Associated Press
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Michigan’s record-high number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients has dipped, the first drop in 49 days as health leaders continue to urge vaccinations while describing a dire situation inside hospitals.
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Enbridge Energy is trying to shift to federal court a Michigan lawsuit seeking shutdown of an oil pipeline that runs beneath a channel linking two of the Great Lakes.
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A coalition took a step closer in its effort to have voters decide how Michigan should cap interest rates on payday loans.
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A 41-year-old Michigan man has been arrested and accused of using chemical spray on law enforcement officers as part of a mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.
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Michigan’s attorney general says her office will review events that occurred before the mass shooting that left four students dead at Oxford High School, despite the district’s rejection of her offer to be a third-party investigator.
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The prosecutor overseeing the case against the student accused in last week’s deadly school shooting has left open the possibility that school officials could also face charges.
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A new Michigan law makes more firefighters with cancer eligible for workers’ compensation benefits.
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Honda is recalling nearly 723,000 SUVs and pickup trucks because the hoods can open while the vehicles are moving.
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A third 22-member medical team from the U.S. military is being deployed to Michigan, where hospitals are grappling with record-high numbers of COVID-19 patients amid the state’s fourth surge of infections.
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Members of the United Auto Workers union apparently will approve picking their leaders in direct elections.