![萝莉社-Dearborn alum Daille Held, left, and 萝莉社-Dearborn senior Sophia Hawkins spent summer 2024 Saturdays volunteering in the student-led community garden.](/sites/default/files/styles/teaser/public/2025-02/Garden%201.jpg?h=71976bb4&itok=dkfkKzXI)
When Alexcia Starks looks out her window, she can see the remains of a burnt Craftsman-style house. Two doors down from where she lives in southwest Detroit, there鈥檚 another attractive 1920s home that suffered the same fate.
鈥淭he one across the street happened last year. I knew the man who lived there,鈥 Starks says with her voice trailing off. Then, possibly looking to focus on the positive, her voice becomes stronger when she shares that both homes were recently bought and someone was renovating them.
鈥淲hen I was younger, I wondered why blight would just sit there. Now I understand that it鈥檚 not like your concern goes straight to the mayor. There are many steps in making something happen in your neighborhood. It鈥檚 just how it is. And it really does start with one person looking to make a change 鈥 that person could be you.鈥
At only 18 years old, the freshman sociology major is aware that she can play a role in making her Detroit neighborhood a more attractive, sustainable, socially just place to live. To help her better understand how to do that, she鈥檚 working as an intern for Councilwoman Raquel Casta帽eda-L贸pez office with the Building Better Blocks program.
Starks learned of the internship when she let faculty members who teach sociology know of her interest in helping re-shape Detroit neighborhoods. In addition to sharing the opportunity with Starks, she says professors also helped her polish her resume and prepped her for the interview. Starks says she鈥檚 also getting college credit for her experience.
Starks 鈥 whose photo with Casta帽eda-L贸pez is on the September cover of Detroit鈥檚 District Six newsletter 鈥 says her internship is partially in person and virtual. On weekends, she does tours of Detroit neighborhoods and businesses. And last Saturday, she spent time helping plan a playground in a field where Pattengill Elementary School used to be.
鈥淚 really want to get in touch with Detroit communities, meet the people around me and find out what they need. I also want to really surround myself with stories from the people who have lived here so I can understand Detroit鈥檚 history. When I was in Detroit schools, they didn鈥檛 teach me Detroit history 鈥 and our city over 300 years old. Isn鈥檛 that something? I want to know more about Detroit and where it鈥檚 been so I can better understand where we want to go.鈥
Starks says she doesn鈥檛 have political ambitions, but she does want to help her neighbors by better understanding the political systems in play, learning why decisions are made, and figuring out how she may be able to navigate policy and procedures in the future.
And it鈥檚 something she started before she could drive. At age 15, Starks volunteered for Mayor Mike Duggan鈥檚 re-election campaign. Starks went door-to-door canvassing Detroit neighborhoods to let them know about the 2017 election. Most of it was on foot and she says she enjoyed interacting with people in neighborhoods across the city and seeing the multicultural fabric of Detroit.
鈥淚t was so wonderful going out to neighborhoods I haven鈥檛 spent time in before. I was helping people learn what was on the ballot and reminding them to vote,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was a learning experience for me too. I met so many people and was able to ask questions about Mayor Duggan鈥檚 strategy. I didn鈥檛 get why Detroit鈥檚 downtown businesses got so much attention, while the neighborhoods seemed left out. This gave me the chance to talk with someone about it.鈥 She was told Duggan鈥檚 plan is to have a strong downtown whose success radiates out to the neighborhoods.
But until that鈥檚 fully realized, Starks says there is work to do.
Eventually, she hopes her collective experience will lead to a human rights career where she can work as a Detroit-based immigration attorney. She鈥檚 already working on learning other languages; she credits that interest to her Haitian grandmother, who is a translator. Starks says she鈥檚 looking forward to additional experiences in college that will help expand her understanding of the social and political systems that we live within.
Starks says she鈥檒l continue to combine her academics with on-the-ground experience like she鈥檚 gaining through Casta帽eda-L贸pez鈥 office because there is still blight to remove, people who need connections to resources and playgrounds to build.
鈥淚t really is about showing up. Caring for the people is what building better neighborhoods is all about.鈥