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How to Become a US Citizen: A Clear, Practical Guide for Immigrants
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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
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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
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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 Marquette, County

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

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Presentation Notes and Links

Impact 1: Taxes → household budgets and small-business cash flow

The most visible, easy-to-explain tax change is a larger standard deduction.

Public Law 119-21 raises the standard deduction amounts by amending Internal Revenue Code section 63(c)(7). Specifically, it changes $12,000 to $15,750 and $18,000 to $23,625. (Congress.gov)

What that benefit is:

A bigger standard deduction means more income is shielded from federal income tax before tax rates apply.

Show the work (the “extra” deduction)

  • $15,750 − $12,000 = $3,750 additional deduction (Congress.gov)
  • $23,625 − $18,000 = $5,625 additional deduction (Congress.gov)

Turn it into dollars (simple, honest math)

Tax savings depends on the filer’s marginal tax rate:

Tax savings = extra deduction × marginal tax rate

Example (illustrative formula, not a claim about any specific household):

  • If marginal rate is 12%, then $3,750 × 0.12 = $450; $5,625 × 0.12 = $675.

Why it matters locally

Marquette County’s median household income is $65,429 and poverty is 13.4%. That means a large share of households are sensitive to changes in take-home pay and refunds, even when the dollar amounts look “small” on paper. (Census.gov)

The “filing season” storyline that follows from this:

This change hits in two places:

  1. withholding and paychecks (how quickly employers update withholding tables), and
  2. filing season (how many households switch between standard vs. itemized, and whether new rules create confusion).

Public Law 119-21 also removes “sunset” language for reduced rates by striking “before January 1, 2026” in the reduced-rate provision. That is a separate, broader stability claim: it is not a new “check,” but it prevents a scheduled shift back to prior-law timing in the rate provision it amends. (Congress.gov)

Impact 2: Medicaid/health rules → rural provider stability

This is the “paperwork meets staffing” story: coverage rules and enrollment processes change, and rural systems feel it first as administrative load and unpaid care risk.

Public Law 119-21’s table of contents shows Subtitle B—Health with Chapter 1—Medicaid, including provisions on eligibility redeterminations, duplicate enrollment, and Medicaid “community engagement requirements” (work/community engagement). (Congress.gov)

Local stakes (what makes Marquette County the pressure point)

UP Health System – Marquette describes itself as a 222-bed regional specialty care hospital that “receives patients from across the UP.” (uphealthsystem.com)

Marquette County’s health care sector scale is large enough to matter countywide: $566.419 million in health care and social assistance receipts/revenue (2022). (Census.gov)

What changes turn into on the ground

When eligibility processes tighten or shift (redeterminations, verification, engagement requirements), three predictable operational channels follow:

  1. Coverage “churn.” People cycle on and off coverage, even if they remain eligible, because they miss paperwork deadlines or documentation requirements. The law explicitly points to redeterminations and enrollment processes as a policy target. (Congress.gov)
  2. Administrative load. More time in check-in, billing, prior auth and casework. That is time not spent on care.
  3. Uncompensated care risk + staffing strain. If churn increases and patients show up uninsured, hospitals and clinics absorb more unpaid care. Meanwhile, rural staffing is already tight; extra administrative steps function like a staffing cut.

This is a direct story because the law’s Medicaid chapter is explicit about enrollment process and eligibility mechanics, and UP Health System – Marquette is explicit about being the regional hub. (Congress.gov)

Impact 3: Tourism access and safety → the seasonal economy

This is a reliability story: fewer disruptions and stronger safety response capacity stabilize a short, high-stakes summer season.

Public Law 119-21 includes:

  • Coast Guard mission readiness
  • Spectrum auctions
  • Air traffic control improvements (Congress.gov)

Local stakes (what is “at risk” in dollars and institutions)

Marquette County posts $183.891 million in accommodation and food services sales (2022). (Census.gov)

Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore is a major draw on the Lake Superior shore, with visitor infrastructure and commercial tours that anchor summer demand in the central UP. (National Park Service)

What the mechanism means in human terms

  • Air traffic control improvements connect to fewer cascading delays that break short trips, force cancellations, or compress stays. When a summer season is only so long, “one bad travel weekend” matters.
  • Coast Guard readiness connects to Lake Superior safety and response capacity — not abstract national defense, but whether incidents turn into tragedies and whether visitors feel safe booking water-based trips.
  • Spectrum policy connects to rural connectivity for operators and visitors: reservations, payment systems, safety comms, and last-minute weather and routing changes.

Proof targets that match the storyline (and don’t require guessing)

  • Seasonal airport delay/cancellation comparisons (peak months vs. shoulder months).
  • Local booking volatility (cancellations, length of stay, staffing pivots).
  • Interviews that match the mechanism: airport operations; charter/outfitter operators; hotel managers; park staff; emergency responders.

The point is not that the law “guarantees” more tourists. The point is that the law targets reliability systems (air traffic control, Coast Guard readiness, spectrum capacity) that tourism economies depend on. (Congress.gov)

Impact 4: SNAP and forestry → household strain and the forest economy

This is one storyline with two fronts: household food support rules change, and forestry funding is pulled back.

Public Law 119-21’s table of contents shows:

  • Modifications to SNAP work requirements for able-bodied adults” (Sec. 10102)
  • Rescission of amounts for forestry” (Sec. 10201) (Congress.gov)

The SNAP work requirement changes are not just a heading: the law text shows the work requirement section rewriting exceptions and eligibility mechanics for able-bodied adults. (Congress.gov)

Local stakes (why this is not abstract)

Marquette County poverty is 13.4%. That is a basic exposure indicator: the higher the poverty rate, the more households are likely to be close to eligibility thresholds or dependent on food assistance during layoffs, seasonal work gaps, or health shocks. (Census.gov)

The direct “rural job market” story

In a rural labor market, work requirements can collide with:

  • limited child care,
  • limited transportation,
  • seasonal work patterns,
  • fluctuating hours.

When enforcement tightens, the practical outcomes that local reporters and service providers see are:

  1. case closures and reinstatements (paperwork failure vs. true ineligibility),
  2. higher pantry volume and pressure on school meals,
  3. more time spent by local DHHS staff and nonprofits walking households back through compliance.

Layer in the forestry rescission, and there is a second channel: fewer or delayed forestry dollars can squeeze local contracting opportunities and forest work scheduling. The law explicitly lists forestry rescissions as its own subtitle. (Congress.gov)

Impact 5: Public lands funding rescissions → park-adjacent services

This is the “deferred maintenance becomes private-sector pain” story.

Public Law 119-21 includes “Rescission of National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management funds” (Sec. 50304). (Congress.gov)

Pictured Rocks is explicitly a National Lakeshore with visitor services, commercial tours, and year-round access considerations. (National Park Service)

How rescissions show up locally

Rescissions do not usually appear as a single headline closure. They show up as:

  • shorter seasonal staffing,
  • reduced visitor-facing hours or slower response time,
  • deferred maintenance on trails, facilities and safety infrastructure.

When visitor experience degrades or capacity shrinks, the spillover is immediate for outfitters, lodging and restaurants because those businesses sell access and reliability, not scenery in the abstract.

Impact 6: Education and borrower rules → student risk and the workforce pipeline

This is a “student protection timeline” story: borrowers wait longer for relief pathways, and local institutions absorb counseling pressure and uncertainty.

Public Law 119-21 includes:

  • Sec. 85001. Delay of rule relating to borrower defense to repayment.
  • Sec. 85002. Delay of rule relating to closed school discharges. (Congress.gov)

The law text specifies that, for certain loans originating before July 1, 2035, the 2022 borrower-defense and closed-school discharge regulatory provisions “shall not be in effect,” restoring older regulatory posture in the manner described. (Congress.gov)

Local stakes

Northern Michigan University is located in Marquette, Michigan. (Northern Michigan University)

What the delay means as a local story

  • Borrowers facing disputes (misrepresentation, program quality claims) or school closure scenarios face a longer, murkier path to resolution because the newer rule framework is delayed. (Congress.gov)
  • Financial aid offices and student support staff face higher counseling demand: explaining options, timelines and risks to students and families.
  • Uncertainty changes decisions at the margin: whether to enroll, transfer, borrow, or pause.

This is not a claim about NMU itself doing anything wrong. It is a pipeline story: changes to federal borrower-relief rules change how risk is priced and explained, and that pressure lands in campus advising offices and household decision-making.

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