Southwest Lansing (MI) and my neighborhood

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DON’T FORGET: Southside City Council-member Robinson to meet this a.m. with residents

July 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Starting at 10 a.m., this morning, Saturday, July 11, Lansing’s southside City Council-member A’Lynne Robinson will meet with residents for her monthly Second Saturday meeting.

A main item on the agenda will be a review of the city’s fireworks ordinance. This follows the July 4 holiday and citizen complaints about police response to fireworks usage in the neighborhoods.

She has other items of neighborhood concern on the agenda.

The meeting takes place in the meeting room at the Lansing Fire Department’s Station #6 on the corner of Jolly and Pleasant Grove.


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A checklist to stay safe in your home

July 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment

In the wake of two recent shootings in the Averill Woods neighborhood on Lansing’s southwest side, Melissa Quon-Huber provides a checklist of suggestions for residents to stay safe:

  • Report suspicious activities or properties
    • If an emergency – call 9-1-1
    • If not an emergency call 483-4600 and also leave a message for our community police officer, Jason Bock at 272-7488 ext 9530
  • If police arrive on your block to investigate a situation like this…
    • Stay inside
    • Turn on your exterior lights if it is dark
    • Stay alert
  • Check to make sure your street lights are working and are not blocked by trees. For repairs and tree trimming around your street lights contact the follow individuals:
    • Street light repair – Call Board of Water & Light at 702-6006
    • Tree trimming around street lights where no utilities are present – Call Paul Dykema at City of Lansing at 483-4277
    • Tree trimming around street lights where utilities ARE present – Call Board of Water and Light at 702-6006
  • Know your neighors
    • Contact Melissa if you want to start a neighborhood watch on your street (394-3996 or hubermel@msu.edu
    • Keep an eye out for each other, know what isn’t “normal” activity


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Averill Woods neighbors to discuss school shooting tonight

June 26, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Averill Woods Neighborhood Association will meet at 7 p.m. tonight, Thursday, June 25 to discuss last Sunday night’s shooting at or near Averill School where a fight between two young men resulted in one receiving a non-fatal shot to the face.

Representatives from the Lansing Police Department, Lansing Parks and Recreation, Lansing Public School District along with local officials have been invited to the meeting.  These include Mayor Virg Bernero, third ward Council-member A’Lynne Robinson and Lansing Schools Deputy Superintendent Jim Davis have been invited.

The basketball courts and playground behind the school has been an area of neighborhood concern especially after a shooting last summer and the shooting this past Sunday.

All neighborhood residents are invited to attend.  Entrance to the meeting which will be held in the school library will be at the back of the school.

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Proposed Averill Woods Neighborhood Association Bylaws

January 5, 2009 · 2 Comments

The Averill Woods Neighborhood Association in southwest Lansing (MI) is making plans to take its relationship with its members to the next level with  proposed bylaws which could possibly be presented at the Jan. 22 meeting.  This PDF is the first draft and will probably be changed to fit our group.

Residents in our neighborhood bounded by Cooley, Deerfield, Holmes and Waverly has operated in the past with a lean and supple organizational structure that could adapt to the needs as presented.

With a perceived need for a more formal organizational structure, the association’s president Melissa Quon-Huber has drafted a proposed set of bylaws.

Your comments are invited and appreciated. The goal is to keep them simple, but yet provide a more formal organizational structure.

Feel free to leave comments on this post.

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Do you get the city of Lansing Now update e-mailed to you?

November 18, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This new Lansing update from City Hall reminds me of a coffee shop news that some legislators used to distribute to their constituencies. Check out the Archives of this new publication which started in July and get it e-mailed to you if that’s of interest:

Lansing Update

Powered by ScribeFire.

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Lansing (MI) Council Member A’Lynne Robinson talks about cell tower ordinance and police stations

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Lansing (MI) Council Member A’Lynne Robinson stopped by an outside clean-up activity of the Averill Woods Neighborhood Association to share some hot coffee and news about issues being discussed at City Hall.

These included a new cell tower ordinance which the City Council is expected to have a final vote on at tomorrow night’s regular meeting and issues surrounding the talked-about consolidation of the city’s north and south police station.

If you have comments or questions from what she shares, you are invited to leave them on this post.

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Post #3–Mark it down to bring cookies and punch to Averill School on Dec. 11

October 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Averill School Principal Rosa Thill has invited Averill Woods Neighborhood Association members to bring cookies and punch to a school “Neighborhood Walk Through” at 1:30 pm on Thursday, Dec. 11.  For details read this blog or my Daily Grit where I have cross-posted this.

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Post #2–Averill Woods Neighborhood to help with school updates

October 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Averill School on Lansing’s (MI) southwest side has become a focal point for the Averill Woods neighborhood and its association.

MARK YOUR CALENDAR: On Saturday, Nov. 8, from 9 a.m. to noon, the Averill Woods Neighborhood Association will sponsor a “thin out”  of the forested area adjacent to the school.  Goal is to trim the perimeter of the forest back two to three feet to allow more visual access to the area.

This could be the first of regular monthly cleanups of the woods by neighborhood residents.

The project is part of a package of proposals developed by MSU senior lanscape architect student Trish Gilbert who divided her recommendations into four areas:

Painting of a mural on the north side of the  building by students was also discussed or by local mural artists was also discussed.

  1. School’s front yard where school groups, including students,  would get involved in spring planting and other efforts to soften the institutional appearance of the building.
  2. Installation of motion lights at the back of the school where there’s a playground, including a basketball hoop and other equipment, but also has been a hidden place where there’s been gatherings turned violent.
  3. Resurfacing of the play areas which could include new asphalt and the painting of a area-size US map for students to play on.
  4. Reclaiming the woods just north of the school which has become a tangle of growth and a hiding spot for illicit activity.  (Go to next page for video clip)
  1. (more…)

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Post #1: Averill Woods and other southsiders praised by LPD for B & E arrests

October 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Lansing (MI) Police Department Officer Jason Bock praised Averill Woods neighbors and others on the southside for calling police when they see unknown and suspicious people at neighbors’ homes.

Bock, who is the assigned officer to the Averill Woods neighborhood, said aware southside neighbors played a significant role in the capture of nine sets of young burglars in recent days, including a home on South Deerfield where thieves were caught with various pieces of electronic equipment.

LPD officer Jason Bock gives his monthly report to the Averill Woods Neighborhood Association.  He talked about an increase in the number of B & E's in the area.

LPD officer Jason Bock gives his monthly report to the Averill Woods Neighborhood Association. He talked about an increase in the number of breaking and enterings.

Highlights of his comments:

  • Compared to past months in the Averill Woods neighborhood and the south side, he said, the area has been “getting hammered” with breaking and enterings.
  • But, the thieves have been getting caught because of neighbors keeping watch for each other and calling 911 when they see something suspicious.  About when to call, he said, “Call all.  Think the worst.”
  • Many of the burglars are teens who look like school kids with backpacks.  Two or three will come to a house with one acting as a lookout, another knocking on the front door while another goes through the back.  Often the stolen property will be hidden in the backpack.
  • Recent experience has shown that many break-ins occur between the time when residents leave for work and when they come home.
  • The biggest point of entry for burglars has been hidden back doors.
  • Officer Bock said that LPD officers have been given permission from their commanders to work overtime to protect our area, find perpetrators and prevent additional break-ins.
  • He also said there has been an increase in the number of calls for domestic problems.  Many times, Officer Bock added problems can be avoided when the two conflicting parties give each other space.
  • In one other problem area, he said, there’s been an increase in motor vehicle accidents in the neighborhood because of cars slipping on wet leaves.

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Are we prepared for a natural disaster on the scale of Ike?

September 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

September’s task is to “Collect emergency information” according to the http://www.do1thing.us/ website. That’s timely.

Sam and I pulled up live GIS maps from the National Atmospheric and Oceanic Association to look at Hurricane Ike’s path tonight.

I wanted to measure how far inland was expected to be impacted, and how that compared to our distance to the Great Lakes.

I wondered if there were people who had to be prepared for the effects of this enormous hurricane who don’t normally think of the gulf waters in their daily life.

It turns out the impact was expected to reach up to 120 miles inland in the lowest lying areas. We are about 80 miles away from Lake Michigan. I can’t imagine having to be prepared for distasters that would originate that far away.

Not that we’re going to have a hurricane on Lake Michigan or anything, but it made me think about we sometimes feel impervious to distasters on that large of a scale because they seem so far away.

But remember the summer of the east coast power outage? That was a reminder of how we are all connected together, especially on the energy grid.

We learned that cell phones were unreliable at that point.

And if that power outage had happened now, anyone with Comcast phone service would have been without a phone after their 8 hours of back-up energy sources were exhausted.

And now, 25% of our nation’s oil drilling and refining facilities are likely to be impacted by the Hurricane Ike so we’ll likely all feel the impact.

Remember Katrina? Neighborhoods were abandoned and folks were scattered all across the country in the mass evacuation, and of course some folks were left behind without the resources to leave.

-If we had a mass evacuation in Lansing, would you be able to contact your neighbors wherever they fled to and see if they were okay?

-Would you know if you had neighbors with special needs and couldn’t evacuate or needed special assistance?

-If you were out of town and something happened to your house, would a neighbor know how to reach you or someone who knows where you are?

It’s just a reminder that knowing your neighbors is really important. Not only does it help us create a strong social fabric to enrich our lives and to fight crime, it can also help to keep us “safe in the storm” so to speak.

While the weather is still nice, take a walk around your block. Get to know your neighbors. Exchange information as much as you feel comfortable.

Here is an example of information that neighborhood watch block captains and coordinators can collect to help plan for an emergency as well as crime watch: http://www.averillwoods.org/resources/FamilyDataSheet2008+-+revised+MH.doc

You can also get a detailed, but simple list of things to do and information to collect at http://www.do1thing.us/files/calendar/GettingEmergencyInformation.pdf

–Melissa

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