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Severe Thunderstorm Warning expires in West Michigan
MICHIGAN, USA — A Severe Thunderstorm Warning was in effect for much of West Michigan until 7 a.m. Tuesday. Damaging wind gusts—upwards of 70 mph—were the primary risk this morning. Hail risk was non-zero but a lesser, isolated risk. Thunderstorms were increasingly organizing in Wisconsin early Tuesday....
WEATHER ALERT: Severe Thunderstorm Warnings issued in West Michigan
A severe thunderstorm warning has been issued for Lake, Muskegon, and Newaygo County by the National Weather Service as of 5:19 A.M. A line of storms carrying potential damaging winds in excess of 70 MPH as well as penny size hail is moving to the southeast at approximately 50-70 MPH. Heavy amounts of thunder and lightning are likely. Initial readings are radar indicated.
Newaygo County grandparents charged in 5-year-old's shooting death refuse plea deal, headed to trial
NEWAYGO COUNTY, Mich — The grandparents of a 5-year-old Newaygo boy who was killed after being shot in their home will go to trial. Karl and Theresa Robart refused a plea deal Monday—after already waiving their preliminary hearings last month—and will now head to trial. The couple...
Two projects expected to bring $33.7M investment to Muskegon, Newaygo counties
MUSKEGON, MI — Two economic development projects are expected to bring a $33.7 million capital investment to Muskegon and Newaygo counties, and create up to 20 jobs, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s office announced. In Norton Shores, M. Argueso & Co., a supplier of wax blends and adhesives, is planning...
$33M in investments from two development projects coming to West Michigan
Muskegon County will welcome a supplier’s new U.S. headquarters following the company’s consolidation of sites in Ohio and Michigan. M. Argueso and Company is a German-owned supplier of wax blends and adhesives and will expand an existing facility in Norton Shores, adding manufacturing equipment and operations. It’s a...
USDA finds unusual twist: Bird flu moved from dairy cows to poultry in Michigan
LANSING — A team of epidemiologists from the U.S. Department of Agriculture have traced the H5N1 viral spread in Michigan to a single herd of dairy cattle that had been unknowingly introduced in the spring to infected cows imported from a Texas dairy operation. From there, poultry farmers in the state took the viral hit. It is unknown how the Texan dairy cow contracted the virus, though some have surmised that it was transmitted by some dead waterfowl on the property. In Michigan, the virus escaped the barnyard and hit localized poultry operations, according to a report released by the USDA on June 9. As a result, H5N1 detections in poultry have been encountered in Newaygo County. Counties that share both poultry and cattle detections include Ottawa, Ionia, and Gratiot counties. Seven other countries in central and western Michigan have seen outbreaks of H5N1 in cattle only, according to data released by the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, last updated on May 24. The total number of dairy herds infected reached 25 as of June 12, according to Tim Boring, director of the MDARD. In addition, there have been seven poultry operations and one backyard flock infected.
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