Vacant West Dearborn Building Finally Comes Down

April 8th, 2012

The former Brothers Tuxedo in downtown west Dearborn is now razed.

A dilapidated building in downtown west Dearborn that once was home to Brothers Tuxedo has finally been razed.

Crews began demolishing the building on Friday and by Saturday afternoon all that remained of the two-story brick building was a pile of rubble.

While it has taken years to remove this Dearborn eyesore, the good news is that it is now finally down. And with a clean plot of land on a prime corner of downtown Dearborn there comes hope that it will become something more than just another grassy space.

The building is the second of three dilapidated buildings that Dearborn developer Hakim Fakhoury agreed with city officials would come down. The third building, Bally’s Vic Tanny, is still being prepared for demolition.

The former Brothers Tuxedo building at Michigan and Howard before demolition.

As part of the agreement with the city and a way to save demolition costs, the foundation of the Brothers Tuxedo building, just like the former Giuliano’s, will remain until the property is ready to be developed.

The three buildings, all located between Mason and Military on Michigan Avenue, were being removed as part of a large-scale redevelopment proposed in 2005 by Fakhoury.

That particular development never occurred but clearing the area of these rotting buildings is a step in the right direction.

Dearborn Symphony Home Tour May 19

April 7th, 2012

Springwells Park, the historic early-American subdivision, designed by Edsel and Henry Ford at Rotunda Drive and Greenfield, is the location for the Saturday, May 19 Dearborn Symphony Home Tour.

The Headquarters for this 31st edition of the Tour is the neighboring Tournament Players Club (TPC) where tickets at $15 pre-sale and $20 on Tour day will be available.

Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free parking is available at Dearborn Congregational Church on Rotunda Drive adjacent to the TPC. Lunches at $13 will be available at the TPC Clubhouse and nine vendors will display their artworks, plus a Symphony jewelry booth.

Plan to take the tour of the five unique homes. enjoy the plentiful tree-lined streets and get some new decorating ideas.

All proceeds go directly to the Dearborn Symphony for next season’s concerts at the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center.

To obtain tickets or for information, phone 313-565-2424.

Later Start of Day for Dearborn High School Students

April 2nd, 2012

After years of study and debate, Dearborn schools will launch a trial this fall allowing 10th-, 11th-, and 12th-graders to start the school day an hour later if they choose, at 8:25 a.m. rather than 7:20. It’s one of the first school districts in Metro Detroit to take such an approach.

The change for upperclassmen could improve attendance and boost grades. Classes now get out at 2:15 p.m.; under the new trial, students would get out at 3:20.

The new flexible start time was approved by the school board in late February. It was proposed by a group of parents who said research shows teens are biologically programmed to go to bed later and wake up later.

It will be interesting to see how this turns out.  Proponents of the trial plan still say it doesn’t go far enough because it’s optional. Not all parents in the district wanted the change.

In an article today in The Detroit News, Dearborn parent Ernest Oz, who was on a committee that studied start times, told the paper that children need sleep for safety, health and academic reasons. He said the flexible start trial “is not what it should be, but it’s a start.”

The new start time will be tested for one year before it is assessed. Freshmen aren’t eligible, nor are students behind on credits. Students will have to provide their own transportation.

Another parent, Helena Thornton, told The News that the trial is “a poor excuse of a plan.” She said the committee proposed several more ambitious options the district could have pursued, such as flip-flopping the middle school start time with the high schools, meaning younger students would start earlier.

“The trouble in Dearborn is politics,”  said Thornton, an industrial engineer who has a son, 17, who graduates this spring, and a daughter, 13. “Nobody wants to rock the boat.”

About 10 teachers at each high school have volunteered to start later and work later, though scheduling will need to be ironed out.

Dearborn Skating Team Looking for Sponsors

March 30th, 2012

The Crystallettes Senior Synchronized Skating Team, representing the Dearborn Figure Skating Club, is looking for sponsors for their Team USA team.

The group is sending skaters and coaches to Goteborg, Sweden to represent the U.S. in this ISU World Synchronized Skating Championships, April 12-14, 2012. Travel to this event is very expensive for the athletes and their families so the group is selling t-shirt advertising spots to help with expenses.

  •  For $50 your business will receive two lines on the t-shirt. These t-shirts will be worn by the skaters at these events and in your community and the surrounding communities once the events are over.
  • For $100 your business will receive two lines on the t-shirt as stated above as well as ¼ page advertising in the team’s 2012 Ice Show Program. This is a full color program.
  • For $250 your business will receive three lines on the t-shirt as stated above as well as 1/2 page advertising in the team’s 2012 Ice Show Program.
  • For $500 your business will receive four lines on the t-shirt as stated above as well as full page advertising in the team’s 2012 Ice Show Program.

Those interested please contact:  Holly Teets, 14900 Ford Rd. Dearborn, MI 48126. Checks payable to “DFSC”. Please also include the exact verbiage or artwork you would like on your ad. Dearborn Figure Skating Club is a IRC 501 © 3 not for profit organization.

Dearborn Poll Workers Needed for Aug. 7, Nov 6

March 30th, 2012

The Dearborn City Clerk’s Office is accepting applications for election inspectors (poll workers) for the Tuesday, Aug. 7 State Primary and State general election to be held on Tuesday, Nov. 6.

Applicants should be at least 18 years of age and a registered voter in the County of Wayne. Interested parties may fill out an application at the City Clerk’s Office in the Dearborn City Hall, 13615 Michigan Ave., by Friday, June 1.

This position pays $120 for the day and an additional $10 for attending an hour-long election inspector training class.

The hours of work will be 6:15 a.m. until approximately 9 p.m. on election day. (Polls are open from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. that day).

The duties of an election inspector include helping with the set up of voting booths and equipment, processing voters, offering instructions, completing the poll book and helping with the closing of the polling location.

For more information, call 313-943-2030.

Best Buy Closing 50 Stores; Dearborn Future Unknown

March 29th, 2012

Best Buy is beginning to acknowledge that its big-box business model, which dominated electronics retailing for much of the past two decades, is no longer working.

The electronics chain said it would close 50 big-box stores this year, test new store formats in San Antonio and Minneapolis, and lay off 400 corporate and support workers as part of a plan to trim $800 million in costs and restructure its ailing business.

It isn’t clear what that means for the Best Buy store on Ford Road and Mercury Drive in Dearborn but the hope here is that it will survive this round of store closures.

The company outlined the following moves:

• It will cut $800 million in costs by fiscal 2015.

• Close 50 big-box stores this fiscal year.

• Open 100 Best Buy Mobile and small stores this year.

• Boost online revenue by 15 percent.

• And Best Buy will change its employee compensation model to revolve around customer service and business goals.

Historical Museum Plans ‘Best Dearborn Stories’ 2

March 28th, 2012

It doesn’t have a title yet, but there’s a sequel in the works to the Museum Guild of Dearborn’s paperback “best seller,” Best Dearborn Stories: Voices From Henry Ford’s Hometown.

The Dearborn Historical Museum announced preliminary plans for the sequel this week.

The 382-page Best Dearborn Stories anthology sold more than 500 copies in the first month after its release in early December, a number believed to rank in the upper 20 percent among new U.S. books. We ran excerpts of the first book here on DeepsaidWhat? You can read the last entry HERE.

“I have to say the book’s reception was a pleasant surprise,” said Kirt D. Gross, the museum’s chief curator. “By our standards, it was certainly a best seller. We hope that plans continue to come together for the sequel.”

Overall, the book has sold more than 800 of its initial run of 1,300 copies, earning gross receipts of more than $16,000. All proceeds beyond the Museum Guild’s initial publication cost go to support the Historical Museum.

L. Glenn O’Kray, vice chair of the Dearborn Historical Commission and coordinator of the publishing project, said editors expect to come up with a title for the sequel within the month.

“It could simply be Best Dearborn Stories, Part II,” O’Kray said. “But there’s been some support for choices like Return of Best Dearborn Stories and Son of Best Dearborn Stories. And we haven’t ruled out popular favorites like Revenge of Best Dearborn Stories.”

He said editors have begun soliciting stories and hoped that publication details could be ironed out within several months.

As with the first book, residents and former residents are being asked to write up to 700 words describing a favorite Dearborn experience or person to help create a sense of place about Henry Ford’s hometown. The 152 authors who contributed stories for the first book covered categories such as Henry Ford, Mayor Orville L. Hubbard, Camp Dearborn, growing up, family, schools, neighborhoods, recreation, cops, diversity and activism.

The first book was published on a tight deadline that covered only 65 days from O’Kray’s original concept to delivery of the printed books.

Those interested in writing for the second book are asked to e-mail their stories by June 1 to lglennokray@cavtel.net. O’Kray said he is willing to assist those who have a story to tell but have a rough time putting it on paper. For an appointment with O’Kray, call 313-724-8203.

Authors may submit photos for their stories to O’Kray at 752 Wagner Ct., Dearborn 48124. Photos will not be returned.

The price of the new book is expected to be $19.95, the same as the first book, O’Kray said.

Based on sales to date, O’Kray said he hoped to sell the remaining 500 copies of the first book “by the end of summer.” It will be sold during Dearborn’s Homecoming weekend, Aug. 3-5, and is currently available for sale at the museum’s McFadden-Ross House, 915 S. Brady, as well as the Henry Ford Centennial Library, the Dearborn Chamber of Commerce, the Dearborn City Hall and Hair Designs North, 841 S. Military.

O’Kray and his wife, Jane, also staked out Westborn Market one weekend to sell books.

“We were pleased not only with the number of books sold,” he said, “but also by the number of positive comments we got from shoppers who had already read it. I frequently run into people who say they had tears come to their eyes on reading some of the stories.”

The book project is one of several initiatives under way to help keep the Historical Museum’s doors open despite funding cutbacks imposed by the City Council for the current fiscal year and beyond. The Museum Guild, a nonprofit group of more than 20 clubs that support the museum, is planning a major fund drive to augment a museum membership campaign begun last year.

For information on Best Dearborn Stories, call the Historical Museum at 313-565-3000.

Avoid Tickets: Keep Cars off Street on Trash Days

March 27th, 2012

Public Service Days starts again the week of April 2, 2012 and last through Nov. 30, 2012.

The city of Dearborn wants to avoid having to issue tickets during Public Service Days and has again issued a notice to remind residents that all vehicles must be off the streets on trash days.

Public Service Days starts again the week of April 2, 2012 and last through Nov. 30, 2012.

During this time period, Dearborn provides critical services, such as street sweeping, tree-trimming, and sewer maintenance in your neighborhood on your trash day.

To ensure these services are provided in a safe, effective manner, residents are warned to not park on residential streets from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on your trash day, which is also your Public Service Day.

Tickets will be issued to vehicles parked on the street during a trash day/Public Service Day.

If you are parking in a neighborhood that is not your own in Dearborn, check street signs to determine if it is that neighborhood’s Public Service Day.

As we have mentioned before here, residents can no longer park vehicles across the sidewalk on Public Service Days. You will be ticketed if you park across the sidewalk. In addition, you must not park on lawns or any other unpaved areas or you will be ticketed, too.

You must also keep your trash and recycle carts and yard waste containers off the street on your Public Service Days/trash days.

Additional information is available at www.cityofdearborn.org. For parking issues related to Public Service Days, call 943-2276.

 

$1 Video, Audio cassettes at Dearborn Library April 4

March 26th, 2012

Got a buck?

The Friends of the Library Dearborn (FOLD) has a deal for you.

FOLD is offering videocassettes for five for $1 and audiocassettes four for $1 at its monthly book and media sale Wednesday, April 4 at the Henry Ford Centennial Library, 16301 Michigan Ave.

The sale is 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Also for sale will be books, compact discs, DVDs, and magazines.

Check out the great selection and keep in mind that proceeds from the FOLD sales are used to support popular library programs. So every dollar you spend helps your local library.

Dearborn Hosts Forum to Discuss Redistricting

March 26th, 2012

The League of Women Voters of Dearborn and Dearborn Heights will host a public forum on Monday, March 26 to discuss the results of Michigan’s 2011 redistricting and how to improve the process moving forward.

The program will feature presentations on the 2011 redistricting process and approaches used by other states, followed by a facilitated discussion about ideas for reform. The featured speaker is State Sen. Morris Hood III, who represents Dearborn and neighboring communities.

This event is the latest in a series of discussions hosted by local Leagues around the state to examine the different ways that states draw political districts and how voters’ interests are affected.

Where: Christ Episcopal Church, Room 213, 120 N. Military St., Dearborn

When: Monday, March 26, 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.

Who: Event sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Dearborn and Dearborn Heights

For more information, call Mary Bugeia at 313-278-6476