Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared on June 13, 2012, on Daily Kos. The author gives permission for it to appear.

Start a discussion about 20th century industry in America and images of factories humming with production probably fill your head. It’s nice that romantic image fills your head because the reality is harsher to comprehend. Many factories today in this country sit idle; the people and machines that made them productive are gone. Rusting, rotting hulks are all that remain. Jobs were made redundant, sent to other countries where labor is still cheap and exploitable. Today a drive on Woodward or Piquette in Detroit or perhaps Flint boasts many empty derelict structures that were once shining jewels of American Capitalism. Don’t worry, they still are the perfect metaphor for Capitalism. Capitalism can shine like a jewel, but in time can also become a deep scar.
The 20th century is not the beginning of industry or capitalism in America however. By traveling back a mere 60 years to around 1840, it is easy to find even older scars where capitalism took hold, made a few men rich, provided jobs for a period of time, then left the land they used scarred from their industry.
Once Michigan was covered with ancient forests filled with majestic trees. The White Pine is Michigan’s state tree for a reason, but not the reason you think. Except for one small piece of land, the White Pine all but vanished from Michigan’s landscape. Millions of board feet of lumber floated down rivers and landed in saw mills in Muskegon, Manistee, Traverse City and Saginaw, to name a few locations. Lumber went to Grand Rapids and became furniture. It rebuilt Chicago after the great fire. Lumber shipped by train went to the great plains and built shanties, homes and towns on the prairie.
The lumber industry provided millions of dollars to very lucky men. Take a drive through Muskegon and you will find a number of buildings, parks and street signs with the name Hackley on them. Hackley was a Lumber Baron. Henry Crapo became Mayor of Flint, and eventually Governor of the state of Michigan. He ran a lucrative saw mill and left a large estate behind that eventually came to his grandson, William Crapo Durant, a carriage builder in Flint. Durant started manufacturing automobiles, then bought other automobile manufacturing companies. We call that conglomerate of car manufacturers General Motors today.
Historical narratives about the Michigan lumber boom inform the reader about the lumber produced, the money the industry brought to the state, and romantic tales about life in the lumber camps. My father used to wake us in the morning with shouting “Daylight in the swamp!” My great grandfather and great grandmother both worked in the lumber camps during the winter months; he trimmed branches from trees, and she cooked in the camp kitchen. What the stories don’t often tell you are how the men who trimmed the tree branches, or ‘swampers’ left piles of these branches on the ground and moved on. The limbs dried out and were the tinder for large, damaging wildfires all over the state. As technological advances made cutting and moving trees easier, lumberjacks didn’t need to be choosy, and land was clear-cut of every tree standing. Once land was cleared, the lumber barons found themselves strapped with ‘worthless’ bare land and the burden of paying taxes. Advertisements describing “cleared farm land.” found their way to newspapers in this country and other countries, enticing people to buy land unseen and travel to claim their purchase. Upon arrival however, they found their property riddled with enormous stumps and with the trees gone, no real tillable soil for farming. Kaleva is one example of a northern Michigan town that came about from Finnish immigrants buying land from the lumber company after all of the trees were removed from the land.
Over a hundred years later, the scars of the lumber boom can still be seen in parts of Michigan. Ancient stumps, the ghosts of old growth forests haunt the new tree lots of Northern Michigan. The lumber boom produced lots of money, produced jobs, but with only 60 years of viable industry, the legacy is resources were consumed and made a few men rich. Everyone else found themselves with stump-riddled land with no value. No value on the surface, but what about resources under the surface?
Right now, our state government is leasing state land to fracking companies. These companies are coming to a Michigan county near you with the intention of extracting natural resources for profit. It also means Michiganders will soon be dealing with the environmental impact of fracking, and the documented health problems that come with it. Politicians paid plenty of money from these companies will tell Michiganders this is a good thing; it will mean desperately needed jobs for Michigan residents. It will also mean more scars left on the Michigan landscape. Scars that we still don’t know how long they will last or how damaging they will really be. The future Scars of Capitalism – a fine American tradition.
In two days the annual Mesick Mushroom Festival begins in the town of Mesick. Mushroom hunting is a time honored, sometimes-cutthroat tradition of spring in northern Michigan. Whether you hunt for the small black morels, the large, white-grey ones, or cross your fingers and say a prayer before feasting on “beefsteak” false morels, you know the importance of remembering secret mushroom spots in the woods every spring. You hope the conditions are right and your eyesight is true to spot the little gems poking through the leaf litter of the forest. The only thing that rivals buck fever is mushroom fever. Success, no matter how few are found the first time out is a victory for human over fungus.
The festival runs from Friday through Sunday, with many events and venues to enjoy. There are competitions, with of course mushroom contests taking place all weekend. On Mother’s Day, mothers accompanied by a child have free admission to the carnival. Raffles, bake sales, flea markets and craft shows, with show events, parades, tractor pulls, a beer tent and much more. There’s something for everyone at the Mesick Mushroom festival.
So come up to Mesick for the weekend and bring your mother. Nothing says Mother’s Day in Northern Michigan like stalking wild fungus and having a good time.
Betsy DeVos is a woman on a crusade. Her goal for the state of Michigan is one thing, and that is eliminating public education from the state forever. Since 2001 Betsy DeVos with her husband Dick have spent over a million dollars on supporting candidates in Michigan who vote the way they want on promoting vouchers, charter schools, and whatever it takes to weaken the state’s excellent public schools. One of the DeVos family’s eliminate-public-education-at-all-costs projects is the Great Lakes Education Project, or GLEP.
GLEP once upon a time had a pretty vibrant public presence, but recently has reduced to funding and endorsing candidates. So far they’re endorsing 33 candidates for Michigan, two of them in Northern Michigan: Frank Forster of Petoskey for the 107th district, and Ray Franz of Okenama for the 101st district. Both of these candidates are Republicans, and most on GLEP’s endorsed list are Republicans. A few Democrats are there too, which will make people stop and make the false assumption that GLEP really is bipartisan as they claim.
With the Michigan state government now in the hands of Rick Snyder and a Republican majority, many of the bullet points in GLEP’s mission statement are becoming law in the state. None of these laws do anything to improve education, but to make it more difficult for public schools to do their job by establishing punitive systems for teachers who do their jobs very well. Betsy DeVos hates that teachers get things like retirement, health insurance and tenure, and she works hard to make sure all of those things are stripped away.
Betsy these days doesn’t just work on making public education in Michigan a bad memory; she’s working hard to erase it from the United States too. With her new project, American Federation for Children, she boldly blazes forward to put an end to the tyranny of public education, and Democratic Party-voting teachers.
And that’s the real reason behind the DeVos family – and the Walton family – and so many other right wing families and their crusade to destroy the public education system our founding fathers worked so hard to establish. Children don’t vote, so they’re easy prey.
One month ago Dr. Steve Ingersoll and his wife Deborah were both charged with several counts of fraud, including defrauding Chemical Bank, the United States and tax evasion by a federal grand jury. The optometrist and wife team, along with his brother and another couple who owned a construction company engaged in a dizzy dance of money transfers and check writing to each other that eventually moved most of a business loan for renovating a church into a school in Bay City, Michigan, into Steve Ingersoll’s personal bank account. The reason for doing this appears to be avoiding paying taxes, and also covering up for money paid by him to him through advances taken from Grand Traverse Academy’s school funds, another charter school managed by Ingersoll.
Not only the Ingersolls enjoyed shuffling money from one bank account to another through money transfers and writing checks. The other people named in the indictment include Roy and Tammy Bradley, the contractors, and brother Gayle Ingersoll, who was hired as a sub-contractor for the Bay City School renovations. The Bradleys are charged with paying their employees with cash to avoid payroll taxes and face another charge from a year ago that asbestos was illegally removed from the church in Bay City when they were working on renovating it.
Steve Ingersoll owns Smart Schools Management Incorporated. Many charter school operators work through management companies, which allows them to run their own mini districts of charter schools and compete with public school districts for education tax dollars. In March of 2014, Ingersoll was removed as president of Bay City Academy after the schools showed low academic performance. In January, the Superintendent of Bay City Academy Ryan Schrock was abruptly removed from his position. Parents troubled by the development pulled their children from the school and enrolled them elsewhere. Grand Traverse Academy no longer associates with Smart Schools Management Inc. and now works with a new charter school management company that oddly enough is owned by another Traverse City optometrist named Mark Noss. Despite the problems Ingersoll is facing with the federal court, Bay City Academy sees no reason to find a new management company for their schools.
Steve Ingersoll embodies the most glaring problem with charter schools in Michigan; too much taxpayer money being siphoned into management companies with very little oversight and for very poor returns. Bay City Academy did very poorly in achievement scores compared to other school districts in Bay City. Parents and politicians need to reconsider whether charter schools really offer an alternative for better education. What is mostly being revealed about the people who start and manage charter schools is it’s a quick way to make money at taxpayer expense. Public Schools have always been the better investment for educating Michigan’s children, and it’s time to put our money back into the institution dedicated to education rather than profits.
In the spirit of great Michigan political blogs like Eclectablog, the purpose of Up North Progressive will be for news and opinions of the current state of political and social concerns of progressives in Northern Michigan.
Northern Michigan faces the same problems and issues as downstate. The laws and policies made in Lansing have their impact on us. Progressives need to be informed to deal with anything the state hands out.
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Up North Progressive