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The bills seek to restore access to medical care that was lost to many survivors after the passage of Michigan's auto no-fault law in 2019.
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Michigan lawmakers have finished this year's scheduled legislative sessions without reaching agreement on a spending package that would have totaled almost $500 million.
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Some of Michigan’s COVID-19 workplace policies would be repealed under legislation passed Thursday in the state Senate.
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The package would allow foster family homes to receive an extended license, create tax incentives to provide paid adoption leave, and expand the definition of “relative” for placement.
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June is traditionally acknowledged as Pride Month to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall uprising following a police raid on a gay bar New York City’s Greenwich Village.
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A child care bill package passed the Michigan Senate on June 8 with wide bipartisan support. Supporters said the legislation is necessary to help address the child care need in both urban and rural parts of the state.
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The state attorney general’s office has opened an investigation into whether campaign finance laws were broken by two political funds with ties to Michigan Senate Republicans.
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Supporters say pausing the gas tax is necessary as fuel prices soar.
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An effort Wednesday in the Michigan Senate force a vote on gun safety bills failed. On a party-line vote, Republicans returned the measures to a committee where they’ve sat for 11 months.
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Michigan could study building more nuclear facilities under a plan advancing in the state Legislature.