All posts by Joanne

Traffic Tuesday: Speed Limit

By Jenni Eby
Wyoming Department of Public Safety


Welcome to the Traffic Tuesday question. Each week, the question will be posted on Tuesday, and the answer posted Thursday.

What is the speed limit in a residential neighborhood if there are no posted speed limit signs?

  1. 15 mph
  2. 25 mph
  3. 30 mph
  4. I’m not sure, I’ll check back on Thursday!

Drive-in theater has a new meaning as Civic Theater offers up two fall productions

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


From set design to location, the Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s fall offerings are going to look at little different this year.

Like many others, the Civic Theatre staff has had to be a little more creative to overcome the COVID-19 challenges of social distancing and masks. The company’s answer: drive-in theater. 

Bruce Tinker, Executive Director of Grand Rapids Civic Theatre
Bruce Tinker

Yes, you heard correctly, the company is set to present the perfect pairings of “Dracula” in October and “A Christmas Carol” in late November/early December in an old radio-style format in the parking lot of the DeltaPlex, 2500 Turner Ave. NW.

“The one thing COVID has taught us is that preplanning is the road to disaster,” said Grand Rapids Civic Theatre Executive Director Bruce Tinker. It’s hard for any theater company in the West Michigan area to do much preplanning since when the facilities will reopen remains an uncertain variable.

 

With that in mind, Civic Theater staff started looking at what other theater companies across the nation were doing along with brainstorming their own ideas. Over the summer, the company had a successful outdoor concert series where, for a fee performers, came to a home for a concert. The series sold out within hours of being announced.

Looking to offering something to a wider audience, the staff learned of The Des Moines Playhouse live theater drive-in project and began looking at how the team could adapted it to the Grand Rapids area. The first challenge was finding a space.

“Des Moines has a large parking lot to host the drive-thru event,” Tinker said. Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s downtown location has no parking lot. The location challenge was met when the management at the DeltaPlex offered its parking lot.

A radio-style format was decided on since it requires little or no sets or costumes. The format is reminiscent of the golden age of radio, which was the 1930s, where actors would read from a script using mostly their voices to relay the story. While costumes are not required, actors would wear items that would help them get into character such as a cape for Dracula or carry a cane for Scrooge.

 

In Civic’s upcoming production of “Dracula,” set for Oct. 23 -25 and Oct. 30 – Nov. 1, there are plans to project scenes on the side of the DeltaPlex to help establish the setting. Actors will have minimal costumes but the story will largely be told through their voices, Tinker said. The audio will be broadcasted via FM with the audience listening in through their car radios. Adding to the night of fun, DeltaPlex will have vendors on hand selling theater food items, Tinker said.

Only a 100 cars will be allowed per showing. (There are two shows per night at 6:30 and 8:30 p.m.). Considering one vehicle can hold up to five people, there is a possible 500 people who could be in attendance. The Civic Theatre usually has a 500 to 600 seating average and can hold up to 740.

 

And no worries about a small car getting stuck behind a large truck. The Civic team went out to the DeltaPlex parking lot and tested out where cars should be parked so everyone could see the production. This means all tickets will be sold as general admission with vehicles being directed on where to park based on size.

Ticket sales for “Dracula” opened on Sept. 4 with sales moving, Tinker said, adding they have sold tickets to every perform so far. Tickets are $100 per vehicle. For more information or tickets, visit grct.org.

 

Civic Theatre brings Broadway to the ballpark

By Anna Johns

WKTV Intern

Fifth Third Ballpark and the Grand Rapids Civic Theatre have come together to offer Broadway at the Ballpark. This performance is a concert of classical and contemporary Broadway tunes performed by West Michigan actors.

Performances will take place at Fifth Third Ballpark, 4500 W. River Dr NE. Performances will take place on Oct. 1 – 3. There will be two showings per night, 6:30 and 8:30 p.m.

Tickets are $100 for 12’x12′ plot in the outfield for up to six people. Parking is free and concessions will be available. For tickets and more information, visit https://www.fifththirdballpark.com.

Get your spook on as Circle Theatre presents two Halloween cult classics

“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” will be show Oct. 1 – 3

By Anna Johns

WKTV Intern

Fall is almost here and to kick off the Halloween season Circle Theatre has joined forces with Wealthy Theatre to show screenings of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” and “Hocus Pocus.”

“Hocus Pocus” is Oct. 8 – 10

“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” will run Oct. 1 to 3 and “Hocus Pocus” will run Oct. 8 to 10. Doors open at 7 p.m. with a costume contest at 7:45 p.m. and the show will start at 8 p.m.

“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” is a 1975 musical comedy horror film that was mostly featured in theaters around midnight due to its mature content. The cult favorite is known for such songs as “Let’s Do the Time Wrap Again” and launched the careers of Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon, Barry Bostwick, and Meat Loaf. Another cult classic, “Hocus Pocus” is a 1993 Disney movie about the Sanderson sisters who were resurrected by a teenage boy in Salem, Mass, on Halloween night. The film features Bette Milder and Sarah Jessica Parker.


Patrons will have access to a cash bar with both alcoholic and non alcoholic drinks. Popcorn and candy will be available but guests are allowed to bring their own picnic-style food. 

Films will be shown on the lawn of the Aquinas College Performing Arts Center, where Circle Theatre has its productions. The Aquinas College Performing Arts Center is located at 1703 Robinson Rd. SE. Social distancing between groups will be enforced and guests are required to wear masks when not seated. Tickets are $15 and can be purchased by calling the box office at 616-456-6656 or visit Circletheatre.org


Guests should bring their own picnic blankets and beach chairs. They are also encouraged to get into the Halloween spirit by participating in costume contests. Each screening will have a costume contest held before the show.

All proceeds from this event will support local theater.

WKTV Journal Sports Connection talks fall football opening night — finally — with MHSAA

WKTV talks with the Michigan High School Athletic Association’s John Johnson via a Zoom connection. (WKTV)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

On Sept. 3, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer announced a lessening of Covid-19 restrictions on sporting activities, including high school football and other fall contact sports. The MHSAA, the sports governing body for Michigan high school sports, followed quickly with the much hoped for announcement that football would be played this fall.

On the latest episode of WKTV Journal Sports Connection — WKTV Sports’ new sports show focused on local high school sports — we talk with the Michigan High School Athletic Association’s John Johnson, MHSAA director of broadcast properties.
 

We talk about what prep football, and other MHSAA sanctioned sports, might look like this fall — for players, coaches and fans. And we get a hint of what the expanded 2020 football playoff format might be.

WKTV Journal Sports Connection brings its audience interviews and stories focused on local Wyoming and Kentwood area high schools sports, both on cable television and on our YouTube channel. Readers can catch up on all our local sports coverage by visiting WKTV journal.com/sports.

WKTV Journal Sports Connection is available on-demand, along with WKTV coverage of highs school athletic events and other sports, at WKTV.viebit.com. It also airs on cable television in the Wyoming and Kentwood areas on Comcast WKTV Channel 26 (For dates and times on Channel 26, see our Weekly On-air Schedule). Individual interviews included in episodes of WKTV Journal Sports Connection are also usually available on YouTube at WKTVvideos.

WKTV Journal In Focus checks in with Kent County health on COVID-19, immunizations, health survey

Dr. Adam London, Director, Kent County Health Department

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

On this episode of WKTV Journal In Focus, we have three short Zoom interviews with the Kent County Health Department. First we catch up with the ongoing and extensive work by the department during this time of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the department is also involved in more routine but non-the-less important activities including the need for important vaccinations and an on-going health survey.

First In Focus is an update on the current state of the COVID-19 pandemic here in Kent County, what has been done and what is being done by the Health Department and its local partners to keep us healthy and get us through these difficult times. With us is Dr. Adam London, Director, Kent County Health Department.

While the county Health Department’s relentless work protecting the community during this pandemic is probably first in everybody’s mind, county health workers are also concerned about the expected return of flu season — and the need for routine vaccinations of all kinds, for children and adults. There is also an ongoing countywide health survey of importance in process.

We talk with Mary Wisinski, Kent County Health Department Immunizations Supervisor, and then have a discussion on the current Kent County Health Department’s 2020 Community Health Needs Assessment with Maris Brummel, Kent County Public Health Epidemiologist. (The survey, which is available in Spanish as well as English, takes about fifteen minutes to complete and is available online at https://bit.ly/kentcounty20. Paper copies are also available.)

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.

Bridge GR fills the void of a public outdoor exhibition

“Tropical Readiness” by Jeffery Augustine Songco can be seen on Monroe Center. (Supplied/Bridge GR)

By Anna Johns
WKTV Intern


After the announcement that ArtPrize would not take place this year, a group of Grand Rapids residents and city leaders have come together to offer a new art-focused event to encourage area residents to come down and enjoy Michigan’s second-largest city.

 

The Bridge GR kicked off on Aug. 28 and runs through Oct. 3. The event takes place throughout downtown Grand Rapids and its surrounding neighborhoods. The Bridge GR is a live event focused on celebrating Grand Rapids’ arts, culture, music, and community. Events such as yoga, concerts, dance parties, and river clean-ups will take place throughout the month. For a complete list of events, you can visit www.TheBridgeGR.com.

“This exciting community celebration serves to bridge the gap between our current reality and our brighter future,” said Grand Rapids City Manager Mark Washington. “By giving our community this platform, we hope not only to celebrate who we are, but to build conversations that promote resilience, healing, shared understanding, and progress in Grand Rapids.”

Many in the community are currently suffering the effects of the pandemic. The Bridge GR is designed to support economic recovery while connecting the community. Recently the national conversation has turned towards issues of racial and economic justice and the Bridge GR hopes to provide residents with an opportunity to experience diverse cultures to provide a platform to speak on these injustices.

 

“This is a time to unite in celebration of the diverse talent and cultures that make Grand Rapids unique,” said Tim Kelly, president, and CEO of DGRI. “Bridge GR will have activities for the whole family and will help ensure our community stays resilient into the future.”

 

A pillowcase designed for The Pillow Project located at Ah-Nab-Awen Park. (Supplied/Dégagé Ministires)

In light of these injustices, Dégagé Ministries has created The Pillow Project. This installation features pillowcases decorated by the community that represents the 4,700 women who have accessed Dégagé Ministries Open Door Women’s Center since 2003. The project is designed to share the stories of the woman Dégagé has served. The project is located at Ah-Nab-Awen Park, on the Gillett Bridge, and along the fencing to the west of DeVos Place.

All Bridge GR events will take place outdoors and are limited to one hundred attendees. Participants are encouraged to wear a mask and all events will follow the State of Michigan guidelines which are detailed on The Bridge GR website

Snapshots: Things to do in Grand Rapids this weekend

By Anna Johns

WKTV intern

The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain.

Country Singer Dolly Parton
Wizards and muggles have a chance to explore the fantastic beasts of John Ball Zoo this weekend (John Ball Zoo)

The Fantastic Beasts of the Muggle World

Potion makers, spell casters and even muggles are invited to visit the John Ball Zoo, 1300 W. Fulton St., for a peek at the fantastic beasts of the muggle world. From 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and again next weekend, the lions, tigers, and bears will be out to showcase their unique talents during the Wizarding Weekends or visitors can take their chances in the forbidden forest. Costumes are highly encouraged. For more information, click here.

A Glimpse of Africa Festival

As part of Bridge GR, A Glimpse of Africa will be taking over Rosa Parks Circle on Saturday, Sept. 12, from noon to 8 p.m. Fashion, art, food, and music will be featured throughout the day with performances from the dancers of Eritrean Youth, comedian Daniel Kumapayi, the band Netty BM & Myra Maimoh, and many more. For guests safety, the event will be limited to 100 attendees throughout the day. For more information, visit the organization’s Facebook page.

Things that Go Bump in the Night

Take a walking tour around Grand Rapids this weekend and learn about the spooky history of the city. During this tour, guests will learn the stories of a ghostly janitor still trying to clean up in his after life and a recently deceased man who still roams the city. Guests will meet at Lyons Square, 295 Lyon NW (right next to Grand River). Guests have the choice of a daytime tour at 11 a.m. or a night tour at 7 p.m. The walking tour lasts for about 90 minutes. Tours run from September to October. For more information, click here.

The Mackinaw Bridge at sunset (WKTV)

Fun Fact: 150 million and still counting…

Completed in 1957, the Mackinaw Bridge, the longest suspension bridge in the Western Hemisphere, has been helping travelers go from the upper to the lower peninsula for more than five decades. Pre-COVID, the bridge averaged more than 11,600 vehicle crossings a day. In April 2020, that dropped to about 86,413 for the entire month. In September 2009, the bridge marked its 150th million vehicle crossing. To learn more about the Mackinaw Bridge, visit https://www.mackinacbridge.org/

GVSU to showcase pieces by Mathias Alten, ‘Dean of Michigan Painters,’ in statewide traveling exhibition

GVSU students prepare some of Mathias Alten’s works for a statewide traveling exhibit. (Supplied/GVSU)

By Peg West
GVSU

Mathias Alten often painted bucolic scenes, such as farmers using oxen, in a nostalgic response to the immense modernization around him in the early 20th Century.

Another constant for the German-born impressionist artist was his depiction of the Michigan landscape, a collection of beloved pieces from the lakeshore, cities and rural areas that experts say helped cement the reference to him as the “Dean of Michigan Painters.”

Now Grand Valley State University, the holder of the largest public collection of Alten’s works, will share some of these pieces throughout the state in a traveling exhibition to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Alten’s birth in 1871.


“Mathias J. Alten: An American Artist at the Turn of the Century,” will begin on Sept. 20 at the Dennos Museum Center in Traverse City.

A painting by Mathis Alten is prepared to be shipped as part of a statewide exhibition of his works. (Supplied/GVSU)

“Narratives of empathy, peace, love, social justice, equity — all core elements to what it means to be human — are told through art,” said Nathan Kemler, director of Grand Valley’s galleries and collections. “I believe the stories art tells belong to everybody and we want to take these stories into our communities and across our state.”

Other scheduled venues are the Daughtrey Gallery at Hillsdale College, the Michigan Historical Museum in Lansing and the Muskegon Museum of Art, said Joel Zwart, curator of exhibitions for the Art Gallery, who added officials are working through hosting dates due to the uncertainty from COVID-19.

The exhibition includes more than 40 works drawn from the Art Gallery collection as well as historical photos and personal artifacts such as brushes to fully tell the story of Alten’s life, Zwart said.

Alten’s artistic work was one of inspiration from travels to major art and cultural centers around the globe and creating pieces that showed the quiet reflection of himself as well as his surroundings when his travel was limited during World War I and the 1918 pandemic. 

His lifelong celebration of his surroundings in Michigan, in particular the environmental landscapes, especially resonated with George Gordon, who along with his wife, Barbara, donated 35 paintings in 1998 to initiate Grand Valley’s collection. The momentum that ensued after that initial donation not only led to the distinction of GVSU having the world’s largest public collection of Alten’s work but also the entire artist Catalogue Raisonné and published scholarship.

“All of this is only possible because of the Gordons’ contributions and their passion not only for Mathias Alten but also art in general,” Kemler said. “The Gordons could have done several different things with that collection. They shared our vision that works need to be seen, they need to be shared and they need to be out in front as much as possible, not in storage.”

Alten’s works are on exhibit in the George and Barbara Gordon Gallery on the Pew Grand Rapids Campus. It open from 1-5 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, except for holiday weekends, and admission is free.

Senior-led Legends defeat Godwin Heights, 4-1, in season-opening soccer action

Penalty kicks, as shown here, led the Wyoming-Lee boys soccer team to a 4-1 season-opening contest Sept. 8. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

By Luke Schrock, WKTV Intern

ken@wktv.org

It was a senior-dominated performance in the Wyoming-Lee Legends’ 4-1 win against the Godwin Heights Fighting Wolverines Tuesday, Sept. 8, in the first soccer matches for both teams amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.
 

“It’s tough because the kids are not used to playing with masks on, but we have to follow the state rules and I like what the state said. We are safer by wearing them,” said Wyoming-Lee Head Coach Jaime Ramirez.

The Legends would score early in the first half with a penalty kick from senior Jose Sosa in the second minute. Senior Jesus Gutierrez would follow not that far behind with a goal of his own in the 4th minute to make it a quick 2-0 lead for Lee High School.
 

Godwin Heights senior Kevin Zarco-Salto would end the shutout in the 16th minute to keep it at a one-point deficit. But Lee senior Gerardo Montanez scored his team’s third goal in the 36th minute on a penalty kick to end the first half, 3-1.

“They (the seniors) are normally the ones who normally take the lead in everything, so I love that,” coach Ramirez said. “This is a really good team right now.”
 

The second half possession leaned more in the favor of Godwin Heights. The Fighting Wolverines out shot Wyoming-Lee but couldn’t take advantage of three clear shots that soared over the crossbar. But their defense blunted several Lee attacks.

“We dominated the whole game,” Godwin coach Federico Villafuerte said. “We got more shots. Unfortunately we lost on three penalty kicks. … We just did not finish” on their scoring opportunities.

It is quite clear that coach Ramirez likes what he sees in his squad, but he sees his junior center-defender Alexander Ruiz and sophomore Ismael Galvan being key players to watch as the season progresses.
 

“Well, number 10 (Ismael Galvan) got chosen to spend a month to try out for semi-pro in Mexico. So he is one of them, but definitely my center-defender Alexander Ruiz. He is probably the key for the team, he is blocking everything right now.”

Wyoming-Lee is back in action today, Sept. 10, at Kelloggsville and Godwin Heights travels to Comstock Park, also on Sept. 10.

Opera GR livestreams collegiate competition

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsam
joanne@wktv.org


The Final Round Concert for the Opera Grand Rapids’ Collegiate Social Competition is set for Saturday, Sept. 12.

The 7 p.m. event will be live-streamed on the Opera Grand Rapids website, operagr.org.

Viewers will be able to participate in voting for the audience favorite Friends of the Opera Award.

For more information, visit the Opera Grand Rapids website, operagr.org.

Local church encourages residents to celebrate grandparents with drive-thru event

https://youtu.be/bLOzFrc4ulc
In 2004, the “Grandparents Day Song,” by Johnny Prill was selected as the official song from Grandparents Day.

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


This Sunday is Grandparents Day and Grand Rapids resident Teresa Longstreet and her church Brighter Life Pentecostal Power Church is hosting a special drive-thru Grandparents’ Day Celebration to encourage everyone to connect and spend time with the grandparents and older members of their family.

“I was just talking to my mom about how there is no recognition for grandparents and how they are always there and you can always depend on them,” said Longstreet, who is the grandmother to four. “We started talking about Grandparents Day and she said some people might just not be aware of it. I was like ‘Really? Why not?’ She then asked me how I knew about it and I said because I like older people and I looked it up.”

Dispelling a myth

Marian McQuade in Washington D.C. when Grandparents’ Day was officially passed in 1978 by Congress. (Photo from National Grandparents Day Council)

The holiday was not set up by a card company. It was actually the idea of West Virginia native Marian McQuade who thought of the idea in 1956 while trying to arrange a special celebration for the elderly members of her community. It was through that she discovered that many of the senior citizens, especially those in nursing homes, did not receive visits from their families.

McQuade started to campaign for Grandparents’ Days in the 1970s with the idea that the holiday should be a time for families to visit with older family members living in nursing homes. As she worked with politicians and others, McQuade emphasized the wisdom and family history that grandparents can offer their grandchildren and other family members.


Congress passed the legislation proclaiming the first Sunday after Labor Day as National Grandparents’ Day in the United States with then-President Jimmy Carter signing the proclamation on Aug. 3, 1978. Since then, the day has its own designated flower, Forget-Me-Nots, and song written by singer/songwriter Johnny Prill.

Connecting the Generations

Much like McQuade, Longstreet also wanted to celebrate the contributions that grandparents give to their families.

The official flower for Grandparents’ Day is the Forget-Me-Not (Bernie Kohl/ CC BY-SA)

“I remember talking to my grandmother and she would say something and then say “You will understand that when you get older,’” Longstreet said. “You are like ‘What does that mean?’ and then you get older and suddenly you realize what she said and it all makes sense.

“It is important for children and grandchildren to have those conversations together, to have those aha-moments.”

So while discussing Grandparents’ Day with her mother, Johnnie Mathews, who has 37 grandchildren, the idea of hosting a drive-by Grandparents’ Day Celebration at Longstreet’s church, Brighter Life Pentecostal Power Church, 1255 Broadway NW, began to form.



“When she presented the idea I started thinking of my own grandmother and how close she was to me,” said Brighter Life Pastor Tyree Evans. “I wished I could show how appreciative I was.”

Evans said he saw how the project was an opportunity to connect with the community.

“I guess as a church we sometimes over look our foundation,” he said. “Our church will be able to celebration the foundation of the grandparents who have helped raise the children and grandchildren.”

Because there are a lot of people who walk in the community where the church is located, it was decided the event would be a drive-by, walk-by, come-by event, Longstreet said, adding that social distancing requirements will be adhered to.

 

Longstreet based the idea off of her sister’s drive-by graduation party and within just a week and half, Longstreet and the Brighter Life congregation was able to organize the event that included putting together goodie bags, collecting Forget-Me-Not petals, and creating thank you cards for participants to give to their grandparents.

 

“I’m a little tired but I am so excited,” Longstreet said about the event, which she said the church plans to make an annual thing for the community.

 

“If nothing else, I hope people just spend sometime this Sunday celebrating the grandparents in their family,” she said.

WKTV video captures local World War II ‘Greatest Generation’ celebration’s military plane flyover

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

The 75th anniversary of the end of World War II was commemorated locally Sept. 1-2 with local ceremonies including a socially distant Grand Rapids area flyover of war-era military aircraft.

In our own effort of remembrance of the “Greatest Generation”, WKTV sent camera persons out Sept. 2 to capture the local flyover of three restored military aircraft from the Yankee Air Museum, including a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress heavy bomber, a Douglas C-47 Skytrain military transport, and a North American B-25 Mitchell medium bomber.

In response to our video of the ‘Greatest Generation” celebration local military plane flyover, viewer David Knight shared this video of the event.

Virtual has been a written success for one of the area’s locally-owned bookstores

Schuler Books is located Kentwood on 28th Street (WKTV/Faith Morgan)


By Faith Morgan
WKTV Intern




At the start of the pandemic, many business owners had concerns of how they were going to continue bringing in business. It was no different for independently-owned Schuler Books with its owners worrying how they could continue to serve their customers and maintain a sense of community during a shutdown. It required the bookstore to go virtual.

“Keeping our customers and staff safe during this time has been our number one priority and will continue to be,” said Schuler Books Event Coordinator Samantha Hendricks.


Through social media platforms, Zoom, Eventbrite, and personal shopping, Schuler Books was able to serve its customers and allow authors and illustrators to connect with their fanbase while staying safe. Moving events onto virtual platforms has enabled authors to continue to foster their relationship with their fans through Q&As and readings.

The Schuler Books 28th Street location is open to the public (WKTV/Faith Morgan)


Since reopening, the store has made some changes requesting in-store shoppers to wear face masks correctly and practice social distancing. They also have the option for customers to put items they do not want to purchase on designated tables marked throughout the store to be disinfected and then returned to its shelf.



Customers may put items they don’t want to purchase on designated tables (WKTV/Faith Morgan)


Since online shopping has increased during this pandemic, why shop local?

“It’s the personal touch,” Hendricks said. “It goes back to creating and maintaining those relationships with our community.

“Independent bookstores have more flexibility and our main goal is to leave a lasting impression on the customer that feels personal to them.”

Through its personal shopping service, the store has helped its customers in their search and offers suggestions for other similar items. In fact, staff curates lists of book for their customers based on their reading interests.


 

Schuler Books staff can offer suggestions based on a customer’s interest (WKTV/Faith Morgan)


Schuler Books still plans to continue to host virtual events such as author readings and Q&As during this month and Facebook Live readings of scary stories in the month of October.

For more information on future virtual events you can visit the store’s website or follow Schuler Books on Facebook and Instagram.

Chamber’s ‘Team Up Tuesday’ Wyoming community event set for Sept. 15

By Tyler Bronsink, WKTV Intern

ken@wktv.org

 

The business community of Wyoming and Kentwood has held strong together during the coronavirus pandemic of 2020, and in celebration of them working together they are preparing for a community event, Team Up Tuesday, on Tuesday, Sept. 15.

Hosted by Wyoming/Kentwood Chamber of Commerce, Family Network of Wyoming, and The Candied Yam, the outdoor event is open to the public to “hang out and connect with each other.” Light refreshmentswill be served by The Candied Yam.
 

The event will take place from 4:30-6 p.m., at Family Network of Wyoming on 44th street. Small group tours of the Family Network lending closet and food pantry will be part of the event as well.

Residents will be asked to follow social distancing/safety protocols and wear masks for this fun-filled evening. To find out more about the event, visit southkent.org.

St. Cecilia hosts free virtual concerts

Pianist Anne-Marie McDermott performs Dec. 3. (Supplied/St. Cecilia Music Center)

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


St. Cecilia Music Center (SCMC) is launching virtual concerts this fall to entertain music lovers and concert aficionados. Each concert in the two series’ – The Chamber Music Series by the esteemed Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and The Jazz Piano Series featuring Michigan jazz pianists and the world-renowned Bob James – will keep music lovers entertained within the safety of their own home.

These virtual concert performances are free.

Beginning Sept. 10 and running through Nov. 4, St. Cecilia Music Center will offer five free-streaming Jazz Piano Concerts through its Facebook page and YouTube Channel. Jazz lovers will be able to tune in at 7 p.m. to hear great performances by Michigan Jazz Pianists John Proulx, Xavier Davis, Steve Talaga, Cliff Monear, and Bob James every other week.

Starting Sept. 17 and continuing through Dec. 3, St. Cecilia Music Center will offer four free-streaming monthly Chamber Music Concerts at 7 p.m. on its website at SCMC-online.com. These performances by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center will feature works by composers Mozart, Bartók, Dvořák, Tchaikovsky, Bach and others. All Chamber Music concerts can be viewed the night of the airing and for seven days after.  Program notes and artist bios will also be available through SCMC’s website.

Every virtual 90-minute Chamber Music Society concert will begin with an “up close and personal” interview with one Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center artist beginning with Pianist Alexio Bax on Thursday, Sept. 17; Violinist Cho-Liang Lin Oct. 15, Violinist Arnaud Sussman Nov. 12, and Pianist Anne-Marie McDermott Dec. 3. Each concert will also conclude with a Q & A with Chamber Music Society Artistic Directors Wu Han and David Finckel and featured artist.

Virtual Jazz Piano Series 

Thursday, Sept. 10 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: John Proulx

Originally from Grand Rapids, John is currently living in Los Angeles where he is a lecturer at Cal State Long Beach and Cal Poly Pomona. John is a recording artist, with four albums to his credit. In addition to touring with his own trio, John has performed with the likes of Anita O’Day, Natalie Cole, Melissa Manchester, and Marian McPartland. He is also a Grammy-winning composer. 

Thursday, Sept. 24 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Xavier Davis

Xavier Davis’ professional career as a jazz pianist took off when the legendary vocalist Betty Carter spotted his outstanding talent at the 1994 International Association of Jazz Educators convention in Boston while he was performing with his college ensemble. She brought Xavier to New York, hiring him exclusively as the pianist of her working trio. Today, Xavier is one of the most accomplished jazz pianists worldwide.

Thursday, Oct. 8 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Steve Talaga

Pianist, composer and arranger Steve Talaga has been performing professionally for more than 40 years. He was chosen as the West Michigan Jazz Society’s 2008 Jazz Musician of the Year, and has released eight albums under his own name as well as many with various ensembles.  He has performed with many jazz greats, including Kenny Wheeler, Terry Lynne Carrington, Phil Woods, the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and the Grand Rapids Symphony.

Professional Jazz Pianist Cliff Monear performs Oct. 22 (Supplied/St. Cecilia Music Center)

Thursday, Oct. 22 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Cliff Monear

Cliff Monear is a professional jazz pianist and has performed all over the world with some of the biggest stars in show-business.  His YouTube channel features solo and group performances that spotlight many of the finest jazz artists in the Midwest. He is a faculty member at Wayne State University, and a sales consultant for Steinway & Sons, Michigan and Ohio region.

Grammy Award-winning Bob James performs Nov. 4 (St. Cecilia Music Center)

Thursday, Nov. 4 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Bob James

The career of Grammy Award-winning Bob James is long, varied and continues to evolve at every turn. The music of Bob James has captivated audiences throughout the world. Discovered by Quincy Jones at the Notre Dame Jazz Festival in 1963, James recorded his first solo album, Bold Conceptions, that year for Mercury Records. Fifty-eight albums and innumerable awards would follow through five decades. His composition, “Angela,” the instrumental theme from the sitcom Taxi, is possibly James’ best known work. Bob composed all the original music used in that television series for its entire run.


Virtual Chamber Music Series 

Thursday, Sept. 17 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artists: Alessio Bax and Lucille Chung

Mozart | Concerto No. 14 in E-flat major for Piano and String Quintet, K. 449
Alessio Bax, piano 
Arnaud Sussmann, Bella Hristova, violin; 
Paul Neubauer, viola; 
Sophie Shao, cello; 
Joseph Conyers, double bass

Bartók | Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion
Alessio Bax, Lucille Chung, piano; 
Ian David Rosenbaum, Ayano Kataoka, percussion

Violinist Cho-Liang Lin performs Oct. 15. (Supplied/St. Cecilia Music Center)

Thursday, Oct. 15 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Cho-Liang Lin

Foss | “Composer’s Holiday” from Three American Pieces for Violin and Piano
Cho-Liang Lin, violin 
Jon Kimura Parker, piano

Dvořák | “Larghetto” from Sonatina in G major for Violin and Piano, Op. 100
Cho-Liang Lin, violin; 
Jon Kimura Parker, piano

Tchaikovsky | Sextet for Two Violins, Two Violas, and Two Cellos, Op. 70, “Souvenir de Florence”
Cho-Liang Lin, Erin Keefe, violin; 
Paul Neubauer, Hsin-Yun Huang, viola; 
Dmitri Atapine, Colin Carr, cello

Thursday, Nov. 12 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Arnaud Sussman

Bach | Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G major, BWV 1049
Arnaud Sussmann, violin 
Sooyun Kim, Tara Helen O’Connor, flute 
Bella Hristova, Francisco Fullana, violin 
Richard O’Neill, viola 
Dmitri Atapine, cello 
Xavier Foley, double bass 
Hyeyeon Park, piano-harpsichord


Chausson | Concerto in D major for Violin, Piano, and String Quartet, Op. 21
Arnaud Sussmann, violin 
Wu Han, piano 
Kristin Lee, Yura Lee, violin 
Richard O’Neill, viola 
Nicholas Canellakis, cello

Thursday, Dec. 3 at 7 p.m.
Featured Artist: Anne-Marie McDermott

Mozart | Concerto in D minor for Piano and Strings, K. 466
Anne-Marie McDermott, piano 
Sean Lee, Bella Hristova, violin 
Paul Neubauer, viola 
Mihai Marica, cello 
Timothy Cobb, double bass 
Tara Helen O’Connor, flute


Smetana | Trio in G minor for Piano, Violin, and Cello, Op. 15
Anne-Marie McDermott, piano 
Ida Kavafian, violin 
Gary Hoffman, cello

The Salvation Army Kroc Center to reopen on Sept. 17

By Jon Shaner
The Salvation Army


After six months of complete closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic, The Salvation Army Kroc Center will reopen to members on Thursday, Sept. 17, in accordance with the pre-Labor Day executive order by Governor Gretchen Whitmer.

“We’ve spent the last few months making sure the Kroc Center is as safe as possible for our members,” said Senior Kroc Officer Captain Bill Brutto. “The Kroc is an important place for the physical and mental health of our members, and we are glad to be able to welcome them back.”

The Kroc Center will continue to follow all state and local guidelines and has developed its own “Road to Reopening” plan that will phase in services and programs over the coming weeks and months. Details on the plan are available at GrKrocCenter.org.

In the first “Orange” phase, only the fitness center will be available to Kroc Center members. No day passes will be sold. Services like the aquatics center, gymnasium, group exercise classes, and child watch will return during the “Yellow” phase. Day passes, programs, and all other services will wait until the “Green” phase. The progression of phases will be based on customer feedback, staffing, and, most importantly, the state of the coronavirus in the Grand Rapids area.

“Even as we reopen, the COVID-19 pandemic is still with us, and we can’t ignore its impact on the people we serve,” said Captain Brutto. “Every step we take is rooted in the health and safety of our members and guests.”

During its closure, the Kroc Center has continued to provide services to members and guests by offering free sack lunches and grocery boxes, check-in calls for seniors, and virtual fitness classes and other activities. Kroc Church has also continued meeting, both via online channels and outdoor worship services.

Family friendly ‘Moovies’ coming to Fifth-Third Ballpark in September

By Luke Schrock, WKTV Intern

ken@wktv.org

The West Michigan Whitecaps and Milk Means More are bringing fans family friendly fun from Fifth-Third Ballpark once again, this time with a month full of ‘Moovies from the Mound” — all with safety at the forefront.

“Once our baseball season was cancelled on June 30th, we began working on ways to energize the event side of our business,” and came up with the idea of showing movies, Steve VanWagoner, Whitecaps director of marketing and media relations, said to WKTV.

Movies from the Mound will continue throughout September starting Friday, Sept. 11, with the first of two films starting at 6 p.m. There will also be films continuing on select Fridays and Saturdays, at various times. Fifth Third Ballpark is located at 4500 West River Dr., Comstock Park.

“We put together a safety plan and got advice from local health officials,” he said. “The plan included painted 120 12-foot by 12-foot plots in the outfield, distanced and will hold six people with lots of room. We check temperatures of everyone entering the ballpark and everyone (even children) wear masks when around in the park and take them off when in their plots.”

During the month of September showings will include “Pets 2”, “Remember the Titans”, “Frozen 2”, “Onward”, “The Mighty Ducks”, “Incredibles 2”, “Aladdin”, “The Greatest Showman”, “Harry Potter”, and “Pirates of the Caribbean”. Each screening will begin with a 10-minute presentation from Milk Means More to educate viewers on the importance of dairy farmers and dairy products.

Plots are $35 per plot, but to see both movies in a night a plot must be purchased for each movie. Each plot is socially distanced and includes six tickets per plot in the outfield.

Outfield restrooms will be open. Standard Fifth Third Ballpark Policy for prohibited items will apply — no outside food and beverage, glass bottles/containers, coolers, alcoholic drinks, smoking including E-Cigs, backpacks, bug spray, pets/animals (except certified assistance dogs) or weapons.
 

To reserve a plot and to learn more visit fifththirdballpark.com or check out the West Michigan Whitecaps Facebook page.

Photo of the Week: In honor of him

Last week, vintage World War II planes flew over Grand Rapids in honor of the 75th anniversary of VJ (Victory over Japan) Day. Waiting for the event was 103-year-old Grand Rapids veteran Virgil Westdale who served as a U.S. Army Air Corps pilot in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and the 52nd Artillery Battalion. Local photographer Tom De Vette, owner of Tom De Vette Photography, was out to capture the flyover when he saw Westdale, and fans, on Grand Rapids’ Gillette Bridge. Tom was kind enough to also share a few photos he took of the flyover as well.

If you have a photo that you would like considered for Photo of the Week, send it to WKTV Managing Editor Joanne Bailey-Boorsma at joanne@wktv.org.

Can’t be in stands? WKTV to live broadcast, livestream featured prep football games

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

WKTV Community Media each year broadcasts fall football games as part of its extensive coverage of Wyoming and Kentwood high school athletic teams. But with in-stadium crowds limited in this shortened prep football season due to COVID-19 restrictions, WKTV’s sports coverage will expand to provide fans with live coverage of games.

Starting with the Week 4 contest featuring Zeeland West at Wyoming High on Friday, Sept. 18, WKTV will livestream our Featured Game broadcast on WKTV.org (click on Watch Live), as well as on cable television in Wyoming and Kentwood on Comcast Channel 25 and AT&T Channel 99 Community Channel.

WKTV’s Feature Game coverage crew is ready for a little football. (WKTV)

“WKTV prides itself on being the community connection for the cities of Wyoming and Kentwood, so we wanted to step up and be the weekly football source for fans with live coverage of games,” Tom Norton, general manager for WKTV Community Media, said. “We thank the MHSAA for allowing us to bring these games live to our community.”

At this time, our schedule will include the Week 5 Sept. 25 game of Grandville at East Kentwood, and the Week 6 Oct. 2 game of Belding at Godwin Heights. (East Kentwood’s home game will be live-streamed on a different platform, and WKTV will provide that information.) WKTV also plans to cover local games in Week 8 and 9, and possibly into opening round of the now-expanded playoffs.

“We’re relaxing our live video rules during the pandemic to allow games to get out to fans who can’t get to the events,” John Johnson, director of broadcast properties for the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA), said.

For more information on WKTV coverage of football and other fall prep sports, follow us at wktvjournal.org/sports.

GVSU economics expert: Recession recovery picks up speed

Brian Long is a local business forecaster. Credit: GVSU

By Dottie Barnes
GVSU


The economic bounce that was expected for West Michigan has arrived, said Brian G. Long, director of Supply Management Research in Grand Valley State University’s Seidman College of Business.

Long said the local index of new orders, the most important index, flipped to positive for the first time in several months.

Long surveyed local business leaders and his findings below are based on data collected during the last two weeks of August.

The survey’s index of business improvement (new orders) came in at +19, up from the +12 reported last month. The production index came in essentially unchanged at +13. The index of purchases remained unchanged at +10, and the employment index rose to +13 from -4.

Long said while some firms are still struggling, others are already back at full capacity.

“A significant number of local firms have reopened and are doing just as well or better than they were before the recession began,” he said.

Long said some local business owners report having difficulty finding enough workers, especially workers with specific skills.

 

“If this trend continues, our unemployment rates will continue to fall,” said Long. “That said, the recovery from every recession in recent memory has begun with a surge in pent-up demand. After the initial surge, we begin to see the permanent damage from the recession.”

Long said pending a significant rise in COVID-19 cases, the current positive numbers should improve a little more for September. He added it will be difficult to know where the economy is headed until the November elections are done.

The Institute for Supply Management survey is a monthly survey of business conditions that includes 45 purchasing managers in the greater Grand Rapids area and 25 in Kalamazoo. The respondents are from the region’s major industrial manufacturers, distributors and industrial service organizations. It is patterned after a nationwide survey conducted by the Institute for Supply Management. Each month, the respondents are asked to rate eight factors as “same,” “up” or “down.”

Signs installed opening the 99-mile Chain of Lakes Water Trail

By Ellie Kirkpatrick
Paddle Antrim

Paddle Antrim announced that signs have been installed along the Chain of Lakes Water Trail, Northern Michigan’s only state designated water trail. From small lakes to big lakes, and meandering rivers, this trail provides a paddling experience for all skill levels. Whether kayaking, canoeing, paddle boarding or fishing, there are opportunities for all to enjoy along this 99 mile long trail.

“While the lakes have always existed, the water trail provides the information people need to make decisions on where to paddle,” said Deana Jerdee, Executive Director of Paddle Antrim.  “We have worked with our partners to identify 84 access sites and consolidate the information so people know where they can launch, what amenities are available, what distances they will travel and more to help create a quality paddling experience.”

The Chain of Lakes Water Trail offers paddlers access to quaint communities along the trail including Ellsworth, Central Lake, Bellaire, and Elk Rapids. These towns all have access points that allow paddlers to easily walk into town to enjoy the plentiful amenities including restaurants, retail stores, outfitters, art galleries and more. “Over the last few years we have seen a steady incline in our paddle sport rentals,” said Patrick Boyd, owner of Paddles and Pedals, located in downtown Bellaire.  “Word about the water trail is getting out and with the current pandemic more people are craving access to nature. We love seeing paddlers out on the water enjoying the beauty of the area.”

Paddle Antrim has been working on the Chain of Lakes Water Trail since 2015. The trail depends on access sites identified and approved by 19 governmental and nonprofit entities.  Signs have been placed near the water’s edge at each access site so paddlers can identify where to exit from the water. Additional information on stewardship, safety, paddling experiences, and more can be found on kiosks at main and secondary access sites. “The emphasis on stewardship included in the water trail signs is essential to educate new and experienced paddlers about ways to protect our waterways,” said Christine Crissman, Executive Director of The Watershed Center Grand Traverse Bay. “The appreciation paddlers have for clean, healthy water distinctively motivates them to prevent concerns such as shoreline erosion and spreading aquatic invasive species.”

In addition to the signs being installed, Paddle Antrim has launched a new website with all the Chain of Lakes Water Trail information that paddlers need in order to plan a safe and fun trip. The non-profit is in the final stages of developing a waterproof Paddler’s Guide which will be available for purchase on their website. These tools are meant to help paddlers plan ahead to ensure a fun and safe experience and remind them of safety measures and stewardship.

 

Paddle Antrim raised $275,000 for the launch of the water trail, which includes the installation of these signs. The non-profit is grateful to Consumers Energy Foundation, Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Rosso Family Foundation, Rotary Charities of Traverse City, The Harry A. and Margaret D. Towsley Foundation and many other donors, partners, and supporters who helped make this project a success.

For more information about the Chain of Lakes, visit Paddle Antrim’s website or visit www.michiganwatertrails.org.

WKTV lets the Sun In

By Tom Norton


From that nascent moment when Benjamin Franklin’s discovered electricity in 1757 to September 1882 when Thomas Edison went online with his first power dynamo to generate it, the transformative power (pun intended) of electricity on society is evident everywhere. So common and everyday that we don’t even imagine the world we live in without electricity. Perhaps next to the discovery of fire, the harnessing of electricity is one of the greatest leaps in the advancement of civilization, completely transforming the personal lives of everyone on the planet.

But it wasn’t until the burgeoning environmental movement of the 1960s and 1970s that the primary means of powering the generators to make the world’s electricity came under closer scrutiny. Air and water pollution from coal fired power plants and the early accidents with nuclear power inspired and drove science to continue to look for other means of generating electricity. By far one of the biggest contributors to airborne pollution, coal-fired power plants were on track to only increase their output; both of electricity and pollution, as the earth’s population grew and demand exponentially increased.

A key question is how does that sort of information filter down to the average business or home?  WKTV Community Media here in Wyoming, Michigan, has taken the plunge into renewable energy and spent the last three months converting the power needs of a full fledged television station over to solar power. For a television station like WKTV, the power needs are significant. At any one time, full use of television and media production happening in the media facility consumes as much as 15,000 – 25,000 watts of electricity.  There are the lights, cameras, a control room and in addition to productions there are offices, editing bays, master control, a newsroom with its own studio needs and remote vehicles plugged in to the main building when not on the road and all of it operating from 9 a.m. until 10 p.m. each day. It all adds up to hefty and expensive electrical use.

During the past 12 years, WKTV’s monthly electrical bill has tripled. Even taking into account rate increases, which have been relatively constant, that’s a dramatic increase and reflects facility growth. Realizing this was a financial issue as much as an environmental one, WKTV sought to discover how they could reduce this significant expense.

The array of inverters and panels that take converted solar to the power grid (WKTV Journal)

Getting By With a Little Help from Our Friends

There’s the familiar and sometimes sarcastic saying of “Your tax dollars at work” and perhaps for once it’s become a truism. With NASA’s now nearly 60-year history of scientific and tech innovation playing out in the marketplace, the benefits are being felt at WKTV.

   

In 1954, American scientists at Bell Labs created the very first photovoltaic cell, converting sunlight into electrical current. At the time, the efficiency of that first cell was only 4 percent, but the early space program instantly recognized this capability of solar power to provide current to everything early NASA researchers and scientists were dreaming of putting up into space. In fact, one of the most rewarding partnerships between government and private enterprise is found in NASA’s sharing of scientific knowledge with the private sector in hopes of picking up the pace of technological developments. NASA has devoted an entire division, called Advanced Energy Photovoltaics, for the last several decades to this ongoing collaboration with American private enterprise.

 

The array of 252 solar panels on the roof of WKTV Community Media (WKTV Journal)

So if some wonder what this means to the average home or average-sized business, the answer is “plenty.” The technological advancements made at NASA in the last 60 plus years extend way beyond Velcro and cordless drills. If someone considers the advancements in solar necessary for the Mars Rovers to successfully operate on the red planet, where incidentally the power of the sun is significantly weaker; then a person can appreciate how this can translate to real practical advancements here on Earth.

When WKTV initially inquired about solar power for its facility, there was an initial assumption that it would be expensive and only moderately effective, but there was a feeling that it was worth at least an inquiry. After submitting months of electrical usage reports to multiple companies for analysis on the effectiveness of a solar array, the prospects were encouraging. On average, the prognosis that came in was that by switching to solar, WKTV could see a reduction of 90-95 percent in its annual electrical costs.

In other words, it was no longer your grandfather’s solar. Solar had come a long way increasing the ratio of light converted to electricity. And with a payback schedule of 13 years for an array of 252 panels spread over a 10,000 square-foot roof, the numbers did work in WKTV’s favor. The operating principle for solar operation is relatively simple: once sunlight is converted into electricity on the roof, an array of inverters installed inside the facility distribute that power to the facility. Any unused portion of solar electricity is then sent onto the grid where Consumer’s Energy will apply it to its own power generation needs and that will then generate a credit toward the facility’s power costs. This method is what reduces the annual electric costs by as much as 95 percent. With 252 panels so efficient they can even generate small amounts electricity in moonlight, it’s looking brighter for solar (again, pun intended.)

Coal accounts for just 22 percent of America’s energy sourcing (Tony Webster)

The Green Equation

While everyone knows that pollution is bad both for the planet and all of us living here, the debate lies in how to handle it. Since coal is now one of the most expensive means of generating electricity, some projections are that coal will be completely retired from power generation in just ten more years. Already coal accounts for just 22 percent of America’s energy sourcing. Much of this is because the costs of renewable energy sourcing is dropping dramatically. While coal fired plants continue to go offline annually, here in Michigan companies like Consumer’s Energy know that incentivizing customers to use less electricity by subsidizing customers with the latest power saving tech is far cheaper than building a new power plant.  In a 2019 USA Today article, Mike O’Boyle, Director of Electricity Policy for Energy Innovation, a research non-profit group that is focused on reducing greenhouse gas emissions, stated that the U.S. should be open to a multitude of solutions. He said that innovation is going to find ways to keep the system running at lower costs, adding that if the market sets the agenda technology areas increasingly lean toward more cost efficient carbon neutral solutions.

 

Judging from the fact that several years ago, the idea of going completely solar at WKTV was something not even on the facility’s radar screen to becoming a reality shows that it’s dangerous to say “never.”

 

So starting in late September 2020, WKTV will throw the switch and begin generating daily electricity needs from the star at the center of our solar system. Here on what’s referred to as the “third rock from the sun,” one organization’s leap into solar may only add up to one step for a small business, but still is a giant leap forward for much lower utility bills.

Tom Norton is the General Manager of WKTV Community Media and writes for the WKTV Journal on science, technology and communications issues.  

Snapshots: Fun things to try this Labor Day Weekend

You still have a lot of time to make yourself be what you want. There’s still lots of good in the world.

S.E. Hinton, The Outsiders


By Faith Morgan
WKTV Intern



The usual haul from magnet fishing — odds and ends.(WKTV/Matt Kavaluskis)


Try Magnet Fishing



For many people, fishing is a common hobby during Labor Day Weekend. The Grand River is a perfect site for fishing and more recently popular: magnet fishing. Using strong magnets, you can lure metallic treasures that were lost along the bottom of large bodies of water. Just make sure to do so carefully and turn in any dangerous or suspicious items to your local police.


For the Universe (Supplied)


Listen to a local band

Looking for some new music to listen to during your Labor Day weekend travels? Grand Rapids-based For the Universe releases its self-title record at 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 4. The heavy metal band’s new record will be available to download and stream through the Bandcamp app.



Watch Movies in the Park

Celebration Cinema is hosting Sunset Cinema at Studio Park throughout the month of September. This Friday, Sept. 4 through Wednesday, Sept. 9, the film “Arrival” will be featured. When mysterious spacecraft land across the globe, expert translator Louise Banks (Amy Adams) is sent to decipher their intent. As tensions mount, Banks discovered the aliens’ true purpose and, to avert global war, takes a chance that could threaten humanity.  “Arrival,” released in 2016, also stars Jeremy Renner and Forest Whitaker. For ticket prices and showtimes you can visit https://celebrationcinema.com/


Fun fact: Chocolate Holidays

Super Simple Chocolate Milkshake (Smucker’s)

We love the delectable taste of chocolate so much that we have national holidays surrounding this treat. This month we celebrate three chocolate holidays: Sept. 12 is National Chocolate Milkshake Day, Sept. 13 is International Chocolate Day, and Sept. 22 is White Chocolate Day, which really isn’t chocolate, but hey, we’re fine with that. Time to go buy some chocolate!

Coaches ready as local high school sports shift into high gear following Gov. Whitmer, MHSAA action

Friday night lights could be returning to local fields. (Shown is Lee High School’s football team celebrating a win over Galesburg-Augusta in 2019.) (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

In 2020, this year of pandemic, Wyoming and Kentwood high school athletic teams — especially football teams — have, in the opinion of Wyoming high head football coach Irv Sigler, “learned to adjust and adapt to whatever happens.”

So on Thursday, Sept. 2, when Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s office announced competitive sports would be allowed and the Michigan High School Athletic Association give its approval, with restrictions and with pages of state health department and MHSAA guidance, local teams hit the ground running.

The result of state and MHSAA action is some fall sports that had been in limbo, including boys soccer and volleyball, can begin competitive action against other schools as early as the week of Sept. 7. And high school football can begin be under the Friday-night lights beginning Sept. 18.

The final approval for beginning of competitive action will be left to the discretion of individual school districts and athletic departments, according to a MHSAA statement.

But with the news, local football teams are chomping at the bit and ready to get into pads for the first time next week, and will be ready to begin action in two weeks.

East Kentwood football coach Anthony Kimbrough working with a previous year team at practice. (WKTV)

“Our players, especially our seniors, are extremely excited about playing on Friday nights thIs fall,” East Kentwood head football coach Tony Kimbrough said to WKTV. “Most teams have never stopped practicing, therefore adding pads and actually hitting one another won’t be an issue. We will hit the ground running on Tuesday, and we cannot wait.”

Coach Sigler echoed his fellow coach when it comes to his Wolves team being ready to play in two weeks.

“Our kids have worked hard and are ready for the opportunity,” Sigler said to WKTV. “All high school football players deserve to have their season — and everyone is very excited.  As for the time it takes to prepare — we are all essentially in the same boat, so there’s a sense of equal footing there.”

And there is a sense that school communities and football fans alike need the opportunity to have a degree of normality with a however-shortened football season.

“I truly believe that the return of high school football is what our state needs,” Kimbrough said. “COVID-19 has had a traumatic impact on many lives. I believe football will give everyone a much needed dose of hope and joy, and assurance that normal times are soon to return. This will certainly have a positive effect on the mental health of our student athletes. … (And) hopefully this will generate a lot excitement for our student body and the community.”
 

And while all high school athletic teams are expected to resume their approved fall 2020 schedules once competition starts, with football beginning with Week 4 games, there will be changes to the regular schedule of the football playoff system, the MHSAA also said.

“All football teams in 11 and 8-player football will qualify for the playoffs during this fall’s shortened season, and then advance through their usual postseason progression with 8-Player Finals the weekend of Nov. 27-28 and 11-Player Finals the weekend of Dec. 4-5,” according to the MHSAA statement.

All other fall 2020 tournaments will be conducted as previously scheduled.

Approvals, restrictions and health warnings

The fall 2020 football season was reinstated by the Representative Council of the Michigan High School Athletic Association after Gov. Whitmer’s Executive Order 176 this week lifted restrictions that previously did not allow football — as well as soccer, volleyball and competitive swimming — to be played.

But according to the MHSAA, “schools are not required to play any of those sports this fall, and may postpone until the spring. However, the MHSAA will conduct its postseason events in those four sports only for the Fall 2020 season.”

But the current order also sets spectator limits for outdoor and indoor events in Phase 4 of the MI Safe Start Plan, which Wyoming and Kentwood schools fall under. The details of this implementation of those limits are to be finalized by the individual school districts and high schools.

But general state restrictions on spectators of high school events were detailed by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHSS).

“Spectators for indoor organized sports are limited to the guests of the athletes with each athlete designating up to two guests. For outdoor sports competitions, the organizer of the competitions must either limit the audience to the guests of the participants with each athlete designating up to two guests, or limit total attendance to 100 people or fewer, including all participants like athletes, coaches, and staff.”
  

The MHSAA, too, has health guidance for the on-field athletes and teams.

“We share the Governor’s priorities of putting health and safety first, and the COVID-19 guidance and protocols designed by the MHSAA at her request have led to the safe starts in all sports across the state,” MHSAA executive director Mark Uyl said in the MHSAA statement. “Thirty three other states are currently participating in all fall sports, and the MHSAA and its member schools are committed to doing this as safely as possible.”

While the Governor’s new order allowed the MHSAA to go ahead with fall competitive sports, the state health department at the same time issued a warning to schools which decide to participate.

“Individuals can now choose whether or not to play organized sports, and if they do choose to play, this order requires strict safety measures to reduce risk,” Dr. Joneigh Khaldun, MDHSS chief medical executive, said in the Governor’s statement. “However, we know of 30 reported outbreaks involving athletic teams and facilities in August. Based on current data, contact sports create a high risk of COVID-19 transmission and MDHHS strongly recommends against participating in them at this time. We are not out of the woods yet. COVID-19 is still a very real threat to our families.”

With the high school football season now planned to begin Friday, Sept. 18, WKTV expects to resume its coverage of high school football action on that day.



Iron Fish Distillery celebrates its fourth anniversary

By Adrienne Brown-Reasner
West Michigan Tourist Association


Join Iron Fish Distillery Labor Day Weekend, Sept. 4 -6, 1-9 p.m., to celebrate their four-year journey as Michigan’s first Farm Distillery.

The weekend is packed full of live music, a special spirit release, barrel making demonstration, and safe social distancing following the Michigan Restaurant Promise.



*Limited seating. No reservations. First come, first serve. No parties more than 10 people.

The weekend celebrations include:



Friday, Sept. 4
1-7 p.m. Croze Nest Barrel Building Workshop
6:30 – 8:30 p.m Live Music with Blake Elliot

Saturday, Sept. 5
1 p.m. Rye Finished in Rum Cask Spirit Release.
6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Live music with Luke Winslow-King

Sunday, Sept. 6
1-9 p.m. Cocktails and wood-fired cuisine.
6-8 p.m. Live music with the Bootstrap Boys

Wow, sushi — Woodland Mall to welcome nine new retailers, restaurants this fall

One of Woodland Mall’s entrances. (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

Woodland Mall’s expanding line-up of retailers and restaurants has or will gain nine new arrivals this fall including the opening of Sephora and White House Black Market. And while you are shopping, a stop at the new WOW Sushi for lunch might be in order.

In addition, also now open at Woodland Mall are Jamba, Tempur-Pedic, Bath Planet and FunShop. WOW Sushi, The Zon3 and Windsor are set to open later this fall.

“We are delighted to welcome so many new arrivals to our growing portfolio of retailers and restaurants,” Cecily McCabe, Woodland Mall marketing director, said in supplied material. “We are looking forward to offering guests an expanded selection of shopping and dining options and a premium experience under our rigorous safety protocols.”

Sephora, now open in the Von Maur wing,  debuted in North America more than 20 years ago, and “has been a leader in prestige omni-retail with the purpose of creating an inviting beauty shopping experience and inspiring fearlessness in its community,” according to supplied material.

Also in the Von Maur wing, White House Black Market will open next to Bath & Body Works in early October. WHBM offers “polished black and white women’s clothing with pops of color and patterns for tailored dresses, tops, pants and accessories.”

WOW Sushi opened in the Café in the Woods Food Court at Woodland Mall Sept. 1. Men’s streetwear clothing store The Zon3 will open in the JCPenney wing near H&M in early October. In the Macy’s wing, Windsor will open near Shoe Encore across from Ann Taylor in early November.
 

Also on the list of new retailers and restaurants that recently opened is Jamba, located in the mall’s center court next to Starbucks. Jamba serves on-the-go freshly blended fruit and vegetable smoothies, made-to-order bowls, fresh-squeezed juices and shots, boosts and bites.

Shoppers will also discover FunShop, a new video arcade, in the Macy’s wing near Spencer’s. The space features a popular combination of the latest video and redemption games. Sanitizing wipes are available for customer use on high-touch areas.

Nearly 100 retailers and restaurants have reopened since June 1. A complete list can be viewed on Woodland Mall’s website.

In order to comply with Michigan requirements, occupancy numbers remain limited as the mall operates on reduced hours, Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. Some stores modify those hours further.

Woodland Mall asks guests to follow CDC recommendations, make use of the several hand sanitizer stations located throughout the mall, wear masks and practice physical distancing. Common area furniture and other elements where physical distancing cannot be enforced have been removed. While the play area remains closed indefinitely, food court seating is now available at reduced capacity.

Also, many retailers at the mall are currently hiring. Job seekers are encouraged to explore the list of openings here.

Honolulu House Museum opens Sept 5.

The Honolulu House Museum (Marshall Historical Society)

By Adrienne Brown-Reasner

West Michigan Tourist Association


The Honolulu House Museum will open for the 2020 season on Saturday, Sept 5. The opening had been delayed from April due to coronavirus concerns.

The museum at 107 N. Kalamazoo Ave. will be open from noon to 4 p.m. weekends only. Adult admission for a tour of the museum is $8. There is no charge for children under age 12 and under.

Tours will be limited to eight people. Masks will be required. Social distancing will be expected. Hand sanitizer will be available. Credit card payments are encouraged.

The Honolulu House Museum stands at the heart of Marshall’s National Historic District and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Historic American Buildings Survey. The house was built in 1860 for a former U.S. consul to the Sandwich (Hawaiian) Islands. Constructed of Marshall sandstone, the building is a wonderful blend of Italianate, Gothic Revival and Polynesian architecture.

The Marshall Historical Society has restored the building’s interior to its 1880s elegance that features decorative wall and ceiling paintings. A replica of the 1880s fence was installed in 2013 in front of the building. The Honolulu House is the headquarters of the Marshall Historical Society which has operated the building as a house museum since 1962.

Tickets and more information are available at marshallhistoricalsociety.org.

Traffic Tuesday Answer: Drinking and Driving

By Jenni Eby
City of Wyoming Department of Public Safety


Welcome to the Traffic Tuesday question. Each week, the question will be posted on Tuesday, and the answer posted Thursday.

Since there is nation-wide increase in patrols for impaired drivers currently going on, we’re going to focus on drunk driving this week. Most people know that driving with a blood alcohol level of .08 or higher is illegal. However, can you be arrested for driving with a blood alcohol level lower than .08?

  1. Yes
  2. No
  3. I’m not sure, I’ll check back Thursday!

Answer: 1) Yes. MCL 257. 625 covers “operating while intoxicated”. It specifically lists the BAC of .08, and also states that “a person, whether licensed or not, shall not operate a vehicle upon a highway or other place open to the general public or generally accessible to motor vehicles…within this state when, due to the consumption of alcoholic liquor, a controlled substance, or other intoxicating substance, or a combination of alcoholic liquor, a controlled substance, or other intoxicating substance, the person’s ability to operate the vehicle is visibly impaired.”

There are multiple validated and reliable tests that officers are trained to conduct roadside to determine impairment. These tests are not based on one’s blood alcohol content, but on how the alcohol affects a person. Someone could be impaired and unable to operate a vehicle before reaching the .08 BAC level.

Circle Theater schedules last outdoor summer concert

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


The Circle Theatre’s last of its three-part Circle Summer Fundraising Concert series on Wednesday, Sept. 16. The outdoor concert will be at 7 p.m. on the lawn of the Circle Theatre which is the Aquinas College Performing Arts Center located at 1703 Robinson Rd. SE.

The outdoor, family-friendly, socially distant concert will feature the best of West Michigan musicians performing a variety of music. The concerts will take place on the lawn of the Circle Theatre. Patrons are urged to bring a picnic, good friends, and relax while enjoying the music.

Social distancing between groups is required, so feel free to spread out and enjoy the great summer weather! Tickets are $25 and all proceeds go directly to Circle Theatre.

September’s fundraising performance will feature performances by Lisa Knight, Ellie Frances, and Larry Young. Musicians for the performance include Perry Moody, John Parker, and Danny Robinson. Songs will include “What’s Going On,” “Master Blaster,” “Mustang Sally,” “Chain of Fools,” and others.

Circle Theatre is committed to keeping the health and safety of our patrons, volunteers, performers, and staff our top priority. It is because of this, that the decision to postpone our 68th season was made. This extended intermission has left Circle Theatre with the task of raising $200,000 to cover costs during this time. With the support of the community, Circle Theatre has raised $100,000 to date.

To learn more about Circle Theatre, the September concert and other programs, visit circletheatre.org.

Documentary follows resident’s journey of walking the Lake Michigan coastline

Micah Rynders and Jacob Penning met up during Penning’s walk along the coast of Lake Michigan. (From The Middle Coast)

By Anna Johns

WKTV Intern

The Lake Michigan coastline is one of Michigan’s most treasured places. Every year visitors walk a portion of its shore and take in the beautiful sites. But how many can say they have hiked the 473 miles from the Indiana border to Mackinaw City?

West Michigan native and Grand Rapids Christian graduate Jacob Penning can make that claim. With friend and former WKTV intern Micah Rynders, he produced the documentary “The Middle Coast” to share his story. That documentary, “The Middle Coast,” premieres Sept. 8 at 7 p.m. on WKTV Channel 25 with re-air dates Sept. 9 at 1 a.m. and Sept. 11 at 10 a.m. 

The West Michigan coastline. (From The Middle Coast)

On July 9, 2018, Penning started at the Indiana border and headed north on his hike which spanned four weeks. With no trail, he embarked on a solo hike along the Michigan lakeshore documenting every step of the way. The hike was rough and Penning needed to rely on the help of Michigan residents to complete his journey.

“In the summer of 2017, I hiked the Colorado trail, an 484-mile walk across the width of the state,” Penning wrote in an email to WKTV. He is currently traveling through Montana. “Looking at a map of the coast of Michigan, and measuring the distance from the boarder of Indiana to the bridge, I found it was almost exactly the same distance as my hike in Colorado. Having already walked that far before, and seeing how follow-able the coast was with constant access to water and many cities to resupply food, I knew that it could be done.”

Coming up to Big Red in Holland. (From The Middle Coast)

During his journey, he spent his nights resting at campsites and friends’ homes. Along the way, there was no shortage of familiar faces from catching his old teacher at the beach to finding his former neighbors at a campground.

“There was not an ugly place along the entire coastline,” Penning wrote. “Every part of the coast is uniquely beautiful.”

Penning made sure to take his time hiking the coast so he could stop at some of the state parks and cities along the way. From taking a jeep ride over the Silver Lake Sand Dunes to exploring Traverse City, he had his fair share of adventures.

“Muskegon State Park surprised me with its beautiful dunes and forests,” he said. “Crossing most every river channel was done by hitchhiking boats to get a ride across, this happened without fail every time that I needed it, usually from the first boat that passed by.”

The challenge was the actual hike, Penning said. Hiking 20-plus miles day after day is taxing on the mind and body and requires perseverance and determination when the end seems so far away, he said.

“I don’t think he ever actually felt negatively about the journey, nor do I think he ever really felt alone,” Rynders said. “I think he looks back on the whole journey with awe and excitement so much more than he thinks anything negative about any of it.”



The entire production was filmed predominately on a GoPro with close up shots done on a Sony mirror-less camera, as well as drone footage shot by Rynders. When all was done, they had hours of footage. The goal was to submit the film to the Banff Mountain Film Festival, the world’s largest mountain film festival, and to do that they needed to cut the footage down to 20 minutes. This took an excessive amount of time, however, in the end they believe the finished product exceeded their expectations, Rynders said. They will know in October if the film made it as a finalist.


In a few weeks, Penning said he will be moving to Ethiopia to produce music and spread the gospel in the capital of Addis Ababa for the next year. Penning and Rynders also are “dreaming” about their next project, so “more adventures are on the horizon,” according to Penning.

The end of the line: Jacob Penning touches the Mackinac Bridge to signal the end of his 473-mile journey along Lake Michigan’s coastline. (From The Middle Coast)

St. Julian Winery & Distillery installs tallest tanks in Michigan

By Adrienne Brown-Reasner
West Michigan Tourist Association


St. Julian Winery & Distillery, which will celebrate its 100th year in 2021, continues to modernize and expand its operations with the installation of two state-of-the-art storage tanks at its facility in Paw Paw. The 88-foot tanks, which were installed on Aug. 28, and expand storage capacity by 140,000 gallons, are believed to be the tallest to be installed at the winery and quite possibly the state of Michigan.

“We’re replacing many of our old storage tanks and expanding capacity at the Paw Paw facility,” said John Braganini, President and third generation owner. “As we near our 100th anniversary, we have made the strategic decision to modernize and expand our capabilities at St. Julian Winery & Distillery. While we have been around for a century, we have always looked to the horizon and what comes next. That is reflected not only in our production facilities, but also in the products we offer for the all wine consumers.”

Installed just in time for the 2020 harvest, the new tanks will be used for storing base wines and/or juice intended for blending and/or bottling. Together the tanks expand capacity by 140,000 gallons or 10% of the total capacity of the winery. The tanks are stainless-steel with glycol cooling systems, providing the winemaking staff with the capability to control temperature of wines more tightly during and after fermentation.

KDL announces ninth annual Write Michigan Short Story Contest

By Katie Zuidema
Kent District Library


Kent District Library, Hancock School Public Library and Schuler Books announce the ninth annual Write Michigan Short Story Contest, which drew over 1,000 Michigan writers last year.

Writers of all ages are invited to enter, with separate categories for youth, teens, adults and Spanish language (11 and younger). Winning entries will be published and receive cash prizes.



With so many kids being homeschooled or learning virtually this year, Write Michigan is a great option to get them thinking, writing, expressing and imagining. Teachers are encouraged to have their students participate.

“Write Michigan provides educators at all levels an opportunity to get students excited about writing,” said KDL Community Liaison Jim Davis. “This annual program allows writers of all ages and experiences to enter the short-story arena while giving a great support to school leaders and their curricula.”


Stories can be submitted at www.writemichigan.org through Monday, November 30 at noon. Details include a 3,000-word maximum length; $10 entry fee for ages 18 and above, free for 17 and under; current Michigan residents only; all entries must be submitted online.

Winners are chosen by public vote for the Readers’ Choice award and by a panel of judges for the Judges’ Choice award. Voters and judges choose winners from the top ten semi-finalists. The top honor in each category receives a $500 cash prize and a Judges’ Choice runner-up in each category will receive a $250 cash prize. In addition, judges will award one writer a slot in Johnathan Rand’s 2021 Author Quest writing camp for kids ages 10-13.

Winners will be honored during an awards ceremony in March and their story will be published in an anthology by Chapbook Press.



KDL welcomes the Hancock School Public Library as a partner this year. HSPL will work to attract writers and volunteers from the Upper Penninsula to participate in Write Michigan.


For more information on Write Michigan, visit  www.writemichigan.org. For the Write Michigan media kit, including logo, poster and additional graphics, please visit https://writemichigan.org/media-kit/.

Despite COVID-19’s impact, Kent County reports progress on 2019-23 Strategic Plan implementation

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

Despite the COVID-19 pandemic hitting, and Kent County taking a leadership role in local response and recovery through its health department and its allocations of federal CARES Act funds, the county is moving ahead with it 2019-23 Strategic Plan — and it has the stats to prove it.

Kent County announced this week that it had launched its 2019-2023 Strategic Plan Performance Dashboard, designed to track progress made toward achieving the priorities and goals of the County’s Strategic Plan, which was approved by the Board of Commissioners in June 2019.

“Families and businesses are struggling with their own budgets, so we have a responsibility to make their government more accountable and transparent than ever,” Kent County Board of Commissioners Chair Mandy Bolter said in supplied material. “Moving more County data online will help taxpayers know what we are focused on and empower them to hold our feet to the fire when we aren’t getting the job done.”

While there have been major disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, County leadership continues to review the plan and “adjust as necessary to ensure the priorities and goals reflect the changing economic conditions and community needs,” according to the county statement.

The Strategic Plan Performance Dashboard gives more insight into where specific priorities have been disrupted due to COVID-19 and how far along they are to completion.

The dashboard uses seven measures — status pending, on track, some disruption, major disruption, upcoming, discontinued and complete — to track progress toward five priorities: economic prosperity, quality of life, service delivery, inclusive participation and effective communications.


“This is all about effectively and efficiently using our resources to meet community needs,” Kent County Administrator Wayman Britt said in supplied material. “This plan acts as a guide when deciding how to prioritize activities, allocate resources and fund initiatives — and it’s been an invaluable tool during this pandemic.”

Visit Kent County’s Strategic Plan Performance Dashboard here. See the entire strategic plan here. And see here a WKTV Journal In Focus interview with Kent County leadership after they approved the plan.


Popular off-road competition set for Sept. 12

Bundy Hill Offroad Park was established in 2009 by Mike and Deb Kortas. It has become Michigan’s largest off-road park with a total of 300 acres of all-terrain trail riding for all ages.

We offer a combination of mud, rocks, tire crawls, wooded areas, hill climbs, pea gravel hills, valleys and scramble areas. We at Bundy Hill strive to deliver the best off-roading experience to each customer starting from check-in to check-out.

Bundy Hill accommodates our riders by providing a picnic area, rustic camping, wash station for you and your vehicle, Bundy Hill novelties and gear.

Makings its return this year is our King of the Hill event on Sept. 12.  This popular off-road challenge races four exclusive classes of off-road vehicles.

Stock, Modified, & Unlimited will race for the top spot in their class. Winners will then go on to compete for the “King of the Hill” crown and a $500.00 payout.

The fourth class will be a special UTV (side by side) challenge competing to win big money as well.

All four classes will have a chance to be entered into the “Best of Show” competition with an additional $500.00 payout.

The King of the Hill 4×4 Shootout will be held on Sept. 12 at Bundy Hill Offroad Park in Jerome, Mich.

The Vendor and Sponsor areas open for set up at 8 a.m. and to the public at 9 a.m., followed by the Shootout commencing at noon.