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Muskegon County commissioners join 33 other counties urging repeal or amendment of 2019 no-fault lawMuskegon County resolution said 45% cuts in payments to care providers for catastrophically injured car crash patients are "unsustainable."
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In the first phase of a study by the research firm Michigan Public Health Institute, 1,500 patients with catastrophic injuries from car crashes were found to have lost care due to changes in no fault law. That number has now more than quadrupled to 6,800.
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A data journalist stops in to discuss period tracking apps and how they can give away users’ data. Then, we talk to an award winning photojournalist about the life he leads as a nature photographer. We hear about a protest of the auto insurance law. Finally, a segment from Interlochen Public Radio about a deadly fungus that is pushing some bats towards extinction.
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A handful of summer protests against the impact of Michigan’s 2019 auto insurance changes kicked off Tuesday in Lansing.
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1st Call Home Healthcare has discharged forty patients with severe injuries from car crashes, due to cuts in payments under the 2019 auto no fault law. Options for their care going forward are extremely limited.
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The Michigan Court of Appeals heard arguments in a class action lawsuit, Andary v. USAA, that seeks to restore reasonable payments for the care of people with catastrophic injuries from car crashes that happened before 2019.
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Reporter Tracy Samilton on a class action lawsuit challenging the state's no-fault auto laws. Then, one Michigan mom on the driving school she founded for people with autism. Plus, why the formula shortage isn't over for Michigan families.
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The Michigan Court of Appeals will hear arguments in class action lawsuit Andary v. USAA, on whether 2019 auto no fault law can cut benefits for patients hurt in car crashes before the law passed.
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Seven Republican and two Democratic members of the state House Insurance Committee walked out during testimony from providers who say insurance companies are refusing to pay them for the care of auto accident survivors.
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The county's resolution, which was adopted unanimously, asks the Michigan Legislature to completely repeal the state's auto no-fault law.