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Blight Elimination Program funds still benefitting northeast Michigan

One of many promotional visuals from Property Cleanout Michigan’s website. This is a home the company cleaned the outside of, as seen by the dumpsters in the bottom right. CEO Vincent Dontje said the size of the clean up and how many dumpsters are needed factor into the costs of his services.
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Property Cleanout Michigan
One of many promotional visuals from Property Cleanout Michigan’s website. This is a home the company cleaned the outside of, as seen by the dumpsters in the bottom right. CEO Vincent Dontje said the size of the clean up and how many dumpsters are needed factor into the costs of his services.

Michigan state law defines blighted areas as “a portion of a municipality, developed or undeveloped, improved or unimproved, with business or residential uses, marked by a demonstrated pattern of deterioration in physical, economic, or social conditions.” While usually viewed as a problem encountered in large, urban areas, small rural areas are also facing this problem.

In February, Governor Gretchen Whitmer awarded $72.5 million in blight elimination funds to assist communities across Michigan. The funds were distributed in four rounds through 2023 into 2024, and northeast Michigan saw funds dispersed across the first three rounds according to the Blight Elimination Program Awards page. The region received roughly $2.8 million, which is 4% of all the funds awarded across the state.

“Blight elimination is vital for the well-being and future success of our state,” Whitmer said in a press release. “Our commitment today is an investment in the long-term prosperity and vitality of our state, ensuring that future generations have access to thriving, vibrant neighborhoods where they can live, work and prosper.”

Vincent Dontje is the CEO of Property Cleanout Michigan, which offers various clean up services across the state. A man who grew up in northern Michigan and always wanted to come back, he saw the need for home and property cleanouts that weren’t just “junk hauling.”

“I had this thought, that ‘I’m sure I could make money doing this,’ and I have,” he said. “It’s grown substantially in the last 10 years.”

Dontje said his business started offering blight cleaning services two years ago. He estimates by the end of this year, 20% of their revenue will have come from blight cleanups.

“This year we bought a booth at the Township Supervisor’s Conference in Traverse City to give out materials,” he said. “Since then, the phone’s have been ringing off the hook for them.”

Dontje said Whitmer’s Blight Elimination Program may be one of the reasons this service has grown in popularity.

Dontje said homes are often cluttered on the inside and outside, but when contacted by the city his crews only clean the outside. His sister business, Hoarder Cleanup Michigan, cleans up the insides of homes for those struggling.

“We want them to know that they have no reason to be embarrassed about anything and we’re here to help” he said. “We do this not only because it’s a business, but because my team cares.”

Courtney Boyd is a newsroom intern for WCMU based at The Alpena News
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