06/14/2026
Professor of Environmental Health Sciences Devon Payne-Sturges recently participated in the Michigan Road Scholar Tour, an annual five-day traveling seminar funded by the U-M Office of the Provost that takes faculty across the state to learn firsthand about Michigan's economy, government, culture, health and social issues, and communities. Designed to strengthen ties between the university and the people it serves, the program introduces faculty to the places most U-M students call home and surfaces ways research and scholarship can address real state needs.
The tour spanned more than a dozen stops across the Lower and Upper Peninsulas. In Detroit, Payne-Sturges visited Focus: HOPE, a nonprofit fighting poverty through food access, early childhood education, and workforce development that serves tens of thousands of seniors across 18 counties. A meeting with Tribal Council members of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians surfaced research and program evaluation needs in housing, youth outreach, grant capacity, and community development that Payne-Sturges hopes can become the foundation for future partnerships with Michigan Public Health. In Lansing, the group learned about the Michigan Department of Education's Indigenous Education Initiative and their "Step Into Our Stories" curriculum—12 years in the making, developed with elders, youth, educators, and artists from tribal nations across Michigan—a reminder, as Payne-Sturges noted, that the Anishinaabek are here, still living and working and sharing land with the state.
"I hope to find ways for the School of Public Health to follow up and create partnerships with the tribal council," she wrote. "Michigan Road Scholars are really becoming a close group."
Read more about her trip: https://myumi.ch/jVwqZ