Northern Light

The Rev. Joan Ross keeps the faith, fighting for families and residents in one of Detroit鈥檚 oft-neglected neighborhoods
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听滨f you strip down the multi-layer, multi-issue work of the Rev. Joan Ross, it鈥檚 all about stabilizing families.

Here, in Detroit鈥檚 North End 鈥 one of the city鈥檚 less talked about neighborhoods 鈥 her work may mean rescuing a foreclosed home, pushing for reliable public transit, or bringing fresh produce into the community. Over the years, Ross has done it all: fighting, praying, collaborating, and educating. Her work in the North End is tireless; her spirit, infectious.

For the uninitiated, the North End is an area roughly bound by Woodward Avenue to the west and I-75 and Hamtramck to the east. Highland Park is to the north and Grand Boulevard to the south. It goes by other names, like Northend Central, and its boundaries extend farther afield.

Commerce in this pocket of Detroit is sparse. There鈥檚 The Turkey Grill and Celebrity Car Wash on Woodward Avenue, party stores, thrift shops, and clusters of businesses along East Grand Boulevard. Two community farms 鈥 Oakland Avenue Urban Farm and The Michigan Urban Farming Initiative 鈥 supply fresh produce during warm-weather months, and The Red Door Gallery offers a place for artists to gather, read poetry, and showcase their work.

The community has potential, and that鈥檚 part of the glimmer in Ross鈥 eyes. But if there鈥檚 one thing that鈥檚 going to move the North End forward, Ross says it鈥檚 the community members themselves.

鈥淭he people and their resiliency are our best assets,鈥 Ross says.

But the area faces challenges, especially when it comes to housing. Between 2000 and 2010, the neighborhood experienced a near 40 percent exodus of families with children. Today, more than one-fifth of the residents don鈥檛 have a high school diploma.

While an optimist at heart, Ross isn鈥檛 blind to these challenges, especially the houses and the conditions people live in.

鈥淲hen you hear a child and a mom are sleeping in a car at night (due to gas and water shutoffs) 鈥 my God. I get overwhelmed,鈥 she says. But not enough to take it sitting down.

Every day, Ross dons her business suit and goes to work on the fifth floor of a wellness plan building on Second Avenue. It鈥檚 from this Storehouse of Hope office that she started the first community land trust (CLT) in Detroit. It purchased 15 occupied Detroit homes last year during the county鈥檚 property auction.

The CLT is leasing the properties to the occupants for one year 鈥 or more if needed 鈥 and assisting with rehabbing. The idea is that the residents will eventually buy back the homes, with the trust remaining owner of the land. Stipulations are placed on future sales to keep the houses affordable for low-income buyers in perpetuity.

With a few thousand dollars left from a 鈥淜eep Our Homes鈥 Go Fund Me campaign that allowed for the property purchases, Ross is working with families to stabilize the homes.

Her goal is for the 15 residents, as members of the community land trust, to develop the skills and emotional footing to become spokespeople and advocates in their communities.

鈥淪omehow, you have to bring them back into knowing, 鈥楬ey, if you try to do this by yourself, you can鈥檛 make it,鈥 鈥 Ross says. 鈥淏ut as a community, we stand a chance.鈥

Ross knows the power of community action firsthand. In 2007, as board chair of the Storehouse of Hope Client Choice 香港六合彩图库资料 Pantry (a position she still holds), she brought together human service agencies, community development corporations, and faith-based groups to address food insecurity isssues in the North End.

When it opened in 2010, Storehouse of Hope operated out of a brick and mortar location in the St. Matthew鈥檚 and St. Joseph鈥檚 Episcopal Church basement. For the past two years, it has distributed food via quarterly mobile pantry locations. Ross is working with Gleaners Community 香港六合彩图库资料 Bank to find a permanent location.

鈥淩everend Ross really has compassion for people in the community in being able to meet their basic needs,鈥 says Jerry Hebron, executive director at North End Christian CDC and 鈥渃hief cultivator鈥 at Oakland Avenue Urban Farm. 鈥淪he is always making sure it is part of the conversation anywhere in the community.鈥

Indeed, food needs in the North End are omnipresent. Hot, free meals, which are cooked and served at a number of local churches, are popular. Many families use local emergency food pantries and attend the Storehouse mobile food distributions. Grocery stores are sparse, but the Oakland Avenue Farmers Market and The Michigan Urban Farming Initiative offer low-cost produce during the growing season along with nutrition education and agriculture programming. A cooperative food store with discount-priced healthy and organic foods is planned for the North End this year.

Ross is no stranger to the food industry, nor is she a novice to social justice issues. A self-proclaimed product of the 1960s, Ross鈥 dedication to human rights started as a student at Howard University.

But her professional life did not take a typical protester鈥檚 path. Ross, who majored in speech pathology, went from causes on campus to working at a McDonald鈥檚 outside of D.C. as a 鈥渨indow girl鈥 for $1.25/hour. She worked her way up to manager, becoming one of the first women hired into the McDonald鈥檚 management-training program.

Eventually, after making her way into the corporate office, she bought three McDonald鈥檚 franchises in Detroit and relocated to the area.

After 20 years with McDonald鈥檚, she sold the franchises and opened a Detroit nightclub called Ortheia鈥檚 Place, with her friend and business partner, the late Ortheia Barnes. After a few other stops along the way, she went into the ministry.

Ross鈥檚 diverse background has provided her with the tools to tackle other issues in the North End, like job loss, water shutoffs, and school closures.

Even new development, creeping up Woodward from prosperous Midtown, could eventually push out mom-and-pop shops and the multi-generational families who have lived along the North End鈥檚 tree-lined streets.

Transportation equity is another hot-button issue. The M-1 Rail (now the QLine) ends at Grand Boulevard. Ross says that the 3.3-mile route between New Center and downtown neglects many low-income, transit-dependent people living in the North End.

鈥淚t was never meant to convey anybody to a job center,鈥 she says. 鈥淥nly 20 percent of Detroiters work in Detroit, so it ain鈥檛 conveying me nowhere 鈥 it鈥檚 just moving.

鈥淲e have an on-the-ground people mover, and an in-the-air People Mover, but we still don鈥檛 have a transit vehicle.鈥

Ross started the North End Woodward Community Coalition to advocate for people in the North End when the M-1 project was originally proposed. But with that door closed, the coalition is now pushing against any cuts to Detroit鈥檚 current bus service and advocating for a bus rapid transit system to efficiently connect North End residents to jobs, shopping, school, and recreation.

For all the hats that Ross wears, none of them are paid. She doesn鈥檛 receive compensation for her pastor duties, the CLT, or for her work at WNUC, a North End community radio station she鈥檚 trying to get off the ground. The only income she receives is through her own bookkeeping and office services company.

Ross remains devoted to many causes. 鈥淭here鈥檚 been a lot in my life that鈥檚 always been in this rebellious, speak-for-the-people, underdog stuff,鈥 says Ross. 鈥淪o I came from the right place at the right time.

鈥淚 could be easily discouraged, too, and there is some of that that lives in all of us,鈥 she says. 鈥淚nside our heads, there鈥檚 faith 鈥 and there鈥檚 fear and discouragement.鈥

Thankfully, for the North End, it鈥檚 Ross and her faith that prevails.