Thousands flock to Grand Haven for Coast Guard Festival

In celebration of the United States Coast Guard service members, Grand Haven hosted its annual Coast Guard Festival from July 29 to August 7.

Photos by Brittany Meyers.

In celebration of the United States Coast Guard service members, Grand Haven hosted its annual Coast Guard Festival from July 29 to August 7.

 

This festival began in 1924 when the local Coast Guard held rowing competitions for the service members stationed in Grand Haven. It has grown to become one of the most popular festivals in Michigan with over 350,000 people visiting during the week, earning Grand Haven the nickname Coast Guard City, USA.

 

Activities for everyone

 

Grand Haven’s 10-day celebration included attractions such as ship tours, fireworks, parades, car shows, craft shows, and a carnival complete with popular rides like the Fireball.

 

The Waterfront Stadium and boardwalk hosted a variety of musical entertainment, including the Eagles tribute band Hotel California and Chicago tribute band Brass Transit. The Waterfront Stadium also was the site of events such as the cardboard boat race and the Ultimate Air Dogs dog show.

 

Another crowd-pleasing attraction was the craft show in Central Park. Hundreds of vendors set up their booths throughout the park for festival goers to browse and find unique, handmade products. Everything from artwork and sculptures to homemade soaps and clothing could be found here.

Long-awaited Tanglefoot Park opens with ribbon-cutting

Marking the culmination of years of work, Spring Lake residents celebrated the opening of the long-awaited Tanglefoot Park on Friday at a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

Photos by Brittany Meyers.

 

Marking the culmination of years of work, Spring Lake residents celebrated the opening of the long-awaited Tanglefoot Park on Friday at a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

 

This property had been an RV park, but the four-year undertaking has transformed it into an open, universal-access waterfront park that is available for all to enjoy. From the beginning, the vision for the project was to create a community hub. The park has lakefront access for fishing, boating, and kayaking, as well as a large pavilion that holds up to 299 visitors. It also has a splash pad that should be a new hot spot for kids of all ages this summer.

 

The ceremony began with Village President Mark Powers and Village Manager Christine Burns, who thanked the donors who brought the park to life and the many residents who came out to celebrate and show their support.

 

Board members then gathered behind the blue ribbon while Powers used a pair of giant scissors to cut the ribbon and officially open Tanglefoot Park.

 

Tyra Jonas, the village’s communications specialist, helped coordinate the ceremony and has been working to make this new attraction a reality.

 

“It was amazing seeing the boards, donors, and community members gathered into one space,” Jonas said, “and it reminded me of the close-knit community Spring Lake really is and how it truly takes a village. I am so excited to see how this park can bring people in and help our community grow.”

Grand Valley faculty showcases evolution of tech in new media technology exhibit

Technology plays an ever-increasing role in our daily lives and is constantly changing and evolving. But what happens to outdated technology after a new version is created?

Photos by Adam Bird of Bird + Bird Studio.

Technology plays an ever-increasing role in our daily lives and is constantly changing and evolving. But what happens to the outdated technology after a new version is created?

Grand Valley State University’s operations manager, Scott Vanderberg, has been collecting the school’s outdated media equipment for 35 years. Vanderberg has collected everything from video cameras and tripods to recording devices and landline phones and is currently showcasing his collection in the form of the first-ever Media Technology Exhibit at the university’s Allendale campus.

 

“Basically, as technology [changed] over the years [and] we get something new, I hang on to one of the old,” says Vanderberg. Vanderberg believes he has a lot of equipment, but that there is still a lot that he doesn’t have. “I have enough to represent the change in technology over the years,” he says.

 

Vanderberg has saved over 100 pieces of equipment including a Panasonic NV-8200 Omnivision II VHS cassette recorder, a JVC KY-2700 three-tube color video camera, and a Sony AV-3400 portable record/playback videorecorder.

 

The NV-8200 is a 34-pound VHS editing recorder/player and the KY-2700 is an 18 to 20-pound video camera, both are from the early 80s. The AV-3400 is the first portable color video recorder manufactured in 1969 and weighs 18 pounds.

 

He has been working with Grand Valley multimedia journalism professors like James Ford and Len O’Kelly to put this equipment on display. Professor Len O’Kelly has his own collection of audio equipment that he plans on sharing with the exhibit to fill in the gaps in the exhibits audio section.

Sexism in Journalism

Sexism is a centuries-old problem for women of all ages and backgrounds. Women who work in the journalism field are no exception and every day these women work to combat these issues.

Allison Donahue, Savannah Bressman, and Hannah White have all been pushing for sexism in the journalism workplace to be put to an end.

 

 

Allison Donahue

Allison Donahue, Michigan Advance. Courtesy of Donahue.

 

Grand Valley State University Alumni, Allison Donahue is a reporter for Michigan Advance. Donahue published a first-person story on January 15 about her encounter with Senator Peter Lucido.

 

Donahue went to the state capital to interview Senator Lucido and while she was trying to question him, the Senator told her that a group of schoolboys nearby could “have a lot of fun” with her. The boys instantly burst into laughter.

 

“I was immediately so embarrassed,” says Donahue. “I think it was clear that what he was saying was sexist and that he intended to embarrass me.”

 

Donahue immediately contacted her editor and told her that she planned to give the Senator a chance to apologize. She told the Senator that she thought his comment was “unprofessional.”

Lucido did not apologize but assured her that it was nothing personal and that that was just how he talks to young women.

 

After Donahue had gotten the statements from Lucido, she went home and wrote a first-person story about her experience because she believes that by speaking up she can prevent this from happening to anyone else.

 

Allison Donahue’s story on Sen. Lucido after it was shared on Twitter. Courtesy of Michigan Advance’s Twitter page.

 

Donahue believes that in order to prevent things like this from happening to other women, boys should be taught how not to treat people. “I think we need to start younger; boys aren’t taught how to be great men until it’s too late. Until they have seen men treat women poorly. Starting earlier is always a good solution,” she says.

 

“I think the other thing is we need to stop whispering between women or holding in the things that happen to us. It’s when we start talking to each other, then we realize the issue. It is really important to speak up to the person that offended them but also to other women. We can eliminate the guilt if we start speaking up about it and we can protect other women. We need to speak up for ourselves and other women,” she says.

 

 

Savannah Bressman

Savannah Bressman, WTXL-ABC 27. Courtesy of Bressman.

 

Similar to Allison Donahue, another Grand Valley State University Alumni, Savannah Bressman works as a photographer/videographer and editor for WTXL-ABC 27 in Tallahassee, Florida.

She has not had an encounter with sexism yet, but she expects it is something she will have to deal with more than once in the future. “I have definitely heard stories from my coworkers, especially our women in our sports department,” says Bressman.

 

“I don’t know how long I will be in the journalism field because I want to make the switch to sports [where] I have a feeling [sexism] will be more frequent even more than news,” says Bressman.

 

Bressman has noticed a lot of women are starting to speak up about sexual assault and harassment in the workplace. “I feel like a lot of women are starting to call it out when they see it and grow a backbone! I know especially one reporter at my station doesn’t put up with anything and will call anything out when she sees it!” says Bressman. “I think [speaking up] will definitely help decrease [sexism] in the future!”

 

 

Hannah White*

 

Hannah White, a Grand Valley journalism student, was working on a project for school when she had a similar experience to Allison Donahue. White was interviewing a source for a story she was putting together when things became uncomfortable.

 

“I was on a shoot for a story that I was doing in Grand Rapids where a higher profile actor was coming into town and I had managed to get an interview. I thankfully brought a colleague along with me in order to help set up shots and record them,” says White.

 

White and her assistant eventually ran into the actor’s manager. They exchanged names and small talk, and White and her assistant believed the manager wanted to help “guide [them] through what [they] were and were not allowed to shoot.”

 

However, after a few hours of speaking with the manager, the women became uncomfortable. “On numerous occasions, the manager approached me and my assistant to tell us about all of his success and the other clients that he represented, as well as place his hand around my waist and pull me in and make a few inappropriate comments to two females who were half his age,” says White. “One comment, in particular, included him letting us know about his love life. Later he found it important to let us know that he was going to be heading back to his hotel room later, as almost to insinuate something.”

 

Eventually, White and her assistant were able to interview the actor they originally came to meet with and they left without confronting the manager.

 

“Of course, I thought that our interactions were strange and highly uncomfortable, but at the time I didn’t really think that the situation was ‘extreme’ enough to really say anything. I didn’t want to come across as hypersensitive in a situation that I was trying to establish myself as a journalist,” says White.

 

“And that right there is the problem. Women in this industry, including myself, have become conditioned to excuse inappropriate behavior because ‘it wasn’t extreme enough,’” says White. “But, where is the scale that measures that?”

 

“In recent years… scenarios like the one I encountered are just your average day around here,” says White. “It has to be one of the most frustrating things too because I can’t help but think that if I had a man with me or if I myself was a male, things would have played out a little different that night.”

 

“Something that is so terrifying as a woman is that we have to think about ‘what would happen if I speak out and tell my story, what then?’ It’s so unfortunate but stories like that have a tendency of defining people, whether they intend to or not. I have seen too many situations where the victim of sexism didn’t come out on top, but rather face a world of scrutiny for saying anything at all,” says White.

 

“I think that by telling our stories is adding to a conversation that has been going on for a number of years. Hopefully, by sharing stories, it encourages other women to come forward and realize that sexism in this industry is real,” says White.

 

“I hate that as women, we have to think about how to stop a problem that quite frankly isn’t even our fault to begin with. I’m not sure that we will see sexism eradicated in our lifetime. It is something that has been going on for far too long,” says White. “As a woman, I can only hope that there are people out there who will stand with the people who have experienced it firsthand. Through shared experiences, hopefully, we can isolate the problem to the point where situations like these are far less than they are now.”

 

*This source has requested to remain anonymous.

 

 

Promoting Change – Susan Demas

Susan Demas, Michigan Advance. Courtesy of Demas.

 

Each of these female journalists believes the best solution to sexism is to never stay quiet. However, Susan Demas, editor-in-chief of Michigan Advance believes that it isn’t up to women to speak up and push for change, but rather up to men to be the change.

 

“… I do feel overall that the onus is on men to change as opposed to my responsibility to prepare reporters and to warn them. This really should be a larger, cultural change taking place,” says Demas.

 

Demas has been working on pushing male journalists to change publicly. In November of 2019, Demas published an article calling out men in the journalism field and telling them to call out sexism in politics.

 

According to Demas, it is the responsibility of men “to treat everybody respectfully rather than on women to be constantly trying to correct behavior or always hav[ing] to stand up for themselves.”

 

Demas and many other journalists are working to promote change and pushing men to be a part of that change. She hopes that one day all of their hard work can make sexism a thing of the past.

 

How a Westside scholarship program is changing the way local students view life after high school

Challenge Scholars provides a way for families on Grand Rapids’ West Side to cover the costs of education after high school.

 

Photos by Adam Bird of Bird + Bird Studio.

 

Post-secondary education has become increasingly expensive over the years. According to an article from CNBC by Abigail Hess, the cost of a college education has increased by more than 25% in the last decade. Challenge Scholars provides a way for families on Grand Rapids’ West Side to cover the costs of education after high school. The program, funded by the Grand Rapids Community Foundation, partners with Grand Rapids Public Schools and other organizations like Kent School Services Network and WestSide Collaborative.

Challenge Scholars offers an early scholarship promise so students and their families know, beginning in at least 6th grade, that a scholarship for college and career training after high school may be available to them. Challenge Scholars is only available for students at Harrison Park, Westwood Middle School, and Union High School.

Recently, the Grand Rapids Promise Zone Authority Board of Directors voted to approve the Grand Rapids Promise Zone Development Plan. This plan also provides tuition-free education to Grand Rapids students. “We are exploring how our Challenge Scholars program and the Promise Zone might complement each other,” says Audra Hartges, PR and Marketing Specialist for the Grand Rapids Community Foundation.

Union High School’s class of 2020 will be the first group of Challenge Scholars students to receive a tuition-free education. Challenge Scholars Director Cris Kutzli says the program has been working continuously to improve their goal of “affordable educational attainment.”