
- Chris Ryba/Daily
- Groundcover representative Robert Salo sells copies of the newspaper on the corner of South State Street and East Liberty Street on Thursday, Sept. 22. Buy this photo
By Jennifer Lee, Daily Staff Reporter
Published September 22, 2011
While people normally read newspapers to find out what's happening in the world, a group of homeless individuals hope to use the print media to provide economic relief, empowerment and a sense of community.

- Alden Reiss/Daily
- Robert Salo is one of the vendors for Groundcover newspaper, which sells for $1 each.
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The monthly street newspaper Groundcover, founded in April 2010, provides job opportunities and serves as a collective voice for people facing tough financial conditions. Seventy-five people total have been trained at seminars provided by the newspaper, which contains articles on numerous topics as well as advertisements from local businesses. The paper is now garnering greater support from University students.
Vendors receive 10 free papers to sell and can subsequently buy additional papers for people to purchase for 25 cents each. The paper sells for $1 per copy.
Groundcover publisher Susan Beckett said the newspaper plays an important role for homeless people by offering them a source of income.
“The way the economy is right now, there are so many people who have no alternative,” Beckett said. “(For one vendor) that dollar is what lets him do his laundry.”
Currently, the newspaper has 25 active vendors. The seminars the 75 people have attended include classes on advanced selling, basic computing and writing for potential contributors to Groundcover.
Beckett described Groundcover’s content as “eclectic,” which ranges from interviews with members of the Ann Arbor community to articles on how to reduce one’s carbon footprint.
“We want people to buy the paper, we want people to enjoy the paper and 12 pages of poverty and homelessness can get pretty depressing,” Beckett said. “Typically, a quarter or less of our content is about that. There’s a lot that’s local community news, in-depth features about interesting businessmen, people around town, things going on.”
When she asked vendors around the city to distribute copies of Groundcover, Beckett said she was surprised at the initial reaction. Many of the sellers expressed a desire to write for the newspaper.
“It was an interesting response, especially the writing — I had not anticipated that,” Beckett said.
Tony, who requested to keep his last name anonymous, grew up in Grosse Pointe, Mich. and has been selling newspapers on the corner of East Liberty and Main Streets since last summer. He became unemployed following the collapse of his once-prosperous business.
“I went everywhere looking for a job. I couldn’t find one,” he said. “Everywhere I went, I got turned down. But I said, ‘I could sell a paper for a dollar.’”
Tony said he hopes to write an article for Groundcover one day. But until then, he is grateful for the opportunity to work as a vendor because the job has improved his life.
Despite having to endure days when the temperature in Ann Arbor drops 20 degrees below zero or reaches a heat index of 115, Tony said he enjoys working as a vendor for Groundcover because it allows him to interact with community members.
Groundcover was created after Beckett visited her daughter about a year and a half ago in Seattle, where she came across the city’s street newspaper, Real Change.
Initially, her idea was not well-received, but Beckett eventually contacted the North American Street Newspaper Association and received a $1,000 start-up donation by 1Matters, which also provided funding to launch street newspapers in Toledo, Ohio and Detroit.
Beckett said the majority of people who buy Groundcover are Ann Arbor residents, rather than University students or faculty.
“Sales in the University area generally have been way, way lower than anywhere else,” Beckett said. “I think part of it is because of the lack of publicity to that particular community.”
However, in an effort to remedy this, Education junior Marquise Williams plans to start a Groundcover Club by the end of the semester to increase awareness of the newspaper among the University community.

























