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Tag: Southwest Detroit

  • Cafe Sous Terre opens sister restaurant the Grand Porter in Southwest Detroit – Detroit Metro Times

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    The owner of Midtown’s Cafe Sous Terre has opened a “sister restaurant” in Southwest Detroit.

    The Grand Porter celebrated its grand opening on Monday at 3620 Porter St., in a house built in 1894 and an adjacent retail space that most recently held the former Sweet D’s candy shop.

    The two structures were combined into one building that owner Reimer Priester describes as an “all-day cafe” that can seat around 30. Priester’s wife Rebecca, who handled the interior design at Cafe Sous Terre, also worked on the project.

    Cafe Sous Terre and the Grand Porter mutually support each other, Priester says, with Cafe Sous Terre roasting coffee served at the Grand Porter and the Grand Porter making food served in Cafe Sous Terre.

    The food menu was developed over months by chefs Lauren Moll and Dakota Joseph with a focus on breakfast, lunch, and pastries using seasonal, high-quality ingredients. 

    The Grand Porter opened in a former storefront at 3620 Porter St., Detroit. Credit: Sarah Berger

    Some of the items on offer include a breakfast sandwich, avocado toast, a patty melt, salads, and soups.

    “Our menu is very vegetarian- and vegan-friendly,” Priester says. “That’s not to say this is a vegetarian or vegan establishment … but the focus is more on the vegetarian-plus side.”

    Situated in a residential area, Priester says the Grand Porter is unique in its neighborhood and has already seen strong support from the community.

    For Priester, the Grand Porter harks back to Detroit’s 20th century boom, when neighborhoods were teeming with cafes and corner stores.

    “All these neighborhoods had these very hyper-local amenities that, slowly over time fell by the wayside through economic decline and all the things Detroit has been through,” he says. 

    “There are very few options for a sit-down coffee experience in Southwest Detroit,” he says. “I think we can be a part of filling that need.”

    Cafe Sous Terre opened in 2023 at 445 W. Forest Ave.


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    Lee DeVito

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  • Unpreempted victory for Detroiters – Detroit Metro Times

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    Detroit on the break, taking it down the wing, cutting inside the defender, lining it up, he shoots, GOAAAL — DETROIT CITY FC SCORES!

    The roar of soccer fans from across Detroit and the region will soon echo through Corktown and Southwest Detroit. The new Detroit City FC stadium, set to open in 2027, promises to bring people together, breathe life into a long-vacant site, and create fresh opportunities in the heart of our community.

    As the Detroit City Council Member for District 6, I have a responsibility to ensure the new stadium delivers for the working people of Detroit – not just for the developers and outside investors. The stadium will be one of many local attractions that will bring people from various races, backgrounds, and ZIP codes together. However, this development must create lasting value in our neighborhoods, our families, and, importantly, for the workers in our community who will clean it, secure it, and keep it functioning for future generations.

    The foundation of Detroit is rooted in the power of good union jobs, from the autoworkers to the janitors in commercial office buildings. A union job means fair pay, protection from discrimination, and strong benefits – but its impacts reach even further into the lives of our families and communities. Unions stabilize neighborhoods, empower families, and invigorates communities so everyone can thrive, not just survive.

    Building a renowned sports venue like this soccer stadium requires us, as a community, and me, as a council member, to “keep our eye on the ball” and hold developers accountable to respect the community and its people. 

    Detroit City FC’s new AlumniFi Field stadium is planned for the site of the abandoned Southwest Detroit Hospital. Credit: Lee DeVito

    Unfortunately, creating jobs that people can raise their families with is much more difficult for Detroit’s city government than other cities in America. Corporations and developers lobbied the state legislature to pass laws that take away Detroit’s freedom, and right, to require that developers create good-quality jobs – these restrictions are known as “abusive preemption” laws. Corporate actors want to maximize profits at any cost, and have lobbied Michigan’s legislature to create a legal environment that empowers themselves and disempowers voters and local elected officials. These laws keep the working people of Detroit and in metropolitan areas across Michigan trying to rebuild on “defense” instead of “offense” on shaping our economic policy. It’s time that Michigan’s legislature “level the playing field” and restore Detroit’s freedom to make these decisions for itself.

    I grew up in a single-parent household. My mother and I were like many Detroiters: working poor. I worked multiple jobs in the service industry to put myself through both undergraduate and graduate school. Every day, I hear from residents who are struggling to make ends meet, who have to decide between paying their rent, refilling their medical prescription, or filling up their gas tank to get to work or take their kids to school. What’s further disheartening is knowing that there are ways to ease this financial burden placed on our working-class and low-income residents, but the state won’t allow us to act.

    My colleagues and I have worked tirelessly to repeal abusive preemption and return the power to Detroit’s voters. We must also be transparent with developers and investors, making it clear that committing to good union jobs, fair wages, and a respect for workers’ rights is essential to having a successful stadium.

    The impact of the new 15,000-seat AlumniFi Field will be felt throughout the City of Detroit. We now know that Detroit City FC is seeking $88 million dollars in tax breaks. We need to have a say in how our money is spent. Detroit has already invested heavily in private development, with public subsidies for District Detroit hovering around $1.8 billion. Yet too often, those billions failed to deliver the union jobs and lasting community benefits residents were promised. We must prioritize working people and ensure developers and investors don’t cut corners. A sports development like this can pave the way forward for community wealth, strengthening families, and supporting workers’ rights.

    Detroit City FC fans. Credit: Andrew Erdmans

    The opening of AlumniFi Field has been a long time coming, tracing back to 2010 when five friends founded the fútbol club. This milestone reflects the commitment of community members and working people who came together to build Detroit’s professional league. We must remember those humble beginnings to ensure the stadium delivers real benefits to the working families of Detroit.

    I stand for the working people of Detroit, which means ensuring that developments in my district are measured not just by profits, but by how much they elevate workers across the city, regardless of race, background, or ZIP code.

    AlumniFi Field will soon be a place where thousands will gather to cheer for Detroit City FC, but the real celebration begins when good union jobs elevate our communities so all can thrive. That kind of victory will impact Detroiters on and off the field.


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    Gabriela Santiago-Romero

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  • ICE arrested more than 1,400 undocumented immigrants in Michigan under Trump, and most had no criminal convictions

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    Steve Neavling

    Protesters rally outside the U.S. District Court in Detroit after an undocumented immigrant was arrested.

    Since President Donald Trump took office in January, federal agents arrested 1,432 undocumented immigrants in Michigan as of the end of July, and most had no criminal convictions, according to data from the Deportation Data Project.

    The total is nearly triple the 523 arrests recorded during the same period in 2024, when Joe Biden was president, according to a Metro Times review of the data.

    Despite Trump’s claims that his administration is targeting criminals, only 420 – or 29% – of those arrested by his administration in Michigan have been convicted of a crime. Another 31% had “pending criminal charges,” and most notably, about 40% had never been convicted of a crime.

    Among those arrested were 11 children, including a girl no older than four. The oldest person was in his 80s.

    That hasn’t stopped the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from claiming that agents are arresting the “worst of the worst.”

    Arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Michigan have surged under President Donald Trump. - Steve Neavling

    Steve Neavling

    Arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Michigan have surged under President Donald Trump.

    During the same time period last year, about half of the people arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Michigan had at least one criminal conviction and 24% had “pending criminal charges.” About 26% had no criminal record.

    Those figures show that under Trump, ICE is arresting undocumented immigrants without criminal records at a much higher rate than it did under Biden.

    Nationwide, the number of immigrants arrested by ICE with no criminal history surged from about 860 to 7,800 in June, an increase of more than 800%, according to Reuters.

    In Michigan, a vast majority of those arrested were men. Only 86 were women.

    The immigrants held citizenship in dozens of countries, from China and India to Haiti and Russia. But most were from Central and South America. Mexicans made up 37% of those arrested, followed by 17% from Venezuela, and 8% from Honduras.

    Of those arrested under Trump, 864 have been deported.

    Fears of mass deportations have shaken immigrant communities in Michigan, especially southwest Detroit, where families are keeping children from school and limiting time outside.

    In April, U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, joined the ACLU of Michigan and the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center (MIRC) to call out federal agents for arresting immigrants who took a wrong turn near the Ambassador Bridge in Southwest Detroit.

    Tensions rose on June 30 when ICE agents, backed by Detroit police, swept into the Joy Road-Livernois neighborhood to detain Marcos Fabian Arita Bautista, a Honduran man. Protests erupted, and a man attempted to block ICE agents with his car. Two people were arrested, and Detroit cops used pepper spray on protesters.

    Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, who is running for governor as an independent and is trying to appeal to Trump supporters, called undocumented immigrants “illegal” in January while speaking to business leaders. When called out by pro-immigration groups, Duggan dismissed the criticism as “political correctness.”

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Michigan Central extends public viewing through Labor Day weekend due to popular demand

    Michigan Central extends public viewing through Labor Day weekend due to popular demand

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    Michigan Central says that more than 100,000 visitors have walked through the doors of Detroit’s rehabbed train station since Ford Motor Co. opened them to the public in June.

    Due to the popular demand, Michigan Central is now extending its “Summer at The Station” tours through Labor Day weekend — so if you haven’t visited yet, you have a few more weeks to do so.

    “This outpouring of support has truly been inspiring,” said Joshua Sirefman, CEO of Michigan Central. “The Station is more than just a building; it’s a symbol of the city’s strength and a catalyst for innovation, and we’re proud to welcome the community back to this iconic Detroit landmark.”

    Michigan Central says Summer at The Station has surpassed expectations, drawing an average of 3,000 visitors on Friday evenings and 5,000 visitors on Saturdays.

    Guests can sign up for tours to learn about the history of the former train station, which opened in 1913 and closed in 1988, as well as about Ford’s six-year, nearly billion-dollar transformation of the building.

    No tickets or registration is required, though Michigan Central plans to launch ticketed and guided tours in the fall. More information is available at michigancentral.com/visit.

    The rehabbed building’s 100,000th visitor was Pastor Robert D Lodge, of the People’s Missionary Baptist Church on Detroit’s east side.

    “Being the 100,000th person to enter into this epic building has made me recognize the future is bright and Detroit has been given a fresh start,” said Pastor Lodge. “We wanted to come and relive the nostalgia of the train station and see the enhancements and how Detroit has been revitalized and that this will be an epic reminder that Detroit is back.”

    The building is expected to hold offices for Ford and other tenants, as well as retail and restaurants.

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    Lee DeVito

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  • Detroit’s members-only Carbon Athletic Club is opening to the public with live music

    Detroit’s members-only Carbon Athletic Club is opening to the public with live music

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    Tucked among the train tracks in an industrial section of Southwest Detroit, the old Carbon Athletic Club has been called “Delray’s best-kept secret” by Metro Times and remains in many ways a time capsule of 1947, the year it opened as a hangout for the community’s Hungarian and Polish immigrants. Much of its former neighborhood no longer exists.

    But if the humble bar is going to continue to defy the ravages of time, it needs new blood. Fortunately, a new generation of members are breathing life into the club.

    MaryBeth Beaudry, the club’s newly elected president (it uses a special liquor license reserved for nonprofit organizations, which require an elected board), sees her job as “bridging the old with the new.” To that end, she’s aiming to expand membership by opening the doors to the public for live music events, which she expects to ramp up in 2024.

    The Carbon-curious can check out the club at a country music concert on Tuesday, April 16 featuring Austin, Texas troubadour Cactus Lee with support from Big Spirit, E.M. Allen, Nancy Friday, and Ash Nowak, a new C.A.C. member who will spin records between sets and is helping to organize the show.

    Tickets are available at the door, cash only, and capacity is limited at around 100 or so.

    “It’s always been this really delicate spot of preserving the history, which our older members would like to continue to do, but also bringing in more exposure, more people who have a skill set that they can help the club with,” Beaudry explains. “Because it’s always just been run by the hands of a few.”

    The club is entirely volunteer-operated, with members working the bar, cleaning the facilities, and scrounging together the resources to make any renovations or repairs.

    Beaudry, who has worked in Detroit’s bar and restaurant industry since she was a teenager, says she was instantly charmed by the old club when a member brought her along years ago. The club hosts an annual Christmas party to watch the Canadian Pacific Holiday Train pass by, a locomotive decked out in festive lights that travels North America.

    “They had a big party, and the Detroit Party Marching marching band was outside, it was just a really cool vibe,” Beaudry says. “And then that night, I signed up for membership.”

    As a newly minted member, Beaudry returned one day to find the bartender that night explaining that the other member scheduled to work that day did not show up. “She was like, ‘Do you want a couple days a week? I would love to have you,’” Beaudry recalls. Soon, she was regularly slinging drinks and also working to bring the club into the 21st century with a social media presence and an email list, as well as booking more events.

    “The main events they had were like steak roasts, and fish fries, and a corned beef dinner for Saint Patrick’s Day,” Beaudry says.

    click to enlarge

    Courtesy photo

    Much of the Carbon Athletic Club’s former neighborhood no longer exists.

    Beaudry says the club’s heyday was fueled by workers from nearby industrial plants. “There was an older crowd,” she says. “You know, they used to have a really big business with the auto companies and with all the industry nearby, they would come over for lunch.”

    Over the decades, once-popular social clubs in the U.S. have also declined, so the younger members of C.A.C. have had a bit of a learning curve.

    “For a lot of us, it is foreign,” she says. “Robert’s Rules of Order, we’re all researching those now. Like, how do we run this meeting, besides, you know, doing the Pledge of Allegiance?”

    Memberships cost $30 a year, and $50 the first year with an existing member’s co-sign. Beaudry says members get discounted tickets to events (“For the old timers that have always sat at the bar any day of the week, we don’t charge them anything,” she adds) and is working on a plan to offer a rebate to members who volunteer their time to help run the club.

    Beer prices are low, with most sold for $1.50-$2.25.

    Nowak, one half of the duo behind the Haute to Death dance night, says she’s working on organizing events there that will appeal to both the older and newer members of the club.

    “I’m trying to be really cognizant of [running events] where everyone that is a regular there can enjoy it,” she says, adding, “I wouldn’t throw a Haute to Death there, they would kill me!”

    Beaudry believes no-frills spots like the Carbon Athletic Club will always have their place.

    “Especially in Detroit right now, I mean, there’s so much competition in terms of where to go,” she says. “Everybody’s doing nice cocktails. But everybody, I think, deep down loves a grandpa bar. I always joke that I love going to Donovan’s [another Southwest Detroit dive] because on a Tuesday or Wednesday I can go there to cry if I wanted to, or I can go play euchre at the end of the bar with the bartender. I think people enjoy that. And there aren’t enough of those.”

    She adds, “I think Carbon is unique in its appeal because it’s in the middle of nowhere. … It’s a place that people feel is a secret little corner in the armpit of Detroit [and] it’s really near and dear to my heart.”

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    Lee DeVito

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