Michigan United in Grand Rapids

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How to Become a US Citizen: A Clear, Practical Guide for Immigrants
For immigrants, becoming a US citizen is about much more than paperwork. It is about stability, opportunity, and finally having a full voice in the country you call home.
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Spades and Games: A Policy Reform Night
Come play games, art, music, and conversation to connect Black history to current civic and social issues affecting our communities today.
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Feeding the Flock & Following the Law: A Johnson Amendment Update
Join us for an engaging Lunch and Learn where we’ll break down the legal jargon into plain English.
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Western U.P Intro to Cryptomining and AI Data Centers Briefing
A live event in Sault Ste. Marie, Hancock, and Marquette. And a Zoom link for attendees from entire first congressional district!
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Take Action on ICE Funding
Right now in Minneapolis and across the country, ICE and federal immigration agents are operating like an occupying force.
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Michigan United in Action: What you can do about Minneapolis
We are living in a crisis born of government force. Use our Advocacy Alert below to educate yourself, understand what's needed and take action.
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Michigan United on Substack: “American Reflections” on our 2026 MLK Celebration
Substack writer Ty Partridge, author of American Reflections attended our 2026 MLK Day Celebration. It was a day of inspiration, fellowship and recommitting to the cause.
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Regulating AI in Michigan: What is “Best Practice” for Legislation?
We built this app because “AI legislation” is starting to show up in statehouses. This app turns policy into a simple checklist you can actually use.
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How to Regulate AI in Michigan: The Physical Reality
Given AI influence in the White House, it is highly unlikely we’ll see tech regulation from DC. As a result, states are laboratories for governing AI.

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What's the Impact of the "Big Beautiful Bill" on Grand Rapids and Kent County?

A presentation and report that summarizes likely local impacts on health coverage, food assistance and federal grant funding in Grand Rapids and Kent County, Michigan. Use the embedded brief for sources and the full outline, or use the bot to ask questions tied to this geography.

  • Presentation
  • Report & FAQ Bot
Presentation
Report & FAQ Bot

Ask your own question. Enter your ZIP, learn the effects

Presentation Notes and Links

Summary, context and sources

This tab is the reference layer for the embedded brief. It keeps the core claims, the geography, and the evidence links in plain text so readers can scan fast and verify.

One-sentence summary

The biggest near-term risks for Grand Rapids (ZIP 49503), Kent County, Michigan, cluster in three places: health coverage stability, food assistance stability, and where federal grant dollars flow for jobs, schools and public services.

What the brief is trying to answer

If federal policy shifts quickly, what changes will show up first for households, schools and clinics, and county services in Grand Rapids and Kent County?

Top three impact areas

1) Health coverage

Claim: More residents may face coverage gaps, increasing demand on clinics and emergency rooms and raising household medical costs.

Why it matters locally: When coverage is interrupted, people delay care, then show up sicker and more expensive to treat. That strain lands on clinics, hospitals and household budgets.

What to watch (local signals):

  • More calls and appointments for enrollment help.
  • More uninsured or self-pay visits at clinics and emergency rooms.

Evidence links:

  • CMS fact sheets (Medicaid/CHIP continuous enrollment unwinding): https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets
  • U.S. Census QuickFacts, Kent County, Michigan (uninsured rate row): https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/kentcountymichigan

Confidence: Medium.

2) Food assistance

Claim: If SNAP rules tighten or it becomes harder to keep benefits, interruptions can increase short-term food insecurity and push more demand to food banks and pantries.

Why it matters locally: Small breaks in benefits can cause immediate hardship. Households cut meals, skip medications, or fall behind on bills. Local pantries absorb the shock.

What to watch (local signals):

  • Higher pantry visits and longer distribution lines.
  • More reports of benefit interruptions or delays, even among eligible households.

Evidence links:

  • U.S. Census QuickFacts, Kent County, Michigan (poverty rate row): https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/kentcountymichigan
  • Project 2025 policy direction (benefits/welfare sections): https://project2025.org/

Confidence: Medium.

3) Federal grants for jobs, schools and public services

Claim: Shifts in federal grant priorities can change what gets funded locally, affecting workforce training access, school support, and county service capacity.

Why it matters locally: Even when total funding does not collapse, new priorities can force programs to re-qualify, change eligibility, or cut services that no longer match federal goals.

What to watch (local signals):

  • Workforce programs changing who they can serve or what training they offer.
  • Local agencies and nonprofits spending more time reapplying or reshaping programs to fit new requirements.

Evidence links:

  • Project 2025 policy direction (workforce, education, public administration sections): https://project2025.org/
  • BLS Midwest region pages (county employment context): https://www.bls.gov/regions/midwest/

Confidence: Medium.

Quick evidence pack (baseline + policy)

Baselines (local):

  • Kent County uninsured rate and poverty rate: https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/kentcountymichigan

Policy direction (federal):

  • CMS Medicaid/CHIP unwinding materials: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets
  • Project 2025 policy platform: https://project2025.org/

Terms used in the brief (plain meanings)

  • Coverage gap: Losing health coverage for a period of time, often because of missed renewal steps or paperwork.
  • Benefit interruption: SNAP or other assistance stops temporarily, even if a household still qualifies.
  • Grant shift: Federal dollars move toward different goals, which changes what local programs can fund and who they can serve.

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Mop Up Michigan

Michigan’s government should work for people, not powerful corporations.

Whether you’ve got five minutes or five hours, your time matters. We’re going to need volunteers to collect signatures, knock doors, spread the word, and help bring this ballot initiative to life.

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Care Over Cost

We hold health insurers accountable for covered but unpaid benefits. Together, we are working to transform our health care system to put people over profit.

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Transformative Justice

We believe that we can keep our communities safe from crime and reduce the number of people in prison. We're working to reform the policies of the police, schools, prosecutors, as well as reform sentencing guidelines and improve release services.

Election Protection

We're on a mission to safeguard the integrity of every election, ensuring that the democratic process remains fair, accessible, and representative of all voices.

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Immigrant Rights

Join us in our fight for a brighter future, where every person, regardless of their immigration status, is afforded the same rights, opportunities, and respect as any other Michigander.

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Join Project 3.5

We believe that we can keep our communities safe from crime and reduce the number of people in prison. We're working to reform the policies of the police, schools, prosecutors, as well as reform sentencing guidelines and improve release services.

Help us clean up Michigan politics by signing our MOPP petition!

Join Project 3.5

Help us create change that lasts

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We want to organize 3.5% of Michigan, tear down the barriers of inequality and replace it with dignity and opportunity.

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