7 minute read

Summertime In Plymouth Means Art In The Park and Graduation

As the calendar finally turns to summer (yes!), it means the Plymouth Art In The Park festival is right around the corner.

Advertisement

Now in its 43rd year, Art In The Park will take over downtown Plymouth over a threeday weekend, July 7-9. Although the festival has humble beginnings, it now attracts more than 400 artists from around the nation, who exhibit and sell their paintings, sculptures, ceramics, jewelry, fiber, glasswork, woodwork, photography, folk art and so much more.

Art In The Park is Michigan’s second largest art fair (behind only Ann Arbor’s), and is arguably Plymouth’s signature event of the year. If you don’t believe me, just ask the more than a quarter million people who are expected to descend upon town that weekend, which means plenty of residual business for all our local stores and restaurants.

For the third year in a row, The Rock has partnered with Art In The Park organizers to publish the festival’s official guide, which you will find inside this issue. The guide, which begins on Page 11, is filled with festival highlights, a listing of all the artist’s and a map where they are located, plus profiles on a couple of the artists who will be exhibiting their work.

We hope the guide will make your AITP experience a little less chaotic, and help you pinpoint exactly where to find what you are looking for, not to mention the best way to get to and from the event (hint – take the shuttle from Schoolcraft College, where there is plenty of parking). And remember, even if art isn’t really your thing, the festival will feature plenty of outstanding food, entertainment and some of the best people watching this side of Kellogg Park.

Of course, summer also means the end of another school year and the celebration of another graduating class.

The Class of 2023 includes more than 1,300 students from PCEP, with Salem High leading the way with 461 graduates (followed by Plymouth with 444 and Canton with 440). All three commencement ceremonies took place June 11 at Eastern Michigan University’s Convocation Center.

In this issue you will also find the graduation lists of all three schools (thank you Schoolcraft College for sponsoring!), and lots of wonderful photos compiled by our talented photographers. I promise, the smiles are infectious.

There are few events as celebratory and joyous as a high school graduation ceremony. It is the end of a long journey for our students, and the beginning of a new one, with more than 1,300 students going on more than 1,300 different paths leading away from “The Park.”

The graduation coverage begins on Page 23

If any members of the Class of 2023 get the chance to read this, my advice is to go out and change the world in your own individual ways. Forget the expectations and pressures from others. Work hard, stay focused and just be you. And, remember, no matter where your travels take you or how far from Plymouth you go, The Park will always be a part of you.

Congratulations to you all. We can’t wait to see what you become.

Kurt Kuban is the editor of The Rock. He can be reached at

Northville Downs' proposed move will boost Plymouth Township's fortunes and breathe life into a fading sport, backers say.

Detractors paint a less glamorous picture.

They contend a harness racetrack planned for the southwest corner of Five Mile and Ridge roads will only bring traffic headaches, if not a crime spike. A few naysayers assert the development is nothing but a backdoor to open a casino.

Don’t bet on the latter, township attorney Kevin Bennett retorts.

The attorney outlined several reasons why erecting a gambling house on the 128-acre site would be impossible under state law. Bennett spoke during a June 1 planning commission special meeting at Plymouth Township hall.

At the special session, commissioners voted to send the planned unit development site plan to the township board of trustees for final approval. The elected seven-member body will take up the matter sometime this summer.

A half-mile harness race track and three-story grandstand seating 480 spectators is the centerpiece of the proposed Northville Downs at Plymouth Township.

The raceway would open spring 2024 and host live events from May to September, said John Carlo, Northville Downs’ owner and director of operations. Auburn Hills-based PEA Group is representing the track owner during the PUD process.

To torpedo casino scuttlebutt, Bennett recited state gambling laws.

A gaming house would require statewide voter approval and local backing at the polls, Bennett said.

Another state regulation restricts gambling facilities to cities with a population of 800,000 or more. Plymouth Township has 27,938 residents, according to 2020 U.S. Census figures.

"It's a nonissue," Bennett said.

Despite those assurances, some residents refused to let go of the conspiracy theory at the public meeting.

A few suggested a Native American tribe could buy into the project and open a gambling house.

Bennett said Indian-run casinos are limited to federally designated tribal lands. No Native American reservations exist in southeast Michigan, the township attorney added.

"We really need to put this to bed," said Bob Doroshewitz, planning trustee who joined six colleagues in unanimously approving the PUD site plan. "This myth out there about a 56,000-square-foot casino is total nonsense."

Those spreading rumors either don't know the law or have a political agenda, said Kurt Heise, township supervisor.

“I guess I'm just going to have to say it one more time: The casino is virtually impossible under the state constitution,” Heise said.

During the project's unveiling in January, a proposed 53,800-square-foot gaming facility was listed as part of a "future phase." Those plans were later scrapped, Heise said.

Along with the track and grandstand, the Northville Downs proposal includes a 35,500-square-foot horse barn, a 23,000-square-foot racing structure, and a 3,200-square- foot maintenance building.

“There’s no second phase,” Heise said. “When you are going through the planned unit development process, there are always drafts that are flying back and forth.”

If the track owner makes any site plan revisions, the multistep PUD process would start over, the township supervisor said.

Casinos aside, nearby residents are worried about the project bringing traffic headaches and unsavory visitors.

“It's a nice site plan, it's got a lot of nice features,” said Howard Hamerick, who lives near the proposed horse track. “The question is: How do you get there and how do you get out?”

Another resident recalled being less than impressed with the clientele during a Northville Downs visit a few years ago.

"I'm just going to say it: There were a lot of degenerates that were in that building, " said George Maitland, who lives in the Andover Lakes subdivision. That observation didn't mesh with the township police chief's findings.

During a Feb. 15 planning commission meeting, Police Chief James Knittel said he spoke to Northville law enforcement officials about the raceway whose current 48-acre site is expected to undergo a sweeping $113 million redevelopment.

City of Northville Police Chief Alan Maciag and Capt. Greg Hannewald informed their Plymouth Township counterpart crime is not a problem at the historic racetrack, Knittel said. Northville Downs opened in 1944 and is the state's last harness remaining venue.

Aside from Kentucky Derby day, which attracts a lot of visitors to the Downs, the existing facility doesn't require additional patrols, Knittel added. Northville Downs also hosts off-track betting.

“Generally, the type of clientele that goes to the track are senior citizens,” the police chief said.

The sports facility's addition is also not expected to create nightmare gridlock, a traffic impact study suggested.

An analysis by Detroit-based Fishbeck predicts the raceway will generate 288 additional vehicle trips on weekdays. That figure is about a tenth of the estimated 2,077 trips a manufacturing site would create.

The once-proposed 5 Ridge Corporate Park was expected to house eight businesses.

The former Detroit House of Correction site is designated for industrial use but was expected to be rezoned as technology and research under the township’s 2025 Master Plan. A swath along Johnson’s Creek is classified as public land.

Harness race events are also not expected to coincide with the

4-6 p.m. peak weekday traffic period.

The proposed harness racing venue "will not have a significant impact on current traffic conditions on Ridge Road and Five Mile Road," said Kyle Basset, Spalding DeDecker project manager, in a report to the planning commission.

The track’s arrival will pump more money into the township. The municipality's share of breakage fees—pennies accumulated from rounding down betting payouts to the nearest dime—could reach $250,000-$300,000 annually, Heise said. That figure doesn't include anticipated tax revenue.

Other perks will be outlined in a yet-negotiated community benefit agreement, which is included in the PUD process.

Soccer fields and pickleball courts highlight the plan’s recreational amenities.

Under a shared services agreement, youth soccer's Plymouth Reign will manage three fields planned within the half-mile track's infield.

Likewise, a community organizer will oversee eight pickleball courts, Carlo said. The courts are part of a "flex space" planned outside the racing building. That area can be easily reconfigured for other events such as 3-on-3 basketball tournaments.

The track's owner assured planning commissioners that township residents will be able to play the increasingly popular paddle sport at the proposed facility.

“I don’t think our goal was to ever exclude anybody from pickleball,” Carlo said, “but have someone control it like the soccer fields.”

Our pounds) and explosion categories.

Under the RAS or Relative Athletic Score, which computes potential NFL Draft pick’s measurables condensing them into one analytic number, Nowaske ranked 9.85 on a scale of 10. In the history of RAS testing since 1987, Nowaske ranked 38th all-time out of 2,500 linebackers.

“I wouldn’t have gone through the process if I hadn’t believed in myself,” Nowaske said. “I have a lot of confidence in myself. I knew the odds were stacked against me, but I also know my capabilities and what I’m able to do. It was kind of a shock to a lot of people at my (pro day) and had my numbers, but it wasn’t a shock to me. Like I said, I’m very confident in myself. I know my abilities and I’m just going to continue to prove people wrong.”

This article is from: