December 8, 2025
education
Detroit Lawmakers Urge ICE to Release Students, Local Construction Worker
Ernesto Cuevas Enciso, a 34-year-old construction worker and DACA recipient, was detained by ICE while driving to work in Ypsilanti, despite having pending legal permanent residency applications and valid work authorization. Community leaders, including Michigan state senators and Detroit city council members, are demanding his release, arguing he was following proper immigration procedures and should be allowed to remain with his wife, a U.S. citizen, and their one-year-old child. The detention represents a shift in ICE policy under the Trump administration, which now arrests individuals with pending immigration applications rather than waiting for application outcomes. Cuevas Enciso is being held at a reopened for-profit detention facility near Baldwin, Michigan, and is one of several Detroit-area residents recently detained, including four students who advocates say are also in federal custody.
Read moreDecember 8, 2025
education
Holiday Detroit Returns With Its Biggest, Boldest Spectacle Yet
Holiday Detroit, an annual performance showcase, will present its seventh edition at the Music Hall on December 18th. Producer and Director Lisa McCall is leading an expanded production featuring over 100 performers, including eight musicians, multiple vocalists, dancers, student performers from Voyageur College Preparatory High School, and nationally recognized artists. The show blends diverse musical styles from Motown to gospel and hip-hop with choreography and storytelling that celebrates Detroit's cultural heritage. McCall, an entertainment industry veteran with nearly three decades of experience who has worked with legends like Aretha Franklin, has received numerous honors for her contributions to the arts and Detroit community. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 8, 2025
technology
Ancestral Bloodlines: The One-Drop Rule in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Dr. Carolyn Haliburton Carter argues that artificial intelligence systems are digitally replicating America's historic One-Drop Rule by learning and perpetuating racial biases embedded in historical data. She traces how racial classification systems from slavery—which used fractional measurements like "Mulatto" and "Octoroon" to control people through quantified ancestry—now manifest in AI technologies that categorize identity through facial recognition, DNA testing, and algorithmic decision-making. These modern systems reproduce structural racism in areas like hiring, policing, healthcare, and financial services, with facial recognition showing significantly higher error rates for darker-skinned individuals and algorithms reinforcing historical patterns of discrimination. While scholars like Joy Buolamwini and Dr. Ruha Benjamin are challenging these algorithmic hierarchies, Carter emphasizes that communities must reclaim technology through increased literacy, accountability for developers, and community-led data projects that prioritize restoration over ranking. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 8, 2025
politics
COMMUNITY VOICES: Trump Removes MLK Day & Juneteenth as Free National Park Dates, Adds His Birthday
The National Park Service announced that Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth would no longer be fee-free entry days at national parks in 2026, replacing them with June 14th, which coincides with both Flag Day and Donald Trump's birthday. The author argues this decision represents a discriminatory erasure of Black history and civil rights commemoration from national policy. By removing holidays that provided symbolic recognition and practical access for marginalized communities, the administration prioritizes personal glorification over meaningful historical acknowledgment. The columnist contends this policy change demonstrates how public institutions are being repurposed to minimize Black American experiences while centering nationalist symbolism around a single political figure. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 8, 2025
sports
Michigan State Men’s Basketball Falls to Duke 66-60 in First Loss of the Season
Michigan State, ranked No. 7, hosted No. 4 Duke at the Breslin Center in a highly anticipated matchup between top-10 teams, with the Spartans seeking to solidify their elite status after recent wins over ranked opponents. Despite a strong defensive first half that limited Duke's star Cam Boozer to just two points and excellent playmaking from Jeremy Fears Jr., who recorded 13 assists, Michigan State struggled offensively throughout the contest. The game featured multiple lead changes and remained competitive until the Spartans went cold from three-point range over the final 12 minutes, failing to capitalize when Boozer sat with foul trouble. Duke ultimately prevailed 66-60, maintaining their undefeated record while handing Michigan State their first loss of the season.
Read moreDecember 8, 2025
politics
After a Decade of Waiting, Flint Residents Set to See Movement on Long-Delayed Settlement Payments
A federal judge has approved the distribution of over $600 million in settlement payments to nearly 26,000 Flint, Michigan residents affected by the 2014 water crisis, marking the first concrete financial compensation a decade after the disaster began. The crisis originated when a state-appointed emergency manager switched the city's water source to the Flint River without proper treatment, causing lead contamination that government officials repeatedly dismissed despite mounting evidence. Payment amounts will range from approximately $1,000 for property claims to around $100,000 for young children who documented lead exposure and health impacts, with nearly 80% of funds reserved for those who were minors during the crisis. Many residents still distrust tap water despite official safety assurances, and the city faces ongoing infrastructure challenges due to declining population and revenue instability. While these payments represent significant movement toward restitution, they cannot reverse the developmental damage to children or restore public trust eroded by this environmental disaster. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 7, 2025
politics
Faith Leaders Rally Communities for a National Spending Blackout
Faith and community leaders across the United States are spearheading an economic boycott called "We Ain't Buying It," urging Black Americans and justice advocates to withhold spending from major retailers during the holiday season. The movement, which builds on an earlier Target boycott from spring that successfully pressured the company regarding its $2 billion commitment to Black businesses, asks participants to avoid corporations like Target, Walmart, and Amazon for at least seven days while redirecting their purchases to Black-owned and locally-owned small businesses. Organizers emphasize that Black consumers control approximately $1.7-2 trillion in spending power, and even a 5% reduction in corporate sales could force major retailers to reconsider their positions on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. Leaders frame this action as both an economic strategy and a broader statement against policies they view as harmful to marginalized communities, including cuts to social services and immigration enforcement practices.
Read moreDecember 7, 2025
health
Why Black Folks Say ‘No’ to Organ Donation
This article examines the deep-rooted medical mistrust among Black Americans that influences their decisions about organ donation, using personal stories to illustrate broader systemic issues. The piece focuses on Tamika Smith, a New Orleans woman who endured over a decade of medical dismissal before finally being diagnosed with endometriosis and lupus, leaving her unwilling to register as an organ donor despite maintaining regular preventative care. A Word In Black survey found that 57.6% of Black respondents believe Black transplant patients aren't treated with equal respect and dignity, reflecting concerns shaped not just by historical medical racism but by ongoing contemporary experiences of discrimination and neglect in healthcare settings. The article argues that this mistrust is a rational response to systemic oppression across multiple institutions, not simply a legacy issue, and it has significant consequences since Black Americans represent 30% of kidney transplant waiting lists despite being only 13% of the population. Researchers and physicians emphasize that addressing this mistrust requires comprehensive institutional reform, increased diversity in healthcare, and acknowledgment of present-day mistreatment rather than dismissing concerns as historical artifacts. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 5, 2025
education
DESC Appoints Talitha Johnson as New Communications Director
The Detroit Employment Solutions Corporation (DESC), Detroit's workforce development agency, has appointed Talitha Johnson to serve as its communications director, where she will oversee messaging and branding for major workforce programs including Detroit at Work and Grow Detroit's Young Talent. Johnson previously held the communications director position at Downtown Detroit Partnership and brings extensive experience from organizations including Detroit Regional Partnership, Michigan State University, and UAW-Ford. DESC operates as the centralized resource hub for workforce development in Detroit, managing career centers, training programs, and employer services while implementing the Mayor's Workforce Development Board vision. Johnson, a Detroit native and Wayne State University graduate, replaces the retiring Robin Johnston and started her new role in mid-November.
Read moreDecember 5, 2025
politics
Seniors Spend Week in Limbo as Leland House Fights to Stay Open
A historic 22-story Detroit apartment building faced an imminent power shutoff after its owners failed to pay over $50,000 owed to DTE Energy as part of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case. Management initially instructed residents to vacate by December 3rd, prompting many tenants to begin moving out, but a bankruptcy judge subsequently granted owners until Thursday to pay the debt through a $1.2 million high-interest loan tied to the building's eventual sale. Despite the court-approved reprieve allowing residents to remain, many tenants—predominantly Black seniors—expressed uncertainty about their future and continued relocating anyway. The building, which originally opened as a 700-room hotel in 1927, also houses the Leland City Club, a popular underground music venue whose supporters raised over $34,000 through crowdfunding efforts. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 5, 2025
education
People Mover Debuts New Online Retail Store with Free T-Shirt Giveaway
The Detroit Transportation Corporation has launched its first online retail store, PeopleMoverStore.com, featuring branded merchandise and celebrating with a limited-time promotion offering free T-shirts through December 8th. This retail expansion follows the system's transition to fare-free service in February 2024, which has successfully increased ridership and improved accessibility for downtown Detroit commuters. The store partners with Corktown-based supplier MyLocker, which uses print-on-demand technology to manufacture customizable items locally while employing Detroit residents. The initiative represents another effort to strengthen community engagement with the elevated rail system, which has connected downtown destinations since 1987 and serves as an established component of Detroit's transportation infrastructure.
Read moreDecember 5, 2025
politics
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Michigan Needs to Lower its BAC Limit to 0.05%
A Michigan community leader is advocating for the state to reduce its legal blood alcohol content limit for drivers from 0.08% to 0.05% in response to the state's persistent drunk driving fatality problem. According to recent data, impaired driving caused 447 deaths on Michigan roads in 2024, with the state typically losing 250-350 people annually to alcohol-related crashes. The author argues that this policy change would be cost-free to taxpayers and is supported by scientific research showing that driving performance becomes impaired at 0.05% BAC. The letter emphasizes that Michigan lags behind most industrialized nations and other states that have already implemented lower BAC limits and experienced reduced crash fatalities as a result.
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
climate
Alert sent for Nevada earthquake that did not happen
The United States Geological Survey mistakenly issued an alert on Thursday morning warning of a magnitude 5.9 earthquake near Carson City, Nevada, which turned out to be completely false. The erroneous warning, generated by the USGS's automatic earthquake detection system, reached people as far as the San Francisco Bay Area and triggered automatic safety alerts telling residents to take cover. The agency quickly canceled the alert and removed it from their website within minutes, stating this appears to be the first time they have issued a completely fabricated earthquake notification. Law enforcement agencies near the supposed epicenter confirmed no seismic activity had occurred, and the USGS has launched an investigation to identify what caused the system malfunction.
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
education
Usher, Big Sean Donate $1M to ‘Entertainment Incubator’ for Boys & Girls Club
R&B artist Usher and Detroit rapper Big Sean are investing $1 million to establish an entertainment production studio and innovation incubator at the Boys & Girls Club of Southeastern Michigan's new Michigan Central location. The 13,000-square-foot facility, scheduled to open in February 2026, will provide young people aged 14-24 with access to advanced production equipment, business education, and mentorship opportunities in entertainment and emerging technology fields. Both musicians are Boys & Girls Club alumni who are contributing through their respective foundations, alongside partners including Ilitch Sports + Entertainment and Emory University's business school. The incubator aims to help Detroit youth build careers in industries ranging from film production to artificial intelligence without having to leave their city.
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
politics
TSA to Charge $45 Fee for Travelers Without REAL ID Starting Feb. 1
The Transportation Security Administration will begin charging a $45 non-refundable fee starting February 1st for domestic air travelers aged 18 and older who arrive at airports without REAL ID-compliant identification or other approved government documents. While the REAL ID requirement was implemented in May, passengers previously could pass through security with additional screening and a written warning at no cost. The identification standard originated from security legislation passed after the September 11th terrorist attacks, requiring states to issue licenses meeting federal verification standards, though implementation has been delayed repeatedly since its original 2008 target date. Approximately 94% of travelers already use compliant identification, and the new fee structure aims to encourage the remaining passengers to obtain proper documentation or face potential denial of airport security access if their identity cannot be verified through TSA's alternative system.
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
education
PRSA Detroit Elects New 2026 Leadership, Names Antonice Strickland President
The Detroit chapter of the Public Relations Society of America held its annual meeting at Wayne State University on November 20, selecting leadership for 2026 and recognizing outstanding communications professionals. Antonice Strickland from 98Forward was elected as the chapter's 2026 president, emphasizing themes of collaboration and accessibility for practitioners at all career stages. The organization also appointed new board members and officers representing major institutions across corporate, nonprofit, government, and educational sectors throughout metro Detroit. Individual honors were awarded to longtime industry leaders, including Tina Kozak's induction into the chapter's Hall of Fame and distinguished service awards to Sharon Garcia and Georgie Kirsten. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
politics
Focus: HOPE Seeks Volunteers to Deliver Food and Support 1,500 Detroit Seniors This Holiday Season
Focus: HOPE, a Detroit nonprofit organization, is recruiting volunteers for its annual Senior Holiday Delivery event on December 20th, which will provide food boxes to 1,500 homebound elderly residents throughout Southeast Michigan. The initiative addresses growing financial pressures facing seniors on fixed incomes who struggle with rising grocery costs, delayed government benefits, and unpredictable assistance programs that force difficult choices between food, medicine, and utilities. Beyond providing essential nutrition, the delivery program offers critical human connection to isolated seniors, many of whom live alone and may not interact with anyone else that day. The volunteer effort represents both practical support and community recognition of the contributions Detroit's elderly residents have made throughout their lifetimes to sustaining the city's neighborhoods and institutions. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
education
Michigan Chronicle Creates a Table Where Power 50 Leaders Confronts Detroit’s Defining Questions
The Michigan Chronicle hosted its Power 50 dinner at Detroit's Harmonie Club, bringing together 50 influential Black leaders from Southeast Michigan to address critical issues facing the city during a pivotal mayoral transition. Publisher Hiram E. Jackson convened this diverse group of business executives, judges, philanthropic leaders, and public safety officials to move beyond celebration and engage in substantive problem-solving. Participants tackled longstanding structural challenges including the tension between real estate and economic development, educational system deficiencies, youth support, and intergenerational poverty. Rather than serving as a ceremonial recognition event, the gathering functioned as an accountability checkpoint where leaders with decision-making authority committed to ongoing collaboration and developing tangible solutions for Detroit's most pressing problems. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
education
Pro Football Hall of Fame Hosts Strong Youth Summit in Detroit to Empower Local Teens
The inaugural Strong Youth Strong Communities Summit brought together approximately 400 Detroit-area students at Wayne State University before Thanksgiving, organized through a partnership between the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Meridian Health Plan of Michigan, and community organizations. The event addressed critical challenges facing Detroit youth, including high poverty rates exceeding 45% and chronic absenteeism affecting nearly two-thirds of district students during the 2023-2024 school year. Pro Football Hall of Famers Darrell Green and Aeneas Williams, along with former college basketball player Iman McFarland, shared personal stories about overcoming adversity while leading interactive sessions focused on resilience and life skills. The summit represents part of a nationwide Centene Corporation initiative aimed at empowering teenagers through mentorship and community support to help them navigate challenges and build positive futures.
Read moreDecember 4, 2025
health
Organ Donation 101: Here’s What to Know
The article explores the U.S. organ transplant system through ten key questions, using the story of Micah Clayborne, a teenager who received a life-saving heart transplant after being diagnosed with Danon disease. While 2024 saw a record 48,000 organ transplants, over 105,000 Americans remain on waiting lists, with approximately 17 people dying daily while awaiting organs. The piece examines how the system operates through nonprofit organ procurement organizations (OPOs) and the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), which manages allocation through a computerized matching system. The article also addresses racial disparities and mistrust in Black communities, debunking myths about donor treatment while noting that Black Americans comprise the second-largest group on transplant waiting lists with roughly 32,000 people waiting for kidneys.
Read moreDecember 3, 2025
politics
What’s in a mayoral transition: Sheffield wants your suggestions
Detroit's incoming Mayor Mary Sheffield is conducting an unusually comprehensive transition process that includes extensive public input sessions to shape her first 100 days in office. At a community meeting held at the Marygrove Conservancy campus, approximately 50 residents discussed Sheffield's key policy priorities including public safety, affordable housing, transportation, and economic empowerment. Sheffield has received 1,200 job applications for 21 key positions and plans to create several new city departments focused on issues like gun violence prevention and senior services. Her transition team, which includes nearly 230 members across 18 committees, is expected to continue advising her beyond the inauguration, representing a departure from previous mayoral transitions. Sheffield, who served 12 years on City Council, aims to conduct what she calls the most inclusive and community-driven transition in Detroit's history.
Read moreDecember 2, 2025
politics
Brandy, Monica Light Up LCA for ‘The Boy Is Mine’ Concert in Detroit
On November 29th in Detroit, R&B legends Brandy and Monica brought their co-headlining tour to Little Caesars Arena, performing together for the first time in 25 years since their hit collaboration. Despite snowy weather, enthusiastic fans filled the venue to watch a star-studded lineup that included opening performances from Jamal Roberts, Mya (substituting for an ill Muni Long), and Kelly Rowland. The headliners delivered a creative multi-act show that alternated between competitive "versus" segments, individual solo spotlights, and collaborative performances, featuring multiple costume changes and special guest appearances by Detroit artists including Kash Doll, Skilla Baby, and Icewear Vezzo. The evening concluded with an emotional finale of their iconic duet "The Boy Is Mine," with the 32-city tour produced by Black Promoters Collective set to wrap up on December 14th in Jacksonville, Florida.
Read moreDecember 2, 2025
education
Dream Studio Detroit Opens New Community Hub in Cody Rouge to Expand Family Economic Mobility
Dream Studio Detroit has opened a $1.5 million, 11,000-square-foot community center in the Cody Rouge neighborhood on Detroit's west side, consolidating education, childcare, workforce training, and entrepreneurship resources in one accessible location. Founded by Detroit native Danielle North, who invested $250,000 of her own money and served as general contractor, the facility addresses longstanding gaps in neighborhood-based services for multi-generational families. The center houses Kidz Kingdom childcare facility, college access programming through the Detroit College Access Network, youth entrepreneurship training, and leadership development initiatives targeting women and Black men specifically. Funding partners include Invest Detroit, Motor City Match, IFF, and private investors, reflecting growing support for Black-led community infrastructure projects. The permanent facility represents a significant step toward eliminating barriers that prevent families in underserved Detroit neighborhoods from achieving economic mobility.
Read moreDecember 2, 2025
education
1,600 Detroit Students Meet Acclaimed Authors at Literacy for Kids’ Event
Over 1,600 middle school students from Wayne County schools participated in Literacy for Kids' annual author event at Music Hall Detroit and the Detroit Public Library this week. Students from ten schools across Detroit, Hamtramck, Redford, and Harper Woods met three acclaimed authors—Matt de la Peña, Soman Chainani, and Kelly Baptist—who contributed to the anthology "Flying Lessons and Other Stories" that students had been studying in class. The interactive event featured a moderated panel discussion, author readings, question-and-answer sessions, and concluded with students receiving signed copies of the anthology. The nonprofit organization, founded in 2019 by Jayne M. Rose-Vallee, aims to cultivate literacy and creative expression among young people by connecting them with professional writers and poets. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 2, 2025
sports
Wolverines Outplayed By Buckeyes 27-9 In “The Game” at Michigan Stadium
In the 121st edition of the storied Michigan-Ohio State rivalry, the top-ranked Buckeyes dominated the Wolverines 27-9 in Ann Arbor, ending Michigan's four-game winning streak in the series. While Michigan started strong with two early field goals to lead 6-0, Ohio State seized control from the second quarter onward, ultimately holding the ball for over 40 minutes while limiting Michigan to just 163 total yards. The Buckeyes' balanced offensive attack featured quarterback Julian Sayin's three touchdown passes and running back Bo Jackson's 117 rushing yards, overwhelming a young Michigan team struggling with injuries. Ohio State remained undefeated at 12-0 and advances to face Indiana in the Big Ten Championship, while Michigan finishes its regular season 9-3 and awaits a bowl game assignment. # Key Takeaways
Read moreDecember 2, 2025
politics
Detroit Receives More Than $4.6M as Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis Awards $34.1M in Affordable Housing Grants
The Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis has announced $34.1 million in Affordable Housing Program grants for 2025, with Detroit receiving over $4.6 million to support housing development amid rising construction costs and limited affordable inventory. The program, operating for over thirty years, provides crucial gap financing for nonprofit developers working on projects serving low- to moderate-income households, with this year's funding expected to create or rehabilitate 1,578 affordable units across Indiana and Michigan. Detroit faces significant housing challenges, requiring thousands more deeply affordable units for residents earning below 50 percent of area median income, while much of its rental stock predates 1960 and requires expensive rehabilitation. The funding fills critical financing gaps that often delay or prevent affordable housing projects from moving forward, particularly in long-disinvested neighborhoods where rental income cannot cover full construction costs.
Read moreDecember 2, 2025
politics
Skate Park, Electronic Music Museum Planned for Packard Plant Redevelopment
Detroit developers Mark Bennett and Oren Goldenberg have announced plans to transform 28 acres of the abandoned Packard Plant into a mixed-use development called "Packard Park," honoring the site's history as an underground electronic music venue. The $50 million project will include affordable housing units, Detroit's first indoor skate park, a Museum of Detroit Electronic Music, and a new industrial building designed to create 300 permanent manufacturing jobs. The city has demolished much of the deteriorating complex since 2022, spending approximately $17 million on demolition after winning a court battle against the plant's previous owner. This represents the latest attempt to redevelop the site that has sat largely abandoned for over 60 years and became a symbol of Detroit's industrial decline.
Read moreDecember 1, 2025
sports
Lane Kiffin, NIL, and the Real Problem in College Football: A Leadership Crisis We Created
ESPN and CBS commentator Darryl Jacobs argues that Lane Kiffin's departure from his team before the college football playoffs exposes a fundamental leadership crisis in college athletics rather than problems with player empowerment. Drawing on his decades of experience in college and professional sports, Jacobs contends that coaches and administrators have long operated without accountability while players face criticism for similar decisions to seek better opportunities. He asserts that blaming NIL deals and the transfer portal for instability is a convenient distraction from the real issue: a broken system that allows coaches with massive contracts to move freely without consequences while expecting discipline and loyalty from athletes. Jacobs calls for structural reforms including protected hiring timelines, leadership accountability measures, and recognition that player empowerment reveals rather than creates the chaos that has existed in college sports for years.
Read moreDecember 1, 2025
politics
Black Women Led Mary Sheffield’s March to Mayor
Mary Sheffield's historic election as Detroit's first woman mayor was powered by a strategic campaign led predominantly by Black women, particularly the team at 98Forward, Detroit's longest-standing Black-woman-led PR firm. Brittni "Bee" Brown served as communications lead, heading a tight-knit team that maintained strict narrative control and discipline throughout the campaign, resulting in Sheffield winning 77 percent of the vote. The victory represents not just a personal achievement but a generational milestone for Black women in Detroit politics, who have long served as the backbone of political operations without holding executive authority themselves. Sheffield's landslide win reflects decades of labor by Black women political organizers, strategists, and community leaders whose work shaped Detroit's political landscape while rarely receiving recognition or power.
Read moreDecember 1, 2025
education
Approval of WNBA Practice Facility, DCFC Stadium Marks New Era for Detroit Sports
Detroit City Council approved two major sports development projects on November 26: a $198 million soccer stadium for Detroit City FC in Corktown and a $50 million WNBA practice facility on the city's east riverfront. Unlike past controversial stadium deals such as Little Caesars Arena, which received over $403 million in public subsidies but failed to deliver promised development, these projects faced minimal community opposition. The DCFC stadium includes community benefits like free tickets, public art funding, and labor standards, while the WNBA facility will be paired with a youth sports academy, though critics argue the split structure avoids triggering Detroit's community benefits ordinance. Detroit's new WNBA team, set to begin play in 2029, will mark the city's return to women's professional basketball after the Detroit Shock relocated in 2009.
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