Please turn JavaScript on
header-image

Muskegon Tribune

Want to stay in touch with the latest updates from Muskegon Tribune? That's easy! Just subscribe clicking the Follow button below, choose topics or keywords for filtering if you want to, and we send the news to your inbox, to your phone via push notifications or we put them on your personal page here on follow.it.

Reading your RSS feed has never been easier!

Website title: Muskegon Tribune

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  10.97 / week

Message History

Ford is moving its headquarters for the first time in seven decades The carmaker is relocating to a newly constructed building 3 miles away in its longtime home of Dearborn The new HQ is 5 to 10 minutes away from Ford’s current HQ in the ‘Glass House.‘ It is designed to enhance collaboration and innovation DEARBORN— […]

Read full story

Ford is moving its headquarters for the first time in seven decades The carmaker is relocating to a newly constructed building 3 miles away in its longtime home of Dearborn The new HQ is 5 to 10 minutes away from Ford’s current HQ in the ‘Glass House.‘ It is designed to enhance collaboration and innovation DEARBORN— […]

Read full story

Legislators are debating next year’s funding for a quasi-governmental partnership that oversees billions in job-growth programs That spending is controversial; some lawmakers call it ‘corporate welfare, ’ others say subsidies are vital  Bridge dug into documents to lay out how the MEDC was created and how it functions Funding for Michigan’s controversial economic development age...

Read full story

Michigan Senate Democrats on Thursday proposed legislation to divert money from economic development to roads The plan would ax $500M in annual funding for the SOAR fund, sending some of that back to a state transportation fund The proposal comes as Michigan lawmakers race to finalize a budget deal to avoid a government shutdown next […]

Read full story

Michigan’s record-setting business subsidy plan was cut out of the 2026 state budget on Friday The program, known as SOAR, turned controversial as skepticism grew over the billions in taxpayer money promised to companies Opponents cheered the move, but business leaders caution that Michigan’s competitiveness could be harmed When lawmakers passed an $81 billion state spending [&#...

Read full story