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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
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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.

 

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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.

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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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NEWS FROM

Our Better World

Stanford’s Cost Saving Lesson: Parking Doesn’t Pay

In the late 1990s, Stanford University found a way to trim the mounting costs of providing a high quality education: Pay university staff to leave their cars parked at home. Locally, Northwestern Michigan College recently unveiled a new master plan, which calls for an additional 244 parking spaces to accommodate an expanding technical education program and double the amount of student housing. Are there any lessons local college officials can learn from the California university?

View of public transit is changing nationally and locally

Back in 2009, some of the bumpers on BATA buses in Traverse City were held together with duct tape. Today, the 75-strong BATA bus fleet is taking more commuters than ever before to and from their jobs. They did this by adding routes and providing services that “fit residents’ lifestyles,” according to BATA’s business development director. This caught the attention of Jeffrey Tumlin: It is fortunate “you have a transit operator that really gets it.”

Mary Brower: More Renewables, Efficiency for Great Lakes Energy

Mary Brower is running for the Great Lakes Energy Cooperative board of directors because she wants her utility to embrace the future-particularly moving beyond coal power to more renewable energy and energy efficiency. Great Lakes Energy members will receive a ballot for their board of directors election in the July-August issue of the co-op’s magazine, Country Lines, which hits mailboxes soon. Brower recently took a break from her daily farm chores to speak by phone about her campaign to persuade fellow co-op members to check her name on the ballot and mail it in.

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