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State delays deadline for school districts to waive legal rights in exchange for mental health fundsDistricts now have until December 4 to decide whether to give up some legal protections and accept a portion of the state's $321 million fund for student safety and mental health.
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A settlement requires Shelby Campbell to stop using Campbell’s trademarked logo. She’s free to use the term “soup” in her campaign though, as long as it isn’t in a reference to the soup company.
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Campbell’s Soup filed a lawsuit Friday against a candidate running for Michigan's 13th Congressional District for trademark infringement and false endorsement.
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After conflicting rulings, the Michigan Court of Appeals says there are no exceptions to a one-year deadline for suing the state.This week’s decision means any plaintiff who sued outside of that timeline, but during a period when the court said it was okay, could have their case dismissed.
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Michigan has joined more than 20 other states in a lawsuit against the Trump administration for freezing education grants. The funds frozen in Michigan total around $171 million. $6.8 billion of federal funding that had previously been approved by Congress has been frozen across the country.
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In this edition of Stateside, we discuss the launch of the Rx Kids program in Dearborn; also how the conservation efforts for the Kirtland's warbler are impacting other species. Additionally, we highlight a fishing tradition in Michigan’s smallest city. Lastly, a puzzle maker has filed a lawsuit against Michigan State University and one of its professors.
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A federal judge in the Eastern District of Michigan says lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security by noncitizens who survived serious crimes in the U.S. can move forward.
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Today, we put last night’s presidential debate into the context of Michigan’s political landscape. Then, the consequences of a landmark legal settlement regarding the Detroit Police Department’s use of facial recognition technology. Plus, what makes Detroit the perfect city for bicyclists of all kinds.
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Mobile home residents file Federal lawsuit, an introspective painting sparks conversation in Gross Pointe, and an attempt to restore a once common Great Lakes fish
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Two Capital Internal Medicine Associates employees have filed federal discrimination complaints.