© 2025 MICHIGAN PUBLIC
91.7 Ann Arbor/Detroit 104.1 Grand Rapids 91.3 Port Huron 89.7 Lansing 91.1 Flint
Michigan Public
BBC World Service
Michigan Public
BBC World Service
Next Up: 6:00 AM TED Radio Hour
0:00
0:00
BBC World Service
Michigan Public
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

A Minute with Mike: The Oracle

A Minute with Mike
Vic Reyes
Minute with Mike

I've dusted off the old 8-ball Ouija-tron to find out what's happening in future Michigan.

Dateline: Lansing, December 2034

In what some describe as a desperate move, state officials will sell the naming rights to Michigan highways and byways as a way to generate money for road repair.

Lawmakers were proud to introduce the Roads Ain't Cheap Act.

Prosperity for the Prosperous spokesperson Renee Barbarella Jr. says it's a great move by Michigan, and taxpayers should be ecstatic with road funding shifting from John Q. Citizen to Big Corporate Brother.

Barbarella Jr. says her group will work hard with the state to come up with “totes coolest and inter-web-trendy-ist names for Michigan roads.”

Motorists may soon be cruising the Comcast Corridor, the Federal Express Express, or taking the “Big Mac” Mackinac Bridge – presented, of course, by Mickey-Ds.

State government won't be the only winner under the new law; counties, cities and townships will also be able to sell off street names to the highest bidder.

So long, Grand River Avenue and Eight Mile Road. Say hello to the Quicken Loans Causeway and the Amway Highway.

Opponents to the Roads Ain't Cheap Act say selling the names of roads to private businesses goes too far.

But, bill sponsor Sean Penciltruck doesn't see it that way. Penciltruck says smooth roads outweigh public integrity in most voters' minds.

The first road name auction is set for March 2035.

Related Content
  • The debate over what we, as residents of Michigan, are officially called may soon be over. Headed to Governor Snyder's desk is a package of recently…
  • Oh, Bad Poetry, Why are you written?Why are you listened to? Perhaps the audience is held captive out of perceived rudeness at a coffee house or locked in…