The airport has had a quarantine center that has been used during bird flu, SARS and other public health scares.
The Detroit Zoo is seeking the community’s help in naming the calf born Sept. 30.
As one local community explores ways to put the hammer down on fracking, Don't Drill the Hills prepares to go to court on related issue.
The application for FEMA assistance for damages in the Aug. 11-13 floods is Nov. 24.
There are no active cases of Ebola in Michigan, although man who had been in West Africa and had a high fever was placed in isolation.
A man recently caught a very big fish. How big? It was so big it took to men to wrestle it into the boat – and that's no fish tale.
Lake sturgeon can live nearly 200 years, and the one two Michigan men caught may have been the grandaddy of them all.
Teen dies after he was electrocuted in an accident at his school; officials probing why fence had electrical current.
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and some metro Detroit firefighters, EMTs and paramedics are lending a "pink" hand to the effort.
Re-reading journals isn’t cathartic. It’s pathetic. Who was that tentative, unsure woman?
The 51 turtles and hundreds of others confiscated in international smuggling ring are being cared for at Detroit Zoo.
The Oct. 8, 2014, eclipse, the second in the lunar tetrad, is also called a hunter’s moon.
Also, more cities report they’re on the mend economically, according to a new University of Michigan study.
“These are our cousins, our sisters, our nieces,” says an infectious disease expert who moved to Michigan from Liberia at age 12.
Police called twice Monday as tensions mount between ET Rover pipeline representatives and landowners.
Also, a metro police department denies allegations of racial profiling after an ACLU analysis of traffic tickets.
Also, the Farmington Hills City Hall and other green buildings are on the 2014 National Solar Tour.
Also, a Michigan judge will decide skirmish over "rogue" police force in village – where there is1 police officer for every 3 residents.
What’s your library story? A Michigan company is collecting personal anecdotes about the power of libraries to change ives.
Federal bankruptcy judge says he lacks the authority to stop water shutoffs and that Detroit can’t afford “this hit to its revenues.”
More than 140 vets have made Honor Guard Flights in recent days for somber reflection at memorials to their service.
A lawsuit filed after a bad online review straddles the tricky line between the online persona of a business and freedom of speech.
Also, are hamburgers ruining the global environment? A documentary to be screened in Royal Oak and Ann Arbor says "yes."
President Barack Obama has cleared the way for assistance in hard-hit Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties.
Whether sold as “Cloud 9,” “Hookah Relax,” “K2” or some other name, the “absolutely deadly” drug poses “imminent danger.”
Also, fire officials in Dearborn think a gas leak caused a house explosion that critically injured a man who was working on the stove.
Your friends and neighbors have something to say on the Bulletin Board. You can, too. We’ll tell you how. You can add Instagram photos, too.
Also, GM announces it's moving Cadillac headquarters to New York.
State health officials are still unsure the cases of enterovirus D68 originated, but they're investigating.
Also, billionaire Warren Buffett says his investment firm would buy a Detroit-based company.
Find out where Troy, Sterling Heights and Westland were ranked by a financial news website.
Also, Christie Siegel is working her way through the tragedy of losing her own children by helping other people's children.
News organization’s FOIA request yields an alleged history of road rage by both parties in a fatal Sept. 2 encounter.
House that served as a hospital and a symbol of civil rights struggles of even the most affluent blacks is up for grabs in tax sale.
4 simple steps to make sure you’re heard loud and clear.
So, a Michigan woman reports an unusual intruder the other night. What’s the strangest animal encounter you’ve ever had?
Political consultants behind a robocall accusing candidate of taking "dirty pictures" must publicly apologize in unusual court settlement.
An anonymous donor writing about the Bath School Disaster provided the money to provide a headstone for young Richard Fritz.
Also, prosecutors want to include evidence of a 2005 soccer match attack in the case against Dearborn man who fatally punched soccer ref.
The race is tight, and the public only has a few more days to vote for their favorite hero singing “The Star-Spangled Banner.”