-
Incumbent Lansing City Councilmembers Ryan Kost in Ward 1 and Adam Hussain in Ward 3 will keep their seats.
-
Lansing voters elected Tamera Carter and Trini Lopez Pehlivanoglu to serve in at-large seats on the City Council. The two will be sworn into office in January.
-
The Capital City will draft new rules and regulations for the city's government during a years-long revision process.
-
Lansing is seeking a federal grant to consider projects to benefit residents living near I-496. That could include pedestrian bridges, bike lanes, or green spaces.
-
Lansing officials are preparing to construct a new $175 million public safety complex that will centralize the city's police and fire departments and the 54-A District Court.
-
During the Nov. 7 general election, Lansing voters will pick two candidates for the City Council who they want to represent them on at-large seats.
-
In the Nov. 7 general election, voters in Ward 3 in Lansing's southwest neighborhoods will decide who they want to represent them on City Council.
-
The November ballot asks Lansing voters if there should be "a general revision of the Lansing City Charter." If approved, the proposal could pave the way for dramatic changes at City Hall.
-
In the Nov. 7 general election, Ward 1 voters in Lansing's Eastside will decide who they want to represent them on City Council.
-
Audrey Clare Farley tells the story of the Morlok sisters in her book, Girls and their Monsters.