Funding to Shore Up Retirement Savings for Michigan Seniors

Funding to Shore Up Retirement Savings for Michigan Seniors

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 20, 2023

Contact: [email protected]

 

Gov. Whitmer Awards Funding to Shore Up Retirement Savings for Michigan Seniors, Putting More than $553 Million Back into their Pockets

Grant Awards Help Local Communities with Promises to Local Retirees, Provide Fiscal Stability for Other Important Services

 

 

LANSING, Mich. – Today, Governor Gretchen Whitmer announced that more than $553 million in Protecting MI Pension Grant awards are being sent to 123 Michigan communities, putting dollars back into the pockets of retirees and offsetting costs for local communities, keeping them from having to divert funds from critical public services.

 

“After a lifetime of hard work, Michigan seniors deserve to retire with dignity,” said Governor Whitmer. “Today’s Protecting MI Pension Grants will ensure that Michiganders who served our communities as police officers, firefighters, sanitation workers, and in so many other invaluable professions, will receive the stable, secure retirement that they earned. I am proud that earlier this year, I signed legislation rolling back the retirement tax on our seniors, saving half a million households an average of $1,000 a year, putting money back in their pockets for gas, groceries, or gifts for their grandkids. Today, we are continuing to deliver on our promise to Michigan’s seniors and shoring up municipal budgets across the state. Let’s keep putting money back in people’s pockets and building a brighter future.”

 

The Protecting MI Pension Grant Program was created to help Michigan’s underfunded municipal systems. Under the Fiscal Year 2022-23 budget, the Michigan Department of Treasury was appropriated dollars to establish and operate a program for qualified retirement systems that were underfunded as outlined in state law.

 

Under the grant program, eligible cities, villages, townships, counties, and road commissions were encouraged to review their retirement system funding and apply for a grant by mid-June. A complete list of grant award communities can be found online. 

 

“A major budgetary concern for our local governments is their pensions systems,” said State Treasurer Rachael Eubanks. “Funding these systems enables our communities to uphold their commitment to 25,000-plus public servants and focus on providing the services Michiganders come to expect.”

 

Local units of government from every Michigan region received a grant award.

 

“Receiving this grant is a huge weight off the village’s shoulders,” said Tom Ebenhoeh, interim village administrator of the village of Chesaning. “With an underfunded liability like that, it is constantly in the back of your mind. Having this relief brings us that much closer to being able to reach our goal of a pension that is secure. It has turned a 20-year project into a five-to-eight-year project when it comes to getting our pension reasonably funded. It also means the extra resources we are investing into the pension now will sooner be available to put elsewhere in our community.”

 

“Rising pension payments have drastically affected the City of Saginaw’s ability to provide necessary services to our citizens,” said Tim Morales, city manager of the city of Saginaw. “Saginaw has taken measures to reduce legacy costs including eliminating the pension program over 20 years ago and eliminating retiree healthcare 15 years ago. The city has also made payments in excess of our Annual Required Contribution (ARC); however, the impact of these actions hasn’t resulted in reducing our annual contribution. The Protecting MI Pension Grant Program will significantly improve our financial stability and help provide an overall benefit to our operations and ability to provide essential services. We are very grateful that the state of Michigan has awarded this funding to the city.”

 

“This grant award will provide a much-needed boost to the city’s ongoing efforts to address its underfunded pension liability,” said Erin E. LaPere, city manager of the city of Charlotte. We have made changes to our benefits, but our legacy costs continue to place a significant strain on the overall pension system’s funding levels and the city’s overall budget. For the past two years, City Council has approved funding additional $150,000 above the required annual contribution into our pension plan, but our current underfunded liabilities are approximately $14 million. As a small, rural municipality that operates on minimal staffing, this grant from the state will help bolster our ongoing efforts and accelerate our work towards fully funded status.”

 

“The City of Sault Ste. Marie Police and Firefighters Pension is very pleased to be awarded $2,636,455 from the Protecting MI Pension Grant Program,” said Kristin M. Collins, finance director/treasurer of the city of Sault Ste. Marie. “The award is the full amount of our request and the maximum allowable amount that would bring the fund out of underfunded status. While funding levels have improved over the past five years, increasing from 52% to 57%, it’s a slow climb and this infusion will provide a boost that the fund really needed.”

 

“We were very excited to receive the news that we would be a recipient of the Protecting MI Pension Grant Program,” said Dan Stoltman, city manager of the city of Norway. “Helping us get to the 60% funded status makes the light at the end of the tunnel a little closer and a lot brighter for our future.”

 

“We have many priorities, in Lansing, and our long-term financial stability is always in mind as we do everything we can to grow Lansing. Long-term liability through pension obligations has tremendous impacts on our ability to service our residents and retirees,” said Mayor Andy Schor, city of Lansing. “We have implemented smart, responsible changes to bring our unfunded liability down significantly, and this grant will be another great step forward. I thank the Legislature and Governor for helping communities to serve their residents and to provide the pension payments for our retirees,”

 

“The City of Dowagiac is very pleased that the State of Michigan and Michigan Department of Treasury understand the importance of the pension system for public employees and established the Protecting MI Pension Grant Program that will strengthen the City of Dowagiac’s municipal pension system” said Kevin Anderson, city manager of the city of Dowagiac. “Especially now, when inflation is taking a bite out of local government’s ability to fund critical community services, the funding provided through the Protecting MI Pension Grant Program will not only strengthen the city’s retirement system, but also provide room within our annual budgets to continue to meet the service expectations of our citizens. We are also grateful for the Department of Treasury’s administration of the grant process. The process was clear, the grant documentation concise, and the communication was timely.”

 

“The Protecting MI Pension Grant Program was a real blessing to the City of Benton Harbor and our thanks to the Governor, Treasury, and the Governor’s whole team” said Ellis Mitchell, city manager of the city Benton Harbor. “As Benton Harbor is a financially distressed city, without this grant, the city would have had to place an additional burden on our citizens that they could not afford or have been years trying to catch up.  Thank you again.”

 

“The Protecting MI Pension Grant Program is critically important for communities like Hazel Park with underfunded pension systems.  The Grant Program provides relief for taxpayers and protects the pensions of retired workers” said Edward Klobucher, city manager of the city Hazel Park. “One of the best pieces of legislation for cities to come out of Lansing in decades!”

 

“The Ottawa County Road Commission is very appreciative of the Michigan Department of Treasury and the grant received to assist our underfunded pension system,” said Brett Laughlin, managing director of the Ottawa County Road Commission.

 

“The award from the Protecting Michigan Pension Grant program will benefit Presque Isle County Road Commission by reducing the length of time needed to reach our goal of being 100% funded for our MERS pension plan,” said David A. Kowalski, superintendent/manager of the Presque Isle County Road Commission. “Additionally, the grant award will help ensure financial stability going forward and allow the Road Commission to budget better for equipment purchases and road projects.”

 

Building a Trusted Partnership with Michigan communities, the Michigan Department of Treasury has developed tools and resources to help local communities navigate budget processes and enact the best practices to achieve fiscal stability. Programs like Protecting MI Pension Grant Program help alleviate some budget pressures and enable resources to be dedicated to important services that residents depend on every day.

 

To learn more about the Protecting MI Pension Grant program – including a list of grant award recipients, program description and frequently asked questions – go to Michigan.gov/MIPensionGrant.

 

AG Shuts Down Internet Gambling Corporation’s Illegal Operations

AG Shuts Down Internet Gambling Corporation’s Illegal Operations

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

September 12, 2023

Media Contact:
Danny Wimmer

Attorney General Nessel Shuts Down Internet Gambling Corporation’s Illegal Michigan Operations

LANSING – Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, through her office’s Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement Division (AGED), secured an Assurance of Discontinuance on September 1st, effectively shutting down the illegal Michigan operations of Massachusetts based Golden Hearts Games, Inc. The out-of-state corporation was informed by the Department of Attorney General, working with the Michigan Gaming Control Board (MGCB), they were operating in violation of the law by offering their online gambling games to Michigan consumers without the requisite licensure.

State gaming regulators began investigating Golden Hearts Games in August 2021 and found Golden Hearts’ activity constituted illegal gaming, as they did not hold a license to offer gaming in the state of Michigan. In 2022, the Department of Attorney General issued a cease-and-desist letter to Golden Hearts advising that it was illegally operating. Despite the letter, Golden Hearts continued to offer its gaming product to Michigan residents. The Department subsequently sent notice under the Michigan Consumer Protection Act of its intent to file an action in state court. Faced with the intended lawsuit from the State of Michigan for violating the Lawful Internet Gaming Act by conducting internet gaming without a license, Golden Hearts thereafter agreed to halt its activity, signing an Assurance of Discontinuance stating that it would no longer offer its games in Michigan. The Assurance of Discontinuance was filed in the Ingham County Circuit Court on September 1, 2023. The complaint also alleged that Golden Hearts’ conduct violated the Michigan Consumer Protection Act by deceiving Michiganders into thinking that they were participating in legal gaming.

“Unlicensed gaming robs our schools and our government of essential funding and leaves consumers unprotected,” Nessel said. “When companies like Golden Hearts attempt to circumvent Michigan’s gaming laws, they create the false impression that their games are legal and safe for consumers. My office is committed to ensuring that our gaming laws are strictly enforced and those who violate those laws are held accountable.”

Golden Hearts’ decision to sign an Assurance of Discontinuance is the culmination of the Department of Attorney General’s collaboration with MGCB to hold accountable individuals who try to take advantage of Michigan consumers by offering unregulated and unlicensed gaming. Michigan’s Lawful Internet Gaming Act imposes stringent standards on those who are both eligible and suitable for licensure. The highly regulated industry ensures that Michigan residents are offered fair and honest gaming.

Flags Lowered to Honor Fallen Police Sgt. Shannon Wright

Flags Lowered to Honor Fallen Police Sgt. Shannon Wright

 

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 8, 2023

Contact: [email protected]

 

Gov. Whitmer Lowers Flags to Honor Fallen Detroit Police Sgt. Shannon Wright

 

LANSING, Mich. – Today, Governor Gretchen Whitmer has ordered U.S. and Michigan flags within the State Capitol Complex and across all public buildings and grounds to be lowered to half-staff on Saturday, September 9 to honor and remember Detroit Police Sergeant Shannon Wright, who passed away from a medical emergency on duty. The flag lowering will coincide with the date of Wright’s funeral.

 

“Michigan will lower flags on Saturday to mourn the loss of Sergeant Shannon Wright, a dedicated public servant, mother, and daughter,” said Governor Whitmer. “Sergeant Wright was one of Detroit’s finest officers who put her life on the line every day to keep working families and communities safe. Our hearts go out to Sergeant Wright’s family, friends, and fellow officers through this difficult time and the entire community that has been impacted by her passing.”

 

Sergeant Wright joined the Detroit Police Department in October of 2000 and became a detective in 2014. Wright was then promoted to rank of sergeant in May of 2020. During her career, she received the Major League Baseball All-Star Recognition Award, the National Football League Super Bowl XL Recognition Award, the Rosa Parks Funeral Recognition Award, and was awarded a Citation, given out for service in the line of duty and required unusual thoroughness, conscientiousness, determination, and initiative in the performance of a difficult assignment. Wright was also a devoted mother to her two daughters.

 

The State of Michigan recognizes the duty, honor, and service of fallen Detroit Police Sergeant Shannon Wright by lowering flags to half-staff. Michigan residents, businesses, schools, local governments, and other organizations also are encouraged to display the flag at half-staff.

 

To lower flags to half-staff, flags should be hoisted first to the peak for an instant and then lowered to the half-staff position. The process is reversed before the flag is lowered for the day.

 

Flags should be returned to full staff on Sunday, September 10, 2023.

County seeks community input at Opioid Listening Sessions

County seeks community input at Opioid Listening Sessions

County seeks community input at Opioid Listening Sessions to guide future prevention, treatment and recovery spending

Post Date:09/06/2023 3:06 PM

Pontiac, Mich. – Oakland County is hosting a series of community-based opioid listening sessions aimed at gathering input from Oakland County residents about the impacts of the opioid epidemic; resources needed to prevent opioid misuse and supports needed for people in treatment and recovery; and how to best use funding from opioid settlements.

Oakland County is estimated to receive approximately $35 million over the next 20 years as a result of settlements reached in class action lawsuits filed against opioid prescription drug manufacturers and pharmacies.

“The scourge of opioid addiction has been devastating for so many Oakland County and Michigan families and this settlement funding will help to provide some justice for those who have been impacted by prescription addiction with intervention, treatment, and other services,” said Oakland County Executive David Coulter. “We will work with residents, local health care systems, community partners, and the Oakland County Board of Commissioners to develop a plan to use these funds to address treatment and prevention of future addiction.”

Opioid Listening Sessions are open to people who live or work in Oakland County and are 18 years and older. Session locations, dates and times are listed below and are open-house style. Registration is recommended at oakgov.com/health or by calling Nurse on Call at 1-800-848-5533. Walk-ins are welcome.

• Waterford Town Hall, 5200 Civic Center Drive, Waterford, on Sept. 12, 11 a.m. – noon
• Affirmations, 290 West Nine Mile Road, Ferndale, on Sept. 13, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m.
• Pontiac Public Library, 60 East Pike Street, Pontiac, on Sept. 13, 6:30 – 7:30 p.m.
• Southfield Public Library, 26300 Evergreen Road, Southfield, on Sept. 18, 6:30 – 7:30 p.m.
• Costick Center, 28600 Eleven Mile Road, Farmington Hills, on Sept. 19, 10 – 11 a.m.
• White Lake Public Library, 11005 Elizabeth Lake Road, White Lake, on Sept. 21, 6:30 – 7:30 p.m.
• Oakland University, 318 Meadow Brook Rd, Rochester, on Sept. 26, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m.

In 2021, more than 75% of the nearly 107,000 drug overdose deaths in the United States involved an opioid. During that same year, Oakland County had 180 drug overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids, which was a 119.5% increase in synthetic opioid-involved deaths over 2020.

EMS administered 1,156 units of Naloxone to patients in Oakland County from June 2022 to June 2023, while Oakland County’s Harm Reduction program distributed 2,670 Narcan kits resulting in 188 reported rescues to date in 2023.

“Comprehensive substance use prevention, treatment and recovery efforts are vital to the health and safety of our community,” said Oakland County Health and Human Services Director, Leigh-Anne Stafford. “Together with community input, key partnerships, and opioid settlement funds, we anticipate providing life-saving services for years to come.”

Oakland County has many substance use prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery efforts underway, including free Narcan vending machines and ‘Save a Life’ stations highlighted on a new, interactive map; the first Harm Reduction and Syringe Service Program clinic in Oakland County; prescription drug disposal locations via Operation Medicine Cabinet; substance use prevention programs for schools and community organizations; and medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for inmates at the Oakland County jail.

More information about opioids, harm reduction services, and substance use prevention programs can be found on the Health Division’s website at oakgov.com/health or by contacting Nurse on Call at 800-848-5533 or [email protected]. Nurse on Call is available 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. For up-to-date public health information, follow @publichealthOC on Facebook and X (formally known as Twitter).

For media inquiries only please contact Bill Mullan, Oakland County media and communications officer, at 248-858-1048.

Majority Support Paid Family and Medical Leave Proposal

Majority Support Paid Family and Medical Leave Proposal

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

September 6, 2023

Contact: [email protected]

 

Majority of Michiganders Support Paid Family and Medical Leave Proposal in What’s Next Address

Majority of Michiganders support paid family and medical leave so workers can spend time with their newborn, care for a sick parent, or get better after a serious medical procedure

 

LANSING, Mich. — A majority of Michiganders support the paid family and medical leave proposal in the ‘What’s Next Address,’ a speech Governor Gretchen Whitmer delivered on August 30 to lay out top legislative priorities for the fall and beyond. Paid family and medical leave ensures workers can be there for their families. It helps people bond with their babies, care for an aging parent, or get better after a serious medical procedure.

 

Paid Family and Medical Leave

Too many Michiganders cannot be there for their families without sacrificing a paycheck. No one should have to choose between their health, their newborn, or a sick relative and paying the bills and putting food on the table.

  • What’s next: Enact paid leave so people have breathing room to get better when they’re sick, bond with their newborn, or care for an aging or ill family member. Helps small businesses compete for talent with larger companies who can offer paid leave.

 

What do Michiganders think?

  • A Pew Research survey from May 2023 found that 99% of Americans said spending time with family is one of the most important things (73%), very important (18%), or somewhat important (8%).
  • Michiganders have been in support of paid leave for years. In 2015, a poll from Denno Research found 86% of Michiganders support paid sick time.
  • Nationally, paid family and medical leave has strong, bipartisan support that has held steady for years.
  • Data for Progress poll in February 2023 found that 79% of American support paid family and medical leave, including 74% of Independents and 72% of Republicans.
  • Navigator Research poll in September 2022 found that 80% of Americans support paid family and medical leave, including 76% of Independents and 70% of Republicans.
Artificial Intelligence and Its Harmful Effects on Children

Artificial Intelligence and Its Harmful Effects on Children

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

September 5, 2023

Media Contact:
Danny Wimmer

AG Nessel Urges Congress to Study Artificial Intelligence and Its Harmful Effects on Children

LANSING – As part of a bipartisan 54-state and territory coalition, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined a letter urging Congress to study how artificial intelligence (AI) can and is being used to exploit children through child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and to propose legislation to protect children from those abuses.

“Artificial Intelligence poses a serious threat to our children, and abusers are already taking advantage,” Nessel said. “Our laws and regulations must catch up to the technology being used by those who prey on our children. I stand with my colleagues in asking Congress to prioritize examining the dangers posed by AI-generated child sexual abuse material.”

The dangers of AI as it relates to CSAM consist of three main categories: a real child who has not been physically abused, but whose likeness is being digitally altered in a depiction of abuse; a real child who has been physically abused and whose likeness is being digitally recreated in other depictions of abuse; and a child who does not exist, but is being digitally created in a depiction of abuse that feeds the market for CSAM.

The letter states that AI can, “rapidly and easily create ‘deepfakes’ by studying real photographs of abused children to generate new images showing those children in sexual positions. This involves overlaying the face of one person on the body of another. Deepfakes can also be generated by overlaying photographs of otherwise unvictimized children on the internet with photographs of abused children to create new CSAM involving the previously unharmed children.”

Attorney General Nessel and the rest of the coalition ask Congress to form a commission specifically to study how AI can be used to exploit children and to “act to deter and address child exploitation, such as by expanding existing restrictions on CSAM to explicitly cover AI-generated CSAM.”

The letter continues, “We are engaged in a race against time to protect the children of our country from the dangers of AI. Indeed, the proverbial walls of the city have already been breached. Now is the time to act.”

Besides Michigan, the letter, which was co-led by South Carolina, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Oregon in a bipartisan effort, was joined by Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Northern Mariana Islands, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virgin Islands, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

LANSING – As part of a bipartisan 54-state and territory coalition, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined a letter urging Congress to study how artificial intelligence (AI) can and is being used to exploit children through child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and to propose legislation to protect children from those abuses.

“Artificial Intelligence poses a serious threat to our children, and abusers are already taking advantage,” Nessel said. “Our laws and regulations must catch up to the technology being used by those who prey on our children. I stand with my colleagues in asking Congress to prioritize examining the dangers posed by AI-generated child sexual abuse material.”

The dangers of AI as it relates to CSAM consist of three main categories: a real child who has not been physically abused, but whose likeness is being digitally altered in a depiction of abuse; a real child who has been physically abused and whose likeness is being digitally recreated in other depictions of abuse; and a child who does not exist, but is being digitally created in a depiction of abuse that feeds the market for CSAM.

The letter states that AI can, “rapidly and easily create ‘deepfakes’ by studying real photographs of abused children to generate new images showing those children in sexual positions. This involves overlaying the face of one person on the body of another. Deepfakes can also be generated by overlaying photographs of otherwise unvictimized children on the internet with photographs of abused children to create new CSAM involving the previously unharmed children.”

Attorney General Nessel and the rest of the coalition ask Congress to form a commission specifically to study how AI can be used to exploit children and to “act to deter and address child exploitation, such as by expanding existing restrictions on CSAM to explicitly cover AI-generated CSAM.”

The letter continues, “We are engaged in a race against time to protect the children of our country from the dangers of AI. Indeed, the proverbial walls of the city have already been breached. Now is the time to act.”

Besides Michigan, the letter, which was co-led by South Carolina, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Oregon in a bipartisan effort, was joined by Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Northern Mariana Islands, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virgin Islands, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.