7 minute read
WE CAN ALL HELP WITH FAIR HOUSING PRACTICES
guest opinion
by YARROW BROWN
April is Fair Housing Month and offers an opportunity to provide insight into the importance of fair housing practices. As we welcome back the tourists and seasonal residents this spring, I am reminded of those of us who survived another winter, and I think about those who are losing their shelter or being displaced. I also think about those who experience housing insecurity
I first moved to Leelanau County in 2008— single, with a dog and a year-round job. I was impressed by how friendly and welcoming everyone was. I also arrived here just in time to find a place to rent before I started my job at the Leelanau Conservancy. I was lucky: I was 15 minutes from work, had a roof over my head, and a place for my dog to run. There were not many options back then, maybe two or three, but there was also not a lot of competition. Now, there are even fewer options and waitlists that span years.
I believe we are part of a community that cares about its people and welcomes everyone. Yet I know many of us resist change and, often if we are comfortably housed, are unaware of how many struggle to find housing.
It will take all of us to change how we look at housing’s role in our communities and the role of local agencies in creating local solutions. Housing for all is necessary infrastructure. It’s critical to our health, to our local business’ health, and to our mental health to have a safe, secure home.
So what do I mean by “fair housing?” Fair housing is the right to choose housing free from unlawful discrimination. In our region, the Fair Housing Center of West Michigan (FHCWM) is a private, nonprofit organization committed to providing comprehensive fair housing services, including education, outreach, research, advocacy, and enforcement. They are the front door to housing choice, ensuring that everyone in our community has equal opportunity to choose housing that’s right for them.
Currently, the FHCWM serves 12 counties in western Michigan including Grand Traverse. We’re fortunate to have its staff active in our community and offering their services and expertise in northwest Michigan. As someone who sits on the board of FHCWM, I believe fair housing is the key to all people having the roof they want over their heads.
There are also federal, state, and local laws designed to protect people from discrimination in housing transactions such as rentals, sales, lending, and insurance. Those laws protect all individuals seeking housing, including renters, homebuyers, persons obtaining a mortgage or homeowners insurance, and others.
The federal Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing because of the following list of “protected classes”: race, color, religion, national origin, gender (including sexual orientation and gender identity), disability, or familial status (presence of children under the age of 18 and pregnancy).
The Michigan Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act extends the protections afforded by the Fair Housing Act and further prohibits discrimination in housing because of marital status or age. In March of 2023, Gov. Whitmer signed an expansion of the ElliottLarsen Civil Rights Act into law; it now includes sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression as being protected from discrimination under the law.
The Federal Fair Housing Act was not officially enacted until April 11, 1968. It came only after a long and difficult journey and was pushed through by President Johnson after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. It was in response to a lot of civil unrest and calls to action.
However, it was President Nixon who had the power to appoint the first officials administering the act. Nixon appointed Michigan’s governor at the time, George Romney, as the first Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
While serving as governor, Secretary Romney successfully campaigned for ratification of a state constitutional provision that prohibited discrimination in housing. He had some innovative ideas, including proposing an “Open Communities” program. Romney believed the impact of concentrated poverty and racial segregation “in the central cities extends beyond the city boundaries to include the surrounding communities,” and “[t]o solve the problems of the ‘real city’ only metropolitan-wide solutions will do.”
I’d like to think that he was forward thinking and looking at ways we could bring more urban tools to even rural environments, as well as looking at ways to encourage racial and economic integration.
Fair housing practices help people understand what it means to be a welcoming and vibrant neighborhood and community. When people feel welcomed, they make themselves at home. They invest their resources back into their community, which makes it an attractive place for diverse and talented people to come. Fair housing also plants seeds for economic development, talent retention, and more in our community.
Equal access to housing goes hand in hand with quality of life.
Yarrow Brown is the executive director of Housing North, a 10-county housing agency serving northwest Michigan.
BOTANICAL HOME & GIFT SHOPS
PLANTS + POTS • STICKERS DRIED FLORALS • PRINTS STATIONERY • & MUCH MORE
BOTH
By Greg Tasker
With its extensive American menu, lakeside setting, and friendly service, Burke’s Waterfront is a popular stopover for hungry tourists motoring along Route 115 through the outskirts of Cadillac.
“The lake is busy all year,” says Mary Burke, who opened the nautical-themed restaurant with her late husband, Larry, nearly four decades ago. “The last three years have been phenomenal. I think people got tired of staying at home during the pandemic and want to be out and about. They’re feeling good, so they’re out.”
That longevity for a restaurant is no easy feat. Burke attributes the casual restaurant’s success to that extensive menu—“there’s something for everyone”—the waterfront location, the proximity to Mitchell State Park, regularly refreshing the dining room, and, perhaps most importantly, the emphasis on family.
The Family Business
Mary and Larry Burke, the latter of whom was already an accomplished chef and had worked at other restaurants in Cadillac, opened Burke’s Waterfront in 1983. It was his dream to have a restaurant; Mary helped him realize that vision.
“We liked the location,” recalls Mary Burke, who is a Cadillac native; her late husband was from Indiana. She describes him as a talented chef and a jack of all trades. “We had family and they wanted to be involved, so we jumped at the opportunity to be next to the water. Everything fell into place.”
It is a prime location: Burke’s Waterfront sits on 3.5 acres, 3 miles from downtown
Cadillac and along a busy stretch of Route 115, which connects from U.S. 10 to Route 37 (to Traverse City) and Route 31 to Lake Michigan beach towns.
The couple had four children, so “the family-friendly passion naturally embodied the air and menu.” Over the years, the business has remained a family affair.
Helping Mary Burke—who does a bit of everything associated with running a restaurant, including bookkeeping and greeting customers—are her son Steve, who is the general manager; daughter Susan, who oversees the dining room; and daughter Pam and grandson Steven, who both work parttime.
One summer, Burke recalls, six of 10 grandchildren (some were too young) helped out at the restaurant. They bussed tables, rolled silverware, washed dishes, “whatever needed to be done,” she says.
“Bring the family home” remains the restaurant’s battle cry “because nothing connects families better than Lake Cadillac and cooking for everyone.”
That emphasis is prominent on the menu, where diners are welcomed by this greeting: “We understand what truly matters at the end of the day—family. That’s why we’ve honed and crafted our menu into something that everyone can enjoy including countless options.”
The Vast Menu
Countless, indeed.
The restaurant’s hearty breakfasts— everything from overstuffed country omelets to eggs benedict to lumberjack-inspired eggs, meat, and sides—have cultivated a loyal following of locals, hunters, snowmobilers, and boaters, as well as the after-church crowd on Sundays.
The lunch and dinner menus are a smorgasbord of American classics, including various hamburgers, Reuben, patty melt, classic club, Monte Cristo, and wraps. Entrees offer chicken, shrimp, seafood, and pasta dishes. And then there are salads and a selection of Mexican fare with burritos, enchiladas, tacos, and fajitas.
The appetizers, dubbed “Sailing Shareables,” include boneless chicken wings, French Onion Soup, white cheddar cheese curds, and fried pickle slices.
The menu standouts, known as the “Lumberjack’s Choice,” are the prime rib— fresh every day—and the steaks, which include a 12-ounce NY strip, a blackened 14-ounce ribeye, and an eight-ounce sirloin. The prime rib is hand-cut, marinated by hand, and slow-roasted in low temperatures. All the beef options are served with a fresh garden salad and a side of either potatoes or vegetables.
The seafood offerings, “Neptune’s Net,” includes maple-glazed salmon, herb-crusted walleye, Michigan whitefish (from Lake Superior), and jumbo Gulf shrimp.
Noteworthy, too, is a selection known as “Lola’s Favorites.” Lola was Mary Burke’s mother-in-law, whom she describes as a fabulous cook. The recipes were Lola’s, and choices include Country Fried Steak, Roasted Turkey Dinner, Roasted Beef Dinner, and “To Die For” Liver, described as “a generous portion of tender top quality beef liver smothered with sautéed onions and crispy hickory bacon.” Lola cooked at Mary and Larry’s former restaurants, but never at Burke’s Waterfront.
Burke’s has a liquor license, offering customers a selection of Michigan craft and other beers, spirits, cocktails and wine, including one from Michigan, Black Star Farms Riesling. “It’s not a sit-down bar— mainly table service,” Burke says.
The Summer Rush
While the extensive menu is popular, Burke says the family is in the process of trimming the selection to ease pressure on the kitchen.
“We get really busy in the summer. It’s hard to get kitchen staff, so we’re trying to streamline things and be a little more efficient,” she says, adding that is no easy task. “Everything is so popular—we’re having a hard time deciding what to eliminate.”
Summer, unsurprisingly, remains the most popular season at the restaurant. The dining room windows afford panoramic views of Lake Cadillac; an outdoor deck, busy in the summer and fall, brings customers closer to the water’s edge. Guests enjoy frequent sightings of wildlife, including eagles, otters, muskrats, and jumping fish.
“There are spectacular views and some beautiful sunrise views,” Burke says, noting the restaurant opens at 7am every day except Thursdays, when they are closed.
“We have a great customer base,” she concludes. “It’s really a big family. We have people who have been coming here for years. They liked what they saw and kept coming back. I just talked to a lady from downstate who remembered stopping here several times a year when she was a little girl on her family’s way to a cabin Up North. Lots of customers have stories to tell.”
Find Burke’s Waterfront at 2403 Sunnyside Dr. in Cadillac. (231) 775-7555, burkeswaterfront.com