Michigan
$50M secured for mid-Michigan road and bridge repairs
LANSING, Mich. (WNEM) – The Federal Freeway Administration (FHWA) awarded $50 million to Michigan for emergency repairs made after the Could 2020 dam failures in mid-Michigan.
The funding will reimburse the state for street and bridge repairs made following the flooding.
Practically 30 roads and bridges throughout the area had been closed and suffered injury, in line with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s Workplace. Three bridges had been closed to site visitors after being washed away. US-10 at Sanford Lake was additionally closed resulting from excessive scour of bridge piers and the bridge approaches being washed away.
The Michigan Division of Transportation has been working with the FHWA, the Midland County Street Fee, the village of Sanford to reestablish mobility throughout Midland and Gladwin counties.
“This grant will carry federal taxpayer {dollars} again to Michigan and assist us proceed to repair the rattling roads and bridges,” Governor Gretchen Whitmer mentioned. “In 2020, after historic flooding and dam failures, we took motion to repair impacted roads and bridges, and I’m grateful that Michigan is getting that cash again. Since I took workplace by way of the top of this 12 months, we are going to repair 16,000 lane miles of street and 1,200 bridges, and we have to maximize each greenback we’ve got to spend money on our infrastructure and make it simpler for households and companies to get round our state. We now have been by way of loads over the past couple of years, however robust occasions name for robust individuals, and we are going to maintain getting issues carried out and shifting Michigan ahead.”
“These funds with assist communities throughout our nation restore roads and bridges broken by extreme climate occasions, which have gotten more and more frequent due to local weather change,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg mentioned. “From current hurricanes that struck the Gulf Coast, to wildfires in California and floods and mudslides in quite a few states, we should handle the devastating impacts of local weather change and work to construct extra sustainable transportation infrastructure to higher stand up to its impacts for years to return.”
Copyright 2022 WNEM. All rights reserved.
Michigan
Second Florida man sentenced for stealing rent checks in Michigan
A second Florida man was sentenced on Thursday for stealing rent checks in four Michigan counties.
Rafael Rodriguez, 44, was sentenced at the 42nd Circuit Court to serve between six and 20 years in prison, the Michigan Department of Attorney General announced in a press release.
Rodriguez, along with co-defendant Juan Miguel Rodriguez-Venegas, of Florida, stole money orders and cash from apartment complex drop boxes and mobile home parks between 2019 and 2022, according to the release.
The two men targeted residences in Oakland, Saginaw, Bay and Midland Counties, according to the release. The Midland County Prosecutor’s Office and Department of Attorney General filed joint charges in March.
Both men pleaded guilty in August to one count of conducting a criminal enterprise and agreed to pay restitution.
Rodriguez-Venegas, 55, was sentenced to serve between two to 20 years in prison in September.
Reached Friday, Rodriguez’ attorney, Mitchell Manwell, declined to comment on the case.
“Michiganders work hard and deserve better than having their rent payments fished out of drop boxes and stolen by criminals,” Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said at the time Rodriguez pled, according to the release. “Thanks to our partnership with Midland County Prosecuting Attorney J. Dee Brooks, the perpetrators of this scheme will be held accountable and required to compensate these rent-theft victims.”
Rodriguez’ sentencing is the latest development in a case of stolen checks in Michigan.
A former Warren nursing home manager was charged in September for allegedly stealing more than $7,792 in checks from eight nursing home residents. The Southfield man was charged with six embezzlement counts.
Check fraud cases escalated from 350,000 reports of check fraud in 2021 to approximately 680,000 in 2023, the Associated Press reported. Postal authorities and bank officials warned Americans to avoid mailing checks or to use secure mail drops inside post offices.
Check usage has been on the decline for decades with credit and debit cards’ popularity surging. The average size of checks Americans rose from $673 in 1990 – or $1,602 in today’s dollars – to $2,652 last year, per AP.
Michigan
Michigan Arab American community leaders urging Trump to bring peace
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Michigan
Man uses racial slur while testifying against Michigan Capitol gun ban
Lansing — A man disrupted an already tense Michigan Senate committee hearing Thursday on whether guns should be permanently banned from the state Capitol building by using a racial slur to refer to people in Detroit while testifying.
The individual identified himself as Avi Rachlin and said he was representing “Groypers for America,” referring to a far-right extremist movement, according to the testimony card he submitted to the Michigan Senate Civil Rights, Judiciary and Public Safety Committee.
Rachlin opened his remarks by contending that Democrats’ efforts to push the gun prohibition for the state Capitol and House and Senate office buildings went against the “will of the people,” who had voted on Nov. 5 to elect Republican Donald Trump as president and give back control of the state House to the GOP.
“This is legislation that targets White people,” Rachlin said. “It is racial because the people who carry in the Capitol are primarily White people …, and this is retaliation for the only demographic that overwhelmingly voted to support Donald Trump.”
Rachlin then said lawmakers should focus on people who shoot others in places like Detroit. He noted that the committee’s chairwoman, Sen. Stephanie Chang, D-Detroit, represents a portion of the city. Rachlin then said the individuals are “overwhelmingly 13 to 34 year old Sub-Saharan African n——.”
In response, Chang hit her gavel and said the committee was going to move on.
“Are you going to have armed guards remove me?” Rachlin asked. “Armed men with guns?”
Sen. Jim Runestad, R-White Lake, interjected, asking “Did I just hear you call a group of people by some epithet?”
“Yes,” Rachlin replied.
Sen. Ruth Johnson, R-Holly, told Rachlin, “The term that you used is inappropriate, and it will not get you anywhere in this Legislature.”
Moments later, the committee voted 4-2 to send the bills to the full Senate, with Runestad and Johnson in opposition.
The measures would generally prohibit guns inside the Michigan Capitol, the Anderson House Office Building and the Binsfeld Senate Office Building in Lansing. However, a lawmaker with a concealed pistol license would still be able to carry a weapon in the buildings.
Currently, under a policy of the Michigan State Capitol Commission, guns are banned inside the Capitol. That standard doesn’t apply to the House and Senate office buildings.
Sen. Dayna Polehanki, D-Livonia, one of the sponsors of the bills, has argued that lawmakers need to put the prohibition into law so a future commission can’t change it on its own. Polehanki said it is “very important” to her to get the bills through the Legislature by the end of the year, before Republicans take back control of the state House.
“As you can see, my Republican colleagues, who voted no, I guess don’t believe in protecting … Michigan citizens in the Capitol from the real threat of gun violence,” Polehanki said.
The Livonia lawmaker said there are enough votes in the Senate to pass the bills.
Polehanki and Sen. Sarah Anthony, D-Lansing, both testified on Thursday about protests during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 — before the gun ban was in place — that brought individuals with guns into the gallery of the Senate.
“It was just a few years ago that many of us were in this building absolutely terrified as firearms were pointed at us while we were trying to do our jobs,” Anthony said.
Runestad asked Anthony if she reported the guns being pointed at her to Capitol security. Anthony said she had made a formal complaint to the Michigan State Police and House sergeants. Runestad interrupted Anthony. Then, she said, “I raised a lot of nieces and nephews, and I’m not shy when it comes to addressing temper tantrums.”
A representative from the National Rifle Association and Tom Lambert, legislative director of the group Michigan Open Carry, testified against the bills.
Lambert said Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, would have prosecuted individuals if they pointed guns at lawmakers during protests in 2020. Michigan already has a law against brandishing a firearm, which would include pointing a gun in a threatening manner, Lambert noted.
“The bills are a solution in search of a problem,” Lambert argued.
cmauger@detroitnews.com
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