Letters to the Editor
- Tri-City Record
- 14 hours ago
- 2 min read
More Roy, please
Dear Amy,
We sure enjoy your paper and the trips back to “yesteryear” by Roy Davis. I know I say the same thing every year, but could you publish more of his articles more often?
Have a blessed day and enjoy our awesome fall days in our “Pure Michigan”!
Jerrie Williams, Paw Paw
Gov. Whitmer signs balanced, bipartisan FY26 Budget
(Press release) October 7, 2025, Governor Gretchen Whitmer signed her seventh balanced, bipartisan budget into law. The fiscal year 2026 (FY26) budget secures sustainable, long-term funding to fix Michigan’s state and local roads, tax cuts for seniors and working families, protections for core health care services, funding for public safety, investments in Michigan’s air, land, and water, and commonsense changes to improve government efficiency. The FY26 budget totals $81 billion, including a general fund total of $14.1 billion.
Additionally, as a part of the budget deal, Speaker Hall and Majority Leader Brinks agreed to pass bipartisan legislation before the end of the calendar year that will make it easier to create and retain good-paying, high-skill jobs in Michigan. Governor Whitmer called for commonsense, job creating legislation in the Mackinac Policy Conference keynote and several of her series of Road Ahead speeches this year. The legislation will help Michigan continue to lead the future of advanced manufacturing, regardless of the economic uncertainty at the federal level.
“This balanced budget delivers on the kitchen table issues that make a real difference in people’s lives,” said Governor Whitmer. “Our budget fixes the damn roads, cuts taxes for seniors and working families, funds first responders, secures core health care services that millions of Michiganders rely on, protects our air, lakes, and land, and increases government efficiency to saves taxpayers time and money. I’m so grateful to legislators on both sides of the aisle for coming together to get this done. Amidst so much uncertainty caused by a chaotic tariff strategy and a national government shutdown, Michigan is showing everyone how to get things done. In the weeks and months ahead, we will build on this momentum and come together on commonsense tools to create and retain good-paying jobs.”
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