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Today โ€” 25 November 2025Main stream

Thousands prepare for Thanksgiving travel at Detroit Metro Airport

25 November 2025 at 10:46

Whether you're planning to travel by plane, train, or car for Thanksgiving, you'll be one of tens of millions of people heading out.

See the latest reports in the video below

Thousands prepare for Thanksgiving travel at Detroit Metro Airport Week of Thanksgiving travel kicks off at Detroit Metro Airport

According to AAA, nearly 82 million people will travel at least 50 miles from home during the Thanksgiving travel season, which officially starts on Tuesday and goes through Monday, Dec. 1.

It's no secret that air travel has had its fair share of challenges this year, most recently with delays and cancellations during the government shutdown. Tuesday is expected to be one of the busiest days.

Flights are looking pretty good at Detroit Metro Airport, with FlightAware showing no cancellations this morning and only three delays, which is good news for the thousands expected to move through airports in the coming days.

Six million people are projected to be taking domestic flights during the Thanksgiving period, according to AAA. That's up 2% from last year.

During last year's period, DTW saw about a million people. We caught up with some people at DTW on Tuesday morning to hear what they're saying about traveling during one of the busiest times of the year.

"As long as you get here early enough, I dont think youll have a problem," Richard Herbert, who is flying to Punta Cana, said.

"Get here early. Weve been very lucky to get through fast, but the one time we don't, we know were going to get caught. But its pretty good today, we walked right through," Crystal and Jason Congdon said.

If you're one of the thousands coming through DTW, here are some tips to make sure your trip runs smoothly:

Get to the airport at least two hours before domestic flights and three for international flights Make sure you have your Real ID, passport or other acceptable form of ID Keep electronics easily accessible and wear slip-on shoes with shocks for a quick move through TSA When packing, remember the 3-1-1 rule. Liquids can be up to 3.4 ounces, and you have have as many that will fit into a quart Ziplock bag that has to zip and it's one bag per traveler
Before yesterdayMain stream

'Uplift the city': Detroiters react to Mary Sheffield's historic win to become city's next mayor

5 November 2025 at 11:09
History has been made in the Motor City, with Detroiters chosing City Council President Mary Sheffield as their next mayor, making her the first woman to serve in the position.

We wanted to see what the average Detroit voter thought about the city's first female mayor and the landslide win. We also ran into people who did not cast a ballot at all.

Watch Brittany's report in the video player below 'Uplift the city': Detroiters react to Mary Sheffield's historic win to become city's next mayor

"Detroit you showed up, you showed out. You stood strong and raised your voices to a future we could all believe in," Sheffield said after her victory last night.

Sheffield supporters filled a watch party at the MGM Grand Casino, a couple of hours after she addressed them. We hit the city streets to hear what Detroiters think of the outcome.

"She hit every point I needed her to hit and Im glad that she won," said Detroiter Kieya Lileton.

"I hope that she would do good for the city. Uplift the city. Just do all the things that she said she would do," said Detroiter Michael Lloyd.

"I feel that things are looking up," said Detroiter Luis Carcamon.

All Detroit precincts have reported, but absentee ballots haven't reported. Unofficial election results show Sheffield won nearly 80 percent of the vote, but like City Clerk Janice Winfrey predicted, only about 20 percent of voters came out to cast a ballot. We talked with over 10 Detroiters throughout the night, with only thre confirming they voted.

"Unfortunately I never got out to it. It kind of hit me a bit when the election was going on. I was like 'I should have gone out there,' but I didnt," Carcamon said.

Residents all said they hope to see Mary keep downtown developments going, and show that tender, love and care to the neighborhoods.

"The Citys been going great," Carcamon said. "The past 15 years so hopefully we can keep that trend. The communities. Where we live. Get the communities back right. Get the houses back right, that's what I'm hoping."

Sheffield will be sworn into office on Jan. 1.

What we know about SNAP funding pause as government shutdown enters day 34

3 November 2025 at 10:54

Monday marks day 34 of the federal government shutdown, and all eyes are on the U.S. Senate to see if lawmakers can strike a deal ahead of their next vote.

If they don't and the shutdown goes into Tuesday, it will be tied for the longest shutdown in American history.

Watch our interview with Forgotten Harvest CEO Adrian Lewis in the video below

Forgotten Harvest CEO talks about what they're doing during SNAP funding pause

Meanwhile, its impact on everyday Americans continues to grow, as millions of people are now without critical food assistance.

Funding for federal SNAP benefits officially ran dry over the weekend, leaving 42 million low-income Americans, including 16 million children, wondering how they will afford their next meal.

Two federal judges are firing back at the Trump administration, ordering the payments to move forward. The president said he'll eventually provide the funding, but wants more direction from the court first.

Just make a decision. People are out here really suffering, you know hungry," Diamonique Wright, a Detroit mom of four, said.

She's a SNAP recipient and with four kids at home, every cent she gets helps.

It is a plus for me being a mom of four and it does goes a long way, it truly go along way," she said. "It gives my children the food that they need, it gives me a piece of mind at the end of the night knowing that they do have food to eat."

The record-breaking 35-day stoppage happened during Trump's first term. This time, the USDA put in an October memo that it wouldn't use over $5 billion in contingency funds saying, "the well has run dry," and arguing those funds are for natural disasters. It also said it wouldn't pay states back for funding SNAP with state money.

"We have over 200 pantry partner distributors throughout metro Detroit and they are seeing as much as 10-15% increase in demand well and thats combined," Forgotten Harvest CEO Adrian Lewis said.

Michigan has injected $4.5 million into the state food bank council. In Michigan, each household receives on average $335 a month with SNAP, which is just under $6 a day pe perso.

You just have to make it work and day by day, minute by minute, hour by hour, you just have to do what you have to do," Wright said.

The USDA is supposed to lay out a plan on how it will fund SNAP during the shutdown, but those payments could be reduced.

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