Detroit, MI
$10M fiber pilot project set for Detroit’s Hope Village neighborhood

DETROIT – Town of Detroit is addressing digital fairness with a brand new $10 million fiber-optic pilot undertaking.
The pilot shall be funded by federal {dollars} from the American Rescue Plan Act and can happen within the Hope Village neighborhood.
The Hope Village neighborhood is positioned between the Lodge and Davison Freeways.
Final September, the neighborhood skilled a devastating web outage.
“The 2 days grew to become two weeks grew to become 4 weeks grew to become six weeks,” mentioned Jeffrey Jones, who lives within the neighborhood.
The outage lasted 45 days and included cellphone companies too.
“I’ve a school-aged daughter, and so she was at house on college just about, utilizing my mobile phone, burning up my information,” mentioned Jones. “So it grew to become an additional invoice and a problem for folks.”
Town of Detroit’s Director of Digital Inclusion Joshua Edmonds mentioned having the pilot undertaking in Hope Village is a direct response to what occurred.
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“Digital fairness for us is a dedication to residents who traditionally have been on the incorrect aspect of the digital divide. So this isn’t one thing the place we take a look at final 12 months or the previous 5 years,” mentioned Edmonds. “It is a historic understanding that we would like to have the ability to attain residents the place they’re and the place they’ve been and giving them that benefit to have the ability to say, ‘That is fiber optic web, the quickest web within the nation.’ We need to be sure you’re prioritized as an alternative of us going to different locations and cities equivalent to a downtown and midtown first.”
Town will set up the fiber. From there, extra web suppliers can choose in to supply service.
“If we go from having a duopoly right here on the house web expertise between Comcast and AT&T, we at the moment are opening that up, or we’re now permitting for extra non-public suppliers to offer service in Detroit,” mentioned Edmonds. “And in order that then permits us to have the ability to say we will now have competitors right here that may decrease prices and enhance our customer support expertise for Detroit residents.”
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It’s an thrilling new chapter for residents like Jones.
“For many years now, we’ve been the victims of disinvestment. And so to see town leaders are available and say we’re going to speculate $10 million in your neighborhood, bringing you not the second-best know-how however the quickest web for our neighbors, you simply can’t put that into phrases.”
Thursday, Join 313 hosted a number of boards to replace the group on the undertaking and reply questions.
Copyright 2022 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

Detroit, MI
Detroit Fire medics honored after saving man during cardiac arrest

DETROIT (FOX 2) – A journeyman mason was on hand as the two Detroit Fire medics were honored for bringing him back from the brink on Tuesday.
The backstory:
Every day is a second chance for Micah Parker. Today it was another chance for him to say thanks.
“I see this guy every day from the memories,” he said.
Parker is talking about Detroit Firefighter Paramedic Chris Photiades.
“We’re responding to a different call and we were rerouted from a different call to this one,” he said.
The DFD Medic Crew was just in time to arrive at Mann Elementary School in Detroit.
“When we got there we saw the patient, his union brothers were doing CPR on him,” said Photiades.
Parker, who was working as a journeyman mason, had suffered cardiac arrest and was clinically dead.
“It was very tense. We recognized immediately that we needed to fire all cylinders when working on this guy,” said Samuel Lemire, DFD firefighter.
“We lowered him down on the ground, cut his shirt off, started CPR on him, threw the defibrillator pads on him,” said Photiades.
And then finally – there was a sign of life.
“Between us and his union brothers, Engine Company 55, we all worked together to bring him back from the dead, literally,” said Photiades.
FOX 2 first met Parker last November when he met with his union brothers, medics and DMC Sinai Grace Hospital staff to say thank you.
“I’m just happy that I am really able to talk about all this,” he said, then.
Fast-forward to EMS Week 2025 and Parker showed his appreciation while the two medics received the Kim Lagerquist Lifesaver of the Year Award from the Detroit East Medical Control Authority.
Union-required CPR training saves member’s life on Detroit job site
“Every day members go above and beyond, but for some cases, they just really need that extra recognition,” said Chuck Simms, DFD executive fire commissioner.
Everyone involved in this life-saving story say you, too, can be a hero, and it starts with learning hands-only CPR
“You not knowing CPR could be the difference between someone living or dying around you,”
“It’s two to three hours out of your day for a lifetime of knowledge that could save your life, or someone you love,” said Photiades.
The Source: Information for this story came from a previous report and Tuesday’s award ceremony.
Detroit, MI
Organizations and companies are partnering to introduce Black students in Detroit to golf

The Rocket Classic has steered nearly $10 million from the annual PGA event held in Detroit to local charitable organizations. Of that, $800,000 has been given to programs that teach kids how to play the game. One program provides access to college scholarships to high school seniors, while upward of 700 children and teens take part each year in programs put on by First Tee of Greater Detroit.
”Golf is the why we get them there, but while we have them there we’re teaching them life skills,” said Carl Bentley, chief executive of First Tee of Greater Detroit, which has donated a golf simulator to the school district. ”Learning how to say ‘yes sir, yes ma’am’ — shake a hand properly, how to start a conversation. We’re teaching them life skills and then we get to putting and swinging and things like that.”
Among the 28.1 million Americans who played golf on a course in 2024, about 25% were Black, Asian or Hispanic, according to the National Golf Foundation. Interest is wider when considering those who played or followed professional golf coverage on TV, in writing or via podcasts.
But Hawkins said his experience as a coach suggests Black high schoolers aren’t among that audience.
”You don’t hear kids talking about the latest golf shoes or the cool golf apparel,” Hawkins said. ”You’re not necessarily going to get a badge of honor walking into your high school and you’ve got the newest golf shirt.”
Lack of money is a barrier
Detroit, MI
Why OL coach Hank Fraley chose to return to Detroit Lions

This offseason, the Detroit Lions’ coaching staff was picked apart by other teams, but one critical coach opted to stay with the team despite opportunities elsewhere.
Lions offensive line coach Hank Fraley interviewed several times for the Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator job, but ultimately returned to Detroit—and got a nice little promotion along the way by adding run game coordinator to his title. That said, Fraley said the opportunity in Seattle was a good learning experience.
“I think everything you do in life, you’re always learning from something and trying to get better at it,” Fraley said last week. “It was a great opportunity to at least look at and learn from. You never want to take things for granted. I just want to be the best O-line coach I can be, to be honest. To be the best coach, it’s like being the best dad, the best husband. It was an honor for somebody to call and reach out, and it was a great experience.”
It’s unclear if Fraley was ever offered the job, but he made one thing extremely clear: returning to Detroit was no consolation prize for the 13-year coaching veteran.
“I’m very glad I’m back here because this is where I wanted to be with my family. We’ve got stuff special here, I’ve got a special room,” Fraley said.
The importance of Fraley to Detroit’s offensive line cannot be overstated. Not only has Detroit’s offensive line been their biggest strength during their franchise turnaround, but when the topic of Fraley potentially taking a job elsewhere came up, Lions All-Pro offensive linemen Penei Sewell and Frank Ragnow both joked that they rely on Fraley so much that they would sabotage his efforts to leave.
“I haven’t played in this league without Hank and I don’t plan on doing it. I’ll sabotage him, I’ll leak stories, whatever it takes,” Ragnow joked.
“He’s just been one of those pillars for me in this organization,” Sewell said. “When I first came in, I fell in love with him, and we’ve got a history, too. He was recruiting me in high school when he was at UCLA. So, lotta history between us, and our relationship has grown. He’s like coach (Dan) Campbell in terms of a figure in my eyes. So, he’s not going nowhere.”
For Fraley, leaving Detroit would have been a tough decision. He’s been in Detroit for seven years now. He’s raised four children who call Detroit home. And there’s also something special to him about walking through those doors at the Lions’ Allen Park facility every day.
“Family is a big part of it, but really, the (offensive line) room,” Fraley said. “Coach Campbell is a big part of it. Family, we’ve been here going on eight years. For me, personally, you guys probably know a lot more than that, but my kids, before here, the longest they ever lived (in one place) was four years. Michigan, I would say, is home for them. Even though they’ll go anywhere. We’ve lived all over the country. But home right now, for my wife and I, is here in Michigan.”
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