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Groundwork Center Programs Help You

Create a better michigan!

Together, let's build local-based solutions for environment, economy, and community.

GIVE NOW
Q

About Our
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Rosebud Schneider is a former manager of Ziibimijwang Farm, owned by the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians and located near the Mackinac Straits.

Little Traverse Bay Bands created Ziibimijwang Farm in large part to help achieve food sovereignty and expand the use of traditional foods. “You can’t call yourself sovereign unless you grow your own food,” says Joe Van Alstine, a former chair of Ziibimijwang's board.

Rosebud is currently Co-Director, Education and Engagement for Keep Growing Detroit. She is an enrolled Citizen of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, recognized descendant of the Lac Du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewas and Eastern Shawnee Tribe of OK and Purepecha peoples.

Groundwork has partnered with LTBB in areas of food access and food education.

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A BETTER WORLD IS POSSIBLE. We think you believe that too.

 

LET'S MAKE REAL CHANGE

We Understand

It is frustrating to want the best for our Michigan but not have the time, skill set, and team to make the change you see we need.

We Have Solutions

People like you have allowed Groundwork to design and implement local-based solutions that have tackled big problems and strengthened our environment, our economy, and our communities for 25 years.

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"We are so fortunate to have such a resourceful, competent, and impactful advocate for positive change in Northern Michigan."

— Skip Pruss, former director of the Michigan Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth

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3. TOGETHER WE build the Michigan we BOTH want to see

NEWS FROM

Our Better World

Rebuilding ‘foodshed’ and community resilience

“Rebuilding the Foodshed: How to Create Local, Sustainable, and Secure Food Systems,” by farmer and university professor Philip Ackerman-Leist, is the third book in the Bob Russell Resilience Reading Project. He discusses how we came to the largely industrial food system that we have today, where it’s often easier for a school in our region to purchase lettuce from California, for example, rather than from farmers right down the road.

TC-TALUS Seeks Comments on Long-Range Plan

The Traverse City Area Transportation and Land Use Study (TC-TALUS), the regional transportation planning agency, wants feedback on their draft long-range plan, which recommends how local agencies should spend scarce transportation dollars. While there are many bright spots in the plan, it assumes we can build our way out of traffic problems with new and wider roads. It fails to recognize the role that demand-side strategies-like parking management, reliable transit and safe bike networks-play in reducing traffic at the busiest times of the day.

Energy Freedom’ Bills: Time to Unlock Homemade Power in Michigan

A bipartisan group of state representatives has introduced four bills, known as the Energy Freedom package that would allow Michiganders to invest more in solar, wind, or methane-powered generation; reap a better return; and share credit for the electricity they produce. Different combinations of 12 Democrats and five Republicans are sponsoring different parts of the package, marking a shift in the Michigan Legislature.

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