Category Archives: 3-bottom

Wyoming residents rally around ‘Knight of 44th Street’ to keep him in the community

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wkrtv.org


When Wyoming resident Matthew Gould posted his neighbor’s 10-foot suit of armor statue for sale, he wasn’t expecting the type of community outpouring that would cause his phone to ding constantly throughout the day.

“I don’t think after I posted the listing that I was even able to close my phone before it started dinging,” he said.

The ‘”Knight of 44th Street” is a familiar symbol to many residents traveling along 44th Street. (Photo courtesy of Matthew Gould)

Few who have driven 44th Street heading east from U.S. 131 have missed the 10-foot statue sitting on the lawn of the Zoet home. According to Mabel Zoet, her husband Nelson, who was an auctioneer, often traveled to Laredo, Texas, where he would purchase the suits of armor statues, which were made in Mexico. He then would sell the seven-foot statues, she said.

“One day a friend said to him ‘Why don’t you put up a 10-foot one up?’” Zoet said. “So he put one up next to the flagpole.”

That was about 30 years ago, Zoet said. Now after 58 years in their home, Zoet is looking to downsize. So she decided to put the “tin man” up for sale, never realizing how much of a symbol it had become to the community and her neighbors.

“[I] used to live down the block from ‘my knight in shining armor,’” wrote Ruth Ann S. on the Grand Rapids Online Garage Sale Facebook page.

Fida K. wrote “I used to see this as my parents drove by that house as a young child!! I love/still love him!! Such an icon! Please keep him!”

“Oh I’m so sad to see this for sale,” wrote Amber M. “I remember walking past that thing when I was a little girl on the way to school and imagining the things we could do if we were inside it.”

“It’s like the only cool thing on 44th Street,” wrote John F.

In fact, so many people thought the statue was too “cool” to be moved that they encouraged a GoFundMe campaign to purchase the statue to keep it in the community. In less than 24 hours, the $500 was raised to purchase it.

For more than 30 years, the suit of armor statue has been on the Zoet property located along 44th Street just east of US-131. (Photo courtesy of Matthew Gould)

Gould said the task now will be to find a new home for the statue.

 

“I feel like this needs to be put up in a park nearby or even downtown with a little plaque ‘The Knight of 44th St.’” wrote DK. “Crazy how this was something of significance to a lot of us growing up!”

Alex C. agreed. “This is a landmark icon, we need to preserve this art. Make it known, put the man’s name on a plaque at least.”

For now, Zoet said the statue can stay in her yard. Gould, who lives next door to Zoet, said his yard is also available until a permanent home can be found. Gould said he plans to reach out to city officials in 2022 as he works to secure the statue’s new home.

“…He was a childhood icon for me when my parents would take me to C’s Dairy and Dogs for the car shows,” wrote Josh W. “I’m forever thankful for this guy no matter where he goes.”

Kentwood’s Endeavor Elementary one of two state schools to earn national honor

Video produced and offered courtesy of Kentwood Public Schools.

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

The National Association of ESEA State Program Administrators recently announced that Kentwood Public School’s Endeavor Elementary School has been nationally recognized as a Distinguished School, according to an emailed statement from KPS administration.

The honor is only awarded to two schools within the state of Michigan. Selected schools must show excellence in education as evidenced by student achievement gains.

“The team at Endeavor Elementary demonstrates excellence and tenacity in their work on a daily basis,” KPS Superintendent Kevin Polston said in supplied material. “We are extremely proud of Endeavor’s achievement and commitment to academic achievement for all students.”
 

Endeavor Elementary won the award for excellence in serving English Learners. Schools are recognized for their approaches to teaching and learning, professional development opportunities, individualized programs and strong partnerships between schools, parents and the community.  The selection criteria for this award included the multilingual learners’ achievement on WIDA assessment and school accountability data.

“This is a whole team award. All of our staff have played a crucial role in loving and educating our multilingual learners,” Mark Bea, principal of Endeavor Elementary, said in supplied material. “From our KPS central office who provides clear direction, to our school EL program and EVERY teacher who creates the family environment and targeted instruction to make it happen; from our food service, custodial, and paraprofessionals who provide critical services, to our office and itinerant staff who offer unending support.

“Together with the efforts of students, parents, staff and a supportive community we can achieve true excellence!”
 

Out of the top nine Michigan schools, MDE identified two other Kentwood elementary buildings, Glenwood and Discovery, for their success with English Learners.

The Michigan Department of Education will cover the cost for travel, food and lodging for three staff members to be recognized at the National ESEA Conference. The conference, held in New Orleans, offers opportunities for staff members to learn from nationally recognized leaders and experts in education. Participants can also network with colleagues from all over the United States.

Proposed eastern sandhill cranes hunt in breeding states stirs controversy

A pair of eastern sandhill cranes keep a lookout for predators. These birds normally stay together unless one dies, in which case they’ve been known to start other family groups. Credit: Department of Natural Resources

By Nicholas Simon
Capital News Service


LANSING — Efforts by politicians to create a hunting season for eastern sandhill cranes in both Michigan and Wisconsin are stirring debates among hunters, farmers and birders.

A Michigan legislative resolution to encourage the Natural Resources Commission to explore the possibilities of issuing tags for cranes was introduced but not adopted. Wisconsin has gone further, with lawmakers introducing a bill in October to require the state Department of Natural Resources to issue permits to eligible hunters for the birds.

If either of these measures passes, it would be the first time the bird has been hunted legally in its breeding grounds since the species was nearly hunted to extinction in the early 1900s.

Advocates of a hunt in both states cited the agricultural damage caused by rising numbers of the birds, as well as increased opportunities for hunters as reasons to add the sandhill crane to their lists of state game birds.

However, hunting them is controversial for both birding groups and ornithological associations. They argue that the cranes’ unique ecology has historically made them vulnerable to overhunting.

“This bird wows and delights people,” said Heather Good, the executive director of Michigan Audubon, the state’s oldest conservation organization.

“It’s widely depicted in art, and it’s the oldest living species at more than 2.5 million years old. True conservationists do not take that history for granted,” Good said.

Sandhill cranes have the lowest juvenile survival rate of any game bird in North America, with only one in 10 nests producing a chick that survives to adulthood, according to the Wisconsin Society for Ornithology. One reason is the time it takes for the birds to reach maturity, with pairs being an average of 4 years old before they can reproduce, it said.

Eastern Sand Hill Cranes have a low juvenile survival rate. (Wikipedia/http://www.birdphotos.com)

Their low birth rate, paired with increased habitat loss and overhunting during the early 1900s, led to its eradication from a number of Great Lakes states, including Illinois, Ohio and Indiana. By the 1930s, there were only 25 breeding pairs in Wisconsin, according to population counts at the time.

Researchers from the University of Wisconsin, like Mark Berres, claim that near-extinction means that the eastern sandhill crane still has problems with genetic diversity, which makes it more susceptible to overhunting.

In an interview with the University of Wisconsin News, Berres said: “We have a pretty good understanding of why the birds are doing so well, but we’re really just starting to figure out the population’s breeding structure. To me it screams ‘don’t touch them.’”

Michigan DNR officials claim that the bird’s destructive behavior towards crops is a sign of resilience and adaptability.

 

The cranes tend to travel into cornfields from adjacent wetlands and eat the new shoots as they sprout out of the ground in the springtime. Farmers say they can leave large sections of their field bare.

 

“They’re an adaptable species and they’ve been able to take advantage of available habitats like wetlands and emerging wetlands,” said Barbara Avers, the waterfowl and wetland specialist at the Michigan DNR. “But they are now using agricultural products as an abundant food source, and we are really seeing their numbers take off.”

Despite the rising rates of agricultural destruction, ornithological groups say that’s not an issue because of existing solutions such as repellents that make new plants taste bitter so cranes stay away.

However, the cost of repellent ranges from $6 to $10 per acre, and some farmers are unwilling to take on the added cost and time to treat their crops. The federal government offers a permit to such farmers to kill cranes that are damaging their crops.

Federal regulations make it illegal for those hunters to consume meat from the cranes they kill. Instead, carcasses are left in the field to discourage other groups of cranes from coming to that farm.

 

Hunting groups in both states call that a waste of natural resources and argue that a hunting season would both reduce population numbers for farmers and provide an economic opportunity for the state DNRs.

 

At an appearance with Republican lawmakers in Wisconsin, Michigan musician and pro-hunting activist Ted Nugent called sandhill cranes “ribeyes in the sky,” referring to his desire to eat them.

In a presentation to the Natural Resources Commission, Nick Green, the public information officer for Michigan United Conservation Clubs, said hunters both understand population management strategies and provide funding for habitat restoration.

Green said, “Numerous game and no-game species have all flourished thanks to funding generated almost exclusively from hunting license sales and the tax on firearms and ammunition.”

At a commission meeting this fall, officials from Michigan Audubon and the Michigan Humane Society said DNR has focused too much on hunters in the past.

Good said, “Conservation is not a sport, it’s actually a science.”

Molly Tamulevich, the Michigan director for the Humane Society of the United States, said, “In conversations with commissioners, it’s clear that some of you believe that the primary role of the Natural Resources Commission is to serve the fewer than 7% of Michiganders who hold a hunting license.

“In fact, the lens through which the commission’s decisions are made frames Michigan’s wildlife entirely as a resource to be managed by being killed by game license holders,” she said.

Tamulevich said she was frustrated with the lack of representation for Michigan’s growing eco-friendly and non-hunting residents, saying that ignores economic benefits produced by birders and native Anishinaabe communities that consider the bird sacred.

“It’s time the decision-making bodies start to pay attention to the voices of Michigan citizens who are heavily invested in their outdoors land and wild areas but chose not to hunt, trap or kill for trophies, cash prizes and bragging rights,” Tamulevich said.

Wyoming City Council honors longtime public servant, Harold Voorhees

Mayor Jack Poll reads the proclamation thanking Harold Voorhees for his service as a Kent County commissioner. (WKTV)

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


Harold Voorhees

At its Monday council meeting, the Wyoming City Council recognized the two decades of contributions from former Kent County commissioner Harold Voorhees.

Voorhees, who had been involved in public service from the late 1980s, retired from public service in 2020 when he decided not to seek re-election as a Kent County commissioner.

Wyoming Council member Kent Vanderwood said he remembers when Voorhees came to him about running for the state legislature in 1986.

“He did not win that election, but he went on to serve on the city council, as mayor and eventually as state representative,” Vanderwood said. “Harold is the reason I am sitting here tonight.”

Voorhees was elected to the Wyoming City Council in 1987 and two years later, he was elected mayor. He resigned his position as mayor in 1992 to serve as the 77th District State House representative, which he did for three terms from 1993-1998. In 2000, Voorhees was elected as the 8th District Kent County commissioner and served on the commission for 20 years.

At Monday night’s meeting, Mayor Jack Poll read a proclamation thanking Voorhees for his years of service as a Kent County commissioner. Poll noted that Voorhees’s wife, Joanne, also has served in various public positions, including replacing her husband as the 77th District State House representative in 1998 as well as serving on the city council.

“We appreciate what you have done for this community, you have been leaders,” Poll said.

“Thank you Mayor Poll and council members, and City Manager Curtis Holt,” Voorhees said. “What a wonderful Christmas gift to be together with family and friends in a familiar venue of government…I thank each of you for your time, your talents and what you do for our city and we can always be proud putting up the Wyoming flag. This is a great place to be.”

Mayor Jack Poll with Harold and Joanne Voorhees as Monday’s Wyoming City Council meeting. (WKTV)

Bold decisions by local businesses has put The Right Place’s strategic plan on track

By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org



Now two years into a three-year strategic plan and The Right Place, Inc is on track to exceed all of its goals.

This month, the regional nonprofit dedicated to economic prosperity in West Michigan, hosted its 25th annual Economic Outlook which showed that The Right Place was doing well on meeting its targets for the three-year period from 2020-2022.

For 2021, the organization reports that its work has resulted in 1,541 new and retained jobs, $84 million in new and retained payroll, and $286 million new capital investment.

 

The Right Place President and CEO Randy Thelen said that due to COVID-19 and its impact on the economy in 2020, the organization was behind the curve in terms of its objects of new and retained jobs, new and retained payroll, and new capital investment. Because of bold decisions made by the business community in 2021, The Right Place is now ahead of its three-year statistic plan.

Over the past two years, the organization has achieved 2,494 new and retained jobs, which is 74 percent of its goal of 3,400 in the three year period. For new and retained payroll, it has achieved $127 million which is 69 percent of its three-year goal of $184 million. For new capital investment, The Right Place, Inc. has achieved $286 million completing 79 percent of its three-year goal of $500 million.

 

The bigger question for many is what to expect in 2022. The Right Place meet with 422 companies and from those conversations, learned the local business community is confident in the region’s future. The overwhelming majority believe the region is competitive (94 percent) and more than half are planning to expand in the near future (63 percent). The positive outlook comes despite the labor shortage and ongoing pandemic with many making investments into training (52 percent).

Labor shortages continue to be a concern with the pandemic magnified the barriers for some, such as childcare. According to a recent CNN article, the biggest impact on the labor shortage is not due to people relying on government aid but because of early retirement. The overall labor force participation rate is falling, birth rates are down and boomers are retiring fast. Labor demands are 60 percent high than they were pre-COVID, according to The Right Place.

 

It should be noted that pre-pandemic unemployment rate in the U.S. was the lowest since 1969. In fact, the unemployment rate today is lower than it was in any month between March 1970 and February 1999 and for any month between March 2001 and August 2017. 

According to The Right Place officials, where the economy is falling short is the number of jobs and the number of people in the labor force. In the U.S., there are 2.6 percent fewer jobs today than there were in February 2020 and in Michigan there are 5.1 percent fewer jobs than in February 2020. The unemployment rate would be much higher except for the fact that many of the formerly employed workers have dropped out of the labor force, which is down by 1.5 percent in the U.S. and 3.4 percent in Michigan since February 2020.

 

The imbalance between demand, which is higher than before the pandemic, and supply, especially labor supply, which is lower than it was before the pandemic is generating increases in prices. Consumer prices in the U.S. were 6.2 percent hight in October then a year earlier and prices in Michigan, measured by the Detroit CPI, are 5.5 percent higher than a year ago. The real disposable personal income per capita in the U.S. in October was 1.7 percent higher than it was before the pandemic in February 2020 and the average new wroth of American households, adjusted for inflation, increased 17.5 percent from the fourth quarter of 2019 to the second quarter of 2021. 

To check out the full strategic plan from The Right Place, click here.

Financial Perspective: Tips to lowering your property taxes

By Dave Stanley
Integrity Financial Service, LLC


“One thing you can always count on, death and taxes.” Dave Stanley

When you own a home, you are liable for the property taxes assessed on your property. The taxes collected on your property pay your share of the cost of local schools, government, and several other local and other programs. The biggest mistake many homeowners make is overpaying these taxes. You have rights and have the opportunity only to pay your fair share of the taxes assessed. You have options available to you to make sure the assessment on your home is fair. However, you do not have to overpay to be honoring your civic duty by paying taxes. There are several things that can be done to lower your taxes and help keep the cost of owning a home down.

Fair Assessment:

Photo from pxhere.com

The most important thing is a fair and accurate assessment of the value of your home. Each year (or every 3 years), the county tax assessor will evaluate the value of your home and any new improvements made to it. The tax assessor will also take into consideration the “fair market value” of any homes sold (also known as comparables) in your area and the replacement cost of your home. Once the tax assessor determines your property value, the liability can be established. Schools, municipal areas, county, and special tax districts determine your actual taxes. The assessments from the taxing districts cannot be contested. The tax assessor has leeway and discretion in evaluating each piece of property. The evaluation should be fair, and you have the right to complain and argue with this valuation. If you can successfully argue a lower valuation, your tax liability will be lower.

The easiest way to lower the evaluation is to discuss with the person who determines your home value Information you can provide regarding similar home valuations in your area will all help you make your point of the argument. Most tax assessors will allow you to discuss the evaluation of your home and generally will negotiate these values when a factual statement is made.

Tax Exemptions:

Many states allow for the filing of a Homestead Exemption Act to lower the value of your home. This filing protects the allowable state limit of the Homestead Act and will reduce the value of your home by that amount. The reduction in the value of your home will lower the tax overall tax liability of your property taxes.

Many counties in this country allow for a senior citizen’s tax exemption. This exemption is based on the overall income of the occupant of the home. Each state or county will have its own rules and exemptions, so your local county tax assessor should be contacted.

Mortgage Insurance:

Many FHA-guaranteed loans require an insurance payment based on the age of the loan and the value of the loan. Often the amount charged is too high and can be reduced at certain periods; this insurance is no longer needed, and it can be removed. Contact your local mortgage service company for specific details.

The most important thing to remember is that you have rights, and you can argue for those rights. Most homeowners who ask for a re-assessment of their home value will receive a benefit adjustment.

Always pay your fair share which means never pay more than you owe, may sure your tax liability is accurate.

Dave Stanley is the host of Safe Money Radio WOOD1300 AM, 106.9 FM and a Financial Advisor and Writer at Integrity Financial Service, LLC, Grandville, MI 49418, Telephone 616-719-1979 or  Register for Dave’s FREE Newsletter at 888-998-3463  or click this link:  Dave Stanley Newsletter – Annuity.com  Dave is a member of Syndicated Columnists, a national organization committed to a fully transparent approach to money management

Increased usage at Wyoming’s parks demonstrates its important health role

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wkv.org


One of Wyoming’s Park and Recreation’s big accomplishments this year was the reopening of Jackson Park. (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

If you wonder how much of a resource of health and public welfare the City of Wyoming’s parks have served during the pandemic, consider this: reservations at the parks was at 30,000 hours, a 77 percent increase over 2020.

This was part of the 2021 annual Community Impact Report released last week by the City of Wyoming Community Services Department’s Parks and Recreation.

“Today, access to recreation resources have never been more sought after or needed for public health and welfare,” said Rebecca Rynbrandt, director of community services for the City of Wyoming. “This report provides the public with the transparency needed to affirm we are investing tax dollars wisely, meeting, and in many ways exceeding, resident expectations in providing parks and recreation services during the pandemic.”

The community impact report highlights the ways parks and recreation programs from the past year promoted community health and wellness, child development, economic development, and provided many avenues to build unity and community strength.

 

Rynbrandt noted during the Dec. 13 city council work session that in 2020-2021 year, the department offered 251 programs. During the epicenter of the pandemic in 2020, it offered 158 programs.

“Of course we saw a significant increase in use of our parks and recreation resources and facilities because that is what [people] were encouraged to do, get outside in order to play,” Rynbrandt said.

Another example of increase parks and recreation was the softball program which had a record year of 1,200 participants during the spring and summer.

Rynbrandt said staff worked to adapt by offering virtual programs and working with outdoor programming. When programs were able to return inside, staff ensured that the required social distancing, mask requirements, etc, were met.

Many programs this past year were modified to ensure public safety during the pandemic and exemplified the ways that parks and recreation services are essential to community resiliency and sustainability. Once such an example of adaptability was the Rec at Home kits with families stopping by Wyoming’s city hall to pick up the kits.

“For those of you who may have been here we had people coming to the back door and picking up so that we were able to adapt and provide that family a positive time alternative they could do with their families in the presence of their home or they could go outside in a public park,” Rynbrandt said.

The City of Wyoming partners with Godwin, Godfrey, and Wyoming public schools for its TEAM 21 program. (courtesy photo)

Parks and recreation is critical to child development, Rynbrandt said. TEAM, 12, which is funded through the U.S. Department of Education’s 21st Community Learning Centers grant, provides summer and after school programs for students in Godwin, Godfrey-Lee and Wyoming public schools. The program served about 900 children this year, which was down from pre-pandemic, which would average between 1,200 to 1,400 students per year.

Despite the limitations due to the pandemic, the program had 121 children on wait lists, according to Rynbrandt.

 

“[TEAM 21] is one of the most important programs where we impact the mental, physical, social, and scholastic health of our community’s children, Rynbrandt said.

The city also has an impact on the senior population. Through its partnership with the Meals on Wheels program, the city was able to provide 7,488 meals for socially isolated older adults. Rynbrand noted that this was a drive through program at the senior center.

 

Vaccine clinics and tree plantings were other activities provided through the Wyoming Department of Parks and Recreation.

 

As for the financial overview, about 52 percent of the Parks and Recreation budget goes directly into park facilities and maintenance, six percent is in the senior center, eight percent into recreation, and about 20 percent into TEAM 21, which is through the grant program.

 

The city features 23 parks and recreation facilities, including the Wyoming Senior Center, located throughout the city’s 700 acres of parkland.

To view the annual Community Impact Report, visit https://www.wyomingmi.gov/About-Wyoming/City-Departments/Parks-and-Recreation/Annual-Report.

For more information about Parks and Recreation programs and events please contact the City of Wyoming Parks and Recreation team by calling 616-530-3164, emailing parks_info@wyomingmi.gov, or visiting www.wyomingmi.gov

Local faith, medical leaders rally behind healthcare workers, stress dark COVID days remain but will pass

The Rev. Khary Bridgewater and Kent County Chief Inclusion Officer Teresa Branson, at left, led the Monday, Dec. 20, “Prayer Service for Health Care Workers” and pandemic awareness gathering. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

It is no secret that the COVID-19 pandemic seriously impacts the lives of all Kent County residents regardless of race, ethnicity and faith — although current statistics make clear it impacts the unvaccinated to a more serious degree.

It is not surprising, therefore, that speakers at a Monday, Dec. 20, “Prayer Service for Health Care Workers”, attended by county clergy, the leaders of local hospital  networks, and Kent County officials, stressed three things: appreciation to frontline healthcare, the non-discriminatory nature of the virus, and the need to get vaccinated as an individual’s part in keeping themselves and their neighbors safe.

The prayer service was led by several local clergy. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

“One of the realities that we are seeing — and I just came off the hospital floor — is the fact that there is not sector or section of this community that is not being affected by COVID,” Rev. Khary Bridgewater said to WKTV at the gathering at  Mercy Health Saint Mary’s downtown Grand Rapids. “Young. Old. Regardless of ethnicity. Regardless of creed … We are all in the same boat. We are all dealing with the same impact.

“Everyone is having the same sort of regrets as they struggle with this virus, particularly those at the end of life and they realize this was an avoidable situation. It doesn’t matter who you were when you get to a hospital bed. We are working very hard with every member of our community to stress the simple truth that COVID is dangerous.”

The gathering and prayer service was led by the Kent County Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships Team, formerly known as the Kent County COVID-19 Task Force). The gathering’s stated goal was to “stand with our front-line medical workers, hospital staff and public health officials, as well as their families, who are sacrificing daily to provide the care that our community needs.”

Leading the gathering was Rev. Bridgewater, facilitator of the Kent County Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships Team, and by his side was Teresa Branson, Kent County Chief Inclusion Officer, who as been a leader of the group since its inception. The pandemic-aware gathering was limited to local media, a few other people, and several persons remaining in their cars in the parking lot location.

The gathering also highlighted numerous churches and faith-based organizations “coming together to raise community awareness of the current situation in our hospitals; issue a public statement of commitment; and pray and bless our health care personnel and their families.”

Among the local medical leaders present were Dr. Matt Biersack, president of Mercy Health Saint Mary’s; Dr. Darryl Elmouchi, president of Spectrum Health; Kent Riddle, CEO of Mary Free Bed; and Dr. Ronald Grifka, chief medical officer of University of Michigan Health-West.

“In this season of hope, when so many workers turn to their home, their families, their traditions, remember many healthcare workers will be working around the clock taking care of their patients,” Grifka said to the gathering. “That selfless spirt embodies what we celebrate this time of the year. I ask that no matter what your beliefs, please keep our healthcare workers in your hearts.”

At a Monday, Dec. 20, “Prayer Service for Health Care Workers”, Kent County clergy, leaders of local hospital  networks, and county officials gathered. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

The Kent County Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships Team, according to supplied information, is a group of faith-based and non-profit community leaders that have partnered with the Kent County Health Department and its Diversity, Equity and Inclusion office.

“Together, they have reduced the spread of COVID-19, provided space for church vaccination clinics and informed the community about the vaccine,” according to the supplied information. But in doing so, thy have also heard “the concerns of our hospitals who are beyond capacity and our health care professionals who are weary and overburdened.”

In response to the current pandemic situation, faith leaders from across the city and the county also pledged to eliminate all non-essential, indoor gatherings; restrict essential gatherings to less than 50 people per 2,000 square feet; require all attendees at indoor gatherings to wear a mask and abide by social distancing and COVID-19 hygiene; and — maybe most importantly — to encourage all members of our community to get COVID-19 vaccination and any appropriate booster shots.

Retiring Huntington president jumps into volunteering, hopes others will follow

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


John Irwin helps a student at the Y’s Safety Around Water program. (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

Upon retiring as the West Michigan region president for Huntington Bank, John Irwin traded in his business suit for a different kind of suit, swimming trunks. His boardroom is now a swimming pool and instead of talking about financial security, he is now discussing water safety.

“I knew with retirement that I wanted to give back to my community,” said Irwin, who is a triathlete having completed more than 80 events in the past 20-plus years. “I knew I wanted to do something more on a one-to-one basis versus being on a board.”

Being a member at the David D. Hunting YMCA in downtown Grand Rapids, Irwin was aware of the many programs being offered at the Y, such as the water safety program.

“I basically sent an email and said ‘I don’t want to run the program. I don’t want to get paid.’ I just wanted to volunteer,” Irwin said. “I think Becky was like ‘You’re my type of person.’ That is how easy it was.”

Becky Haveman, the YMCA association aquatics and safety director, gives out a little laugh.

“John sent me an email with his story and I said we should talk,” Haveman said, adding that the Y has had volunteers in the past help with the water safety instruction. “It is not unusual for us to have 14- and 15-year-olds looking to eventually teach.”

Irwin went through training with the Y staff, watched classes and in September was set up with his own class of about a dozen six-year-olds who have never been near the water.

John Irwin. a retiring Huntington Bank executive, with his first Safety Around Water class. (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

Jumping in

“You see them now and you think I am their best friend,” Irwin said after just completing a short class demonstration. “It didn’t start off that way. Many of them would not even get in the water, much less near it.”

In Michigan, on average, a person is only about six miles away from natural water, Haveman said. Because of that, the YMCA offers a number of water safety and swimming classes. In fact, these classes are one of the most popular programs at the Y, with the organization teaching more than a million such classes nationwide.

“The water safety class is designed to teach the students that if they fall in the water or see someone fall in, they know what to do,” Haveman said.

There is the “jump, turn, grab” technique where students are guided on learning how to turn and grab onto the side or something if they fall into the water, Haveman said. There is also the “swim, float, swim” technique that if a student is swimming and gets tired, they roll over on their back and float for a while to rest and then resume swimming, she said.

After demonstrating a technique, Irwin asked “OK, who’s going into the water?” A few hands shot up right away and Irwin takes each child, one at a time, until he gets to a little red-headed boy who with a pouty face, shakes his head no.

“You don’t want to do it today?” Irwin asks with a smile. The boy again shakes his head no. “That’s OK. I know. You don’t like to jump in the water.”

Volunteering for the swimming program seemed like a natural fit for Irwin because of his triathlon experience. Irwin also got his level one swim coach certification.

John Irwin with the Y’s aquatics and safety director, Becky Haveman (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

“I am hoping that now I am retired, they plan on using me a little more,” Irwin said. Havman gives a quick head shake yes.

Irwin also is sharing his story in hopes of encouraging others to follow in his path.

“When people look at the Y, they see the buildings but they don’t think about all the great programs that they offer that are inside the buildings,” Irwin said. “I would encourage people to reach out to the Y, or any organization they want, and take what they love and see how they can use that talent to give back.”

Who knows, you might end up trading your suit for a pair of gloves and a garden or maybe some shorts and a gym, or, perhaps like Irwin,  a pair of swim trunks and a pool.


Like to join the fun? The Y will be hosting training classes for would-be lifeguards. The four-day trainings are Dec. 20-23 and Dec. 27-30. Lifeguards must be at least 16, and while most are high school and college students, the ranks are made up of professionals, retirees, and stay-at-home moms. For more information, visit grymca.org/events/lifeguard-training-class. For the Safety Around Water program, visit grymca.org/news/water-safety-y.

Last-minute shopping — local, small bookstores offer selection from well-known as well as debut writers

Shoppers at epilogue bookstore in Rockford. (WKTV/D.A. Reed)

By D.A. Reed, WKTV Contributing Writer

ken@wktv.org

Booklovers, and those with lovers of books on their last-minute shopping list, are in for a treat as several new releases from well-known authors, as well as debut writers, are available just in time for the holidays.

And how better to get that last gift than by buying local, or making a holiday roadtrip out of it?

“There are a ton of really solid, interesting books by well-known authors, as well as those who haven’t written before,” said Tim Smith, Operations Manager for Schuler Books.

Schuler Books on 28th Avenue is a big bookstore with a small bookstore feel. (WKTV/D.A. Reed)

Founded in 1982 by Bill and Cecile Fehsenfeld, Schuler Books includes locations in both Grand Rapids and Okemos. The Grand Rapids location on 28th Street “offers a wide array of new and used books for adults and children, an extensive selection of book-themed gifts, and a café where shoppers can enjoy coffee and a bite to eat,” they say. And a “friendly, helpful staff contribute to the welcoming feel shoppers experience.”

And if you’re really into last minute Christmas shopping, Schuler Books invites all ages to come and enjoy the live reindeer that will be outside the store Christmas Eve.

Adding to the inviting atmosphere is the knowledge that the staff at Schuler Books have personally hand-picked each book lining the shelves.

“We have a team of buyers that meet with publishing reps (representatives),” Smith said, “and over time have curated our stock. There are core items, of course, but also items specific to each store and its location.”

Changes in readers’ tastes

Schuler’s Smith also mentioned a shift in what buyers are looking for in reading material.

“Over the past couple of years, but especially this year, it has been different because people are looking for books connected to particular current events that people are trying to understand,” said Smith. “People see the world is changing, that there are large changes happening, and people are looking to books to understand these things.”

Popular titles at Schuler Books this holiday season substantiate Smith’s observation, with several books addressing current topics prevalent in society today:

“Change Sings: A Children’s Anthem” by Amanda Gorman. (WKTV/D.A. Reed)

“How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America” by Clint Smith speaks to racial understanding.

“Firekeeper’s Daughter” by Michigan author Angeline Boulley concentrates on the indigenous community.

“Change Sings: A Children’s Anthem” by Amanda Gorman incorporates a call to action for people of all ages to use their abilities to make a difference.

Other popular titles offer inspiration, humor, and a connection with nature:

“Taste: My Life Through Food” by Stanley Tucci; “The Impossible Mile: The Power in Living Life One Step at a Time” by Johnny Agar; “All Creation Waits: The Advent Mystery of New Beginnings” by Gayle Boss; “Where the Deer and the Antelope Play” by Nick Offerman; “A Carnival of Snackery” by David Sedaris; “Get Untamed” by Glennon Doyle, a companion journal to Doyle’s 2020 release, “Untamed”; “The Sentence” by Louise Erdrich.

Maybe make a day-trip shopping

If you like to do a little strolling around a small-town downtown with plenty of shopping,  epilogue books, founded in July 2018 by Pat and Valerie Burkholder, is celebrating their fourth holiday season in Rockford.

Some of the staff picks at epilogue books in Rockford. (WKTV/D.A. Reed)

Tucked into a strip of stores just off East Bridge Street, epilogue books features a comprehensive selection of new books for readers of all ages, including several by Michigan authors.

“We try to support local Michigan authors and artists,” said Cindy Coats, bookseller at epilogue books.

Coats also said that the staff at epilogue books hand-picks each book that is placed on the shelves.

“We look at what books are projected to be top-sellers,” said Coats said, “as well as what people are asking for.”

 

And the staff also looks at trends: “People come in asking for books that are being made into movies, like ‘Dune’ (Frank Herbert) and ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ (Liane Moriarty),” said Coats.

Biographies and autobiographies have also proven to be a rising trend.

“People have been out of work, or not in their normal realm of work, for a year and a half and used that time to write their stories,” Coats said. “(Readers) like hearing where people came from, and especially about overcoming adversity.”

Several new releases on epilogue’s shelves cater to this topic, including “Will” by Will Smith, and “The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music” by Dave Grohl.

Pick one; all are worth reading. (WKTV/D.A. Reed)

“Atlas of the Heart” by Brené Brown, a self-help book that focuses on how to develop meaningful connections with the people in our lives, is another popular title this holiday season.

Cookbooks are also a top seller this year. “Lots of celebrities are now writing cookbooks,” said Coats. “Pop culture is really interjecting into food.”

The bookseller pointed to “An Unapologetic Cookbook,” written by TikTok sensation Joshua Weissman. “We can’t keep these on the shelf,” Coats said with a laugh.

Other popular titles offered by epilogue books include: “Go Tell the Bees That I am Gone” (Outlander Series, Book 9) by Diana Gabaldon; “The Silent Patient” by Alex Michaelides; “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” by Taylor Jenkins Reid; “Cat Kid Comic Club: Perspectives” by Dav Pilkey.

A new reproduction of “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” by J.K. Rowling is also dazzling shoppers with its full color illustrations and eight interactive paper craft elements.

“They are stunning,” said Coats, touching the cover as she passed by.

And say ‘“Hi” to Tommy

epilogue books’ Tommy the Bookstore Dog. (WKTV/D.A. Reed)

Visitors to epilogue books will most likely be welcomed by the store’s most popular member, Tommy the Bookstore Dog, a mild-mannered golden retriever who loves to interact with customers.

“People come in just to see Tommy,” said Coats. “One woman drove all the way from Lansing after seeing him on a TikTok video, just to meet him.”

And after the holidays, an upcoming event that booklovers will want to mark on their calendars is a book signing with ABC’s chief meteorologist, Ginger Zee, featuring her upcoming release, “A Little Closer to Home.” A Rockford native, Zee will be at epilogue books Jan. 15 to meet fans and sign books.

Messages from West Michigan U.S. Navy sailors serving our country overseas this holiday season

USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), with a little bit of holiday lights lit, is the home of West Michigan’s Petty Officer 2nd Class Matthew King, serving active duty in the U.S. Navy. (U.S. Navy)

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

In peacetime and in wartime, American serviceman and women often spend their Christmas Holidays far away from home but allowing those from their hometowns to enjoy the season safe and secure.

The U.S. Navy recently sent WKTV information on two such U.S. Navy personal from West Michigan, including their well wishes for family, friends and everybody they serve yet do not know.

Sailors help maintain America’s strategic advantage at sea, everyday, including the holidays. This means they do not always get to celebrate holidays with their loved ones.

U.S. Navy Seaman Breana Leonard. (U.S. Navy)

Seaman Breana Leonard, a Hastings native serving overseas will celebrate the holidays with shipmates in Guam.

“The holidays are a time to take a break and enjoy time with friends and family,” Seaman Leonard said in supplied material. And she wants to make sure her family back home know that they are loved and missed.

“Thank you for standing by me,” Leonard said. “I love you and I miss you all.”

Leonard serves as a gunner’s mate aboard USS Emory S. Land. As a member of the U.S. Navy, Leonard, as well as other sailors, know they are a part of “a tradition providing unforgettable experiences through leadership development, world affairs and humanitarian assistance,” according to the U.S. Navy announcement.

“Serving in the Navy means that I’m setting myself up for success in the future,” added Leonard.

Leonard’s brother in arms, Petty Officer 2nd Class Matthew King, a Grand Rapids native, will celebrate the holidays volunteering for Catholic services at the base chapel in Yokosuka, Japan.

But he remembers a special memory from a holiday past.

U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Matthew King. (U.S. Navy)

“For me, the holidays represent birth and new beginnings,” Petty Officer King said in supplied material. “When I was 13, my house burnt down in the fall and when the holidays came a secret benefactor donated a home to my family. If you’re reading this, thank you!”

King, too, wants family back home to know they are missed this holiday season.

“I hope everyone back home has a merry Christmas,” King said. “Despite being in Japan, the Christmas spirit spans worldwide. I would also like to thank the students and staff of Meadowbrook Elementary School for sending us care packages.”

King serves as an intelligence specialist aboard USS Ronald Reagan.

“The Navy is about maintaining peace — especially for the holiday season,” King said. “That is all I could ask for.”

Stephanie Fox, of the Navy Office of Community Outreach, contributed to this story.

Hospital COVID cases are mostly those not vaccinated, Omicron variant found in Kent County

By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org


The Omicron variant of COVID has been discovered in a person from Kent County. (pxhere.com)

On the heals of announcing that the Omicron variant has been detected in Kent County, the Kent County Health Department released some sobering COVID-19 statistics.

The positivity rate has been 20.5 percent for COVID with the average number of cases per day being 377 in the last seven days.

Currently there are 400 people hospitalized with COVID, of which 102 are in intensive care units. About 90 percent of those patients in ICU are not vaccinated.

There is some good news in that about 62 percent of those eligible to be vaccinated, which are people who are ages 5 and up, are fully vaccinated. About 67.2 percent of population that is eligible has received at least one dose. Also 128,859 boosters have been administered in Kent County.

Kent County Health Department Director Dr. Adam London said the best way to protect against COVID-19 and the Omicorn variant is to be fully vaccinated and to get the booster shot.

“The identification of the Omicron variant is not unexpected,” London said. “We are fortunate that we have an effective, safe, and available vaccine that can protect us from this illness. We continue to urge people to get their vaccine and their boosters as soon as they are eligible.”

Early indicators suggest the Omicron variant causes milder COVID-19 than the Delta variant but seems to spread faster. The person identified with the Omicron variant is vaccinated but has not received a booster. However, according to KCHD officials, it is too early to determine precisely the severity of the disease caused by Omicron or if existing treatments will be as effective.

Other steps to take:

Get vaccinated against influenza

Stay home if you are sick

Wear a mask in public, indoor spaces, or crowded outdoors

Avoid large indoor gatherings

Wash your hands frequently

Get a COVID-19 test if you are exposed or are symptomatic

London also noted that the public health order on required facial coverings for pre-kindergarten to sixth grade would be in effect until Jan. 2, 2022. There are no plans at this time to extend the order.

“Vaccination appointments are readily available throughout the community,” London said. “And more importantly, school and legislative leaders have had ample time, with an awareness of the timeline and the relevant facts, to create long-term policies for COVID mitigation.”

On Oct. 29, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted vaccine authorization for children ages 5 to 11. Since vaccinations started being administered this age group, 26.8 percent of children in Kent County, have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

Working with school officials, the Health Department has developed a COVID-19 Precautions for Students flyer in both English and Spanish. A few tips from that flyer are:

Students with symptoms MUST stay home

Consider contacting your family doctor or scheduling a test

Practice healthy behaviors like social distancing, getting good sleep, eating well, and staying active.

 

For more information from the Kent County Health Department, visit www.accesskent.com/Health/

Kentwood police promotes 20-year force veteran Stephanie Morningstar to deputy police chief

Kentwood Police Captain Stephanie Morningstar was with family as she was promoted from sergeant to the department’s first female captain in 2018. Now she is the department’s first deputy chief. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

The leadership change at the City of Kentwood Police Department continues as, following last week’s appointment of Chief Bryan Litwin to replace retired Chief Richard Roberts, the City of Kentwood announced Dec. 15 that Captain Stephanie Morningstar has been promoted to deputy police chief.

Deputy Chief Morningstar previously was a captain in the Kentwood Police Department’s Services Division. Chief Litwin had previously been deputy chief.

For a story on new Chief Litwin visit here. For WKTV future story on retired Chief Roberts visit here.

As deputy chief, Morningstar is responsible for assisting with the planning, coordination and management of the city’s police, code enforcement and traffic engineering functions and staff, according to the announcement.

“Deputy Chief Morningstar brings exceptional leadership, communication and strategic planning skills as well as more than 20 years of experience with the Kentwood Police Department to her new role,” Chief Litwin said in supplied material. “Her expertise in the department’s investigative, patrol and training efforts will be invaluable as we continue to focus on reducing serious crime, increasing traffic safety and serving the community with excellence.”

Kentwood Police Department Deputy Chief Stephanie Morningstar. (Supplied)

Morningstar started her career in Canton Township before coming to Kentwood in 2000. She served as a patrol officer, general case detective, patrol sergeant and detective sergeant before becoming the department’s first female captain in 2018.

As the former captain of the Services Division, Morningstar oversaw the Detective Bureau, Special Investigations Unit and Records Bureau, as well as the city Justice Center’spolice and court building maintenance, operations and security. Additionally, she has provided guidance and instruction at major crime scenes and conducted complaint investigations to ensure quality customer service.

“I am honored to be deputy chief of the Kentwood Police Department and serve our community in this role,” Morningstar said in supplied material. “I look forward to continuing our efforts to deliver professional police services and partnering with residents and other community members to make sure Kentwood is a wonderful place for everyone.”

During her tenure with the City of Kentwood, Morningstar has taught precision emergency vehicle response driving to police academy recruits at Grand Rapids Community College since 2007. She also developed and presented lectures on death investigations at the Grand Valley State University Police Academy from 2014-18.

Morningstar serves on several specialized units, including the Kent County Child Death Review Board, Sexual Assault Response Team, Adult Mobile Crisis Unit and Human Trafficking Coalition Coordinated Response Team. She is also a Kentwood District Court Sobriety Court advisor.

Morningstar has completed numerous trainings in different types of interviewing, interrogations and investigations, according to the city’s announcement, as well as critical incident stress management and peer support. She has also completed leadership programs through the International Association of Chiefs of Police, Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police and Grand Rapids Police Department Leadership Institute.

Morningstar graduated from Grand Valley State University and GVSU Police Academy in 1996 with a degree in criminal justice.

In love and health: Handling grief through the holidays

By Dr. Erik Johnson
Love & Health Chiropractic


When a loved one dies, we experience a great amount of stress. Not only are hearts broken, but disruptions to daily routines and holiday celebrations can take a huge emotional toll. As one of the most common causes of stress, losing a dear friend, family member, or spouse can lead to serious illness, including depression.

 

Those suffering from a loss during the holidays should engage in practical self-care and tend to the essentials such as eating a well-balanced diet.
The lost of a love one can been difficult during the holidays. (Courtesy of Love and Health Chiropractics)

Stress from loss can show up as negative attitudes or feelings of being out of control. Headaches, neck pain and back pain are common among people who are grieving. So, chiropractic adjustment is one practical way to deal with the general stress as well as the physical manifestations of grief.

The Harvard Medical School Health blog’s “A Guide to Getting through Grief” counsels those mourning a loss to engage in practical self-care and “Tend to the essentials.” Eat a well-balanced diet that includes plenty of fruit, veggies, lean proteins, and a daily multivitamin. Stay hydrated. Make sure to stay on your prescribed medications. And get plenty of sleep—grief can really tire you out. Don’t overdo caffeine or alcohol as both can sabotage a good night’s sleep.

 

Even if you feel like a slug, try to do a little more exercise than usual. It will not only boost your energy levels but also ease depression, anxiety, and anger. Push yourself to take care of yourself each day. What would make you feel a little better? A funny movie, coffee with a friend, a phone conversation with a family member? If you were a caregiver of the person you lost, now is your chance to take care of you.

Because of the ongoing toll that COVID-19 is taking on us here in Michigan, don’t be surprised to find out that you are not alone in your grief. You might even want to join a grief support group. Many of the meet safely over virtual formats. The State of Michigan Family Center has put together this guide listing grief support by county. In addition, you can find a list of local church-based grief support groups here. Ele’s Place specifically helps children who are grieving. Local hospice organizations and mental health care providers can also help you walk through your grief.

The Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center offers these “7 Things to Remember When Dealing with Loss.”

  • It won’t feel like this forever. 
  • You can handle it, even when you feel like you can’t.
  • Be gentle with yourself. 
  • Think in cycles, not lines. 
  • Your feelings are normal. 
  • Grief can beget meaning. 
  • You’re not alone.

Dr. Erik Johnson DC is a chiropractor at Love and Health Chiropractic in Wyoming at 1586 44th Street SW.

Godfrey-Lee Public Schools’ new superintendent eager to get to work on ‘exciting’ district agenda

Lee Middle and High School. (WKTV)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

Godfrey-Lee Public Schools, after selecting Dr. Mike Burde, currently Assistant Superintendent at Kenowa Hills Public Schools, to be the next GLPS superintendent last month, the school board approved his contract at its meeting Monday, Dec. 13.

Superintendent Burde’s first day on the job will be Jan. 3. And a long list of “exciting “ work awaits him.

Godfrey-Lee Public Schools Superintendent Dr. Mike Burde. (Supplied)

“It’s an honor to be selected as the next superintendent of Godfrey-Lee Public Schools,” Burde said to WKTV. “I am eager to get started in listening, learning, and building relationships in the schools and in the community. With bond construction projects scaling up, new curriculum programs, and forward-thinking continuous improvement efforts, it’s an exciting time to be a Legend!”

Burde will work with Interim Superintendent Dirk Weeldreyer as he transitions out of this role.

The Board, in a previous statement, said it was “especially thankful for Mr. Weeldreyer’s leadership” since the beginning of the school year.

“We have been fortunate to have the time to conduct a thorough search, and it has been time well spent,” GLPS board President Eric Mockerman said in the statement.

Mockerman also told WKTV he and the district is excited to have Burde take over in the new year.
 

“I am excited to get to work with Dr. Burde. He comes to us with a wealth of experience that I believe will lead Godfrey-Lee well into the future,” Mockerman said. “While we were going through the interview process the board was impressed by Dr. Burde’s experience as well as the thoroughness that he had planned for his first 90 days.

“I spoke personally with several of Mike’s references through the hiring process and I also had the opportunity to speak to several of his current board members who backed up 100 percent what was told to me by his references. Mike … is more than ready to hit the ground running with all of the work that needs to be done. I think he is an excellent fit for Godfrey-Lee.”

Superintendent Burde, according to a biography on the Kenowa Hills Public Schools website, become the district’s assistant superintendent in 2012. Since then, “he has supported the district’s implementation of building and district improvement plans that support student-centered education; which the district calls Personal Mastery. Dr. Burde has also been an active advocate for the K-12 instructional technology; assisting in the planning and implementation of district’s ongoing 1:1 technology initiative. In addition, he’s worked to develop strong partnerships with organizations such as KnowledgeWorks, the Michigan Department of Education, and the Michigan Association of State and Federal Program Specialists (MASFPS).”

He earned his Bachelor of Arts in Education from Spring Arbor University, Masters of Arts in Educational Leadership from Western Michigan University, as well as a Doctorate of Philosophy in Educational Leadership from Western Michigan University.

For 15 years, Dr. Burde has been involved in public school administration at the elementary, secondary, and central office levels. He began his professional career at Ionia Public Schools, where he served as a middle school social studies teacher before taking on various leadership responsibilities at Belding Areas Schools.

Burde and his wife, Jacqlyn, have two children: Katherine and Marilyn.

Financial Perspectives: Does your social security just go away when you die?

By Dave Stanley
Integrity Financial Services, LLC


Those planning their retirements should consider what, if any, Social Security benefits could be available if you are the spouse, child, or parent of a worker who dies.” Dave Stanley

Many people planning for when they no longer work forget to include potential Social Security Survivors Benefits.

Photo from pxhere.com

In 2021, workers can earn up to four credits per year, one credit for each $1,470 in wages or self-employment income. If a worker has hit $5,880 in wages, they have earned their maximum four credits the year.

How do those credits work?

Depending on a workers’ age at the time of death, the number of credits necessary to provide survivors’ benefits varies. The younger a decedent is, the fewer credits are needed for family members to get survivors’ benefits.

When a worker dies, benefits may be disbursed to their children and the surviving spouse still caring for the children, even if that worker doesn’t have enough credits. These survivors can receive benefits as long as the worker has credit for at least one and one-half years of work, or six total credits, in the three years preceding their death. If there is no surviving spouse, payments typically go to a child eligible for benefits on the deceased worker’s record. However, you will want to talk to a Social Security expert or claims representative about your options because of everyone’s unique situations.

Who can get monthly survivor benefits?

Typically, these family members are eligible to receive monthly benefits when you pass away.

  • Your widow or widower who is at least age 60. Or a disabled widow or widower aged 50 or older.
  • In certain strict circumstances, your surviving former spouse may be eligible.
  • Your widow or widower of any age who is caring for your child younger than age 16. Or if disabled and receiving a child’s benefits.
  • An unmarried child aged 18 or 19 and a full-time student in elementary or secondary school.
  • A child 18 or older with a disability that began before they turned 22 may qualify.

What do you do when a family member passes away?

As of 2021, you still cannot report that death or apply for survivors’ benefits online. That’s why you need to contact Social Security and your financial advisor as soon as possible. The funeral director will often report the death to Social Security if you have provided them with the deceased’s Social Security number.

There may be instances when you want or need to speak to a Social Security representative directly. In that instance, you can call the SSA at 1-800-772-1213 during regular business hours.

What are some other considerations and caveats?

Suppose you don’t have a surviving spouse. A one-time, lump-sum death benefit of $255 might be paid to your surviving spouse if they were living with the deceased. If you were living apart, the spouse still might qualify if they received certain types of Social Security benefits on your record. In that case, the death benefit goes to any child eligible for benefits on your record in the month of death.

Suppose you were already getting benefits when you died. In that case, your survivors must return the benefits you may have received for the month of death or any later months. For example, if you passed away in September, you must return all benefits paid in October. Be sure your loved ones know they should not cash any checks received for the month in which you died or later.

Summing it up: These are just some of the many rules, regulations, deadlines, and other nuances regarding Social Security survivor benefits. That’s why it makes sense to sit with a qualified Social Security expert so that you have a basic game plan in place when you or your spouse passes away. Planning will give you and your loved ones greater peace of mind when you are no longer there to help them.

Dave Stanley is the host of Safe Money Radio WOOD1300 AM, 106.9 FM and a Financial Advisor and Writer at Integrity Financial Service, LLC, Grandville, MI 49418, Telephone 616-719-1979 or  Register for Dave’s FREE Newsletter at 888-998-3463  or click this link:  Dave Stanley Newsletter – Annuity.com  Dave is a member of Syndicated Columnists, a national organization committed to a fully transparent approach to money management.

Kentwood, Wyoming have open sites for storm yard waste debris

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


The brute force winds that came through West Michigan now has many residents looking for places to discard the yard waste. Fortunately, for those living in cities of Kenwood and Wyoming, they have options.

A past pile of leafs at the City of Kentwood Department of Public Works as the city’s leaf and brush drop-off programs returns this week to help with debris from the recent wind storm. (City of Kentwood)

City of Kentwood

Today, the City of Kentwood reopened its leaf and brush drop-off sites, which will be open through Dec. 18. The purpose is to help residents dispose of fallen leaves and tree debris.

“We’re reopening our drop-off sites to help residents clean up after Saturday’s windstorm as well as accommodate the late leaf drop this year,” Public Works Director Chad Griffin said. “With the warm temperatures expected this week, this is a great opportunity for residents to take care of the leaves, trees and branches that have fallen on their properties.”

Residents may drop off brush, sticks, tree limbs, logs, loose leaves and loose grass clippings through Saturday, Dec. 18 at the Kentwood Department of Public Works, 5068 Breton Ave. SE. The drop-off sites are open noon-8 p.m. Monday-Friday and 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday.

The service is available to Kentwood residents only. Staff will be on-site checking for proof of residency and appropriate materials. Materials that cannot be accepted include paper and plastic bags, trash, dirt, concrete, asphalt, tires, rocks, stones, construction materials, glass and metal.

Residents may report downed tree limbs and other debris obstructing city streets to the Department of Public Works at 616-554-0817 or 911. Non-emergency street or sidewalk concerns can be reported online at kentwood.us/psr/index.php

City of Wyoming

The City of Wyoming operates a year round leaf and yard waste disposal site at 2600 Burlingame Ave. SW.

Winter hours for the site are 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday – Thursday. The site is closed on Sunday.

Yard waste should be sorted in leaves and grass piles and brush piles which may include sticks, branches less than eight-fee long, bushes, and stumps less than three-feet in diameter.

The site does not accept leaf bags , plastic bags, sod, rocks, stones, sand, treated wood, fencing, shingles, concrete, asphalt, furniture, carpet, glass, garbage or basically anything that is not naturally grown in a yard.

There is an attendant at the site with residents having to show proof of residency.

Power outages can be reported to Consumers Energy online or by phone at 800-477-5050. In the case of an emergency, such as a downed power line, call 911.

After weekend storm, Kent County Health Dept. offers a few safety reminders

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


Food can last up to fours in a refrigerator that has no power. (pxhere.com)

This past weekend’s high winds that left thousands without power had the Kent County Health Department offering up tips on maintaining proper food safety and generator safety.

 

According to the Health Department, if properly prepared, most families could deal with the inconvenience of a few hours or even a couple of days without power. Having no power, means that most homes would be without refrigeration, running water and sanitary services. Depending on the season, homes may also not have heat.

The biggest reminder, which also came from Consumers Energy, is to never touch a down power line. If you are uncertain if the line down is a power line, call emergency services for help and treat it like a down power line.

Generators

Those who can will turn to generators to help power the home should remember not to operate a generator indoors as it does produce carbon monoxide, which can kill in minutes.

 

Because a generator can create 100 times more carbon monoxide gas than a car exhaust, extensive studies have been done into how far a generator should be placed from the home. In fact, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly half of the non-fatal carbon monoxide poisonings reported during the 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons involved generators that were seven feet from the home. While it is recommended that generators be at least 15 feet at the home, studies have determined that may not be far enough as carbon monoxide will still enter the home. A generator should be placed as far away from the home as possible and away from any doors or windows.

To help check carbon monoxide levels in a home, make sure that the home’s carbon monoxide detector has been checked and is working properly. 

Refrigeration

Food will last up to four hours in a refrigerator and up to 24 hours in a half filled freezer and 40 hours for a full freezer. So if the power is out for a couple of hours, the food in the freezer will be safe to eat, according to the Health Department.

While the power is out, keep the refrigerator and freezer doors closed as much as possible to keep the food cold longer. If possible, have frozen ice packs ready in case you need to move food from the refrigerator to a cooler to keep it safe.

 

Refrigerated food needs to be at a temperature of 40 degrees or less and frozen food should be between 0 and -10 degrees. Keeping a thermometer in the refrigerator and freezer at all times to help you determine what the temperature of the unit is and if the food is safe. As always “when in doubt, throw it out,” according to the Health Department.


The Kent County Health Department has guide sheets on how to prepare a disaster supply kit with food and other general supplies along with tip sheets on other emergencies such as flooding, water safety, and preventing the spread of flu in the home.

John Ball Zoo tiger tests positives for COVID

By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org


Nika, a 16-year-old tiger at John Ball Zoo, has tested positive for COVID-19. (Supplied)

John Ball Zoo announces that its 16-year-old female Amur tiger has tested positive for SARS CoV-2 (COVID-19) and is recovering.

The Amur tiger named Nika recently became ill. At that time, she was immobilized in order to perform diagnostics that included COVID testing, which came back as positive for SARS CoV- 2 (COVID-19).

As seen among other zoos, John Ball Zoo suspects that Nika’s exposure likely came from a pre-symptomatic, positive member of the animal care team. “Even with increased safety protocols in place for the care of the Zoo’s animals, we know that just as with humans, the spreading of COVID can occur even among those who are vaccinated and practicing safe habits and protocols,” said John Ball Zoo Chief Executive Officer Peter D’Arienzo.

“We continue to take the health and well-being of our team, guests and animals seriously as we have before and during this COVID pandemic,” added D’Arienzo. “As with all of the Zoo’s animals, Nika continues to receive exceptional care from her keeper and veterinary teams and they are cautiously optimistic on her complete recovery.”

The Zoo notes that while increased health and safety protocols are in place that there is no guarantee against transmission. “The animal care and veterinary teams have been diligent with our use of PPE and other safety protocols in all animal spaces in particular our felid, primate, and small carnivore spaces, but we also know that no system is perfect in preventing a highly contagious virus,” said Dr. Ryan Colburn, John Ball Zoo’s veterinarian.

In addition to the John Ball Zoo’s tigers, the chimpanzees, lions, snow leopards, and small carnivores are completely vaccinated or are scheduled to receive their second vaccination against SARS CoV-2 (COVID-19).

“Many of our animals are now completely vaccinated against COVID-19 and that partially included Nika as she was due for her second dose on the day that she became sick,” added Colburn.

Dr. Colburn also noted that Nika is doing well and her health is continuing to improve. There have been no clinical signs from any of the other Zoo cats or their other animals of having COVID. However, out of an abundance of caution, John Ball Zoo will run additional testing of the other two Amur Tigers to determine if they are shedding the virus. According to the Centers for Disease Control, the risk of animals spreading COVID to humans is low.

Recently, John Ball Zoo received AZA-accreditation. This is the 38th consecutive year that JBZ has held the accreditation. The Association of Zoos & Aquariums requires zoos and aquariums to complete a rigorous accreditation process and inspection by top zoo experts every five years to remain accredited. The inspection team visited John Ball Zoo in July and observed all aspects of the Zoo’s operations and focused on areas such as veterinary care; physical facilities; safety; security; finance; staff; governing authority; involvement in education, conservation, and research; and adherence to AZA policies.

More Michiganders live alone

By Cameryn Cass
Capital News Service


LANSING – Living alone is increasingly common throughout Michigan and the rest of the world, a trend worrisome for  older folks,  particularly during the pandemic.

More than 2.4 million of Michigan’s population is 60 and up, and 41% of them live alone, according to a state plan on aging. (pxhere.com)

To reduce such concerns, Michigan has bolstered programs to help older people living solo to connect socially.

 

More than 2.4 million of Michigan’s population is 60 and up, and 41% of them live alone, according to a state plan on aging.

  

“Historically, social isolation has been a concern for our older population,” said Scott Wamsley, the deputy director for the Aging and Adult Services Agency of the Department of Health and Human Services.

COVID-19 is making the problem more profound, he said.

 

Already, Michigan offers programs to help older adults live alone safely and socially. With promised investment in broadband, the programs should become even more accessible, especially for those living in rural areas like the Upper Peninsula, Wamsley said.

 

For more opportunity, adult children and grandchildren may have to move from rural areas, he said.

  

“We’ve heard about that in the Upper Peninsula where some of the younger adults need to move away for employment purposes, and therefore that family network is now distanced,” Wamsley said.

 

The agency usually offers programs to adults 60 and older, but some programs are available to those over 55.

 

It recently developed an interactive program called GetSetUp, which acts as a virtual education and socialization platform, helping older folks learn to use things like video conferencing and telemedicine as more activities and services go online, he said.

To cater to the rapidly aging U.S. population, Ashton Verdery, an associate professor of sociology and demography at Penn State University, predicts demand for places that can foster community among older adults will rise.

“We’ll go from condos with pools and bars to condos with bridge clubs and things like that,” Verdery said.

 

To cater to the rapidly aging U.S. population, Ashton Verdery, an associate professor of sociology and demography at Penn State University, predicts demand for places that can foster community among older adults will rise. (pxhere.com)

Older adults, however, aren’t the only ones living solo.

 

Roughly one-tenth of Michigan residents live alone, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

 

Nationwide, the number of those living alone has nearly doubled over the past 50 years, according to the bureau’s Current Population Survey.

In comparison to the post-World War II era, where nuclear families and suburbs were all the rage, younger folks are pursuing a different lifestyle, said Tyler Augst, a government and community vitality educator with Michigan State University.

“What we’re seeing now is some of those family dynamics are changing,” Augst said. “People aren’t having as many kids, they’re waiting longer in life to get married, they’re just not wanting that lifestyle anymore.”

 

Additionally, they prefer different living quarters.

 

Walkable neighborhoods in urban settings are particularly attractive, offering a chance for both environmental and monetary savings, especially important in today’s market where housing is a considerable expense, Augst said.

 

“Thinking about ways to become more environmentally friendly and efficient is also a way to reduce housing costs,” he said.

 

Contributing factors fueling rising solo living include economic stability, an emphasis on individualism and a substantial decrease in multi-generational households, Verdery said.

“I think, in a lot of ways, the increase in living alone is very good for society,” Verdery said. “People are able to achieve the living arrangements that they want.” 

Wyoming girls hosting South Christian is WKTV’s Feature Game Tuesday, then a doubleheader on Sailors home court Friday

WKTV’s video coverage off last week’s Wyoming Godwin Heights at Wyoming Lee girls basketball game is available on-demand at wktvlive.com. (WKTV)

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

WKTV Featured Game coverage of local Kentwood and Wyoming area high school basketball will offer up three games this week, with Wyoming high girls hosting South Christian on Tuesday, Dec. 14, and a boys and girls basketball doubleheader on Friday, Dec. 17, at South Christian when Unity Christian visits.

The South Christian girls enter the week with a 2-1 early-season record, all non-conference, including a 37-34 home win over Holland Christian Dec. 10. The Wolves girls will enter with an identical 2-1 non-conference record, including a 45-43 win over Northview, also on Dec. 10.

After this week’s games, the WKTV crew will then take the holiday season off, as do most local teams, but return in full force in January 2022.

Complete local basketball schedules as well as up-to-date scores of previous night’s games are also available at wktvjournal.org/sports-schedules-scores. (You can also just just bookmark WKTVjournal.org on your phone or other device and click on the blue banner at the bottom of the screen.)

The tentative January and February WKTV Feature Game schedule is as follows:

Friday, Jan. 14, Boys and girls basketball, Calvin Christian at Godwin Heights.

Friday, Jan. 21, Boys basketball, Zeeland East at Wyoming

Tuesday, Jan. 25, Boys basketball, Ottawa Hills at South Christian

Friday, Jan. 28, Boys and girls basketball, Kelloggsville at Godwin Heights

Wednesday, Feb. 2, Boys hockey, Manistee at East Kentwood

Friday, Feb. 4, Boys and girls basketball, Grand River prep at Potter’s House

Tuesday, Feb. 8, Boys basketball, Holland at Wyoming

Friday, Feb. 11, Boys hockey, Petoskey at East Kentwood

Friday, Feb. 18, Boys and girls basketball, Zion Christian at Wyo. Lee (HOF night)

Tuesday, Feb. 22, Boys basketball, Caledonia at East Kentwood

Friday, Feb. 25, Boys and Girls Basketball, Tri-unity Christian at Potter’s House

WKTV featured games will on cable television in Wyoming and Kentwood on Comcast Channel 25 and AT&T Channel 99 Community Channel, rebroadcast 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 basketball and other 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.

Kent County Animal Shelter offers tips, warning to protect pets in cold weather

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

Kent County Animal Shelter this week announced has some cold weather tips to protect pets from this winter’s often dangerous freezing temperatures, including producing the updated video (above). The KCAS also announced it is prepared to investigate all reports of animal neglect throughout the winter.

While Michigan law does not prohibit dogs from being left outside in the cold, state law requires that all dogs who spend time outside have access to adequate shelter, fresh water, and dry bedding, according to the KCAS announcement. The statue also stipulates separate shelter requirements for livestock.

(From Kent County Animal Shelter video)

“The best place for our pets is in our home next to us, but we know that is not always possible. We encourage all pet owners to take appropriate steps to protect those animals that may be left outside for long stretches of time,” Angela Hollinshead, Kent County Animal Shelter Division Director, said in supplied material. “Many pets are not equipped to handle the effects of cold temperatures, so we want to remind pet owners of their responsibilities to care for them during the winter.”
 

A few of the cold weather requirements in state statue include maintaining adequate shelter:

Inside the owners’ home, or an enclosure or shelter with at least three sides and a roof that is appropriate for the size and breed of the dog.

Or in a structure, including a garage, barn or shed, that is sufficiently insulated and ventilated to protect the dog from exposure to extreme temperatures, or if not sufficiently insulated and ventilated, contains a doghouse inside the structure (or structures or natural features such as trees or topography for livestock).

Also animals should be provided dry bedding, such as straw, when the temperature is or predicated to be below freezing. Avoid using blankets or cloth bedding as these materials will likely get wet and freeze.

Finally, provide water that is safe to drink and suitable for the age and species of the animal. Owners are encouraged to check every few hours to ensure the water is not frozen.

Although Michigan law does not directly address free-roaming or community cats, the KCAS encourages residents be mindful of their needs as well. Cats are typically well adapted for living in colder climates, but they greatly benefit from having access to a shelter. Simple cat shelters made from a storage tote lined with foam and stuffed with straw make great places for cats to escape from the cold. (An instructional video for creating your own cat shelter is available on the KCAS website.)
 

“Michigan winters are certainly beautiful but can be dangerous for some animals if they do not have appropriate resources,” Hollinshead said. “We encourage pet owners to watch our educational video and learn about these dangers, so your pets are safe and happy this winter.

“If you cannot keep your pet indoors and need resources, we urge residents to reach out to the KCAS to so see how we can help.”

The KCAS also stated it investigates all reports of animal neglect throughout the winter. Residents are encouraged to call the KCAS at 616-632-7300 “if they notice an animal being kept outside for an extended period without adequate shelter, water, and bedding.”

 

Kentwood City Commission approves appointment of Bryan Litwin to rank of Police Chief

Deputy Chief Bryan Litwin has been picked to be the next Chief of the City of Kentwood Police Department. (Supplied)

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

The City of Kentwood announced this week that after action by the City Commission on Tuesday, Dec. 7, Deputy Chief  Bryan Litwin will be the next Chief of the Kentwood Police Department.

Deputy Chief Litwin will succeed Police Chief Richard Roberts, who is retiring Friday, Dec. 10. (For a WKTV feature story on retiring Chief Roberts, visit here.)

As chief, Litwin will lead a team of nearly 95 personnel, including 71 sworn police officers. And, according to the city announcement, “he will continue the department’s efforts to recruit and hire individuals who are representative of Kentwood’s diverse community, collaborate with other City departments to support community safety and engagement efforts and work to enhance quality of life.”

Additionally, he will continue to provide “the best training and equipment possible for members of the police department,” and will also oversee the department’s goal of obtaining state accreditation in 2023 through a “continued commitment to following state and national best policing practices and procedures.”

“Throughout Deputy Chief Litwin’s 22-plus years of service to the City of Kentwood, he has played an integral role in the department’s service, recruitment and training efforts,” Mayor Stephen Kepley said in supplied material. “I have no doubt the department will continue to provide excellent service to our community as has been provided by our department under the leadership of the chiefs before him.

“I look forward to the future accomplishments the department will achieve under Chief Litwin’s leadership and direction.”

Litwin joined the Kentwood Police Department in 1999 as a patrol officer. He has also served as a field training officer, community services officer, Staff Services Bureau officer, special response team member and team commander.

The Kentwood Justice Center which houses 62-B District Court and the Kentwood Police Department. (WKTV)

He was promoted to sergeant in 2012, captain in 2016 and then to deputy police chief in 2019. As captain, he managed the Professional Standards Division, served as the public information officer and oversaw the police cadet program, which recruits and develops future police officers.

“It will be an honor to serve as police chief and continue to work alongside the dedicated professionals of this outstanding department,” Litwin said in supplied material. “We will continue to commit ourselves to serving the community with excellence with a high emphasis on community engagement, transparency and accountability.”

During his tenure with the City of Kentwood, Litwin has taught ethics in law enforcement to police academy recruits at Grand Valley State University and led GVSU’s Police Academy Subject Control program. He served as chair of the department’s training committee from 2016-19. Litwin has a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from GVSU.

Litwin also helped implement the City’s first Youth Police Academy, which gives high school students and recent high school graduates hands-on experience in a variety of police-related tasks.
 

Litwin has completed numerous trainings, including leadership programs through the International Association of Chiefs of Police, Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police and Grand Rapids Police Department Leadership Institute.

Litwin serves as chairman of the GVSU Police Academy Advisory Board and Kent Career Technical Center Law Enforcement Advisory Board. He also has served as president of the West Michigan Tactical Officers Association.

“Deputy Chief Litwin has long been an integral part of our leadership team, demonstrating steadfast dedication to the department, profession and service to our residents,” retiring Chief Roberts said in supplied material. “With the leadership, communication and strategic planning skills he has illustrated during his career, I have complete confidence he will continue to provide exemplary leadership and fulfill the department’s mission.”

Local businesses continue to be impacted by COVID-19, supply chain issues

By D.A. Reed
WKTV Contributing Writer


As the holiday shopping continues, local West Michigan businesses find acquiring merchandise for shoppers more challenging than usual due to far-reaching economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Meyer Music is no stranger to these struggles. A third-generation family-owned music supply and repair store, owners Joel Hoekstra and his wife Lindy have felt the long-lasting effects of the pandemic in several ways over the last 18 months.

Meyer Music, a third-generation family owned business in Kentwood, is no stranger to supply chain struggles.

When COVID-19 first appeared in the United States, the main concern for the Hoekstras was the safety of local students. “Much of what we do is dependent upon people blowing air,” Joel Hoekstra said. “We had to question—can playing an instrument be safe for students?”

Specially made masks with slits for instrument mouthpieces and bell covers for wind instruments were just some of the solutions Meyer Music implemented.

However, as months passed with no end to the pandemic, the Hoekstra family, like many other retailers, began to face merchandise supply issues.
 

“We haven’t had as many issues as some retailers,” Hoekstra said. “Due to the nature of our business, we always have to plan far ahead. When we realized there were issues with the supply chain, we began ordering even further in advance.”

Getting shipments from warehouses in the United States is pretty quick, Hoekstra said, but supplies from Asia take much longer, with shipments remaining on the water for up to 90 days before making it to land. Inflation has prices surging for everyone, causing suppliers to prioritize higher priced items for shipping and often leaving smaller goods behind because they are too expensive to ship to the U.S. Hoekstra acknowledged that once the U.S. warehouses are depleted, finding supplies will become more challenging.

“This puts a different strain on the system than we’ve ever seen before,” he said. “There are unprecedented amounts of instruments and products on backorder.”
 

Educators have been understanding, Hoekstra said, adding “We have good relationships with teachers and are always truthful with them.”

Meyer Music customer Matthew Reed, who is the band director for Central Montcalm Public Schools, certainly understands.
 

“Supply chain issues have impacted purchases and instrument supplies,” Reed said. “I’ve ordered new instruments and can’t even get an estimated arrival, and had to be flexible on how quickly smaller items are available. Flexibility and patience are definitely required at the moment. Along with ordering early.”

Hoekstra believes the supply chain issue is still 18 months from any form of resolution. To counteract it, Hoekstra said he plans to continue his aggressive approach to staying ahead of the supply issues, placing big orders for store merchandise now instead of his usual timeline of January-March.

 

Not allowed to be open during the pandemic shutdown, West Michigan Bike & Fitness’s first day of business had other out-of-state shops calling to see what inventory the store had.

During the pandemic, the federal government considered bike shops essential because bikes are viewed as a mode of transportation. However, “Michigan is the only state in the nation where bike shops were not deemed essential,” said West Michigan Bike & Fitness sales manager Geoff Kuyper. “April 25, 2020 was the first day bike shops were allowed to open in Michigan after a seven-week closure. Any store with available inventory was sold out within two weeks.”

In fact, that first day, approximately 50 percent of the calls West Michigan Bike & Fitness received were from out-of-state retailers, who were able to stay open, looking for inventory because they had depleted resources.

“Not only was the significant demand causing delays on parts and productions, there was a shutdown overseas at the beginning of the pandemic where they didn’t ship,” said Geoff Kuyper, West Michigan Bike & Fitness sales manager. “Stores ran out of inventory at that time.”

Like Hoekstra, Kuyper said he doesn’t see the supply issue stabilizing until fall of 2023. “Most stores only have one model (of bike) to show. Some models are backordered 12 to 18 months, some are backordered until 2024,” he said.

Taking a page from car dealerships that recommend pre-ordering, Kuyper said pre-ordering is the only way to get something specific, but consumers have to be willing to wait. If a person needs something more quickly, then Kuyper suggested not looking for a specific model, but simply asking stores what they have on hand or what models stores can obtain on a faster timeline.

Though the supply chain issue is ongoing, both Kuyper and Hoekstra are staying positive.
 

“It’s better than it was,” said Kuyper. “The last two months have improved our position dramatically.”

While for Hoestra it is a matter of unity and support: “We are in this together. Local businesses are doing everything we can to support our local communities.”

Two new wildlife ambassadors, bobcats in need of names, join Blandford Nature Center

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


First there is an ear. It twitches. Then there is the outline of a face. Will it come out from its hiding place? But the whispers of the school children nearby causes it to vanish.

Finally, the children are gone and it is quiet. It makes its way slowly, out of the hollow log. It looks toward the pathway and sees two strangers watching it. Carefully, slowly, it moves, picking something up off the ground and slinking back into the log.

One of the favorite hiding places of the male bobcat is the logs. The brother and sister bobcats recently came to Blandford Nature Center. (Supplied)

The encounter is brief, but you can’t help but feel the excitement of having seen a Michigan bobcat.

The five-month-old male bobcat, along with his sister, is the newest addition to the Blandford Nature Center, 1715 Hillburn Ave. NW. 

“We believe they were born sometime in the spring,” said Sidney Baxter, marketing specialist for Blandford Nature Center. “Sometime shortly after they were born, their mother was hit by a car and died.”

The cubs, not knowing what to do, stayed with the mother. Concerned residents in the Hart area where the accident happened, contacted the animal rescue center Kelly’s Westshore Animal Friends, who took the orphans in.

“Because they were so young and had not received any of the needed life survival skills from their mother, a wildlife rehabilitator decided that the cubs would not be able to return to the wild,” Baxter said, adding that Kelly’s Westshore Animal Friends began looking for a permanent home for the cubs.

Bob the Bobcat

Blandford Nature Center cares for a host of animals, about 40, that are native to Michigan. The animals in the Center’s care would not survive in the wild and through the center help to serve as wildlife ambassadors, giving residents and children the opportunity to view the animals up close and learn more about Michigan’s wildlife.

One of the most recognizable of the Blandford animals was Bob the bobcat, who had lived to the age of 15, dying in 2020.

“The average lifespan of a bobcat in the wild is about seven years, but it is often much shorter, usually four,” Baxter said. “Bob lived to 15, which is pretty rare for a bobcat.”

Actually, according to a report from John Hopkins University, most bobcats don’t live past 10 years and the oldest recorded bobcat in the wild was 16. The oldest living capitative bobcat lived to 32.

It is estimated that between 1,000 to 1,500 bobcats live in the Upper Peninsua, but they are not only up north. Bobcats may live on the outskirts of cities such as Detroit. Because bobcats live mostly solo, only pairing up for mating season and to care for their young, and they are nocturnal, most people have never seen a bobcat.

“This makes it important for people to be able to see them so they have a greater understanding about the creatures,” Baxter said.

While the animals are often mistaken for other large cats such as cougars or lynx, bobcats are distinct. They are about twice the size of a domestic cat and get their names from their tales, which appear to be “bobbed” or cut short. Chances are if you saw a large cat in Michigan, it was a bobcat as the Canadian lynx is endangered and is rarely found in Michigan.

With an empty enclosure built for two, Blandford connected with Hart’s wildlife center about the two orphan bobcats. After passing a habitat inspection by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and the Environmental Protection Agency, the cubs were transported in November making Blandford Nature Center their new home.

The female bobcat demonstrates her love for climbing, something the former residence never did. (Supplied)

Balls of mischief who need a name

“It is interesting that Bob was declawed, so he never climbed the fence [around the habitat],” Baxter said, noting that Bob had been someone’s pet before coming to Blandford. The owner had had the animal declawed leaving Bob defenseless if put back in the wild. “Every once in a while, you’ll come out and these two are climbing the fence.”

For now the brother and sister pair are just getting used to their new home. Baxter said the male prefers the logs in the center of the enclosure while the female prefers to sit under the wooden structure.

“Both love to climb the rafters of the structure and sleep in the roof area,” she said with a laugh.

To help introduce the new ambassadors, Blandford is currently hosting a naming campaign and fundraiser. For a minimum $5 donation, participants can vote on four name choices: Lil and Phil, Leia and Luke, Artemis and Apollo, and Lilo and Stitch. Residents have until 6 p.m Dec. 14 to vote with the winning name being announced on Dec. 15.

No matter what name is chosen, many – including those children on the trailway path trying to capture a peek – are excited to have bobcats back at Blandford Nature Center.

“It’s been a little bit over a year since our bobcat, Bob, passed away and walking by his empty enclosure always made me miss having a bobcat wildlife ambassador,” said Blandford Wildlife Manager Lori Lomoro. “I am excited to have these two using that enclosure now, and I can’t wait to hear about the experiences students and guests will enjoy while visiting and learning about these two beautiful animals.”

As Baxter and I walk away from the enclosure back to the main building, we turn for a look back. Watching us, in full view, and then, he is gone.

Community members can visit the bobcats on the Wildlife Trail during Blandford’s open hours Monday-Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more about Blandford Nature Center or to vote on a name, visit www.blandfordnaturecenter.org.

Santa appearances in Grand Rapids area

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


Santa is making his rounds in Grand Rapids and West Michigan with a number of appearances for this holiday season.

He will be at this year’s Santa Parade which is set for 10 a.m. Saturday along Division Avenue. Santa also has regular scheduled visits at Woodland Mall.

Santa riding into town at the 2019 Wyoming-Kentwood Area Chamber of Commerce Santa Parade. (WKTV)

Here are a few more places Santa plans to be this weekend:

BattleGR is putting on its “Cookies with Clause” Sunday, Dec. 12, from noon to 1 p.m and 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. This event includes one game of laser tag, a picture with Santa, cookie decorating, and crafts. Visit BattleGR’s website to sign up.

Reds at Thousand Oaks, FireRock Grille, and RedRock Grill will be hosting brunches with Santa. At each of the locations, there will be a family-friendly brunch with Kris Kringle himself. Enjoy a buffet, cookie decorating, and a hot chocolate bar. And of course, Santa will be available for photos. Reds at Thousand Oaks, 4100 Thousand Oaks Dr. NE, hosts its Santa Brunch Sunday, Dec. 12. FireRock Grille, 7177 Kalamazoo Ave. SE, and RedRock Grille, 4600 Macatawa Legends Blvd., will have Santa Brunches on Dec. 19.

The Coopersville & Marne Railway’s Santa Train will be taking to the rails again this month. This family-friendly event has become an annual tradition for many in West Michigan, and includes a 90-minute trip on the vintage train from Coopersville to Marne and back. During the trip, a storytelling Princess will read the “Polar Express” and kids will be able to look for special Christmas symbols located along the route. Each child also will have an opportunity to talk directly to Santa Claus using a special direct video connection. Each child also will receive a toy. For dates and times visit the Coopersville & Marne Railway website.

If you are heading north this weekend, Ludington Bay Brewing Company will be hosting a Santa visit from Sunday, Dec. 12. Santa will be stoping by between 1 and 4 p.m. to say hello to families.




Wyoming-Kentwood chamber’s Santa Parade reruns to Division Avenue, and WKTV, Saturday, Dec. 11

A marching band at the 2019 Wyoming-Kentwood Area Chamber of Commerce Santa Parade. (WKTV)

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

The Wyoming-Kentwood Area Chamber of Commerce’s 15th Annual Santa Parade will return on Saturday, Dec. 11, starting at 10 a.m., with the parade route running down South Division Avenue from 33rd Street to just before 44th Street.

Expected to be in the parade are more than 50 entrants, including five school bands, and — of course — Santa.

Santa riding into town at the 2019 Wyoming-Kentwood Area Chamber of Commerce Santa Parade. (WKTV)

WKTV will also be on-hand as well to record the festivities, with cable television re-broadcasts scheduled for the night of the parade, Dec. 11, at 7 p.m., and again Sunday, Dec. 12, at 10:30 p.m. WKTV’s coverage of the parade will also be available on-demand later.

Sponsors of the parade include Consumers Energy, Wyoming Moose Lodge, Car City, City of Wyoming, Diversified Protection and Investigations, The Chiropractic Doctor, Godwin Plumbing, Hobart Sales, HOM Flats, Lake Michigan Credit Union, Marge’s Donut Den, Rivertown Community Federal Credit Union, Steelcase, Supermercado Mexico, The Rapid and VanDyk Mortgage.
 

WKTV featured community events appear on cable television in Wyoming and Kentwood on Comcast Channel 25 and AT&T Channel 99 Community Channel. See the programming schedule at wktv.org. Community events covered by WKTV’s video coverage team are available on-demand within a week at wktvlive.com.

Retiring Kentwood Police Chief Roberts reflects on decades of service, community involvement, career of police work

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

Compiling a series of photographs of the career of City of Kentwood Police Chief Richard Roberts two things stand out — there is a ton of him standing proud among his “Brothers in Blue” and a close second is him getting personal with community members, especially kids.

As Chief Roberts prepared to retire from his position this week, and end a career of four decades in police work and 30 years with the City of Kentwood, he sat down with WKTV and reflected on what has changed and what has not over his career.

“What doesn’t change, over the years as I think back, is what I thought about (when he started), what drove me to get into police work,” Chief Roberts said. “A sense of community. To help the community, be an advocate for those victims of crimes, to try to solve them, to hold people accountable. Just basically make a community a safe place for people to live, to have businesses, raise a family. … Those are the same reasons that young people, now, are seeking to get into this profession.”

Kentwood Police Chief Richard Roberts with wife Maria in an undated photo. (Supplied)

Along the way, however, Chief Roberts said, there has been good days and bad days; there has been mentors and young officers to be mentored; there has been the constant support of a policeman’s family — including his wife, Maria — who he said are “in it as much as we are.”

“It has to be that way,” he said. “We are one of those handful of careers where we work nights, holidays and weekends. This career, the family of someone who has chose this career, has to understand that. … There has to be that support from the family.”

If he did not know that the first day on the job, he knows it now.

And about that first day …

From first day, to an unexpected career path

On his first day as a patrol officer, before he even joined the Kentwood Police Department, he learned lessons about knowing your beat and dealing with the community.

“It was 38 years ago and I can remember my very first call,” Chief Roberts said. “It was a small department, one square mile, City of Roosevelt Park, over near Muskegon … It was a call for me to respond to a traffic crash.”

Problem was, as he tells the story, he did not know the city very well, wasn’t from that area, and ended up — shall we say — taking the long way to go a short distance.

“Seemed like it took me forever to get there. … (But when he did) they asked me ‘What took you so long?’,” he said. “It’s a 1-square-mile city and they could hear my siren going all around them.”

And while on that first day in a patrol car Chief Roberts really had no thoughts of one day being a department chief, he did have the mindset of taking advantage of the opportunities presented.

“I didn’t have any long-term plans to become a chief,” Chief Roberts said. “I had some shorter-term goals that I wanted to, first, take advantage of the opportunities as they came along. And my first opportunity was as a field-training officer.

“The reason that interested me is that my field-training officers here at Kentwood turned out to be some of the people that I looked up to the most throughout my career. … That is one of the most important positions here, training our new officers.”

He added that he had some “aspirations” to be a supervisor, “but there was no race to get there.” Yet he certainly got there.

Prior to joining the Kentwood Police Department, he served as deputy corrections officer at the Kent County Sheriff’s Office and as a police officer with the City of Roosevelt Park.

Roberts joined the Kentwood Police Department in 1987 as a police paramedic and has served in many different roles, including 24 years in supervisory and management positions — the last few leading a team of nearly 95 personnel, including 70 sworn police officers.

Uniquely, Chief Roberts was the first in the Kentwood Police Department history to move through the ranks from patrol officer to police chief. In addition to his paramedic experience, he also served as a detective, field training officer, field training supervisor, road patrol supervisor, Staff Services Bureau supervisor and Detective Bureau supervisor. He also served on the crisis negotiating team.

Roberts was promoted to captain of the Patrol Division in December 2012, deputy police chief in August 2017 and then to chief in November 2019.

Along the way, there were mentors and people to be mentored, he said.

“I had two very good sergeants,” Chief Roberts said. “Sgt. (Michael) Hollinrake and Sgt. (Ted) Herrington. Both were my primary sergeants early on in my career. … Just the way they carried themselves. They were good officers themselves before they became supervisors, and both of them encouraged me to take advantages of opportunities as they came along.”

Later on, he said, Capt. Scott Yerrick and Capt. Randy Williamson mentored him after he became a supervisor.

Technology, policy changes but job remains the same

While a lot has changed over the years, in Chief Roberts career and in police work in general, he said. But most of it was for the good of law-enforcement officers and most of it is good for the community they “protect and serve.”

When he first started there were no computers in the car — “Everything was done over the radio. We hand wrote everything. Now there is so much technology in these vehicles that the officers can use.”

And that use of technology extends to all aspects of police work.

“I kid with my detectives now, with all the technology that is available for investigations, I could never go back in there,” he said. “It has changed a great deal.”

When he worked as a detective, “we were door-knockers. Talking to people. Talking to people on the phone,” he said. “But now much of modern investigations are done though social media platforms and many other computerized resources.”

And as far as changes to the “way” police do their business, he simply said “policies evolve over time” and those policies are driven by case law, changes to equipment, and more and more of a focus on being part of the community not just the protector of the community.

“I think what has changed in policy goes along with what has changed in policing over the last 30, 40 years,” he said. “It has moved to more of a profession than just a job. More and more of our staff are college educated.

(Photo supplied by Kent County Sheriffs’ Office)

“Along with new technology came police changes. Probably the most prevalent one is body cameras. The use of that and the policies on the use of force. Use of force has been standard and defined based on case law, for many, many years. … What has evolved is what tools we may have to deal with the use of force” including tasers and pepper spray … “The soft techniques.”

What hasn’t changed, he said, is community involvement, community interaction.

“We are the guardians for the community,” Chief Roberts said. “So, they count on us to protect them from crime, to try to keep crime at a reduced level. We do the best we can. … Part of serving is answering their calls when they call us. But what else can we do to enhance our community?

“We can work with the community, be transparent with them, because they have to trust us. So we spend a lot of time having positive interactions with our community, not just enforcement actions.”

Chief Roberts’ retirement is effective Friday, Dec. 10. Upon the recommendation of Mayor Stephen Kepley, the City Commission confirmed Deputy Chief Bryan Litwin to become the city’s next police chief during its Dec. 7 meeting.

 

Wyoming, Kentwood officers join others to help spread some holiday cheer

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


On a brisk, cold Tuesday morning, representatives from about 17 area first responders and law enforcement agencies — including Wyoming and Kentwood — helped Santa Claus by delivering about 500 new toys to Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital.

“This is just awesome to have this opportunity to spread some holiday cheer especially among some children who may not be able to be home,” said Wyoming Department of Public Safety Officer Chad Lynn.

The Toy Express to the children’s hospital was made possible through a grant from the First Responders Children’s Foundation (FRCF), a national nonprofit organization that provides financial relief to the families of first responders who have been injured or killed in the line of duty. The event was spearheaded by the Grandville Police Department, which wrote the grant request to FRCF.

Wyoming police officers Chad Lynn and Devin Quintard and Kentwood officers Jamie Karwowski and Jeff Augustyn help deliver presents to the Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital. (WKTV/Joanne Bailey-Boorsma)

“On the second Wednesday of the month, local first responders come out and turn their lights on for the children [at Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital],” said Grandville Chief Paul Anglim, who had served with the Wyoming Public Safety Department for 27 years.

 

“It was just a natural extension of the Project Night Lights since the group was already formed.”

Project Night Lights is a program of Silent Observer, a non-profit established in 1972 to help solve and prevent serious crime in the Grand Rapids area.

“Silent Observer is so appreciative of this donation and is thrilled that Grandville Police Department and the FRCF are recognizing Silent Obersrver’s efforts involving Project Night Lights and all the First Responders who give up their time, month after month, to show their love and support of the patients at the Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital,” said Silent Observer Executive Director Chris Cameron.

 

The parade went from the Grand Rapids Community College’s parking garage off of Ransom Avenue and made its way up to the Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital on Lake Michigan Drive. Officers then unloaded the toys to carts which were wheeled inside to the hospital.

“We’re so pleased to have donations like this from the generosity of the community,” said Kelly Dyer, president of Spectrum Health and Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital Foundations.  “The generosity is simply amazing. It has been such a challenging year for everyone, and we are grateful for those who make time for this kind of thing.”

It’s all about bringing a little bit of joy, she added with a smile.

Grandville Chief Paul Anglim (WKTV)

“Making a child feel normal while managing a challenging situation like being in the hospital is what it’s all about.  Bringing a little bit of joy…that’s what we’re trying to do here.”

Glenn Colbert, a former Kentwood Police officer who is now manager of security at Spectrum Health, agreed with Dyer, adding he felt it was a great opportunity to showcase the public outreach many officers do for the community.

“We are happy to have this opportunity to partner with our fellow law enforcement officers and emergency medical personnel by supporting the children in the hospital,” said Matt Brinkman, director of security at Spectrum Health.

 

Along with Grandville, Wyoming and Kentwood police departments, other law enforcement and first responder agencies that participated in the Toy Express event were Spectrum Security Police, Grandville Fire, Michigan State Police. Kent County Sheriff’s Office, Grand Rapids Police, Walker Police, East Grand Rapids Department of Public Safety, Rockford Department of Public Safety, Grand Rapids Community College Police, Plainfield Township Fire, American Medical Response, Life EMS, Lowell Police, and Grand Valley State University Police.

Financial Perspectives: Don’t put your money under the mattress – there are other options

By Dave Stanley
Integrity Financial Service, LLC


“Numerous options exist for a safe place to keep your money; the secret is finding the best return without any exposure to risk.”  Dave Stanley

Insulating your money against inflation, theft or catastrophe is as simple as taking it out from underneath your mattress and opening a savings account. The three most common are transactional savings accounts, money market accounts, and certificates of deposit. Two alternative accounts are high yield savings and specialty savings accounts. They all operate under the same premise: money given to the bank will earn interest.

Photo from pxhere.com

Traditional Transactional Savings Accounts

The simplest way to store money with a financial institution is to open a traditional savings account with a small minimum deposit. If the minimum is maintained, the account holder usually avoids fees. Shop around and compare factors like initial deposit and balance requirements, interest rates, and other fees.  While being highly liquid makes it easy to withdraw cash and move funds between accounts, they typically have the lowest interest rates. Accounts are federally insured through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or the National Credit Union Association (NCUA), protecting your savings from bank failures.

High Yield Savings Account

High yield savings accounts offer interest rates usually 20 to 25 times higher than the national average for transactional savings accounts. While potentially available at your local bank, the highest interest rates are typically offered by online banks. Electronic transfers between institutions are speedy and straightforward, making it easy to move your funds if needed. FDIC or NCUA also insures them. Keep in mind that banks offering high yield savings accounts do not typically provide checking accounts and other services like ATM cards.

Specialty Savings Account

Specialty savings accounts are specific to a particular savings goal. These include accounts you can open for children like savings accounts, student accounts, or 529 college savings accounts. Also included are home down payment savings accounts, health savings accounts, and traditional or Roth IRA’s. These accounts generate interest and have either low or no maintenance costs. Be aware of strict and potentially costly regulations related to early withdrawal of funds. There are also specifics concerning who can open what type of account.

Money Market Account

Money market accounts typically offer higher interest rates than traditional savings accounts, .02% higher on average. This type of account is special in that you can write checks and use a debit card, like a checking account. However, there are limits to the amount of money and the number of withdrawals allowed. It’s also not uncommon for higher minimum balance requirements and fees associated with money market accounts.

Certificate of Deposit (CD) FDIC Insured

A certificate of deposit, or CD, is an account with a fixed interest rate, term length, and maturity date. The fixed date means funds cannot be accessed early without penalty. These accounts typically pay higher rates than traditional savings accounts and are less liquid. The risk is very low, and the return is guaranteed, making it a safe place to store funds that you plan to use in the future.

 

Each of these accounts can help achieve your savings goals. Evaluate the pros and cons of each depending on your goals and financial situation. Be sure to explore various institutions for the best rates possible, and as always, consult a trusted financial advisor regarding any questions you may have.

Dave Stanley is the host of Safe Money Radio WOOD1300 AM, 106.9 FM and a Financial Advisor and Writer at Integrity Financial Service, LLC, Grandville, MI 49418, Telephone 616-719-1979 or  Register for Dave’s FREE Newsletter at 888-998-3463  or click this link:  Dave Stanley Newsletter – Annuity.comDave is a member of Syndicated Columnists, a national organization committed to a fully transparent approach to money management

Proposed hotline aimed at bottle bill law

By Danielle James
Capital News Service


Any unclaimed bottle deposits are used to clean up and develop polluted areas in the state and educate the public about pollution prevention. (Pxhere.com)

LANSING –  Some state lawmakers and environmental advocates want to create a hotline to stop retailers from fraudulently cashing in on Michigan’s bottle deposit law.

Bottle bill fraud takes deposit money away from state pollution prevention and cleanup programs.

 

The effort isn’t to stop the kind of scam immortalized in a 1996 “Seinfeld” episode where Kramer and Newman trucked empty cans and bottles from New York to Michigan for the higher deposit redemption.

New technology that scans barcodes makes it much harder to redeem cans from out of state, according to Conan Smith, the president and CEO of the Michigan Environmental Council.

Instead, the recently introduced Senate bill would focus on reporting large violations, mostly by retailers who buy beverages out of state and sell to Michigan residents, Smith said.

 

“This is actually oriented at two major systemic problems we’ve been experiencing with the bottle bill,” Smith said.

 

First, the state has a problem of retailers buying bottles and cans in Ohio, where there is no bottle deposit. Then they sell the beverages in Michigan, often to gas stations, where the consumer still pays the cost of the beverages plus the deposit.

“You as a consumer are charged the 10 cent bottle deposit, but you’re not able to return that can because it’s not a Michigan can,” Smith said. “You get screwed out of 10 cents, and these fraudulent sellers pocket your dime.”

Smith said these dimes could amount to tens of thousands of dollars per year in deposit costs for consumers.

 

Most automated return machines won’t accept out-of-state cans. If a consumer  is able to return an out-of-state can to a retailer that hand checks them, some cases of fraud are not intentional.

 

Many people who try to redeem their containers from out of state don’t even know it’s illegal, said Matt Fletcher, a recycling market development specialist for the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy.

“I’ve gotten calls from Boy Scout troops in Illinois saying ‘We’ve loaded up a U-Haul, and we’re going to drive up to Michigan to get the deposit,’” Fletcher said, “and I have to explain to them that it would be fraud, because the deposit has to be paid to get redeemed.”

Fletcher said the Boy Scouts had been collecting cans all summer for a trip.

 

“They had $10,000 worth of dimes,” he said.

 

Any fraud takes away from state unclaimed bottle deposit funds.

 

It is considered fraud to cash in bottles or cans that are not from Michigan and have the “10 cents MI” stamped on the top. (Pxhere.com)

Those are used to clean up and develop polluted areas in the state and educate the public about pollution prevention, Fletcher said.

 

“It’s not the consumer’s role to figure out if where they bought it in Michigan is complying with the law,” Fletcher said. “Ultimately the main environmental impact of fraudulently redeeming containers would be that it weakens the system and takes away unclaimed deposit funds that are used for benefits in Michigan.”

The addition of a hotline could reduce instances of fraud, Smith said.

 

“If a can doesn’t say ‘Michigan 10 cents,’ you need to have somewhere you can report that so that the bottle bill can be enforced,” he said.

 

Smith said another violation comes from retailers throughout the state that still haven’t opened up their bottle return facilities.

“They shut them down during COVID, which was totally reasonable,” Smith said, “But they’ve since failed to reopen those facilities, despite the fact that the rest of their business is back open.

“That means they’re denying you the opportunity to utilize that facility.”

Since October 2020, the return program has been fully re-established.

 

Businesses are required to have facilities open, and can’t refuse returns or restrict their hours to impact the return of bottles, said the Department of Treasury.

 

But the total number of violations throughout the state isn’t tracked by Treasury, said Ron Leix, a deputy public information officer for the department.

Smith said the hotline could also be used to report nonoperational facilities.

“We haven’t taken a formal position on the bill yet, but are very supportive in concept,” Smith said. “I want to make sure when we create this hotline that we’re not reporting our neighbor dropping a can in the trash.

“We’re really trying to generate info and intelligence on systemic problems with the implementation of the law,” he said.

Espresso Book Machine offers books hot off the presses

By Sheila McGrath
WKTV Contributing Writer


Pierre Camy holds a copy of ‘The City in the Forest,’ a history of Lansing. The book had just been printed on the Espresso Book Machine at Schuler Books & Music, 2660 28th St. SE.

If you only visit Schuler Books & Music on the weekends, you might wonder about the contraption near the back of the store that looks like a copy machine on steroids.

Visit on a weekday, though, and you’re likely to catch the Espresso Book Machine in action, busily printing, binding and trimming one of the 3,000 books it produces each year.

The Espresso Book Machine can print copies of millions of old books that are out of print, and also lets authors self-publish their novels, family histories or recipe collections, according to Pierre Camy, who runs the machine at the bookstore.

When it was installed there in 2009, it was one of only 20 Espresso Book Machines in the world.

 

Twelve years later, the machines are still pretty rare. According to the Espresso Book Machine website, there are about 80 of them around the world, mostly at bookstores, universities and libraries. A new machine costs about $125,000, Camy said.

Authors self-publishing their works make up the majority of Camy’s customers. But more and more, the machine is being used to print copies of titles available through Google Books, a service of Google that offers millions of scanned books online.

Several universities, including the University of Michigan and Harvard University, have had their entire library collections scanned by Google Books, and so have many libraries around the world. Shoppers can search for out-of-print books to be printed on the machine at ondemandbooks.com.

As long as the book is in the public domain – meaning it is no longer under copyright – it can be printed on the machine. Most books printed before the mid-1930s are now in the public domain unless the copyright was renewed, Camy said.

 

“’The Great Gatsby’ is now in the public domain,” he said. “We print books from the 17th Century, the 18th Century – anything, really.”

 

Every now and then, Camy said, he’ll get a run of orders for a really obscure book.

He recently got several requests for ‘Camp Fires and Camp Cooking; or, Culinary Hints for the Soldier,’ an 1862 book by James M. Sanderson with recipes and cooking tips for Civil War soldiers. The book is likely being purchased by Civil War re-enactors, Camy said.

 

With orders coming in both from local authors and buyers around the United States, the machine is running nearly all the time on weekdays now. But that wasn’t always the case.

 

“The first couple years were pretty slow, but then it took off,” Camy said.

There are lots of books already in the machine’s queue as the holidays draw near, he said, but authors who want to self-publish a book before Christmas can still get it in time if the files are set up according to the required specifications. Help is available for authors who need guidance about how to create the files.

“If files are print ready, we can make it happen,” he said.

The Schuler Books & Music website has guides for the Espresso Book Machine the include different types of publishing and pricing for various packages. 

County family court celebrates a record number of teenage adoptions on annual ‘Adoption Day’

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

The Kent County 17th Circuit Court, Family Division, marked its 25th Annual Adoption Day Dec. 2 with 27 adoptions finalized, a new record for the annual event, according to an announcement from the county. This year’s theme, “You are Deer to Us,” had many of the virtual courtrooms decorated and judges dressed in festive reindeer attire.

“We celebrate every single adoption that is finalized in our courtrooms throughout the year,” 17th Circuit Family Division Judge Kathleen Feeney, said in supplied material. “But our annual adoption day is a way to collectively honor these momentous occasions and to celebrate with the children and families whose lives are forever changed through adoption.”

The 17th Circuit Court’s Family Division finalizes an average of 300 adoptions each year, with the largest number in a single day typically slated for the Annual Adoption Days. Statewide, 2,161 adoptions are finalized in 2019. Of this number, 8 percent of the adoptions were youth between the ages of 13 to 17, according to the announcement.
 

This year, the Family Division judges had added reason to celebrate as nine teenagers officially joined their adoptive families. Among those adopted were 15-year-old Pierce Overway, who has spent the last seven years in foster care, with 10 different foster home placements and 15-year-old girl Marissa Holmes, who has spent more than seven years in foster care, with 13 different placements.

“The tragic truth is, teen adoptions are rare,” 17th Circuit Family Division Judge Patricia Gardner said in supplied material. “Like Pierce and Marissa, far too many kids spend years moving from one foster home to another with no sense of permanency. Many age out of the foster care system before they’re adopted.

“We are so happy for Pierce and Marissa and for their families. Theirs is a story of deep love, commitment and renewal — as are the stories of every single adoptive family.”

 

Two works by renowned artist Jaume Plensa come to Grand Rapids

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma
joanne@wktv.org


“The Four Elements” by Jaume Plensa is now on the corner of Monroe Avenue and Lyon Street in downtown Grand Rapids. (Supplied)

Letters, characters, and elements seem to randomly come together creating a human form on Monroe Avenue and Lyon Street in Grand Rapids.

The piece, Jaume Plensa ‘s “The Four Elements” is just the last addition to the downtown landscape which features such works as Mark di Suvero’s “Motu Viget” (The Swing), Maya Lin’s “The Ecliptic,” Clement Meadmore’s “The Split Ring” and the first public funded art piece by the National Endowment for the Arts, Alexander Calder’s “La Grande Vitesse.”

“Grand Rapids’ reputation as an art destination has been growing for decades,” said Experience Grand Rapids President and CEO, Doug Small. “As community leaders help to bring the work of acclaimed international artists to our doorstep, it not only enhances the ‘quality of place’ for area residents – it enhances the draw for visitors from across the country and around the world.”

Plensa, who is from Barcelona, Spain, is world-renowned having public works in several cities including Chicago where he is the artist of the Crown Fountain featuring faces on large scale screens with water shooting out of their mouths.

The Grand Rapids piece, which was commissioned by the DeVos family, is a 16-foot-tall, 5,400-pound stainless steel sculpture that uses letter characters and element symbols representing air, water, fire and earth to create a human form, signifying the many different characteristics that bring people together to form a single human race. Pamella DeVos said the piece is meant to portray a welcoming message of unity and diversity. 

The piece is one of three that the DeVos family has commissioned for the downtown area.

 

Gardens brings in third Plensa piece

The Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park already is home to the Plensa piece, “I, you, she or he,” which are three steel sculptures similar to the downtown piece.

“Utopia” By Jaume Plensa (Photo by Laura Medina, courtesy Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park)

This week the Gardens unveiled a third piece by Plensa, “Utopia.” Housed in the Gardens’ new Welcome Center, which was designed by Tod Williams and Billie Tsien, “‘Utopia” consists of four 90-foot carved marble portraits depicting the faces of Marianna, Julia, Laura, and Wilsis. Each of the floor-to-ceiling portraits utilizes the human form to symbolize the capacity for a shared humanity.

According to GRAY Gallery, which represents Plensa, the installation is crafted from white marble, a material chosen by the artist both to harmonize with the architecture and for its nuanced reactions to light and shadow. 

 

“With ‘Utopia,’ I wanted to set out to transform an expansive space into a single piece,” Plensa said. “I wanted to do something unforgettable for the Gardens. I wanted to create something that seemed invisible, but with 400 tons of marble, which I know seems like a contradiction. I spend my life trying to work through that duality, that poetry.”

The Gardens dedicated and opened its 69,000-square-foot, LEED-certified Welcome Center this week. The Welcome Center is part of the $115 million “Welcoming the World: Honoring a Legacy of Love” expansion project that includes an expanded and upgraded amphitheater, Frey Foundation Entry Plaza, a new Meijer-Shedleski Picnic Pavilion, the new Stuart and Barbara Padnos Rooftop Sculpture Garden and expanded and accessible parking and urban gardens. Still to be completed are the indoor sculpture galleries, a Volunteer Tribute Garden and the expanded Tassell-Wisner-Bottrall English Perennial Garden. The project is scheduled to be completed in June 2022. 

Bistro Bella Vita general manager becomes only public advanced-level sommelier in Grand Rapids

By Amy Sherman
WKTV Contributing Writer


It takes years of study, lots of blind tastings, patience and dedication, plus more than a few glasses of wine to pass a sommelier certification test. The resulting graduate is a passionate wine expert, who is excited to share their knowledge and love with guests, and we are lucky to have a newly minted sommelier right here in Grand Rapids.

“Ultimately this certification is a commitment to hospitality, and to the guest in our chair,” Tristan Walczweski said. He recently passed the Advanced Sommelier exam, and has received this coveted diploma. He is currently the general manager at Bistro Bella Vita in downtown Grand Rapids, as well as the beverage director for Essence Hospitality, the restaurant’s parent company.

Walczweski believes he is the only sommelier with this certification working in a restaurant open to the public in Grand Rapids, as well as one who works for a family, and one who works at a private country club. The Rockford native took almost five years to achieve this level of certification, with support from his wife Angie, and more than a little welcome distraction from his two-year-old son, Rowan. 

So why is this such a big deal, and what does it mean for you, dear reader? And how might Walczweski help you to drink better wine? Read on to find out.

Run by the Court of Master Sommeliers, the certification process “elevates the quality of the beverage service throughout the hospitality industry” according to their mission statement. “The Court of Master Sommeliers provided a reference point for exceptional hospitality,” Walczweski explained. “For some, their takeaway is expert knowledge. For others, it’s an opportunity. I’ve always enjoyed the process of these exams, the preparation, the challenge, and ultimately the reward: sharing it with the guests, and helping cultivate it further with the staff.”

Tristan Walczweski, general manager at Bistro Bella Vita restaurant in Grand Rapids, recently achieved Advanced Sommelier status from The Court of Master Sommeliers.

“It’s one of the most respected certifications in the industry,” said Walczweski. And while “there have been their fair share of shake ups and scandals over the last year, it’s always been geared towards restaurants and service. It is preparation for excellent service in that setting.” Walczweski is referencing the claims of 21 women that they have experienced sexual harrasement and abuse by six male members of the organization. The accused, as well as one other member, have been suspended, with motions in place to expel them and strip them of their sommelier titles.

 

What this certificate means for Bistro Bella Vita is that they are now home to an elevated beverage program, one that goes above and beyond the usual wine offerings you might find, all thanks to Walczweski. “Here you might find newer things, like a label you might not recognize,” he said. “Finding a taste in your glass somewhere that you might not expect it. We carry producers who have their finger on the pulse of winemaking.”

Can something like this be one more step for the Grand Rapids restaurant scene to make a splash on a more national level?

“I think so 100%.,” Walczweski said. “Grand Rapids is still very small and a very easily influenced community. Through the Covid pandemic we have been given the chance to kind of rebirth our hospitality industry. I think Grand Rapids would benefit from having a defined hospitality culture and a high level of service. We have a huge opportunity for new restaurants coming in and really creating a unique experience, and something like this just helps that happen.” Walczweski and Bistro are happy to be a part of the change and development in West Michigan.

“There is immense thought and care put into our wine programs at Essence Restaurant Group,” Walczweski said. “At Bistro Bella Vita, we aim to highlight the work of the small producers, ones who take the methodical and holistic approach, farming regeneratively and sustainably, who leave the Earth better than they found it. Much time is spent over choosing these producers with the question always at the forefront of my mind: What would our guests think of having this wine in their glass?”

As much thought and care that is put into the wine program at Bistro, there was an equal amount put in by Walczweski into achieving this certification. It is no easy task, and has taken him years to achieve this level. In fact, Walczweski didn’t even set out seeking this kind of recognition, he originally thought that the introductory course might be a nice compliment to the new management position he had taken at Bistro.

Tristan Walczweski is one of only three Advanced Sommeliers in Grand Rapids, and the only one who works in a restaurant open to the public, Bistro Bella Vita.

Walczweski started working as a server at Bistro during his senior year in college at Davenport University. After graduating with a degree in business administration and management, a personal reckoning occurred. “I was always interested in history, foriegn languages, and music education, and I wanted to find something where I could apply all of these elements, in an untraditional way,” Walczweski said. “I wanted the opportunity to do more.”

He figured that his love of learning about history and languages might help him with the test. “My knowledge of general history was a big, helpful element as to when events took place, it gave me context to things like wine law, or who was in charge in certain countries,” he said. “And having an understanding of deconstructing languages from a theory standpoint really helped with deciphering labels and understanding regions,” he explained.

The actual testing process occurs through several different levels, and typically takes years to prepare for. Walczweski took and passed the Introductory level exam, a 75 question written exam, in 2016. “I spent nearly six months preparing for the exam, gradually understanding the winemaking countries of the world, the grape varietals and regions that defined them, along with the laws and geographical influence that made each unique,” he said.

He then moved on to level two, which is known as the Certified Sommelier. This was much more involved. “The exam had three parts: a timed written theory examination, a timed blind tasting of four wines, and a service practical which in its essence was a test of grace under pressure,” he explained. “Can you maintain poise, grace, and humility while juggling the woes of a restaurant?”

To properly prepare, Walczweski worked with a few other candidates to create a tasting group. They met weekly and each person brought both a white and a red wine for everyone to taste. “We exercised the tasting grid, a deductive process of blindly assessing a wine, each week working to develop our nose and palate and to understand ultimately what makes a wine tick,” he said.

He completed the test in Detroit, and after a few tense moments during the announcement of which candidates had passed, he learned that not only did he pass, he had gotten the best score on the test out of his group. He received the Walter Core Scholarship, which allowed him to continue his wine and beverage studies, as well as travel through some of the wine regions of Europe.

 

He scheduled his test for Advanced Sommelier for October 2020, which was then delayed multiple times during the pandemic. This was both a bit of a blessing and a curse. “The hardest part of preparing for this was sticking to a routine, being able to study,  especially while in the restaurant industry,” he said. “I’d study from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., while being a parent trying to balance all of it,  I was really feeling the burn.”

The test “gave some structure during Covid,” he explained. “I was never furloughed. I worked in more versatile roles during the pandemic. Sometimes I was dishwashing, sometimes working to-go’s. Studying gave me structure and a goal post. It really was something to look forward to.”

Walczweski is now looking forward again, to taking the Master Sommelier test, but he’s going to build his own timeline around the test. Ideally, he’d love to take it in 2023, but for now, he’s going to focus on his family, and his job at Bistro. “I’m waiting till I’m ready,” he said. “Then I’ll take a path and an approach that is healthy.”

If you’d like to experience a sip of Walczweski’s expertise, you can stop by Bistro or The Greenwell Bistro and grab a glass or bottle of wine that he’s selected. You can also join Bistro’s monthly wine club, where you can order his recommendations by the bottle or the case. This year, he’s put together a list of his top ten selections for the holiday season.

I asked Walczweski if he could share any knowledge with us on how to be a better wine drinker down at the lower end of the price scale. He had some great advice, first being that there is a huge difference between bottles of wine that retail between $15-$20 a bottle and those that come in under $10.

“I play the $20 challenge with myself,” he said. “How far can I make this $20 go? Going into the $15-$20 range, you reach a new echelon from $7-$8.”

Looking beyond the familiar is where you can find some high quality, yet affordable offerings. “Knowing other countries besides the well-known ones is key,” he said. “They take the same level of work, they are also tied to the land, but are coming from countries that get overlooked. Your dollar goes further.” He recommended checking out offerings from Spain and Portugal over Italy and France, Washington over Napa, and seeking out small regional offerings that might not be well known.

It always comes down to not just the liquid in the glass for Walczweski, but also to the overall hospitality involved in the restaurant business.

For Walczweski, it’s all about “how can I make your experience exceptional every day, as it’s seen through a wine glass.”