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Tag: East side

  • Detroit school urges judge to halt Chick-fil-A construction next door

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    Steve Neavling

    Demolition was temporarily halted in May on a building to make way for a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Detroit after crews failed to notify nearby residents and a school.

    A Detroit Montessori school is asking a Wayne County judge to immediately halt construction of a Chick-fil-A restaurant next door, arguing developers violated zoning laws and endangered children by building just feet from its playground.

    The Giving Tree Montessori, which serves 116 children from infancy through kindergarten, filed an emergency motion last week, accusing Verus Development Group (VDG) and Chick-fil-A of ignoring Detroit’s zoning ordinance and the conditions of a Board of Zoning Appeals (BZA) order by expanding their project onto land designated as school use.

    The school contends that the 3,000-square-foot, drive-thru-only restaurant, which would operate feet from its playground, violates a city ordinance prohibiting fast food restaurants within 500 feet of a school.

    “Defendants are using and/or attempting to use the VDG Disputed Parcel as part of the property to construct a restaurant within 100 feet—mainly 6 feet away — from The Giving Tree in violation of City Code Section 50-12-131, prohibiting a fast-food restaurant within 500 feet of a school,” the motion states.

    Giving Tree Montessori sued VDG and Chick-fil-A in June, alleging the drive-thru project at 17761 Mack Avenue near the border of Grosse Pointe Park violates zoning laws, poses an immediate danger to children’s health and safety, and could force the school to close down.

    The school says it will have to eliminate this playground for infants and toddlers because it's too close to the Chick-fil-A site. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    The school says it will have to eliminate this playground for infants and toddlers because it’s too close to the Chick-fil-A site.

    “The construction borders the school playground, exposing children to heavy machinery and construction activities on the opposite side of the fence,” school owner Renee Chown said in an affidavit filed with the motion. “The playground has had to be shrunken to shield everyone from flying debris and construction activities. A planned expansion of the playscape had to be stopped.”

    As a result of the construction, two families have already withdrawn their enrollment for the 2025-26 school year, and the Montessori was forced to cancel plans to build more space and outdoor areas for the children, Chown said.

    Chown said Detroit police were called on at least two occasions “because heavy and dangerous construction equipment has been placed dangerously close to students that are playing outside on the school playground.”

    She added, “Gaping holes have been left in material bordering the fence which are small enough to allow a child to easily slip through and into an active construction site.”

    The development has drawn opposition from parents, educators, and neighbors, including at public meetings where dozens spoke out against the plan. The city initially rejected the project in October 2023 over traffic concerns, but the Detroit Board of Zoning Appeals overturned that decision in March.

    City officials have argued the 500-foot restriction doesn’t apply because Giving Tree wasn’t officially recognized as a school under zoning rules until June 2024, two months after the zoning was approved. But the lawsuit says that’s a technicality meant to justify a decision that favors developers over children’s safety.

    Demolition began in May without notice or fencing, prompting the city to temporarily halt the work. A sign went up days later, reading, “Chick-fil-A Coming Soon.”

    Since then, construction has been ongoing.

    In an affidavit, former Detroit zoning manager and certified city planner Tonja Bolden Stapleton supported the school’s case, saying the city’s Buildings, Safety Engineering, and Environmental Department (BSEED) issued the permit “prematurely, in error” and should rescind it.

    Stapleton said the site plan failed to meet several requirements, including a drive-thru escape lane, loading zone, and landscape buffers. More significantly, she said, the project never received a variance for the 500-foot school spacing requirement.

    Giving Tree Montessori School serves 116 infants, toddlers, and kindergarteners. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    Giving Tree Montessori School serves 116 infants, toddlers, and kindergarteners.

    “The site is less than 500 [feet] from The Giving Tree Montessori School,” Stapleton said. “This location restriction was never waived by the BZA.”

    The motion also argues that developers improperly expanded the project site after a boundary dispute was settled in April 2024, adding the disputed parcel without returning to the BZA for approval.

    “This materially expanded the project site beyond what the BZA considered and approved,” Stapleton said.

    She added, “Proceeding without BZA review violates both the express conditions of the Decision and Order and the procedural requirements of the zoning ordinance.”

    Chown said the lack of oversight and notice left families blindsided.

    In May, the city abruptly halted demolition on the Chick-fil-A after construction crews began tearing down a building on the site without notifying nearby residents, businesses, and the school.

    Developers said the restaurant will serve up to 1,700 cars a day and generate $10 million in annual sales.

    For families and small business owners in the East Side neighborhood, the project is a clash between wealthy developers and a corporate fast-food chain, and the people who live, work, and raise their children next door.

    Metro Times was unable to reach developers for comment.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • NAACP Maintains 2019 Cleveland ‘Water Lien’ Case is Worthy of Class Action Suit With Thousands Affected

    NAACP Maintains 2019 Cleveland ‘Water Lien’ Case is Worthy of Class Action Suit With Thousands Affected

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    Scene Archives

    Cleveland Water HQ

    Lawyers working for an affiliate of the NAACP argued earlier this month that an ongoing suit against Cleveland Water should be classified as a class-action case.

    That suit, Pickett v. City of Cleveland, which was originally filed in 2019, contends that tens of thousands of mostly Black Clevelanders had been discriminated against when the city’s water department overbilled them, shut off their water line unjustly or placed liens on their homes for, in some cases, as little as $300 in  overdue bills.

    Although the city has twice tried to appeal (and have the case dismissed), a trio of lawyers for the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund have argued since last year that, as assistant attorney to the plaintiffs Arielle Humphries said, “thousands of complaints” against Cleveland Water clearly amount to a suit greater than on a person-by-person basis.

    “We have shown that this is a widespread issue,” Humphries told Scene in a phone call on Wednesday. “And that there are a lot of Black Clevelanders that have been subject to the discriminatory lien policy and the discriminatory unfair billing policy.”

    “The policy needs to change,” she added.

    A brief filed in the Northern District of Ohio Court on October 4 supports the NAACP’s position that the case is worthy of class action status, which the court agreed with in a ruling late last year. Cleveland has since appealed.

    The subject at hand: From 2012 to 2020, there were 17,000 liens on Clevelanders’ homes placed due to unpaid bills, the lawyers for the plaintiffs argue.

    And unfairly so, they argue: 18 percent of those liens were on homes in majority-white neighborhoods, they say; about 70 percent of those liens were placed on homes in majority-Black neighborhoods, mostly those in Central, Lee-Miles, Fairfax and Slavic Village.

    Which is, the lawyers argue, a matter of color and race, not just financial status—a clear violation, they say, of the Federal Housing Act, along with the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which states that no state “can take away a person’s life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”

    “Even when controlling for median household income, the higher percentage of Black residents in any given neighborhood,” the October 4 brief reads, “the higher the number and proportion of all water liens are placed in that neighborhood.”

    “Cleveland Water will not be commenting on this particular case, as it is an ongoing legal matter,” a spokesperson told Scene via email.

    In a message to News 5, who covered the story in 2019, Cleveland Water said that they’re “currently working through the court system with outside counsel.”

    The city, they also found, had spent $1.4 million in attorneys fees up to 2023 arguging the case.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • ‘Sounded very distraught’: Mother seeking help finding son last seen near Calumet River

    ‘Sounded very distraught’: Mother seeking help finding son last seen near Calumet River

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    CHICAGO — A mother is devastated and asking for more help to find her 24-year-old son — who was last seen near the Calumet River two weeks ago.

    Jovon “JB” Nelson, 24, was seen by a bridge worker near the Ewing Avenue Bridge on April 9, according to his mother Tangela Nelson.

    Nelson was staying at a residence in the 3200 block of East 92nd Street and called his mother before running out of the home wearing a black t-shirt and gray sweatpants. He had no socks, no shoes, no ID and no phone.

    Family believes he was suffering from a mental health crisis.

    “He sounded very distraught, scared and anxious,” Tangela Nelson said.

    Tangela and JB

    Nelson and loved ones have been searching the area with dogs and drones since and a $3,000 reward is available. It originally started at $2,500 and $500 was recently added, according to Nelson.

    She said there’s been a lack of help from the authorities that’s frustrated her.

    Missing person flyer, made by family

    Nelson told WGN News the Coast Guard refused to deploy resources in the river and Chicago police are not looking as well.

    “They’re not helping,” she said. “Haven’t had any help since day one.”

    The Coast Guard discussed the circumstances of the incident with WGN News.

    A lieutenant said their office was notified by family on April 13. Prior to that, a CPD marine unit investigated and found there wasn’t a reason to believe he entered the water, according to the Coast Guard.

    Because of “no intelligence” that he entered the water, a search mission in the Calumet River has not been conducted by the Coast Guard, the lieutenant said.

    Nelson is 5’9″, 140 lbs., with brown eyes and dreadlocks.

    Anyone with information can call 911 or detectives at 312-747-8274. To join the family’s search party, you can text 773-938-2808.

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    Andy Koval

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  • Lawsuit seeks to save trees, protect residents at contaminated AB Ford Park in Detroit

    Lawsuit seeks to save trees, protect residents at contaminated AB Ford Park in Detroit

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    Three Detroit residents filed a lawsuit against the city this week in hopes of halting a controversial plan to remove more than 250 trees from AB Ford Park and cover the contaminated park in two feet of new soil.

    The lawsuit, filed in Wayne County Circuit Court on Monday, alleges the city violated the Michigan Environmental Protect Act and is endangering residents by exposing them to toxic pollutants.

    The residents — Terry Swafford, Brenda Gail Watson, and Emma Miller — are seeking “protection of the air, water, and other natural resources and the public trust in these resources from pollution, impairment, or destruction,” according to a lawsuit filed by their lawyer Lisa Walinske of the Detroit East Community Law Center.

    Walinske tells Metro Times that she plans to file an emergency preliminary injunction later this week to stop the work until the city pulls the proper permits and provides sufficient evidence through scientific tests that its proposed solution won’t endanger residents.

    In late February, the city announced that it was closing the waterfront park in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood to begin removing the trees, some of which are more than 100 years old and are used by bald eagles and other wildlife.

    The city insists the trees won’t survive after crews cover the 32-acre park in two feet of fresh soil.

    The plan comes nearly two years after environmental testing uncovered excessive levels of arsenic, mercury, lead, barium, cadmium, copper, zinc, volatile organic compounds, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the soil.

    Despite this, the city kept a large portion of the park open to the public without revealing the findings. The test results weren’t disclosed until after Metro Times raised questions about why the city hadn’t been more transparent about the findings.

    Despite increasing concerns about the park, the Detroit City Council unanimously approved the renovation plan on Tuesday.

    The lawsuit also alleges the city’s plan will increase pollution in the neighborhood because an average of 20 to 30 heavy trucks will trudge through nearby streets every day from March to September to cover the park in new soil.

    In addition, the lawsuit claims the city’s plan will destroy habitat, cause soil erosion, and increase the risks of floods because the additional soil will raise the level of the river’s edge, blocking stormwater runoff.

    The city “is not taking sufficient remediation steps to ensure that the soil contamination does not harm the visitors to the park, does not harm the adjoining waterway and does not have a negative environmental effect on the Park’s ecosystem,” the lawsuit states.

    In effect, the city’s plan to cover the contaminated soil in even more dirt will “encapsulate toxic pollutants” at the edge of the Detroit River without remediating the contamination, the lawsuit alleges. Since the park is in a designated floodplain, excessive rain could cause the toxic pollutants to spread.

    The lawsuit also raises concerns about a large mound of “toxic soil” at the park’s entrance that is across the streets from homes. The dirt was dumped there during previous renovations, and the contamination is spreading “with each passing breeze.”

    After the remediation, the city plans to include walkways, a playground, basketball court, fitness and picnic areas, tennis and pickleball courts, a fishing node, beach, and waterfront plaza.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Detroit kept residents in the dark about hazardous contaminants at waterfront park

    Detroit kept residents in the dark about hazardous contaminants at waterfront park

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    click to enlarge

    Steve Neavling

    A.B. Ford Park in Detroit has been closed off after contamination was found at the site.

    The city of Detroit knew about serious levels of contamination at a waterfront park on the east side but failed to alert residents or fence off the entire area until last month, Metro Times has learned.

    Soil testing at A.B. Ford Park in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood in 2022 and 2023 revealed excessive levels of arsenic, mercury, lead, barium, cadmium, copper, zinc, volatile organic compounds, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, according to an environment assessment report made public on Tuesday, a month after the city received it.

    Contacting the soil is dangerous, according to the report.

    “This complete pathway is an unacceptable exposure and, therefore, response activities are required,” the report from Atlas Technical Consultants states.

    The city closed the park late last month to begin topping the contaminated ground with two feet of soil. The city also drew the ire of some residents with plans to remove more than 250 trees, some of which are more than 100 years old and are used by bald eagles.

    The testing was done ahead of planned park renovations that include walkways, a playground, basketball court, fitness and picnic areas, tennis and pickleball courts, a fishing node, beach, and waterfront plaza.

    click to enlarge A.B. Ford Park in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood is undergoing renovations. - Rendering via city of Detroit

    Rendering via city of Detroit

    A.B. Ford Park in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood is undergoing renovations.

    Now some residents are threatening to file a lawsuit against the city for allegedly exposing them to dangerous contaminants.

    Terry Swafford, who has taken his two children to the park almost every day before it closed last month, is calling on the city to offer free testing for residents who may have been exposed to contaminants.

    “We have all been exposed to toxins from the soil,” Swafford tells Metro Times. “It is unacceptable.”

    City officials are defending their handling of the contamination, saying the west side of the park was closed after toxins were found.

    “We followed the science every step of the way to make sure the public was protected at AB Ford Park,” Crystal Gilbert-Rogers, general manager for environmental affairs, told Metro Times in a statement. “The entire western half of the site has been fenced off to the public since February 2022 to allow for soil testing and demolition at the former Lenox center, as well as construction of the new community center.”

    Although the testing was confined to the western portion of the park, where the first renovations took place, environmental consultants emphasized in their report that the east side was likely just as contaminated.

    “It should be noted, based on soil-fill material grid sampling completed to date, the level, nature, and distribution of soil/fill material contamination within the eastern portion of the park are expected to be similar, if not identical, to the western portion of the park fully investigated in mid-2023,” consultants wrote in the Feb. 5 report.

    The eastern side of the park, which includes a soccer field, walking paths, and a fishing pier, stayed open for more than two more weeks after the report was received – and nearly two years after the first contamination was discovered on the western side of the park.

    Despite the contamination, an NFL Draft party was held next to the new recreation center in the park on Saturday, and food trucks, a bounce house, and games for children were set up in the parking lot. Although a chain-link fence was erected to keep people off the grass, clumps of dirt had breached the fence.

    Residents were informed in mid-February that contaminants were found, but the city declined to disclose any details until earlier this week.

    The level of contamination is serious enough to prompt the consultants to urge the city to notify workers of the contaminants and require them to wear gloves and clean any soil or dust from their boots and hands after leaving the park.

    “Construction workers may be exposed to hazardous substances found in soil and groundwater,” the consultants wrote.

    It’s unclear if workers were notified of the contamination when they demolished a building and constructed a solar-paneled recreation center last year.

    Residents are also worried about a large mound of dirt at the park’s entrance, which is across the street from homes, that was dumped there during previous renovations. Disrupted soil carries a significant risk of exposure.

    click to enlarge A large mound of dirt at the entrance of A.B. Ford Park. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    A large mound of dirt at the entrance of A.B. Ford Park.

    The city defended the mound of dirt, saying it’s “entirely fenced off.”

    But Swafford counters that a chain-link fence cannot protect residents from airborne contamination. He’s not persuaded by the city’s insistence that residents were protected.

    “It’s complete bullshit,” Swafford says of the city’s explanation. “It’s insane. It’s truly Owellian. It’s divorced from reality altogether.”

    It’s unclear exactly what caused the contamination. The park used to be a Nike missile site in the 1950s. Those sites are notorious for leaving behind a toxic cocktail of contaminants, though it is not believed that any missiles were ever stored at the A.B. Ford Park site, which housed radar tracking towers and barracks for military personnel.

    The base of two radar towers are still jutting out of the ground at the park.

    click to enlarge The base of two radar towers from a former Nike site at A.B. Ford Park in Detroit. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    The base of two radar towers from a former Nike site at A.B. Ford Park in Detroit.

    City officials believe at least some of the contamination is from soil that was dumped at the park decades ago.

    A Detroit City Council committee meets at 1 p.m. Thursday to consider approving the $9.6 million renovation plans. Some residents plan to speak out against the plans.

    The committee delayed action on the measure last week, saying it needed more time to hear from residents and gather more information.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Detroit suspiciously quiet about contamination found at missile-related site-turned-park

    Detroit suspiciously quiet about contamination found at missile-related site-turned-park

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    A week after the city of Detroit alerted residents in a last-minute Zoom meeting that it was closing a waterfront park on the east side after finding contamination in the soil, Mayor Mike Duggan’s administration has refused to divulge any further details.

    Now residents in Jefferson Chalmers are left wondering if they’ve been exposed to dangerous contaminants at A.B. Ford Park, which was a Nike missile-related site in the 1950s. Those sites are notorious for leaving behind a toxic cocktail of contaminants, though it is not believed that any missiles were ever stored at the A.B. Ford Park site, which housed radar tracking towers and barracks for military personnel.

    Residents are also incensed with the city’s insistence that it must remove more than 250 trees, some of which are more than 100 years old and are used by bald eagles. The city claims the best way to protect residents from the contamination is by adding two feet of fresh soil to the 32-acre park, which would make it impossible for the trees to survive.

    To cover the park with new soil, an average of 20 to 30 heavy trucks would trudge through the neighborhood every day from March to September, the city said.

    The city plans to replace the trees with hundreds of native and flowering trees, according to a city document.

    After news broke about the park’s closure on Friday, the city abruptly canceled a meeting with residents.

    Terry Swafford, who takes his two children to the park almost every day, has been trying to get more information from the city, to no avail.

    In a phone conversation last week with Crystal Perkins, director of the city’s General Services Department, Swafford says he was told Detroit had to spend the money quickly.

    None of this adds up to Swafford and his neighbors. The city has been testing the park for contaminants for years and never mentioned finding toxic chemicals. In fact, the city renovated the western portion of the park last year and added no new soil.

    He’s skeptical that there’s any good reason to remove the trees.

    “This is disastrous, and no one wants it,” Swafford tells Metro Times. “All of my neighbors are up in arms about it, and they feel powerless. This is a no-win for us. This is horseshit, and the city knows it.”

    Swafford says residents have reached out to his city councilwoman, Latisha Johnson, but she never called them back.

    When Metro Times asked for specifics about the contamination, the city declined to release details. The city also refused to divulge the funding source, the identities of the contractors, and whether there was even a bidding process.

    Even for the city of Detroit, this level of secrecy is unusual.

    Earlier this week, Duggan spokesman John Roach said he would try to answer Metro Times’s questions, but on Thursday morning, he declined, saying the administration will address the community during a meeting about the park on Thursday evening.

    “The city is doing a full presentation on the soil contamination to the community at a meeting at 5:00 tonight,” Roach said in a text message. “That community report will be followed by the posting of all environmental reports on the city’s website early next week.”

    Trouble is, that timing prevents residents from providing any insight until the process is almost complete.

    After this story was published, a Detroit City Council committee voted to delay action on the $9.6 million plan at a meeting Thursday afternoon. Swafford says neither he nor his neighbors knew about the meeting until the last minute.

    If the council approves the spending, the plan will move forward, without ample opportunity for residents to provide any meaningful insight.

    Detroit resident Jay Juergensen, a flood protection expert and lead organizer of Jefferson-Chalmers WATER Project, says he has serious concerns about the plan and the city’s lack of transparency. Residents in Jefferson Chalmers have been inundated with flooded basements over the past few years, and he’s worried the plan could exacerbate the problem.

    “All of my neighbors are up in arms about it, and they feel powerless. This is a no-win for us. This is horseshit, and the city knows it.”

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    “What efforts are being made to ensure the proposed work is engineered in a manner that meets performance standards, including stability, seepage and settlement necessary to ensure it can provide flood protection or does not undermine future efforts for flood protection or put adjacent residents at great risk for flooding?” Juergensen tells Metro Times.

    Residents also want to know if the area’s seawalls, which are intended to prevent flooding, are going to be raised since the ground is going to be two feet higher.

    If the park is contaminated, it remains unclear why the city renovated the western portion, demolished an old building, and constructed a solar-powered recreation center last year. That building has large windows that are just inches above the ground. Adding two feet of soil around the building would put some of the building underground.

    Without any answers, residents have no idea what to believe.

    “If they had known it was contaminated when they took soil samples years ago, they would have done this remediation ahead of time [on the western portion] and there would have been two feet of extra soil,” Swafford says. “They didn’t follow their own recommendation. Are we to believe that it just became contaminated? None of this adds up. This should be obvious to anybody.”

    From 1955 to 1960, the military used the property for radar tracking towers for missiles that were stored underground near Belle Isle. Towers from the Nike missile site are still standing at the park.

    In Michigan, the military had 15 Nike sites, where workers handled hazardous chemicals. The Defense Department stationed thousands of surface-to-air missiles at about 250 Nike sites nationwide that were intended to protect major U.S. cities from aerial attacks during the Cold War.

    Researchers discovered that these sites were rife with contamination.

    “Normal operations of a Nike site included the use and onsite disposal of solvents, battery acids, fuel, and hydraulic fluid,” researchers found in a 1984 study. “Environmentally persistent compounds disposed of included carbon tetrachloride, trichlorethylene, trichloroethane, lead, and various hydrocarbons.”

    Roach said it is believed that the contamination at A.B. Ford Park stems from the non-native fill material that was used to develop the site, which was once a marsh.

    City officials hope to reopen the park in the fall. The park is undergoing renovations that will feature walkways, a playground, basketball court, fitness and picnic areas, tennis and pickleball courts, a fishing node, beach, and waterfront plaza.

    But without more information, residents aren’t applauding the new amenities.

    This story was updated with a clarification that no missiles were believed to have ever been stored at the site, as well as additional comments from the city’s spokesman.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Contamination forces closure of Detroit waterfront park

    Contamination forces closure of Detroit waterfront park

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    click to enlarge

    Rendering via city of Detroit

    A.B. Ford Park in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood is undergoing renovations.

    The city of Detroit closed a waterfront park on the east side that was undergoing renovations after finding contamination in the soil.

    Beginning in March, the city will remove more than 250 trees, some of which are more than a 100 years old and are used by bald eagles, from A.B. Ford Park in the Jefferson Chalmers.

    The park, which was closed and blocked off Wednesday, is undergoing $9 million in renovations that will feature walkways, a playground, basketball court, fitness and picnic areas, tennis and pickleball courts, a fishing node, beach, and waterfront plaza.

    Even without the contamination, the park was scheduled to soon close for renovations.

    The trees are being removed because officials have to add two feet of fresh soil to the 32-acre park to protect residents from the contamination. The trees, most of which city officials said are in poor condition, won’t survive the extra soil.

    The city plans to plant hundreds of new native and flowering trees in their place, according to a city document. The new trees include quaking Aspens, river birch, Princeton elm, Shumard oak, purple beech, sugar maple, bur oak, black gum, eastern redbud, and dogwood.

    The plastic and metal contamination was found while officials were conducting environmental testing that was required to demolish the old and abandoned Lenox Center on the site.

    To cover the park with two feet of new soil, an average of 20 to 30 heavy trucks will dump the material at the site every weekday from March to September, according to the city’s plans.

    As part of the renovations, the city recently built the $7.2 million A.B. Ford Park Community Center, which was funded by Detroit and a donation from the Penske Corp. to the city’s Strategic Neighborhood Fund. The solar-powered building features classrooms, a library area, a community gathering room, and space for indoor sports and parties.

    City officials hope to reopen the park in the fall.

    City spokesman John Roach tells Metro Times there’s no truth to rumors that an Environmental Protection Agency restoration project will be canceled.

    The source of the contamination wasn’t immediately clear. Roach says the soil is non-native and about a century old.

    The city plans to soon hold meetings to update residents on the contamination and plans to remediate it.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Truck driver surprised to wake up to huge fire at East Side truck stop

    Truck driver surprised to wake up to huge fire at East Side truck stop

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    SAN ANTONIO – The flames and smoke were almost impossible to miss for anyone driving along an East Side highway early Thursday morning.

    According to San Antonio firefighters, a fire that started inside the kitchen of a Denny’s restaurant near Interstate 10 and Foster Road quickly spread throughout the entire building.

    RELATED: Denny’s kitchen fire spreads through Flying J along I-10 on East Side, destroys building

    The huge fireball not only destroyed the restaurant, but the Flying J truck stop and convenience store attached to it.

    Truck driver Matt McClellan, who had stopped there for the night, somehow slept through it all.

    “I’m parked right there,” he said, pointing to his truck, which was parked about 100 yards from the burning building. “I didn’t hear a thing. I was out like a light.”

    McClellan couldn’t believe what he saw when he woke up, dozens of fire trucks surrounding the burned-out shell of a building.

    “It’s, like I mean, literally the whole building. I was just there last night,” he said, incredulously.

    Firefighters, meanwhile, were there for hours Thursday morning, just trying to quench the furious flames that they found when they arrived shortly after 5 a.m.

    “(They) went in to extinguish the fire. The fire got up in the hood system, got up in the attic and went through the roof,” said Fire Chief Charles Hood, describing how quickly it spread.

    He said the first crews who arrived called for backup. At one point, there were more than a dozen fire crews and apparatus at the scene.

    Hood says one truck apparently got too close to the fire and was damaged.

    “Once we put the supply lines in, we can’t move those trucks. The winds changed on us,” Hood said.

    The fire also burned dangerously close to fuel lines and a fuel shut off valve, he said.

    At the time when it broke out, Hood said, there were more than 50 big rigs parked at the truck stop.

    Some of those temporarily were in the danger zone. It appeared some of them were left covered in soot from the smoke.

    Hood said no one was injured by the fire.

    Pilot, the parent company for Flying J, later issued the following statement:

    “We are relieved to report that all of our Team Members and Guests have been accounted for and are safe after the fire that occurred at our Flying J travel center in San Antonio, Texas. We thank the San Antonio Fire Department and First Responders for their quick response and action to control the fire. We are cooperating with the local officials as they investigate the cause, and we ask you to direct any inquiries to the proper authorities.

    The safety of our Team Members and Guests is our top priority. We are grateful to our Team Members and responders at the scene who helped ensure everyone on property was able to evacuate the building safely. We are providing support resources to our valued Team Members and will make jobs available to them at nearby travel centers while we work to restore this location.”

    A spokesperson for Denny’s sent KSAT the following statement:

    “Denny’s is very pleased to know that there were no injuries during the fire that took place at the Flying J Travel Center. Furthermore, we are grateful that our restaurant at this location was closed at the time, and no employees or guests were on the premises. The safety and wellbeing of our guests and team members is always our top priority. We appreciate the San Antonio Fire Department and First Responders for their tireless efforts to control the fire and are working with them to support their investigation in any way we can. In the meantime, we will be providing positions at other Denny’s locations in the San Antonio area to ensure none of our team members are without employment during this time.”

    Copyright 2022 by KSAT – All rights reserved.

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