Michigan
Former Michigan star RB promoted to Eastern Michigan assistant head coach
Former Michigan running back and assistant coach Mike Hart is getting a promotion on Chris Creighton’s staff at Eastern Michigan.
The school announced Monday that Hart is being elevated to assistant head coach and will oversee the receivers in 2026. Michigan’s all-time leading rusher spent last season as an offensive analyst for the Eagles.
“Coach Hart is a winner,” Creighton said in a news release. “He has the ‘It’ factor. He selflessly helped us this year as an offensive analyst and made a positive impact. We know that he will be a major addition as assistant head coach and wide receivers coach.”
Hart has 14 years of college coaching experience, including a three-year stint as Michigan’s running backs coach from 2021-23. He served as interim head coach for one game during the Wolverines’ 2023 national championship season when Jim Harbaugh was suspended.
Under Hart, Michigan’s running backs thrived. Blake Corum rushed for 1,000 yards in consecutive seasons and was a third-round pick by the Rams in 2024. The Wolverines won the Big Ten all three years Hart was on staff, but they did not renew his contract after the 2023 campaign.
The 39-year-old began his coaching career at EMU in 2011 and also has had stints at Western Michigan (2014-15), Syracuse (2016) and Indiana (2017-2020).
As a player at Michigan, Hart was a two-time Doak Walker Award finalist and finished fifth in the 2006 Heisman Trophy voting. Last season, EMU finished 4-8 but was No. 2 in the Mid-American Conference in passing yards per game.
“I am excited to be a part of Eastern Michigan football,” Hart said in a release. “Coach Creighton is one of the best leaders of men I have ever been around, and I look forward to learning and being a part of his program. EMU football and the Ypsilanti community have always held a special place in my heart, and I am excited to help the team reach our goals for the 2026 season.”
Michigan
Michigan Sen. Gary Peters backs Democratic Rep. Haley Stevens in contentious race to succeed him
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Outgoing Michigan Sen. Gary Peters is endorsing U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens as his successor, adding to a growing effort by the Democratic establishment to help her defeat progressive favorite Abdul El-Sayed in next month’s primary.
Peters, who is retiring after 12 years in the Senate, said Stevens “will be ready on day one to fight for Michigan.” The endorsement, which was announced Monday, marks a reversal for Peters, who told The Associated Press in late May that he intended to stay neutral in the race.
But since then, Democratic leaders have increasingly rallied behind Stevens as the Aug. 4 primary approaches and concerns grow that El-Sayed is too far left to succeed in November. Holding the Michigan seat is viewed as critical to Democrats’ hopes of reclaiming the Senate majority.
Stevens, a four-term House member, has campaigned as a more moderate Democrat focused on manufacturing issues in the critical battleground state. El-Sayed, who has never held elected office, is running on a more progressive platform that includes Medicare for All and campaign finance reform. He’s also been outspoken about the war in Gaza, which has been a fault line within the party.
Concerns about Michigan have only intensified after Democrats’ attempt to flip a Senate seat in Maine was thrown into turmoil when nominee Graham Platner withdrew from the race following a sexual assault allegation last week. Democrats there must now choose a new nominee to face Republican Sen. Susan Collins.
Peters’ endorsement also comes after state Sen. Mallory McMorrow dropped out of Michigan’s Democratic primary earlier this month, transforming the race into a head-to-head contest between Stevens and El-Sayed.
“Senator Peters knows what it takes to win in Michigan, and he knows what Michigan needs from our next U.S. Senator: grit, effectiveness, hard work, and Michigan common sense,” Stevens said in a statement. “I am honored to have his support.”
Michigan U.S. Senate candidates, Abdul El-Sayed, left, and Rep. Haley Stevens, D-Mich., are displayed on a television during a debate inside the spin room at WoodTV studios on Tuesday, July 7, 2026, in Grand Rapids, Mich. Credit: AP/Kristen Norman
Peters won two Senate races in Michigan and led Senate Democrats’ campaign arm during the 2022 and 2024 election cycles.
His endorsement adds to Stevens’ growing support from the Democratic establishment, with the race being viewed nationally as a broader fight over the party’s direction.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York has also backed Stevens, along with Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada. El-Sayed has support from Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and, more recently, Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland.
The campaign has grown increasingly contentious in recent weeks.
El-Sayed has attacked Stevens over tens of millions of dollars in outside spending supporting her campaign, including by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. Stevens has criticized El-Sayed for not disclosing his personal financial records.
During a July 7 debate, each accused the other of running a negative campaign.
“Abdul has spent this entire campaign attacking me,” Stevens said.
The Democratic winner will likely face Republican Mike Rogers, a former member of the U.S. House running uncontested for his party’s nomination, in what is expected to be one of the country’s most expensive and closely watched Senate races.
Michigan
Michigan churches strengthen safety after recent attacks on houses of worship
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. – Whether it’s a church, mosque, synagogue, houses of worship have long been viewed as sanctuaries and safe havens.
But with violent incidents such as the attack on the LDS Church in Grand Blanc last fall and the attack on the Temple Israel in West Bloomfield back in March, they are facing a new and scary reality balancing safety with worship
“People in congregations like to feel when they come to church, that they’re safe,” Rev. Chris Yaw, the pastor at St. David’s Episcopal Church in Southfield, said on Sunday morning. “They wanna feel like this a place I can come to where I can be myself, not have to worry about gun violence…”
He brought members of the Southfield Police Department after 10:00 a.m. service to talk about emergency planning and situational awareness, all to help parishioners stay vigilant in the off-hand chance something bad happens.
“Because (violence) is such a new and disheartening unfolding of events, we wanna make sure to bring the experts in to tell us what we should be looking at,” he said.
While crime overall in houses of worship remains low, according to the non-partisan Violence Prevention Project, there were 399 violent incidents in houses of worship here in the United States between 2000 and 2025 – resulting in 512 deaths and 213 injuries.
“The thing that people need to understand is that you cannot stop living,” Southfield Police Lt. Teresa Young said. “You do need to be more aware of your surroundings. If something doesn’t feel right in your heart, your soul, your belly, then follow those instincts.”
Young helped lead the event this morning. It’s similar to programs that the Detroit Police and Michigan State Police have run over the last year
“I feel safe coming here,” parishioner Elizabeth Greene said. She was flanked by her little sisters and is relatively new to this church. While she feels safe worshipping here, it is a new experience that won’t change things for her.
“I’ve never experienced a church giving education about their safety protocols,” she said. “Just being aware of it is enough.”
Copyright 2026 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
Michigan
Sturgis closure may be ‘first of more’ for Michigan rural hospitals
Beth Kelley spent most of her life working at Sturgis Hospital. For 32 years, the nurse said it was “unusual to walk down the hall and not recognize somebody.” The independently owned hospital had served its community in rural St. Joseph County for more than a century.
“I like the small hospital atmosphere,” Kelley, 56, told Bridge Michigan. “I know this is maybe a little cliché, but it’s like family.”
When administrators held a town hall last month to tell staff the hospital would close about 70 hours later, Kelley said the room filled with “shock” and “devastation.” The decision left many long-serving employees like herself “scrambled trying to find a job” while they worked their remaining shift hours.
Sturgis Hospital shuttered its doors June 19, citing “years of ongoing financial challenges” facing rural health care providers. The facility had 84 licensed beds and about 300 associates working, according to the hospital.
There were warning signs. The facility had been winding down services in recent years, even as it obtained a city-issued pandemic relief loan, a state lifeline and new federal status — Sturgis Hospital became Michigan’s first designated rural emergency hospital in 2023, which allows for increased support from the US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
It’s not the only rural hospital in Michigan to be impacted by a shifting health care landscape. These health care facilities, sometimes the only medical care providers available for miles, have been navigating several problems, including declining payer reimbursements, rising operating costs, and a federal reworking of Medicaid and Medicare — programs used by the bulk of patients in rural hospital settings.
For Kelley and others, the Sturgis Hospital closure is part of a bigger trend and serves as a wake-up call for her and others in the field.
“As a nurse, we took care of patients, and that’s all we did. It’s all we cared about. We didn’t care about the financial end of it,” Kelley said. “Those days are gone.”
Service cuts
Rural hospital closures, reductions, restructuring and consolidation dominate the contemporary health care landscape in Michigan, according to researchers, physicians and policy advocates working in the field.
For one thing, Michigan’s population is aging, which puts strain on the state’s health care system. In addition, many point to problematic payment models that don’t offset costs for service, and federal program reductions outlined in HR 1 — the “One Big Beautiful Bill.”
Five rural hospitals have closed in Michigan since 2005, according to the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
As Congress debated the One Big Beautiful Bill last year, the Sheps Center estimated four of 63 rural hospitals in Michigan could be at risk for closure, highlighting facilities that had run a three-year deficit or existed as one of the top Medicaid revenue earners in the country. Sturgis Hospital was not included.
Even if a hospital does manage to remain open, many have to drop major parts of their operation to survive. Last year, the labor and delivery unit at Aspirus Ironwood Hospital and the obstetrics unit at MyMichigan Medical Center in Tawas City closed.
Rural birthing hospitals are costly and difficult to staff, according to Michael Shepherd, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health focused on rural health disparities and health policy in the US.
“Half of births in rural communities are being paid for by Medicaid at the moment,” Shepherd told Bridge following passage of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, which calls for slashing Medicaid. “So what you’re talking about is a not very profitable service line — it’s very expensive and one that’s about to face massive financial shortfalls.”
Sturgis Hospital had closed its birthing center in 2018. Last month, it ended the remaining services nearby residents relied on — surgery, laboratory, medical imaging, physical therapy, endoscopy and cardiac rehabilitation services.
From 2 miles to 25
While other clinics exist to fill the gap, the absence of an emergency department in Sturgis has left facilities in Three Rivers, Coldwater and LaGrange, Indiana as the closest alternatives to patients.
That reality has a “substantial operational effect” on the city’s emergency medical services, according to Sturgis Director of Public Safety Ryan Banaszak. When ambulances leave their service areas, he said longer distances and travel times affect their ability to respond.
“What was once approximately a 2-mile transport for patients has now become closer to 25 miles, which takes ambulance personnel and equipment out of service for a much longer period of time,” Banaszak said in an email.
It’s more than distance for some patients — while Parkview LaGrange Hospital may be the closest drive from Sturgis at less than 20 minutes, low-income patients may still face obstacles finding medical coverage.
“If you are a Michigan Medicaid patient, you can’t simply go across the border to another hospital,” said Joe Gavan, CEO of Cass Family Clinic, a federally qualified health center operating in rural southwest Michigan. The loss of the Sturgis Hospital, he said, is “a huge burden on the folks that are impacted the most.”
Rebecca Burns, health officer of the Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency, said she is “saddened by the loss” of the hospital. The public health agency continues to operate a site in Sturgis.
“We stand ready to continue to provide public health preventative services to residents as they need them,” Burns said.
Another perspective
Dr. Andrea Wendling sees a pattern play across rural systems which lands patients in emergency rooms and causes hospitals to operate on tight margins.
“People aren’t doing the primary care and they’re not doing the preventative care in between,” said Wendling, a family doctor who practices at a clinic in Boyne City and serves as senior associate dean for academic affairs for the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine.
“When they’re not able to pay that bill and there’s not insurance for them to pay, that’s a loss for those hospitals, and they need to have a certain percentage of paying customers in order to be able to fund the service that they provide.”
Wendling, who has spent much of her life living and working in rural hospital settings and ensuring its continued workforce, worries the Sturgis Hospital closure is “the first of more closings that we’re going to see over the next few years” in the state.
She said independent hospitals are pressured to join bigger systems for economic benefit: Acquisition allows for smoother negotiations with big insurance payers, stronger purchasing power and reduced administrative costs.
But acquisition is no guarantee of survival. Sturgis Hospital had been acquired by a health care company in 2023, but city officials reported last August the deal was slow to close “by all indications.” A representative from the company declined to comment.
“Despite extensive efforts by hospital leadership and the Board of Directors to secure the hospital’s future, including pursuing potential acquisition opportunities and partnerships, a sustainable path forward could not be achieved,” Sturgis Hospital noted in its announcement.
The closure underscores the need for rural hospitals to use every tool for financial sustainability, including dollars from the 340B drug cost program and “ swing beds,” according to Lauren LaPine-Ray, vice president of policy and rural health for the Michigan Health & Hospital Association. Under swing bed arrangements, hospitals can shift the use of their beds to provide either acute or post-acute care on an as-needed basis.
“Rural hospitals need sustainable policies that account for the unique challenges associated with providing care in communities with lower patient volumes, workforce shortages and populations that are older, sicker and more likely to rely on Medicare and Medicaid,” LaPine-Ray said in an email.
Michigan has received a $173 million grant from the Rural Health Transformation Program, but the federal initiative has been scrutinized by hospital leaders operating in the targeted areas.
The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services has been criticized because under its grant funding criteria, some populous counties, including Wayne, Washtenaw and Oakland, would qualify as “partially rural” while St. Clair, Monroe, Jackson and Ottawa counties would not.
Looking forward
For Kelley, the change the hospital’s closure forces is out of her hands.
“I was pretty comfortable, so to start over is a little rough,” the nurse said.
The hospital is behind on paying out certain paid time off and retirement benefits, Kelley said, and she’s “doubtful” she’ll get back her vacation and sick time.
Representatives for the Michigan Nurses Association say union members lost health insurance coverage on the day of closure, with some employees reporting issues getting temporary COBRA coverage.
A call to the hospital by Bridge was not answered in time for publication of this story.
Kelley, who lives in Centreville, about 17 miles away from Sturgis, has found new work at Three Rivers Health Hospital as an as-needed nurse working part-time.
It’s an adjustment from her guaranteed, full-time pay position at Sturgis Hospital. “I’m hoping for 40 hours a week, but that’s probably not realistic.”
While the commute will be slightly closer for Kelley, she said the closure of the Sturgis Hospital will mean longer drives for some patients to reach a health care facility.
“For some of those people, it could be a matter of life and death.”
___
This story was originally published by Bridge Michigan and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
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