All posts by Cris Greer

Annual Fall Fling Tournament and Food Drive on Saturday, Nov. 11; hosted by Kentwood and Great Lakes Disc

(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org


The City of Kentwood and Great Lakes Disc are inviting disc golfers of all levels to the annual Fall Fling tournament and food drive Saturday, Nov. 11.

The best-shot doubles tournament begins with on-site registration at 9 a.m. at Old Farm Park, 2350 Embro Drive SE. The cost is $25 per person or $50 per team, plus a canned food donation for Kentwood’s Little Free Pantry.

“The City of Kentwood is pleased to again offer local disc golfers an opportunity to have fun, show off their skills and support our community at the Fall Fling,” said Val Romeo, Kentwood Parks and Recreation director. “We appreciate our partnership with Great Lakes Disc in helping to bring this popular event to Kentwood each year and are grateful for the continued generosity of our local disc golf community.”


(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



Pre-registration for the Fall Fling is encouraged online at kentwood.us/FallFlingDiscGolf. Players will meet at 9:45 a.m., and the first round of the tournament will begin at 10 a.m. Dune Buggy food truck will be on-site offering burgers, fries and beverages for sale.

“We really enjoy being a part of this tournament and spending a fall day with local disc golfers and other community members,” said Shea Abbgy, owner of Great Lakes Disc. “Our team is honored to join the City of Kentwood in co-hosting this event, which is a great example of our community’s active and giving spirit.”

Kentwood Little Free Pantry

The Kentwood Little Free Pantry initiative began in 2017 as a community service project in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. The pantry is open to all community members year-round and addresses an immediate and local need. It offers non-perishable food and personal care items. Anyone can utilize or donate to the pantry, no applications required, and no questions are asked.


(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



Kentwood’s Little Free Pantry is in immediate need of donations, and the City is encouraging local businesses, organizations and community members to get involved. The pantry has locations at the Kentwood Activities Center, 355 48th St. SE, and the Kent District Library – Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch, 4950 Breton Ave. SE, along with several other donation bins located throughout the City of Kentwood campus.

More information about the pantry, including hours and a suggested list of donations, is available at kentwood.us/LittleFreePantry.


Happy Halloween! Have fun, be safe; read these important tips

(Courtesy, pxhere.com)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The Cities of Kentwood and Wyoming hope this Halloween is a fun, safe experience for community members who plan to trick-or-treat or take part in other activities on Tuesday.


Kentwood Trick-or-Treating is recommended from 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 31.

Wyoming has no designated time for Trick-or-Treating on Oct. 31 (check with your local neighborhood).



The Kentwood Police Department recommends that all children are accompanied by an adult when trick-or-treating. 



“We ask that motorists keep an eye out for trick-or-treaters due to the large increase in pedestrians outside during this time,” added Kentwood Police Chief Bryan Litwin. “We also recommend that an adult checks all of the candy before a child eats it.”


Here are some other safety tips to keep in mind:

  • If you hand out candy, turn on your porch light at 6 p.m. and off at 8 p.m.
  • Only visit homes that have their lights on.
  • Make sure trick-or-treaters wear a bright-colored costume, headlamp or reflective tape so they are visible to drivers and other trick-or-treaters. Consider bringing a flashlight.
  • Go from house to house on the same side of the street and then visit homes on the other side on your way back. This will reduce the need to cross the street.
  • Walk on sidewalks. If you must walk in the street, walk on the left side facing traffic.
  • Don’t go into any stranger’s home or car even if you are offered candy.
  • Keep in mind Kentwood’s curfew ordinance: Unless accompanied by a parent or responsible adult, children who are younger than 12 must not be in any public place after 10 p.m., younger than 16 after 11 p.m. and younger than 17 after midnight.

Please observe activity in your neighborhood. Report suspicious activity and crimes while they are happening by calling 911.

To report crimes after the fact, call the Kentwood Police Department’s non-emergency line at 616.698.6580 or file an online report. You can also submit an anonymous tip through Silent Observer at 616.774.2345 or SilentObserver.org.

Thank you for doing your part to ensure the entire community enjoys a safe and fun Halloween.

Woodland Mall to host Job Fair on Friday, Nov. 3



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



Woodland Mall will host a job fair on Friday, Nov. 3 featuring more than 25 organizations seeking to fill dozens of positions.

Job seekers will have the opportunity to learn about full-time, part-time and seasonal positions from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Organizations will be set up at hiring tables located throughout the mall.

A variety of retailers, restaurants and other organizations will participate in the event with opportunities for a wide range of roles, from seasonal sales associates to managerial positions.

“We’re delighted to host a hiring event to help our retailers find high-quality candidates to join their teams,” said Kennedy Vancalbergh, Woodland Mall marketing manager. “Here at Woodland Mall, we have a wide variety of careers available for anyone who is interested in retail or may be looking to earn some extra cash around the holidays.”

The current list of participating organizations includes:

  • Aéropostale
  • Auntie Anne’s
  • Bath & Body Works
  • Carter’s
  • Chico’s
  • Claire’s
  • Dry Goods
  • Footlocker
  • Francesca’s
  • GNC
  • Hollister Co.
  • Hot Topic
  • Icing
  • Journeys
  • Journeys Kidz
  • Kay Jewelers
  • Kids Footlocker
  • My Cellphone Repairs
  • Pacsun
  • Sephora
  • Soma
  • The Children’s Place
  • Tradehome Shoes
  • Vera Bradley
  • Von Maur
  • White House Black Market

Job seekers who are unable to attend the event are encouraged to explore the list of Woodland Mall openings and apply at ShopwoodlandMall.com/jobs.

Nearly 15,000 visitors are expected to pass through Woodland Mall on the day of the job fair. Booths are still available for additional employers to participate. Registration includes a table, chairs, wi-fi and parking. Businesses who are interested in participating can register using an online form.  

 More information about Woodland Mall is available at ShopWoodlandMall.com.



South Christian Sailors tame Wildcats’ offense in opening round Friday

(Jake Westbrook/WKTV)




By Ty Marzean

WKTV Contributor


The Division 4 playoffs began where the regular season left off: South Christian vs. Wayland at East Kentwood’s Falcon Stadium.

The rematch of the regular season finale, which saw both teams combine for nearly 1,000 yards and 89 total points, looked a lot different Friday night as South Christian controlled the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball to cruise to a 34-7 playoff victory. 

South Christian struggled out of the gate

The Sailors elected to receive the opening kickoff and proceeded on a 15-play drive that saw junior quarterback Carson Vis struggle to pass the ball. Vis went 1-4 and took a sack before turning the ball over on downs.

Wayland started its first drive at the 25-yard line. On the second play, Wildcat running back Cameron Bogart burst out of the backfield and streaked down the sideline for a 74-yard touchdown run. 

South Christian Coach Danny Brown had flashbacks of the week prior.

“That was not how we anticipated it starting,” said Brown, whose team improved to 7-3.”We envisioned coming out getting a defensive stop and scoring.

“We knew that if we could all come together and trust each other and do what we’re supposed to do, we would have a chance.”

Sailors grind it out on offense

Vis finished off a 14-play, 70-yard drive that took over seven minutes off the game clock with a 4-yard dart to Jake Vermaas that tied the game at 7. 

Vis threw an interception to Wayland’s Kaharrie Pureifoy on the next drive. 

South Christian grabs lead for good

The final drive of the first half was capped off by an 8-yard touchdown run by Vis to give South Christian a 14-7 lead at the half.

“All year, we have been scoring in a hurry; this game, we had to grind it out,” Brown explained.

A week after giving up 453 yards, South Christian stood stout and gave up the lone touchdown on the opening drive. 


South Christian’s Cam VanSolkema. (WKTV/Ty Marzean)



“We took it personal”

Senior defensive lineman Cam VanSolkema has been an anchor on the Sailor defensive front since he’s been a freshman. 

“I think the energy at practice changed the whole game,” VanSolkema said. “We all trust each other and love each other, and that was the topic we worked on during practice this week.

“We took it personal and we got it done on defense.”

South Christian controlled the second half as Vis went a perfect 6-for-6 with another touchdown pass to Vermaas while adding a second running score.

“He was a little off schedule to start the game,” Brown said. I don’t know if he was just excited. We went up to him and said settle down and get back to basics.”
 

Vis completed 11-of-16 passes for 188 yards and two scores, including an interception. He also ran for 96 yards and two touchdowns.



South Christian receiver Jake Vermaas earlier this year. (Courtesy, Eric Walstra)



His favorite target, Vermaas, had six catches for 129 yards and two touchdowns. 

South Christian advanced to the district finals against Forest Hills Eastern next Friday. 

Last meeting, the Sailors beat Forest Hills Eastern 32-29 in Week 4. 

“They’re a good team up front they’ve got some really good linemen, and their backs run hard, so we’re going to have a challenge,” Brown explained. “We’re going to need another great week of practice like we had this week.”

The winner of that matchup faces the winner of Whitehall vs. Big Rapids on November 10 in the regional finals. 

The Sailors hope to continue their winning playoff ways from last year, where they finished a perfect 14-0 season with a D-4 state title with a 28-0 win over Goodrich. It was South Christian’s fourth state championship in football.


Blok and Merriweather helping Lee football reach the next level; 5-4 finish a giant step

The Legends celebrate after the last game of the season. (Courtesy, Shafi Subhan)



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Without question, two players that helped the Lee football team make a statement this season are sophomore Aidan Merriweather and junior Anthony Blok.



Merriweather caught 48 passes for over 900 yards with 14 touchdowns, and Blok threw for nearly 2,500 yards with a school record 29 touchdowns.


Lee QB Anthony Blok. (Courtesy, Shafi Subhan)



Those impressive stats helped the Legends secure their first winning season (5-4 overall) since 2006, and clear a path for their next step of growth.



The 2022 Legends gave up 60 points per game, while scoring 17 en route to an 0-9 season. The 2023 Legends improved on both metrics, scoring 38 points per game and giving up 32. 



Though they were ineligible for the MHSAA 8-Man playoffs due to enrollment limits, the 2024 Legends look to build upon the gains they made this season, returning many key starters like Blok and Merriweather, among others.



“Aidan is an outgoing kid; he’s vocal … he leads by example,” said Lee Coach Lamar Marshall, in his second year. “He comes in and puts in the work and doesn’t complain.



“Without a doubt, he will be the vocal leader next year. Players tend to get behind him, especially when he’s assertive.



“Anthony is more of a quiet guy … when he needs to be vocal, he most certainly is,” Marshall said. “He takes charge on offense and makes sure everyone knows what to do. He audibles when need be; he makes the right play when we need him too.”



Merriweather, who began playing football around 9 or 10 years old, said a relative got him interested.



“My uncle inspired me to play football,” Merriweather explained. “He said that I had the potential to be the best.”


Lee WR Aidan Merriweather. (Courtesy, Shafi Subhan)

He went on to say the team’s season had to be “one of the best.”


“It was great to see the team get together in the summer practices, conditioning … and strengthen our brotherly bond,” said Merriweather, who also plays basketball. “It felt amazing going 5-4 this season because seeing all the hard work and dedication we put in this past summer pay off, making history for our school.”





As far as his stat-filled season, Merriweather said he’s “extremely proud” of himself.



“I pushed and worked hard for my team … our coaches pushed me to be the best version of myself. Being able to contribute and help this team grow means a lot to me. Overall, our team definitely deserved this praise and glory for all the hard work.”



Like Merriweather, Blok began football at an early age

“I started playing football around the age of 8 to 9,” explained Blok, who also plays basketball and runs track. “My dad used to coach our elementary football team, but I wasn’t old enough to have pads on, so I just practiced.



“I loved many sports, so football was just another one I was trying out, but along the way one of my coaches said I thought I would be a good quarterback, and that was always my favorite position when I was watching football.”

Blok said the Legends’ year was “amazing” coming off a winless season.



“It wasn’t just luck like some people thought,” Blok said. “We were putting in the work through the offseason to come in and make a statement. It felt great as a team and an accomplishment as a player to have that winning season.



“The next step for us is to turn it up even more and make a bigger statement next year. We need to get in sync as a team and get in the weight room.”



Lee QB Anthony Blok. (Courtesy, Shafi Subhan)



Blok said he was adopted at age 6 and his parents are his biggest supporters.



“They come to every game no matter how far, or cold it is,” he explained. “They inspire me to be my best and try hard at what I do.”


As far as his achievements on the field Blok said, “It was cool to know that I would be making a stamp at Lee High School. My coaches knew my strengths and weaknesses, so we improved those weaknesses and perfected my strengths.”


The Legends lose three graduating seniors: Clarence Lewis and defensive standouts Issac Delgado and Kameron Washington. 


“Clarence was huge for us,” Marshall said. “He made plays when we needed him to. He was a vocal and emotional leader.”



Marshall also anticipates significant growth from freshmen Jayden Sanchez and Ziere Feast. 


“I expect Jayden and Ziere to lead us on defense next year,” Marshall said of his young talent.

Woodland Mall welcomes Abercrombie & Fitch 

(Courtesy, Woodland Mall)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



Abercrombie & Fitch, a leading global specialty retailer of apparel, accessories and fragrance, opened at Woodland Mall Friday, Oct. 27.

Shoppers can peruse a wide range of clothing at the retailer, which is located in the JCPenney wing near center court.

The new store will feature aspects of the getaway-themed store concept Abercrombie & Fitch unveiled last year that will make for a light and bright space evoking a chic hotel lobby with omnichannel shopping capabilities.

With a focus on casual wear, Abercrombie & Fitch aims to “make every day feel as exceptional as the start of a long weekend,” with items designed to inspire global customers to feel confident and comfortable. 

“We are looking forward to welcoming Abercrombie & Fitch to Woodland Mall just in time for the holiday season,” said Kennedy Vancalbergh, Woodland Mall marketing manager. “This is sure to be a key destination for shoppers looking for that effortless style. The store will offer everything from elevated basics and trendy activewear to semi-formal attire for special occasions.”

Abercrombie & Fitch is the namesake brand of Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (NYSE: ANF) and is sold through more than 200 stores worldwide and abercrombie.com globally.

At Woodland Mall, Abercrombie & Fitch joins an exclusive lineup of destination retailers, including Apple, Dry Goods, The North Face, Pottery Barn, Sephora, Williams-Sonoma, Von Maur and many others, along with dining establishments such as The Cheesecake Factory and Black Rock Bar & Grill.

The mall also is home to Phoenix Theatres, which features heated reclining seating, 4K digital projection with Dolby Atmos, first-run movies and family-friendly pricing.

More information about Woodland Mall is available at ShopWoodlandMall.com.

Ford International Airport welcomes new Southwest Airlines service to Nashville

(Courtesy, Ford International Airport)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org


Starting June 2024, Gerald R. Ford International Airport will increase its connectivity to the Southeast with additional service to Nashville International Airport (BNA) on Southwest Airlines.

“We are delighted to have Southwest Airlines expand their network with the addition of a seventh destination,” said Tory Richardson, president and CEO of the Gerald R. Ford International Airport Authority. “This service will further connect our business and leisure passengers to a major destination. We are grateful to our partners at Southwest for helping deliver convenient and exceptional travel experiences to our community.”

This new seasonal service – which is currently served by one other carrier at Ford International Airport – is scheduled to operate on the carrier’s 143-seat Boeing 737-700, offering nonstop flights on Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are now on sale at Southwest.com.

“We continue to optimize our schedule and respond to changing travel trends,” said Brook Sorem, vice president network planning at Southwest Airlines. “We look forward to providing this service between two strong leisure markets.”

Southwest is the United States’ largest domestic airline and is preparing to open its Nashville flight crew base in 2024, creating the 12th crew base in the Southwest system.

Southwest has served the Ford International Airport since 2013. View its current nonstop destinations and more at FlyFord.org.

Find Halloween looks you’ll continue wearing after the holiday at Woodland Mall

Woodland Mall Barbie inspired ensemble. (Courtesy, Woodland Mall)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



Spooky season is officially upon us. While seasonal pop-up shops or big-brand party stores may seem like the obvious choice for finding the perfect costume, Woodland Mall has options for Halloween looks that feature pieces you’ll wear again and again. Some ideas include:

Barbie and Ken: The blockbuster film held many iconic looks, from all-pink ensembles to cowboy-inspired looks. You can find a full pink outfit featuring quality dresses, jumpsuits, tops and more at many stores throughout Woodland Mall, including Dry Goods and Versona. Altar’d State and Windsor also have glitzy cowboy accessories to help you look the part – and Aldo’s Barbie collection provides the perfect footwear to tie it all together.

To rock the “Kenough” look, check out the many styles at Forever 21 Men, from all-denim gear to a western-inspired getup. 



(Courtesy, Woodland Mall)


Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift: We’re in our Tayvis era. If you and your partner are looking for a fun and simple couples costume, this star-studded pairing may be the answer. Swing by Lids or Locker Room by Lids to grab some Kansas City Chiefs apparel for him and recreate Taylor’s gameday look with a simple white tee and red hoodie from Macy’s or Von Maur.


Swing by Lids or Locker Room by Lids to grab some Kansas City Chiefs apparel. (Courtesy, Woodland Mall)



Wednesday Addams. (Courtesy, Woodland Mall)

Wednesday Addams: The perfect little black dress can be found in many stores throughout the mall, from Forever 21 to Francesca’s. Find one you love and pair it with some spooky accessories from Claire’s, Hot Topic or Icing for the perfect Addams Family look. As a bonus, stop by Sephora for some Wednesday-inspired makeup.

Ted Lasso: You can easily recreate the look of the popular TV character with a simple navy sweater and some slacks from J.Crew or a track set from JCPenney. All you need is a mustache and you’ll be ready to hit the field.

Justin and Hailey Bieber: Turn the recent memes of Justin and Hailey’s mismatched event attire into a comical couple’s costume. You can swing by H&M to find a head-turning red dress and a cozy pair of sweats.




Plus many more outfits and accessories for the perfect spooky, super or supernatural ensemble.



Celebrate Veterans Day at the 5th Annual Michigan Women Veterans Empowerment Family and Friends Conference Saturday, Nov. 11

(Courtesy, pxhere.com)



by WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The public is invited to celebrate Veterans Day at the 5th Annual Michigan Women Veterans Empowerment Family & Friends Conference on Saturday, Nov. 11.



The conference takes place from noon to 4 p.m. at Hero’s Corner, 4809 Eastern Ave S.E. Kentwood.



The admission free event features everything from food, vendors, a 50/50 raffle, public officials, community leaders, music and veterans gifts.


(Courtesy, MIWVEC Veterans Conference)




The host of this event is Sgt. Stephanie Shannon, a 2023 MLive Women Who Shape the State Awardee, and the founder/CEO of MIWVE.


Shannon has designed this strategic, transformational, enrichment conference to bring the community in West Michigan together to build a vibrant and diverse community where veterans, family and friends focus on healing, uniting and supporting our nation’s heroes.



For more information, contact Sgt. Shannon at 810-373-5744, MIWVEC@yahoo.com and epowermiwomenvets.com


South Christian expects tough rematch with Wayland in D-4 playoff opener Friday at East Kentwood; hoping second time’s the charm

South Christian prepares to take the field. (Courtesy, Eric Walstra)



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor
greer@wktv.org



In their regular season, high-scoring finale, South Christian fell to Wayland 49-40 in a game where the teams combined for nearly 1,000 yards of total offense. The Sailors had 532 yards, while Wayland posted 453.

One week later, the teams will have to square off again, this time with everything on the line. The Sailors and Wildcats meet in the Division 4 playoff opener at 7 p.m. Friday at East Kentwood’s stadium.

“I would expect them to show up similar to last week,” South Christian Coach Danny Brown said. “It is win or go home time so we expect to get everyone’s best game.”

“We need to clean up some things and get our defensive unit to play 11 strong. We show moments of it, but we haven’t been consistent enough. We seem to lose trust in each other so that is the biggest thing to clean up. Once we lose trust big plays have happened against us.”

Last week against Wayland, South Christian relied on the passing arm of Carson Vis. The junior standout connected on 24-of-44 passes for 373 yards and three touchdowns. Vis also provided a running threat with 117 yards and a pair of scores on eight carries.

“He is a great athlete and has really settled in at playing QB,” said Brown, whose team is 6-3 overall heading into the playoffs. “He has a great understanding of what we are tying to do and has done a great job of executing as the play develops. He can hurt teams with his legs and his arm which makes it tough for teams to game plan for.”


South Christian hopes to lean on quarterback Carson Vis. (Courtesy, Eric Walstra)



While South was passing the ball last week, Wayland countered with an effective running game that gobbled up huge chunks of yardage. Bryce Calkins led the ground game for Wayland with 121 yards on 21 carries and a pair of touchdowns. Wayland quarterback Brady Cassini also was effective running the ball as he rushed for 94 yards on 16 carries. And Kaharrie Pureifoy gave Wayland a three-pronged running attack with 70 yards on seven carries and a touchdown.

Jake Vermaas “best wide receiver in the state,” Brown says

Another big weapon for the Sailors is receiver Jake Vermaas, who had 16 catches for nearly 300 yards and three touchdowns against Wayland.

“Jake is a great athlete and an even better competitor,” Brown said. “He has been the leader of this team and we seem to go as he goes. His game last week was a school record in catches and yards. He is one of the best wide receivers in the state in my opinion.”


South Christian receiver Jake Vermaas is the “leader of the team.” (Courtesy, Eric Walstra)



The Sailors hope to continue their winning playoff ways from last year, where they finished a perfect 14-0 season with a D-4 state title 28-0 win over Goodrich. It was South Christian’s fourth state championship in football.

South Kent Community Expo features 50-plus local organizations on Tuesday; all-ages event includes business expo, health screenings, prizes and more

(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



Community members of all ages are invited to the City of Kentwood’s seventh annual South Kent Community Expo on Tuesday, Oct. 24.

The free event will take place from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Kentwood Activities Center, 355 48th St. SE. More than 50 local businesses will be on site with a variety of products and services for community members to explore. Pre-registration is not required for community members to attend.

The football-themed event also will feature door prizes, refreshments and free health screenings for blood pressure, spine alignment and more.

“This event is a great way for us to gather the community and local organizations together to build connections and let people know about local resources and services,” Recreation Program Coordinator Shelby Henshaw said. “We have a terrific lineup of vendors this year and are sure to have something for everyone.”



(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



The touchdown sponsors for this year’s expo are Estate Planning Legal Sources, Humana and Tim Hortons. Field goal sponsors are Cornerstone Caregiving, Health Alliance Plan of Michigan, Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services and Stroo Family Funeral Home.

Vendor space at the expo is available. Interested vendors are encouraged to complete an online vendor registration form. Pre-registration is required for businesses looking to attend. 


For more information about the event, visit  kentwood.us/SouthKentCommunityExpo.



(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)

Legends use record-setting performance to secure first winning season since 2006



By Ty Marzean

WKTV Contributor




The 2022 edition of the Lee Legends gave up 60 points per game while scoring 17 en route to an 0-9 season.

The 2023 Legends improved on both metrics, scoring 38 ppg and giving up 32. 



Lee football coach Lamar Marshall. (WKTV/Hayden Passig)

Second-year Coach Lamar Marshall stressed execution and growth from last season’s struggles in the off-season.

“Maturity, experience, and knowing how varsity football operates,” Coach Marshall said. “Every down is meaningful. Executing on all three phases of the game is crucial.”

On Friday night, the Legends secured their first winning season (5-4) since 2006 with a record-setting 62-0 win over Bloomingdale. 



The Legends’ defense, led by defensive coordinator Damion Gregory, scored a school-record four touchdowns. 

“My hats off to my defensive coordinator, Damion Gregory,” Marshall said. “He did an incredible job with that unit.”

Sophomore wide receiver Aidan Merriweather showed his defensive skills with two interceptions returned for a touchdown and a recovered fumble for a score.  

Hybrid linebacker Jaden Potts also took an interception 75 yards for a touchdown. 

The Legends set another record in the blowout win.


Quarterback Anthony Blok from an earlier game this season. (Courtesy, Shafi Subhan)


Lee QB Anthony Blok sets passing TD record in a season

Junior quarterback Anthony Blok went 4-for-7 for 154 yards and three passing touchdowns to set a Lee record for most passing touchdowns in a season with 29.

Senior running back Clarence Lewis finished his lone football season with 147 yards from scrimmage and two scores. 

“Clarence was huge for us,” Marshall said. “He made plays when we needed him, too. He was a vocal and emotional leader.”

The Legends will lose three graduating seniors: Lewis and defensive standouts Issac Delgado and Kameron Washington. 

The 2024 Legends will look to build upon the gains they made this season. Lee will return many key starters, including Blok and Merriweather, among others.

“Aidan set the confidence tone this December with his dedication to the weight room. He got stronger, and it motivated the team to follow suit.

“Without a doubt, he will be the vocal leader next year. Players tend to get behind him, especially when he’s assertive.”

Marshall also anticipates significant growth from freshmen Jaden Sanchez and Ziere Feast. 

“I expect Jaden and Ziere to lead us on defense next year,” Marshall said of his young talent.

The Legends are ineligible for the MHSAA 8-Man playoffs due to enrollment limits and will finish the 2023 season with a 5-4 record.



South Christian comes up short against Wayland in regular-season finale; prepares for playoffs

(Image Courtesy of South Christian)




By Greg Chrapek
WKTV Contributor



South Christian opened the season playing in a high-scoring dual with Grand Rapids Christian, and Friday the Sailors ended the regular season in another barn-burner against Wayland. South, however, came up on the short end of the latest points bonanza as Wayland held off the Sailors 49-40.

The Sailors and Wayland combined for 89 points, a little less than South Christian and Grand Rapids Christian combined for in the regular-season opener when the two teams combined for 108 total points.

“It was a back-and-forth game the whole way,” said South Christian coach Danny Brown. “Credit Wayland, they were playing for their playoff lives. They gave us everything they had. They made the plays at the end that made the difference.”

Carson Vis led via air and ground

The two teams combined for nearly 1,000 yards of total offense as the Sailor offense totaled 532 yards and Wayland posted 453. Each squad reached those lofty numbers in different ways. South Christian relied on the passing arm of Carson Vis. The junior standout connected on 24-of-44 passes for 373 yards and three touchdowns. Vis also provided a running threat with 117 yards and a pair of scores on eight carries.

Jake Vermaas had 16 catches for nearly 300 yards

South Christian wide receiver Jake Vermaas was the main target of Vis in the passing game as he put up some video-game type receiving numbers. Vermaas hauled in 16 passes for the game for 298 yards and three touchdowns.

“Offensively, on paper we did really good,” Brown said. “We did have some mistakes that hurt us. We had a couple of turnovers and a couple of other things did not work out so well.”

While South was moving the ball with the passing game, Wayland countered with an effective running game that gobbled up huge plots of yardage. Bryce Calkins led the ground game for Wayland, carrying the rock 21 times for 121 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Wayland quarterback Brady Cassini also was effective running the ball as he rushed for 94 yards on 16 carries. Kaharrie Pureifoy gave Wayland a three-pronged running attack as he carried the ball seven times for 70 yards and a touchdown.

“They (Wayland) know who they are,” Brown said. “They have an identity. They have physical, hard-nosed kids. We tried some things to stop their inside ground game but they adjusted and went outside and hurt us. Their coaches did a great job adjusting and their kids do a great job of executing.”

The Bulk of the points came during the second and fourth quarters. Wayland was up 7-6 at the end of the first quarter thanks to a 21-yard run by Pureifoy, while South answered that score with an eight-yard scoring pass from Vis to Vermaas.

Both teams turned up the rpms on offense during the second quarter as they each reached the end zone twice. Wayland upped its lead to 14-6 on a six-yard touchdown run by Calkins. South answered with a 46-yard passing play from Vis to Vermaas that cut the lead to 14-12 when the Sailors missed the two-point conversion.

Sailors take first lead at 18-14

The Sailors then took their first lead of the game when Vis scored on a 67-yard touchdown run. The Sailors missed the two-point try leaving their lead at 18-14.

Wayland up 21-18 at halftime

Wayland then regained the lead before halftime when Hudson Biondo scored on a four-yard touchdown run giving Wayland a 21-18 advantage.

The two teams traded touchdowns during the third quarter. Wayland went up 28-18 as Cassini hit Calkins with a 19-yard touchdown pass. South then answered when Jackson Haik broke free on a 40-yard touchdown run that cut the deficit to 28-25 after the extra point by Drew Bruinsma.

Five TDs scored in the final quarter

The offensive fireworks picked up in the final quarter as the two teams combined for five more touchdowns. Wayland took control of the game with back-to-back touchdowns early in the final quarter to go up 42-25.

South cut the margin to 10 points when Vis connected with Vermaas on a 68-yard scoring strike with Bruinsma tacking on the extra point.

Wayland then upped the lead to 49-32 when Calkins ran in for a touchdown from four yards out.

South Christian closed out the scoring when Vis ran for a touchdown from 16-yards out. The Sailors then added a two-point conversion making the final margin 49-40.   

With the win, Wayland improved to 6-3 for the season and nailed down a spot in the upcoming state playoffs.

South Christian fell to 6-3 win the win as it prepares for the state playoffs coming off a pair of losses.

“It’s a unique situation coming into the playoffs off a loss,” Brown said. “You can look at it one of two ways. It can motivate you or it can bring you down. I feel we are good enough to compete with anyone. It’s up to us and what team shows up. The beauty of the playoffs it that everyone starts 0-0. Coming into the playoffs with that mindset could make a difference as we will be playing for our lives.”     



Check out our latest WKTV Friday Night Highlights from Oct. 20! Don’t miss these local high school football clips



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Check out our latest edition of WKTV Friday Night Highlights above, for clips of many of the local high school football teams in Kentwood and Wyoming.

Kentwood Police Department to host National Drug Take Back Day event Oct. 28

(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The Kentwood Police Department is encouraging community members to take part in National Drug Take Back Day on Saturday, Oct. 28.

The department will host an event from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kentwood Police Department, 4742 Walma Ave. SE. The department will collect tablets, capsules, patches and other solid forms of prescription and over-the-counter drugs. Liquid products, such as cough syrup, should remain sealed in its original container. The cap must be tightly sealed to prevent leakage. The event also will accept vaping devices and cartridges as long as lithium batteries are removed. Syringes, sharps and illicit drugs will not be accepted.

The national observance is part of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s National Prescription Drug Take Back initiative. It aims to provide a safe, convenient and responsible way for community members to dispose of prescription drugs while also educating the public about the potential for abuse of medications.


(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



“When community members properly dispose of medication, it helps prevent identity theft, accidental poisonings, drug addiction and overdose deaths, while keeping medication from polluting landfills and sewer systems,” Kentwood Police Chief Bryan Litwin said. “From saving a life to protecting the environment, participating in Drug Take Back Day is an impactful way residents can be part of our community effort.”

For individuals unable to attend the event, the Kentwood Police Department also has a year-round Drug Take Back Program. Community members can safely dispose of unused and/or expired prescription medications in the Kentwood Police Department’s lobby 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. To learn more about the program, visit kentwood.us/DrugTakeBack.

Law enforcement agencies across the nation partner with the DEA to host Drug Take Back Day events every October and April as part of ongoing efforts to combat prescription drug misuse and overdose deaths. The events provide timely opportunities for residents to safely and securely dispose of unneeded medications to help address this public safety and public health issue. Studies have shown most abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, often from the home medicine cabinet.

Ford Airport voted the best small airport in the country by USA TODAY

(Courtesy, Ford International Airport)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The Gerald R. Ford International Airport earned the top spot in the USA TODAY Reader’s Choice Awards for best small airport.

The 20 finalists for the category were selected by a panel of experts and then voted on by the public. The panel consisted of editors from USA TODAY and 10Best.com, expert contributors and industry sources. The USA TODAY 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards series highlight top-notch attractions and businesses, providing readers with trusted recommendations.

“We already knew our guests are the best in the country so it’s a real honor to know the feeling is mutual,” Gerald R. Ford International Airport Authority President & CEO Tory Richardson said. “One of the unique characteristics of our airport is the incredible support we receive from our community, which we don’t take for granted. This award underscores how important our commitment to the guest experience is.”

The top ten winners in the best small airport category were:

  1. Gerald R. Ford International Airport (GRR)
  2. Huntsville International Airport (HSV)
  3. Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport (ICT)
  4. Myrtle Beach International Airport (MYR)
  5. Long Island MacArthur Airport (ISP)
  6. Manchester-Boston Regional Airport (MHT)
  7. Rhode Island T.F. Green International Airport (PVD)
  8. Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport (BTV)
  9. Pensacola International Airport (PNS)
  10. Frederick Douglass Greater Rochester International Airport (ROC)

Voting was open from Sept. 4 until Oct. 2 with the public being invited to cast one vote per person, per day. USA TODAY noted while the finalists serve smaller numbers of passengers each year than large hub airports, they excel with commercial flight offerings, easy access and amenities.

In 2022, 3.4-plus million guests chose the Ford International Airport for their travel needs, higher than the small airport industry average of 992,000. The Airport is managed and operated by the Gerald R. Ford International Airport Authority, which has more than 100 team members who are responsible for the infrastructure and maintenance of airport facilities. Additionally, more than 1,300 team members from six airlines, food and beverage providers, maintenance facilities and several other partners come together to offer air service and amenities to guests. 

“We thank everyone who took the time to share their vote for the Ford International Airport,” Richardson continued. “We also thank our entire team and partners who are critical in creating an engaging and comfortable guest experience.

“As we celebrate six decades of serving the West Michigan community, we look forward to continuing to provide world class travel in an accessible and convenient way for another 60 years – and beyond.” 



Sun Country Airlines to begin service in Summer 2024 at the Ford International Airport

(Courtesy, Ford International Airport)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org


The Gerald R. Ford International Airport announced Sun Country Airlines will begin service in June 2024.

Sun Country Airlines is a low-cost air carrier focused on serving leisure passengers. Based in Minnesota, the airline offers flights to destinations in North America, Central America and the Caribbean. With this new service announcement, seven airlines will now serve the Ford International Airport.

“We’re excited to bring even more options to our guests by welcoming Sun Country to West Michigan,” Gerald R. Ford International Airport Authority President and CEO Tory Richardson said. “Sun Country is well poised to serve our leisure passengers with access to the airline’s network of destinations.

“We look forward to our new partnership with the airline as we continue to grow and diversify options for our guests.” 

The details came in Sun Country’s summer service announcement today. The airline will initially focus on its route from Grand Rapids to Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport, which will run June 13 through Sept. 1, 2024. Flights will be offered biweekly on Sunday and Thursday in the afternoons and evenings. From Minneapolis, guests will be able to connect to 98 destinations.

Sun Country has previously chartered several aircraft through the Ford International Airport, but this is its first scheduled route.

“Minnesotans have a close connection to Michigan,” said Grant Whitney, senior vice president and chief revenue officer of Sun Country Airlines. “We are excited to expand our service in the state with seasonal service to Grand Rapids, and to bring additional opportunities to your residents to fly Sun Country.”

Booking will be available spring 2024 at Sun Country’s website: https://www.suncountry.com/.

Join Kentwood’s community effort to restock the Little Free Pantry

(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The City of Kentwood’s Little Free Pantry is in immediate need of donations, and the City is encouraging local businesses, organizations and community members to get involved.

The Little Free Pantry is a free resource that provides food and personal care items to community members who are under-resourced. Anyone can give to or take from the pantry, with no questions asked and no application needed.

The pantry operates year-round and has locations at the Kentwood Activities Center, 355 48th St. SE, and the Kent District Library – Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch, 4950 Breton Ave. SE.

The pantry is typically stocked through donations and food drives from the community. Use of the Little Free Pantry has seen a steady increase over the past few years, and immediate assistance is needed. Preferred donations include canned and nonperishable food items and personal care items. A list of suggestions and a link to make financial contributions can be found at kentwood.us/LittleFreePantry.

“We typically see most of our donations come through during the holiday season, but there is need all year,” said Val Romeo, director of parks and recreation. “We’re urging community members to consider donating to this valuable resource. Any donation directly helps someone in our community, whether it’s a single item or an entire grocery cart.”  

There are several pantry donation drop-off locations throughout Kentwood. Collection hours and locations are as follows:

  • Kentwood Activities Center, 355 48th St. SE: Donations may be dropped off 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday.
  • Kentwood City Hall, 4900 Breton Ave. SE: Donations may be placed inside the collection bin 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday and 7:30 a.m. to noon Friday.
  • Kent District Library – Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch, 4950 Breton Ave. SE: Donations may be placed inside the collection bin located in the lobby 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
  • Kentwood Justice Center4740 Walma Ave. SE: Donations may be placed inside the collection bin 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
  • Kentwood Public Works, 5068 Breton Ave. SE: Donations may be placed inside the collection bin 6:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday.
  • Kentwood Fall Leaf and Brush Drop-off, 5068 Breton Ave. SE: Donations may be placed in the bin while the site is operating noon to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. Please note: The leaf and brush drop-off service is only available to Kentwood residents.

Kentwood’s Little Free Pantry was established in 2017 as a Martin Luther King Jr. Day community service project to fill an immediate and local need. A second location was added in 2021.

To make a financial donation and find more information about Kentwood’s Little Free Pantry, visit kentwood.us/LittleFreePantry.

Kentwood Police arrest juvenile for the  shooting death of a 17-year-old at the Delta Hotel on Oct. 13

(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



Update 10/16/23 – Kentwood Police detectives have arrested a juvenile for the shooting death of a 17-year-old at the Delta Hotel, 3333 28th Street SE, on October 13, 2023. The juvenile is currently being held at the Kent County Juvenile Detention Center. The juvenile’s name and other information are not being released.

Detectives will meet with the Kent County Prosecutor’s Office, which will determine specific charges to be filed.  

At approximately 10:15 p.m. on October 13, officers from the Kentwood Police Department responded to the Delta Hotel on the report of a shooting that occurred inside the hotel. Responding officers located a 17-year-old male inside a hotel room with an apparent gunshot wound. Life-saving measures were performed by the officers and other first responders, but the subject was eventually pronounced dead at the scene. No other persons are known to be injured as a result of this incident. The name of deceased is not being released. 

Wyoming uses strong ground game to secure first win of season at WKTV Game of the Week Friday

(WKTV)



By Ty Marzean

WKTV Contributor



In the last game of the COVID-19-shortened season in 2020, the Wyoming Wolves beat the Holland Dutch 34-26.

Since that night in October 2020, the Wolves have won only one game. 

Nearly two years later, on a rain-filled and chilly homecoming night, the Wolves again emerged victorious against the Holland Dutch 34-13 on Friday night. 

Two plays into the opening drive, the Wolves lost junior quarterback Jay Johnson to an injury. 


Wyoming running back Adrian Moore filled in for injured QB Jay Johnson early in the game.

As Johnson was helped off the field, he had a moment of embrace with junior quarterback Adrian Moore, who would take over at quarterback for the Wolves. 

Moore would get Wyoming on the board first, scoring on a QB keeper from seven yards out early in the first quarter.

After a long punt by Holland’s Dylan Floes, the Wolves’ senior running back Donavyn Edwards took the first play 64 yards down the sideline to put Wyoming up 13-0.

The second quarter saw two long drives by the home team end in turnovers. 



Mauricio Hernandez-Keys helped the defensive effort with an interception in the end zone late in the second quarter.

Wyoming led 13-0 at halftime 

Junior running back Jack TerVeen came into Week 8 averaging 125 rushing yards over the last four games. 

TerVeen had wide-open running lanes all night long on his way to another 100-yard game and punched the ball past the goal line three times. 

Wyoming (1-7) ends the 2023 season at home next Friday hosting the Muskegon Big Reds (6-2).

Tri-unity edges host Calvin Christian 8-0 Friday


By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Check out our WKTV highlights from the Defenders 8-0 win over Grandville Calvin Christian. Tri-unity is tied atop the the Southwest Michigan 8-Man Football League – Blue with New Buffalo at 3-1, 5-3 overall.

WKTV Game of the Week

Year after year, our high-tech WKTV Game of the Week truck films one game each week, which includes two play-by-play announcers, a field announcer and various camera angles with slow motion replays to capture all those great plays for your viewing pleasure.


Game of the Week airs every Friday night on WKTV Comcast Channel 25 & AT&T U-Verse Channel 99 at 11 p.m. with a rebroadcast on Saturday at 11 a.m. To watch the WKTV Game of the Week online, visit WKTVVideos on Youtube.



Caledonia defeated East Kentwood 21-0 Friday; Check out our WKTV game highlights inside



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Check out our WKTV highlights from Caledonia’s 21-0 win over East Kentwood Friday.


WKTV Game of the Week

Year after year, our high-tech WKTV Game of the Week truck films one game each week, which includes two play-by-play announcers, a field announcer and various camera angles with slow motion replays to capture all those great plays for your viewing pleasure.

Game of the Week airs every Friday night on WKTV Comcast Channel 25 & AT&T U-Verse Channel 99 at 11 p.m. with a rebroadcast on Saturday at 11 a.m. To watch the WKTV Game of the Week online, visit WKTVVideos on Youtube.

Palermo Pizza owner holding 50th birthday fundraiser Saturday, Oct. 14; helping some graduating seniors




By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Palermo Pizza owner Janice Vitale is holding a 50th Birthday Fundraiser on Oct. 14 at 735 36th St. SW Wyoming.



The fundraiser will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday and consist of a bake sale, pop can drive and a portion (20 percent) of all orders that day will be donated to charity. Cake and refreshments will be served as well.



“Help me celebrate my birthday by doing what I love to do best; service,” Vitale said. “Together we can do more by giving back.



“Drop your pop cans off, maybe purchase some baked goods and have a slice of cake with me. Each year I sponsor a few graduating seniors. I pay for the cost of their caps and gowns, other memorabilia, and their senior all-nighter. I try to sponsor students in the foster care system, but never limited to. I know with your support we can help more students this year.”





Grief counseling for hospice patients and their loved ones

Providing comfort and care at the end of life extends to loved ones and caregivers with emotional support to help cope with stages of grief. (Courtesy, Adobe Stock)



By Emmanuel Hospice


Marcy Kiger is only one of many at Emmanuel Hospice who can attest to the importance of caring not only for patients receiving hospice care, but friends and loved ones on the journey with them.

“Right from the start, we like to emphasize that we’re here to care for anyone else who needs the support, because grief is not an isolated experience,” she says. “It grows roots and spreads, and everybody deals with it differently. By opening the door, folks are able to take that first step.”

As a social worker with Emmanuel, Kiger has noticed that especially in the Midwest, people can be more stoic than elsewhere, and that grief and loss aren’t easy topics to broach and discuss.

“So, we tell folks they’re the drivers of the bus, and we are the wheels,” Kiger says. “We’ll go as fast as they want.”

How are you doing?

Kiger shares that friends and family of people in hospice care are sometimes surprised to hear a clinician or therapist turn to them and ask, “What about you? How are you doing?”

In asking just that, a pause often surfaces during which they can “recalibrate their brain and allow them to be OK with dwelling on whether they’re struggling with the journey.

“It’s real important for us to check in on them to make sure they’re having those moments,” she says, “and even if they’re brief, it’s important to know where they are and how they’re doing.”

Some tips for loved ones

Some tips for loved ones dealing with an impending loss? First, be brave enough to admit you’re having a tough time, because acknowledging it is a big first step.

Second, if you need to talk, seek out a good listener. Emmanuel’s staff is trained to meet you where you are, and help you cope with virtually anything. The nonprofit offers bereavement counseling for up to 13 months after a patient passes.

“That one-year anniversary can bring up a lot of feelings,” Kiger says.

At Emmanuel, caring for people surrounding the patient begins almost immediately.

“We assess the bereavement needs of family members,” Kiger says, “and then we might suggest it would be beneficial to talk with someone on our team if they’d like to do that.”

Kiger and her colleagues pay attention to a lot of factors and also look for clues that will help them counsel friends and family.

“We consider how close they are to the patient, if they have kids, if they are working full time and whether there have been any other deaths or traumatic events in the family lately. All of that might figure into their stress level.”

Dealing with feelings can be tougher on some than others, but Kiger says being open and honest about what you’re experiencing can help you move forward.

“Sometimes, we’re dealing with years and years of learning what is right and what is wrong to express,” she says. “To help them with their struggle, at least we can point out those different doors to consider.”

Emmanuel Hospice’s grief support services are open to anyone in the community on a grief journey regardless of whether they have a prior connection with the nonprofit organization or hospice care. More information is available at EmmanuelHospice.org/grief-support.


Kent County Department of Public Works launches fall recycling guide with tips and tricks




By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The Kent County Department of Public Works (DPW) has launched its fall recycling guide to help residents ensure recyclable and hard to dispose of materials don’t end up in a landfill this fall.

The 2023 Fall Recycling Guide is part of the DPW’s efforts to familiarize Kent County residents with items that can be placed in their recycling bins to move toward the goal of reducing landfill waste by 90 percent by 2030. The guide also includes tips for properly recycling or disposing of material that can’t go in a recycling bin, but can still be kept out of a landfill like leaves, pool chemicals and clothing.

“The fall season and fall holidays can bring about a lot of waste, from food containers to costumes to decorations, so it’s important Kent County residents are knowledgeable about what can be recycled and put to better use than sitting in a landfill,” said Micah Herrboldt, waste reduction educator at the DPW. “We’re proud of our community’s commitment to recycling and reducing waste all year-round.”

In the fall, the DPW tends to see items like cider jugs, paper cups and cartons, certain plastics and cardboard boxes end up in the trash when they could be placed in curbside recycling bins and eventually repurposed. Items like soup and broth cartons, rigid plastics and metal cans and tins for pie filling, also can be recycled.

If an item can’t be recycled, there are other options for residents to avoid contributing to the landfill. The DPW offers tips for what to do with Halloween costumes and wigs, sweaters and coats, as well as clothing that’s been outgrown by children.

If a garage clean-out is on your fall to do list, household hazardous waste can be brought to any of the DPW’s SafeChem locations throughout the county for free responsible disposal. Organic waste like branches, leaves and garden plants can be provided through a local waste hauler.

The Kent County Department of Public Works provides municipal solid waste disposal services to ensure the effective removal, storage and disposal of residential and commercial solid waste through various facilities and programs, including Waste-to-Energy, the Recycling and Education Center, North Kent Transfer Station and South Kent Landfill.

Fashion for a Future brings local celebrities and community together for Hope for Single Moms



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Local philanthropist Dr. Carla Ludwig said like many nonprofits, hers was started based on a personal story.


Her inspiration: Her youngest daughter Christina.

“My husband John and I had a daughter who became pregnant during her freshman year of college,” said Ludwig, founding director of Hope for Single Moms, to WKTV. The complete story and more can be seen on her website Hope for Single Moms. “My daughter and granddaughter (Ashley) moved away from Michigan when my granddaughter was nine months old. Without a career with a $40,000/year or more income, it was always going to be a struggle to pay the bills.



Hope for Single Moms philanthropist and founding director Carla Ludwig’s inspiration for the organization: Her daughter and granddaughter Christina and Ashley. (Courtesy, Carla Ludwig)



“A year after they moved, my husband and I offered our daughter the opportunity to go back to college. Long story short, she went back to college with a two-year-old, and I just saw a lot of challenges to success. I think the hard part was just to see that there wasn’t the support and resources at the university available to her.



“But honestly, we weren’t independently wealthy. What could I do? I tried to dismiss the thought. But God pursued me. I really didn’t know what I could do.”


Fashion for a Future (Photos Courtesy of Brock Visuals)



Ludwig said it was a privilege to be included in her daughter’s journey.


“This experience showed me how hard single parenting is,” Ludwig continued. “I learned about the barriers single moms have to just about anything and everything in life. And then there’s the stress of trying to pay bills. But most striking was seeing the isolation and loneliness of being a single mom.

“I’ve learned a lot. It’s a privilege to be able to now serve the West Michigan community. After she graduated, we went and said, ‘Let’s do it here in Michigan.'”



Dr. Carla Ludwig, Hope for Single Moms founding director, talks to WKTV during her Fashion for a Future event on Sept. 28. (WKTV/Hayden Passig)



Fashion for a Future

One of the events Ludwig created to fundraise for Hope for Single Moms is Fashion for a Future, which held a third annual benefit on Sept. 28 at New Vintage Place in Grand Rapids.

Statewide celebrities like WOOD TV8’s Terri DeBoer, former Detroit Tigers pitcher Dave Rozema, who was on the team during its 1984 World Series Championship, and NPR/PBS host Shelley Irwin took part in the fashion show, the major fundraiser for Hope for Single Moms.


Former Detroit Tigers pitcher Dave Rozema hit the runway (see video above)

“I just met Carla this week and what a fantastic organization she has,” said Rozema, who walked the runway at the fashion show and signed autographs as well. “Carla’s a tremendous person. I just can’t see men assaulting wives … I’ve been married for 38 years and that’s unacceptable, so I’m helping out here. I have a nice couple of outfits and I’m here to sign autographs, raise money, and brought some donations in from Tram (Alan Trammell) and Kirk (Gibson) to help out. Every little bit counts.”




WKTV Managing Editor/Sports Director Cris Greer (left) and former Detroit Tigers pitcher from the 1984 World Series season Dave Rozema talk at Fashion for a Future. (WKTV/Cris Greer)




A native of Grand Rapids, Rozema graduated from Grand Rapids Central High School where his junior and senior seasons were spent as an all-city pitcher for the baseball team. He later pitched for the Detroit Tigers for eight years, including the 1984 World Series championship season. He retired from baseball after 10 years, posting a 60-53 record, 17 saves and a 3.47 ERA.

Fashion for a Future draws 200 people

“There were about 200 people there plus an additional 60 volunteers, including 20 professional models,” Ludwig said. “One flew in from New York City, one drove in from Cadillac, Traverse City and Kalamazoo. Everyone had a great time and learned about the needs of single mom families and how they, through partnering with Hope for Single Moms, can address those needs with real solutions that lead to transforming lives. Not only have people donated, but they are volunteering to help these families thrive.



“What people like about our program is that Hope for Single Moms provides long-term solutions. Their donations remove the financial barriers to a career education. They know these families will maintain economic independence because they are learning the life skills needed to do so. When I can tell a donor that a family will move from poverty to prosperity in about three years, they know they are making a difference and changing lives.”


Emcee Jennifer Feurstein (ABC 4 West Michigan)

“Jennifer Feuerstein has been our emcee all three years,” Ludwig said. “She has been a solo mom for eleven years, so it’s a cause close to her heart.”


Fashion show featured designer Ashley Kinsey

Ashley Kinsey was the featured fashion designer at the event showing 17 looks from her new collection. A designer in the industry for about 20 years, she has worked for a variety of companies, including major brands like Anthropologie, J.Crew, Cato Fashions and most recently Meijer.

Ashley Kinsey, featured fashion designer at Fashion for a Future. (WKTV/Hayden Passig)





“I support this event just because I love what they’re doing for single moms, helping them get educated, giving the mentorship that they need so that they can support their children better in the long run,” said Kinsey, who donated 20 percent of the sales of the show’s designs to Hope for Single Moms.






Grand Rapids Ballet School and Junior Company Director Attila Mosolygo

“I’m very grateful to be part of this wonderful event,” Mosolygo said. “I always look for opportunities to reach out into the community, to do community work, and this a fantastic way to do it. I work with a lot of students on a daily basis … and it’s good to know that there’s somebody out there that’s thinking of those single parents, single moms and their kids and their difficulties. I could not say no to this event.”



Celebrity model Attila Mosolygo, Grand Rapids Ballet School and Junior Company Director. (Courtesy, Brock Visuals)



“Education is the key”

As Ludwig will tell you, one of the key headlines on her Hope for Single Mom’s website states: “Education is the key to moving single mom families from poverty to prosperity!”

When helping her daughter Christina she noticed, “many organizations/programs offered short-term material assistance to single moms and their children. Good and necessary, but there were no long-term solutions available.”

“Our program is for single parents who are full-time students in college or trade school,” Ludwig continued. “Our goal is to help parents and their young children develop the educational and family life skills needed to achieve self-sufficiency.”

Teach a woman to fish approach

“What that means is helping a woman get the education she needs to provide well for her children,” Ludwig explains. “Hope for Single Moms focuses on a career education, but also provides community, life assistance and mentoring.


“Not only do we give them a career education, but we have volunteers who help with life assistance, such as budgeting. If they honestly need it, whatever it takes.”

A holistic/whole person approach

“We really want to have a holistic approach so that we’re not just throwing money at them to go back to school, but we want to set them up for success,” she explained. “So, in addition to finances, we also provide mentors. We also provide life assistance teams because some of our clients don’t have a supportive family. We want to be that help and encouragement that they need.”

Four new families to help

“We’re about $6,000 short of the goal, but are moving forward with our four new families, two of whom were there,” said Ludwig, whose organization is providing laptops, car repairs, tuition bills, car insurance and gas money, among other expenses. “We also have two families on our waitlist to enter the program.”

“People often have stereotypes about single moms; however, once they meet the women we work with, that stereotype is broken. We are able to transform so many lives with not a ton of money, and of course, because our staff is all volunteers. These women have already done so much of the groundwork and are highly motivated.”

West Michigan is very generous

Ludwig talked about the upcoming holidays and said they’ll be asking the community to make sure every family has the food they need for the holiday.


“We also do a holiday gift drive,” she continued. “Each family has a Christmas wishlist we put on Amazon, and people can buy as little or as much as they want. West Michigan is very generous and we often have couples who buy everything for an entire family for Christmas.”


For more information on how to donate, visit Hope for Single Moms.



Be honest and be careful to avoid errors with medications

Pharmacist Aaron Hoholik showing participant Carol a pill organizer for her medication. (Courtesy, Care Resources)



By Care Resources

greer@wktv.org



Everyone makes mistakes.

But when it comes to errors regarding the medications you take, the consequences can be serious or even deadly.

The good news is this: With attention to detail and being honest about how you use meds, it’s possible to safeguard yourself against blunders that can affect your health.

“Any kind of error can result in adverse effects,” says Aaron Hoholik, a clinical pharmacist with Care Resources in Grand Rapids. “That goes not only for prescription drugs, but over-the-counter products as well.

“In the pharmaceutical world, medication errors come in a wide variety – wrong medication, wrong dose, drugs with similar names, a drug not monitored correctly and even wrong patients receiving the drug.”

Be aware of drug interactions

He points out that mistakes also occur when patients aren’t aware of the risks associated with how a drug might interact with another they’re already taking, and that includes products labeled as “natural,” “herbal” or “supplemental.”

“One of my pharmacy school professors used to say that even arsenic is a natural product,” Hoholik notes.

When someone joins Care Resources, a community-based program for people 55 years or older,  it’s crucial for them to share an accurate list of meds they’re taking, how often they’re taking them and where they’re getting them from.

“That’s a great way to start,” says Hoholik, emphasizing that such information can help medical providers like himself best serve patients going forward.

But it’s also vital that patients be honest in reporting how often they’re actually taking a medicine, since some people will intentionally or accidentally not take them as prescribed – anything from pain meds to insulin to what’s in their inhaler.

Taking a dose more or less often than a person is supposed to can result in adverse effects like low or high blood pressure, dangerous blood-sugar levels and more.

“We need to know exactly what they’re taking and how they’re taking it,” says Hoholik, “so they don’t experience any problems that are going to have them end up in emergency health care.”

Organize your medications

Of equal importance is organizing your meds, and there are a variety of ways to do so. While some people dispense meds from individual containers, many are resorting to “adherence packaging,” which relies on accurately marked pouches or blister packs to bundle meds so that patients get the right dose at the right time, every time.

“It’s becoming a common way to package meds for our patients,” he says of participants he’s been serving on behalf of Care Resources since 2009.

Additional tips on how to avoid errors include:

  • Never dump your old pill bottles into your new ones, even if the medication name and dose are the same.
  • Set alarms on your phone, an alarm clock or a smart device to help you remember to take your medications.
  • Call for a refill when you have about one week of medications left to avoid gaps in taking your medications.
  • Ask your pharmacist about getting all your medications lined up to fill on the same day each month.
  • Ask your pharmacist and primary care provider if there are ways to take your same medications, but with fewer daily doses (by combining medications, changing to extended-release formulas or other adjustments).
  • Don’t be afraid to ask for help if you notice you’re missing doses.

“Organizing your meds and taking them as directed is always a process,” Hoholik says. “Being honest and accurate is key. And it can make all the difference when it comes to being and staying healthy.”



Bissell Pet Foundation’s “Empty the Shelters” event reduces adoption fees through Oct. 15

Peanut the cat needs a home. (Courtesy, Janet Vormittag)



By Janet Vormittag

WKTV Contributor



Are you considering adding a furry friend to your family? If so, you’re in luck. The BISSELL Pet Foundation is hosting its Fall National “Empty the Shelters” event in 43 Michigan shelters.



Several local shelters are participating including the Humane Society of West Michigan and the Kent County Animal Shelter.

Our nation’s animal shelters are in crisis due to increased owner surrenders and stray intakes, spiking post-pandemic euthanasia rates across the country.


Eli the rabbit is available. (Courtesy, Janet Vormittag)



“Our nation’s animal shelters are facing an overcrowding crisis unlike anything we have experienced in more than a decade. The devastating increase in owner surrenders and stray intakes has left tens of thousands of socialized, house-trained, and leash-trained pets desperate to find a home,” said Cathy Bissell, Founder of BISSELL Pet Foundation.

 From Oct. 1-15, BISSELL Pet Foundation will sponsor reduced adoption fees at more than 345 shelters in 42 states. Adopters can save a life and bring home a spayed/neutered, vaccinated pet available for adoption for $50 or less.  


Alize the dog is hoping for a new home. (Courtesy, Humane Society)



Tania Jaczkowski, executive director of the Humane Society of West Michigan, said the humane society is only doing a one day event on Saturday, Oct. 14, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Close to 50 dogs, 100 cats and a few rabbits will be available and adoption fees will be waived. 

Anyone interested in adopting is encouraged to fill out an application online at www.hswestmi.org Adopters can also be pre-approved which will save time on the day of the event.

Alize, a 74-pound hound mix, is hoping to find a new family. Alize loves toys and playing fetch. She also loves affection. She’s only a year and a half old and is a long-termer at the humane society having been there longer than three weeks.

Peanut, a 13-year-old gray cat, is hoping to find a family with a couch where he can spend his golden years. Peanut is sweet, independent and playful. He needs a home without young children. Peanut has an over active thyroid which is controlled by daily medication.

A rabbit who needs a home is 10-year-old Ike. He currently lives in Jaczkowski’s office where he takes up close to half of her floor space. Ike is friendly and will take treats out of your hand.

Jaczkowski said they have participated in more than 20 Empty the Shelter events and have always seen increased adoptions. She added that Bissell has been very supportive of the humane society. “They’re fantastic.” When the humane society needed more space for their cats, the Bissell Pet Foundation paid for a cattery expansion which included several rooms for free-roaming cats.

Jaczkowski said the humane society, like other shelters and rescues, is feeling the crisis of too many pets being surrendered and adoptions being down. Plus, since the Covid pandemic there are more animals with behavioral issues. She feels the reason for the crisis is the economy. “People can’t afford another mouth to feed.”

The humane society also is feeling the pinch of inflation. “We’re purchasing less, but it’s costing us more.”

Jaczkowski hopes the Empty the Shelters event will result in some of the animals at the humane society finding new homes. 

“It’s a lot of work, but the exposure it brings to the animals is worth it.”

Visit www.BISSELLPetFoundation.org/Empty-The-Shelters for more information.

Kentwood’s annual Trunk or Treat features candy, costumes and fun on Oct. 21

(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



By WKTV Staff

greer@wktv.org



The City of Kentwood is inviting community members to enjoy some spooky, seasonal fun at its annual Trunk or Treat event on Saturday, Oct. 21.

The free event takes place from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Department of Public Works, 5068 Breton Ave. SE. Kids can collect candy and explore more than 25 City and community vehicles.



(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



These vehicles will feature seasonally decorated trunks for community members to view and enjoy. Attendees will have the opportunity to vote for their favorite trunk during and after the event using the online form that will be available at kentwood.us/TrunkOrTreat.

Children are encouraged to wear Halloween costumes and bring their own bag for collecting candy.

“Our Trunk or Treat event gives community members, City personnel and local organizations an opportunity to connect and celebrate the season, while providing a more controlled trick-or-treating environment,” said Val Romeo, Kentwood Parks and Recreation director. “We’re excited to welcome our city’s best ghosts and ghouls for this spooky celebration.”



Kentwood Mayor Stephen Kepley passing out candy at a previous Trunk or Treat event. (Courtesy, City of Kentwood)



Local businesses and community groups wishing to participate in Trunk or Treat can register for free online until 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 13. Pre-registration is not required for community members to attend the event.

For more information and to sign up to volunteer, visit kentwood.us/TrunkOrTreat.



(Courtesy, City of Kentwood)

Injuries and rainy night extinguish explosive Lee offense in lopsided loss to New Buffalo




By Ty Marzean

WKTV Contributor



On a chilly, rain-filled Friday night, the Lee Legends were overpowered by their 8-player league foe from New Buffalo 72-28. 

The Legends have used junior quarterback Anthony Blok and senior running back Clarence Lewis to spark their offense, which has averaged 41.3 points per game. 

Injuries and inefficient play dampened the Lee offense Friday.

Lee played without star running back Clarence Lewis, who was out with an ankle injury. 

“He’s the guy we go to when we need a play,” said Lee Coach Lamar Marshall of his senior running back.

Anthony Blok rushed for 95 yards and two scores

Junior quarterback Anthony Blok completed 33 percent of his passes in the losing effort, but used his ground game to run for 95 yards and two scores. He also threw two passing touchdowns.


Lee quarterback Anthony Blok earlier this season. (Courtesy, Shafi Subhan)




The Bison also held standout sophomore wide receiver Aiden Merriweather to 22 yards on the night.


“We couldn’t sustain drives,” Marshall said. “We didn’t execute well at all.”


The Legends played close in the first half. New Buffalo was up 20-14 at the end of two quarters.







 
“We committed a few penalties, and then we had to wait out a rain delay,” Marshall explained. “We couldn’t recover.”

Charles Davis was a bright spot for the Legends, finishing the night with 108 yards and a touchdown catch. 


Lee receiver Charles Davis. (WKTV/Hayden Passig)


“We need to be consistent throughout the week,” Marshall said. “We need to make practice a little more physical next week.”


The Legends (4-3 overall, 1-3 in the Southwest Michigan 8-Man Football League – Blue) look to get back on track next week against host NorthPointe Christian (4-3). 







WKTV Game of the Week

Year after year, our high-tech WKTV Game of the Week truck films one game each week, which includes two play-by-play announcers, a field announcer and various camera angles with slow motion replays to capture all those great plays for your viewing pleasure.


Game of the Week airs every Friday night on WKTV Comcast Channel 25 & AT&T U-Verse Channel 99 at 11 p.m. with a rebroadcast on Saturday at 11 a.m. To watch the WKTV Game of the Week online, visit WKTVVideos on Youtube.

South Christian holds off upset-minded Middleville 29-20 in WKTV Game of the Week

(Image Courtesy of South Christian)



By Greg Chrapek

WKTV Contributor

On a wet, windy and chilly night, the South Christian football team kept its hopes for a conference championship by playing some old-fashioned football. Relying more on the ground game and playing some strong defense late in the game, the Sailors rallied to defeat Middleville Thornapple Kellogg 29-20 in the WKTV Game of the Week.

With the win, the Sailors remained undefeated in conference play and set up a showdown with Grand Rapids Catholic Central next Friday with the OK Gold Conference championship on the line.

Keeping their conference record clean was anything but easy for the Sailors as Middleville came in with a strong game plan and pushed South to the limit. Relying on their strong running game, the Trojans played to their strengths and gave South everything it could handle.

“We talked about it all week that they are better than their record,” said South Christian Coach Danny Brown. “They are a physical team and they run their schemes well. Their fullback (Drake Snyder) is a heck of a player. It probably helped a little bit when he went out of the game, just for us to kind of dictate the line of scrimmage a little more.”

Middleville showed just how strong it is running the football when it mounted an 11-play, 73-yard scoring drive on the first possession of the game. Quarterback Grant Middleton capped the drive when he ran in for a touchdown from two-yards out halfway through the opening quarter.

South Christian tied the game late in the first quarter. With Middleville bottled up deep in its own territory, Jake Vermaas intercepted a Trojan pass giving South good field position inside the Middleville 20-yard line. A few plays later Drew Bruinsma took a pitch from South quarterback Carson Vis and rambled into the end zone from 14-yards out

Trojans up 14-7 at the half

Middleville regained the lead late in the first half. Again, the Trojans mounted a long drive. Covering 73 yards, the Trojans capped the scoring drive by going to the air as Middleton hooked up with Snyder for a seven-yard touchdown pass. Hayden Chatman added the point after giving Middleville a 14-7 halftime lead.

South responded to the score on the opening drive of the second half. Relying on their own ground game, the Sailors drove the ball down to the Middleville 7-yard line where Vis connected with Austin Tiesma for a touchdown pass cutting the margin to 14-13. South, however, missed the point after.

Trojans up 20-13 in the third

Middleville answered the South score with a scoring drive of its own on the next possession. Starting out at its own 45-yard line, the Trojans moved the ball 55 yards on nine plays. Brody Wiersma capped the scoring drive by running in from 24-yards out. Middleville, however, missed the extra point leaving the Trojans with a 20-13 lead.

South Christian goes ahead 21-20 in the fourth

Facing a touchdown deficit late in the third quarter, the South Christian offense again stepped up. Starting out on their own 35-yard line, the Sailors mounted an 11-play scoring drive that went into the fourth quarter. Mixing the pass and run, the Sailors drove down to the Middleville 4-yard line. At third down at the 4, Vis scrambled in the face of a Middleville pass rush and found Vermaas for a touchdown pass. Down by one point, the Sailors elected to go for the two-point conversion. South pulled a trick out of its bag on the play as Vermaas took the ball on a double reverse and completed a pass to Tyler Brinks in the corner of the end zone giving South a 21-20 lead.

With the lead, the Sailors put the game in the hands of its defense. Making adjustments throughout the game, the Sailor defenders slowed down the Middleville ground game. They forced the Trojans into a three-and-out and then turned Middleville over on downs late in the fourth quarter.

Sailors get insurance score late in the game

South added some insurance points late in the game. With 2:14 remaining, Vis ran in for a touchdown from eight-yards out. The Sailors then added another two-point conversion when Vis connected with James VanderArk on a pass play.

“This was a great team win,” Brown said. “I challenged the guys at halftime. I told them we have to make some positive plays. We had to make them (Middleville) doubt themselves and what they had going on. Our kids just stepped up in the second half.


“The kids got the stops we needed and the two-point conversion was a big play.”

With the win against Middleville keeping their record clean, the Sailors face Catholic Central in the showdown for the league title.

“We’re excited about the game,” Brown said. “It will be fun. We are both undefeated and they are obviously a very good program. It is one of those special games that the kids will remember 20 years from now.”    



WKTV Game of the Week

Year after year, our high-tech WKTV Game of the Week truck films one game each week, which includes two play-by-play announcers, a field announcer and various camera angles with slow motion replays to capture all those great plays for your viewing pleasure.

Game of the Week airs every Friday night on WKTV Comcast Channel 25 & AT&T U-Verse Channel 99 at 11 p.m. with a rebroadcast on Saturday at 11 a.m. To watch the WKTV Game of the Week online, visit WKTVVideos on Youtube.

Lee soccer team establishing winning foundation in the Alliance League; ranked 12th in state heading into playoffs

The Lee soccer team has won a second straight Alliance League championship and has been state-ranked in Division 3 this season. (Courtesy, Lee High School Soccer Team)



By Greg Chrapek

WKTV Contributor



The West Michigan area is home to some outstanding soccer programs that have played an elite level of soccer for years. At Lee High School, the Legends soccer team is working hard to add its name to the list of premier soccer teams in the area.

Since entering the Alliance League two years ago, the Legends have elevated their play on the field and have been contending for the league title. Two years ago, the Legends turned in the best record in conference play, but were ineligible for the league title as a first-year team. Last season Lee won the Alliance League title and this year the Legends finished first with a perfect league record of 8-0.


Lee finished the regular season with a record of 11-3-1. The Legends also have been garnering state-wide recognition as they were ranked 12th in Division 3 in the state rankings the last week of September.

Winning a second consecutive league title has been anything but easy for the Legends who graduated some key players from last year’s squad and also have been dealing with adversity this season.

“We have a younger team this year,” said Lee Coach Hugo Cano, in his third year coaching the team. “We have six seniors, but overall, we are a pretty young team. We have also gone through a lot of adversity both on and off the field. We really emphasized to the guys to play hard and stay strong mentally and they definitely show that resiliency and drive this year.


“The team unity is a strong point this year and going through the adversity has brought our players together.”

On the field, the team unity is evident as the Legends have won several close games and play strong defense. During league play this season the Legends have allowed just five goals. A major highlight victory for Lee came on September 21 when it defeated Muskegon Western Michigan Christian, the No. 2 ranked team in the state in Division 4 and a defending state champion, 2-1. 

“That was our biggest win so far this season,” Cano said. “We played our most complete game of the season in that win. The team played together and it was an overall great team effort.”

Lee also tested itself against the best in the state in Division 3 when it played Hudsonville Unity Christian in a non-league game. Lee led Unity Christian 1-0 at the half in that game before Unity rallied in the second half to win the game.


The Lee soccer team huddles up with Coach Hugo Cano to talk strategy during a recent match. (Courtesy, Lee High School Soccer Team)



On offense, the Legends rely on a balanced attack. Junior Javier Zamora leads the team in scoring, while fellow junior Aundrey Hernandez is second on the team.

“Aundrey and Javier are our leading scorers but we have different players scoring from different positions,” Cano said. “Our goals are coming from different positions on the field.”

In the midfield, the Legends are paced by senior Alexis Rivera, who also has added a couple of goals and a couple of assists this season.

“Alexis’ soccer IQ, his vision on the field and his ability to read defenses is very crucial for us,” Cano said.

On the backline, the Lee defense is led by senior Carlos Herrera-Santos and senior Kevin Mencho. Sophomore backs Edwin Flores and Brian Herrera also have added to the depth on defense. The Legends also are strong in goal with senior goalkeeper Christian Diaz.

“Christian is a team captain,” Cano said. “He has a great understanding of the game and helps keep us very well organized in the back.”

Legends very deep

Overall, the Legends have a deep team with contributions coming from many players on the squad. Seniors Victor Huitron and Justin Gomez have provided key contributions. Senior Denison Vasquez has been a key multi-role player for the squad. Junior forward Gera Perez has provided strong play at forward. Junior Kevin Meza and sophomore Aaron Perez have added to the strong depth along with Nazareth Maldonado-Martinez, Ruvino Bautista-Perez and Jose Ayala.

The total-team effort will be needed when state tournament play opens as Lee competes at the rugged Covenant Christian Division 3 district. Lee opens district play October 12 against Kentwood Grand River Prep. The district also includes Unity, ranked No. 2 in the state and Godwin Heights, ranked 14th.

Aiming for Top 15 every year

“We’ve had a lot of positives the last three years as a program,” Cano said. “We want to get the program to where we can be a top 15 team in the state in Division 3 every year. We want to be a top contender in the conference and the district every year.

“I also want to thank coach Oliver and Coach Andrew for all the work they do and our Athletic Director Sarge (Andre Sargent) for all the support he gives our program. I also want to give a shout out to Erving#13.”         

Check out our latest WKTV Friday Night Highlights from Oct. 6! Don’t miss these local high school football clips




By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



Check out our latest edition of WKTV Friday Night Highlights above, for clips of many of the local high school football teams in Kentwood and Wyoming.


WKTV Game of the Week

Year after year, our high-tech WKTV Game of the Week truck films one game each week, which includes two play-by-play announcers, a field announcer and various camera angles with slow motion replays to capture all those great plays for your viewing pleasure.

Game of the Week airs every Friday night on WKTV Comcast Channel 25 & AT&T U-Verse Channel 99 at 11 p.m. with a rebroadcast on Saturday at 11 a.m. To watch the WKTV Game of the Week online, visit WKTVVideos on Youtube.

WKTV Game of the Week Remaining Schedule

  • Friday, Oct. 13 (7 p.m.) Holland at Wyoming
  • Friday, Oct. 20 (7 p.m.) West Ottawa at East Kentwood

The Arm of St. Jude the apostle coming to Sacred Heart Oct. 9

(Courtesy, Treasures of the Church)



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



In a rare, one-of-a kind event, the arm of St. Jude the apostle is coming to the Diocese of Grand Rapids on Monday, Oct. 9, specifically, Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic Parish.

“I feel very excited about this particular relic coming,” said Michael Tober, director of Religious Education for Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic Parish, and a parishioner since 2003. “If my feeling of excitement were a number between 1 to 10 with 10 being the strongest, my feeling would be a 10. This excitement would be similar to what it would feel like just before meeting a family member again after being separated from them for a long time.”


Veneration of the relic begins at 1 p.m. with a mass in honor of St. Jude at 7 p.m, and the visit ends at 10 p.m. The relic will be in the main sanctuary of Sacred Heart, 151 Garfield Ave. SW, Grand Rapids. Parking is limited, so it’s expected that people will park on side streets around the Church.

Sacred Heart is the only Grand Rapids stop

From September 2023 to May 2024, the arm of Saint Jude Thaddeus will be on pilgrimage in the United States, making stops in 100 cities. Sacred Heart is the only Grand Rapids stop. (Source: The Apostle of the Impossible website)

First time leaving Italy

Sponsored by the Tour of the Relics of St. Jude the Apostle, this is the first time the arm has left Italy.


Michael Tober, director of Religious Education at Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish. (Courtesy, Michael Tober)

“The Vatican does release certain relics from time to time so Christians around the world may venerate them,” Tober said. “However, these are always special occasions and not the norm. This relic has never left Rome, so in that sense given how long it has been there it is rare.”


Tober said the arm also will stop in the Lansing Diocese and in several Detroit locations. Click here for more information about St. Jude and for the U.S. tour schedule.


Known as the Apostle of the Impossible, St. Jude is revered for his unwavering dedication and steadfast faith. Millions have experienced his intercession in times of adversity and need.


How many people is Sacred Heart anticipating?

“Our expectation is somewhere around 5,000 visitors between 1 p.m. to 10 p.m.,” said Tober, who holds a degree in theology from Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, as well as a Master Certification in Catechetics in the Diocese of Grand Rapids.

Relics on display at Sacred Heart

Tober said other relics are on display at Sacred Heart throughout the year.

“Sacred Heart has relics of St. John the Apostle, St. Theresa of Avila, St. Therese of Lisieux, St. Thomas Aquinas, to name a few,” Tober explained. “They are located in a reliquary in our baptistry. First class relics comprise of either bone, hair, skin or blood of a saint.”  

WKTV We the People: Get to know the Kentwood City Commission candidates before the Nov. 7 general election



By Cris Greer

WKTV Managing Editor

greer@wktv.org



For the Michigan Nov. 7 general election, WKTV’s We The People program invited all Kentwood City Commission candidates. If they participated, their videos are linked here. All videos are 5-minutes or less devoted to the candidate, and were not edited in any way by WKTV.

Kentwood City Commission is made up of seven officials, including the Mayor, elected by the residents. It is the City Commission’s responsibility to set policy and provide financial oversight for the City. All Kentwood elected officials serve a term of four years. The City Commission generally meets on the first and third Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at City Hall unless otherwise posted.


View the City of Kentwood Ward and Precinct Map.


Kentwood City Commission At-Large Seat

The City of Kentwood Commissioner At-Large, one of two seats, is voted upon by the entire City of Kentwood. The non-partisan candidates listed in the Nov. 7 general election are incumbent Commissioner Maurice H. Groce and candidate Lily Cheng-Schulting. Betsy Artz is in the middle of her term.




Maurice H. Groce —  Incumbent Candidate,
Kentwood Commissioner At-Large

Why are you running for office?:

I am running for re-election to retain my seat as Commissioner At-Large. I have been involved with the City of Kentwood since 2007 serving on the Local Officer Compensation Committee, Housing Commission, Planning Commissioner, and three times as a City Commissioner.

My drive and commitment to serving the City of Kentwood are centered around championing public safety, safeguarding the city budget, promoting better communication, and planning for the future generations of our city.

Ensuring the safety and well-being of our residents is paramount. I am dedicated to working closely with our department leaders to implement effective strategies to prevent crime and enhance public safety. Responsible fiscal management is crucial for the prosperity of our city. I will work to safeguard taxpayer dollars by diligently examining the city budget, identifying areas of potential savings, and prioritizing essential services and infrastructure development. By promoting better communication channels, we can forge stronger partnerships, address community needs, and work collaboratively to make our city an even better place to live. I will work to plan for the long-term future, ensuring a balanced and inclusive growth that preserves our city’s unique identity and legacy.

I am devoted to upholding these values as your City Commissioner. I humbly ask for your support and trust on August 8 as we work together to build a safer, prosperous and united City for ourselves and for the generations to come.

Two issues you are focused on:

Championing Public Safety

·Prioritizing funding for police and fire services to meet the needs of the community.

·Advocating for safe and healthy neighborhoods by supporting community policing efforts and building positive relationships between law enforcement and residents.

·Supporting initiatives such as crime prevention programs and neighborhood watch initiatives.

Safeguarding the City Budget

·Continue to be a driving force to keep Kentwood a city with a continually balanced and fiscally responsible budget.

·Committed to ensuring the city budget is allocated and spent efficiently without wasteful expenditures.

·Forecast budgeting assessments for future projects, challenges and liabilities to ensure the city’s financial stability.




Lily Cheng-Schulting — Candidate,
Kentwood Commissioner At-Large

Why are you running for office?:

I am running to represent all Kentwood residents as your servant leader. I will always remember that I work for you, regardless of your status, income, gender, age, race, skin color, cultural background, educational background, or abilities. 

As your Kentwood City Commissioner, I will listen to your concerns, advocate fiercely for you, and work together with you for positive changes and real solutions. 

If you have any local concerns, please call me. I will be your fiercest advocate, since I have been a successful, proven advocate for almost a decade. Many people already know about my leadership and advocacy in benefitting many thousands of students with disabilities, teachers, and staff at the KISD center-based (special education) schools, through systemic change, which led to better funding, resources, and accountability.  

Therefore, my mission is to dedicate my skills, experience, and energy to improve the quality of life for all Kentwood residents and to ensure a better, more accountable, inclusive, and responsive Kentwood City government.

Two issues you are focused on:

Many residents have expressed to me their strong concerns, if not disappointment, that they were not actively informed nor did they have a strong voice regarding recent major proposed changes and projects. You deserve better. I will, therefore, increase community engagement and uplift your voice, including by creating town halls and monthly office hours. 

I will champion public safety for all residents, including for people with disabilities and mental health challenges. I will listen to your concerns and work with you and your neighborhood associations to create real solutions, including ensuring the resources for effective public safety and exploring options, such as neighborhood watch and joint programs with social workers. 
 

I will also strengthen the economic development and resources for small businesses and start-ups. Small businesses and minority-owned businesses have been an integral part of the growth of Kentwood. I will aid and explore options with small business owners, including minority-owned small business owners, to ensure their success and that they have a strong voice.  

Most importantly, as a proven leader, I will listen to all concerns and advocate fiercely for all Kentwood residents. I love and respect each and every resident in Kentwood. I will work for all Kentwood residents, and I will be an active servant leader for you. 

For more information:  

Please visit my website at Lily4Kentwood.com or email me at lilyformichigan@gmail.com.  



Kentwood City Commission Ward 1

The City of Kentwood Ward 1, which has two commissioners, includes voting Precincts 1-9 and 17, roughly the southwest areas of the city. Incumbent 1st Ward Commissioner Robert Coughlin is running unopposed in the Nov. 7 general election in this non-partisan race, and Clarkston Morgan is in the middle of his term.

Kentwood City Commission Ward 2

The City of Kentwood Ward 2, which has two commissioners, includes voting Precincts 10-16 and 18, roughly the east and northeast areas of the city. David Moore II will run against incumbent candidate Ron Draayer in the Nov. 7 general election in this non-partisan race, while Jessica Ann Tyson is in the middle of her term.




Ron Draayer — Incumbent Candidate
Kentwood Commissioner Ward 2

Occupation: Kentwood City Commissioner (since 2019); Computer Science and Cyber-Security Professor — Davenport University (Emeritus)

Why are you running for office?:

I am running for office to ensure that our residents continue to receive top-quality service from our City workers and that our tax dollars are safe and well-utilized.

Two issues you are focused on: 

My top priority will continue to be the safety of our residents with strong support for our police officers, fire fighters and first responders.

Another priority will be to continue Kentwood’s strong financial position so that we can support and maintain our wonderful parks and trails along with city streets and other city facilities.




David Moore II — Candidate
Kentwood Commissioner Ward 2

Occupation: Self-employed Writer

Why are you running for office?:

Kentwood needs commissioners who will listen to its residents and invest in making their city feel like home.

Two issues you are focused on:

1. Overseeing that the voter-approved Parks and Recreation millage is spent as was promised.

2. Working closely with Mayor Stephen Kepley and other Kentwood commissioners to ensure Kentwood empowers and rewards its residents with clean and safe streets and responsible spending of city revenue and tax dollars.