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A data journalist stops in to discuss period tracking apps and how they can give away users’ data. Then, we talk to an award winning photojournalist about the life he leads as a nature photographer. We hear about a protest of the auto insurance law. Finally, a segment from Interlochen Public Radio about a deadly fungus that is pushing some bats towards extinction.
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The scramble from state officials to keep auto production in Michigan as the industry transitions to electric. Protecting Michigan dogs from cruel and inhumane testing. And, the final installment of our podcast special, Collision Course.
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Brian Woodward was one of the success stories envisioned by Michigan's old no fault law, which aimed for "maximum recovery." Now, under new law, he's lost nearly everything.
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Kelley Miller lost the use of her arms and legs ten years ago in a catastrophic car crash; now, she's lost her quality of life and her home, due to the state's new auto no fault law.
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Survivors of catastrophic car crashes despair as loss of care due to new no-fault law changes threatens their wellbeing and even their lives
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Accident survivors are expressing dismay at news Michigan auto owners will receive $400 refund checks. The checks will use surplus money from a fund meant to pay for their treatment.
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The amnesty was written into the 2019 auto no-fault insurance law. It allows people who have gone uninsured to buy auto insurance without penalty.
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Governor Gretchen Whitmer announced Tuesday that drivers can expect bigger savings on auto insurance rates over what they paid in the previous year. That’s under the state’s new insurance law that she signed in 2019.
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Republican State Senator Jim Runestad says political indifference to the desperate plight of auto accident survivors with catastrophic injuries is "the coldest I've seen."
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MCCA to send auto insurance refund checks to drivers; some advocates call it stealing from survivorsA fund to care for catastrophically injured auto accident survivors has a big surplus. The board agreed to send refund checks to Michigan drivers after a request from Governor Gretchen Whitmer.