Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Lawsuit alleges Allen Park Krispy Kreme failed to protect disabled worker before sexual assault

A young woman with a developmental disability was sexually harassed, abused, and discriminated against while working through a supported employment program at a Krispy Kreme in Allen Park, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Wayne County Circuit Court.

The post Lawsuit alleges Allen Park Krispy Kreme failed to protect disabled worker before sexual assault appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Workers spoke out about racism at the Detroit Club. A jury awarded them $6.25 million.

A federal jury has ordered the Detroit Club and its owner to pay more than $6.25 million to three former employees who said they were punished after speaking out about racist treatment of Black guests and workers at the historic downtown private club.

The post Workers spoke out about racism at the Detroit Club. A jury awarded them $6.25 million. appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

DDOT created six-figure job for Duggan appointee before removing him months later

After Mike Duggan left office as mayor of Detroit, one of his appointees landed a newly created six-figure job at the Detroit Department of Transportation, even though employees say he lacked traditional transit experience and the position was never posted online.

The post DDOT created six-figure job for Duggan appointee before removing him months later appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Most Detroit landlords have no legal right to collect rent, housing attorneys say

About 85% of the rental properties in Detroit are owned by landlords with no legal right to collect rent, a discovery that could upend thousands of eviction cases, according to a coalition of housing attorneys and tenant advocates. 

The post Most Detroit landlords have no legal right to collect rent, housing attorneys say appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Michigan failed to monitor hotlines used by thousands seeking food, housing and crisis help

Michigan health officials failed to properly oversee a network of public hotlines that hundreds of thousands of residents rely on each year for help with food, housing, health care, mental health crises, gambling addiction, and domestic violence, according to a new state audit.

The post Michigan failed to monitor hotlines used by thousands seeking food, housing and crisis help appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Livingston County deputies threw elderly man to ground, mocked him as he suffered stroke, lawsuit says

A Monroe County man who suffered a stroke during a traffic stop was violently pulled from his vehicle, slammed to the ground, handcuffed, and mocked by Livingston County sheriff’s deputies, even as his medical condition worsened, according to a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday.

The post Livingston County deputies threw elderly man to ground, mocked him as he suffered stroke, lawsuit says appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

AIPAC-backed group pours $2M into ads boosting Haley Stevens in Michigan Senate race

United Democracy Project, an outside political group backed by the controversial American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), is spending more than $2 million on ads supporting U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens in Michigan’s Democratic primary for U.S. Senate. 

The post AIPAC-backed group pours $2M into ads boosting Haley Stevens in Michigan Senate race appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Judge blocks Detroit Thermal from using historic Lafayette Park townhome property

A Wayne County judge has permanently blocked Detroit Thermal from using property owned by the historic Mies van der Rohe townhome associations in Lafayette Park to run steam service to a nearby high-rise, handing residents a major victory in a yearlong legal fight over easements, trespass, and historic preservation.

The post Judge blocks Detroit Thermal from using historic Lafayette Park townhome property appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Women are suffering and dying at Michigan’s only women’s prison, and activists say lawmakers are moving too slowly

Two recent deaths at Michigan’s only women’s prison and the worsening health of a woman who says mold exposure is destroying her body are renewing calls for sweeping reforms at the troubled facility.

The post Women are suffering and dying at Michigan’s only women’s prison, and activists say lawmakers are moving too slowly appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

Detroit’s debt problem has a revenue solution we’re ignoring

Stephen Henderson’s recent analysis of Mayor Mary Sheffield’s budget captures Detroit’s fiscal reality with unusual clarity: the city is making real progress on bonded debt, but rising pension costs and a dysfunctional tax structure leave policymakers with “no way out, few ways up.”  That diagnosis is right. The conclusion is not.  Detroit does have a […]

The post Detroit’s debt problem has a revenue solution we’re ignoring appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

How Wayne State’s battle for African American Studies came full-circle

This story is part one in a series examining the evolution and challenges facing Wayne State University’s Department of African American Studies, the product of a historic, student-driven movement. Compared to fellow students, Cherine Shaaban got off pretty light when her family learned she was among about 100 undergrads who’d taken over a Wayne State […]

The post How Wayne State’s battle for African American Studies came full-circle appeared first on Detroit Metro Times.

❌