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What Laws Are Impacting Grand Rapids Area Residents

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Category: News

Here's where each state stands on making daylight saving time permanent

October 27, 2025
The Uniform Time Act of 1966 mandates that the country use daylight saving time, but it allows states to opt out and exempt themselves from the practice of staying on standard time year-round. It does not allow states to permanently establish daylight saving time, which would keep them an hour ahead from November to March while other states switch to standard time.
A 2023 bill, which was referred to a committee in the Michigan Senate, would have adopted daylight saving time year-round, provided Congress allowed the switch.
Read more at WZZM 13
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State paying $600K to settle a police case & get life ring from the Edmund Fitzgerald

October 23, 2025
The state of Michigan has acquired a life ring that washed ashore 50 years ago from the Edmund Fitzgerald, a rare artifact that strangely became part of a settlement in a lawsuit that had nothing to do with the famous shipwreck.
Taxpayers are paying $600,000 to settle the lawsuit by Larry Orr, who accused a state police officer of violating his rights during a sexual abuse investigation that was discredited, court records show.
Read more at Fox 17
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State ‘nudges’ gaming machines out of bars and clubs

October 21, 2025
Across West Michigan in recent days, casino-style machines that are popular fixtures in bars, American Legion halls and many other venues have been quietly hauled away.
State gaming officials last month sent out letters telling venues that sport the machines they have to go. They violate Michigan gaming laws, officials contend.
Read more at WoodTV
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US senator asks judges if they used AI in withdrawn court rulings

October 16, 2025
Grassley asked the judges whether and how they, their law clerks or court staff used generative AI or automated tools to prepare orders in the cases.
He also asked them to explain the "human drafting and review" done before issuing the orders, the cause of the errors, and measures their chambers have taken to guard against similar errors in the future.
The letters noted that lawyers have increasingly faced scrutiny from judges across the country for apparent misuse of AI. Judges have levied fines or other sanctions in dozens of cases over the past few years after lawyers failed to vet the output the technology generated.
Read more at Reuters
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Court to consider circumstances in which police may enter a home during an emergency

October 14, 2025

The Fourth Amendment generally requires police officers to obtain a warrant before they enter a home. But the Supreme Court has recognized several exceptions to that rule for emergencies. On Wednesday, Oct. 15, in Case v. Montana, the justices will consider how certain police must be that there is an emergency before they can enter a home without a warrant. Is it enough, as the Montana Supreme Court held, that police have only “reasonable suspicion” that there is an emergency? Or are police officers required to meet a higher bar and have probable cause to believe that there is an emergency?

Read more at SCOTUSblog

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New York City sues social media companies for allegedly addicting children

October 9, 2025
New York City filed a new lawsuit accusing Facebook, Google, Snapchat, TikTok and other online platforms of fueling a mental health crisis among children by addicting them to social media.
According to Wednesday's complaint, the defendants designed their platforms to "exploit the psychology and neurophysiology of youth," and drive compulsive use in pursuit of profit
Read more at Reuters
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Are judges good historians?

October 8, 2025

Judges decide cases. Parties come to judges to resolve their disagreements. Some of those disagreements are about matters of fact (“what happened?”), and some of those disagreements are about matters of law (“what should have happened?”). “What happened” is a question about an event that occurred in the past. “What should have happened” is a question about a rule that existed in the past and was established even further in the past.

Read more at SCOTUSblog

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Gretchen Whitmer Signs Michigan Marijuana Tax into Law

October 7, 2025

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer signed a new 24% tax on marijuana sales between producers and dispensaries, saying the measure will help fund her administration’s long-promised effort to repair the state’s crumbling roads.
The tax, which applies to wholesale marijuana transactions, is expected to generate roughly $420 million annually — money that will go toward Whitmer’s $1.8 billion road-funding plan.

Read more at Newsweek

US Supreme Court rejects tobacco firms' appeal over graphic warnings

November 29, 2024

The rule was adopted by the agency in 2020 during Donald Trump's first presidential administration. The FDA required that warnings about the risks of smoking occupy the top 50% of cigarette packs and top 20% of advertisements. The regulation is technically in effect, but the FDA has generally withheld, enforcing it amid legal challenges.

Read more at Reuters

When can I buy alcohol on Thanksgiving in Michigan?

November 27, 2024

If your relatives show up on Thanksgiving wondering where their favorite bottle of wine, beer or liquor is, you're in luck: Michigan doesn't restrict sales on the holiday, so you can run out to buy what you need.
Generally, any retail or on-premises alcohol sales location may open and operate on Thanksgiving as it would on any other day.

Read more at Detroit Free Press

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