One House At A Ti me Effort to board up abandoned homes seeks support. Allan Nahajewski I Contributing Writer B arry Ross is an activist. And the thought of the children of Detroit walking past aban- doned houses on the way to school was too much or him. So he took action. He partnered with the founder of the New Marcus Garvey Movement, Minister Malik Shabazz (not to be confused with anti-Semite Malik Zulu Shabazz), to pull together seven community-minded organizations in the city to form the Greater Detroit Res- toration Coalition Project. The groups have the people and the motivation to commit to boarding up abandoned homes to create a safer environment for children. What they don't have is the funds to buy the hammers, boards and nails. "I'm working within the framework of the mayor's office," Ross says. "When I asked the city for a truck to help trans- port the volunteers and materials, I was told, 'Barry, we don't have a nail to give you — not one nail. - A Man on a Mission He is quick to point out that this is a community effort — not a one-person crusade. But he is the one who pulled the coalition together. Ross, 60, is a junior partner in Serman's Clothes on Randolph Street in Downtown Detroit. His grandfather opened the store 95 years ago. He says his social activism took shape just within the past few years. "I would watch the local news on TV every night and be constantly reminded of the extreme levels of vio- lence in the city. I said to myself, 'It's not getting any better.' That's when I decided I was going to start an orga- nization, the Detroit Coalition Against Violence," he says. Ross met with families of murder victims and led marches through the neighborhoods, ending up at the site of the murder to hold a candlelight prayer vigil. "I did a few of those, and things started escalating," Ross says. "I held The Coalition The initiative to board up Detroit's abandoned homes is an effort of seven organizations that have joined together to form the Greater Detroit Restoration Coalition Project: ■ The Detroit Coalition Against Violence ■ The New Marcus Garvey Movement ■ It Takes a Village Y'all ■ True Oracles of God Ministries to garner support from the Jewish community in an effort to board up abandoned homes in Detroit. a rally in the Eastern Market against violence and started supporting other organizations that I felt had value, like the Detroit 300, which in its early days helped find serial rapists and murderers by knocking on doors in the community, rattling the cages and shaking out the offenders." Last October, Ross got involved in a collaborative neighborhood patrol with two other community groups — the New Marcus Garvey Movement and It Takes a Village Y'all. "We helped provide extra security after DTE shut down power in some 3,500 homes on the north end of the city," Ross says. "As I was driv- ing through the neighborhoods, I had noticed there were literally 800 abandoned homes within a 5-square- mile area — houses with doors taken off, all the windows out, half a side of a home standing, edifices from fires, and nothing was being done about it. "I realized that children would walk to school past these dwellings where sexual predators were lurking, where ■ Youthville ■ The Better Detroit Youth Movement ■ The Concerned Citizens Federation drug trafficking was going on, where squatters were living. I decided I had to do something about that." Community-wide Initiative The first step was to pull together the coalition of seven organizations to provide the volunteers. In the first three-and-a-half weeks of the initia- tive, the group boarded up seven homes with Ross providing the fund- ing for the first few projects. "We're growing, we're learning, and our goal is to board up the more than 80,000 abandoned homes in the city of Detroit," Ross says. "Some of the homes are structurally unsafe. We're going to find out which ones are safe, and our goal is do as many of these homes as possible. When children walk past these houses, it's difficult for them to try to keep an upbeat atti- tude. The environment just promotes a negative sentiment. We want to change that." It takes the volunteers about 90 minutes to board up a house. The coalition realizes that board- ing up the abandoned homes is just a first step. "Once we finish a street or a neigh- borhood, we plan to form a commit- tee to get citizens re-engaged in their neighborhoods, keeping the streets clean, rehabbing houses and getting people to move back in," Ross says. "There's so much hopelessness and despair in the city, so we need some- thing. We are totally nonprofit. This is an act of love. Young people are vol- unteering to put up the boards on the homes, so our labor is practically free. The seven groups are pooling their resources to try to make a difference in this city." Ross believes his greatest value to the project is to unite the organizations behind a single mission. "So often, groups can have trouble working together," he says. "Me being a Jewish guy working with all these One House on page 3 SPONSORED SECTION BY: QuickenLoans Engineered to Amaze May 17 e 2012 1