State News

 Marsha Chartrand

Can I get tested for coronavirus in Michigan and other questions answered

By Robin Erb, Ted Roelofs, and Kelly House (Bridge Magazine) It can be difficult to sort through the clamor of changing guidelines and mixed messages about coronavirus, or COVID-19. And let’s be honest: There are a whole lot of people talking without the facts. Bridge Magazine is partial to facts and experts, so we’ve worked […]

 Marsha Chartrand

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer: ‘We’re going to get through’ coronavirus

By Jonathan Oosting (Bridge Magazine) LANSING, March 11, 2020 — A day after confirming Michigan’s first two cases of coronavirus, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Wednesday urged schools, community groups and businesses to consider cancelling gatherings or events with more than 100 people. (Update as of 7:48 pm Sunday, March 15: Michigan now has 45 cases […]

 Sara Swanson

At Michigan State, deciding whether to go home or stay for the meal plan

By Kelly House (Bridge Magazine) EAST LANSING—Hours after Michigan State University stopped all in-person classes on Wednesday amid news of a coronavirus outbreak in Michigan, the 50,000-student campus had already begun to look like a ghost town. Almost immediately after university officials announced the closure and encouraged students to leave campus until in-person classes resume […]

 Marsha Chartrand

How to make your own hand sanitizer during coronavirus shortage

By Kelly House (Bridge Magazine) As coronavirus bears down on Michigan, hand sanitizer is in short supply. After news of 16 confirmed coronavirus cases in Michigan prompted prolonged school closures, canceled public events and work-from-home orders for many workers, shoppers began emptying store shelves of sanitary and medical supplies in hopes of protecting themselves against a more widespread outbreak. […]

 Marsha Chartrand

How Michigan hospitals and businesses try to keep workers happy, healthy

by Catherine Shaffer (Bridge Magazine) Cameron Williams wasn’t expecting any surprises when he showed up for a wellness screening through his employer, Detroit-based Quicken Loans, in the summer of 2017. He was 31 years old and not feeling at all sick. His life changed when the nurse told him his blood pressure was extremely elevated, […]

 Sara Swanson

Michigan clerks swamped as state rolls out voter reforms

by Riley Beggin (Bridge) Michigan’s first election with no-reason absentee voting and same-day registration Tuesday resulted in long lines at city clerk offices and an accusation of voter suppression from Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. More than 13,000 people registered to vote and cast a ballot on Election Day, Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson told reporters […]

 Sara Swanson

Michigan lawmakers move to approve $37M pet projects on Election Day

  By Mike Wilkinson, Jonathan Oosting, & Riley Beggin (Bridge Magazine) One year after Gov. Gretchen Whitmer derided millions in “pork” spending, she appears set to approve $37 million on similar projects for parks, arts centers, and special infrastructure plans. On the same day as Tuesday’s presidential primary, the state House approved $320 million in […]

 Marsha Chartrand

Another year, another plan stalls to fix transit in southeast Michigan

By Jonathan Oosting (Bridge) LANSING — A new plan to jumpstart regional transit in Metro Detroit stalled last week in the Michigan House, complicating and perhaps dooming the push for a new ballot proposal this fall. The legislation, celebrated last week by House Speaker Lee Chatfield as a “common ground” approach, would have allowed any […]

 Sara Swanson

Cow dung won’t stop coronavirus and you can open Amazon boxes from China

by Robin Erb (Bridge) Spreading as fast as the new coronavirus are half-truths, innuendo and downright dangerous lies around it, putting Michiganders’ health — as well as their wallets — at risk. One Michigan school district fought rumors that it shut down because of coronavirus. (It was a power outage.) A county health department faced […]

 Marsha Chartrand

Citizenship question is gone, but Michigan immigrants still distrust the Census

By Alexandra Schmidt (Bridge) President Donald Trump’s plans to include a citizenship question on the 2020 U.S. Census have come and gone, but they continue to spark fear among immigrants about what the government will do with information collected in the count. Community advocates say this trepidation could cost vulnerable communities federal funding. “Most people […]