Results for “medical debt”
18 stories
- legislature
Michigan Legislature Advances Major Healthcare Bills to Address Medical Debt and Hospital Financial Assistance
Michigan Senate unanimously approves bipartisan medical debt reform package and Hospital Financial Assistance Act; House advances premises liability, opioid treatment, and litigation funding bills
April 1, 2026·Michigan Capitol·3 sources - legislature
Michigan Senate Passes Bipartisan Package to Address Medical Debt and Require Hospital Financial Assistance Programs
The Michigan Senate unanimously passed a bipartisan package of five bills to address medical debt, requiring hospitals to create financial assistance programs for low-income patients and prohibiting medical debt from appearing on credit reports. The legislation now moves to the House for consideration.
April 1, 2026·Michigan Capitol·4 sources - legislature
Michigan Senate Passes Bipartisan Medical Debt Reform Bills to Protect Michiganders Burdened by Healthcare Costs
Michigan Senate approves bipartisan medical debt reform bills requiring hospitals to expand financial assistance programs, prevent medical debt from appearing on credit reports, and ban home foreclosures tied to healthcare costs.
March 31, 2026·Michigan Capitol·3 sources - legislature
Michigan Legislature Advances Comprehensive Healthcare Package Addressing Medical Debt, Liability Reform, and Workforce Shortages
Michigan Legislature advances bipartisan healthcare package addressing medical debt relief, liability reform, organ donation incentives, and anesthesiologist assistant licensure to tackle workforce shortages
March 31, 2026·Michigan Capitol·7 sources - budget
American Center for Mobility Faces $35 Million Debt Repayment Demand From Michigan
Michigan is demanding annual payments of $1.62 million from the American Center for Mobility, a nonprofit self-driving auto test facility. The state has invested $35 million in the facility and wants repayment, but advocates say the nonprofit was never meant to repay startup costs.
May 12, 2026·Michigan Capitol·1 source - legislature
Michigan State University Board Approves Medical College Merger Despite Faculty Resistance
Michigan State University Board of Trustees approves merger of College of Human Medicine and College of Osteopathic Medicine into MSU Medicine despite faculty concerns about the process and feasibility
April 11, 2026·Michigan Capitol·4 sources - governor
Michigan Gubernatorial Candidate Tom Leonard Proposes Auto Insurance 'Opt Out' Plan That Would Let Drivers Sue At-Fault Drivers for Medical Bills
Republican gubernatorial candidate Tom Leonard proposes letting drivers opt out of Michigan's no-fault auto insurance law and sue at-fault drivers for medical bills instead.
April 15, 2026·Michigan Capitol·2 sources - healthcare
Michigan Lawmakers Resolve Physician License Crisis with Interstate Medical Licensure Compact Renewal
Michigan Lawmakers Resolve Physician License Crisis with Interstate Medical Licensure Compact Renewal
April 2, 2026·Michigan Capitol·6 sources - healthcare
Michigan Legislature Passes Bill to Renew Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, Preserving Access for 8,000 Physicians
Michigan lawmakers pass bipartisan bill to renew Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, protecting access for 8,000 physicians and 100,000 daily patient visits
March 31, 2026·Michigan Capitol·3 sources - business
Muskegon-area metal manufacturer files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with debts exceeding assets
Precision Manufacturing Group, a metal manufacturer near Muskegon, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with liabilities exceeding $3.5 million. The company continues to operate as it seeks reorganization.
May 12, 2026·Michigan Capitol·1 source - legislature
Michigan Legislature Advances Child Care and Healthcare Bills in Major Legislative Push
Michigan lawmakers advance comprehensive child care and healthcare legislation addressing the state's mounting crisis in affordable child care and key healthcare system issues including medical debt and organ donation incentives.
March 31, 2026·Michigan Capitol·2 sources - politics
50-Year-Old Bay City Man Found Partially Submerged in Saginaw River in Zilwaukee Township
A 50-year-old Bay City man was found partially submerged in the Saginaw River in Zilwaukee Township on Thursday afternoon. The Saginaw County Medical Examiner will perform an autopsy to determine cause of death.
May 15, 2026·Michigan Capitol·2 sources - education
Muskegon voters face $37.1M school bond proposal to add classrooms and expand career learning
Muskegon Public Schools presents a $37.1M bond proposal on Tuesday to add classrooms and expand career learning spaces across elementary, middle and high schools. The plan would maintain the current tax debt rate with no net increase in taxes.
May 6, 2026·Michigan Capitol·1 source - politics
Detainees at Michigan's Largest ICE Facility Launch Hunger Strike Over Living Conditions
Detainees at Michigan's largest ICE processing center in Baldwin are staging a hunger and work strike to protest living conditions, medical care, and prolonged detention without bond.
April 29, 2026·Michigan Capitol·3 sources - legislature
Michigan House Passes Kratom Ban as State Tackles 'Gas Station Heroin' Debate
Michigan House passes House Bill 5537 banning kratom sale and distribution, with Rep. Cam Cavitt calling the substance a crisis affecting children. Bill now heads to Senate amid debate over medical research and regulation.
April 21, 2026·Michigan Capitol·3 sources - politics
Advocates Urge Whitmer to Grant Clemency to Inmate Allegedly Sickened by Mold in Michigan Women's Prison
State lawmakers and advocates are urging Gov. Gretchen Whitmer to grant medical clemency to Krystal Clark, an inmate at the Women's Huron Valley Correctional Facility who they say is suffering from severe health conditions tied to mold exposure inside the prison.
April 18, 2026·Michigan Capitol·4 sources - governor
Michigan Governor Signs Health Care and Local Development Bills Including Wood Duck as Official State Duck
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer signs three bipartisan bills addressing physician licensing through the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, downtown revitalization via tax increment financing in St. Clair County, and designation of the wood duck as the official state duck in recognition of conservation success.
April 8, 2026·Michigan Capitol·3 sources - courts
Supreme Court Weighs Michigan Tax Auction Case That Could Reshape Property Rights Nationwide
The U.S. Supreme Court is deciding whether local governments can keep surplus equity from homes they auction to pay tax debts, or must compensate homeowners for full market value. The case involves a Michigan family who lost their $200,000 home after foreclosure for a $2,000 tax debt they never owed.
April 7, 2026·Michigan Capitol·4 sources
