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Michigan City Fireworks

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Michigan City Fireworks


MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (WNDU) – Today 16 News Now spent time checking on Fourth of July celebrations all across Michiana.

Near the beach in Michigan City people from all walks of life came together to celebrate the nation’s birthday.

Ci Claudia Almaraz, a two-time Miss Teen Indiana Latina, has strong feelings about the importance of Independence Day.

“As Latino, as a Mexican I love that Americans celebrate our culture, so now it is our turn to give it back to them and celebrate the USA. My dad migrated here 21 years ago so we’re here celebrating why the main reason my dad made that sacrifice and to just celebrate and spend time with the family, have a cookout, have some carne asada, and just enjoy the time and the fireworks later on tonight,” said Almaraz.

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Tomorrow Michigan City will be hosting a firework fundraising party for the non-profit organization, ‘Save the Dunes’.

The event takes place at the Sunset Grill Rooftop Cantina from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m.

The costs for adults to attend are $30 while children 12 and up is $20.



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Short-term rental company sues Michigan over $18.7M tax bill

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Short-term rental company sues Michigan over .7M tax bill


A nationwide short-term rental company is suing the state of Michigan over a tax audit that found the company owes about $18.7 million in unpaid use taxes to the state.

HomeAway, a Texas-based company best known for its vacation rental platform Vrbo, received a September bill for taxes due from the Michigan Department of Treasury for unpaid use taxes and interest in 2020, 2021 and 2022, totaling $18.7 million, according to the lawsuit filed in the Michigan Court of Claims.

HomeAway maintained in its Dec. 18 filing that it is the homeowners themselves who are responsible for collecting use taxes related to the short-term rental of their homes and remitting those taxes to the state.

“All funds representing use tax collected from guests were disbursed to the hosts,” the company said in its filing.

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The state Department of Treasury and HomeAway declined to comment on pending litigation.

The tax fight comes amid a separate, but related, years-long fight in communities across the state and in the Legislature over how to best regulate and, in some cases, tax short-term rentals, which began to grow in popularity in Michigan after the 2008 housing crisis.

The Legislature has toyed with the idea of banning any local regulations over short-term rentals, putting some limits on those local regulations or establishing a statewide policy for short-term rental housing. State Rep. Mark Tisdel, R-Rochester Hills, helped introduce bills this fall that would allow communities to hold a vote on whether to tax short-term rentals locally to pay for essential services such as police or fire. The legislation has yet to receive a hearing.

In its suit filed Dec. 18 in the Michigan Court of Claims, HomeAway maintained that it was cognizant of the state’s 6% use tax and made provisions for its collection. But the ultimate remittance of that tax to the state is left to the homeowner.

When onboarding, according to the suit, a host or homeowner is given options regarding how they collect taxes. In Michigan, they could make it a percentage of the rental amount at booking or collect and remit the tax separately.

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In either case, HomeAway argued, the host was responsible for paying the use tax. If the host made it a percentage of the rental amount due at booking, the taxes charged in the booking process were sent back to the host for remittance to the state. If the host indicated he or she would collect and remit on their own, the entire process was left to the host, according to the filing.

“The host acknowledged and represented that the host would handle tax collection from guests independent from HomeAway’s online checkout process,” HomeAway wrote in its filing. “…HomeAway never received or retained any tax amounts.”

In January 2023, the Department of Treasury began an audit of the prior three years, and in June 2025, the department issued a bill for taxes due for the audit period. The department found HomeAway wasn’t responsible for paying taxes if the host indicated he or she would collect and remit on their own. But the department maintained the company was responsible for remitting taxes where the host picked the option requiring the tax to be a percentage of the rental amount due at booking, the lawsuit said.

On Sept. 19, 2025, the Department of Treasury issued an $18.7 million bill, with about $15.1 million owed in use taxes and $3.6 million owed in interest. The bill included a total of $676,246 in use tax and interest for 2020, $8.6 million for 2021 and $9.5 million for 2022.

“The department — for the first time during the audit — alleged that for all bookings for which tax was collected on behalf of and at the request of the host, HomeAway unjustly enriched itself by failing to remit the collected taxes to the department,” the filing said.

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The state treasury bills, attached to the lawsuit as exhibits, only note that the money due is for use tax and interest following an audit. There is no mention in the bills of which type of rentals HomeAway was responsible for when it came to remittance of the use tax.

HomeAway, in its lawsuit, denied that it was unjustly enriched, arguing the company didn’t keep any of the tax payments, but instead forwarded them to homeowners to remit to the state.

“It was the hosts — not HomeAway — that were responsible for remittance of use tax to the departments,” the filing said.

HomeAway also alleged the department’s audit violated the federal and state Equal Protection Clauses because it treated HomeAway differently from other similarly situated taxpayers.

“There is no precedent to support the department’s allegation, nor has the department applied this theory to similarly situated taxpayers,” the filing said.

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eleblanc@detroitnews.com



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Northwestern and Central Michigan are heading for a defensive showdown in GameAbove Sports Bowl

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Northwestern and Central Michigan are heading for a defensive showdown in GameAbove Sports Bowl


DETROIT — Christmas bowl games often turn into scoring bonanzas, where the first team to 40 points is the winner.

The GameAbove Sports Bowl might be the exception to that rule — 20 points could be more than enough.

The game Friday pits Northwestern and Central Michigan, two Great Lakes schools that combine strong defenses with low-scoring offenses.

The Wildcats (6-6) are 34th in the country defensively, allowing 20.9 points per game, but 103rd on offense at 22.5. The Chippewas (7-5) are built along the same lines, ranking 50th on defense (22.7 points per game) and 93rd offensively (23.8).

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“When we turned on the tape, it was like looking in the mirror,” Northwestern coach David Braun said. “Central Michigan is a team that is committed to running the ball and playing great defense. It is a team with great fundamentals and great technique, and a great deal of physicality. Those are the same things we teach at Northwestern.”

Central Michigan coach Matt Drinkall had the same experience when he began preparations for the game.

“I chuckled when Coach Braun said that about looking in the mirror, because we were like, ‘I already know what this film is going to look like before I turn it on,’” he said. “Then you turn it on and it reaffirms everything you want to see from a good football team.”

Central Michigan head coach Matt Drinkall looks on from the sideline during the game against San Jose State during an NCAA football game on Aug. 29, 2025 in San Jose, Calif. Credit: AP/Lachlan Cunningham

Tiernan at home

The Wildcats might focus on the defensive side of the ball, but their biggest star will be playing offense in front of home fans. Offensive tackle Caleb Tiernan was named to the All-Big Ten second team and is considered one of the best linemen in the country. Ford Field is located less than 20 miles from Detroit Country Day, where Tiernan played in high school.

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His college career will end in the same stadium as his high school career: He finished his run at Country Day with a state championship won at Ford Field.

“In my junior year, we lost there, so I wasn’t much of a fan of that place,” he said. “But I won in my senior year and the Lions have started to win, so my attitude has changed. I’m extremely excited to play there this year.”

Platoon-style quarterbacking

Central Michigan historically has built around running quarterbacks, but it helps if they can throw a little. This season, the Chippewas are getting that production by using two players at the position.

Joe Labas, who started his career at Iowa, is the passer. He has thrown for 1,676 yards and 12 touchdowns, completing 68.9% of his passes with only six interceptions. He is not a runner, though, having gained minus-4 yards on the ground with no touchdowns.

That’s where Angel Flores comes in. He is second on the team with 519 yards rushing and leads the Chippewas with eight touchdowns. He is not a terrible passer, averaging 7.2 yards per attempt, but he averages fewer than four passes per game.

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Fitzgerald leads the defense

Northwestern cornerback Robert Fitzgerald intercepted only one pass but led the Big Ten with 68 solo tackles and six tackles for loss. He can’t be accused of padding his stats against the easiest teams on the Wildcats’ schedule: He had 10 solo tackles and an interception against Michigan, 13 total tackles against Tulane, 10 against Oregon and eight at Southern California.

Heldman key for Central

If the Chippewas have a chance at the Boxing Day upset (the Wildcats are favored by 10 1/2 points, according to BetMGM Sportsbook), they will need a big day from defensive lineman Michael Heldman. The redshirt senior finished the season with 10 1/2 sacks and 16 1/2 tackles for loss, including five sacks and 7 1/2 tackles for loss in the final three games of the season.

Central Michigan won the first two of those games, beating Buffalo and Kent State to get to 7-4 before losing the finale to Toledo.



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Michigan State Police trooper notices stolen vehicle in front of him, arrests driver

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Michigan State Police trooper notices stolen vehicle in front of him, arrests driver



A Michigan State Police trooper on patrol arrested a driver in Detroit after noticing that the car in front of him was reported stolen.

Police say at about 11:30 a.m. on Wednesday, the tooper was on northbound Lodge Freeway near Glendale Street and began following the car. MSP says the driver, a 50-year-old man from Pontiac, pulled into a parking lot near Davison Road and La Salle Boulevard, got out and ran away. 

The trooper ran after the driver, catching up to him. After fighting with the trooper, the driver surrendered and was detained. MSP says back-up troopers were called before the driver was arrested. MSP says the trooper used his taser several times, but it did not affect the suspect.

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The suspect was lodged pending review from prosecutors. MSP says no one was hurt in the incident.

“Another addition for Santa’s naughty list,” said MSP Lieutenant Mike Shaw. “Great work by the trooper getting this suspect off the streets before he could do more harm. The suspect can now spend the holiday in jail waiting for his court appearance.”



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