MichMash: Attempts to oust MSP director continue; higher ed advocate reacts to recent challenges
Michigan State Police Director Col. James Grady II is expected to testify before the state House Oversight Committee this week after ongoing attempts to oust him from the role.
This week on MichMash, WDET’s Cheyna Roth and Gongwer News Service’s Zach Gorchow explain the brewing tensions surrounding the MSP director. Then later, Michigan Association of State Universities CEO Dan Hurley stops by to discuss the various challenges state universities have faced in the last several months.
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In this episode:
- What led to the no-confidence vote of Col. James Grady II
- How state universities are navigating recent funding challenges
- A breakdown of how public universities receive funding
Earlier this month, two police unions representing state troopers and MSP command officers announced that more than 90% of their members voted no confidence in Grady and his second in command, Lt. Col. Aimee Brimacombe.
The vote was the latest in a series of tensions that have arisen since Grady’s appointment by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in 2023.
Now lawmakers are getting involved, with Republican legislators beginning to call for Grady’s resignation, saying “he’s lost the confidence of his employees.”
“This week, leadership of the House Oversight Committee began deposing some members of the state police behind closed doors, in what appeared to be an effort to get sworn testimony about Grady’s performance,” Roth said, adding that Grady and the Attorney General’s office are saying the body has “no authority” to depose members of the executive branch.
Meanwhile, Democratic lawmakers are rallying behind Grady, Roth said, with the legislative Black Caucus this week calling Grady’s criticism “unwarranted, given Grady’s qualifications,” suggesting that he is getting criticism that a white leader of the department would not get.
Whitmer’s office has also expressed support for Grady.
“In the past when Republicans have called for a department director to resign, the governor and her staff tend to turn the other cheek thinking they don’t want to dignify those types of requests,” Gorchow said. “But her press office is making clear that Gov. Whitmer stands behind Grady.”
Roth and Gorchow also spoke with Dan Hurley, CEO and executive director of the Michigan Association of State Universities, about the recent reductions in funding for state universities, crackdowns on DEI policies, and other challenges education institutions are currently facing.
“The one thing the universities need are sustainability, stability, and good forecasting,” he said, “and their model has been shaken up.”
Hurley said despite the added pressures from the current administrations, these universities, collectively, have been around for a while and will weather the storm.
—WDET’s Jenny Sherman contributed to this report.
More from WDET:
- Detroit Evening Report: Federal government revokes visas for international students at WSU, universities nationwide
- Future of DEI at University of Michigan under the microscope
- Attorney for Racial Justice Project responds to report on discriminatory policing by MSP
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The post MichMash: Attempts to oust MSP director continue; higher ed advocate reacts to recent challenges appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.