures in three main ways. First, they have provided millions of dollars to political candidates who embrace economic austerity policies. Second, the DeVos family gives millions of dollars to organizations which promote economic austerity, like the American Enterprise Institute, the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, the Acton Institute, and the Heritage Foundation. The DeVos family funds these organizations through their foundations, thus allowing them to use non-taxed funds to promote economic austerity policies. The third way the DeVos family promotes economic austerity policies is by being part of groups like the West Michigan Policy Forum, Grand Action 2.0, The Right Place Inc. and the Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce, all of which embrace the same economic policies of wealth expansion for the few and economic despair for everyone else.
The irony of all of this is that while the DeVos family has spent decades undermining local artists and the arts community, they are now swooping in to offer their services to assist art groups in order to make them more marketable and profitable. Just one more example of how sinister the DeVos family is and how they want to control so much of what happens in West Michigan.
Palestine Solidarity Information, Analysis, Local Actions and Events for the week of May 18th
It has been more than 19 months since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. We will also provide information on local events and actions that people can get involved in. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.
Information
The Price of Silence: Gaza’s Famine and the Erosion of Our Humanity – Politics For The People
EXPLOSIVE MATERIALS BOUND FOR ISRAEL ARE FLYING OUT OF JFK AIRPORT
Hamas and U.S. reach deal. “I think we’ll have to detox from US security assistance,” says Netanyahu
GOOGLE WORRIED IT COULDN’T CONTROL HOW ISRAEL USES PROJECT NIMBUS, FILES REVEAL
“People Are Starving to Death”: Oxfam Warns Israel’s Blockade on Gaza Is Catastrophic
Israeli Forces Bombed Two Gaza Hospitals in One Day
Surveillance Humanitarianism”: As Gaza Starves, U.S.-Israeli Plan Would Further Weaponize Food
One Side Routinely Uses Human Shields in Gaza—But Not the Side That’s Usually Blamed
Analysis & History
New Podcast Series: Histories of the Palestinian Left
Image used in this post is from https://visualizingpalestine.org/visual/gaza-stripped/
GRIID weekly audio digest – #5
In the fifth installment of the GRIID audio digest, we bring you the following six stories from this week:
- Marching for workers and immigrant justice, the Cosecha May Day action was met with constant GRPD threats to arrest people
- During the Cosecha cultural event, SECOM announces it will also be a Sanctuary space for undocumented immigrants
- Day 3 of Cosecha action: Salsa shutdown at Walmart demonstrates that interrupting capitalism will bring out the cops
- Responses to the mistrial of ex-cop Schurr who killed Patrick Lyoya – Part I
- Responses to the mistrial of ex-cop Schurr in the death of Patrick Lyoya – Part II
- Responses to the mistrial of ex-cop Schurr in the death of Patrick Lyoya – Part III
GRIID invites our readers to share this audio digest and suggest platforms that we can share these weekly audio versions of our posts.
Chief Winstrom is now saying that Patrick Lyoya was killed because the GRPD was understaffed
It has been a week since the Judge announced a mistrial in the legal proceedings against the former GRPD cop who killed Patrick Lyoya. On Wednesday there were two different gatherings to talk about next steps in finding justice for the Lyoya family.
During Tuesday night’s Grand Rapids City Commission meeting, there were dozens of people who spoke during public comment denouncing the recent behavior of the GRPD, especially during the Schurr trial and their actions during the Cosecha May Day march and the march after a mistrial was announced.
Just minutes before the 7pm Grand Rapids City Commission meeting, WOODTV8 ran a story that was crafted by GRPD Chief Eric Winstrom, a story that was a calculated PR stunt. Winstrom has been working overtime to control the narrative around the GRPD, claiming that he has regained the trust of the community when it comes to the GRPD.
This story that aired on WOODTV8 was simply another pre-emptive attempt to win over public support for the GRPD, with Chief Winstrom playing his role as the snake oil salesman. Winstrom had the audacity in this channel 8n story to make the claim that had their been more cops in the police force, Christopher Schurr would not have had to shoot Patrick Lyoya.
On top of that, the WOODTV8 story used commentary from Christopher Schurr’s trial, where Schurr is talking about hoping for backup on the day he shot Patrick Lyoya. By crafting this story, on could say that Chief Winstrom is brilliant, but I would also call him diabolical. Diabolical in the sense that he willingly knows that this claim is meant as a justification for why Schurr shot Patrick Lyoya in the back of the head. Chief Winstrom never comes out and says it, but it is clear that this is what he is implying.
Here are 5 reasons why Winstron’s claim that Schurr would not have killed Patrick Lyoya if there were more cops available that fateful day is just plain ridiculous.
- An expert that Kent County Prosecutor used during the Schurr trial made it clear that there were multiple things that Schurr could have done after pulling over Lyoya. This expert testified that Schurr did not have to chase after Lyoya when he fled initially. Lyoya was stopped because his car registration had expired.
- Schurr could have waited for back up, that would have allowed for the possibility that Lyoya would be willing to cooperate.
- Schurr could have gone to Lyoya’s home later that day to speak with him and find out why he was driving with an expired car registration.
- Schurr did not use de-escalation tactics. In fact, Schurr escalated the situation.
- The GRPD have been facing a crisis of legitimacy in recent years, thus offering justifications for what they do, even shooting unarmed civilian, is an opportunity to argue why we need cops and more of them. The excellent report by Interrupting Criminalization provides important data and an analysis that dismantles Chief Winstrom’s claim. In fact, this report makes it clear that cops rarely prevent violence.
In my own research looking at local news coverage around crime and public safety, I found that the GRPD rarely prevent crime. In the 673 stories that centered around crime, there were only 11 stories about the GRPD actually preventing crime, which means in most of the stories the GRPD showed up after a crime had been committed.
A couple of other things that Chief Winstrom said in this story was, first, “We’ve turned around the culture around where elected officials aren’t afraid to compliment us anymore.” I read this as elected officials don’t want to be critical of cops anymore for fear of smear campaigns and character assassination from pro-cop organizations and cop unions. In Grand Rapids, the GRPD union has provided campaign funding for people like City Commissioner Robbins, who received $10,000.
The second this that Winstrom said was They (City Commission) did a fantastic job recognizing we need the police department,” he added. “We’re not in a position where we can abolish the police, get rid of the police, that world doesn’t exist.” Of course Winstrom is an apologist for policing, but he also demonstrates that he does not practice radical imagination, like imagining a world where people are shot by cops during a traffic stop. By making the point about the world of abolishing the police doesn’t exist, means that he is telling the Movement for Black Lives, Angela Davis, Miriam Kaba, Robin D.G. Kelley, and countless community based groups that they are wrong, or more accurately, Winstrom is telling them to fuck off.
On May 16, Movimiento Cosecha Michigan and GR Rapid Response to ICE will be hosting a meeting to talk about upcoming actions and campaigns to further the struggle for immigrant justice.
Even if you didn’t participate in the recent May Day march, the Cosecha cultural event or the Salsa Shutdown, you are more than welcomed to attend the People’s Assembly.
I asked Cosecha organizer Gema Lowe about the importance of the People’s Assembly, and she said:
“Movimiento Cosecha Michigan in collaboration with GR RR to ICE are organizing the People’s Assembly where we will discuss the next steps on the immigrant resistance.
Our Immigrant communities are getting organized across the country when our love ones are getting kidnapped by ICE. The greater GR area won’t be the exception and we will continue fighting for immigrant rights.
We say:
YES to Papers for All
YES to driver’s licenses in Michigan
YES to Sanctuary
and
NO to REGISTRATION
NO to DEPORTATIONS
NO to ICE and DETENTION CENTERS”
The People’s Assembly will begin at 5pm in the Linc Up Gallery, which is right next to the Linc Up office, located at 341 Hall St. SE in Grand Rapids.
Editors Note: The fact that Episode #6 aired on Tuesday night, while people were at the Grand Rapids City Commission meeting to verbalize their disgust of the GRPD and the GRPD’s repression of people pushing back against the system, is worth noting. You can also see my deconstructions of the previous 5 episodes at this link.
Episode six begins with audio from a 911 call, where someone has just heard gunshot. According to the All Access PD: Grand Rapids series, they only investigate gun violence, which is a very small part of what the GRPD actually does.
The episode quickly resorts to body cam footage of a young African American who was just shot, while her sister is heard screaming and being restrained by the GRPD from getting to her sister’s body. This was nothing but trauma porn, and a disgusting display of what the GRPD and the producers of the show wanted to communicate.
The scene cuts to Chief Winstrom talking to the camera saying he is shocked that it is a 15 year old girl and that he is, “emotionally invested in this case.” Always the PR guy. Winstrom again shows up and says his primary concern is to be there for the family.
The GRPD get the video footage from the scene and the person who was the shooter is a young African American male.
For the next few minutes the GRPD is then seen talking with the parents of the victim. Why would they use these grief stricken parents at this moment?
GRPD cops then pontificate and shake their heads over why people would not want to talk to them. This is all happening while Chief Winstrom does the voice over in the introduction of this TV series, where he says he is building community trust. Please.
Then scene cuts to another shooting in the southeast part of GR, where you see lots of cops with weapons drawn and they bring out several young Black people, whom they are treating as suspects. At one point, a Black cop is reading the rights to a young Black suspect.
The GRPD then seeks out Jemar Sterling, who does violence prevention work with urban youth, who says that people in his family aren’t happy that he is talking to the cops.
The next scene uses GRPD body cam footage of cops charing a young Black man, which just happened to be the primary suspect in the shooting that this episode is centered around.
The GRPD then hosts a Press Conference, which leads to a call identifying someone who was a witness. The cops then interviews the witness, who identifies a suspect, which leads to the GRPD gearing up to go after the suspect. The cops surround a home and the suspect finally comes out with his hands up. The suspect is a young Black male.
The next scene is two white cops interrogating a young Black male, with one of the white detectives providing commentary for the viewers. The Black suspect is then charged with second degree murder, while the detective is seen calling the victims mother, saying, “this was a good day.”
The episode ends with members of the victim’s family holding a celebration for the girl who was killed, which included releasing balloons.
With this week’s episode, it communicates that the only shooters and victims are BIPOC,, plus some of the video footage used communicates the message that there are Black gangs roaming the streets of Grand Rapids. This show will definitely contribute to fostering and maintaining stereotypes about Black people, since the audience will no doubt be predominantly white. Once again, I’m still waiting for the episode showing how the GRPD monitors community organizers and organizations to suppress any form of dissent against those challenging systems of power and oppression.
Another long line of people formed for the public comment period at the Grand Rapids City Commission. People talked about how the GRPD harassed and abused people during the Schurr trial and after the judge called for a mistrial.
You can watch of the public comments at this link, with the public comment period beginning at 31:50 into the meeting. More importantly was the responses from Grand Rapids City officials, which begins at 1:44:00 into the meeting, beginning with Commissioner Ysasi.
Commissioner Ysasi – spoke for 12 minutes, but didn’t really say much. However, she did want to promote the idea of the civilianization of the GRPD. What is that you say? It means that some jobs that were previously done by cops are now being done by civilians. This is really a misdirection by Commissioner Ysasi, since it not only fails to acknowledge that the GRPD has been adding new officers over the past 2 years, but more importantly, it diverts public outrage over the way that the GRPD has been criminalizing and repressing those who dissent.
Commissioner Perdue – spoke for 2 minutes and 15 seconds. Wants to expand the OPA, even review of use of force incidents.
Commissioner Belcak – spoke for 3 minutes and 30 seconds. Also talked in circles a bit, but spent the most time promoting the 175th anniversary of the City of Grand Rapids.
Commissioner Robbins – spoke for 45 seconds with words like both sides, respect and forgiveness. Robbins received $10,000 from the GRPD union in 2022 and he was implicated in the smear campaign against his opponent in 2022, along with the campaign against another candidate in 2024.
Commissioner Knight – spoke for 4 minutes and 30 seconds. Gave props to Chief Winstrom for having a conversation with her and reveal that she has a son who is a cop.
City Manager Washington – spoke for 3 minutes and primarily highlighted the upcoming Public Safety Committee meeting, where Chief Winstrom and the OPA can tells us about the exciting things they are doing.
Mayor LaGrand – spoke for just under 2 minutes. LaGrand says he spent most of his adult life making the justice system better, but provides no evidence of how he has done that. He also said as a community we can always do justice better, we can always improve our culture and our community. The Mayor’s words were another misdirection, thus avoiding talking about the City’s responsibility and the policing, both systems of power and oppression.
In Part I, I revealed the statements that came from police unions, police apologist organizations and Grand Rapids City officials. Today, I want to look at some of the response to the mistrial of Schurr from those who are supportive of/sympathetic to the Lyoya family.
In Part II, I included statements of solidarity, sympathy and collective grief with the Lyoya family. Today, I want to talk about an abolitionist response to policing, and what Alec Karakatsanis, the author of the new book Copaganda: How Police and the Media Manipulate Our News, calls the, “Punishment Bureaucracy.”
However, before talking about abolition the police, also known as state violence workers, it is important to talk about a recent Executive Order from the Trump Administration that has to do with policing. It is called, Strengthening and Unleashing America’s Law Enforcement to Pursue Criminals and Protect Innocent Citizens. This Executive Order will provide even more freedom for cops to intimidate, harass, jail people in the US, along with providing additional protections for them.
A recent article from the Intercepted states:
The executive order calls for “military and national security assets” to assist in local policing, directs federal resources and protections for state and local law enforcement, and enhances police protections, among other proclamations. But it reflects a deeper ambition.
“He wants more federal militarized law enforcement under his thumb instead of under the thumb of governors or mayors,” says Balko. “He wants to use them to help with immigration deportations. He wants help with cracking down on protest.” And the concern and fear, says Balko, is that Trump will also “use law enforcement to go after his critics and people he perceives to be his enemies.”
I wanted to include this information to say that the standard reformist approaches to policing will not only be completely inadequate, and reforms will only solidify and further legitimize state violence.
This is exactly why the Movement for Black Lives was calling for the Defunding of the Police after the George Floyd protests all across the US. To be clear, defunding the police is the first step to the abolition of policing as we know it.
The City of Grand Rapids has submitted their 2026 Budget proposal, which includes $69,096,436.00 for the GRPD. You can see (above) how the amount for the GRPD will continue to grow and by 2030, they will receive nearly $80 million in public money to manage and control this community.
Using Radical Imagination for the Abolition of the GRPD
Now, no one is expecting that the GRPD will go away tomorrow or anytime soon. However, if we want to see the GRPD, a known institution of oppression, to be dismantled, then we need some kind of a proposal/plan to make that become a reality. What I am proposing is just an idea, it is not the only idea and it may not even be the right idea. However, we have to begin with an idea to start down the path of actually working towards the abolition of the GRPD.
Imagine what kind of an impact that $370 Million would have over the next 4 years if the GRPD was defunded and we used that money to invest in community. Considering these numbers, think about how $370 Million over a four year period could contribute to things such as:
- Housing costs – both home ownership and rent
- Health care costs, including preventive care
- Educational scholarships
- Food security
- Transportation costs
- Environmental Justice projects
These are just some of the ways that divesting from the GRPD and investing in the Black community could radically alter the lived experience of the very community that has disproportionately been affected by policing in Grand Rapids.
Lastly, the $69,096,436.00 that currently goes to the GRPD is annually. Imagine how that kind of funding could be used to invest in community, or that money could be directed towards BIPOC communities in general, as a form of reparations for the historical exploitation, police abuse, drug war, land theft, etc. that BIPOC communities have experienced since the founding of Grand Rapids. We all can radically imagine how things would be different if such a plan were enacted, so why limit ourselves to the unimaginative notion of simply reforming the cops? Lets work to actually abolish the police and practice the principle that we take care of us!













