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Multiple complaints by customers accuse CURE Auto Insurance of bait and switch policies to avoid paying their claims. A leading auto insurance attorney says what CURE is doing is against state law.
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The cost of car insurance in Michigan is higher than ever, and increasing, six years after Govenor Gretchen Whitmer signed a bipartisan 2019 auto no fault bill into law that was supposed to lower costs. A consumer group says a big part of the reason is insurance companies are squeezing more profit out of customers.
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The protest in the hallways of the state Capitol comes after Democratic House Speaker Joe Tate canceled a survivors' group meeting with House insurance committee Chair Brenda Carter.
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An update on Michigan’s reforms to no-fault auto insurance, a two-day festival advocating for environmental conservation and preservation through the sense of sound, and a $2-million grant awarded to the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community for housing development and upkeep for its members.
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From demands for auto no-fault reform to new gun laws now in effect, there's a lot to catch up on in Michigan legislature.
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Activists fighting to restore long-term care for catastrophically injured car crash survivors have begun a campaign to call attention to House Committee Chair Brenda Carter's inaction on Senate bills that would restore access to many forms of longer care. "We've had enough, and we're going to start calling her out by name," the group's statement said.
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An annual report from the Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services shows consumer savings from the 2019 no-fault law. Groups are drawing very different conclusions about what the report means.
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Today, updates in the efforts to adjust Michigan’s no-fault auto insurance laws; concerns about safety in Metro Detroit's Jewish community; and a new director for the U-M Dearborn's Center for Arab American Studies.
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The State Senate passed bills that set new reimbursement rates for many long-term care services for severely injured auto accident patients.
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The state Senate has held the first of two planned hearings on bills that supporters say would ensure access to necessary care for severely injured car crash survivors.