-
Governor Gretchen Whitmer has called on the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association to cut refund checks to auto insurance customers. Whitmer says the MCCA fund has banked $5 billion.
-
The new auto insurance law could mean fewer hospitals in Michigan in the long term, warns a top health care official.
-
Vladimir Konstantinov was in a catastrophic accident six days after he helped the Red Wings win the Stanley Cup. He's about to lose his home care.
-
Today on Stateside, things get real for car crash victims under auto insurance reforms. Also, how a couple of COVID cases and a lack of qualified substitute teachers shut down one Michigan school district. And writer Jerry Dennis talks about life up north, and changes he’s observed.
-
The implementation of auto insurance reforms this summer is creating major problems for people injured in catastrophic collisions. Providers of at-home care have hit a wall requesting payments that have kept patients alive for years. That's putting the entire industry at risk of collapse.
-
Insurance companies are playing a "shell game," with bills to avoid paying for care for people injured in car accidents, and it's causing chaos.
-
Michigan's new auto insurance law allows insurance companies to slash payments for long term care providers for accident survivors by nearly half.But some…
-
Trinity Health Michigan, which owns seven hospitals across the state, says people catastrophically injured in auto accidents are being dropped off at its…
-
Michigan's new auto insurance law is overturning the lives of many auto accident survivors and their families, week by week, as long-term care providers…
-
Chanting, "We can't wait," survivors of catastrophic auto accidents, their families, and friends gathered Wednesday to call on state legislators to take…