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Tag: Michigan

  • FBI says

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    FBI Director Kash Patel says a “potential terrorist attack,” allegedly targeting Halloween weekend in Michigan, was thwarted by the FBI on Friday morning.

    Five people between the ages of 16 and 20 were arrested Friday, CBS News has learned. Authorities say they were inspired by a former member of the Michigan Army National Guard who was arrested in May for allegedly planning an ISIS-inspired attack against a U.S. Army site in suburban Detroit. Ammar Abdulmajid-Mohamed Said, 19, was accused of providing support for a planned attack on the U.S. Army’s Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command facility at the Detroit Arsenal. 

    One or more members of the group of five young people arrested Friday may have known Said, law enforcement sources told CBS News.

    The plot, however, was not well formed, and the FBI was monitoring an online discussion about the plot for a period of time. There was no concrete plan for an attack.

    “Through swift action and close coordination with our local partners, a potential act of terror was stopped before it could unfold,” Patel said in a statement on social media. “The vigilance of this FBI prevented what could have been a tragic attack — and thanks to their dedication, Michigan will have a safe and happy Halloween.”

    A spokesperson for the FBI field office in Detroit told CBS News that FBI agents were in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster on Friday, “conducting law enforcement activities.” They did not offer any additional information on the investigation but said there is “no current threat to public safety.”

    The law enforcement source said an FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force member had apparently uncovered two teenagers on an online ISIS chat room in some kind of discussion, but that no real plot materialized.

    Members of the FBI task force were photographed outside a home in Dearborn on Friday morning.

    Members of the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force search a home in Dearborn, Michigan, on Oct. 31, 2025. FBI Director Kash Patel said the agency had thwarted a “potential terrorist attack.”

    JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images


    Sources said the FBI had not shared specific details of the operation with Dearborn city authorities, but city officials were informed a few hours in advance that an operation would be conducted in the neighborhood where it occurred.

    The Dearborn Police Department said in a post on Facebook that it’s aware the FBI conducted operations in the city on Friday morning.

    “We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department’s post said.

    Dearborn borders Detroit, about 7 miles west of downtown. Inkster is a suburb located about 12 miles west of downtown Detroit.

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    Lucia I Suarez Sang

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  • Top Michigan growers team up for exclusive cannabis drop at new Utica lounge  – Detroit Metro Times

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    Two of Michigan’s most renowned cannabis cultivators — Hytek and Growing Pains — are teaming up for a one-day live rosin drop combining two of this year’s most-awarded strains.  

    The collaboration will debut at a cannabis party on Wednesday, Nov. 6, from 4-11 p.m., at Burn 1, a new consumption lounge in Utica at 45411 Park Ave.  

    For flavor chasers, the limited edition rosin combines the fruity, tropical sweetness of Growing Pains’s Honey Banana with the creamy, lime flavor of Hytek’s Lantz

    Since the event takes place inside a licensed consumption lounge, guests will be able to sample the collab and other products from Hytek and Growing Pains. A dab bar will be available. The neighboring dispensary, Bowdega, also stocks the brands’ products.

    In addition to the collab, the brands will also offer promotions, along with event-exclusive merch and prizes. 

    In October, both strains were named High Times’s “Strains of the Month” for October, and a month earlier, they dominated this year’s Zalympix, a premier cannabis competition often called the “Grammys of Cannabis.” Hytek’s Lantz, a hybrid cross of Ridgeline Runtz and Green Lantern, took home best overall flower and best tasting, while Growing Pains’ Honey Banana won best terps, most unique, and second-best flower overall.

    “I’m really excited for the limited drop of Honey Banana x Lantz mixed wash rosin collab with Hytek,” Tom Farrell, owner of Growing Pains, tells Metro Times. “We’re good friends with the stout team warriors and like what Hytek is doing in Detroit. We thought it would be fun to wash two award-winning strains together and make a limited rosin drop.”

    Farrell says the idea is to “bring the community together to smoke some good hash, have a couple laughs and there is no better place than Burn 1 in Utica.”

    Limited quantities of the collaboration will be available, so it’s expected to sell out fast. 

    Detroit-based Hytek and Paw Paw-based Growing Pains have built strong reputations for their high-quality flower and solventless concentrates.


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    Steve Neavling

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  • Tech Giants Announce $7B Data Center, Michigan’s First Hyperscale Campus

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    Michigan is poised to receive its first hyperscale data center after three tech giants revealed themselves Thursday as the developers behind a proposed 1-gigawatt-plus AI project on farmland in Saline Township.

    The news that OpenAI, Oracle and Related Digital will build the massive computing facility for their Stargate joint venture comes hours after officials with DTE Energy, the utility serving the Saline area, announced on a quarterly earnings call that the company had inked a deal to provide 1.4 gigawatts of power to an unnamed data center project. DTE Spokesman Ryan Lowry confirmed Thursday afternoon that the project is the Saline Township campus.

    Construction is slated to begin in 2026. The Wall Street Journal reported its value will top $7 billion.

    “I’m grateful to these cutting-edge companies for betting on Michigan, building on our work to compete for and win big projects in next-generation industries from cars and clean energy to semiconductors and batteries,” Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said in a statement.

    Whitmer hailed the deal as “the largest economic project in Michigan history,” saying it will create more than 450 onsite jobs, plus additional spinoff jobs in Washtenaw County. In 2022, General Motors announced a $7 billion investment across two factories, promising 4,000 workers.

    The data center proposal has drawn its fair share of pushback.

    After the Saline Township board voted last month against rezoning the 575-acre site for the data center, Related Digital successfully sued, accusing the township of exclusionary zoning.

    A settlement in that case last week, combined with the DTE deal to provide power, paved the way for Thursday’s public announcement.

    The township’s supervisor and attorney did not immediately respond to messages left by Bridge Michigan on Thursday.

    Township Planning Commissioner Ronald Kohler told Bridge Michigan that he originally voted against the proposal, but has grown more comfortable since developers agreed to invest some $14 million to the local community and make concessions such as on-site groundwater level monitoring wells.

    “I really think once it’s in there, you won’t even know what’s there,” he said. “You can’t live in the horse and buggy days no more.”

    The deal will be eligible for a sales and use tax exemption on equipment, a subsidy approved by the Legislature in late 2024. The companies also will seek a 12-year, 50% local tax abatement, according to the court settlement.

    House Speaker Matt Hall, R-Richland Township, noted Thursday that he voted against the data center tax breaks that have prompted a wave of interest from the tech industry. He said he’d like to see economic development officials get more upfront buy-in on projects with the potential to reshape communities.

    “The battery plants come in, and the public don’t want them, and we’re starting to see that on the data centers, too,” he said.

    Yet the deal could signal more opportunity for Michigan during a period of rapidly changing technology, said Phil Santer, chief operating officer of Ann Arbor SPARK economic developers.

    After working on the Saline Township project and visiting others in the US, “we’re thinking about where this can go toward an overall AI strategy for the state,” Santer told Bridge. “A data center of this scale in our backyard just adds to our assets.”

    A press release from the three companies stated that the data center campus would occupy 250 acres of the site with three buildings of 550,000 square feet apiece. The campus will use a closed-loop system to cool servers, which company officials claimed will limit the site’s water use “to levels comparable to an office building.”

    “This project will help ensure Michigan is a key part of building the AI infrastructure that will power the next generation of American innovation,” said Peter Hoeschele, an OpenAI vice president .


    Other data center interest

    The announcement comes hours after Michigan’s two largest utilities both announced new progress in the tech industry’s quest to build massive data centers in Michigan, which so far has none of the hyperscale facilities owned by tech giants like OpenAI, Google and Microsoft.

    Providing power to the announced facility will increase DTE’s power demand by roughly 25% — a sharp uptick that company officials plan to fulfill using excess capacity on DTE’s grid, plus a $2 billion battery facility paid for by the developers.

    DTE President and CEO Joi Harris called the news “an exciting milestone” for the company while touting it as an opportunity to create “substantial affordability benefits for existing customers.”

    Beyond the Stargate campus, DTE is in late-stage negotiations for another 3 gigawatts’ worth of data center capacity, Harris said during a Thursday earnings call.

    Officials with Consumers Energy, meanwhile, announced they’re nearing completion of deals for three large data centers amounting to a collective 2 gigawatts of power — about double the near-term demand Consumers projected back in August, when it announced a deal with a single data center developer for up to 1 gigawatt of power.

    Consumers has not shared details about the locations of those proposed data centers or the companies involved. But Microsoft has already announced the purchase of two sites in Allegan and Kent Counties, located in Consumers territory.

    The fast-and-furious dealmaking comes after Michigan lawmakers authorized new tax breaks meant to entice big tech companies to build in Michigan amid a global data center boom.

    Proponents tout the multi-billion-dollar facilities as a way to bring new investment and tax revenue to Michigan. Although the state’s new law exempts eligible data centers from the state’s 6% sales and use tax, local taxes can amount to millions of dollars a year for each facility.

    Opponents, however, fear the facilities will overtax Michigan’s energy grid, raise utility rates and negatively transform the rural farming communities that tend to attract data centers because of their abundance of cheap undeveloped land.

    “How many do we need, and how close together should they be?” asked Regina Kudla, a resident of the Ypsilanti area, where the University of Michigan and Los Alamos National Laboratory are pursuing a $1.2 billion project.

    Kudla said she is concerned that the facilities’ water and energy use could overtax supplies.


    A deal after others fell apart

    While Whitmer touted the data center announcement, the investment comes after several blows to her administration’s economic development strategy in recent months. They include Sandisk pulling out of a megasite deal near Flint that was estimated to be worth $63 billion, or nine times the cost of the Saline Township project.

    On Tuesday, privately held OpenAI and Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) announced another Stargate development in Milwaukee valued at $15 billion and developed by Vantage Data Centers.

    The massive hyperscale data centers built by the likes of Google, Meta and Microsoft tend to occupy hundreds of acres apiece, gobbling up as much energy as a midsized or even large city. Depending how costs are apportioned for that new demand, it could bring affordability for everyone by spreading the cost of maintaining poles, wires and power plants among more customers, or it could raise rates if data center developers aren’t made to pay for the potential billions of dollars’ worth of investments needed to connect them to the grid.

    Utilities are balancing excitement about the money to be made expanding their business with concerns that the predicted data center boom could fail to materialize, leaving ratepayers holding the bill for that infrastructure build-out.

    In a rate case filed with state energy regulators, Consumers has proposed establishing special rules that would require data center operators to sign 15-year contracts that guarantee consistent electricity use and impose steep exit fees on data center operators that downsize or cease operations mid-contract.

    The goal, Consumers Director of Cost and Pricing Laura Connolly said in a regulatory filing, is to ensure that massive investments meant to accommodate data centers don’t wind up raising rates for everyday power customers.

    Beyond questions about costs, environmentalists are worried utilities will falter in their efforts to get off fossil fuels as data centers prompt a rapid increase in power usage.

    Indeed, both DTE and Consumers say their long-term plans to absorb data center load involve building new fossil fuel power plants.

    Consumers Energy President and CEO Garrick Rochow said Thursday that the utility will file a long-term power plan with state regulators next year detailing plans for “both battery capacity and natural gas capacity.”

    “The more we add, in terms of data centers, that will continue to grow,” Rochow said.

    DTE officials, meanwhile, announced Thursday that they intend to build a gas plant in the coming years to offset lost power generation from the Monroe coal plant slated to go offline in 2032.

    But both utilities contend they can make those fossil fuel investments while still complying with the state’s climate law, which requires them to achieve 100% clean energy by 2040. The law counts natural gas plants equipped with carbon capture and storage technology as an acceptable form of clean energy.

    Environmental groups dislike that strategy.

    To qualify for state tax credits, data centers must procure clean energy covering 90% of their needs. But Charlotte Jameson, chief policy officer with the Michigan Environmental Council, said her group is pushing for clean power commitments to be included directly in the contracts utilities sign with data center developers.

    As for the plans to build new gas plants, Jameson said, “that’s definitely something that we’re going to be pushing back against.”

    This story was originally published by Bridge Michigan and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • FBI Thwarts Possible Halloween Terror Attack – LAmag

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    Kash Patel said the FBI has thwarted a potential Halloween weekend terrorist attack in Michigan with multiple would-be jihadi arrested

    FBI Director Kash Patel said that several suspects hellbent on committing an act of terror in Michigan were arrested, interrupting what homeland security officials call a jihadi plot.

    White House Senior Director for Counterterrorism Seb Gorka wrote on social media that federal agents “disrupted a Jihadi terror plot in Detroit timed for Halloween when innocent children should be enjoying themselves Trick or Treating. The threat is real.”

    A federal source told Los Angeles that at least five people, including a teenager, were taken into custody at several locations after search warrants were executed at two Dearborn addresses, according to the city’s police department who said in a statement:  “the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning,” in a statement that emphasized “there is no threat to the community at this time.”

    A third warrant was executed in Inkster, according to the police there, who posted on Facebook that stated federal agents were working in its jurisdiction.

    Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said Friday, “As details continue to develop, I am grateful for the swift action of the FBI and MSP protecting Michiganders.”

    The Department of Justice has not yet identified the suspects or announced federal charges against them. In May, the DOJ announced charges against a 19-year-old Michigan man who was an active member of the National Guar who was allegedly planning to attack a U.S. military base in the U.S. on behalf of ISIS.

    In that case, Ammar Abdulmajid-Mohamed Said, confided in an undercover FBI agent a plan “he had personally devised and formulated to conduct an armed attack and mass shooting on the U.S. Army’s Tank-Automotive & Armaments Command (“TACOM”) facility at the Detroit Arsenal in Warren, Michigan,” according to a criminal complaint.

    Ammam Said pledged loyalty to ISIS in 2024 when he was active member of the Michigan National Guard, according to a criminal complaint
    Credit: Department of Justice Exhibit

    Investigators say Said played a video on his cellular phone that depicted Said performing a “bayah” pledge of loyalty to the “Chalifa” of ISIS in 2024 while he was still an active member of the Michigan National Guard. According to a court docket, Said’s attorneys are in negotiations for a possible plea deal with the government.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • FBI says

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    FBI Director Kash Patel says a “potential terrorist attack,” allegedly targeting Halloween weekend in Michigan, was thwarted by the FBI on Friday morning.

    Five people between the ages of 16 and 20 were arrested Friday, CBS News has learned. Authorities say they were inspired by a former member of the Michigan Army National Guard who was arrested in May for allegedly planning an ISIS-inspired attack against a U.S. Army site in suburban Detroit. Ammar Abdulmajid-Mohamed Said, 19, was accused of providing support for a planned attack on the U.S. Army’s Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command facility at the Detroit Arsenal.

    One or more members of the group of five young people arrested Friday may have known Said, law enforcement sources told CBS News.

    The plot, however, was not well formed, and the FBI was monitoring an online discussion about the plot for a period of time. There was no concrete plan for an attack.

    “Through swift action and close coordination with our local partners, a potential act of terror was stopped before it could unfold,” Patel said in a statement on social media. “The vigilance of this FBI prevented what could have been a tragic attack — and thanks to their dedication, Michigan will have a safe and happy Halloween.”

    A spokesperson for the FBI field office in Detroit told CBS News that FBI agents were in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster on Friday, “conducting law enforcement activities.” They did not offer any additional information on the investigation but said there is “no current threat to public safety.”

    The law enforcement source said an FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force member had apparently uncovered two teenagers on an online ISIS chat room in some kind of discussion, but that no real plot materialized.

    Members of the FBI task force were photographed outside a home in Dearborn on Friday morning.

    Sources said the FBI had not shared specific details of the operation with Dearborn city authorities, but city officials were informed a few hours in advance that an operation would be conducted in the neighborhood where it occurred.

    Members of the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force search a home in Dearborn, Michigan, on Oct. 31, 2025. FBI Director Kash Patel said the agency had thwarted a “potential terrorist attack.”

    JEFF KOWALSKY/AFP via Getty Images


    The Dearborn Police Department said in a post on Facebook that it’s aware that the FBI conducted operations in the city on Friday morning.

    “We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department’s post said.

    Dearborn borders Detroit, about 7 miles west of downtown. Inkster is a suburb located about 12 miles west of downtown Detroit.

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  • FBI thwarts ‘potential terrorist attack’ in Michigan

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    FBI Director Kash Patel said Friday the bureau had thwarted a “potential terrorist attack.”In a social media post, Patel said, “multiple subjects” were arrested by the FBI in Michigan Friday morning. Those subjects were allegedly plotting a violent attack over Halloween weekend, according to Patel. The director said more details were expected to come later.The FBI’s Detroit field office confirmed “the FBI in Michigan were present in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster this morning conducting law enforcement activities,” spokesperson Jordan Hall told CNN. “There is no current threat to public safety.”The Dearborn Police Department said it “has been made aware that the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning.”“We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department said.Neither the FBI nor the Dearborn police said that the operations were connected to the arrests Patel announced Friday morning.This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    FBI Director Kash Patel said Friday the bureau had thwarted a “potential terrorist attack.”

    In a social media post, Patel said, “multiple subjects” were arrested by the FBI in Michigan Friday morning. Those subjects were allegedly plotting a violent attack over Halloween weekend, according to Patel.

    The director said more details were expected to come later.

    The FBI’s Detroit field office confirmed “the FBI in Michigan were present in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster this morning conducting law enforcement activities,” spokesperson Jordan Hall told CNN. “There is no current threat to public safety.”

    The Dearborn Police Department said it “has been made aware that the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning.”

    “We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department said.

    Neither the FBI nor the Dearborn police said that the operations were connected to the arrests Patel announced Friday morning.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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  • As we “fall back” this weekend, the time change debate continues

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    It’s that time of the year again, when we “fall back” one hour, ending daylight saving time and returning to standard time and thus igniting the semi-annual debate.

    Do we proceed with the current standards and switch the clocks biannually in 48 of the 50 states? Or do we establish one standard and end this shifting of time? 

    19 states say yes, end the shifting and establish permanent daylight saving time. Federal law says no, and thus the debate continues. 

    Why we change the clocks

    The United States began the concept of daylight saving time in 1918, during World War I, to save fuel. The thought was that by advancing one hour ahead, coal-fired energy would assist the war effort rather than that hour at home.

    Standard time returned following the war and continued until World War II. After World War II, some states and even cities kept daylight saving time, creating various time zones within regions. Frustrated with no uniform time, the public pushed Congress to pass the Uniform Time Act in 1966.

    This established the time frame for daylight saving time would begin the last Sunday in April and end the last Sunday in October.

    In 1987, it extended to include the first Sunday in April and end on the last Sunday in October.

    Part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the modern daylight saving time begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday in November.

    This current time shift began in 2007, but this practice, according to millions of Americans, is outdated. 

    Not every state changes the clocks

    The law passed by Congress in 1966 allows states to opt out of observing daylight saving and stay in standard time year-round but not the other way around. Two states, Arizona and Hawaii, along with multiple U.S. territories have done so and thus stay in standard time the full year. 

    Hawaii doesn’t take part because of its location. With not much variation throughout the year between sunrise and sunset, it made little sense to switch the clocks. 

    Only the Navajo Nation in Arizona observes daylight saving time. The rest of the state exempted itself in 1968. 

    They cited the heat as their reason for opting out, adding that if they switched the clocks ahead one hour, the sun would not set until 9 p.m. in the summer, limiting nighttime activities.

    President Trump’s feelings on time change

    Even President Trump sees it from both sides of the debate.

    “The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t! Daylight Saving Time is inconvenient, and very costly to our nation,” he wrote on his social media back on Dec. 13, 2024. 

    However, his Truth Social post in April boasted something completely different.

    A hearing convened in April by the Senate Commerce Committee was debating this issue. Trump’s endorsement might help settle the debate for lawmakers. 

    Sunshine Protection Act and its opponents

    On March 15, 2022, the U.S. Senate voted unanimously in favor of the Sunshine Protection Act, which would make daylight saving time permanent, meaning Americans would no longer have to change their clocks twice a year to account for the time change. 

    While the Senate passed the bill, three and a half years later it remains stalled in the House and has not been signed into law by President Trump.

    Not everyone agrees with eliminating standard time.

    Earlier this week, Republican Sen. Tom Cotton was on hand to thwart a bipartisan effort on the chamber floor to pass a bill establishing permanent daylight saving time. 

    “If permanent Daylight Savings Time becomes the law of the land, it will again make winter a dark and dismal time for millions of Americans,” said Cotton in his objection to a request by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) to advance the bill by unanimous consent.

    Adding, “For many Arkansans, permanent daylight savings time would mean the sun wouldn’t rise until after 8:00 or even 8:30 a.m. during the dead of winter,” Emphasizing, “The darkness of permanent savings time would be especially harmful for school children and working Americans.”

    Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) called for the Senate to pass the bill this week, citing states’ rights as a major reason for his support for the so-called “Sunshine Protection Act.” 

    “It allows the people of each state to choose what best fits their needs and the needs of their families,” said Scott. “The American people are sick and tired of changing their clocks twice a year. It’s confusing, unnecessary and completely outdated.”

    Cotton strengthened his argument by bringing up the “abject failure” of the last time Congress enacted permanent daylight saving time in 1974, pledging to always oppose legislation that would do just that.

     

    Vote in Live Poll: Cancel daylight saving time or stay on it permanently?

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

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  • As we “fall back” this weekend, the time change debate continues

    [ad_1]

    It’s that time of the year again, when we “fall back” one hour, ending daylight saving time and returning to standard time and thus igniting the semi-annual debate.

    Do we proceed with the current standards and switch the clocks biannually in 48 of the 50 states? Or do we establish one standard and end this shifting of time? 

    19 states say yes, end the shifting and establish permanent daylight saving time. Federal law says no, and thus the debate continues. 

    Why we change the clocks

    The United States began the concept of daylight saving time in 1918, during World War I, to save fuel. The thought was that by advancing one hour ahead, coal-fired energy would assist the war effort rather than that hour at home.

    Standard time returned following the war and continued until World War II. After World War II, some states and even cities kept daylight saving time, creating various time zones within regions. Frustrated with no uniform time, the public pushed Congress to pass the Uniform Time Act in 1966.

    This established the time frame for daylight saving time would begin the last Sunday in April and end the last Sunday in October.

    In 1987, it extended to include the first Sunday in April and end on the last Sunday in October.

    Part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the modern daylight saving time begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday in November.

    This current time shift began in 2007, but this practice, according to millions of Americans, is outdated. 

    Not every state changes the clocks

    The law passed by Congress in 1966 allows states to opt out of observing daylight saving and stay in standard time year-round but not the other way around. Two states, Arizona and Hawaii, along with multiple U.S. territories have done so and thus stay in standard time the full year. 

    Hawaii doesn’t take part because of its location. With not much variation throughout the year between sunrise and sunset, it made little sense to switch the clocks. 

    Only the Navajo Nation in Arizona observes daylight saving time. The rest of the state exempted itself in 1968. 

    They cited the heat as their reason for opting out, adding that if they switched the clocks ahead one hour, the sun would not set until 9 p.m. in the summer, limiting nighttime activities.

    President Trump’s feelings on time change

    Even President Trump sees it from both sides of the debate.

    “The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t! Daylight Saving Time is inconvenient, and very costly to our nation,” he wrote on his social media back on Dec. 13, 2024. 

    However, his Truth Social post in April boasted something completely different.

    A hearing convened in April by the Senate Commerce Committee was debating this issue. Trump’s endorsement might help settle the debate for lawmakers. 

    Sunshine Protection Act and its opponents

    On March 15, 2022, the U.S. Senate voted unanimously in favor of the Sunshine Protection Act, which would make daylight saving time permanent, meaning Americans would no longer have to change their clocks twice a year to account for the time change. 

    While the Senate passed the bill, three and a half years later it remains stalled in the House and has not been signed into law by President Trump.

    Not everyone agrees with eliminating standard time.

    Earlier this week, Republican Sen. Tom Cotton was on hand to thwart a bipartisan effort on the chamber floor to pass a bill establishing permanent daylight saving time. 

    “If permanent Daylight Savings Time becomes the law of the land, it will again make winter a dark and dismal time for millions of Americans,” said Cotton in his objection to a request by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) to advance the bill by unanimous consent.

    Adding, “For many Arkansans, permanent daylight savings time would mean the sun wouldn’t rise until after 8:00 or even 8:30 a.m. during the dead of winter,” Emphasizing, “The darkness of permanent savings time would be especially harmful for school children and working Americans.”

    Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) called for the Senate to pass the bill this week, citing states’ rights as a major reason for his support for the so-called “Sunshine Protection Act.” 

    “It allows the people of each state to choose what best fits their needs and the needs of their families,” said Scott. “The American people are sick and tired of changing their clocks twice a year. It’s confusing, unnecessary and completely outdated.”

    Cotton strengthened his argument by bringing up the “abject failure” of the last time Congress enacted permanent daylight saving time in 1974, pledging to always oppose legislation that would do just that.

     

    Vote in Live Poll: Cancel daylight saving time or stay on it permanently?

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

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  • As we “fall back” this weekend, the time change debate continues

    [ad_1]

    It’s that time of the year again, when we “fall back” one hour, ending daylight saving time and returning to standard time and thus igniting the semi-annual debate.

    Do we proceed with the current standards and switch the clocks biannually in 48 of the 50 states? Or do we establish one standard and end this shifting of time? 

    19 states say yes, end the shifting and establish permanent daylight saving time. Federal law says no, and thus the debate continues. 

    Why we change the clocks

    The United States began the concept of daylight saving time in 1918, during World War I, to save fuel. The thought was that by advancing one hour ahead, coal-fired energy would assist the war effort rather than that hour at home.

    Standard time returned following the war and continued until World War II. After World War II, some states and even cities kept daylight saving time, creating various time zones within regions. Frustrated with no uniform time, the public pushed Congress to pass the Uniform Time Act in 1966.

    This established the time frame for daylight saving time would begin the last Sunday in April and end the last Sunday in October.

    In 1987, it extended to include the first Sunday in April and end on the last Sunday in October.

    Part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the modern daylight saving time begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday in November.

    This current time shift began in 2007, but this practice, according to millions of Americans, is outdated. 

    Not every state changes the clocks

    The law passed by Congress in 1966 allows states to opt out of observing daylight saving and stay in standard time year-round but not the other way around. Two states, Arizona and Hawaii, along with multiple U.S. territories have done so and thus stay in standard time the full year. 

    Hawaii doesn’t take part because of its location. With not much variation throughout the year between sunrise and sunset, it made little sense to switch the clocks. 

    Only the Navajo Nation in Arizona observes daylight saving time. The rest of the state exempted itself in 1968. 

    They cited the heat as their reason for opting out, adding that if they switched the clocks ahead one hour, the sun would not set until 9 p.m. in the summer, limiting nighttime activities.

    President Trump’s feelings on time change

    Even President Trump sees it from both sides of the debate.

    “The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t! Daylight Saving Time is inconvenient, and very costly to our nation,” he wrote on his social media back on Dec. 13, 2024. 

    However, his Truth Social post in April boasted something completely different.

    A hearing convened in April by the Senate Commerce Committee was debating this issue. Trump’s endorsement might help settle the debate for lawmakers. 

    Sunshine Protection Act and its opponents

    On March 15, 2022, the U.S. Senate voted unanimously in favor of the Sunshine Protection Act, which would make daylight saving time permanent, meaning Americans would no longer have to change their clocks twice a year to account for the time change. 

    While the Senate passed the bill, three and a half years later it remains stalled in the House and has not been signed into law by President Trump.

    Not everyone agrees with eliminating standard time.

    Earlier this week, Republican Sen. Tom Cotton was on hand to thwart a bipartisan effort on the chamber floor to pass a bill establishing permanent daylight saving time. 

    “If permanent Daylight Savings Time becomes the law of the land, it will again make winter a dark and dismal time for millions of Americans,” said Cotton in his objection to a request by Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) to advance the bill by unanimous consent.

    Adding, “For many Arkansans, permanent daylight savings time would mean the sun wouldn’t rise until after 8:00 or even 8:30 a.m. during the dead of winter,” Emphasizing, “The darkness of permanent savings time would be especially harmful for school children and working Americans.”

    Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) called for the Senate to pass the bill this week, citing states’ rights as a major reason for his support for the so-called “Sunshine Protection Act.” 

    “It allows the people of each state to choose what best fits their needs and the needs of their families,” said Scott. “The American people are sick and tired of changing their clocks twice a year. It’s confusing, unnecessary and completely outdated.”

    Cotton strengthened his argument by bringing up the “abject failure” of the last time Congress enacted permanent daylight saving time in 1974, pledging to always oppose legislation that would do just that.

     

    Vote in Live Poll: Cancel daylight saving time or stay on it permanently?

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Stacy Lynn

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  • Layoffs are piling up, raising worker anxiety. Here are some companies that have cut jobs recently

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    NEW YORK (AP) — It’s a tough time for the job market.

    Amid wider economic uncertainty, some analysts have said that businesses are at a “no-hire, no fire” standstill. That’s caused many to limit new work to only a few specific roles, if not pause openings entirely. At the same time, some sizeable layoffs have continued to pile up — raising worker anxieties across sectors.

    Some companies have pointed to rising operational costs spanning from President Donald Trump’s barrage of new tariffs and shifts in consumer spending. Others cite corporate restructuring more broadly — or, as seen with big names like Amazon, are redirecting money to artificial intelligence.

    Federal employees have encountered additional doses of uncertainty, impacting worker sentiment around the job market overall. Shortly after Trump returned to office at the start of the year, federal jobs were cut by the thousands. And many workers are now going without pay as the U.S. government shutdown nears its fourth week.

    “A lot of people are looking around, scanning the job environment, scanning the opportunities that are available to them — whether it’s in the public or private sector,” said Jason Schloetzer, professor business administration at Georgetown University’s McDonough School. “And I think there’s a question mark around the long-term stability everywhere.”

    Government hiring data is on hold during the shutdown, but earlier this month a survey by payroll company ADP showed that the private sector lost 32,000 jobs in September.

    Here are some companies that have moved to cut jobs recently.

    General Motors

    General Motors moved to lay off about 1,700 workers across manufacturing sites in Michigan and Ohio on Wednesday, as the auto giant adjusts to slowing demand for electric vehicles.

    Hundreds of additional employees are reportedly slated for “temporary layoffs.” And GM has recently moved to downsize other parts of its workforce, too — including 200 layoffs mostly impacting engineers in Detroit, and other 300 job cuts at a Georgia IT Innovation Center, which it is also shuttering.

    Paramount

    In long-awaited cuts just months after completing its $8 billion merger with Skydance, Paramount is going to lay off about 2,000 employees — about 10% of its workforce.

    Paramount initiated roughly 1,000 of those layoffs on Wednesday, according to a source familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The rest of the cuts will be made at a later date.

    Amazon

    Amazon will cut about 14,000 corporate jobs as the online retail giant ramps up spending on artificial intelligence.

    Amazon said Tuesday that it will cut about 14,000 corporate jobs, close to 4% of its workforce, as the online retail giant ramps up spending on AI while trimming costs elsewhere. A letter to employees said most workers would be given 90 days to look for a new position internally.

    CEO Andy Jassy previously said he anticipated generative AI would reduce Amazon’s corporate workforce in the coming years. And he has worked to aggressively cut costs overall since 2021.

    UPS

    United Parcel Service has disclosed about 48,000 job cuts this year as part of turnaround efforts, which arrive amid wider shifts in the company’s shipping outputs.

    In a Tuesday regulatory filing, UPS said it’s cut about 34,000 operational positions — and the company announced another 14,000 role reductions, mostly within management. Combined, that’s much higher than the roughly 20,000 cuts UPS forecast earlier this year.

    Target

    Last week, Target that it would eliminate about 1,800 corporate positions, or about 8% of its corporate workforce globally.

    Target said the cuts were part of wider streamlining efforts — with Chief Operating Officer Michael Fiddelke noting that “too many layers and overlapping work have slowed decisions.” The retailer is also looking to rebuild its customer base. Target reported flat or declining comparable sales in nine of the past eleven quarters.

    Nestlé

    In mid-October, Nestlé said it would be cutting 16,000 jobs globally — as part of wider cost cutting aimed at reviving its financial performance.

    The Swiss food giant said the layoffs would take place over the next two years. The cuts arrive as Nestlé and others face headwinds like rising commodity costs and U.S. imposed tariffs. The company announced price hikes over the summer to offset higher coffee and cocoa costs.

    Lufthansa Group

    In September, Lufthansa Group said it would shed 4,000 jobs by 2030 — pointing to the adoption of artificial intelligence, digitalization and consolidating work among member airlines.

    Most of the lost jobs would be in Germany, and the focus would be on administrative rather than operational roles, the company said. The layoff plans arrived even as the company reported strong demand for air travel and predicted stronger profits in years ahead.

    Novo Nordisk

    Also in September, Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk said it would cut 9,000 jobs, about 11% of its workforce.

    Novo Nordisk — which makes drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy — said the layoffs were part of wider restructuring as the company works to sell more obesity and diabetes medications amid rising competition.

    ConocoPhillips

    Oil giant ConocoPhillips has said it plans to lay off up to a quarter of its workforce, as part of broader efforts from the company to cut costs.

    A spokesperson for ConocoPhillips confirmed the layoffs on Sept. 3, noting that 20% to 25% of the company’s employees and contractors would be impacted worldwide. At the time, ConocoPhillips had a total headcount of about 13,000 — or between 2,600 and 3,250 workers. Most reductions were expected to take place before the end of 2025.

    Intel

    Intel has moved to shed thousands of jobs — with the struggling chipmaker working to revive its business as it lags behind rivals like Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices.

    In a July memo to employees, CEO Lip-Bu Tan said Intel expected to end the year with 75,000 “core” workers, excluding subsidiaries, through layoffs and attrition. That’s down from 99,500 core employees reported the end of last year. The company previously announced a 15% workforce reduction.

    Microsoft

    In May, Microsoft began began laying off about 6,000 workers across its workforce. And just months later, the tech giant said it would be cutting 9,000 positions — marking its biggest round of layoffs seen in more than two years.

    The latest job cuts hit Microsoft’s Xbox video game business and other divisions. The company has cited “organizational changes,” with many executives characterizing the layoffs as part of a push to trim management layers. But the labor reductions also arrive as the company spends heavily on AI.

    Procter & Gamble

    In June, Procter & Gamble said it would cut up to 7,000 jobs over the next two years, 6% of the company’s global workforce.

    The maker of Tide detergent and Pampers diapers said the cuts were part of a wider restructuring — also arriving amid tariff pressures. In July, P&G said it would hike prices on about a quarter of its products due to the newly-imposed import taxes, although it’s since said it expects to take less of a hit than previously anticipated for the 2026 fiscal year.

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  • When will it snow? It depends where you live

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    The days are getting shorter, and temperatures are falling. Now that we’re heading toward winter, many parts of the country are going to begin to see snow in the forecast for the first time in months.

    Even though winter doesn’t begin until December, the first snow can arrive much earlier depending on where you live.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Mountain West usually gets snow before anywhere else
    • Interior New England and the Great Lakes also see snowfall earlier than most areas
    • If it snows in the Southeast, it normally comes after New Year’s



    The primary factors that influence your local snowfall climatology are elevation and latitude. High elevations, like the Rockies, are much more favorable environments for wintry weather than anywhere else in the continental U.S. Some parts of the Rockies could receive snow in all 12 months of the year.

    Of course, that’s not the case for everyone else. Aside from elevation, how far north do you live? Do you live off the eastern shores of the Great Lakes and get lake-effect snow? Do you see a milder maritime air mass from the Pacific, or a continental polar air mass from Canada? 

    The map below gives a good idea of when you can expect the first measurable (>0.1″) snow where you live based on the 1981-2020 U.S. climate normals.

    The map shows the ‘median,’ or average date of the first snowfall. This is when you could expect the first snow to arrive during a ‘normal’ year. Of course, every year is different, but this should give you a good idea of when to get the winter clothes ready. For an even better idea, you can check your local forecast.

    Snow in the Northeast usually arrives before winter does on the calendar, especially in the mountains. Interior New England the Adirondacks, usually sees the first snowflakes falling around early November, with the rest of New England seeing snow before Thanksgiving.

    Coastal areas might lag a little behind the rest of the Northeast since the temperatures run a bit warmer, but it only takes one Nor’easter to deliver the first snow for everybody.

    Great Lakes

    Aside from the Rockies and some other high elevations, the Great Lakes are among the earlier areas to see snow, especially near Lake Superior. When you combine arctic air and moisture over the warm Great Lakes early in the season, the lake-effect machine can pump some big snow totals onto the southern and eastern shores of the Great Lakes.

    Parts of Michigan, Wisconsin, Upstate New York and northwest Pennsylvania are the lucky recipients of lake-effect snow that can arrive as early as October or November.

    Midwest

    The Upper Midwest and Northern Plains see strong cold fronts move in from Canada during the late fall and winter with bitter cold Arctic air that can dump feet of snow, but that’s not usually until later in the season. The first snow? The Dakotas and Minnesota usually get some snowfall in early November.

    Further south, in states like Iowa, Illinois, Ohio and Missouri, it can be a bit later, around or after Thanksgiving as we get into December.

    Northwest/Rockies

    The Rocky Mountains, Cascades and other high elevations across the Mountain West are the snowiest places in the U.S., some of which could see snow year-round. This is why some of the best ski resorts in the world are in states like Colorado, Utah and Montana. Snow usually starts falling by October, with the foothills and lower elevations seeing snow by November.

    The coastal parts of Washington and Oregon in the Pacific Northwest don’t see much snow until later, usually by December. The Pacific Ocean keeps areas west of the mountains much warmer, and much wetter with rain lasting into winter.

    Southwest

    If you’re expecting snow in the Southwest, elevation is an important factor. There are parts of Southern California, northern Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada where the high elevations and mountains see plenty of snowfall, some as early as late November or December. But a lot of the Southwest doesn’t see any, especially in California outside of the mountains.

    In Texas, the Panhandle could get some wild weather by late November or December, but further south into central Texas and the Gulf Coast, the snow chances are few and far between.

    Southeast

    Parts of the Southeast, especially in the Appalachians, could get snow in late November or December. States like Kentucky, North Carolina, Arkansas, Virginia and North Carolina usually get a few good snows per winter, maybe even before changing your calendar.

    If you live anywhere else in the Southeast, especially Florida and along the Gulf Coast, the first time you see snow depends on when you buy a plane ticket! Big snows are much rarer once you get south of I-10. Other parts of the Deep South are lucky to see one or two snows per year, but it usually arrives in January or February.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

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  • Halloween Forecast: Is it a trick or a treat?

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    A chill will be in the air across much of the country for this year’s Halloween trick-or-treaters. The good news is we will see mostly dry conditions in time, but a few spots could still see rain lingering into the night.


    What You Need To Know

    • Below-average temperatures are expected from the Plains to the East Coast
    • Most of the country should be dry around sunset
    • Rain and wind will linger in the Northeast


    Northeast

    For much of Halloween, it will be a wet and windy day across the Northeast. Thankfully, much of the rain will clear in time for trick-or-treaters by sunset with only a few showers across Upstate New York and the northern parts of New England.

    For those heading out, be sure to bring an extra layer and hold on to those witches’ hats! A gusty northwest wind will bring temperatures down into the 40s and 50s along the coast with even colder temperatures farther inland (30s) after sunset. Winds could even reach 30-40 mph at times closer to the coast.

    Southeast

    The forecast is a lot less frightening for the Southeast, which will see clear skies and no chance of rain. However, it will be cool with temperatures slipping into the 50s in areas as far south as Central Florida.


    Central U.S.

    Most of the Central U.S. will also see dry and cool weather Halloween evening. The only exception will be parts of the Northern Plains, where some scattered showers may continue.

    Temperatures will range from the 30s and 40s in the Northern Plains to the 50s and 60s across Texas and the Mid-South.


    West

    Dry weather is likely for almost the entire West with high pressure in control. The only region that may be wet will be the coastal parts of Washington, where another atmospheric river is expected to move onshore.

    It will also be cool in the Pacific Northwest with temperatures falling into the 40s and 50s. Milder weather is expected in the Southwest.


    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Ian Cassette

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  • AP Decision Notes: What to Expect in Detroit on Election Day

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    DETROIT (AP) — Detroit voters will choose a new mayor Tuesday in the city’s first open-seat mayoral race in a dozen years.

    City Council President Mary Sheffield and Triumph Church pastor Solomon Kinloch, both Democrats, will face off for the city’s top job after placing first and second in the Aug. 5 nonpartisan primary. The winner will replace outgoing three-term Mayor Mike Duggan, who is running for governor of Michigan as an independent.

    Still, the next mayor will face numerous challenges, including a shortage of affordable housing and vast economic disparities along racial lines.

    Sheffield has led the field in fundraising throughout the campaign. As of the August primary, her campaign fund more than doubled that of her eight competitors combined.

    In the general election, she has far outraised and outspent Kinloch. As of Oct. 19, her campaign had spent more than $1.8 million on her campaign and had roughly $772,000 in the bank. By that same point, Kinloch had spent about $160,000 on the race and had less than $11,000 remaining in the bank.

    Since receiving more than 50% of the vote in the August primary, Sheffield has picked up key endorsements from Duggan, as well as from two of her former primary opponents, former city council president Saunteel Jenkins and city council member Fred Durhal. Jenkins received 16% of the primary vote, narrowly losing a spot on the general election ballot to Kinloch, who received about 17%. Durhal received about 3% of the vote.

    The Detroit electorate is overwhelmingly Democratic. In the 2024 presidential election, voters in the city supported Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris over Republican Donald Trump by about a 9-1 ratio.

    At a September rally in Howell, Michigan, Vice President JD Vance sent a public message to Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer that the administration is “happy” to send the National Guard to Detroit. “All you gotta do is ask,” he said.

    The Associated Press does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it’s determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why.

    Michigan’s mandatory recount law does not apply to Detroit’s mayoral race. Instead, candidates may request and pay for a recount, with the payment refunded if the recount changes the outcome. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is subject to a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome.

    Here’s a look at what to expect on Tuesday:

    Polls close at 8 p.m. ET.

    The AP will provide vote results and declare the winner in Detroit’s mayoral race.

    Any voter registered in Detroit may participate in the mayoral general election.


    What do turnout and advance vote look like?

    There were more than 518,000 registered voters in Detroit as of the August mayoral primary.

    Turnout in that primary was about 17% of registered voters. About 32% of mayoral primary voters cast their ballots in person, while the remaining 68% voted early in person or by absentee ballot.

    Turnout in the 2021 mayoral general election was about 19% of registered voters, with about 67% of voters casting early or absentee ballots.

    As of Monday, nearly 45,000 ballots had been cast in Detroit before Election Day.


    How long does vote counting usually take?

    In the August primary, the AP first reported results at 8:32 p.m. ET, or 32 minutes after polls closed. The vote tabulation ended for the night at 4:30 a.m. ET, with 100% of votes counted.

    As of Tuesday, there will be 364 days until the 2026 midterm elections and 1,099 days until the 2028 general election.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • The Feds Who Kill Blood-Sucking Parasites

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    In 1955, U.S. and Canadian officials established the Great Lakes Fishery Commission—a bilateral treaty organization intended to root out what was often referred to as the “vampire fish.” Since then, the sea-lamprey population has been slashed by more than ninety per cent, thanks to annual treatments and ongoing research. Controlling the species has saved the region’s fishing industry, now worth six billion dollars a year.

    Pull back the curtain on even the most natural-seeming landscapes and there is often a government initiative invisibly maintaining business as usual. But, for many public programs, success can bring problems of its own. “If no one really knows of the threat, it makes it harder, in lean times, to say, ‘Hey, we need this money,’ ” Ethan Baker, the chairman of the G.L.F.C., told me.

    Early this year, as part of what many federal workers came to refer to as the Valentine’s Day Massacre, the lamprey-control program was unceremoniously gutted by the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency. Twelve probationary workers—some of whom were long-tenured employees who had recently transitioned into new positions—were fired. Presented with an uncertain future, other longtime staff members took buyouts. The roughly twenty-five seasonal workers who are the backbone of the annual control effort couldn’t be brought on, because of Trump’s government-wide hiring freeze. Spending on federal credit cards was capped at a dollar, making it impossible to book travel arrangements to and from treatment sites.

    The commission—which is not itself a public agency but an international organization that contracts with federal employees in the U.S. and Canada—pleaded with local congressional representatives. Residents did, too. In 2020 and 2021, when COVID-era travel restrictions had reduced treatments, lamprey populations exploded. In Lake Ontario, treatments stopped entirely for one year, and the number of lampreys increased tenfold.

    Eventually, the lamprey program was granted an exemption from the DOGE cuts, and allowed to restaff. But crucial treatments were delayed, and early-season assessments—which, ironically, make the effort more efficient by determining exactly where to treat—had to be reduced. Across the country, many similar programs, and the research they depend on, are being bled dry, as billions of dollars are hacked from the federal budget.

    Of the more than five thousand tributaries that empty into the Great Lakes, about one in ten is infested with lampreys. Every year, crews treat about a quarter of the offending streams. Upper Michigan’s Manistique River system, which has about three hundred infested miles, is the site of this year’s biggest deployment. In two weeklong purges, crews killed an estimated one million lamprey larvae there, at a cost of $1.4 million. (In total, the program costs about twenty million dollars annually.)

    To determine where to treat, federal workers must first figure out where the lampreys are. They pace the shallow banks of the tributaries—where lampreys live and breed, before going to the lakes to hunt—and shock the bottom with handheld electrified paddles. If any lampreys are present, they will wriggle out of their muddy burrows. The workers must then expose the ecosystem to a specific concentration of poison, perfectly calibrated to kill lampreys and not many other fish, for nine uninterrupted hours. Treatment supervisors generate a unique model for each river, adjusting for variables as seemingly inconsequential as the appearance of a new beaver dam, which can completely alter the flow. “We were lucky this time,” Lori Criger, a fish biologist who oversees treatments, told me. “It rained right before we got here, and not during the treatment.”

    The lamprey-control program is the world’s only purchaser of 3-trifluoromethyl-4-nitrophenol, also known as T.F.M., or, simply, lampricide, which was identified in 1956 at a research lab at the northern tip of Michigan’s Lower Peninsula. As the lamprey crisis worsened, various chemical companies sent compounds to the lab, which was searching for a panacea. “They would get a chemical, sometimes in a plain brown envelope from the Defense Department or something—‘Here, try this,’ ” Marc Gaden, the G.L.F.C.’s executive secretary, told me. The research team ran “pickle jar” tests: they’d leave lampreys, native fish, and a chemical in a vessel together overnight. In the morning, they’d record the outcome—usually something like “Dead trout, dead lamprey,” or, occasionally, “Dead trout, live lamprey.”

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    Katie Thornton

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  • Michigan’s Winter Weather Forecast Has Arrived

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    Winter is on the way, and with it comes the joys of the holiday season and the weather getting just a bit chillier. Of course, things get a lot colder for those in northern climates, while those down south usually only catch a little chill, but either way, the winter season is nothing like summer no matter where you are in the U.S. So, what’s the official winter weather forecast? The experts at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have revealed what to expect during the cold months this winter heading into 2026.

    Winter Weather Forecast for Michigan and the U.S.

    According to the Farmer’s Almanac, “the first day of winter in the Northern Hemisphere is marked by the winter solstice, which occurs on Sunday, December 21, 2025, at 10:03 A.M. (EST).” They add that for the Northern Hemisphere, the winter solstice takes place every year on December 21 or 22. Meanwhile, for the Southern Hemisphere, winter solstice happens in June. Winter Solstice also marks the shortest day of the year when it comes to sunlight, but the good news is that as soon as we hit Winter Solstice, the days start to grow longer again until Summer Solstice.

    So, let’s get to the NOAA’s winter weather forecast. National forecasters are predicting a La Niña that will impact our weather over the next three months. The Climate Prediction Center, which is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), has revealed seasonal outlooks for November 2025 through January 2026.

    The weather predictions are in line with a La Niña winter, bringing warmer temperatures to much of the U.S. Many states are expected to see warmer-than-average temperatures over the next three months, with the exception being northern states along the U.S. and Canadian border, which have an equal chance. No spots in the U.S. are predicted to get cooler temperatures.

    As for precipitation, the researchers at the NOAA predict more rain for much of the country, especially in the Pacific Northwest and Upper Midwest. The southern states, however, are expected to have below-average rain.

    For Michigan, we’re looking at an above normal chance of warmer temperatures and also an above normal chance of more precipitation. So, that’s what to expect during the early winter months.

    Anne Erickson started her radio career shortly after graduating from Michigan State University and has worked on-air in Detroit, Flint, Toledo, Lansing and beyond. As someone who absolutely loves rock, metal and alt music, she instantly fell in love with radio and hasn’t looked back. When she’s not working, Anne makes her own music with her band, Upon Wings, and she also loves cheering on her favorite Detroit and Michigan sports teams, especially Lions and MSU football. Anne is also an award-winning journalist, and her byline has run in a variety of national publications. You can also hear her weekends on WRIF.

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  • Michigan’s proposed cannabis caps could hurt consumers and small cities that rely on weed revenue  – Detroit Metro Times

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    After delivering a serious blow to Michigan’s already struggling cannabis industry by imposing a 24% wholesale tax, state lawmakers are now trying to make amends with a set of bills aimed at limiting competition in the oversaturated market.

    Democrats who control the state Senate introduced a set of bills on Oct. 2 that would impose limits on new dispensaries and eliminate new large cultivation licenses. 

    While the legislation would benefit many established businesses, it would hurt consumers and smaller cities like Hazel Park and Ferndale by reducing tax revenue, eliminating cannabis jobs, and paving the way for regional monopolies, according to state analyses obtained by Metro Times

    Senate Bill 597, introduced by state Sens. Sam Singh, D-East Lansing, and Jeremy Moss, D-Southfield, would limit each municipality to one dispensary for every 10,000 residents. If approved, the legislation would prevent the state Cannabis Regulatory Agency (CRA) from approving new dispensary licenses in municipalities that already exceed the limit. Municipalities with fewer than 10,000 residents would be limited to one retail license. 

    The bill wouldn’t force existing dispensaries to close, but once one shuts down, it couldn’t be replaced until the municipality falls below the cap. 

    On Oct. 15, the Senate Regulatory Affairs Committee voted 11-0 in favor of the bill that would cap new dispensaries. 

    The caps would defy the voter-approved initiative that legalized recreational marijuana in Michigan in 2018 and called for unlimited cannabis licenses. 

    When voters approved recreational cannabis in 2018, the ballot initiative called for unlimited business licenses. So any change to the initiative would require a three-quarter supermajority in the Senate and House. 

    While many in the industry support the legislation, it threatens smaller cities like Hazel Park (pop. 19,431), Ferndale (pop. 15,064), and Inkster (pop. 25,108), which have become cannabis hubs and rely on the tax revenue. Hazel Park has 10 dispensaries, Ferndale has six, and Inkster has seven, according to CRA records. The new legislation would limit Hazel Park and Ferndale to one dispensary each and Inkster to two.

    Cash-strapped municipalities have come to rely on cannabis revenue. With a 10% excise tax on recreational cannabis sales, hundreds of millions of dollars have gone to local governments, schools, and roads since 2020. 

    Municipalities shared nearly $100 million from excise taxes collected last year, according to the Michigan Department of Treasury. For each dispensary within their boundaries, cities and townships receive more than $58,000 annually.

    This year, Hazel Park received $582,300, a major source of revenue for a city with rapidly rising pension obligations. Without that money, the city “would have had to make cuts in services or pass those costs on to taxpayers,” Hazel Park City Manager Edward Klobucher told Metro Times in 2024

    Ferndale received $349,400 in excise tax revenue, and Inkster collected $407,600.  

    An Oct. 13 analysis by the Senate Fiscal Agency warns that a cap on licenses will harm small cities and towns and “create regional monopolies or oligopolies preventing new businesses from entering the marijuana market.”

    The agency points out that larger cities like Detroit have not yet reached their dispensary limit, but smaller municipalities have. In Detroit, which has a population of 645,705, there are 61 active dispensary licenses. The city’s cap would be 64.  

    “If small cities and villages were prevented from increasing the number of dispensaries while larger cities were not, there would be a shift of payments from small towns to larger cities,” the report states. 

    The legislation would also bar new large cultivation licenses that permit operators to grow as many as 2,000 plants. 

    The bills came in response to a new 24% wholesale tax that will be slapped on the struggling cannabis industry beginning on Jan. 1. With no feedback from the industry or consumers, the House approved the bill 78-21 in late September, and the Senate narrowly approved the tax 19-17 after cannabis business owners spoke out. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer signed the tax into law on Oct. 7.

    Hours later, the Michigan Cannabis Industry Association filed a lawsuit against the state, alleging the Senate lacked the three-quarters supermajority required to change a voter-approved initiative. Voters agreed to a 10% excise tax and 6% sales tax on retail cannabis sales. Any new or higher tax, the association contends, amounts to an amendment of the ballot measure and therefore needs a supermajority vote.

    Records obtained by Metro Times show lawmakers knew the increase was going to harm the industry and ultimately lead to a drop in excise taxes. On Sept. 26, a day after the House approved the tax hike with no public input, the Michigan Department of Treasury estimated the new tax will shrink the wholesale market by 14%.  

    By the state’s own estimates, lawmakers are harming cities that have embraced cannabis legalization and leaving consumers with higher prices and fewer choices. 

    At the same time, cannabis businesses are struggling to hang on in an industry that has more product than it can sell. Prices have plummeted, and sales continue to decline this year. Profit margins are razor thin, and many businesses have closed or are on the cusp of calling it quits. 

    Reducing competition would control oversupply and help existing businesses survive in a tough, competitive, and expensive industry, advocates say. 

    At a Senate Regulatory Affairs Committee meeting on Oct. 15, Moss blamed the wholesale tax vote on House Speaker Matt Hall, R-Richland Township. 

    “He said he would shut down the government if the 24% didn’t pass,” Moss said. 

    Moss pledged the Senate would “demonstrate in good faith that we are serious about listening to the industry,” which he said was “struggling with too many operators both in the grow and retail space, leading to unprofitability of product.”

    Robin Schneider, executive director of the Michigan Cannabis Industry Association, which represents more than 400 cannabis businesses, told the committee that her organization supports the limit on new dispensaries and large-scale cultivation licenses. She said the surplus of marijuana has created “stockpiles of cannabis that are currently sitting in facilities, rapidly losing value across the state.”

    “Unlimited cultivation licenses have created oversupply, causing wholesale prices to plummet, financially harming businesses all the way down the supply chain,” Schneider told the committee. “As we’ve seen in other states, unlimited cannabis production in the license market leads to failing businesses and sometimes diversion of product into the illicit market, and that puts our entire program at risk of federal noncompliance.” 

    But not all cannabis operators support the cap on licenses. At Alien Tech Farms, a relatively new grower of high-quality cannabis in Vassar, a small city of 2,727 located outside of Flint, the goal was to eventually open a dispensary. But Vassar already has more than one dispensary for every 10,000 residents, so opening one there would be impossible if the cap is passed. 

    “This would effectively freeze us all out from vertically integrating or expanding,” Alien Tech Farms owner Steve Wagner said. “That would be pretty tough. … It’s now feeling like we can’t go anywhere.”

    He added, “The little guys are seemingly stomped on.”

    It’s not yet clear if lawmakers can round up enough votes for a supermajority to approve the bills.


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    Steve Neavling

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  • Babysitter sexually abused children over 7-year period, Michigan cops say

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    The nurse faces 47 criminal charges, authorities said.

    The nurse faces 47 criminal charges, authorities said.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    A 63-year-old babysitter is accused of abusing children in her care over a seven-year period, Michigan authorities say.

    Parents came forward to Michigan State Police troopers about the alleged abuse of their children, which they said took place from 2013 to 2020, according to an Oct. 21 news release.

    They said the abuse occurred in the home of their kids’ babysitter, Gaila L. Bennett, of Midland, state police said.

    One of the children said Bennett sexually abused her nearly every day she watched her beginning when she was in kindergarten, according to court records obtained by the Midland Daily News.

    Another victim said that when she was a third grader, Bennett began assaulting her on a bed in her basement, the station reported.

    Bennett is also accused of rubbing soap in the children’s eyes, then sexually assaulting them in the shower, WJRT reported, citing court documents.

    “The victims told investigators that Bennett gave them an unknown medication, made the children take unclothed showers, climbed in the shower with them naked and created images of them in sexually explicit poses,” the complaint said, according to WJRT.

    Troopers executed a search warrant in Bennett’s home and seized electronic devices for evidence, state police said.

    Investigators said Bennett was arrested and arraigned Oct. 21 on 47 criminal sexual conduct charges.

    More charges are possible, troopers said. Anyone with information is asked to contact state police at 989-280-7189.

    Midland is about a 130-mile drive northwest from Detroit.

    Mike Stunson

    Lexington Herald-Leader

    Mike Stunson covers real-time news for McClatchy. He is a 2011 Western Kentucky University graduate who has previously worked at the Paducah Sun and Madisonville Messenger as a sports reporter and the Lexington Herald-Leader as a breaking news reporter. 

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    Mike Stunson

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  • Cannabis Mogul Appointed Ambassador To Middle East Country

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    Washington surprised as cannabis mogul appointed ambassador to Middle East Country amid tension

    Considering the delay in rescheduling, it is a bit of surprising and positive news a cannabis mogul appointed ambassador to Middle East country. yes, Mark Savaya,  a Michigan businessman best known for his Leaf & Bud marijuana dispensary chain and ubiquitous billboards around Detroit, may become the new special envoy to the Republic of Iraq. The pick, announced on Trump’s Truth Social, landed like a Twitter storm: part hometown booster move, part political reward, and part diplomatic wildcard.

    RELATED: Zohram Mamdani And NYC’s Legal Marijuana

    Savaya’s rise is the kind of American-story headline editors love. An Iraqi-born Chaldean who built a visible cannabis brand in Metro Detroit, he became a local celebrity for aggressive billboard marketing and a social-media presence pushing his products — and his persona — into the public eye. His Leaf & Bud outlets and “Mark Savaya Collection” branding have been the subject of local debate and municipal attention.

    The background matters for two reasons. First, Savaya has been politically active in Michigan and a visible backer of the current presideent’s campaign efforts in the state — a factor the White House explicitly referenced when explaining the appointment. Second, his cannabis ties present an awkward optics clash: the U.S. appointee’s business is legal under Michigan state law but remains illegal under federal law, while Iraq enforces some of the region’s toughest drug penalties.

    Why Iraq makes this appointment a high-stakes headline: U.S.–Iraq ties are layered and fragile. The role of a special envoy historically carries weight — envoys have been central to reconstruction, counterterrorism coordination and high-stakes diplomacy since 2003 — and Baghdad’s politics are a mosaic of sectarian factions, foreign influences, and security challenges. The choice of a non-career political appointee with no formal diplomatic resume has prompted questions in both Baghdad and Washington about what the administration expects Savaya to accomplish.

    And then there’s the cannabis angle. Iraq’s law is unforgiving: recreational and medical cannabis are illegal, and penalties for possession, trafficking and cultivation can be severe under Iraqi statutes and long-standing narcotics laws. That stark legal contrast — an American envoy whose public brand is tied to cannabis, representing U.S. interests in a country who criminalizes it — is likely to be raised in Baghdad’s briefings and in public reaction.

    RELATED: The Rise Of The Zillennial

    What to watch next: how Baghdad and Baghdad’s partners (including the Kurdistan Regional Government) publicly receive Savaya; whether his appointment is purely symbolic outreach to Iraqi-American communities and voters in Michigan, or whether he’ll be given a clear, policy-driven brief; and how the White House manages the optics of a cannabis entrepreneur handling sensitive Middle East diplomacy. For young readers and beat-followers, this is less a culture-war curiosity and more a case study in modern patronage diplomacy — where brand, social capital, and partisan loyalty can land you in a geopolitically delicate job.

    The appointment is real, it’s provocative, and it underscores how unconventional pathways to influence are reshaping U.S. diplomacy — for better or worse — at a moment when Iraq’s stability and the U.S. role there remain anything but settled.

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    Terry Hacienda

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  • Why one Michigan town is regulating its golf cart boom

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    For someone with zero interest in golf, Cathy Kochensparger sure loves her golf cart. She bought it as a family cruiser and drives it around town almost daily, but says that safety is paramount.

    “You’ve got to be aware of your surroundings, people and other vehicles,” Kochensparger said.

    St. Johns, Michigan, is aware its surroundings are changing. In the city of roughly 8,000 people, golf carts motor side-by-side with everyday traffic. St. Johns started regulating them last month — one of hundreds of communities across the country — putting restrictions on which roads the carts can be driven on.

    St. Johns Mayor Scott Dzurka said the city has roughly 2,000 golf carts used primarily for transportation.

    “Heaven forbid something happens on one of them. If that golf cart gets in a wreck, it’s pretty disastrous,” Dzurka said.

    Safety is the primary reason why more than two dozen communities in Michigan alone have passed ordinances regulating golf carts on public roads.

    Michael Fagan owns a booming golf cart business, but says golfers represent only 5% of his customer base. The big seller is lifestyle.

    “And even year-round, ’cause we put snow plows on ’em, salt spreaders. You know, people are looking at me goofy when I say that, but we probably sell 15 to 20 snow plows a year,” Fagan said.

    St. Johns resident Ed Thelen opposes golf carts mixing with cars because of the safety issues they pose.

    “If a cart hits a car, the golf cart is just going to lose. There’s nothing there to protect the people in the golf cart,” Thelen said.

    St. Johns just started inspecting golf carts, similar to cars, for working turn signals and horns. Drivers also have to be at least 18 years old and hold a valid drivers license.

    By law now, Kochensparger can drive her cart only on streets where the speed limit is 25 miles an hour or lower. Her golf cart’s speed limit is 15 miles per hour.

    When asked if she feels safe in one, Kochensparger said, “Oh definitely, definitely I do. I wouldn’t take my grandkids on it if I didn’t.”

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  • CSU Rams football coach short list: Who could replace Jay Norvell?

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    Since Canvas Stadium opened, the CSU Rams football program has tried the SEC route. It’s tried The Urban Meyer Family Tree. It’s tried a safe, steady hand with Mountain West bona fides. None of those paths have led to a consistent conference championship contender whose results have matched the ambitions of CSU’s $220 million football home.

    So with Jay Norvell out, where does Rams AD John Weber turn now? Here are nine candidates CSU should have on his short list:

    Tony Alford, Michigan running backs coach/run game coordinator: If it’s about family, nobody bleeds green the way Alford, who played running back at CSU from 1987-90, still does. At 56, he’s been looking for a chance to put a stamp on a program of his own.

    Matt Lubick, Kansas co-offensive coordinator/tight ends coach: Speaking of keeping it in the family, the son of CSU icon Sonny Lubick remains a fan favorite at age 53. Time to come home?

    Jay Hill, BYU defensive coordinator/associate head coach: Not young (50), but we already know what his Cougars can do (and have done) to CU. Bonus: Has head coaching experience, posting a 68-39 record as the top man at Weber State from 2014-22.

    Jason Candle, Toledo: Matt Campbell’s successor was supposed to find his Iowa State a while ago, having produced four seasons of at least nine wins with the Rockets since 2017. He’s still there. Although, as he’s got a contract through 2028, so he probably won’t come super-cheap.

    Collin Klein, Texas A&M offensive coordinator: At 36, the former Loveland High star and Heisman Trophy finalist is a rising star and a good guy, to boot. If Rams fans want to “lock the gates” for local recruits, this could be the guy.

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    Sean Keeler

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