Our spring campaign is in full bloom! Your support today helps us deliver the fact-based, nonpartisan news that Michigan deserves. We've set a goal to raise $65,000 by May 13 to fund our journalism throughout the year.
The link between loneliness and health troubles is real. Agencies are turning to everything from buddy programs to animatronic pets to help ease isolation made worse by the coronavirus.
Dorm occupancy was just 63 percent this year, prompting CMU to consolidate its on-campus housing. It’s another example of the effects of waning enrollment in some of Michigan’s universities.
The Capitol reporter is honored for his coverage of the fallout from the 2020 election. Bridge wins top honors for digital site and 19 other awards in Michigan Press Association annual contest.
The renewed ethics push would ban junkets and relatives on payroll and comes on the heels of allegations that the former House speaker misused political funds and traveled frequently.
Republicans seek to give poll watchers breaks, require the Secretary of State to be more vigilant about removing inactive voters from the rolls. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s veto pen is ready.
Educators howled when legislators passed a law allowing school staffers to serve as substitutes temporarily. Months later, hardly any schools regularly take advantage of the law.
The BA.2 sub-variant of omicron is confirmed in Detroit and 21 Michigan counties. More contagious than the original omicron, it's blamed for the sharp rise in cases in several western European communities.
Robert Peacock, a security expert who worked for years in Ukraine and still has family there, shared his views of the war and its impact so far during a Q and A led by John Bebow, president and CEO of the Center for Michigan.