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Rochelle Riley

  • Recent columns
  1. Rochelle Riley: Detroit's future is more important than today's fights

    I looked out the window of my office and saw Detroit's future sitting at a conference table. He was there because it was National Take Your Child to Work Day. But that wasn't really why he was there. He was there because his father works in the building. But that wasn't really why he was there.

    • Apr. 29, 2012
  2. Rochelle Riley: Dillon gives his verdict: Detroit must want more

    Six weeks ago, in the middle of negotiating a financial consent agreement for Detroit, state Treasurer Andy Dillon was tapped for an urgent task elsewhere: jury duty. Dillon said what he experienced in Wayne County Circuit Court fueled his determination to figure out what's not working in Detroit and improve the quality of life for residents.

    • Apr. 27, 2012
  3. Rochelle Riley: Former Pontiac emergency manager paints gloomy picture of what could await Detroit

    Former Pontiac Emergency Manager Michael Stampfler painted a gloomy picture of what could await Detroit based on his experiences in a smaller city with similar problems.

    • Apr. 24, 2012
  4. Shawne Duperon

    Rochelle Riley: Project: Forgive touches a nation, neighbors alike

    When Shawne Duperon began a campaign to encourage forgiveness -- a movement that, at its heart, features a man who forgave the drunken driver who killed his entire family -- she didn't know what to expect. But the power of Gary Weinstein's decision to forgive has touched a nation.

    • Apr. 22, 2012
  5. Beth Chappell, president and CEO of the Detroit Economic Club, is of the belief that "they absolutely need a woman on that team." MARCIN SZCZEPANSKI/DETROIT FREE PRESS

    Rochelle Riley: Women missing from Detroit finance team

    The governor of Michigan and the mayor of Detroit have named the first three members of the financial board (I refuse to call it an advisory board) that will decide how the city spends money for the near future. And something stands out... All three are men. Detroit's mayors throughout history ... all men.

    • Apr. 20, 2012
  6. Detroit City Clerk Janet Winfrey said that the proposed 25% cut to her budget will make it hard to carry out the presidential election. ERIC SEALS/Detroit Free Press

    Rochelle Riley: Detroit's budget too tight to run November election?

    Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey says it is not possible to conduct a presidential election for city residents with the money Mayor Dave Bing has proposed in his new budget.

    • Apr. 17, 2012
  7. Amber Spears, a Cass Tech grad now at the University of Michigan, is a Jackie Robinson Scholar. She has helped to feed families and raised money for Haiti. ANDRE J. JACKSON/DETROIT FREE PRESS

    Rochelle Riley: Jackie Robinson's legacy includes supporting young scholars who aim to change world

    Today marks 65 years since Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball's color barrier by becoming a Brooklyn Dodger -- and the first black MLB player in the 20th Century. Baseball will salute that history across the nation when all of its players, including our Detroit Tigers playing away in Chicago, wear Robinson's retired No. 42.

    • Apr. 15, 2012
  8. Zsa Zsa Booker

    Rochelle Riley: Bookstock Scholars seek to open world of reading in urban areas

    Zsa Zsa Booker knows exactly what she wants to do when she completes her master's studies at Wayne State University next month. She plans to get a PhD and eventually teach urban librarianship.

    • Apr. 15, 2012
  9. Rochelle Riley: Marygrove College students learning how to lead

    Detroit's fiscal crisis has put a spotlight on city leadership and how good -- or bad -- it is considered to be. But few have asked what that leadership might look like in the future. Enter Marygrove College, which is asking just that question, not just about political or positional leadership, but about community leadership.

    • Apr. 8, 2012
  10. Ashley Thomas of Detroit rides the Woodward bus past Comerica Park on Thursday. The 23-year-old, who works at Au Bon Pain at the Renaissance Center, said she has never been to an Opening Day game. For fun, Thomas said she usually goes to free festivals at Hart Plaza. Photos by William Archie/Detroit Free Press

    Rochelle Riley: Opening Day: A tale of 2 Detroits

    Jennifer Richmond stood in line Thursday at Comerica Park and spoke eloquently about why she returned home after living in Washington, D.C., for 20 years.

    • Apr. 6, 2012
  11. Gary Weinstein's life changed in an instant in May 2005, when a drunken driver killed his wife and two sons in Farmington Hills. Now, he is hoping to help others by sharing his journey of forgiveness. MANDI WRIGHT/Detroit Free Press

    Man who lost his family finds forgiveness, peace

    Fifty-one weeks after Tom Wellinger killed Gary Weinstein's family, the jeweler decided to accompany his attorneys to a meeting with Wellinger at the Oakland County Jail.

    • Apr. 1, 2012
  12. Kassim Alhimidi holds the body of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, during a memorial service Tuesday in Lakeside, Calif. She died March 24. Nelvin C. Cepeda/Associated Press

    Rochelle Riley: America needs answers in killings of Trayvon Martin and Shaima Alawadi

    It is hard for some to understand how there could be anger and outrage over the death of someone who lives in another part of the country. It is hard for some to understand why you would cry out for justice for a stranger. But concern is rising over such a death El Cajon, Calif., where Shaima Alawadi was killed in her home.

    • Mar. 30, 2012
  13. Rochelle Riley: Detroit's financial crisis tests preachers' patience

    The Rev. David Bullock has been preaching about Detroit's financial crisis from the pulpit. How often?

    • Mar. 27, 2012

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