Detroit, MI
Looming Archdiocese of Detroit restructuring plan weighs on region’s Catholics
As the Archdiocese of Detroit prepares for a two-year restructuring, many local Catholics are bracing for the changes ahead, with some fearful their parishes could close and contemplating where they may go next, while others are taking a wait-and-see approach.
Archbishop Edward Weisenburger, who took the helm of the archdiocese last year, announced in November that the archdiocese cannot maintain its around 200 parish buildings and is working to “right-size and reallocate personal and financial resources. He said listening sessions are set to begin this spring at every parish.
For the region’s Catholics who have already experienced church closures or mergers, especially in Detroit and inner-ring suburbs such as Warren, Roseville and Dearborn Heights, some worry their church could be the next to shut its doors. Others are concerned about how the restructuring could affect the existing shortage of priests and nuns. And some worry about how the closures, especially in Detroit, could impact the city’s Black Catholic population.
Shirley Slaughter of Oak Park said her parish, Presentation Our Lady of Victory Catholic Church in Detroit, doesn’t have its own building and held Masses in the chapel of St. Scholastica Parish in Detroit until last October. At that point, the archdiocese began holding only one Sunday Mass time for both St. Scholastica and Presentation Our Lady of Victory, meaning the two parishes attend the same Mass.
St. Scholastica is a large church building, but it’s “not filled up every Sunday,” Slaughter said. Fewer than 100 people are parishioners of the two parishes, combined, she estimated.
“If anybody’s going to be restructured, they’ll probably restructure us again,” Slaughter said.
But the restructuring is “a necessary thing that has to happen,” said Hannah Kolpasky, a 30-year-old parishioner at Our Lady Star of the Sea Catholic Church in Grosse Pointe Woods. She said she is “cautiously optimistic,” now that Weisenburger is leading the archdiocese.
“I think that he has come out from the beginning of his tenure as archbishop with a more clear message of why these things need to happen and what kind of process it’s going to be,” Kolpasky said.
The debate comes as more than 170 of the Archdiocese of Detroit’s 224 priests last week attended a three-day meeting related to the restructuring, brainstorming what churches could potentially be grouped together as part of a “pastorate” model, in which a cluster of one or more parishes is led by one pastor. The new model will replace the archdiocese’s current “families of parishes” approach, in which a grouping of parishes has a team of priests.
While the details of the restructuring are still being worked out, the Rev. Mario Amore, executive director of parish renewal for the archdiocese, said no one “wants to go through a process like this.”
“Especially in our churches, because they’re such a part of the fabric of our lives,” Amore said.
So many of the archdiocese’s parish communities are “limited in what they’re able to do,” he said, because they’re trying to preserve buildings.
“But the Church … and even our buildings are not meant to be museums,” Amore said. “Yes, they are first and foremost places of worship. But if all of our resources are going to preserve a building, then it’s limiting our ministry as a Church and the very reason which we exist, which is to make disciples.”
Still, he acknowledged the anxiety some may be feeling about what could happen to their own parishes.
Amore said “we need to honor” people’s grief and “honor the angst that a process like this brings about.”
Decline in Catholic population
At one point, 1.5 million Catholics called the Archdiocese of Detroit home. The Catholic census is closer to 900,000 today, with around 150,000 regularly attending Mass.
Weisenburger said in November that many of the archdiocese’s churches were built “during a time of tremendous growth.”
The archbishop said the archdiocese doesn’t know how many parishes might merge or how many buildings may close.
What many Detroit-area Catholics may be bracing for is a reminder that their parishes are fighting for survival once again, said Brett Hoover, a theology professor who studies trends in U.S. Catholicism.
“It’s just a lot of grief,” said Hoover, who teaches at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
Closing or merging local parishes has been happening nationally since the late 1990s due to a confluence of events: parishioners moving to the suburbs, religious disaffiliation and aging membership. There is also a declining number of clergy, Hoover said.
Areas in the Midwest and Northeast have been particularly hard hit by declining and changing populations. Many parishes were built around communities that moved out decades ago, the Loyola Marymount scholar said.
The archdiocese’s two-year plan is likely based on lessons learned in other cities where Catholic populations protested closings and at times appealed to the pope to save their parishes, Hoover said.
“I’m sure there is genuine sincerity” behind the two-year plan, Hoover said, though he hasn’t been following the situation.
In the U.S., 19% of adults identified as Catholic in 2025, compared with 24% in 2007, according to the Pew Research Center.
Pew said the share of Americans who are Christian appears to be leveling off, at least temporarily, after years of decline, according to a 2023-2024 study. A report on the study said the Protestant share of the population has been fairly level since 2019 and the Catholic share has been stable since 2014, “with only small fluctuations in our annual surveys.”
The Archdiocese of Detroit conducted a downsizing in the late 1980s and early 1990s under Cardinal Edmund Szoka, and there were a few iterations of parishes clustering or merging in the 2000s and 2010s. The diocese then moved to the “Families of Parishes” model around five years ago under then Archbishop Allen Vigneron.
Past restructurings didn’t include as much feedback from parishioners as the current one, Amore said, adding that the archdiocese hasn’t restructured on this scale before with “this kind of process.”
“That’s part of telling the story of why the priests are so on board with what we’re doing right now, because they don’t want to do another one of those … processes in five years from now,” he said.
‘Very sentimental’
At a recent Communion Service at St. Margaret of Scotland in St. Clair Shores, more than a dozen people filled the pews. A deacon presided over the service in the church’s chapel, a smaller space with colorful stained glass windows. Mainly older adults attended the service, including Lawrence D’Agonstino of Fraser.
D’Agostino, a parishioner of St. Pio of Pietrelcina Parish in Roseville for 53 years, said the restructuring process is “concerning.”
“It’s very sentimental, because everyone … wants to have their own parish stay open, which is common sense,” he said.
One issue is that men are not becoming priests, D’Agostino said. Another issue is the financing of the parishes.
“It’s a shame that the younger generation doesn’t fulfill their obligation as we did when we were younger … and so therefore the amount of people going to the parishes is limited,” he said. ” And due to the fact that it’s limited, it makes it that much (more) difficult … for the parishes to stay open financially.”
D’Agostino, 79, said he doesn’t know where St. Pio of Pietrelcina Parish “is standing financially.” He thinks the archdiocese will be considering whether parishes are “in the red” or “in the green,” with those in the red likely to be a concern.
Paul Padyiasek, a parishioner at St. Louise de Marillac in Warren, said the restructuring has “got to be done.” He said priests are retiring and parishioners have been dying.
He added that some people who used to attend Mass at his church now go to churches farther north in Macomb County. Padyiasek, who is an usher at St. Louise, estimated that a total of 200 to 250 people attend one of two weekend Masses at the church, which is down from around 300 people three or four years ago.
Padyiasek, 81, said he is part of a group of around 20 people who get breakfast together every Sunday after Mass. They’ve already been talking about what church they might attend if St. Louise closes.
“I know a lot of people are going to be going probably to St Anne’s,” Padyiasek said.
St. Anne Parish on Mound Road in Warren will stay open because it has a school, he said.
“I think a lot of the churches that don’t have schools will close,” Padyiasek said.
Experience with closures
St. Christopher Church in Detroit, which was renamed St. Juan Diego Parish in 2019, held its final Mass on Jan. 11, drawing longtime and former parishioners and neighbors. The church had served Detroit’s community since 1941, but in recent years drew as few as 20 worshippers to Sunday Mass.
Slaughter, 80, said her parish in Detroit, Our Lady of Victory, closed in the 1980s and merged with Presentation church. The merged church, which is called Presentation Our Lady of Victory Catholic Church, lost its building in 2014, but it continued holding Masses in the chapel of St. Scholastica Parish in Detroit until recently.
Slaughter, who wrote a book about the history of Our Lady of Victory, said the Black Catholic Church in Detroit has lost “so many Catholics” over the decades because of archdiocese policies that “didn’t serve us.” She said her priest has changed frequently over the years, sometimes every two to three years, and the longest she has ever had a pastor is eight years. She argued that white Catholics have priests for longer periods of time.
Slaughter said Our Lady of Victory will “probably be hit again” because of the low numbers of parishioners.
“And then I’ll make a decision on what I’m going to do after that hit takes place,” she said.
The archdiocese’s Amore said the frequent changing of priests is “really the case across the archdiocese.” He said six to 12 years is a normal term for a priest to be at a parish community.
Amore said the Archdiocesan Restructuring Commission includes Detroiters and people from Black Catholic parishes. He noted that “we are the Archdiocese of Detroit.”
“And so the city of Detroit needs to be a definite focus for us,” Amore said. “And the archbishop has committed to that through this process.”
A Catholic church in Detroit known for its mural of a Black Jesus, St. Charles Lwanga, was at risk of closure late last year, but those plans were reversed thanks to a coalition of parishioners who fought to keep the church open. St. Charles Lwagna is still a place of worship, but now as the newly combined parish, Christ the King.
The biggest lesson that Steve Wasko, a leader in the Anti-Racism coalition, said should be applied to the restructuring process is asking the question, “What does it take to have a flourishing church?,’ as opposed to asking the question ‘What are we going to do with fewer parishioners, less money and less priests?”
Wasko, a longtime member of St. Suzanne Lady/Our Lady Gate of Heaven, said when the Archdiocese of Detroit closes parishes in the city, it disproportionately affects Black Catholics.
“There’s no evidence nationally that these restructuring processes lead to anything other than further retrenchment, usually impacting communities of color the most and usually resulting in the eventual continued loss of Black Catholics from their faith, organized religion and local parishes,” Wasko said.
Some parishioners moved to the suburbs
Southwest Detroiter Walter Glinka, 71, became a parishioner at St. Francis D’Assisi as a child, when his neighborhood was an enclave of residents of Polish heritage. He was baptized there, confirmed there, attended grade school and got married at the parish that is over 100 years old.
In 2004, his parish was merged with nearby St. Hedwig, less than one mile away. He described St. Francis as the oldest Polish-speaking parish in the city. But St. Francis and St. Hedwig have relied on Spanish-speaking immigrants and other Latinos for decades, he said.
Glinka became a lay minister at St. Francis years ago to help with services. But many of his peers have not been as loyal to the parish.
“They got married here, moved to the suburbs. We never had a plan to try to recruit people from the suburbs,” Glinka said.
He’s taking a wait-and-see approach on the latest plan.
“We only know the storyline that it is a two-year process. We don’t know the actual plan yet,” Glinka said.
Pastorate model
Amore said the archdiocese is still in the first phase of the restructuring process, which runs until March. He said the archdiocese has been collecting information from and sharing information with its priests during this phase.
Last week, the archdiocese gathered over 175 priests for a three-day meeting at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit.
“It was an opportunity for them to come together in the areas in which they work, in the different parts of the diocese, and really have … some conversations and ask questions about what the future of the diocese could look like, and then just come together to pray about and propose some different models for our parishes,” Amore said.
Though the exact restructuring plan is still being determined, parishes will become part of a “pastorate,” which is a grouping of one or more parishes led by a pastor, according to the Archdiocese of Detroit. The new model will replace the current “families of parishes” model, in which a grouping of parishes has a team of priests, Amore said. In a “pastorate” model, there will be one designated pastor, and other priests might serve as associate pastors.
In 2025, the archdiocese had 224 priests, a number that is projected to decline 40% to 134 by 2034.
“As all organizations ― secular, religious ― we need to be planning ahead for what our reality will look like, and so … forming these pastorates will help us to align the number of priests with the number of pastorates,” Amore said.
Listening sessions
Priests formed models, or groupings of parishes, during last week’s meeting, Amore said. Three models for each parish will be presented at the listening sessions, which will run from the week of April 13 to the beginning of June.
“There’ll be over 400 listening sessions, two in each of our parish communities, where parishioners can come, see the models for their particular area and then give some feedback,” Amore said.
In similar restructuring processes conducted in dioceses across the country, between 20% and 40% of the models changed based on the feedback from parishioners, Amore said. The plan will then go to the Archdiocesan Restructuring Commission and then an advisory body of priests, which will have to sign off on it. It will then go to Weisenburger for his final approval, Amore said.
A “pastorate” could take a few different forms, he said. One form is one parish, with one building. Another model is one parish, but several buildings. And another model is one pastor who oversees a few parishes.
Amore said there is “no set timeline” for deciding when church buildings in the archdiocese would close.
“Really, at this point, there’s no plan to have set dates for closures of specific church buildings,” he said. “We first are looking at the models and then how things play out from there.”
Some churches are already discussing closing because “they simply don’t have the resources to continue,” Amore said.
At this point, he said, closure is a possibility for all of the archdiocese’s parish communities.
“We don’t want to say that certain places are safe and certain places aren’t. … It’s the reality of where we’re at in the process right now that we just don’t know, and that it’s a possibility for everyone, for every parish,” he said.
Weisenburger will announce the new “pastorates” in early 2027. Amore said it’s possible that some announcements regarding closings could be made then.
asnabes@detroitnews.com
Detroit, MI
Detroit Pistons’ loss to Cavs shows weaknesses before playoffs
What questions have Pistons answered this season?
Friend of the pod Laz Jackson walks through what the Detroit Pistons have proved of themselves this year.
CLEVELAND – In just five days, the Detroit Pistons faced the Cleveland Cavaliers twice.
They split the games to finish their season series against the Central Division rivals, but with a potential reunion looming in the second round of the NBA playoffs, the Pistons came away from both games unsatisfied.
On Friday, it was the Pistons needing overtime to overcome a Cavaliers team missing James Harden and Donovan Mitchell at Little Caesars Arena. On Tuesday, March 3, in Cleveland, however – with Harden back in the lineup – the Pistons struggled in the areas they usually thrive, for a 113-109 loss.
The Pistons’ first loss on the road since Jan. 29 didn’t feature their usual fire for much of the night.
“I’m frustrated with the effort level, the attention to detail that we played on that end of the floor,” coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “The times and opportunities where we did do the right thing, did get stops, we let people outwork us to come up with offensive rebounds. We can’t afford to not play at maximum effort. That’s been our superpower all year long and, tonight, I felt like there were times where we were outworked. If we’re outworked, this isn’t going to be the results that we want.”
The Pistons work at being the league’s most disruptive team via turnovers has given them a top-three defensive rating. They force turnovers on 17.2% of possessions – best in the NBA –and only trail the Houston Rockets in offensive rebounding percentage. They also lead the league in steals and blocks per game. Getting out in transition and capitalizing on second-chance opportunities has created an above-average offense despite struggles on 3-point shooting.
For three quarters against the Cavaliers, little of that materialized – as least until the Pistons grabbed seven steals in the final period (after just two in the first three). Overall, the Pistons were beat on the offensive glass (11-10), mustered just 10 fastbreak points (their lowest total since Jan. 27) and picked up 11 second-chance points (their least since Feb. 6).
It was, in all, a lackadaisical defensive performance, with the Pistons repeatedly losing shooters behind the arc as the Cavs knocked down 17 3-pointers – eight more than the Pistons.
“Obviously they’re a good team, but we haven’t been playing to our standard on that side of the ball,” Pistons wing Javonte Green said. “Coach talked about the effort we need to bring every game. We just need to play harder. We can’t get outworked on offensive rebounds and 50-50 balls, that’s our identity. I feel like we needed to pick up that slack.”
The Pistons also were hurt by a poor shooting performance by Cade Cunningham; he finished with 10 points and 14 assists but shot 4-for-16. Cleveland threw multiple defenders at him all night, and he obliged by passing the ball and setting up his teammates. It led to a big second half for Tobias Harris, who scored all 19 of his points in the last two quarters.
But it wasn’t enough.
“On the defensive end we just couldn’t put up a wall, couldn’t get a stand going,” Cunningham said. “Personally, I had a lot of bad closeouts; just off the ball, I didn’t feel sharp. Just gotta clean all that stuff up.”
With 22 games remaining, the Pistons are focused on cleaning up the margins so they’ll be ready for postseason play. These two games against the Cavaliers have given them a list of areas to clean up.
Friday, they needed an extra period to win after rallying from a late nine-point deficit despite losing Cunningham late after he fouled out with just under two minutes left in the fourth quarter. Jalen Duren and Daniss Jenkins stepped up in overtime after Duncan Robinson also fouled out.
Mostly, the Cavaliers have proven they can pounce during soft stretches on defense. Thursday brings another rematch with a contender, as the Pistons wrap up a three-game road trip against the San Antonio Spurs (another opponent from last week).
“We didn’t play our best basketball the other night,” Bickerstaff said of the Cavaliers’ game on Feb. 27. “Give our guys credit because we played 53 minutes and were able to pull it out in some adverse conditions. Cade fouls out, Duncan fouls out, our guys still figure out a way to get it done.
“We need to be better. We need to be better defensively, we need to impose ourselves on the game a little bit more than we did last game. I thought the last two quarters of the Orlando game [on Sunday] were the best quarters we’ve played defensively since New York [on Feb. 19]. I hope, and told our guys, that we can continue to build off that, because that’s where it always starts for us. You can tell the tone by how we are defensively and how we’re getting after it.”
Contact Omari Sankofa II at osankofa@freepress.com. Follow him on Bluesky and/or X @omarisankofa.
[ MUST WATCH: Make “The Pistons Pulse” your go-to Pistons podcast, listen available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify) or watch live on YouTube. ]
Next up: Spurs
Matchup: Pistons (45-15) at San Antonio (44-17).
Tipoff: 8 p.m. Thursday, March 5; Frost Bank Center, San Antonio.
TV/radio: FanDuel Sports Network Detroit; WXYT-FM (97.1).
Detroit, MI
Police search for suspect, accomplice after teen injured in shooting outside Detroit school gym
The Detroit Police Department is searching for a suspect and an accomplice in connection with a shooting last week that injured a teen outside a school gym.
The shooting happened in the 3400 block of St. Aubin, the same area where the Detroit Edison Public School Academy’s Early College of Excellence is located. Police say that at about 8:27 p.m. on Feb. 27, there was an altercation inside the gym that continued outside.
Police say the suspect allegedly fired multiple shots at the victim, striking him. The teen was taken to a hospital for treatment. His current condition is unknown.
Police say the accomplice who was with the suspect was also armed.
Anyone with information is asked to call DPD’s seventh precinct at 313-596-5740, Crime Stoppers at 800-Speak Up or DetroitRewards.tv.
Detroit, MI
Bruce Campbell announces cancer diagnosis; ‘Fear not,’ he tells fans
Treatment will delay the Royal Oak-born actor’s plans to tour his new film ‘Ernie & Emma’ this summer.
Royal Oak-born movie star and cult hero Bruce Campbell announced on social media on Monday that he has been diagnosed cancer — a type that is “treatable” but not “curable,” he said.
“I apologize if that’s a shock — it was to me too,” the “Evil Dead” star, 67, wrote in a message posted to Instagram.
He went on to say “I’m not gonna go into any more detail,” and he didn’t. He said the public announcement had to do with scaling back appearances on his schedule, including tour dates behind his latest film, “Ernie & Emma.”
Campbell planned to show the movie June 5 at the Redford Theatre; as of Monday night, that date is still on the Redford schedule, but Campbell wrote in his note he plans to get “as well as I possibly can over the summer so that I can tour with my new movie ‘Ernie & Emma’ this fall.”
The movie is written, directed by and stars Campbell as a man who goes on a journey following the death of his wife. Campbell produced the movie alongside his wife, Ida Gearon, and filmed it in Oregon, where he now lives.
Campbell told The News in January he dedicated “Ernie & Emma” to his childhood moviemaking pals, including Scott Spiegel, who died of a heart attack in September 2025.
“It’s a callback to the carefree days of Super 8, where we could do whatever the f–k we wanted to do,” Campbell said of “Ernie & Emma.” “So I thought, ‘All the boys are responsible for this,’ so they’re all in there.”
Campbell got his start making movies around Metro Detroit with his childhood pal, Sam Raimi. Campbell starred in Raimi’s “Evil Dead” trilogy and has since appeared in most of Raimi’s films; Campbell makes a brief appearance in a photograph in the background of an early scene in Raimi’s latest, “Send Help.”
He’s also an author; Campbell’s autobiography “If Chins Could Kill: Confessions of a B Movie Actor” was published in 2001.
In his post on social media, Campbell thanked fans and said he was not out to elicit sympathy.
“Fear not, I am a tough old son-of-a-bitch and I have great support, so I expect to be around for a while,” he wrote.
agraham@detroitnews.com
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