Irons
Deputies find body of 21-year-old man believed to have drowned in Mecosta Co13 ON YOUR SIDE2 days ago
5-year-old boy died after his mother and stepfather, who would lock him and his younger brother in the basement and pour cold water on them, beat the boy with a pipe and a belt; couple found guiltypineblufftoday.com2 hours ago
Michigan State Police K-9 Ox Finds Missing Teen Isabella Fritch in Northern Michigan Woodlandhoodline.com2 days ago
Michigan Daylight Saving Time – Get Ready To Fall BackUS 103.16 hours ago
LATEST NEWS
Outdoors Bound Road Trip: Fall Salmon Run
We have something new, an extension of our Outdoors Bound franchise. We call it Outdoors Bound: Road Trip. It is a way we hope to inspire you to expand your outdoor travel horizons. LUDINGTON, Mich. (WFXR) – The fish, a 25-pound king salmon, went on a reel screaming run and then launched itself into the […]
Cadillac family raises alarm after finding PFAS in their well water
CADILLAC — A Northern Michigan homeowner is concerned after unsafe levels of PFAS were recently discovered in his water. The man, JT Anderson Jr., lives in the industrial park area of Cadillac, where he has his own private well. He’s lived at his home for the past 16 years, raising a family with his wife. RELATED: City of Cadillac will not test for PFAS near industrial park, says cleanup is complete Anderson said he’s worried about the health of his entire family, which now includes 13 grandchildren, with many of them making frequent visits to their home.
Wexford-Missaukee ISD says Career Tech Center building tested high for PFAS
CADILLAC — The Wexford-Missaukee Intermediate School District is taking extra precautions after PFAS levels above the state standard were detected on their Career Tech Center campus. Wexford-Missaukee ISD superintendent David Cox said EGLE notified them that water samples taken from the Special Services and Heavy Equipment Technology and Agriscience buildings well exceeded the maximum contaminant level set by the state. The CTC dealt with high levels of PFAS in the past, but now says their general education building is testing at zero and most other buildings are below concerning levels. Still, they’re not taking any chances. “We don’t have to do anything. The health department said nothing was mandatory. It was not a requirement. It wasn’t a mandate. It was just as a heads up. and that was in the letter that we sent out. But out of abundance of caution, we provided bottled water and we filtered everything that was a source of consumption,” said Cox.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.