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Transition Tracker: Sheffield launches ‘neighborhood conversations’ on policy agenda

January 30, 2026

Mary Sheffield, Detroit's first woman mayor, is conducting an extensive transition process following her landslide November 2025 election victory with 77% of the vote. Her "Rise Higher Detroit" transition team, led by attorney Melvin Butch Hollowell and comprising 284 volunteers across 18 policy committees, has been meeting regularly to develop recommendations for her administration's first 100 days and four-year term. Sheffield has announced several key appointments, including David Bowser as chief of staff, Brian White as deputy mayor, and the retention of Police Chief Todd Bettison along with several other officials from the previous administration.

Who is affected

  • Detroit residents and neighborhoods
  • Mayor Mary Sheffield and her incoming administration
  • The 284 volunteer members of Sheffield's transition committees
  • Key retained officials including Chief Financial Officer Tanya Stoudemire, Corporation Counsel Conrad Mallett, Police Chief Todd Bettison, and communications staff
  • New hires including Chief of Staff David Bowser, Deputy Mayor Brian White, Director of Government Affairs Fred Durhal III, and Director of Youth Affairs Jerjuan Howard
  • Community organizations including Detroit Action, MI Poder, and Eastside Community Network conducting outreach
  • Michigan state lawmakers from both parties
  • Pregnant women and new mothers who will benefit from the Rx Kids program
  • Youth representatives on transition committees
  • Campaign donors and philanthropic foundations funding the transition
  • Job applicants (over 1,200 resumes received)

What action is being taken

  • Sheffield's transition team is conducting five scheduled "community conversations" on priority policy areas (February 2, February 14, March 4, March 5, and March 7, 2026)
  • The Rise Higher Detroit Community Survey is collecting responses from residents through March 6, with a goal of 6,500 responses
  • Community organizations are conducting door-to-door canvassing and distributing surveys at grocery stores, churches, and other community spaces
  • Transition committee members continue to meet informally and remain in communication after submitting initial policy recommendations
  • HR&A Advisers is reviewing and refining policy recommendations
  • Detroit is participating in the Rx Kids program providing financial assistance to pregnant women and new mothers
  • The administration is interviewing candidates to fill key roles (over 1,200 applications received)

Why it matters

  • This represents what Sheffield's team calls "the most ambitious and inclusive transition engagement effort in the city's history," with a scale notable even compared to cities like New York (400 transition members for a population 10 times Detroit's size). Sheffield's community-driven approach marks a significant departure from typical mayoral transitions, as even veteran transition leader Hollowell acknowledges he had "never seen" or "heard of" such extensive public involvement. The transition addresses critical issues facing Detroit including gun violence, housing affordability, education, economic development, regional transportation, and neighborhood revitalization. As Detroit's first woman mayor with a strong electoral mandate (77% of votes), Sheffield's approach could reshape how city government engages with residents and delivers services, with implications for addressing longstanding challenges in underserved neighborhoods while maintaining the city's recent progress.

What's next

  • An action plan will be released publicly on April 11, 2026 (Sheffield's 100th day in office)
  • The Rise Higher Detroit Community Survey remains open through March 6
  • Five community conversation events are scheduled between February 2 and March 7, 2026
  • Additional hires will be announced in the coming days
  • Policy recommendations will undergo another review by transition committee members after being refined by HR&A Advisers and informed by survey results
  • Sheffield plans to launch new departments for seniors and human, homeless and family services; offices of gun violence prevention, small business affairs, homeownership and housing rights; home repair and education task forces; and a regional transit working group in her first 100 days

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com