6 minute read

Grand Rapids Mutual Aid Creates Community

It’s been a little over two months since Governor Gretchen Whitmer  rst made the decision to shut down non-essential services and businesses, and close down school buildings. ( e most current “stay home, stay safe” order is in e ect until May 28th.) In the meantime, hundreds of folks across West Michigan have been left without income. Unwilling to just sit by and watch the economic fall out harm their neighbors, West Michigan residents Sarah Doherty and Amy Carpenter came together virtually and started to plan.  eir plans led to the creation of the Grand Rapids Area Mutual Aid Network (GRAMAN).

Doherty says GRAMAN was started to help those struggling to make ends meet during the coronavirus era.  e purpose of the fund is to get cash into the hands of those who need it the most with no stipulations in place.

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“Amy and I, we understood that there are a lot of nonpro ts that are funded by wealthy donors, and

a lot of charity in the area, but that not everyone gets access to help and opportunities that they need and often there are barriers in place like extensive applications or referrals,” Doherty said.

Mutual Aid and Giving Circles have been around since the late 1700s when the Free African Society was founded to provide support to newly free African Americans. Doherty says anyone is able to start a mutual aid group. “Mutual aid is about gathering resources in community and sharing it with others.”

Rebel Sidney Black, a community organizer, describes mutual aid as the random person from the internet bringing you a hot meal when you can’t get out of bed. It’s cleaning or spiritually cleansing the home of someone who’s too severely depressed to do it themselves. It’s staying up late talking to a suicidal friend, helping unpack an apartment after someone moves, giving rides to chemo, visiting or writing letters to folks in prison and walking someone’s dogs when they can’t do it themselves. It can also look like sharing coping skills, survival skills or job search skills. Mutual aid can be sharing medicine, making medicine, helping sift through doctors to  nd a good  t. Mutual aid can also be  ghting to change the structural causes of oppression so that everyone can be more free.

GRAMAN is run by volunteers and relies mainly on monetary donations from community members to help provide food resources and  nancial aid to those who need it the most.

“Everybody knows what they need to survive and the thing that people need is money and I think that’s becoming clear for folks in Grand Rapids,” Doherty shared.

 us far, the group has raised nearly $50,000 dollars. Doherty says donations can range from $10 per donation to $1,000.

“This is mutual aid, it’s not a social service agency; it’s folks who have decided that they want to give to their neighbors and who trust us to be accountable to the community.”

— Sarah Doherty, co-founder of Grand Rapids Mutual Aid

“A little bit can make a huge di erence,” she expressed. “We have been able to get where we are not from grants, or nonpro ts but from individual people who have decided they have some extra cash they want to use to help others.”

 e group who determine how GRAMAN funds are spent is made up of people of color from the local community who have been a ected by institutional and systemic oppression and understand how resources and services function in Grand Rapids.

“ is group of folks who are calling themselves ‘ e Giving Circle’ meets together virtually and they look at the people’s requests, and what resources are available locally and then they determine how funds are going to be distributed,” Doherty explained.

 e messaging from GRAMAN has consistently been that it’s about solidarity, care and community building.

“It’s not gate-keeping,” Doherty stated. “We are not trying to replicate the nonpro t sector. We want to get funds and resources for people who need them.”

In just under  ve weeks, GRAMAN made 88 payments, distributed more than $54,000 and delivered over $25,000 worth of groceries to 310 families. All cash distributions are made to people of color and other historically marginalized people. Grocery distributions are done on a  rst come  rst serve basis to anyone in the local Grand Rapids community.

Requests for support are made through a simple google form accessible to anyone with a smartphone or computer with an internet connection. In the upcoming weeks, Doherty says they hope to release a phone number to make their services more accessible for those without a reliable internet connection or a computer at home.

“ is is mutual aid, it’s not a social service agency; it’s folks who have decided that they want to give to their neighbors and who trust us to be accountable to the community,” Doherty said.

While many in Michigan and in Grand Rapids are struggling right now, GRAMAN is experiencing overwhelming support from the community to help those who have lost jobs, income and support amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“Some of the most common ways we are using funds is for housing, utility payments, grocery shopping for high-risk folks or those without transportation and health bills,”Doherty explained

As part of their organizing e orts, she says the group is encouraging local community members who have resources and haven’t lost their income during the pandemic to share their stimulus check from the government with others.  e stimulus check is a one time $1,200 credit from the U.S. government in response to the economic fallout caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

“Resources and funds that you need are distributed in ways that are inequitable, so folks who have those resources, who still have their income, we are encouraging them to donate some or all of their stimulus checks to us,” she shared.

Undocumented immigrants, incarcerated folks and those without social security numbers are examples of people who are not eligible to receive the $1200 stimulus check.

For Doherty and Carpenter, the work GRAMAN has been able to do is thanks to the community’s willingness to show up for each other and to recognize how systems of oppression have kept indigenous people, undocumented immigrants and people of color away from resources and capital.  ey do not plan to become a nonpro t, but do plan to continue to build trusting relationships in the community and create opportunities for the community to hold them accountable.

To contribute to the Mutual Aid Fund, visit this site. To request assistance, complete this form.

Note:  is article originally appeared on urbancorecollective.org and has been updated.

Michelle Jokisch Polo is a Grand Rapidian transplant from El Salvador & Ecuador. She loves asking questions and will take any opportunity to do so. She is passionate about creating spaces where intersectionality is encouraged and marginalized voices are elevated. Besides speaking Spanglish on a regular basis, she enjoys writing, drinking coffee, taking walks, reading poetry and riding her bike.