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Equitable Community Development

Individuals and families deserve to live in a vibrant, thriving community that fosters entrepreneurship, sustainable development, and economic growth. In Southwest Michigan, many community-based organizations and municipalities have made some strides to create a more inclusive and equitable community development process to ensure every voice is heard and valued.

About the Project

The Equitable Community Development Project is a solutions-oriented journalism initiative covering community development and quality of life issues in Southwest Michigan, created by the Southwest Michigan Journalism Collaborative.

Our reporting focuses on Southwest Michigan organizations, projects, and developments that promote equity, particularly in community development efforts that build neighborhood assets and create healthy places where residents can achieve their best health and well-being.

This project is built to:

To Southwest Michigan community members about what assets are needed in the realm of community development that will improve their quality of life

About how we can create more equitable community development processes and about what is working to boost equity

On effective approaches to community development that create an equitable playing field for all community members

The problems we seek to address:

Current decision-making processes lack inclusivity, often excluding marginalized voices—such as people of color, youth, seniors, and grassroots organizations—from key discussions.

Barriers to engagement, including limited access to technology and transparent conversations, further prevent true community participation.

Systemic and structural challenges, such as bureaucratic red tape and a lack of resources for entrepreneurs of color, hinder progress toward equitable development.

Lack of awareness exists around the role small businesses and entrepreneurs play in the development of neighborhoods and overall economic vitality of a community. 

Focus Areas

  • Infrastructure Development

  • Affordable Housing

  • Skill Enhancement & Job Opportunities

  • Quality of Health Services

  • Public Safety & Policing

  • Local Businesses & Entrepreneurship

  • Cultural, Art & Recreation

  • Social Justice Policies & Advocacy

By reporting on equitable community development programs, projects and processes, we hope to uplift effective approaches to the problems and uncover idle, unhelpful work in this arena.

Media Projects

A Credit Union
in a Banking Desert

Community Promise Federal Credit Union, a tiny but mighty credit union in the Edison Neighborhood, is determined to bring essential banking and financial services to an underserved neighborhood and beyond.

Created by Public Media Network.

Tiny Houses of Hope: A Discussion with Gwendolyn Hooker

An in-depth conversation with Gwendolyn Hooker, the CEO and Founder of Hope Thru Navigation, and the developer of Tiny Houses of Hope. The three tiny houses on the corner of North and Westnedge Ave., are the first of 24 tiny houses hoping to provide housing for people with few to no options to ever have a home.

Created by Public Media Network.

Affordable Housing Conundrum: New Partners & Creative Solutions

SWMJC hosted a panel of Southwest Michigan housing leaders and local journalists who cover housing focused on the affordable housing conundrum, answering questions about what we can do next to solve the housing affordability crisis.

Created by Public Media Network.

Project Stories

Two women interact in an office; one is sitting at a desk with a computer, smiling and gesturing, while the other stands nearby.

In Southwest Michigan, a new push to fight homelessness before it begins

A smiling man wearing a hard hat, safety glasses, and a yellow reflective vest stands at a construction site with industrial buildings in the background.

Q&A with Eric Stewart – New Tech Education Center for Kalamazoo County High School Students

Five people, including one in a wheelchair, stand together outdoors next to a wooden sign reading "Mitchell’s Patch of Blue Organic Heirloom Blueberries." Lush greenery surrounds them.

Their Own Patch of Blue

Man in a yellow safety vest stands on a balcony holding a hard hat, with a construction site and trees visible in the background.

What actually qualifies as affordable housing in St. Joseph County? We asked a developer, county residents, and more to weigh in

A group of thirteen adults stands indoors holding certificates and smiling at the camera, with balloons and a branded backdrop behind them.

Black Entrepreneur Training Academy Celebrates Fourth Cohort

A 1937 residential security map of Kalamazoo, Michigan, color-coded to indicate graded neighborhoods from A (green) to D (red) and areas for industry, commercial, or farmland.

How Kalamazoo racial segregation fueled today’s home affordability problem

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