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NEW FARMS PUBLIC Shelby and Utica put part of water and sewer payments escrow until state settles debt dispute SAFETY in TOOLS COULD SAVE LIVES IN ACCIDENTS BY K. MICHELLE MORAN kmoran@candgnews.com
FARMS — In an emergency, every minute can make the difference between life and death. That’s why the Grosse Pointe Farms Public Safety Department is so excited to have obtained a set of hydraulic tools — including the Jaws of Life — that will enable it to remove people trapped by industrial machinery or crushed vehicles. Officer Michael Ryan obtained a $48,000 grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Assistance to Firefighters program to enable the department to purchase extrication and stabilization tools that will be kept on the
new fire engine and a supervisor’s vehicle. Although a couple of neighboring Grosse Pointes already have these kinds of hydraulic tools, having its own means the Farms can respond more quickly to a catastrophe in the city. As Ryan explained, in a bad accident, first responders generally have about an hour — referred to as the “Golden Hour” — between the time of the incident and the time the patient reaches the hospital emergency room to save the patient’s life. “Part of us having these extrication tools is it allows us to rapidly achieve that ‘Golden Publicand Safety Department takethrough part in training March 30 Hour’ (goal),” Ryan explained. BY KRISTYNE E.Members DEMSKE of the Grosse Pointe Farms domestic sexual violence comprehensive to learn how to use newly acquired hydraulic tools that can extricate someone from a vehicle. kdemske@candgnews.com services and resources. The agency provides emergenPhoto provided by Grosse Pointe Farms Public Safety Department See TOOLS on page 12A cy, support and prevention services for survivors of MOUNT CLEMENS — Taking steps this domestic and sexual violence, including an emergenmonth to highlight awareness of sexual assault, Turn- cy shelter, individual and group counseling, advocacy, ing Point Macomb is hosting its sixth annual fund- a personal protection order assistance program, and a raiser, Stepping Out With the Stars, April 29. forensic nurse examiners program. Turning Point strives to empower survivors of See TURNING on page 18A
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Second crash in less than a year expands hole in Farms post office
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FARMS — The gaping hole in the side of the Grosse Pointe Farms branch of the U.S. Postal Service has gotten bigger.
After a speeding motorist drove into man — emerged from the wreckage with “We’re glad to see he wasn’t hurt,” Rogthe building the morning of July 9, 2022 — “not a scratch” on him, Farms Deputy Public ers said. sending bricks and debris flying — Turning a second Director Andrew Rogers said. stands Police at the 2021 As was thewith caseStepping last summer, PointSafety President and CEO Sharman Davenport event Out the driver speeder added to the damage after crashing who responded to the crash said the driver was headed eastbound on Warren Avenue with the Stars emcee Evrod Cassimy, of WDIV-TV. into the same spot at 2:24 a.m. March 23. walked out the back ofPhoto thecourtesy post ofoffice toward the spot where Warren ends at Mack Turning and Point The driver — a 44-year-old Detroit declined medical attention. See CRASH on page 16A
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
2A
Cost rises for Hampton Road project BY K. MICHELLE MORAN kmoran@candgnews.com
WOODS — It’s going to cost Grosse Pointe Woods quite a bit more than officials initially anticipated to replace a water main and repave Hampton Road from Mack Avenue to Marter Road. While the city had initially budgeted $1.8 million for the project, the lowest bid actually came in at around $2.4 million, or roughly $600,000 more, City Administrator Frank Schulte said. A low bid from New Haven-based Pamar Enterprises Inc. to undertake the project for $2,324,642.75 was approved unanimously by the Woods City Council March 6. A $100,000 contingency brings the project up to an amount not to exceed $2,424,642.75. Pamar was one of four bidders. City Councilman Thomas Vaughn asked what was driving the “very substantial cost increase.” “That was due to the economic situation out there and few contractors qualified to do the work,” Schulte said. City Engineer Ross Wilberding, of An-
derson, Eckstein and Westrick Inc., also said the “economic climate” had caused the sharp increase. “It’s consistent with what we’re seeing in the overall market,” Wilberding said. He said they’re seeing projects come in at 15% to 20% higher than original engineering estimates. It’s a combination of high inflation, uncertainties in the supply chain and increases in labor costs, he said. “The number of contractors out there is another factor,” Wilberding said. “The number of contractors has not kept up with (rising demand).” To some extent, that’s connected to the loss of many construction firms after the Great Recession and housing market crash caused new construction to all but grind to a halt some 15 years ago. “I’m not surprised by the cost,” longtime City Councilwoman Vicki Granger said. Granger recalled a similar spike in infrastructure project costs for road construction and the like circa 2013 and 2014, as cities were emerging from the Great Recession of 2008 and starting to tackle projects that See HAMPTON on page 5A
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SECOND FRONT PAGE 3A/ GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
Foundation purchases bulletproof vests for Park officers BY K. MICHELLE MORAN kmoran@candgnews.com
PARK — Members of the Grosse Pointe Park Public Safety Department will be safer on the job thanks to a donation from the relatively new nonprofit Grosse Pointe Park Public Safety Foundation. On March 21, members of the GPPPSF formally presented officers in the department with new bulletproof vests. GPPPSF Board President John Wolski said this is the foundation’s first gift to the department. The nonprofit formed last summer and raised about $24,000 to purchase 23 vests for the department — one for each officer. The vests cost more than $1,000 apiece. Park Public Safety Director Bryan Jarrell said the vests were custom-made for each officer. “We’re very grateful to them for their generosity,” Jarrell said of the foundation. “Their sole purpose is to buy things for the Public Safety Department that we can’t buy with our normal budget.” Jarrell said the department requires that officers wear these vests and it needs to provide them, but money has been tight in recent years. He said each vest lasts about five years before it needs to be replaced, as sweat and wear-and-tear degrade their effectiveness
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LEFT: Frannie Bahoura, 6, of Grosse Pointe Shores, rides a pony at Osius Park during the Shores’ Easter egg hunt April 1.
over time. Department officials said some of the vests were more than a decade old. “They’re so vital to our everyday survival,” Jarrell said. “We needed to replace them.” City Manager Nick Sizeland confirmed
Photos by Patricia O’Blenes
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ABOVE: Solomon Scherba, 3, of Grosse Pointe Shores, races onto the grass to collect colorful eggs during the Shores’ annual Easter egg hunt April 1 at Osius Park. Participants were rewarded with a bag of treats, and they also had a chance to meet the Easter Bunny, take a pony ride and visit a petting zoo.
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
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Dual concept restaurant brings 2 dining experiences to 1 Village location BY K. MICHELLE MORAN kmoran@candgnews.com
CITY — A new eatery is coming soon to the site of the former Marais restaurant at 17051 Kercheval Ave. in The Village. The Grosse Pointe City Council voted unanimously March 20 in favor of both a Class C liquor license and a site plan for outdoor seating for Sidecar Slider Bar and Shift Kitchen & Cocktails, a dual restaurant in the same space. “We’re excited to have a new restaurant concept coming to The Village,” City Planner John Jackson, of McKenna Associates, said. He said the background of the own-
ers “is impressive,” noting their success with other locations of these restaurants in metro Detroit. The owners proposed two outdoor dining areas — one on the St. Clair Avenue side of the building, and a dining platform that will occupy two parking spots on Kercheval Avenue in front of the building, Jackson said. “We’re anxious to see outdoor seating made available,” Jackson said. However, he said the owners would need to reduce the length of the dining platform on Kercheval by about 2 feet and make sure it was compliant with Americans with Disabilities Act regulations. Jackson said there were some elements that the restaurant
owners would need to design outdoor seating around as well, including a tree, a decorative bench and a light pole. Additionally, the platform and outdoor furniture need to be removed during the winter. “The applicant has indicated they will not be using (outdoor dining areas) in the winter,” City Manager Peter Dame said. Dame added that if they decided they wanted to start offering outdoor dining during the winter, they could reapply with the city to get permission to do this. Jackson said they will be required to use quality furniture and other materials, not flimsy patio furniture that could blow away during a storm.
Council approval was subject to several conditions, including reduction of the platform length. Stephen Simon, the primary owner of the Grosse Pointe Sidecar/Shift Kitchen location, said Sidecar “is like a family sports bar. … It’s going to appeal to all ages.” He said this portion of the restaurant has lots of TVs. “The Shift concept is more of an upscale wine bar,” Simon continued. He said they started creating these dual concept restaurants to take advantage of larger spaces that might not attract enough business as just one type of eatery. “We’re really excited to be down there,” See RESTAURANT on page 10A
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
Cities won’t face bill for ‘bad debt’ incurred from 2021’s excessive flooding trash
Hampton from page 2A
they’d put on hold in those lean years. Because a large chunk of this project is the water main replacement, Schulte said the city is paying for 75% of the costs with water/sewer funds. “The general fund won’t be too affected with the cost increase” as a result, Schulte said. Because of the rise in the Hampton project cost, Schulte said the city has reduced the number of road projects it will be doing this summer. He said the city has also increased the budget for resurfacing Roslyn Road — a project that will be included in the 2023-24 fiscal year budget — by about
$600,000. Other than Cook Road — which might qualify for federal funding — Schulte said Roslyn and Hampton are the last two roads in the Woods that need to be rebuilt. Other roads just need patching and smaller maintenance jobs. Vaughn praised city leaders for maintaining the roads so they rarely required a more costly redo like this one. “You guys have done a really good job,” Vaughn said. Granger said road maintenance has been something the city has long focused on. “We have worked very hard over the years to be at this point,” Granger said. “I think we’re in a lot better shape than some of our surrounding communities.”
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FARMS — Severe flooding and basement backups from a record-breaking rainstorm in June 2021 resulted in billing confusion for the Grosse Pointes-Clinton Refuse Disposal Authority, which serves the five Grosse Pointes and Harper Woods. During a March 14 GPCRDA Board meeting in Grosse Pointe Farms, CPA Lynn Gromaski, who handles the financial records for the GPCRDA, explained that the GPCRDA ended up with nearly $22,000 in billings for trash disposal that couldn’t be attributed to a particular community or communities. Although the cost was written off as a bad debt expense at the end of the last fiscal year June 30, Gromaski wanted to know if the GPCRDA Board wanted to divide the cost among the six cities, rather than let the Authority absorb the loss. “It was written off (last year),” Gromaski said. “It was just (classified as) an expense.” Residents in the most greatly impacted cities, such as Grosse Pointe Park, Grosse Pointe City and Grosse Pointe Farms, ended up with staggering amounts of trash as people removed most, if not all, of the items in their basements and put the soiled items at the curb. “(An) unprecedented storm resulted in chaos,” GPCRDA Board Chair Terry Brennan said. “It was really a mess.” Brennan said this necessitated the cities calling in independent contractors to aid in trash removal. “Some contractors worked in different communities,” Brennan said. By the time contractors got to a transfer
station or landfill with the waste, they weren’t always able to accurately identify which city it had come from. In addition, as GPCRDA Board member Mike Way — the Grosse Pointe Shores representative — noted, communities that experienced less impact from the storm, like the Shores, helped their neighbors with trash removal, sending their own trucks and personnel. The GPCRDA Board considered dividing the expense among the member communities based on their 10-year historical tonnage record. “This is the same formula we’ve used to settle other outstanding debts over the decades, and it appears to be the most equitable,” GPCRDA Attorney John Gillooly said. However, as GPCRDA Board member Jim Kowalski — who represents Grosse Pointe Woods — pointed out, his city would be facing 23% of the total — or nearly $6,000 — even though the Woods didn’t have nearly as much trash as smaller but harder-hit communities like the Park and City. “No action is needed,” Gillooly told the board. “Nothing has to be done. It’s completely up to this board.” The board voted unanimously to accept this debt as written off, at least at this time. Gromaski said the GPCRDA was able to cover the bad debt expense from its reserves. In the future, they could bring up this bad debt expense if they ran into financial challenges, she said. For now, as GPCRDA Board member Donald Parthum Jr. noted, the GPCRDA “is under budget anyways.” “We are square, accounting-wise,” Brennan said.
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
6A
Woods resident uncovers historic baseballs after 23 years BY JONATHAN SZCZEPANIAK jszczepaniak@candgnews.com
WOODS — On a typical Sunday, one might spend time in the basement searching for something, cleaning or putting things away. Grosse Pointe Woods resident Cyndy Lambert found herself in a similar situation recently, but the outcome was much different than finding a photo album or holiday decorations. As Lambert was in a corner of her basement where she typically stores comforters and plastic containers, she discovered a Disneyland bag that hadn’t been touched since she moved into her home 23 years ago. Under spiderwebs and dust were 11 signed baseballs from her childhood that she collected at various memorabilia shows and Detroit Tigers games. “I started looking at them and I thought, ‘Wow, this is kind of interesting,’ and I saw some of the names on there,” Lambert said. “I knew about Fat Katz (Sports Cards & Collectibles in St. Clair Shores), so I took them there, and Jimmy there, he said, ‘If you want, I can look at them and let you know what I think.’ He started calling me going, ‘Oh my gosh, I can’t believe what you got; I can’t believe this was in your basement in a plastic Disneyland bag from the ’70s or whatever.’” One ball held multiple autographs from the 1972 Oak-
land Athletics, which included Hall of Famers Reggie Jackson, Jim “Catfish” Hunter and Rollie Fingers; another showcased 1970s Baltimore Orioles and featured Hall of Famer Brooks Robinson; and others were multiple Detroit Tigers baseballs from the 1960s and 1970s. While it’s tough to match up against a baseball filled with legends in the case of the 1972 Athletics, a Detroit Tigers and New York Yankees dual-signed baseball dated July 22, 1967 — an 11-4 Tigers win — carries extra historical significance. On July 23, 1967, Detroit police raided an unlicensed after-hours bar, an act that sparked six days of violence in the city that claimed 43 lives and saw approximately 2,500 buildings destroyed and 7,000 people arrested. “The one riot ball, it shocks you once you find out the date and the special things the ball holds, you know,” Fat Katz owner Jimmy Merlo said. On top of the baseball’s place in history, Lambert’s father was a Detroit police officer at that time. “I just remember him calling our house and my mom saying, ‘What’s that noise?’ and he said, ‘It’s just the sound of tracer bullets being shot into the police station,’” Lambert said. “My mom said, ‘Where are you?’ and he was under a desk making a phone call. It was a scary time for everyone.” With the ball holding such history and meaning, Lambert said it was only right that she give it to the Tigers. She had no recollection of the ball and how she came to have it. See BASEBALLS on page 10A
Photo by Jonathan Szczepaniak
The historic baseball autographed by Detroit Tigers and New York Yankees that Grosse Pointe resident Cyndy Lambert found in her basement is dated July 22, 1967, just one day before the history of Detroit would profoundly change.
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NEWS & NOTES
HYMN FESTIVAL PLANNED AT CHURCH Grosse Pointe Memorial Church, 16 Lake Shore Road in Grosse Pointe Farms, will present a Hymn Festival
during its 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. services April 16, with guest speaker Michael Silhavy talking about each hymn and the church choir — with Jim Biery at the organ — performing the songs. The theme of the program is, “We Have Seen the Lord.” Silhavy is an editor at GIA Publications Inc. in Chicago and a member of the editorial review board of The Hymn, a journal of the Hymn Society of the United States and Canada. For more information, call (313) 882-5330 or visit www.gpmchurch.org.
7A/ GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
Students from the Grosse Pointes and Harper Woods are invited to meet with college and military representatives from more than 100 institutions during a free college night from 6 to 8 p.m. April 19 in the gym at Grosse Pointe South High School, 11 Grosse Pointe Blvd. in Grosse Pointe Farms. The event is put on by the Grosse Pointe Public School System, but students from any local schools may attend. No registration is required. For more information, call (313) 432-3519.
HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE DAY SCHEDULED IN APRIL
Silhavy
STUDENT ORATORS HONORED
The Grosse Pointe Optimist Club recently sponsored its annual Optimist Oratorical Contest at The War Memorial in Grosse Pointe Farms. Nine students from Pierce Middle School and Brownell Middle School competed in the contest, delivering speeches on the topic, “Discovering the Optimism Within Me.” Robert Russell Warner, of Grosse Pointe Woods, received the gold medal; Maddox Barksdale, of Grosse Pointe Farms, was awarded the
It’s time to clean out the basement or garage to dispose of unwanted chemicals and the like during Household Hazardous Waste Day. This year, Grosse Pointe Park is the host community. The event will run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 22 at Windmill Pointe Park, 14920 Windmill Pointe Drive. The event is open to residents of Grosse Pointe City, Grosse Pointe Farms, Grosse Pointe Park and Grosse Pointe Shores, and anyone hoping to take part needs to show proof of residency with valid photo identification, such as a driver’s license or state identification card. Acceptable materials consist of the following: oil-based paints and solvents, aerosols, corrosives (acids and bases), pesticides, herbicides, reactives, oxidizers, automotive fluids such as oil and antifreeze, overthe-counter medications, elemental mercury, propane cylinders up to 30 pounds apiece, household and automotive batteries, fluorescent lamps, PCB light ballasts, smoke detectors, fire extinguishers, biomedical sharps housed in rigid containers, and nonregulated waste. Materials that cannot be accepted consist of the following: ammunition, weapons, microwave ovens, air conditioners, yard waste, tires, DEA-controlled narcotics, any type of electronic device, latex paint, flares, explosives, fireworks, radioactive waste, shock-sensitive waste, 55-gallon drums of waste, industrial and commercial waste, trash, appliances, towels and sheets. Household Hazardous Waste Day is free. It’s being offered this year through the mutual contract the four cities have with Green for Life for recycling. For more information, residents should check with their city’s website or department of public works.
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Pictured, from left, are this year’s contestants: Maya Walker, Ana Kozak, Maureen Scanlon, Evie Berger, Charleigh Miller, Ryn Fultz, Maddox Barksdale, Robert Russell Warner, and Rocky Bocci. silver medal; and Rocky Bocci, of Grosse Pointe Park, earned the bronze medal. Warner and Barksdale will advance to the Area Optimist
Oratorical Contest April 22. Participants have a chance to win scholarships through this contest.
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The Grosse Pointe Public Library will host its annual Books on the Lake program featuring authors P. David Allen II, Susan Orlean and Parini Shroff April 29 at the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club in Grosse Pointe Shores. “Books on the Lake is our signature event where the library features three authors selected by our library staff,” Grosse Pointe Public Library Director Jessica Keyser said in a press release. “This year’s authors will not disappoint and will be available at the end of the program to autograph books.” Tickets cost $40 each and went on sale March 25. For tickets or more information, visit grossepoin telibrary.org.
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Navigating the complicated landscape of Medicare options can be confusing, so The Helm at the Boll Life Center is once again offering an informational workshop for anyone who’s about to turn 65 and who’d like more information about what plans would best meet their needs. The Helm, 158 Ridge Road in Grosse Pointe Farms, will offer its free, 90-minute New to Medicare program at 6:30 p.m. April 26. Medicare counselors will give an overview of Medicare plans and coverage, including cost and the pros and cons of different options. Space is limited, so anyone interested in the workshop should make reservations as soon as possible by calling Aurelie Saigh at (313) 649-2110 or emailing asaigh@helmlife.org. Free, individualized appointments with Medicare counselors are also available at The Helm throughout the year and can be made by contacting Saigh.
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
8A
WATCH Retail fraud suspect wanted
FARMS — An unknown woman is said to be wanted for stealing shampoo and cosmetics from the Hill Rite Aid store at around 8:21 p.m. March 22. According to a police report, the suspect brought in her own shopping bag and put makeup and hair care products in the bag. As the suspect headed toward the liquor aisle, an employee offered to put her merchandise on the counter for her. The suspect asked the store employee to put a bottle of tequila in her bag, but the store employee said she needed to see the suspect’s identification first. The suspect is said to have been telling someone on the phone that she needed identification, and the suspect told the store employee someone would be coming into the store with that documentation. The suspect then reportedly left with the bag containing the cosmetics and hair products, for which she hadn’t paid. The tequila was left behind. She is said to have left the store with more than $110 worth of merchandise and was last seen entering a Ford F-150. Anyone with more information can call (313) 885-2100.
Vehicle stolen
WOODS — An unknown suspect is said to have stolen a 2016 Buick from the 19000 block of Raymond Street between the hours of 12:30 a.m. and 1:39 a.m. March 31. The vehicle also contained sunglasses, a stroller and a child’s car seat. Anyone with more information can call (313) 343-2400.
Police remind residents about vehicle theft prevention
PARK — During the overnight period March 23-24, police said, unknown suspects rummaged through the interiors of multiple vehicles parked on Lakepointe Street and Beaconsfield Avenue. Some items were stolen from the vehicles, but police believe the suspects were actually looking for keys or vehicle key fobs. Police ask residents to always lock their vehicles and not leave keys inside them. Anyone with more information about any of these incidents can call (313) 822-7400.
Catalytic converter removed
WOODS — Someone removed the catalytic converter from a 2001 Oldsmobile while the vehicle was parked in the Ascension St. John Hospital parking lot on Mack
Porch pirate sought
CITY — Police said an unknown suspect stole a package of $200 worth of storage containers from the front porch of a home in the 500 block of St. Clair Avenue at around 6:50 p.m. March 28. The suspect is said to have fled the scene in a white Chrysler 200. Anyone with more information can call (313) 886-3200.
Police looking for liquor thief
FARMS — An unknown suspect is facing possible third-degree retail fraud charges after allegedly stealing a 750 milliliter bottle of Flecha Azul Blanco tequila valued at $50 from a store in the 18600 block of Mack Avenue at around 1:58 p.m. March 23. A store employee told police the suspect put the bottle down his pants and walked out without paying for it. He is said to have fled on foot northbound across Mack into Detroit. Anyone with more information can call (313) 885-2100.
Fraudulent check cashed
CITY — A Grosse Pointe City resident filed a report with police March 29 after a former employee — a 28-year-old man — allegedly stole one of the victim’s checks and cashed it for $500. Police said the suspect could be facing uttering and publishing charges in connection with the incident.
Driver arrested on warrant
FARMS — Police pulled over a 50-yearold Grosse Pointe Park man in the area of Mack Avenue and Kerby Road at 8:34 p.m. March 28 after the driver is said to have run a red light. A check of the driver’s name in the Law Enforcement Information System showed that he was wanted on a felony warrant out of 36th District Court in Detroit for uttering and publishing, a police report states. The driver told police he had a concealed pistol license and he had a handgun in the vehicle, which police took for safe keeping. The driver was arrested on the warrant, police said.
Patient escorted off hospital property
CITY — Police said they escorted an unruly patient out of Corewell Health’s Beaumont Hospital, Grosse Pointe, after the
patient is said to have made threats against nursing staff at around 12:30 p.m. March 28.
dangerment — her second such charge since a conviction in 2021 — and driving with a suspended license.
Intoxicated driver stopped
Fraud under investigation
FARMS — Police stopped a 61-yearold Eastpointe woman in the area of Moross Road and Mack Avenue at 8:15 p.m. March 25 when they saw that she was driving on a front driver’s side rim that was almost completely eroded. The driver, who police said had slow and slurred speech and smelled of alcohol, told police she didn’t realize she was driving on the rim and not the tire. She admitted to having consumed one drink that evening. She was arrested for operating while intoxicated after being found to have a blood alcohol level of 0.19% — more than twice the legal limit — in a preliminary breath test.
Intoxicated driver arrested with child in vehicle
FARMS — A 37-year-old Detroit woman is facing a possible charge of operating while intoxicated, second offense, after a traffic stop in the area of Lake Shore and Moross roads at 7:03 p.m. March 25. Police said the driver was speeding — traveling more than 50 mph in a 35 mph zone — and driving erratically, which prompted another motorist to call 911 to report her. Police said the vehicle also had a dark tint on its windows. The driver failed field sobriety tests and was found to have a blood alcohol level of 0.28% — more than three times the legal limit. Police said she was driving with her 9-year-old son in the vehicle. The driver — who was also found to have a warrant against her out of 36th District Court in Detroit for disorderly conduct and a probation violation out of 28th District Court in Southgate — was arrested for operating while intoxicated. She’s also facing possible charges of child en-
FARMS — A 76-year-old Grosse Pointe Farms man is the victim of an apparent fraud by an unknown suspect or suspects. According to a police report filed March 24, the Farms man has had a total of about $24,000 removed in varying increments from his personal checking account over the last 10 to 11 months by a suspect who claimed to work for a cryptocurrency exchange. The case was under investigation by the detective bureau at press time.
Intoxicated motorist arrested
FARMS — Police approached what appeared to be a stranded motorist who was stopped at the side of the road in the area of Moross and Lake Shore roads at 2:43 a.m. March 29. The driver, a 50-year-old Detroit man, said he thought he might have struck a curb or a pothole. While speaking with the driver, police noticed that he smelled of alcohol. The driver reportedly said he had had two or three shots of liquor within the last hour. Police said the driver passed some field sobriety tests but failed others and had a blood alcohol level of 0.113% in a preliminary breath test, after which he was arrested. The driver reportedly admitted to police that he had been driving while intoxicated. Police found two partially consumed bottles of tequila in the driver’s vehicle while inventorying it prior to it being impounded. Besides operating while intoxicated, the driver could also be facing charges for having open intoxicants in the vehicle, a police report noted. Police said both tires on the driver’s side were flat and the rims were damaged. — K. Michelle Moran
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
Vests from page 3A
that rising costs due to inflation and other factors have made these kinds of purchases challenging. “To have passionate residents assisting our Public Safety Department with these equipment needs is truly exceptional,” Sizeland said. “The residents and members of the foundation see the value of our Public Safety Department. We can’t thank the residents and the members of the foundation enough.” Wolski isn’t a Park resident — he lives in Grosse Pointe City — but Jarrell said Wolski is “passionate enough about public safety” that he’s helming the foundation. The vests arrived earlier in March, and members of the department have been wearing them ever since, Jarrell said. Park City Councilman Max Wiener called the foundation’s work “incredible.” “It’s a symbol of the kind of city we have,” Wiener said. “We have people who are looking for ways to give back. I’m very
proud to live here.” One of the foundation board members is James Robson, a 47-year resident of the Park and former longtime City Councilman. Robson is also a retired police officer. By email, Robson said he considered it “an honor and a privilege to serve as a board member.” He was also happy to see how quickly the foundation has been embraced by residents and others. “I couldn’t be more pleased by the great community support here in the early stages,” Robson said by email. Wolski said the foundation got its formal start in summer 2022. It’s an official 501(c)(3), so contributions are tax-deductible, as allowed by law. “I had an opportunity to meet with (Deputy Public Safety Director) Jim (Bostock) a couple of years ago,” Wolski said. “I asked him, ‘What can I do to help?’ He said the department was lacking basic needs — (new) vests, body cameras, radios.” Wolski said Village Wine in the Park sponsored a wine tasting fundraiser last year that raised the bulk of the money for the vest
Photo by K. Michelle Moran
Members of the Grosse Pointe Park Public Safety Department stand outside the department’s garage wearing the new bulletproof vests they received thanks to the nonprofit Grosse Pointe Park Public Safety Foundation. purchase. He said the foundation is already trying to raise funds for other equipment purchases. “Hopefully people will understand the department has needs,” Wolski said. “No dollar will go unused, if donated.”
For more information about the foundation or to make a donation, visit www. gpppublicsafetyfoundation.com. Those without internet access who’d like to make a donation can contact Jarrell or Bostock by calling (313) 822-7400.
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from page 6A
Lambert, a former Detroit News writer who covered the Detroit Red Wings from 1986 to 1998, reached out to a former colleague to figure out the next steps for the historic ball. “I actually reached out to my former colleague John Niyo at the (Detroit) News, and I said, ‘Hey, do you know someone at the Tigers I could go to for this?’ and he gave me Jordan Field,” Lambert said. “He’s with the Tigers, and he’s an authenticator, and he had to check with the archive person, Sarah, who got back to me and said, ‘Absolutely.’” The ball will now be heading to the Tigers archive department to be displayed for fans. For Lambert, the ball is going exactly where her father, who was a Tigers fan, would want it to go.
Restaurant from page 4A
Simon said of The Village location. “We’re happy (the space) was available.” City officials were enthused about welcoming a new restaurant to the downtown. “I’m excited by the developments in our city and Village,” City Councilman Dave Fries said. Councilwoman Maureen Juip agreed, saying she was “really excited … about the new energy” in The Village. Likewise, City Councilman Donald Parthum Jr. was pleased to see a new business coming to town.
“I think my dad would be happy that it’s going to the Tigers,” Lambert said. “It belongs there, as long as they take care of it; that’s what matters.’” Lambert is now holding on to 10 historic baseballs from her childhood. She said she’s found some other baseball memorabilia, including a Steve Kempsigned bat, after getting the motivation to search her basement, but more importantly, she has been able to relive some memories in the process. “It’s gotten me into it again, let me tell you,” Lambert said. “More than anything, it’s taken me back down memory lane and remembering how much time I spent studying baseball and the players. I used to know their earned run average, their batting average and how many home runs they hit. I knew them every day because that’s just how I grew up.” Call Staff Writer Jonathan Szczepaniak at (586) 498-1090.
“I, too, am happy to see somebody invest in our Village,” Parthum said. The company has locations for Sidecar and Shift Kitchen in other cities, including Birmingham, Lansing and Farmington, although not all of the locations feature the dual restaurant concept. Simon said a dual concept Sidecar/Shift Kitchen will be coming to Plymouth in the next month or so. “They have a really good record,” said Kelly Allen, an attorney representing the restaurant owners. “It’s a fabulous concept.” Simon said they hope to start work on renovations soon. Their goal is to be open by late May or early June, he said. Call Staff Writer K. Michelle Moran at (586) 498-1047.
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From left, Grosse Pointe Farms public safety officer Michael Ryan and Lt. Wes Kipke hold two of their newly purchased hydraulic tools, which can be used to rescue accident victims trapped in a wrecked vehicle. Ryan and Kipke were among those who underwent training to use the equipment on vehicles March 30 and 31. Photo by K. Michelle Moran
from page 1A
The city had to shell out less than $3,000 to cover the remainder of the cost for the tools, he said. Officers received training on these tools March 30 and 31 in the parking lot at Mack Avenue and Moross Road. Hurst, the manufacturer of the tools, sent out one of its specialists to conduct the training. “For most of us, it was the first time we had these tools in our hands,” Lt. Wes Kipke said. Besides training on “junked” vehicles, officers also had the chance to train on a couple of newer Ford vehicles — a Mustang and an F-150 pickup truck. Ryan said Ford Motor Co. allows fire departments to purchase these new, unsold vehicles at a very low cost — $300 apiece. “It’s a great program,” Farms Deputy Public Safety Director Andrew Rogers said of the Ford initiative. These vehicles differ from older models in that they usually have high-strength steel and aluminum, Ryan said. “It allows us to train on newer vehicles, newer metals,” Ryan said. The new cutting tools purchased by the Farms are able to slice through these metals, but older hydraulic tools can’t. “It’s going to let us provide better service to the community for any major vehicle accidents,” Kipke said. While the Farms might not have any factories, that doesn’t mean commercial machinery isn’t in use in the community. Heavy presses and woodchippers are just a couple of the devices that can easily cause injury or
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FARMS — Another cellphone service provider will be adding some of its equipment to a communications tower on Grosse Pointe Farms City Hall property at 90 Kerby Road. The Farms City Council voted unanimously March 13 in favor of a site plan from T-Mobile to add six of its antennas to the city-owned tower to improve service for TMobile customers. The antennas will be located below antennas from two other carriers on the tower, at the height of 94 feet. The tower itself is 160 feet tall. Because this is an existing tower, City Manager Shane Reeside said, it was an “ideal site” for the equipment. “We feel, logistically, we can accommodate T-Mobile and it will improve (coverage in the area),” Reeside said. Wallace Haley, an attorney representing T-Mobile, said this wouldn’t cause any additional nuisance to the surrounding neighborhood. “The only visibility is the fact that there will be six more antennas on the tower,” Haley told the council. “As to noise, there is no
additional noise.” Haley also addressed possible health concerns, saying that the cumulative amount of additional radiation generated by these antennas was “so far below” what’s allowed under government standards. “You’re not creating any health effects to folks in the neighborhood ,and you’re not increasing noise,” Haley said. The Public Safety Department said the extra antennas wouldn’t create any problems with its radio signals. “We reviewed it, and we have no objections” as long as the pole could support the weight of the additional antennas, Public Safety Director John Hutchins said. Associated T-Mobile ground equipment will be located in the Public Safety Department garage, in the bike room. According to a lease agreement, the city will receive $1,600 per month from TMobile for use of the tower. The first lease is for a five-year term, with three automatic five-year term renewals. Every 12 months — on the anniversary of the start of T-Mobile’s use of the tower — the cellphone service provider has agreed to increase its rent payment by 3.5%.
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The offices of the Grosse Pointe Woods Municipal Court are temporarily closed while they undergo remodeling. with the court during this period — just not in person. She said they’re recommending that anyone who needs to pay a ticket, for example, use the city drop box in the Woods City Hall driveway. For more information about when the court will reopen to the public, see the Municipal Court page on the city’s website, www.gpwmi.us. Call Staff Writer K. Michelle Moran at (586) 498-1047.
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WOODS — Anyone who has to do business with the Grosse Pointe Woods Municipal Court won’t be able to conduct that business in person for about the next week. The court closed for renovations April 3 and will remain closed until at least April 12, city officials said. Public Services Director Jim Kowalski said the renovations in court offices were scheduled to take place as part of ongoing upgrades at City Hall in recent years. He said the work includes new carpeting and cubicles as well as some new electrical lines. Public Safety Director John Kosanke said the remodeling is “bringing them up to today’s standards.” “They’re just doing a makeover,” Kosanke continued. Court employees are still working during this period, but because of the construction, they can’t accommodate visitors, such as people who need to pay a ticket or fine. City Treasurer-Comptroller Shawn Murphy said residents “can still do business”
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Avenue. Instead of turning onto Mack, the driver apparently went straight, which put him on a collision course with the building. “Fortunately, no one was (in or around the building), because they would have been killed,” Rogers said of the impact from the driver’s GMC Safari. Rogers said the crash — which, like the one last year, saw the vehicle plowing into the postal supervisor’s office — caused a gas leak in the building. He said officers quickly shut off the gas. “Once again, we got lucky — (there were) no explosions and no one got hurt,” Rogers said. This might be one of the rare times a delay in getting construction done was a positive. Rogers said the building still hadn’t been fixed from last summer’s crash, with the hole in the side only covered by plywood. He said contractors had been slated to start repairs on the building during the last week in March. “They probably saved a little money
because they don’t have to (rebuild) twice,” Rogers said. On the other hand, contractors now have additional work, thanks to the second crash in less than a year. The March 23 driver “made a bigger hole and he knocked out a lot more bricks,” Rogers said. He also got deeper inside the building. That’s likely due to the fact that there were fewer obstacles to slow down or stop the vehicle’s progress, given the loss last year of the building’s brick wall and flagpole. While the driver in the July crash was said to be suffering from a medical emergency, the March 23 driver was drunk, police said. According to a police report, the driver told officers, “I had a little bit” to drink, and failed field sobriety tests, including a preliminary breath test that showed he had a blood alcohol level of 0.18% — more than twice the legal limit. Because of its location adjacent to the end of Warren Avenue, the postal building has been the site of many accidents over the years. Rogers, who grew up in the Farms, can recall one from when he was an 8-year-old riding his bike in the area.
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Grosse Pointe City seeks donations to grow its reforestation efforts CITY — Grosse Pointe City’s Urban Forestry Commission continues to spread its roots. Officials with the commission delivered their annual report to the Grosse Pointe City Council during a council meeting March 20. “It’s been a fantastic year for the commission. … We’re starting to make some real progress,” Urban Forestry Commission Chair Rick Whitney said. One boost came from a local club marking a milestone. As part of its 90 Trees for 90 years initiative — in honor of its 90th anniversary in 2022 — the Grosse Pointe Farm and Garden Club planted 21 trees in the City last year. The rest of the 90 trees were planted in Grosse Pointe Park and Grosse Pointe Farms. Since the commission started in 2017, it has planted about 132 trees in the city, Urban Forestry Commission member Alaine Bush said. Their new goal, starting in 2023, is to plant 150 trees over the next three years, City Forester Brian Colter said by phone. “That’s a reasonable goal that’s ambitious but achievable,” Colter said. It will take more money to make it happen. Colter said the City budgets about $10,000 annually for tree planting, which enables them to plant an estimated 28 to 29 trees each year. The cost to purchase and plant a 2.5-inch-caliper tree that’s 10 feet to 12 feet in height is approximately $350, he said. Residents who’d like to donate funds of any amount for tree planting can make a taxdeductible donation to the replanting effort through the nonprofit City of Grosse Pointe Foundation; Colter said they should note in the memo sections of their checks that the funds are for ReLeaf of Grosse Pointe. He said the foundation maintains a separate account for the tree planting effort. Donors who use a form of payment other than a check should make it clear that their gift is for ReLeaf of Grosse Pointe. Colter said ReLeaf of Grosse Pointe has raised “thousands of dollars” in donations since 2017, and they’ve also been able to obtain thousands of dollars in grants. “It’s exciting to hear they have some plans to accelerate (reforestation),” said City Councilman Seth Krupp, the council liaison to the commission. As of the commission’s last tree gap sur-
vey at the end of 2022, the commission determined that the City had roughly 250 trees in decline, most of them lindens and maples. For some notable mature trees, Colter said, 2022 was a bad year. The city last year saw its greatest tree loss to Dutch elm disease since that condition decimated the elm population in the Pointes circa the 1960s and 1970s. The stretch of University Place from Jefferson Avenue to Maumee Avenue — whose residents had been carefully injecting their elms with fungicide for years — lost the majority of the 11 city-owned elm trees that succumbed to Dutch elm disease last year, Colter said. He said a 12th elm was lost to storm damage, reducing the city-owned elm population to fewer than 90. However, Colter said all of the trees on University were replaced with new ones in a variety of species. “We continue to emphasize tree species diversity as well as right tree, right place,” Bush said. Colter said residents who want to add trees to their properties should try to consult with a certified arborist to make sure the tree — or trees — they select will work for the spot where they’d like to plant them, as there are multiple considerations, including the amount of light in that location, how close it is to the house or above-ground utilities, how large that species of tree will get and whether that tree’s roots might interfere with underground sewage lines in the decades to come. Residents can find certified arborists in their area by visiting the website of the International Society of Arboriculture and putting in their ZIP code. The City has a five-year maintenance tree trimming program in which every cityowned tree gets trimmed every five years, Colter said. This includes removing dead and suspect branches and thinning out the tree, which protects trees and property during storms by reducing the number of downed trees and limbs. “By thinning it out, you allow the wind to blow through the top of the tree,” Colter said. At press time, the Urban Forestry Commission was slated to mark Arbor Day in the City this year on April 25 by planting a tulip tree at Maire Elementary School. Call Staff Writer K. Michelle Moran at (586) 498-1047.
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18A
condition. Although he had severe dyslexia and short-term memory loss and was told he would never be able to read or write, Mestdagh went on to graduate from High Point University and write books. He’s also an avid mountaineer, extreme skier and adventurer who established the JT Mestdagh Foundation to bring joy and encouragement to those with physical and learning challenges and their families. Tickets to the prayer breakfast cost $50 and can be purchased from the GPCC office at 106 Kercheval Ave. in Grosse Pointe Farms, by visiting www.grossepointecham ber.com or by calling (313) 881-4722.
COMMUNITY
BRIEF
Prayer breakfast planned
In conjunction with the National Day of Prayer, the Grosse Pointe Chamber of Commerce is hosting the 37th annual Grosse Pointe and Harper Woods Mayors’ Prayer Breakfast from 7:30 to 9 a.m. May 4 at the Country Club of Detroit, 220 Country Club Drive in Grosse Pointe Farms. This year’s guest is author, podcaster and speaker JT “Jester” Mestdagh, of Grosse Pointe Farms. He was born with VATER/ VACTERL syndrome, a life-threatening
— K. Michelle Moran
We’ve been accused of Sorcery! (it’s true, we were caught)
Are you interested GROSSE in aPOINTE new TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023 Primary Care Physician is Are you interested in a newthat Primary in the heart of Grosse Pointe Care thattoisprovide in the heart andPhysician who strives ofyou Grosse and whoofstrives the Pointe highest level tocomprehensive provide you the medical highest level of comprehensive medical care that care that focuses on disease focuses on disease prevention? prevention? Look no farther….. Khamoshi Patel, DO is an Internal Medicine physician with Ascension Medical Group located in The Village of Grosse Pointe on Kercheval Avenue. Dr. Parveen Siddiqui and Dr. Julia Tesch are honored to welcome Dr. Khamoshi Patel to join their well known practice in The Village.
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Birmingham-Bloomfield Eagle • Farmington Press • Fraser-Clinton Township Chronicle • Grosse Pointe Times Macomb Township Chronicle • Madison-Park News • Mount Clemens-Clinton-Harrison Township Journal • Novi Note Rochester Post • Roseville-Eastpointe Eastsider • Royal Oak Review • Shelby-Utica News • Southfield Sun St. Clair Shores Sentinel • Sterling Heights Sentry • Troy Times • Warren Weekly • West Bloomfield Beacon • Woodward Talk
Main Office: 13650 E. 11 Mile Road • Warren, MI 48089 • (586) 498-8000 candgnews.com
Editor: David Wallace | (586) 498-1053 | dwallace@candgnews.com Reporter: K. Michelle Moran | (586) 498-1047 | kmoran@candgnews.com Sports: Jonathan Szczepaniak | (586) 498-1090 | jszczepaniak@candgnews.com Artroom: (586) 498-1036 | ads@candgnews.com
@candgnews
17141 Kercheval Ave Grosse Pointe, MI 48230 T 313-642-4990
facebook.com/grossepointetimes
For retail ad rates: Mike Low | (586) 498-1079 | mlow@candgnews.com Karen Bozimowski | (586) 498-1034 | kboz@candgnews.com Classifieds: For ad rates (586) 498-8100 Legals and Obits: (586) 498-1099 Automotive Advertising: Louise Millar | (586) 498-1054 | lmillar@candgnews.com Real Estate Advertising: Paula Kaspor | (586) 498-1055 | pkaspor@candgnews.com
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR
C & G’s Community Calendar is sponsored by the Macomb Center for the Performing Arts. To view more events or to submit your own, visit candgnews.com/calendar. To advertise an event, call (586) 498-8000.
19A/ GROSSE POINTE TIMES • APRIL 6, 2023
APRIL 7
Blood drive: Noon-6 p.m., Assumption Cultural Center gym, 21800 Marter Road in St. Clair Shores and Grosse Pointe Woods, walk in or register with sponsor code “assumption” at redcrossblood.org, (586) 634-0228
APRIL 8
French Canadian Heritage Society: Virtual meeting at 11 a.m., guest speaker is a historic trade preservationist and cordwainer, email information@ habitantheritage.org for Zoom link
APRIL 10
APRIL 17
Grosse Pointe Audubon Society: Mini presentations about using birding apps, 7 p.m. for social time and refreshments, 7:30 p.m. for meeting, Grosse Pointe Unitarian Resale Shop (behind church), 17150 Maumee Ave., Grosse Pointe, brapai@aol.com, gpaudubon.blogspot.com
Girls book club: Also games and making friends, open to grades 4-5, 7-8 p.m., Grosse Pointe Public Library - Ewald Branch, 15175 E. Jefferson Ave. in Grosse Pointe Park, registration required, (313) 821-8830
APRIL 12
Science Fiction Book Club: 7-8 p.m., Grosse Pointe Public Library - Woods Branch, 20680 Mack Ave., (313) 343-2072
APRIL 28
Build and Protect Your Credit: Virtual workshop hosted by MSU Extension, 6 p.m., register at canr. msu.edu/events/adulting-101-4-12-23
Head and neck cancer screening: 1-3 p.m., Van Elslander Cancer Center, 19229 Mack Ave. in Grosse Pointe Woods, free but registration required, (586) 381-1603
War Memorial, 32 Lake Shore Drive in Grosse Pointe Farms, (313) 881-3454, grossepointeartcenter.org
APRIL 15
APRIL 21
Classical piano concert: Featuring Lise de la Salle, 8-9:30 p.m., Grosse Pointe Memorial Church, 16 Lake Shore Drive in Grosse Pointe Farms, info@cmdetroit.org, (313) 335-3300
Spring cleanup: Moross Greenway needs volunteers to pick up trash and work in gardens, 9 a.m., meet at Mount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church, 21150 Moross Road in Detroit, MorossGreenway Project@gmail.com, MorossGreenway.org
‘Something Rotten:’ May 5-7 and 11-14, Grosse Pointe Theatre, Pierce Auditorium, 15430 Kercheval Ave. in Grosse Pointe Park, (313) 881-4004, gpt.org
Art classes: 10:30 a.m.-noon every first and third Tuesday of month for seniors, 6-8 p.m. every second and fourth Tuesday of month for veterans, The War Memorial, 32 Lake Shore Drive in Grosse Pointe Farms, (313) 881-3454, grossepointeartcenter.org
ONGOING
Art exhibit: Works inspired by the theme “green,” on display daily (except Sundays) through April 27, The Grosse Pointe Artists Association gallery at The
Canasta club: Noon-4 p.m. Mondays, The Helm at the Boll Life Center, 158 Ridge Road in Grosse Pointe Farms, bring own materials, helmlife.org, (313) 8829600
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20A
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0023-2314
2B - GROSSE POINTE TIMES, April 6, 2023
Autos Wanted
www.candgnews.com
Autos Wanted
Special Events & Announcements
Auctions
OFFERINGS AROUND MICHIGAN AMISH FURNITURE An Amish Log Headboard and Queen Pillow Top Mattress Set. Brand newnever used, sell all for $375. Call anytime 989-923-1278 ______________________________ Amish Log Beds, Dressers, Rustic Table and Chairs, Mattresses for Cabin or Home. Lowest price in Michigan! DanDanTheMattressMan.com 989923-1278
Gun Show & Knife Expo April 22 & 23
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AUCTION Beatles Online Auction. Rare records, Posters, Lava lamps, Concert items, Collectibles, Comics, Box sets, Lunch boxes, Bobble heads and Much more. Bidding Ends April 6th, 2023. Bid Now At: www.ColesAuctionService.com 1-810397-3199 _____________________________ Lee Sporting Estate Auction. Guns, Ammo, Fishing. Bid from anywhere johnpeckauctions.com. Shipping/ inspection available. Next gun auction is May! Thinking of Selling? Call John 989-345-4866. Michigan’s premier gun auctioneers since 1979. _____________________________ Online Williams Estate Auction: Ford Model A w/lots of parts, Silverado 2500 Crew cab, International FC McCormick Farmall row crop tractor, Household, Tools, more! Details, photos and bid at: bid.sherwoodauctionservicellc.com 1-800-835-0495. BUSINESS SERVICES METAL ROOFING regular and shingle style, HALF OFF SPECIAL COLORS! Lifetime asphalt shingles. Steel and vinyl siding. Licensed and insured builders. Pole Buildings. Quality work for 40 years! AMISH CREW. 517-575-3695. FISHING Vacation Cabins for Rent in Canada. Fish for abundant walleye, perch, northern pike. Boats, motors, gasoline included. For free brochure call Hugh 1-800-426-2550. Website at www.CanadianFishing.com
Published: April 5, 2023
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Help Wanted General
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Permanent full-time Senior Staff Secretary position $41,122 - $49,817 (40 Hours per week) includes benefit package. Successful completion of Civil Service Examination is required, and applicants must meet all requirements set forth in the Employees Civil Service Ordinance. Pre-employment background investigation and substance abuse testing is required. Interested, applicants must submit application to the Clinton Township Employees Civil Service Commission, 40700 Romeo Plank Rd., Clinton Township, MI 48038 on or before the close of business, Monday, April 17, 2023. The Charter Township of Clinton is an Equal Opportunity Employer, applicants are considered for all positions without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, or disability. For further information pertaining to this position or to download employment application please refer to www.clintontownship. com, click on Employment. 0391-2314 Help Wanted General
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CLEANING PEOPLE NEEDED IN YOUR AREA, Couples Welcomed, Days, Evenings, & Weekends, Part-Time/Full-Time.
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GROSSE POINTE TIMES, April 6, 2023 - 3B
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Home Improvement, Tile, Hardwood-Floors, Kitchen/Bath Remodeling, Plumbing, Electrical, Painting, Hauling, Clean-outs, Any Home Repairs, Free Estimates, 30% Discount, Accept All Major Credit Cards
586-822-5100
BOBʼS HANDYMAN Contractor. Plumbing, Carpentry, Electrical, Drywall, Painting, Roofing. Free-Estimates. No Job Too Small. Senior Discount. Honest, Licensed/insured
586-296-0887
Hauling & Waste Removal **CLUTTER GUY'S**
Removal-Experts Residential/Commercial Houses/Offices Garage/Storage-Areas Efficient Courteous Workers Reasonable-Rates Free-Estimates NEED CLUTTER REMOVED? LET US DO THE WORK!
Hotchkiss Electric
586-873-8210 Filip
586-291-3143 Lic.#6211028
AAA BROOKSIDE
Porches, Steps, Chimney's, Tuck-pointing, Cultured Stone, Preventative Maintenance, Concrete, Custom Mortar Matching, Free-Estimates, Senior Discounts, 37 years exp.
586-755-3636 Father & Son
Master Electricians
Dr. Electric
DRD CONCRETE
Patios, Driveways, Walkways, Steps, Bricks, Tuckpointing. 25 years experience.
Ph # 586-746-8439
Same-Day-Service! All-Residential-Wiring, Change Fuse Box to Circuit Breaker Panel, Troubleshooting, Electric Vehicle Chargers, Backup Generator Transfer Switch, License# 6109094 Senior/Discounts! Visa/MC /Lic./Insured
Financing Available
*
*
Restriction May Apply
*
$50 OFF Sump Pump Installation * $30 OFF Any Plumbing Service
586-552-5416
888.572.0928 586.585.1862
mrbacksplash.com
www.MotorCityPlumber.com
Landscaping & Water Gardens
586-258-6672
SPRING CLEAN-UPS! Shrub & Tree-Trimming, Planting, Removal. Mulch, Sod Installation, Pavers, Garden/ Retainer Walls, Porch Steps, Raise Backyards/Drain Tiles, Powerwashing/ Sealing, Power rake, Aeration, Seeding, Debris Removal
AA4DABLE ROOFING
Master Plumber, Licenced and Insured for all of your Plumbing Needs • ASSE Certified Backflow Testing • Backwater Valves- Prevent Flooding • Drain and Sewer Cleaning with Camera • Water Heater Repair or Replacement • Sump Pumps Repair or Replacement Servicing the Tri- County area for over 30 years *Senior/Military discounts available
Call Us Today for your Free Estimate
(248) 740-7643 or 1(800)441-0525
586-422-2648
Painting Interior/Exterior Remodeling Kitchens, Bathrooms, Finish Basement, Tiles, Drywall, Repairs, Remove Wallpaper, Free Estimates.
M.D.A Pro
Home Improvement LLC Kitchens/Baths, Flooring, Tiles, Electrical, Plumbing, Siding/alm.trim, Decks, Painting Int./Ext.
586-604-2524
Hurry-up & Save Big-$$$$! SPRING-SPECIALSClean-up, Up to 30%-Off!!! Roofing/Siding/Gutters, All-Leaks/Repairs, Residential/Shingles/ Commercial-FlatRoofs/Torch-downs We accept major credit-cards. 30yrs-Experience
586-822-5100
www.capitalplumbingmi.com
ALLTIMATE OUTDOOR SERVICES
Drainage System Professionals Beat The Spring Rush, SIGN-UP-EARLY! New-Construction, Yard-Drainage, Grading, Sod/Seed, Retaining Walls/Walkways/Patios, Senior/Military-Discounts Credit-Cards-Accepted
2 BROTHERS PAINTING Complete Interior/Exterior
• Wood Repair • Power Wash • Free-Estimates
REFERENCES AVAILABLE
586-719-1202
Call Frank 248-303-5897
Lawn Maintenance
2023 SPRING 586-260-5218
Commercial/Residential *Landscaping *Decks *Spring Clean-Ups *Lawn Cutting *Licensed Fertilization *Aerating & Thatching
Visit Facebook:
Bright Horizon Services Inc.
586-489-9226 Donʼs Lawn Service -Lawn Cutting -Edging -Aerating -Power Raking -Bush & Tree Trimming -Sod Since 1979!
Painting
Plumbing
(586)229-4267 American Painting
MASTER PLUMBER
•Residential •Commercial. •Interior & Exterior •Power Washing •Insurance, •Drywall, •Plaster Repair, •Senior-discounts. •Guaranteed-work. •25-yrs experience.
(586)795-8122
Chris Cronin Painting & Staining Inc. Professional quality. Interior-exterior. Power-washing, deck sealing. Insured, References. Free estimates. MC/VI/DC/AX accepted.
Now Accepting New Clients in Macomb and Oakland County! Immediate Response Times! Please Call or Text Alex For Instant Quote.
586-557-4613 belleairlawncare@ gmail.com
FIRST CLASS LAWN A FULL SERVICE LANDSCAPE COMPANY
Not Happy With Your Current Service?
LET US HELP YOU!
We Are Lawn Cutting Specialists! • Senior Discounts • All Credit Cards Accepted
FREE Estimates
586-792-3117
SPRING SPECIAL! 10% OFF Specializing in Great Rooms, Special Pricing For Decks, Interior/Exterior, Residential/Commercial. Special pricing for vacant homes. Senior discount, Free-Estimates, Insured.
GROSSE-POINTE CONTRACTING-CO.
MASTER-PAINTER DRYWALL/PLASTER •Restoration/Repairs •Painting! •Painting! •Interior/Exterior •Wall Covering For Wallpaper Hanging •Wallpaper-Removal We-Do-It-All! B.B.B/A+Rating 30-Yrs, Licensed/Insured Free-Estimates Owner-OP Robert
586-899-3555 (CELL)
586-291-2647
Sewer & Drain Service. Remodeling, repairs, new installations. Free estimates, senior rates. 35+yrs exp. Call Paul
248-904-5822 Lic.#8109852
586.421.5520 586.524.6752 ANDY'S PLUMBING
CITY ROOFING
-Commercial & Residential Roof Repairs -Full Roof Replacement (Shingles) -Flat Roof Replacement -24/7 Emergency Repairs -Eavestroughs (Gutters) and Leaf Guard Installations.
586-733-3004
cityroofinginc@gmail.com
LAFAVORITE ROOFING
Construction & Home Remodeling 30 Years Experience We Crush Competitors' Quotes Call Us About Your Roof or Any Home Improvements
586-873-4430 Licensed/Insured
25-Years Experience Licensed/Insured Call Us Today For All Your Plumbing Needs!! Serving The Tri-County-Area
10%/Senior/Military/Discounts
*N & J Professional Painting
Interior/Exterior, Residential/Commercial. Power washing, caulking, deck staining, varnishing, wallpaper removal. Drywall repair/installation. Insured. Free-estimates.
586-489-7919
Our Name Says It All...
CHERRY CONSTRUCTION ROOFING Residential/Commercial Free-Estimates Senior Discounts Fast, Reliable, Licensed/Insured Builder, General Contractor Leave Detailed Message
Painting
Free-Estimates
PETE'S PAINTING
Home Improvement
Roofing
Plumbing
DOLL'S LANDSCAPING
Call Today!
FREE Camera with Drain Cleaning
*
ANDERSON Painting & Carpentry Complete Interior/Exterior Services Plaster/Drywall & Water Damage Repairs. Wood-Staining. Wallpaper-Removal. Kitchen/Cabinet Refinishing Insured/References. Free-Estimates
586-354-3032 248-974-4012
PRO TOUCH PAINTING LLC.
Interior/Exterior 30-yrs-experience, Power-washing, Drywall repairs, 586-825-3333 Free Estimates. All Work Guaranteed. Affordable Prices. Senior Discount. Insured. 0036-2308.indd Painting 1 2/1/23 2:45 PM
Licensed/Insured. 30-yrs.-experience. Call for free-estimates. Open 7-days a week 24/hrs-day. 10%-Off For Cash Now Accepting All Major Credit Cards.
All Masonry Work Bricks, Stones, Pavers, Blocks, Porches, Chimneys. Tuckpointing. 26-yrs experience Insured, Free Estimates.
·CUSTOM BACKSPLASHES ·CUSTOM CABINETS ·COUNTERTOPS *Granite*Quartz* ·LVT FLOORING ·FIREPLACE TILES *Ceramic*Glass *Stone*
BELLEAIR LAWN CARE
AA4DABLE HANDYMAN
Family Owned & Operated
Repairs & Installation Master Plumber • Fully Licensed & Insured Senior Citizen & Military Discounts 100% Guarantee
MR. BACKSPLASH
586-634-0033
BEST-Price-Period
A-D MASONRY LLC.
586-944-3669
with 10-yr experience is looking for work. Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly Excellent references. Flexible hours. Bonded & insured.
COMPLETE DECK MAINTENANCE
248-252-5331
ABOVE & BEYOND CONTRACTING LLC. -Masonry Specialist-
CLEANING LADY
Decks/Patios
Any & all masonry repairs. Brick, block, steps, chimneys, porches-tuckpointing, Cement work, mortar-matching. 25-yrs experience. Free-estimates. References/Insured.
586-822-5100
The Only Master-Certified! Multi-Service-House Cleaning-Specialist! 28th-year/experience more services offered. Wall/washing/windows/up holstery/carpets/strip wax/grout. Clean/Trustworthy Registered/Insured NOW HIRING!!!
248-890-8830
MOUTON'S MASONRY
Chimneys, Porches, Steps, Flat-Work, Residential/Commercial/ Tuck-Pointing, Cultured-Stone, Brick-and-Any-Masonry Repairs/Needs. Accept all major credit cards. SPRING SPECIALS up-to-30%-off! Senior-Discounts Free-Estimates! 30yrs-Experience
AAA Susie Q's Cleaning & Restoration
Fence Service
Motor City Plumbing & Drain
0355-2235
0093-2314
WE RAISE SETTLED OR SUNKEN CONCRETE
586-634-1152
(direct cell phone #) Panel upgrades, generators, hot tubs, 220 lines. ALL SERVICE Licensed & Insured Dependable, quality work! License#-6111359
Plumbing
0378-2314
Elite Concrete Services, LLC.
Kitchens/ Cabinets/ Countertops
0325-2302
CASTLE ELECTRIC
Warriors Construction L.L.C. MASONRY & CONCRETE REPAIR WATERPROOFING SPECIALISTS SPECIALIZING IN: DISCOUNTS Tuckpointing On ALL Brick Replacement Waterproofing Concrete Repair Jobs Chimney Repair FREE Porch Repair | Waterproofing ESTIMATES Glass Block Installments 586-213-2729 Ask for Joe
Electrical
0036-2308
Cement
Basement Waterproofing
248-495-3512
PEAK PAINTING Custom-Painting, Commercial/Residential, interior/exterior. Drywall-repair, paper removal, carpentry. 30-yr.-exp. Free estimates, senior discounts, insured. Credit-cards accepted.
586-722-8381 Now Hiring!!!
Lic#-8004254
586-757-4715 ABSOLUTE PLUMBING Family Owned Since 1990
Drain Cleaning Special
$75.00 with ad. Complete Plumbing Repairs Senior Discounts,
Licensed/Insured Lic#-8216443
WATERWORK Plumbing.com •Drain Cleaning •Sewer Camera •Water Heaters •Sump Pumps •Backflow Testing
248-542-8022
Same Day Emergency Service Available Reliable/Experienced License#8003885
Powerwashing AJʼs PRESSURE CLEANING & SEAL COATING •Stamped Concrete (remove milky or cloudy film) •Exposed Aggregate •Brick Pavers (resanding)
586-431-0591
Tree Service BERG BROS. LLC. “Fully insured, highly referred.” Senior discounts. Tree-removal, stump grinding, tree-trimming, hedging, shaping, Emergency-Service Residential/Commercial Free estimates!
(586)262-3060
BEST price! Best service!
M.D.L. Tree Service
Removals/Trimming and Stumps. "Free stump grinding with all tree removals!" Senior discounts & fully insured.
586-775-4404
DAVE'S TREE & SHRUB
25%-Spring-DISCOUNT Tree-Leaf-Removal/Trimming, Stump Grinding, Gutter-Cleaning, Season-Firewood, Junk/Scrap/Haul Removal, Free-Estimates. 10% Senior-Discounts. -FREE WOOD CHIPS-
(586)216-0904 www.davestree andshrub.com
www.candgnews.com
4B - GROSSE POINTE TIMES, April 6, 2023
2019 BUICK ENCORE PREFERRED T E STAR REMOT
2021 CHEVROLET TRAX LT T E STAR
17,588
*
2019 CHEVROLET EQUINOX PREMIER
2020 CHEVROLET BLAZER LT POWER
STK# C22266
24,588
$
*
2019 CHEVROLET BLAZER 2LT
T E STAR REMOT
HE ALL W
VE EL DRI
• POWER LIFTGATE • HEATED SEATS • SAFETY PKG. • 22K MILES STK# C21464
26,888
*
2020 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE RS RIOR
R INTE
26,988
2019 GMC CANYON ALL TERRAIN CREW
• 7 PASSENGER SEATING • BOSE AUDIO STK# C22528
32,188
$
*
*
*
32,488
25,288
$
*
T E STAR REMOT
• HEATED SEATS • BEDLINER • 30K MILES
STK# C22274
27,788
$
*
2020 CHEVROLET SILVERADO CUSTOM
*
2022 CHEVROLET SILVERADO LT 4
CAB 4X
• HEATED SEATS • REMOTE START • BEDLINER • 8K MILES
STK# C24145
35,688
$
STK# C24273
31,888
$
CREW
• 4X4 • BEDLINER • ONLY 15K MILES *
STK# C21654
T E STAR REMOT
• V-6 ENGINE • TOW PKG.
$
S
2020 CHEVROLET SILVERADO LT
V-6 EN
STK# C22163
2020 CHEVROLET BLAZER LT
2019 CHEVROLET BLAZER 2LT
GINE
CAB
*
• POWER LIFTGATE • REMOTE START • LOW MILES
• HEATED SEATS • ONLY 11K MILES!
STK# C21972
23,388
$
D SEAT
25,288
$
STK# C23387
HEATE
STK# C22312
• HEATED SEATS • 31K MILES
$
TE LIFTGA
• REMOTE START • HEATED SEATS
2021 CHEVROLET BLAZER LT
E LEATH
21,488
*
• HEATED SEATS • POWER LIFTGATE
23,688
$
STK# C22474
2019 GMC ACADIA SLE-2
• HEATED SEATS • LEATHER INTERIOR *
• HEATED SEATS • ONLY 18K MILES
19,288
REMOT
STK# C22451
T E STAR REMOT
S
$
*
T E STAR
UDIO BOSE A
$
STK# C22586
$
2021 CHEVROLET TRAILBLAZER LT
• REMOTE START • POWER LIFTGATE
• ONLY 9K MILES! • CRUISE CONTROL
STK# C22150
$
D SEAT
HEATE
REMOT
• ALLOY WHEELS • CRUISE CONTROL
2020 CHEVROLET EQUINOX
*
STK# C21292
39,688
$
*
*Plus title, tax, plates, doc and CVR fees. Vehicles available at time of printing. No Salvage or branded titles. Certain restrictions may apply, see dealer for details. Limited Powertrain Warranty is on certified vehicles from original in-service date and whichever comes first, time or mileage. 2 years or 24,000 miles of scheduled vehicle maintenance is on certified pre-owned vehicles, includes oil and filter changes, tire rotations and multi-point inspections. Sale ends 4/14/2023. 0022-2314