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The Metro: ‘Unseen’ highlights the immediate crisis of missing Black girls

According to the National Crime Information Center more than 271,000 girls and women were reported missing in 2022 alone. 36% of them were Black.

These are not just numbers. They are daughters, sisters, classmates, and friends. And too often, their stories are underreported, or not reported at all.

Black girls and women are disproportionately impacted by violence, trafficking, and systemic neglect. And that neglect has consequences. It has led to higher rates of disappearance than their white counterparts and far less urgency when they go missing.

The loss of a Black girl doesn’t just affect a family. It ripples through entire communities, through classrooms, neighborhoods, and peer groups, leaving behind fear, grief, and anger that rarely make headlines.

“Unseen” is a new production by Teen Hype that confronts this silence head-on. It invites audiences into a necessary conversation about what young people—especially Black girls—are facing today, and what it means to be unseen in moments when visibility can save lives.

Teen HYPE is a Detroit-based organization dedicated to empowering young people through education, advocacy, and holistic creative expression.

“Unseen” is directed by Teen Hype alum Mallory Childs, who is currently a sophomore at Spelman College in Atlanta. She and Teen HYPE co-founder Ambra Redrick join the show to talk about the project.  

Co-founder and CEO of Teen HYPE Ambra Redrick.
Co-founder and CEO of Teen HYPE Ambra Redrick. The organization is celebrating 21 years of helping Detroit teens.

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on demand.

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The post The Metro: ‘Unseen’ highlights the immediate crisis of missing Black girls appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Michigan lawsuit over COVID risks for disaster cleanup workers ends in settlement

A lawsuit alleging that disaster-recovery workers were put in unsafe, overcrowded conditions during early pandemic cleanup work in mid-Michigan has been resolved through a confidential settlement, the Sugar Law Center for Economic and Social Justice announced this week.

The post Michigan lawsuit over COVID risks for disaster cleanup workers ends in settlement appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Court of Appeals sides with ShotSpotter critics in Detroit, finding city ‘repeatedly’ violated transparency law

A state appeals court handed a partial victory to critics of Detroit’s controversial ShotSpotter surveillance system, ruling that city officials violated a transparency ordinance when they approved contracts for the gunshot detection technology without properly notifying the public. In a published decision released Thursday, a divided Michigan Court of Appeals panel found that the Detroit […]

The post Court of Appeals sides with ShotSpotter critics in Detroit, finding city ‘repeatedly’ violated transparency law appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

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