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Andy Garris serving up beer and cheer, Woodruff's - Ypsilanti - Doug Coombe
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Blogs
Adrian Pittman
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Albert Abbou
Albert Abbou - Post 1: My First Real Lesson in Life
Albert Abbou - Post 2: What now?
Albert Abbou - Post 3: Why Michigan?
Albert Abbou - Post 4: Explaining IP Law
Albert Abbou - Post 5
Amanda Edmonds
Post 1: Not Your Average Rosy Speech
Post 2: Good Deeds = Good Seeds
Amanda Uhle
Post No. 1: It's Really Free?
Post No. 2: Tall Tales & True Stories
Post No 3: Tall Tales & True Stories (continued)
Post No 4: The Many Faces Of 826
Post No. 5: 826Michigan The Movie
Amy Goodman
Amy Goodman - Literacy In Michigan, It's Worse Than You Think
Amy Goodman - Post 2: The Case for Each One, Teach One
Amy Goodman - Post 3: Literacy builds sustainable communities
Andrew Brix
Post 1: A Conservation State of Mind
Post 2: The LED Revolution
Post 3: Keeping PACE
Andrew Clock
Post 1: The Model Volunteer
Post 2: Long Live Ypsi!
Post 3: Spearheading the Water Street Trail
Post 4 - Michigan Roots Jamboree: Politics, a name change, and pride
Angela Kujava
Angela Kujava - Post 1: Employers—talk money even when there is none to give
Angela Kujava - Post 2: Speaking of those social safety nets
Angela Kujava - Post 3: Serve rather than preside
Anya Dale
Anya Dale - Post 1: Who Is Ann Arbor For?
Anya Dale - Post 2: Playing Up The Huron
Anya Dale - Post 3: Washtenaw Avenue Potential
Anya Dale Post 4: Washtenaw Avenue
Aren Stobby
Aren Stobby - Post 1
Aren Stobby - Post 2
Bob Guenzel
Post. No 1
Post No. 2: Literacy in Washtenaw County
Post No. 3: The Eastern Leaders Group
Post No. 4: Summer, Finally
Brian Tolle
Brian Tolle - Post 1: To Be An Innovative Entrepreneur
Brian Tolle - Post 2: Start Behaving…Like An Innovative Entrepreneur
Brian Tolle - Post 3: Business Dynamics Ripe for Innovation
Brian Tolle - Post 4: Spotting Opportunities for Innovation Final Exam
Carless Commuters
Post 1: Jeff Gaynor
Post 2: Conan Smith
Post 3: Lynne Fremont
Post 4: Nancy Shore - The Commuter Challenge: What's the Point?
Catherine Juon
Catherine Juon - Post No. 1: Setting up your business for a great yields
Catherine Juon - Post No. 2: Measuring the Yield of Your Online Marketing Efforts
Catherine Juon - Post No. 3: Is working in a woman owned company different?
Chad Wiebesick
Chad Wiebesick - Post No 1: Advertising & Marketing In A2
Chad Wiebesick - Post No 2: How Would You Rebrand Detroit?
Chad Wiebesick - Post No 3: Michigan’s Growing Film Industry – How Ann Arbor Marketers Can Get a Sli
Chad Wiebesick - Post No 4: Ann Arbor Advertising Awards Show Honors the Best in Creative Excellence
Conan Smith
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Dan Wickett
Post 1: Dzanc Books Defined
Post 2: New York is NIMBY and that's just fine
Post 3: Beyond the desk: Authors head up community outreach programs
Daniel Moulthrop
Want to fix education? Start with teaching.
David Lahey
Post 1: Cafeteria fries be gone! New growth in the Farm to School Movement
Post 2: How Does Your Garden Grow?
Donald Harrison
Post 1: Michigan Plays Los Angeles
Post 2: Film Beyond the Formulas
Post 3 - Ann Arbor Illuminated: 50th Anniversary of the AAFF
Doug Neal
Post 1: Simulate This
Post 2: Entrepreneurial Distractions
Dug Song
Dug Song - Post 1
Dug Song - Post 2: Ann Arbor - The Curiously Startup (and Skatepark ;-) Deficient Community
Ed Vielmetti
Post No. 1: Why I Blog
Post No. 2: Civic Wikis
Eli Cooper
Post 1: Why we need to step in Complete Streets
Post 2: From celebrating a baby's first steps to celebrating all walks of life
Post 3: One car = A dozen bikes
Post 4: Train commute talk isn't just whistling Dixie
Post 5: Transportation Map for 2041
Elizabeth Ziph
Post No 1: So What Do You Do Here?
Post No 2: Evangelism & Choice
Post No 3: Commercial Open Source Software?
Post No 4: ISO 9001:2000 Certification
Post No. 5: What's the culture of your small business?
Emma Wendt
Why Smaller Towns Make for Bigger Communities
How to Get Your Stomach Through a Michigan Winter
How an ABC (Anything But a Car) Philosophy Makes for a Closer Community
Why Southeast Michigan Should be Packing in the Start-Ups
Gene Alloway, Robin Agnew, & Bill Castanier
Gene Alloway - Opening Up the Book Festival
Robin Agnew - The Bookseller Backbone of Ann Arbor
Bill Castanier - Book City, Ann Arbor
Gretchen Driskell
Please Loiter
The Train Stops Here
We Built It So They Would Come
What Makes a 21st Century Community?
Jan Gensheimer & Gerry Roston (NEF)
Jan Gensheimer & Gerry Roston - Post 1: Who are the new entrepreneurs?
Jan Gensheimer & Gerry Roston - Post 2: Who are the professionals who serve entrepreneurs?
Jan Gensheimer & Gerry Roston - Post 3: It’s who you know that really counts
Jason Bing
Post No 2: Very Different Messengers, One Message
Post No 1: A Municipal Energy Bond for A2?
Post No 3: Washtenaw County’s "Deep Green" Talent
Jason Stewart
Jason Stewart - Post No 1: Finding The Tech Community
Jason Stewart - Post No 2: Music Mecca
Jeff Helminski
Jeff Helminski - Post 1: Why I Live Here
Jeff Helminski - Post 2: Don't Assume It'll Happen
Jeff Helminski - Post 3: If you attract them, prosperity will come
Jeff Helminski - Post 4: What if we did something radical?
Jeff Kass
Post 1: A Perfectly Knuckleheaded Rationale
Post 2: Reinventing the Ann Arbor Book Festival
Post 3: One of the Big Problems I have with School
Jeff McCabe
Jeff McCabe - Post 2: From Plot To Plate
Jeff McCabe - Post 1: It all started with pastrami
Jeff McCabe - Post 3: Investing In Our Farms
Jeff Meyers
Jeff Meyers - What Is Ann Arbor's Artistic Identity?
Jennifer Cornell
Jennifer Cornell - Post 1: Dear Michigan
Jennifer Cornell - Post 2: A Balanced Diet For Michigan
Jennifer Cornell - Post 3: Let's Joust
Jenny Koppera and Erin McDonald
Post 1: Youth Voice In Our Community
Post 2: What is YOUR Truth?
Post 3: Figuring out the In-Between
Jeremy Peters
Jeremy Peters - Post No 1: A Bit More Cooperation
Jeremy Peters - Post No 2: The tale of two (or more) downtowns
Jeremy Peters - Post No 3: Michigan's Unkindest Cuts
Jesse Bernstein
Jesse Bernstein - Post 1: Where Are We Going?
Jesse Bernstein - Post 2: Let's Not Get Ahead Of Ourselves
Jesse Bernstein - Post 3: The Future Is Ours
Jessica Soulliere
Post 1: Rising Stars vs. Rock Stars
Post 2: Connecting With the Rockstar in You, and Your Community
Post 3: Getting on the Tour Bus
John Austin
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Jon Zemke
Jon Zemke - Dear Mr. Mayor...
Josie Parker
Josie Parker - Post 1: The Fate & Funding of Public Libraries
Josie Parker - Post 2: Downtown Development & The Library
Josie Parker - Post 3: Will public libraries exist at the turn of the next century?
Joy Naylor & Diane Bennett
Post 1: Art Speaks About Your Business
Post 2: Artists Up Close and Personal
Post 3: Joy Naylor - Feng Shui Design is Energy
Justin Fenwick
Post 1: A Third Way to Look at Art
Post 2: You Want Free? At What Cost?
Post 3: Social Media, the Bellwether of Generation Gaps in Organizations
Kari M. Smith
Why Be a Small Farmer in Southeast Michigan?
The Struggles of a Michigan Small Farmer
Using Dollars to Support Community Instead of Corporation
Karim Motawi
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Ken Kozora
Ken Kozora - Post 1: Horns For The Holiday
Ken Kozora - Post 2: EcoHistory
Kirk Westphal
Post 1: Why Banks And Offices Are The Bane of Downtown
Post 2: It's okay?I napped through Civics too
Post 3: Why Peak Oil is the most important thing you'll never hear
Larry Eiler
Post 1: What A Difference A Decade Makes
Post 2: How Things Turned Around
Post 3: Getting On The Right Path
Laura Rubin
Post No 1: So, How's The River
Post No 2
Post No 3: Dams, Dams, Dams
Post 4: Bringing it home
Lawrence Almeda
Lawrence Almeda - Post 1: A Defining Experience
Lawrence Almeda - Post 2: More Work to be Done
Lawrence Almeda - Post 3: Enhance Your Client Service Practices
Mahendra Ramsinghani
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Mark Maynard
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker - Post 1: What's Your Visual Literacy
Mark Tucker - Post 2: Curing Visual Illiteracy
Mark Tucker - Post 3: Festifools
Matt Grocoff
Matt Grocoff - Post 1: Ann Arbor’s Mission Zero
Matthew Naud & Jamie Kidwell
Matthew Naud: Sustainability hums with the cross-pollination of city departments
Jamie Kidwell: Ann Arbor has 200 sustainability goals... and counting
Matthew Naud: Sustainability? NOT!
Matthew Naud: Why the Huron is the cleanest urban river in Michigan
Jamie Kidwell: How Do You Measure Zero % Waste?
Mel Drumm
Mel Drumm - Post 1: The Magic Of It All
Mel Drumm - Post 2: Teamwork - Through the Eyes of a Cartoon Character
Mel Drumm - Post 3: Innovation – I’ll Choose Door Number…
Melissa Milton-Pung
Collaboration Is Not a Dirty Word
Will You Know This Place In 50 Years?
Lessons From the Back Seat
Michael Benham
Post 1: Mass transit isn't a horse of another color
Post 2: Sneak Preview – A Transit Vision for Washtenaw County
Post 3: What can the Transit Master Plan do for you?
Michael Drake
Post 1: Welcome to Kyrgyzstan
Mike Finney
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Molly Notarianni
Post 1: Mixing Community with Your Vegetables
Post 2: Hand-to-Mouth Economics
Post 3 - Food by the way of ice shanty: Farmers Market veterans brave the winter
Nancy Shore
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Nancy Short
Post 1: Ten Thousand Voices
Post 2: A New Year, A New Era
Post 3: The State Answers Its Citizens
Post 4: From Ten Thousand Voices to Ten Million Voices
Newcombe Clark
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Pam Labadie
Post 1: Save Water, Save Energy, Save Money, Save the Planet
Post 2: RiverUp! The Time Has Come
Post 3: The United Nations of the Huron River
Patrick McCauley
Post 1: What's the Difference Between Vermont and Michigan?
Post 2: Historic Neighborhoods, NIMBYs, and the Fleeing Young Professionals
Post 3: Old Buildings Aren't Throwaways!
Pavan Muzumdar & Neal Fairbanks
Post 1: Why Venture Capital Gravitates to High-Tech
Post 2: The State of High-Tech in Michigan
Post 3: What's Different About Michigan
Post 4: Where do we go from here?
Priya Gogoi
Post 1: The DeNovo Story: How an Indian, an Iranian and an American built an enterprise over tea
Post 2: How cancer led to innovation
Post 3: Children of the Dark Lord
Rebecca Lopez Kriss
Rebecca Lopez Kriss - Post 1: When Trees Grow Out of Your Gutters
Rebecca Lopez Kriss - Post 2: Underground Parking Blues
Rebecca Lopez Kriss - Post 3: Do something
Rebecca Lopez Kriss - Post 4: My Three Favorite Marketing Ideas for Washtenaw County That No One Lis
Rebecca Lopez Kriss - Post 5: A Plug
Richard 'Murph' Murphy
Richard 'Murph' Murphy - Post 1: The knowledge economy is not made up of hyphens and PhDs
Richard 'Murph' Murphy - Post 2: Educating for the local economy vs. education as export industry
Richard 'Murph' Murphy - Post 3
Richard 'Murph' Murphy - Post 4
Richard Murphy
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Rick DeVos
Rick Devos - Post No. 1: ArtPrize
Rick Devos - Post No. 2: Why Michigan Needs To Support The Arts
Rob Cleveland
Rob Cleveland - Post No 1: Tired of being number one? Tax incentives have to stay.
Rob Cleveland - Post No. 2: Film Industry Credits Take Time To Take Root
Rob Cleveland - Post No. 3: Supporting Health Care Reform: The Small Business Perspective
Robb Woulfe
Post 1: Ah, Yes, The Business of Show
Post 2: The Feds Are Using the "F" Word
Post 3: Our Festival's Future, Or Will "Capital Steps" Be Back in 2025?
Ron Suarez
A Purely Digital Play Business in the Land of Manufacturing
The Politics of Change and Upheaval in the Music Industry
A podcast is not just putting audio or video on a web page
So You're Thinking About Doing a Podcast
Creating your own podcast
Ryan Rybolt
Satish Malnaik
Post 1: If it's broke, DON'T fix it
Post 2: Preventive Maintenance for Health and Cars
Sean Mann
Post 1: "The past is never dead. It's not even past."
Post 2 - Simply Put: Place Matters and We Need to Create Better Places
Post 3: Personal Action and a Culture of Opportunity
Post 4: Advocating for Michigan and Appreciating What We Have
Post 5: Having Fun Arguing For Cities, the Arcade of Fire, and the Sexiness of Density
Sean Reed
From a Folding Chair to $55 Million in Funded Clean Energy Projects
Life With the Maasai: Why Feeding the Starved Doesn't Work for Long
"You Cannot Speak to a Frog in a Well about the Ocean"
Stephanie Chueh & Jordan Garfinkle
Stephanie Chueh: What King David Could Learn From Efficiency
Jordan Garfinkle: Passionate Young People as a Renewable Resource
Steve Pierce
Steve Pierce - Post 1: Why Do Most Free Wireless Efforts Fail?
Steve Pierce - Post 2: Building Ypsi Wireless
Steve Pierce - Post 3: Ypsi Wireless spreads the gospel
Steve Pierce
Post 1: What I Found In My Name
Post 2: The Squelching of Self-Employment
Post 3: What I think of our financial collapse
Tamara Real
Post No 1: What I Know
Post 2: The Business Of Art
Post 3: What Bugs Me
Tamara Real - Post 4
The Concentrate Team
Post No. 1: Paul Schutt
Post No. 2: Newcombe Clark
Post No. 3: Jeff Meyers
Post No. 4: Dave Lewinski
Thomas Meloche
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Tom Rieke
Planetary Coincidence
It Isn't Easy Being Blur
The Next 30 Years
Tracy Koe Wick
Post No. 1
Post No. 2
Post No. 3
Post No. 4
Post No. 5
Trenda Rusher
Post No 1: Access Points
Post No 2: Washtenaw County’s Katrina
Post No 3: Rethinking Customer Services In The Public Or Private Sector
Trevor Staples
Post 1: It's Yours To Do
Post 2: Yes, You Do Have a Care in the World
Post 3 - FAVORS: Fundraising and Volunteering for Organizations
Women’s Exchange of Washtenaw
Post 1: Carrie Hensel - Do Women Really Do Business Differently Than Men?
Post 2: Rebecca Lopez Kriss - Women Need to Know it Isn't Either-Or
Post 3: Marisa Smith - Build Your Own "Old Girls Network"
Post 4: Debra Power - The POWER of Women
Post 5: Carole Baker - Taking the WORK out of Networking
Mark Maynard
Mark Maynard publishes the magazine
Crimewave USA
, puts out records,
draws comics
, and
blogs
when others sleep. He is one of the founders of Ypsilanti's popular
Shadow Art Fair
, co-chair of
YpsiVotes
, and a member of Ypsilanti's 2020 Task Force on the future of the city. He has a keen interest in economic development and will be writing about why he's enthusiastically chosen to live in Ypsilanti.
Post No. 1
Posted By: Mark Maynard
Posted: 4/15/2008
Hello, my name is Mark and I'm an Ypsilantian…
I lived in Ann Arbor for a while. Then I moved.
I met my wife in Ypsilanti, at a bar that's since been condemned. The place was called Cross Street Station, and my band, Prehensile Monkey-Tailed Skink, was playing there. Unlike everyone else, Linette didn't run screaming. Linette's her name. And that was more than 15 years ago now.
Before that night, I'd only been to Ypsilanti once. My friend Dave drove me out to Ypsi from Ann Arbor, where we were in college together. It pains me to say it, but our objective was to buy as much really crude porn as we could carry. Our roommate Jack's parents were coming to visit, and we wanted to make a good impression.
I'm not proud of it, but that's the truth.
Anyway, we headed out to Ypsi in search of inhumanly crude filth, and we weren't disappointed. We found a bookstore with a dilapidated cardboard box full of "used" porn magazines for a few bucks a piece. Until I met Linette, that's all I knew of Ypsi – porn and rock-n-roll. I'd heard there were drugs and prostitutes there too, but, as an Eagle Scout with a propensity for panic attacks, I wasn't all that adventurous. Then, I met Linette in '93, and the love affair with Ypsi began in earnest. The more I learned about the City's rich and bizarre history, and the characters that called it home, the more I wanted to be a part of it.
I've now lived off and on in Ypsi for about a decade and a half. Linette and I tried to leave on a few occasions, but something always kept pulling us back. First, we tried Atlanta. I'd lived there for a few years as a kid and had fond memories of it, but, as a grown up, I found that it kind of sucked. We lasted there about two and a half years before coming back.
Then, after a short detour to DC, Linette and I moved to LA. We were there for about a year when we decided to pack our stuff, drive back across country, and settle for good in Ypsi. We were beginning to think seriously about houses and babies (
actually, just one house, and one baby
), and, when we thought about places we'd like to put down roots, the only place that came to mind was Ypsi.
There was something about Ypsi that just called to us. I can't speak for Linette, but, for me, it was the authentic sense of community I got on Saturday mornings, sitting around the potbelly stove at the Freighthouse, drinking coffee and watching people of all ages and races, dancing around to the sounds of banjos and guitars. There was a real sense of family, and a feeling that we were all in it together. Maybe I'm a sap, but I fell for it.
I'm generally a "glass half empty" kind of guy. But, when it comes to Ypsi, I can't do it. Where others see decay, I see a spirit of resilience. And I'm not alone. I know it puzzles some Ann Arborites to hear this, but there are quite a few of us who don't live here because we
have
to, but because we
want
to. There's a sense of community here that I've never felt elsewhere. People with ideas and energy are welcomed and encouraged. Maybe it's because there's little infrastructure, but there aren't a lot of barriers to participation. If you have a good idea and you come to Ypsilanti, you'll find people eager to join you.
I'm not anti-Ann Arbor. I like Ann Arbor. I lived there for several years, and I have quite a few friends who still do. I might give them a hard time over beers about the number of Starbucks that are downtown now, but I do like Ann Arbor. As the father of a three year old, I look at their school system with a great deal of envy. Ann Arbor, given the economic engine of the University of Michigan, has cultural assets that we in Ypsi could never hope to have. But, then again, because Ann Arbor is only a few miles away, we don't necessarily need to.
And I would argue that Ann Arbor's success hasn't come without a price. The cost of doing business there is relatively high. And, as a result, there's homogenization happening. Where there was once Drake's sandwich shop, there's now Jimmy Johns and Potbelly. And to add insult to injury, the Potbelly Sandwich Shop, stands where the once influential Discount Records used to. There's no sign to mark it, or draw attention to the fact that Iggy Pop, the godfather of punk rock, and favorite son of Ypsilanti, once worked there, but that's where it was.
There's still a hell of a lot of interesting stuff going on – don't get me wrong – but I'd suggest that the momentum is headed in the opposite direction. Take for example the Tech Center. The Tech Center, which used to be home to dozens of Ann Arbor artists, was not so long ago bulldozed to make space for an upscale Y. I know people love the Y, but it didn't come without a cost. Many of those artists, priced out of Ann Arbor, have left. And, I'd argue, that Ypsilanti, where many of them are landing, is coming out on top.
We may not have the Royal Shakespeare Company, but I'd argue that Ypsilanti has more to offer than the strippers and meth dealers that might first come to some of your minds. Ypsilanti isn't just one thing. As my friend Caleb says, "It's also quiet neighborhoods, homemade parade floats and crazy millionaires." His theory is that Ypsilanti is odd because it's stayed complex and layered while the Detroit metro region is full of places that are easily labeled as affluent or poor, urban or suburban, etc. Ypsilanti continues to defy labels. Virtually every demographic of Metro-Detroit's 5 million person region can be found in the 4.5 square miles and 22,000 people of Ypsilanti.
I suspect he's right, but what most appeals to me about Ypsi is the indomitable will to create and shake things up. Ypsi churns out American iconoclasts like other towns crap out gated McMansion communities. Iggy Pop was raised here. Preston Tucker, the automotive maverick who took on the big guys in Detroit, was from here. Early animator Winsor McCay got his start here. Elijah McCoy, one of the most famous black inventors of the 20th Century, was from here. There's a spirit of, "Fuck it, I can do it better," in the air. It's palpable. If you get out of your car, you can feel it.
Ypsi, in my opinion, by suffering financially since the end of World War II, has dodged a bullet. And it wasn't by choice. Our downtown wasn't overrun by national chains, not because we fought them, but because they didn't want us. The question now is, how will we navigate what's coming, because growth is clearly coming. How will we keep the unique character of our downtown? It's occurred to me to fight the chains. I'm told there's a town in Oregon that's passed a law requiring local ownership of businesses. I think that's probably a good thing in the long term.
Locally-owned businesses
put more money into their regional economies, and tend to stay when times get tough. They don't, like Pfizer, pick up and leave when profits are down (
in spite of all the economic incentives that have been given them over the years
).
But, the tax base in Ypsilanti, where 25% of our population lives in poverty, is eroding. We need tax dollars to keep our police on the street, our fire engines running, and our public parks open. Given that reality, I've mellowed a bit. I wouldn't be enthusiastic about a Starbucks on Michigan Avenue, but I doubt that I'd picket one. I'd just hope that it got people to stop their cars, feel that palpable sense of "Fuck it, I can do better" that's in the air, and give one of our local stores a chance.
And, of course, I'd wish that it would go out of business quickly.
I'll be here all week.
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