Corporate, private foundation leaders and realtors dominate list
By Diane Bukowski

Bishop Charles Ellis praying for auto bail-out
CHAIR: Bishop Charles Ellis, Greater Grace Temple
Mayor Dave Bing held his first “community forum” on “restructuring” Detroit at Ellis’s palatial temple at Seven Mile and Telegraph, Sept. 14. Ellis also owns and operates the Rogell golf course, which previously belonged to the city, and is negotiating to take over four other public courses. He runs two charter schools and a senior apartment complex among other revenue-producing enterprises
In Dec. 2008, Bishop Ellis conducted a well-publicized prayer service calling on Congress to vote for the multi-billion dollar auto industry bail-out.
“ . . .If the auto industry gets their bail-out, they are going to FIRE thousands of workers to survive a little while longer until they need another taxpayer bailout,” said ‘Professor Tracey’ on a local blog. “Bishop Ellis and his flock needed to hold a prayer service for new jobs OUTSIDE of the auto industry . . . . not something that will keep white auto executives collecting bonuses for failing at their jobs! . . . .the very idea of holding a prayer service for the auto industry when so many black folks are losing their homes, dying in Iraq, struggling with addiction to drugs or alcohol, languishing in prisons, not getting a quality education, not saving for the future, not safe in their own homes, etc. What a waste!”!”

Phillip Cooley
CO-CHAIR: Philip Cooley, owner Slow’s Bar BQ, developer
“Since launching the perpetually packed Slows five years ago, Cooley has morphed into one of the city’s most-visible urban activists . . . .Up for grabs, however, is whether longtime Detroiters will buy into the progressive agenda of this small-town transplant and his like-minded allies — mostly young, white and suburban-raised — and their affection for the city’s Rome-like ruins.” (Detroit News 5/6/10.)
Cooley and his brother established O’Connor Development Group, LLC in 2004, a real estate agency located in the same building as Slow’s. Today, O’Connor Development . . . .also owns about eight commercial and residential properties in Detroit,” says Crain’s. “Several of the properties have been renovated and are rental loft apartments while other properties are in the development stage.” In that article, Cooley called Detroit “a blank canvas.”
Several years ago, Cooley and a group of Corktown newcomers posted a controversial email establishing committees to transform the area:
(excerpt) “Team Bagley Market: These folks will start organizing complaints against Bagley Market, as well as rogue acts of bad will. We hope to make their operation as difficult as possible until the day when we can afford to swoop in and buy them out to open our own specialty grocery;The Bermuda Triangle: This includes . . . activism to stop the free handouts in our neighborhood that facilitate the drugs, crime and general malcontent that thrives from St Peters to the Train Station to the Mission on Michigan. Phil and I are hoping to go talk to the people at the church next week and will give an update. We’ll try being nice first.”
Allegedly, Cooley et. al. backed off and began cooperating with Rev. Bill Wylie-Kellerman of St. Peters, which sponsors a soup kitchen, as well as Charles Sorel, brother-in-law of Michigan Citizen publisher Catherine Kelly, and founder of another white-frequented bistro, Le Petit Zinc.

Lydia Gutierrez
CO-CHAIR Lydia Gutierrez, Mexican Foods LLC, SWDBA
Crain’s: “The president and CEO of Detroit-based Hacienda Mexican Foods LLC oversees three facilities, 80-plus employees and a company with $8 million to $10 million in revenue. Gutierrez and her late husband Ricardo started Hacienda, a manufacturer and distributor of Mexican food products, 22 years ago.”
Crain’s quotes Gutierrez regarding some of her concerns:“What kinds of businesses will help to fuel more business in Corktown, what’s going on in Bagley, and how does that connect with Riverfront Conservancy, the greenway, the (Ambassador) Bridge, downtown Detroit?”
The Southwest Detroit Business Association joined in the One Detroit coalition of Mexican, Asian and Arab-American business owners who helped defeat the initial proposal for a city-funded African Town in 2006, despite the fact that the city has invested millions in the neighborhood known as Mexican Town.

- Alice Thompson
Alice Thompson, Executive Director, Black Family Development, member Change for Better Schools
Black Family Development is a non-profit that raked in $28.9 million in revenues during 2008. According to recent grant applications, it works closely with the Skillman Foundation and their Good Neighborhoods/Good Schools Initiatives.
In a grant application linking the Osborn and Clark Park neighborhoods, BFDI is partnering with DPS, the Detroit Federation of Teachers, the Detroit Parent Network, Child Trends, Southwest Solutions, Inc. and City Year. Matching funds are expected from the Skillman, W. K. Kellogg, and Kresge Foundations.
Osborn High School and Clark Park Elementary are expected to be torn down and replaced by K-14 campuses under DPS Czar Robert Bobb’s $500.5 million bond issue.
Thompson is a member of “Change for Better Schools,” the coalition that tried unsuccessfully to get a proposal for Bing’s mayoral control of DPS on this November’s ballot. .

Heaster Wheeler to right of Dave Bing at ALPACT dinner
Heaster Wheeler, Exec. Director Detroit NAACP
Wheeler works closely with Rev. Wendell Anthony, who recently hosted a forum featuring speakers from numerous law enforcement agencies, addressing crime in Detroit. Wheeler himself serves on the board of ALPACT (Advocates and Leaders for Police and Community Trust), at a time of rising numbers of killings by police regionally. ALPACT was founded in the wake of 9/11, saying “all Americans are feeling a mix of pain and agony, patriotism and unity.” Its stated goal is challenge rising “bigotry and hate.”
Its first meeting in Detroit, featuring then Mayor Dennis Archer and numerous law enforcement officials as speakers, was swamped by victims of police brutality from metro Detroit who denounced the panelists. Protesters from the family of Imam Luqman Abdullah, killed by the Detroit FBI in a raid last November, and their supporters demonstrated outside an ALPACT dinner held at the RenCen only weeks after the Imam’s death. Detroit FBI head Andrew Agenda and attorney Nabil Ayad co-chaired the dinner, which featured U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder as a speaker.
To date, neither the federal nor state governments have released any conclusions about their investigations of the Imam’s virtual execution (he was shot 21 times). Twelve members of his mosque, which ministered to the needs of residents of one of Detroit’s poorest neighborhoods, still face charges based on conversations reported by FBI informants.
Wheeler also sits on the board of People and Land (PAL), “an organization focused on growth and change in Michigan, funded by the W.K. Kellog Foundation, according to its website. Continue reading →