The City of Kentwood has partnered with Kent County to “help residents stay connected while enjoying many of its parks and visiting the main City campus” with free public wireless internet access now available at 13 Kentwood locations.
The access is funded by Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security ( CARES) Act funding allocated to increase free public Wi-Fi throughout Kent County. According to the United States Census Bureau, approximately 33,000 households in Kent County do not have a broadband internet subscription.
“The pandemic has increased demand for internet use and many in our community do not have access,” Kentwood Mayor Stephen Kepley said in supplied material. “We are grateful to be able to provide more public Wi-Fi across Kentwood for our residents, especially our students, to stay connected for work, school and play.”
Kentwood joins 16 other communities and Kent County Parks as part of the initiative to add free public Wi-Fi access across the county.
The free access is available at the following Kentwood locations:
Bowen Station Park, 4499 Bowen Blvd. SE
City Campus — City Hall, 4900 Breton Ave. SE
City Campus — volleyball courts, 5068 Breton Ave. SE
East Paris Nature Park, 5995 East Paris Ave. SE
Home Acres Park, 145 Farnham St. SE
Jaycee Park, 1088 Gentian Drive SE
Kellogg Woods Park, 275 Kellogg Woods Park Drive SE
Northeast Park, 1900 Middleground Drive SE
Old Farm Park, 2350 Embro Drive SE
Pinewood Park, 1999 Wolfboro Drive SE
Stanaback Park, 3717 Whitebud Drive
Stauffer Station Park, 2360 52nd St. SE
Veterans Memorial Park, 355 48th St. SE
Kent County was awarded $114.6 million in CARES Act funding for COVID-19 economic relief efforts. Of that, $1 million was allocated for near-term solutions for free public Wi-Fi access throughout the county.
The costs of Kentwood’s newest Wi-Fi access points and their installation were covered by Kent County through the CARES Act funding. The total infrastructure investment in the City of Kentwood was $60,855, according to a city statement.
The City of Kentwood will also pay electricity and monthly Wi-Fi service charges. The total cost for the city is expected to be $18,000 over the next two years.
After almost a year of limited exhibitions and other art showcases, several local and regional art institutions have announced upcoming exhibits with a call to local, regional and national artists to participate.
Deadlines are fast approaching for all of these, so if you are interested, move quickly to get an application in.
UICA’s first exhibit will be in July. (Supplied)
UICA
The Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts will host its first exhibit in its new space at 17 Pearl St. NW. Currently, UICA is accepting submissions for the “Whereabouts: the Influence of Place and Space.”
The exhibit will focus on three parts of the building, the lobby, the corridor, and the display cases. Artists are encouraged to create a dialog between the architecture of the building and work. For the cases, artists are encouraged to draw inspiration from the visual storytelling of department store window displays and dioramas. For specific guidelines, visit www.ucia.org.
Deadline for submissions is March 7 with artists being notified of acceptance by March 19.
Tulip Time’s Artisan Market will be virtual this year. (Supplied)
Tulip Time
This year, Tulip Time will be hosting a Virtual Artisan Market from April 24 – May 9. The decision was made to support the directives by the Centers for Disease control and State of Michigan, and with guidance from the Ottawa County Health Department.
Artists will have the opportunity get their items in front of thousands of people as the market will be featured on the Tulip Time website, Facebook and Instagram.
Artists interested in participating need to apply by Feb. 28. Those accepted will be notified by March 5. The booth fee is a $100 and must be paid by March 18. For more information, visit https://tuliptime.com/artisanmarket.
Ramsdell has a call to artists for its upcoming “Soul Sisters” exhibit. (Supplied)
Soul Sisters
With the success of its Stay Safe Face Mask Project and exhibit, Mainstee’s Ramsdell Regional Center for the Arts has announced it will continue engaging local and regional artists with the exhibit “Soul Sisters.”
Curated by regional artists Lynn Willams and Mary Wahr, “Soul Sisters” is open to anyone how identifies as a woman.
“A soul sister is someone who accepts you — al of you. Let’s be united in our art” is the theme of the show, according to Wahr.
Entires are due by March 5. Up to two pieces of art can be submitted for a $20 fee. The exhibit launches on March 12 and runs through April 16. For more information, visit www.RamdellTheatre.org/SoutSisters-Exhibit.
The Lakeshore Art Festival will be June 26 and 27. (Supplied)
Lakeshore Art Festival
Muskegon’s Lakeshore Art Festival is accepting applications through Feb. 28 for its juried fine art and craft fair. The 2021 event will take place June 26 and 27 and brings in around 60,000 people featuring more than 300 fine art and craft exhibitors, 20 food vendors, children’s activities, street performers and art installations in downtown Muskegon.
The leader of the Kent County Board of Commissioners announced early this month the formation of a new Kent County Broadband Subcommittee charged with “assessing barriers to broadband service throughout the county, developing collaborative strategies to break down the barriers” as well as identifying federal, state and local funding to support the strategies.
“The pandemic has made it clear: access to broadband internet service can no longer be considered ‘optional’ for residents of Kent County,” Commission Chair Mandy Bolter, who will convene the committee, said in Feb. 15 supplied material. “For almost a year, thousands of our residents have worked from home, our children have attended school online, and patients have relied on telehealth services for critical medical and behavioral health appointments. We need everyone in Kent County to have access to those opportunities through a quality broadband network.”
The committee, according to the county announcement, will assess existing broadband coverage countywide; prioritize areas where gaps are most significant and where the population is growing; identify regulations, policies and issues that may stand as barriers to service installation; monitor relevant statewide and national efforts; study successful models in other communities and recommend for the Board of Commissioner’s consideration collaborative strategies to address the challenge.
“There are many roadblocks we have to take into consideration when addressing the need for broadband throughout the County,” county Commissioner Michelle McCloud said in supplied material. “Our solutions will have to be creative and we will have to tap into the skillset of each subcommittee member.”
The group will also study the feasibility of establishing an organizing structure, such as an authority of local units of government that could work together to implement the strategies and “administer funding to fill the service gaps,” according to the announcement.
Commissioner Ben Greene will chair the subcommittee.
Other members will be Bolter and McCloud; Ken Yonker, Kent County Drain Commissioner; Steven Warren, Kent County Road Commission managing director; Tim Beck, director, Kent County information technology department; Ruth Gaudard, area manager, external affairs, Michigan Legislative & Regulatory Affairs, AT&T; Tim Mroz, vice president, Strategic Initiatives, The Right Place, Inc.; Marilyn Passmore, director, State Government Affairs, Charter Communications; Ryan Peel, Vergennes Broadband; Jeff Snyder, manager, External Affairs, Comcast, Heartland Region; and Natalie Stewart, vice president of Government and Public Affairs, Switch.
“I am eager to start working with this group to ensure our residents are able to access the services and information they need,” commissioner Greene said in supplied material. “Information technology has become a critical component of the county’s infrastructure. Each member of this subcommittee will bring unique perspectives and expertise into the conversation.”
The subcommittee will begin their work in March and will be asked to provide a progress report to the full Board of Commissioners at the end of 2021. Depending on the progress and recommendations made at that time, the board may extend their work into 2022.
Cecily McCabe, Woodland Mall marketing manager, talking about support of Black-owned businesses and product brands focused on the Black community. (WKTV video)
Woodland Mall, and parent company PREIT, knows it is good for business and good for the local community to support Black-owned businesses and to support brands focused on the Black community, and not just during Black History Month.
Through its “Support Black-Owned Businesses and Brands 365” initiative, the Mall has created a home on its shopwoodlandmall.com website highlighting Black-owned retailers, fashion brands, cosmetics, fragrance lines, books, music and other products for sale within other retailers at the mall.
“We feel this was a concrete step we could take to encourage our guests to support Black-owned businesses throughout the year,” Cecily McCabe, Woodland Mall marketing manager, said in supplied material. “The past year has been challenging for many retailers, but Black-owned businesses have been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. Consumers can now make even more informed buying decisions that will directly support Black entrepreneurs in our community.”
According to an announcement this week from the Mall, this is part of an ongoing effort by the Mall’s parent company, PREIT, to “spotlight Black-owned entrepreneurs and brands within its portfolio of top-tier and region-leading properties in eight states.”
Among Woodland Mall’s programs was this 2020 African-American legends event during Black History Month (with reenactors from New Hope Baptist Church.) (Supplied/Woodland Mall)
During the coming year, at least two-thirds of PREIT properties also plan to host community-wide Black-owned Business Showcases, providing entrepreneurs with a venue to showcase their goods and services.
Woodland Mall was the first property in the PREIT portfolio to host a showcase, welcoming more than 80 regional Black-owned businesses in October 2020, and the Mall plans to do so again in August.
PREIT properties are also planning events and activities throughout the year as a way to highlight the importance of Black-owned business and brands beyond Black History Month. During 2021, Woodland Mall has hosted an art exhibit, documentary screening and this past weekend’s successful pop-up shop welcoming Black-owned entrepreneurs to the mall.
Mall, retailers have history of Black community support
Woodland Mall is already home to Boutique Boulevard, a unique women’s clothing and accessories retailer curated from locally owned Black businesses. The store is located in the Barnes and Noble wing near Kay Jewelers.
Woodland Mall retailers also feature a wide variety of Black-owned brands and merchandise, including products that can be found at Sephora, including, Fenty Beauty by Rihanna, Briogeo by Nancy Twine and others. The JCPenney Salon features Hair by Athulia, which specializes in luxury hair care for women of color.
Macy’s honors and celebrates “the brilliant legacies woven into the fabric of Black history and experience,” by spotlighting Black creators and change makers who continue to make their mark. Macy’s is also committed to empowering future leaders by supporting UNCF and Black Girls CODE through donations at the register or online.
Williams Sonoma is paying tribute to the historic achievements of generations of African Americans in the culinary arts and beyond. Shoppers can get cooking with great recipes and expert cooking tips and explore cookbooks by Black authors.
Woodland Mall asks all guests to follow CDC recommendations by using the hand sanitizer stations located throughout the mall, wearing face coverings and practicing physical distancing.
In order to comply with Michigan requirements, occupancy numbers remain limited as the mall operates on reduced hours 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Thursday; 11 a.m. to 8 a.m., Friday through Saturday; and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday.
You can’t go back and change the beginning but you can start where you are and change the ending.
Author C.S. Lewis
The Lakeshore Art Festival will be June 26 and 27. (Supplied)
Calling all artists
Several local and regional art organizations are preparing for summer exhibits and now is the time to apply to be in them. Some of the organizations are Urban Institute for Contemporary Art, Lakeshore Art Festival, and Ramsdell Center for the Arts. For more, click here.
Ansel Adams (American, 1902-1984), “Half Dome, Merced River, Winter from The Photographs of Yosemite Suite” (Silverprint photograph, 1938. Gift of the Friends of Art, 1989)
Marking a 100 years
The Muskegon Museum of Art is celebrating 100th anniversary of the Friends of Art, an independent non-profit organization established in 1921 that promotes the study of art and supports the museum. The museum, located in downtown Muskegon, is featuring two exhibits “Friends of Art: 100 Years” features almost 30 artworks donated by the “Friends” to the museum and “Ansel Adams: The Photographs of Yosemite Suite” which features 24 iconic images taken in the 1940s of Yosemite National Park. Both exhibits run through the beginning of May.
(Photo from Pxhere.com)
Plan your summer
The West Michigan Tourist Association announced it will be hosting a series of virtual travel expos for area residents to explore different travel options. The series starts March 8 with a golf expo, followed by a March 22 women and family expo, and wraps up April 5 with a travel expo. Or residents can just snag one of the WMTA’s tour guides to get an early start on planning their summer adventures. Visit wmta.org.
The Eben Ice Caves in Hiawatha National Forest
The Frozen Caves of Michigan
Kentucky may have the Mammoth Caves, but Michigan has ice caves — specifically the Eben Ice Caves, also known as the River Rock Canyon Ice Caves. About 20 miles south of Munsing, Michigan, in the upper peninsula, the ice caves form every winter. Basically, it is the water seeping from the rock above that freezes into sheets of ice, forming the “cave” between them and the cliff. The entire area is less than 50 yards long but it brings visitors all over to see this marvelous miracle in nature that is only found in Michigan.
Social isolation has effected us in so many different ways. Some have chosen to take advantage of this pandemic to spend time with family, focus on themselves or take a vacation, while social isolation and other COVID-19 related life changes has lead to an increase in use and abuse of alcohol.
Social media outlets have made memes about “quarantinis” and COVID drinking, making light of a truly serious condition. Unwinding with a “quarantini” or a glass of your favorite spirit might seem like a good way to cope with the stress of this pandemic, but for some people, too much alcohol is a problem.
Quarantini memes make fun of a serious concern.
Consuming alcohol can weaken your body’s ability to fight off infections leading to depression, anxiety, obesity and liver disease. In addition, excess alcohol many lead to such conditions as hypertension (high blood pressure), strokes and heart attacks. ti also could lead to increase susceptibility to contracting COVID-19.
Instead of going down the road of the misnomers of alcohol abuse, let’s take a look at what happens when you actually stop abusing alcohol.
1. Improved health with decreased sicknesses. Alcohol impacts your immune system’s ability to fight off disease.
2. You will dodge accidents and fatal injuries. Even cutting back your drinking by a third can lower the number of injuries and sick days.
3. Your heart gets healthier. Reducing your alcohol intake may lower your blood pressure and cholesterol levels and nay decrease your chances of stokes and heart attacks.
4. The liver heals. The live is responsible for helping your blood clot along with breaking down fats, proteins, and sugars.
5. Weight loss. Alcohol accounts for so many empty and non-nutritional calories.
6. Ease depression and anxiety. Alcohol is actually a downer working as a depressant to slow down vital bodily functions.
7. Decrease your cancer risk.
8. Improve your libido. In women, reducing alcohol use may improve vaginal lubrication and in men, it may decrease erectile dysfunction.
9. Restful nights/daytime sleepiness. Alcohol disrupts rapid eye movement (REM) sleep stage that is essential in learning and making or retaining memories.
10. Clearer thinking. As mentioned above, reducing your alcohol intake increases your ability to retain and make memories.
Always be mindful of your alcohol intake and drink responsibly.
Boat captain, pilot, chauffeur, band leader, businessman, and family man — Herman E. Curtis was a man of many talents. Immortalized in the book “Bud, Not Buddy,” Curtis would open one of the first African-American businesses in Wyoming, located on Buchanan across from the former GM plant on 36th Street. Curtis’s grandson, Michael Curtis, a Grand Rapids firefighter and board member of the Grand Rapids African American Museum and Archives, shares his grandfather’s story in a special WKTV VOICES presentation airing on Channel 26 at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, Feb.24; 8:05 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26; and noon Saturday, Feb. 27.
The Gerald R. Ford International Airport has been named Airport of the Year in the air carrier category by the Michigan Department of Transportation Office of Aeronautics.
The Ford Airport was recognized for its “outstanding contribution and sustained excellence toward aviation progress in Michigan.” The award also reads in part, “Chief Executive Officer Torrance Richardson and the airport staff are being commended in particular for their innovative terminal expansion ‘Project Elevate’ and continued community environmental stewardship.”
The MDOT Office of Aeronautics annually recognizes exceptional airports in various categories. The Ford Airport was presented with the award at a virtual ceremony on Feb. 18 during the 2021 Michigan Airport Conference.
An Allegiant Airlines plane at the Gerald R. Ford International Airport (Supplied/Ford International Airport)
“My team and I are honored to receive this award and thank MDOT’s Office of Aeronautics for recognizing our important role in Michigan’s progress,” Richardson said. “It is our ambition to not only serve as a gateway to West Michigan but also as a catalyst for economic development in our region. It is gratifying to receive this recognition to honor our team’s extraordinary efforts, especially during the pandemic. ”
In 2019, the Ford Airport Authority announced plans for Project Elevate, a three-development expansion that will include a $90 million extension of Concourse A to accommodate projected passenger growth over the next 20 years. Despite the COVID-19 pandemic and the need to adapt its expansion plan, the Ford Airport has broken ground on the first phase of its future federal inspection station. This is the first step to welcoming direct international travel.
Through its programs, partnerships and innovative solutions, the Ford Airport is committed to reducing its impact on the environment. Sustainability was a primary focus of the 2018 Master Plan and, most recently, the reconstruction and expansion of the terminal apron resulted in more than 99% of the materials generated being recycled or reused. Thanks to a collaborative partnership between MDOT, the Federal Aviation Administration and the Ford Airport, this $50 million investment has been completed to support Project Elevate and the Airport’s future growth.
Additionally, the Airport’s continued partnership with Consumers Energy on energy improvements, its natural treatment system for deicing fluid and expanded recycling program with the Kent County Department of Public Works are examples of its stewardship.
Ansel Adams (American, 1902-1984), “Half Dome, Merced River, Winter from The Photographs of Yosemite Suite” (Silverprint photograph, 1938. Gift of the Friends of Art, 1989)
This year, the Muskegon Museum of Art is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Friends of Art, an independent non-profit organization established in 1921 that promotes the study of art and supports the museum.
Two exhibitions organized by the MMA recognize the contributions of the Friends of Art, highlighting works of art that the group has contributed to the MMA over the past century — including one exhibit featuring iconic photographs of Ansel Adams which opened Feb. 18.
The exhibit “Friends of Art: 100 Years” features almost 30 artworks donated by the “Friends” to the museum’s permanent collection over the decades.
Tunis Ponsen (American, 1891-1968), “Yacht Club Pier” (Oil on canvas, 1931. Gift of Friends of Art, 1931)
“Visitors will discover a rich diversity of objects along with some of the museum’s most significant works of art, including pieces by James Richmond Barthé and Paul Howard Manship and one of our signature paintings, Tunis Ponsen’s ‘Yacht Club Pier’,” Art Martin, MMA senior curator, said in supplied material.
The exhibition runs through May 2, and includes a video, “Friends of Art 100th Year Anniversary”, which tells the story of the history of the group through the years. The video and exhibition information can be found here.
Also on exhibit as part of the celebration is “Ansel Adams: The Photographs of Yosemite Suite” which features 24 iconic images taken in the 1940s of Yosemite National Park — the location and pictures that defined Adams’s internationally celebrated career.
In preview material of the exhibit, it is stated: “The artistic and technical contributions Ansel Adams made to photography established him as a legendary figure in American art. Seen by millions of viewers during his lifetime, Adams’s images documented the American wilderness, capturing transitory moments of light and weather that gave his subjects an emotive power not previously seen in landscape photography.”
Friends of Art members purchased the photographs for the museum collection in 1989. The exhibition runs through May 9.
Paul Howard Manship (American, 1885-1966), “Flight of Europa” (Bronze on onyx base, 1928. Gift of the Friends of Art, 1944)
The museum is open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays, and closed Mondays. Health and safety measures include limited occupancy in galleries and other public spaces, enhanced cleaning, and mask wearing is required for guests and staff.
Visit muskegonartmuseum.org for museum updates, visitor information, and exhibition information.
The Rapid is proposing changes to reduced and discounted fare programs for institutional partners, as well some changes to the Wave card system. These changes are intended to simplify and standardize programs in order to make them easier to navigate for riders and partners.
The meetings will take place on three consecutive days, starting on Monday, Feb. 22, 2021:
Monday, Feb. 22 – 6- 7 p.m. Live on The Rapid’s Facebook page o Available via Zoom
Tuesday, Feb. 23 – Noon to 1 p.m. Live on The Rapid’s Facebook page o Available via Zoom
Wednesday, Feb. 24 – 9 to 10 a.m. Live on The Rapid’s Facebook page o Available via Zoom
These virtual meetings will provide an informational overview of the proposed changes, as well as an opportunity for Q&A with Rapid staff members. The proposed changes are as follows:
These virtual meetings will provide an informational overview of the proposed changes, as well as an opportunity for Q&A with Rapid staff members. The proposed changes are as follows:
1. Reduced, Donation, and Discounted Rate Programs The Rapids currently manages programs designed specifically for non-profit organizations, organizations that directly serve people experiencing homelessness, organizations that directly serve people experiencing homelessness, organizations that directly serve people experiencing homelessness, and discounted rates for educational institutions. The proposal would combine these programs and standardize the discounted fare at $1.25 per ticket. This will simplify the programs available to non-profits and post K-12 educational institutions, eliminate multiple discounts or donations programs, and create a more equitable standard for providing discounted cares. The program would be open to the following organizations:
1. 501(C)3 designated organizations
2. Post K-12 Educational Institutions
2. Fare Capping Structure As part of the implementation of the Wave fare system, a fare capping structure was put in place that enables riders to “earn” a 1-day pass, 7-day pass, and a 31-day pass on a rolling basis in accordance with how often rides are taken. The proposal recommends a change to monthly capping system, which will cover one calendar month. This change would eliminate the 7-day capping option and keep the one-day and monthly caps. The fare capping will reset on the first day of each new month. This change would simplify fare capping to make it easier to use and understand for all customers.
3. Negative Balance Elimination The implementation of the E-Fare system was initially configured to enable the Wave cards to allow for a negative balance of up to -$1.74. The proposal recommends the elimination of a negative balance allowance on Wave cards. This change will maintain equity among the Wave card categories and improve the ease of use of the Wave care for customers.
4. Shipping Fee The Rapid is proposing a flat shipping fee of $2.50 for all online fare purchase orders being mailed to customers to cover postage fees.
For any members of the public that are unable to attend next week’s meeting, additional options are available to provide feedback and comment:
Via email to comment@ridetherapid.org
Via phone at 616-774-1235
Via mail to:
300 Ellsworth Ave. SW c/o Communications Department Grand Rapids, MI 49503
“I’ve missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I’ve been trusted to take the game-winning shot and missed. I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”
Michael Jordan, who was once cut from his high school basketball team
Bowling for school pride — Wyoming, East Kentwood, Kelloggsville
As the winter sports season started off slowly, with no basketball, WKTV had the opportunity to give some airtime to local high school bowling teams. We loved it, and you might too. Go here for all WKTV on-demand high school sports replays.
Prep basketball season begins — and WKTV was there
The WKTV sporty crew opened its delayed 2021 prep basketball schedule with a game at East Kentwood as the Falcons hosted the Caledonia Fighting Scots on Feb. 12. If you don’t know the result, we won’t tell you — but it was a great game. Go here for the on-demand game replay.
And for more basketball — this week, its up, up and away
WKTV’s prep basketball featured-game coverage truck will be at West Michigan Aviation Academy this week for a rival game against The Potter’s House, and we’ll bring both the girls and boys games to cable and, later, to on-demand. (And the tentative schedule from there has us at Wyoming Lee on Feb. 26, at South Christian on March 4, at Wyoming high o n March 11 … with the district playoffs in late March also being eyed for coverage. Go here for the story of this week’s games.
Fun fact:
281,992 prep athletes
According to the National Federation of State High School Associations, Michigan high school sports participation statistics for the 2018–19 school year had a total student athlete count of 281,992, with 120,378 girls and 161,614 boys taking part. (MHSAA)
Amway River Bank Run organizers announced this week that the 2021 event date has changed from May 8 to Oct. 23 in downtown Grand Rapids. The decision to move the 44th iteration of the annual event was made after careful consideration and consultation with local health professionals, including health partner Spectrum Health.
The specific event details and safety procedures are still being finalized and will be communicated as they are confirmed. Organizers believe delaying the event to October from its usual second Saturday in May date will allow the occasion to resemble more closely what participants and spectators have come to expect from Grand Rapids’ signature outdoor sporting event.
“The safety of the runners, volunteers and supporters has always been at the center of every decision we’ve made regarding last year’s and this year’s event,” said Russ Hines, owner, Riverbank Events and Media, which owns and operates the annual event. “Even though we do expect there to still be COVID-19 safety precautions in place this October, we felt that it was in everyone’s best interest to allow more time to be comfortable with an in-person event.”
Participants that registered for the May 8 date will automatically be confirmed for the Oct. 23 event.
The social distancing required to prevent the spread of COVID-19 forced the cancellation of the 2020 in-person event, but as more people have learned how to manage social distancing, and giving more time for participants to be vaccinated, run officials believe a later 2021 in-person event is prudent.
“We feel delaying this year’s event to allow more participants and volunteers to be vaccinated will give us the chance to offer a safer and responsible in-person event,” Amway River Bank Run race director David Madiol said. “We continue to be very grateful for the community’s support this past year and look forward to seeing people’s smiles downtown next October, even if they’re behind masks!”
“We commend and support Amway River Bank Run organizers in moving the event to the fall and balancing the desire to ‘return to normal’ with the need to protect the health and safety of participants and the community at large. We look forward to partnering on a successful race,” said Spectrum Health president and CEO Tina Freese Decker.
Legend if not history has it that following his victory over the British, Gen. George Washington — soon to be the nation’s first president — was celebrated by the masses as the “King of America” but he famously responded by stating that he was “Not a King.”
To celebrate Washington and his also legendary distillery prowess, and almost all presidents, in the month of the President’s Day holiday, Journeyman Distillery again offers a patriotic tribute to our nation’s first distiller-in-chief with its Not a King Rye Whiskey release.
Batch #6 of Journeyman’s Not a King Rye was officially released at the Three Oaks distillery on Feb. 12, but to find where you can get it locally check out journeymandistillery.com/find-your-spirit.
Handcrafted from grain to barrel to bottle, with a mash of 60 percent rye, 35 percent corn and 5 percent malted barley, the limited release is, according to supplied material, “an interpretation of Washington’s original rye whiskey recipe” that “takes drinkers back to the late 1700s with nuanced flavors reminiscent of the spirit America’s original settlers would enjoy.”
“The Crossing” has Jeff Daniels as Gen. Washington. (crop of publicity poster)
Aged 3 years in 30 gallon barrels, it’s the makings for a perfect Old Fashioned or Manhattan, with a twist of history, we are told. The offered-up mixology is a drink called “The Founding Father (2 oz. Not a King Rye Whiskey and 1 oz. Amaretto, shaken over ice and strained into a clean or ice-filled rocks glass, then finished with an orange peel.)
Me, on a cold February night, I say find the movie “The Crossing” — a fine period piece starring the great Jeff Daniels as the General — on your television, pour a clean shot, and drink with the president.
The Michigan Brewers Guild usually holds big beer festivals each year, including one in Kent Country, and may still yet later in 2021. But this year, as last, things are different. Still the guild is looking forward to sunny summer days on the golf course, with a beer or two at the 19th hole, by announcing plans for three “Great Beer State Golf Outings” coming up this year, the first being local, on Wednesday, June 9, at North Kent Golf Course in Rockford.
The other outings will be held on Wednesday, Aug. 11, at Forest Akers Golf Course in Lansing, and Saturday, Oct. 9, at Treetops Resort in Gaylord.
“The golf outings we have planned are not intended to replace our larger events and we are hopeful that we will be hosting beer festivals again this year,” Scott Graham, executive director of the guild, said in supplied material. “We are looking for additional ways to raise operating funds for our non-profit trade association, while also getting together with some of our brewery members, allied businesses and beer enthusiasts in a fun and safe way.”
Registration for teams and sponsors the first outing will open in March. Details for all events will be posted soon on MiBeer.com under the EVENTS tab.
Formed in 1997, the Michigan Brewers Guild represents nearly 300 member breweries.
To heck with Punxsutawney Phil, summer is coming
New Holland Brewing is ignoring Punxsutawney Phil’s disheartening winter prediction for 2021 and has released a new style of craft beverage, a Watermelon Spritz — one part seltzer, one part sparkling ale, and a healthy splash of natural watermelon.
New Holland Watermelon Spritz can (Supplied)
If that doesn’t say summer nothing does.
The hybrid beverage, according to supplied material, is the result of brewing a wheat beer that is high in fruity esters, combined with natural watermelon and fizzy seltzer for a “bubbly, crisp and slightly tart” beverage with bold fruit flavor. Watermelon Spritz comes in at a “respectable” 4.3 percent ABV.
Watermelon Spritz hit the market this month in 6 packs of 12-oz. cans — their Summer Ale — a tart IPA — will become available in May in the same way. For more information visit NewHollandBrew.com.
It is still early in a very strange prep basketball season, but after WKTV sports’ featured-game crew visited East Kentwood last week to open the delayed basketball season, a Friday, Feb. 19, boys and girls doubleheader at West Michigan Aviation Academy will feel like the season is in full swing.
In the Friday, Feb. 19, contests, WM Aviation will host The Potter’s House High School for a girls’ contest at 5:30 p.m., followed by a boys’ matchup at 7 p.m. WKTV will record both games and replay them Friday night at 11 p.m., with more replays to be scheduled, and make it available on-demand later. (See details at bottom of story.)
The WM Aviation boys will enter the contest with 3-1 record following a 39-31 win over Wellspring Preparatory on Feb. 17. Potter’s House (2-1) defeated Holland Calvary, 59-22. on Feb. 16.
In the two teams’ previous matchup, last season, Potter’s House defeated WM Aviation, 67-53. In the 2019-20 season, WM Aviation posted a 12-8 record and lost in the district opener to Ada Forest Hills Eastern. Potter’s House (13-7) made it to the district semifinals, falling there to Grandville Calvin Christian.
The WM Aviation girls will enter the contest with a 2-2 record, coming off a 50-44 win over Wellspring Prep this week. Potter’s House comes in 2-0, with wins over Muskegon Catholic Central and Muskegon Orchard View.
In the two teams’ last match up, last season, Potter’s House defeated WM Aviation, 40-22, to complete a 2-0 season sweep between the two teams. WM Aviation was 8-12 overall last season, falling in the district semifinals to Grand Rapids South Christian. Potters House was also 8-12, also ending their season in the district semifinals.
To see the East Kentwood vs. Caledonia boys basketball on WKTV on-demand visit WKTVlive.com. WKTV also has recent local prep bowling coverage on-demand.
WKTV featured games will be on cable television in Wyoming and Kentwood on Comcast Channel 25 and AT&T Channel 99 Community Channel, on the night of the game and various days and times the week after. See the programming schedule at wktv.org. For more information on WKTV coverage of winter prep sports, follow us at wktvjournal.org/sports.
All Featured Games, as well as other high school sports and community events covered by WKTV’s video coverage team, are available on-demand within a week of play at wktvlive.com.
It can be a challenge to open a business in any era and that was especially true for an African American in the early to mid 1900s, but Herman E. Curtis defied those odds to open one of the first, and very successful, African American businesses in the City of Wyoming.
According to his grandson, Michael Curtis, who came to the WKTV studios to share his grandfather’s story through VOICES, Herman E. Curtis was a man of many talents, a pilot, a boat captain, and a well-known band leader with several groups in Michigan and surrounding states.
Curtis decided to add to that list and become a businessman. This was not an easy task for an African American as the banks were not as willing to give loans to those who were not white.
Michael Curtis, a board member of the Grand Rapids African American Museum and Archives, shares the story of his grandfather’s business with resident and Kent County Commissioner Monica Sparks. (WKTV)
“He got himself a white business partner,” said Curtis, who serves as a board member at the Grand Rapids African American Museum and Archives. “So the business partner would go to the bank and to help get the loan, Herman added ‘ma’ to his last name, making it Curtisma.”
The business partner would bring the papers to Herman, who would sign them, Curtis said. The business partner would then take everything back to the bank with bank officials never actually meeting Herman.
Herman would open the General Paint and Body Shop across from the former GM plant on 36th Street and Buchanan. While the business is no longer around, the building at 3818 Buchanan is still there.
Herman E. Curtis was a man who had many positions including being a pioneer businessman, opening the General Paint and Body Shop in Wyoming. (Supplied/Michael Curtis)
The General Paint and Body Shop was known for painting logos and images on trucks and trailers. Today that has mostly been replaced with decals. But back in the 1940s and 1950s, a lot of the work was done by hand and Herman’s shop along with another Ranco, which operated out of the same building, were famous for what they did. The owners of Ranco were Randy Brown and local artist Paul Collins.
“When we started, people were astonished that we could do this,” Collins said during a phone interview. “They had never done business with black folks before.”
Collins said they realized they were paving the way in breaking down stereotypes and building new business relationships between whites and blacks.
“I remember there was an Oldsmobile dealer who wanted to get some promotions painted on his windows,” Collins said. “We went there and he said he couldn’t believe that color boys could do such work.
“We made him a deal and told him if he let us paint the windows, if he didn’t like it, he didn’t have to pay for it. He gave us a chance and I even painted an image of him in one of the windows.”
Needless to say, the car dealership owner loved what he saw. Collins and Brown would become famous for their work and meet people such as Rich DeVos and Jay VanAndel. The business connections opened up doors for Collins to move on to become a full-time artist and Brown and him closed their business.
Herman E. Curtis also became very well respected in the community for his work and in fact, there was a street off of Hall near the U.S. 131 interchange that was named Herman E.Curtis. The street is now gone, but you can look back at old street maps to see it. Herman also was immortalized in the book “Bud, Not Buddy,” which was written by another grandchild, Christopher Paul Curtis. The book received numerous awards including an ALA Coretta Scott King Award and is used in educational curriculum.
For more about African American owned businesses and life in Grand Rapids, visit the Grand Rapids African American Museum and Archives, 87 Monroe Center NW. GRAAMA’s website is graama.org.
With all the snow we’ve had in the last two weeks, it might seem like it’s easier to get around by snowmobile than car! But is it legal to ride a snowmobile on city streets?
Yes
No
I’m not sure, I’ll check back on Thursday
2) No; It’s against city ordinance to ride a snowmobile on any public property, including but not limited to city parks, sidewalks, streets, and parkways.
Clothing. Makeup. Candles. These are just some of the items that can be found at this weekend’s the United We Sell #TheRealAmercia event.
Set for Saturday at English Hills Terrace, 5179 W. River Dr. NE, United We Sell is designed to give a platform to local businesses. More than 30 local vendors will be there featuring an array of items. DreamScape Desserts will highlight its cupcakes and goodies while Horizon Cruise Planners will be showcasing travel adventures. Organic loose leaf tea from Nature’s Healing Teas, clothing from Kiiys Collection, and popcorn from Robinson’s Popcorn are just sine if the other businesses that will be in attendance.
Entrance is free for those who bring fruit cups or pudding cups for Kids Food Basket otherwise it is $5 to enter. Those who attend will have their names entered into a drawing for prizes.
For more information, visit Robinson’s Popcorn’s Facebook page and go under events or call 616-784-6802 or 616-318-7378.
Two fun-packed family weekends are happening March 20 and 21, and also March 27 and 28 at the Maple Syrup Festival at Maple Row Sugarhouse. Times are 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. Saturdays and 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Sundays.
Come enjoy a meal featuring delicious pancakes with lots of pure Michigan maple syrup. Wander the property to see baby farm animals and take a pony ride. This year’s festival will feature a French Colonial family that will reenact how they used to make maple syrup and maple sugar by hand. Watch maple syrup being made “live” the modern way in the sugarhouse.
Maple Row prides itself by being a locally owned family business that supplies pure Michigan maple syrup to area grocery stores and restaurants. For more information about the maple festival including times and location, and to browse through the many maple products offered, please visit the website at www.maplerowsugarhouse.com.
Thomas Jefferson, as portrayed by Bill Barker of Monticello, speaks during a 2019 event at the U.S. Chamber Foundation in Washington, D.C. (U.S. Chamber Foundation YouTube)
Grand Rapids’ Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum, along with the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation and the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at Grand Valley State University, continue to offer virtual programs this month.
The next program, available via Zoom meeting, will be “Bill Barker: President’s Day Celebration — Man and Legacy”, with Barker talking as Thomas Jefferson, on Thursday, Feb. 18, starting at 7:15 p.m.
To register for the free event, including on the day of, visit here.
In a description of Barker/Jefferson event, it is stated:
“In times of great strife, Americans have often looked to our nation’s founding fathers for guidance. In doing so, we inevitably address the paradoxes they posed. The same Thomas Jefferson who penned the idea that ‘all men are created equal’ in our Declaration of Independence, is the same founder who owned hundreds of slaves through the course of his life. How could this be, and what are the lessons to us today?
“To help us unpack these and other historically loaded questions, the Hauenstein Center, along with our partners at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation and the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum and Library, welcomes Monticello’s William Barker back to Grand Rapids. Widely regarded as the nation’s foremost Thomas Jefferson interpreter, Barker joins us for a celebration of Presidents’ Day and for a conversation that plumbs our difficult past.”
Timely topic webinar coming later in February
Next up on the schedule will be a live webinar virtual event — “The Constitution, Elections, and Democracy” on Wednesday, Feb. 24, at 7 p.m.
In a description of this event, it is stated:
“January 6, 2021, served as the culmination of a series of issues left to fester: a global pandemic, racial injustice, and social and political divisions that continue to grow. Across the country, citizens continue to wonder how the world’s leading democracy can move forward and how, as a nation, we can begin to heal the pain and wounds created that fateful afternoon.”
In the first installment of the Presidential Roundtable series, with support from the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies, the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation and other groups, Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, joins GVSU president Philomena V. Mantella and past GVSU presidents for a discussion that “probes our nation’s most revered document, the Constitution.”
For a list of more events hosted or co-hosted by the Ford Museum, visit here. For more information on the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum, visit fordlibrarymuseum.gov.
Just a year old, The Pink Lounge, Dry Salt Therapy, has developed a following as it is the only dry salt therapy lounges in Kent County. Owned by local entrepreneur Jessica Ann Tyson, who also owns The Candid Yam, a restaurant featuring Southern comfort food, and JA PR, which helps with the annual Miss Metro Cruise competition, The Pink Lounge is at 3105 Broadmoor Ave., SE.
Name of business: The Pink Lounge, Dry Salt Therapy
What is your business? We use the proven scientific research of salt from nature to aid in wellness of the mind, body and soul.
How long has your business been operating? We will soon be coming upon our first year anniversary.
How did your business get started? My teenage daughter told me about how other cultures embraced the science of salt, specifically from the Himalayan mountains and the Dead Sea of Jordan. Upon further research and studies, I became so impressed with the many health benefits. I truly believe that creating this type of business was going to be a game changer …. to have a place where people could ‘unplug’ and feel respite in such a busy world.
Why did you decide to locate your business in the Wyoming/Kentwood area? Kentwood is a great vibrant community. I feel fortunate to live in a place where doing business feels easy and feels supported in so many ways.
What has been the greatest challenge for your business? COVID definitely has not been kind to many and many are afraid to get out. The Pink Lounge is a rare gem as one of the only salt spas in this immediate area of Kent County. Those who know of the science or have experienced us benefit from us being here – especially during COVID and beyond.
The Pink Lounge: Dry Salt Therapy is marking its first anniversary. (Supplied)
What is the most popular product/item at your business? People absolutely LOVE bringing their employees or family members to a special private VIP session we call a Salt N Sip! They have the salt spa all to themselves to eat on salt bricks, make their own bath/soaking salt to take home and experience total rest and relaxation, leaving the stress behind.
What is a Wyoming/Kentwood business you like to visit during your free time? We have three other businesses so free time is at a premium – LBVS! During our ‘free time’ we like to support other businesses. It’s the law of reciprocity!
Hopes for 2021: The Pink Lounge wants to be able to do what everyone else wants to do – be open for business! We hope that people will be in a place to feel comfortable resuming their ‘normal activities’ soon!
(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Conner D. Blake)
(Do you have a photo of a Kentwood or Wyoming native serving in the military? WKTV journal would love to get the photo and a brief description. Send it to ken@WKTV.org)
In this photo supplied by the U.S. Navy Office of Community Outreach, Boatswain’s Mate 2nd Class Zachary Coleman, originally from Wyoming, Mich., signals to the fleet replenishment oiler USNS John Ericsson (T-AO 194) from the hangar bay of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) during a replenishment-at-sea on Jan. 22.
The Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group is on a scheduled deployment to the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations in the Pacific Ocean.
As the U.S. Navy’s largest forward deployed fleet, with its approximate 50-70 ships and submarines, 140 aircraft, and 20,000 Sailors in the area of operations at any given time, 7th Fleet conducts forward-deployed naval operations in support of U.S. national interests throughout a free and open Indo-Pacific area of operations to foster maritime security, promote stability, and prevent conflict alongside 35 other maritime nations and partners, according to the U.S. Navy Office of Community Outreach.
With more than 90 percent of all trade traveling by sea, and 95 percent of the world’s international phone and internet traffic carried through fiber optic cables lying on the ocean floor, Navy officials continue to emphasize that the prosperity and security of the United States is directly linked to a strong and ready Navy, according to the U.S. Navy Office of Community Outreach.
By Officer Jenni Eby Wyoming Department of Public Safety
With all the snow we’ve had in the last two weeks, it might seem like it’s easier to get around by snowmobile than car! But is it legal to ride a snowmobile on city streets?
Photo from the “The Story of Kentwood: A History of Kentwood, Michigan”
William Hardy, one of the most prominent African American settles in Kent County, moved to Paris Township in 1844. He would become good friends with Sluman Bailey, another early settler of the area. The Bailey family would house the Hardy family during a couple of months in the winter of 1860 when the Hardys’ home burned. Sluman later would tell his granddaughter the experience was one of the “most rewarding in my life.”
In 1872, Hardy would be elected as the Gaines Township supervisor and is considered one of the first African American government official in the area. He died in 1888.
Four of his five children vowed to never have children because of the discrimination they found outside of their community. Today, the City of Kentwood is considered one of the most diverse in the state and the nation.
St. Cecilia Music Center’s Michigan Folk and Blues Virtual Series 2021, a virtual extension of the Acoustic Café Folk Series, returns this week with the King Biscuit Trio performing on the Royce Auditorium stage and available Thursday, Feb. 18, at 7 p.m.
The performance is streaming free of charge on St. Cecilia’s Facebook and YouTube channels, and accessed through scmc-online.org.
King Biscuit Trio, according to supplied material, is a newly formed blues-based three-piece band “rooted in classic soul and great old rock n’ roll” that features a two-guitar, one-harmonica, tri-vocal approach to a “mixed bag of covers and original material.”
King Biscuit Trio is:
Chris Collins on lead vocals and guitar. He is also the lead singer and guitarist of the Thirsty Perch Blues Band, a West Michigan blues/rock staple for more than 10 years. For the past three years, Collins has been writing, recording, and performing with the Dr. Wu band of Fort Worth, Texas, according to supplied material. Dr. Wu features Buddy Washington, who spent 15 years with the great John Mayhall and the Blues Breakers.
Andy Ogrodzinski on lead guitar and backing vocals. He also plays guitar in the Thirsty Perch Blues Band, and plays gigs as a current member of the blues/rock/funk/reggae band The Kinsey Report, led by Donald Kinsey, well known for his years spent playing with Albert King, Peter Tosh, and Bob Marley.
Craig “Griff” Griffith on harmonica and vocals. He plays harmonica with The Verve Pipe and has been performing with the group for about 20 years. Griff was also the lead singer and harmonica player for the band Botfly throughout the 1990’s and early 2000’s.
The King Biscuit Trio. (Supplied/SCMC)
Folk and Blue series continues
The Michigan Folk and Blues Virtual Series 2021 continues the partnership between St. Cecilia and the Acoustic Café radio show and its host Rob Reinhart, and will stretch into April.
The other free virtual concerts in the series include Rachel Davis and Dominic John Davis on March 25 (from their current home in Nashville), and Jen Sygit and Josh Rose on April 8 and back from the Royce Auditorium stage. The Kat Edmonson virtual concert on March 4 is also a free concert, also available on St. Cecilia’s Facebook and YouTube channel. But as an added attraction, Edmonson will be doing an interview with Reinhart as part of the Acoustic Café radio show.
For a complete list of all virtual concerts offered by St. Cecilia for home viewing, see scmc-online.org/virtual/.
Metro Health – University of Michigan Health Community Clinic on 36th Street will be offering the COVID vaccine. (Supplied)
By Jamie Allen Metro Health – University of Michigan Health
Reinforcing its commitment to health equity, Metro Health – University of Michigan Health has started offering COVID-19 vaccinations at its Community Clinic, which focuses on caring for underserved populations.
The Community Clinic, at 781 36th St. SE, near Eastern Avenue, is Metro Health’s first vaccine distribution site outside the main hospital. The site was chosen to expand access to vulnerable groups and to help those hit hardest by the pandemic.
“Many of the patients who rely on the Community Clinic face racial and social disparities that put them at greater risk for contracting COVID-19,” said Lori Price, Chief Operating Officer, Metro Health – University of Michigan Health. “Those same disparities contribute to underlying conditions that can add to the severity of the illness. These patients need and deserve the protection of the vaccine.”
Data from the federal Centers for Disease Control show COVID-19 infection rates, hospitalizations and deaths are disproportionately higher for non-white populations. Studies also show a disproportionate impact on impoverished communities.
These trends are reflected in West Michigan. Nine of the top 10 zip codes served by the Community Clinic match the top 10 zip codes for COVID-19 cases in Kent County, which make up more than half of the county’s total 47,739 cases as of Feb. 13.
Distribution at the Community Clinic will follow state guidelines for eligibility, and patients will be able to schedule via phone or MyChart. Clinic staff also will reach out directly to the most at-risk patients. After eligible Community Clinic patients have the opportunity to receive the vaccine, the site will open to the general public.
Due to the lack of vaccine, this is Metro Health’s first opportunity to offer the vaccine by Moderna. Like the Pfizer vaccine currently being administered at Metro Health Hospital, the Moderna vaccine was shown in clinical trials to be highly effective across ethnic and racial groups. However, unlike the Pfizer vaccine, the Moderna vaccine does not need to be stored in ultra-cold freezers at the hospital. This logistical advantage enables distribution to the Community Clinic.
The clinic has remained an invaluable community resource throughout the pandemic, maintaining access for safe in-person and virtual care visits. The location is on the No. 3 and No. 4 bus routes for The Rapid, with services designed to serve patients who are underinsured or uninsured, refugees, and those whose first language is not English.
In 2020, 60 percent of clinic patients were from non-white backgrounds, including 34 percent who listed their background as Black or African American and 11.5 percent who listed their ethnicity as Hispanic or Latino. With about 30 languages spoken by patients, 15 percent of office visits required an interpreter, most often for Spanish, Nepali and Burmese.
In surveys, more than half of patients at the Community Clinic said they experienced financial strain in 2020, and nearly a third faced daily stress. Most rely on Medicaid or Medicare for their health care, and some have no insurance.
Metro Health designed the Community Clinic to address these and other challenges faced in the community. In addition to primary care, services include family medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, osteopathic manipulative medicine, general surgery, orthopedics and urology.
The clinic has a multilingual staff and comprehensive services, including social workers and a nurse case manager. Staff helps with Medicaid applications and accessing medication and medical financial assistance. The clinic also provides an emergency food pantry.
“Through these programs and others, like home-visit education to reduce infant mortality, we are working to improve the health and wellbeing of all in our community,” Price said. “Providing access to COVID-19 vaccines is an important part of our work. The only way to defeat the pandemic is by making sure this protection is available to everyone.”
At Monday night’s City Council meeting, the council approved the last measure to allow food truck vendors in the city along with paving the way for a bike trail along Plaster Creek and the city’s Spring Carnival.
In an unanimous decision, the council approved a new fee structure for food truck vendors to operate within the city. The new fee is $300.
“I have had a conversation with a food vendor outside the city,” said Council member John Fitzgerald. “I can tell you that there is excitement about the opportunity to come into the city of Wyoming which I thought was spectacular.”
Fitzgerald said he was asked if a food truck would be able to use its approved inspection from another city, which City Planner Nicole Hofert said yes.
“This helps as they are only going through the process onetime and streamlining it so it all follows the same code,” Hofert said, adding that the fee was structured in consideration of whether a full inspection or review was needed.
Plaster Creek Trail
The City Council unanimously supported the construction of a Plaster Creek Trail along the south side of Plaster Creek Boulevard from Division Avenue to Buchanan Avenue. The project is estimated to be around $604,000, with a portion of the expense for a retaining wall that will be needed. Once constructed, trail users will go under Division Avenue following Plaster Creek. The trail also will provided sidewalk to the Kroc Center and The Rapid bus stop.
The council approval was need for the city to seek a $385,000 Transportation Alternative Grant for the construction, which is scheduled for 2022.
Spring Carnival
The city is planning its Spring Carnival with the Council unanimously approving waiving the city fees for the event which is scheduled for April 23 – May 2 at Lamar Park.
Mayor Jack Poll noted that the city has waived the fees since the city’s Park and Recreations Department has sponsored the event and the funds raised are used to provide scholarships and operations support for the department programs and community grants, and funds for the Greater Wyoming Community Resource Alliance.
Appointments
Alexander Fera was appointed to the Parks and Recreation Commission and LeighAnn TeBos was appointed to the Community Enrichment Commission.
St. Cecilia Music Center has announced its 2021 recipient of the now annual Helen DeVos Legacy Award, with Karen Henry Stokes the third person so honored. However, the annual gala event to honor Stokes, originally scheduled for March, has been postponed until March 5, 2022, due to the pandemic.
“We are thrilled to honor Karen Henry Stokes with the next Helen DeVos Legacy Award, but sad that we have to wait to do so until 2022,” Cathy Holbrook, executive and artistic director of St. Cecilia Music Center, said in an email announcement. “We felt it was the best option to ensure that people felt safe attending a gala ceremony and dinner event. We wanted as many people to attend and pay tribute to her as possible and March of 2022 felt like the best choice.”
St. Cecilia started the Helen DeVos Legacy Award in 2019 to pay tribute to the late Helen DeVos for her support of and involvement in the arts.
Last year’s recipient, the late Stella Royce, “embodied the same spirit of giving and love of the arts,” according to the announcement. “Karen Henry Stokes is the perfect person to receive the next Helen DeVos Legacy Award as she has demonstrated exemplary service within the arts community and her efforts have helped expand the cultural landscape of West Michigan.”
Stokes has been involved with many arts organizations in the region, as a board member, trustee and committee member, including the Irving S. Gilmore International Keyboard Festival, Grand Rapids Symphony, Opera Grand Rapids, St. Cecilia Music Center, as well as other organizations such as Grand Valley State University, Hospice of Grand Rapids, Gilda’s Club and Hope Network.
Stokes, also a pianist, was a member of the piano faculty of Grand Rapids Baptist College (now Cornerstone) from 1974 to 1981, as well as a member of the piano faculty of Calvin College from 1981 to 1989. She holds performance degrees from the Royal Conservatory of Toronto and the University of Manitoba.
She has lived in Grand Rapids since 1970, was married for 28 years to the late Paul B. Henry and has three grown children and four grandchildren. Additionally, she was married for 20 years to the late James L. Stokes. gaining five more children and eight more grandchildren through that marriage.
“Karen’s true connection to SCMC is our partnership with The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center,” according to the announcement. “She is a dedicated subscriber, and when we launched the series in 2012, Karen helped us spread to the word to other classical music lovers in the community.”
Grand Rapids Ghost Hunters host Wayne Thomas with co-host Brandon Hoezee
By Wayne Thomas Grand Rapids Ghost Hunters
On our WKTV podcast we asked viewers and listeners to keep an open mind about things they might not easily believe as we explore the mysterious. Some of the areas that we have examined include astronomy, cryptozoology, demonology, numerology, ufology, reiki, tarot reading, witches, psychic mediums, seers, coptic healers, and ghost hunters. Many of our podcast guests are multifaceted with complicated layers and simple labels can’t adequately describe them. Mama Mary Bassett falls into this category of spookiness.
For Grand Rapids Ghost Hunters episode no. 2, we welcomed Mary Bassett and step daughter Sara Bassett. This unique duo works together ghost hunting and podcasting as Paranormal XL with their alias names Mama Mary and GG. During this episode of our podcast, we examined some crystals and discussed the seven Chakras or energy zones with Reiki Master Bassett. Mama Mary offers meditation for spiritual awakening and a monthly astrological forecast. Bassett’s mission is to bring love, light, and healing to those who need it most.
Mama Mary Bassett
During episode no. 25, Bassett offered predictions of a New World Awakening, demonstrated her Hang Drum, and did a Tarot reading for co-host Kim Kolean. On episode no. 36 we revealed how Bassett became “a light to my path” after cancelling six consecutive WKTV podcasts due to COVID pandemic restrictions.
Reaching a point where everything seemed trivial to surviving the virus, questions of whether we should shut down the show emerged. Mama Mary sensed my despair and wasn’t having any of it. She suggested we move forward and start a Blog Talk Radio show. She would set it up, produce it, and co-host. My job was to find spooky people to interview and host the show that became known as Cryptic Frequencies, which currently has 13 episodes into it now. Bassett produces other podcasts on her page Spiritual Voices Across the Golden Veil.
Grand Rapids Ghost Hunters podcast featured Bassett as our special guest on episodes no. 21 & 25, and recently on episode no. 36; she also joined us as a guest co-host on episodes no. 28 and 37. Bassett describes herself as a psychic channeler that she achieves through meditation, automatic writing, and messages from Spirit Guides, angels, and loved ones. If that’s not spooky enough, she is a Reiki Master, energy healer, and has been doing Tarot readings for more than 20 years. Her wish is to help people feed their soul so they can grow spiritually.
On episode no. 36, Bassett introduced us to her Singing Chakra bowls that she uses to help clear certain energy centers so people might integrate with their true self. Bassett has made some bold predictions on imminent alien encounters. If you’re looking for help with your path to enlightenment, visit Bassett’s shop in Hastings.
The electronic Wave card system was implemented in 2018 by The Rapid. The transportation system will be eliminating paper tickets at the end of the month. (Courtesy)
At the end of February, The Rapid will no longer accept paper 10-ride tickets.
“We’re excited to continue our Wave card transition to make riding The Rapid as simple as possible,” said Bill Kirk spokesperson at The Rapid. “We encourage all riders and stakeholders to provide us with their feedback and questions to help ensure that we get this change right.”
The Greater Grand Rapids area public transportation provider has been phasing out the sale of paper tickets since late 2018 due to the complete transition to the Wave card, The Rapid’s electronic fare system. The Rapid will continue to accept cash as a valid form of fare payment.
Beginning Feb. 22, through March 5, customers will be able to exchange unused 10-ride tickets at the Information Center inside Rapid Central Station during open hours, Monday through Friday, 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Customers will receive either the value of the 10-ride ticket on their existing Wave card, or they will be provided with a Wave card with the equivalent value, minus the $3 new card fee. Unused Adult 10-ride cards will be exchanged for $13.50 worth of Wave card value, and unused Student or Reduced fare 10-ride tickets will be exchanged for $10.50 (Student) or $8.50 (Reduced) worth of Wave card value. Students and reduced fare riders must bring identification for proof of eligibility. Customers may only exchange up to ten 10-ride paper tickets per day during the exchange period.
Partner agencies with an existing stock of 10-ride paper tickets can exchange their stock for equivalent Wave card value at The Rapid’s Administration building on Tuesdays and Thursdays from March 9 – 31. For details and to address any questions or concerns, partners can contact The Rapid at partners@ridetherapid.org.
For additional information about the Wave card, including more than 50 retail locations with Wave cards available for purchase, please visit wave.ridetherapid.org.
You may have noticed some billboards around the area talking about new and expanded programs of the Kent County Veterans Services office. WKTV Journal In Focus, as part of our continuing effort to support our veterans and their families — and bring notice to groups who are really doing the job on the frontlines — wanted to find out what was going on at the county office.
And there is a lot going on: from a focus on reaching veterans and the families, to expanded dental services, to making sure veterans have other veterans to “walk with them” as they move through life’s ups and downs.
Visiting the WKTV studios is Martha Burkett, manager of Kent County Veterans Services, as well as Rachel Wustman, also from the Kent County office.
WKTV Journal In Focus airs on cable television in the Wyoming and Kentwood areas on Comcast WKTV Channel 26 and on AT&T Channel 99 Government channel (For dates and times on Channel 26, see our Weekly On-air Schedule. For dates and times on Channel 99, visit here). All individual interviews included in episodes of WKTV Journal In Focus are also available on YouTube at WKTVvideos.
May your days be as glittery as a diamond, may your friends be as good as gold, may your heart stay as green as an emerald, and may your soul remain as pure as a pearl.
The World of Winter continues with the Valent-ICE which runs through Feb. 14. The event will feature more than 80 ice sculptures. As part of the World of Winter, there is also some incredible installations including the Singing Christmas Tree on Canal and Impulse on Monroe which is the light-up seesaws. Also tonight, from 3 – 8 p.m., will be a virtual Chinese New Year celebration hosted by the Grand Rapids Asian-Pacific Foundation.
Mainstee’s Ramsdell Regional Center for the Arts received more than 300 masks for the “Stay Safe” exhibit, some came from as far away as California. (Supplied)
Go on a Stay Safe Adventure
Mainstee’s Ramsdell Regional Center for the Arts received more than 300 masks for its current exhibition “Stay Safe.” Masks came from as far away as California and Colorado and as close as West Michigan as local resident Carol Grant and her grandson contributed to the project. Viewing is by appointment. The exhibit is up through Feb. 28.
Photo from Pxhere.com
Seeing Red
More than a quarter of the world’s population is celebrating Chinese New Year. From envelopes to lanterns to clothing, the color of the celebration is red. Why is that? According to the legend, Nian, a beast terrorized the villagers eating the crops, livestock and children. That is until the villagers learned that the beast was afraid of three things: fire, noise, and the color red. Red remains China’s good luck color as it is believed to scare away spirits of bad fortune.
The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services announced early this month that the state plans to offer a voluntary COVID-19 school-based testing program to provide weekly tests to educators with the “goal of having all Michigan school districts offer an in-person learning option for students by March 1.”
But many local school districts, including Wyoming Public Schools, either are already using or plan to use a Kent County Health Department testing program which initially proved successful during a December 2020 pilot testing program at Godfrey-Lee Public Schools — one of may local district also already providing in-school education to any student household requesting it.
The county program “is not part of the MDHHS testing program that is available to schools,” Joann Hoganson, Director of Community Wellness for the Kent County Health Department (KCHD), said to WKTV. “Our pilot predated that program, and since it is up and running smoothly, most schools in Kent County have not chosen to take advantage of the state’s offer for testing.
“In fact, I am not aware of any schools that are using the testing supplies (and) program offered by the State,” said Hoganson, who serves as liaison between the KCHD and the schools . “They are using the saliva tests offered by Arctic Lab and organized by the Kent County Health Department.”
Wyoming Public Schools is one of the school districts taking advantage of the county system.
Wyoming Public Schools Superintendent Craig Hoekstra. (Supplied)
“Our testing clinic will be located at the Cherry Health Wyoming Community Health Center (in Wyoming) and will be up and running on Tuesday, Feb. 16,” Craig Hoekstra, superintendent of Wyoming Public Schools, said to WKTV. “In this partnership, we will be working with Arctic Labs and the KCHD.
“The credit for making this happen goes to Sarah Earnest, Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources. She did an excellent job working through the logistics, and we are excited about getting this going for our students, staff, and the greater community.”
The saliva COVID tests to be used, provided by KCHD in a partnership with Arctic Labs, are the same one used by the students, staff, and families of students and staff at Godfrey-Lee schools, Hoganson said. “This was a pilot, which went very well. We now provide similar testing for all of the schools in Kent County at several regional sites.”
Hoganson also provided WKTV with some KCHD numbers associated with the school-based program.
The first school testing site opened on Dec. 1, was available for full access on Jan. 18, and there are now four different sites available in Kent County. According to Hoganson, 20 schools and school districts have participated in testing at the regional sites, with 303 test “records” since the beginning of this year, resulting in 42 COVID-19 positive tests, 255 negative and six inconclusive.
“It is not a ‘rapid’ test … (but) it allows teachers and other staff who wake up with symptoms to get tested quickly,” she said. “They miss that day of school, but they get their results back within 24 to 36 hours. If they are positive, we have kept them out of school and prevented exposure to others. If they are negative, they can return to school much more quickly, thus reducing absenteeism by both students and staff. It is convenient and costs nothing to the person being tested.”
The MI Safe Schools Testing Program, announced Feb. 2, by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) provides no-cost COVID-19 rapid antigen testing for Michigan educators from both public and private schools.
Approximately 300 schools and 9,000 staff have signed up for testing so far, according to the state.
The rapid antigen testing program is modeled after Michigan’s successful pilot project that tested student-athletes and coaches who were participating in playoffs for high school fall sports such as football, according to the MDHHS. In that program more than 8,300 people were tested, including the Grand Rapids South Christian High School football team.
Producer of “In Between the Trees,” Rose Hammond stands outside her display at Woodland Mall. “In between the Trees” will screen just kitty corner from the central Starbucks court until Sunday evening. (WKTV)
By Tom Norton
Like any story about anyone who faces adversity and struggles, slowly at first, to overcome it; Rose Hammond seems to know that slow and steady wins the race.
If anything could be said about her latest documentary, “In Between the Trees,” a story of the African American community in Idlewild, Michigan and the nearby Woodland Park is that her motto fits this pattern perfectly.
Hammond went from standing on her mother’s front step “with six bags of dirty laundry and a baby” to becoming an author and documentary filmmaker through a slow and steady process that in the course of it, brings to life another story (this time not her own) of a community also with no where else to go.
While America’s story of race is certainly long and complicated, one thread through that story is constant; for more than a century the black community was identified as “the other.” Consequently denied many fundamental rights in American society, the black community also very rarely enjoyed something so many took for granted; the concept of a “vacation” or a “getaway” and the ease with which so many of us plan a vacation.
Like a sprinkling of other recreational communities across the country, Idlewild became a place where black people could go to relax and escape not only the Jim Crow south, but also the segregated and outright racist attitudes that existed in many parts of the country.
Hammond originally grew up in the area around White Cloud with its small lakes and simpler life. This allowed her to hear the stories of black Americans traveling to Idlewild as a safe place for a vacation. Eventually that place called Idlewild had grown to become the largest African American resort in the United States. Like a sprinkling of other recreational communities across the country, Idlewild became a place where black people could go to relax and escape not only the Jim Crow south, but also the segregated and outright racist attitudes that existed in many parts of the country, including Michigan. Starting in the 1920s and continuing all the way through the mid 1960s, African Americans from the far away big cities would navigate their way to the small resort and from those decades, Hammond’s book and eventually documentary film would be born.
“Well, blacks couldn’t attend white night clubs then and
we also couldn’t go to any resorts. We had to have our own
resort because it (Idlewild) was the only place you could go
and not be insulted.”
-Rita Collins from “In Between the Trees”
While no one could characterize this time for black Americans as the best of times, the adversity the black community faced also brought out the tight bond that helped so many communities of color endure the racial discrimination of the era. In Idlewild, music from the best musicians in Chicago and Detroit would drift out from the summer nightclubs over the small lake nearby. Residents and visitors of Idlewild spoke of a time of being able to relax without the constant fear that you might be stepping out of some invisible boundary that was a part of daily life once they returned to the cities. It was the recipe that let Idlewild thrive for decades.
For Hammond, her generation grew up after the effects of the civil rights acts and Supreme Court rulings were beginning to be felt in daily life. This meant that education, housing and voting; elements of daily life most people naturally take for granted were no longer just things that black Americans wished for. They were things Hammond’s generation was now doing without a second thought.
But it didn’t change the fact that Hammond was starting over in life and living back in White Cloud. Once back she realized she couldn’t escape the history of the area and her own memories. Other family members would talk of originally traveling to the north from the southern states; of taking back roads all the way to avoid any “trouble.”
African Americans from the far away big cities would navigate their way to the small resort called Idlewild and from those decades, Hammond’s book and eventually documentary film would be born.
“They came here with the hopes that life would be easier, if not better,” Hammond said. “I do remember that my mother wanted that better life for us. She didn’t want us to pick onions or cherries or clean houses every day for a living.”
That lesson from her mother was that education was how you stayed out of the fields and soon Hammond found herself enrolled at Ferris University learning skills that would one day place her on course to tell the story of Idlewild and the tenacity she inherited from her mother would be just as valuable.
As Hammond heard the stories told in the area around White Cloud about the thriving community populated during the summer months by black Americans from cities like Chicago, Detroit, Grand Rapids and Indianapolis she recognized this was a story that needed to be told. Her first effort was the typical goal that most people would set to tell a story; to write a book.
“The ski club was up from Detroit to ski some of the local slopes
and made reservations to stay in a motel. On arrival they (the motel)
discovered they were black and so told them they had no reservations.
The group drove to Idewild where they found lodging at the Morten Motel.
…there are some things that you will never forget.”
– John Meeks from “In Between the Trees.”
“My mother was the one who encouraged me,” recalled Hammond. “I knew nothing about how to publish a book, but she told me to just learn how and start by doing research, so I did.I thought I needed an agent to get a book published and I tried that, but no one would help, so I followed my mother’s advice and just did it myself.”
It was her first time writing a book. By this time she was living and working in Grand Rapids, but Hammond started making weekend trips up to Idlewild where she interviewed residents; drove home, hand-typed a transcription of the interview and then submitted it back to the subject for approval. It was a painstaking process, but she was doing it the only way she knew how and from that process, gradually a diary like book began taking shape.
“…it was just so humiliating. To think that I had my little children…
we already had our bread buttered and now they said they couldn’t
serve us. I just didn’t know what to say (to the children.) We just left
and they never did figure out why because I just didn’t want to tell them.
I guess I was just too close to tears.”
– Rita Collins from “In Between the Trees.”
And it wasn’t long before another idea for telling the Idlewild story came to mind. After years of working on the book, Hammond was living in Wyoming and came across WKTV Community Media. She had an idea of creating a documentary and so with cameras and crew people in tow, Hammond began making the return trips to Idlewild. Like the book she was also working on, it was a slow and painstaking process. It would be several years before both the book and the documentary were completed, but the dream of a book and documentary together pushed her on and a very important goal began to develop.
“In the process of writing the book, I visited several junior high schools and noticed that there are a lot of young black people who don’t know much of their own history,” Hammond said. “I wanted them to learn about black history that is right in their own backyard.”
And to get that word out, Hammond takes every opportunity so that not only young people, but people everywhere can learn that just north of Grand Rapids, there was a place called Idlewild that offered itself as a haven for the black community in times when places like it were too few and far between. Now complete, the documentary film was recently accepted at the Montreal Independent Film Festival and is also featured at multiple showings on WKTV and in the metro Grand Rapids region.
Because of the ups and downs of life, it took Hammond several years to finish both the documentary and the book, but now years after she started, she appears to have honored her late-mother’s original admonition to “just learn how.” From standing on her mother’s step with a baby and about to start over to finishing a project that tells the story of the community she originally grew up in, Rose Hammond appears to have won the race the only way she knew how.
The documentary, “In Between the Trees” is now available on WKTV On Demand by visiting wktv.org/programming/ondemand. More information on the companion book for “In Between the Trees” is now available at Barnes & Noble booksellers, Amazon or this weekend at the Woodland Mall Black History Month event.
In Idlewild, music from the best musicians in Chicago and Detroit would drift out from the summer nightclubs over the small lake nearby.
While some may enjoy all the winter activities, there are others who are facing some of the darkest periods of the year.
These are people who may suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), a type of depression that is related to changes in the season. SAD begins and ends at about the same times every year. For most, it starts in the fall and well into the winter months although some can have the verse of Spring and Summer Affective Disorder.
This past year has been one like no other with stress brought on by the COVID pandemic, an election and unprecedented movements such as the Black Lives Matter movement which may have further complicated those dealing with SAD.
Not able to adhere to exercise routines or to take a trip to sunny or warmer climates or just having access to the therapist presents obstacles.
Don’t brush off your feelings as a case of the winter blues or just being in a funk. If you find you are losing interest in what you enjoy doing, can’t focus or are even having suicide thoughts, make sure to tell someone.
It is normal to have some sad days but if those days outweigh the good, then you should talk to someone. Remember, you matter.