2017 in Michigan

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Events from the year 2017 in Michigan.

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2017
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The state's top news stories of 2017 included continuing political fallout and criminal charges in connection with the Flint water crisis; Larry Nassar and the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal; the December 5 retirement of John Conyers amid claims of sexual harassment; the re-election of Mike Duggan to a second term as Mayor of Detroit with 72% of the vote; and the revitalization of Downtown and Midtown Detroit.

In sports, the state's top stories included the return of the Detroit Pistons to Detroit; the opening of Little Caesars Arena as the home of the Pistons and Detroit Red Wings; the election of three former Detroit Tigers (Iván Rodríguez, Alan Trammell, and Jack Morris) to the Baseball Hall of Fame; the firing of Jim Caldwell as head coach of the Detroit Lions and Brad Ausmus as head coach of the Tigers; and Claressa Shields of Flint winning female middleweight and super middleweight boxing titles.

Office holders

State office holders

Rick Snyder

Mayors of major cities

Mike Duggan

Federal office holders

Debbie Stabenow
Gary Peters

Population

In the 2010 United States Census, Michigan was recorded as having a population of 9,883,640 persons, ranking as the eighth most populous state in the country. By 2017, the state's population was estimated at 9,962,311, and the state had become the 10th most populous state.

The state's largest cities, having populations of at least 75,000 based on 2016 estimates, were as follows:

More information 2017 Rank, City ...
2017
Rank
City County 2010 Pop. 2016 Pop. Change 2010-16
1DetroitWayne713,777672,795−5.7% Decrease
2Grand RapidsKent188,040196,4454.5% Increase
3WarrenMacomb134,056135,1250.8% Increase
4Sterling HeightsMacomb129,699132,4272.1% Increase
5Ann ArborWashtenaw113,934120,7826.0% Increase
6LansingIngham114,297116,0201.5% Increase
7FlintGenesee102,43497,386−4.9% Decrease
8DearbornWayne98,15394,444−3.8% Decrease
9LivoniaWayne96,94294,041−3.0% Decrease
10TroyOakland80,98083,6413.3% Increase
11WestlandWayne84,09481,545−3.0% Decrease
12Farmington HillsOakland79,74081,1291.7% Increase
13KalamazooKalamazoo74,26275,9842.3% Increase
14WyomingKent72,12575,5674.8% Increase
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Sports

Baseball

Brad Ausmus

American football

Jim Caldwell

Basketball

Andre Drummond

Ice hockey

Henrik Zetterberg

Boxing

Claressa Shields

Racing

Other

Music

Big Sean
Eminem

Chronology of events

January

Gretchen Whitmer
  • January 3 - Gretchen Whitmer, former minority leader of the Michigan Senate, filed paperwork as a candidate in the 2018 election for governor.
  • January 4 - Ford Motor announced a $700 million investment to improve its Flat Rock, Michigan, plant to build self-driving and electric cars.
  • January 8 - Fiat Chrysler announced plans to invest $1 billion at its Warren and Toledo Jeep plants.
  • January 10 - A lawsuit was filed in Grand Rapids against Larry Nassar and Michigan State University by 18 women alleging they were sexually abused by Nassar.
  • January 13-22 - North American International Auto Show in Detroit
  • January 16 - A second group of tapes was released purporting to have the voice of Warren Mayor James R. Fouts denigrating black people and older women. Fouts denied the voice was his.
  • January 18 - Iván Rodríguez, catcher for the Detroit Tigers from 2004 to 2008, was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
  • January __ - 61 Muslim refugees set for resettlement in Detroit had their travel restricted by President Donald Trump's Muslim travel ban.

February

Betsy DeVos
  • February 6 - Developer Dan Gilbert's Rock Ventures proposed building a soccer stadium and entertainment district on a downtown site slated for construction of a new jail. In exchange for the site, Gilbert would also build a new jail on another site.[15]
  • February 7 - Betsy DeVos of Michigan was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as Secretary of Education. The vote in the Senate was evenly split, requiring Vice President Mike Pence to cast the deciding vote.
  • February 10 - Mike Ilitch died.
  • February 19 - Three gymnasts appear on 60 Minutes to describe their experiences with Larry Nassar in the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal.
  • February 22 - An additional 22 sexual assault charges were filed against Larry Nassar arising out of his Michigan State University Sports Medicine practice.
  • February 22 - Developer Dan Gilbert proposed construction of Detroit's tallest building, a 52-story structure including 250 rental apartments, on the former site of the Hudson's department store.
  • February 23 - Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan accused former emergency manager Kevyn Orr of keeping him in the dark with respect to calculations of the city's future pension payments. The discovery required the city to place an additional $50 million into a trust account. Duggan threatened to sue Orr's law firm, Jones Day, over the undisclosed calculations.
  • February 25 - A record pressing plant operated by Jack White's Third Man Records held its grand opening in Detroit.
  • February 26 - The Detroit Pistons retired the jersey (No. 22) worn by Rip Hamilton.

March

  • March 8 - An airplane carrying the Michigan Wolverines basketball team skidded off the runway at Willow Run Airport, crossed a road, and crashed into a ditch. The team went on to win the Big Ten Conference Tournament and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen in the NCAA basketball tournament.
  • March 15 - President Donald Trump visited the American Center for Mobility in Ypsilanti, accompanied by Gov. Rick Snyder, EPA administrator Scott Pruitt, General Motors CEO Mary Barra, Ford Motor CEO Mark Fields, and Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne.
  • March 22 - Census Bureau estimates for 2016 show that Michigan's fastest growing counties were Kent (+ 6,078), Washtenaw (+ 3,862), and Oakland (+ 3,696). Wayne County's population declined by 7,696 persons.
  • March 23 - Michigan lost to Oregon in the Sweet Sixteen round of the NCAA basketball tournament.
  • March 31 - Wayne County assumed ownership of the former McClouth Steel plant in Trenton for failure to pay taxes.

April

Red Berenson
  • April 9 - The Detroit Red Wings played their final game at the Joe Louis Arena. The Red Wings played at Joe Louis Arena for 38 seasons, winning four Stanley Cup championships.
  • April 10 - Red Berenson announced his retirement after 33 season's as head coach of the Michigan Wolverines hockey team.
  • April 10 - The Detroit Pistons played their final game at The Palace of Auburn Hills.
  • April 19 - Michigan rockers Ted Nugent and Kid Rock visited with Donald Trump at the White House.
  • April 21 - Two doctors (Jumana Nagarwala and Fakhruddin Attar) and a third person from a Livonia, Michigan, clinic were charged with violation of a federal genital mutilation law for allegedly performing or facilitating religious ritual on seven-year-old Indian-Muslim girls.[16][17][18]
  • April 26 - Jim Harbaugh and his wife met with Pope Francis as Harbaugh and the Michigan football team visited Rome.

May

Jim Hackett
  • May 4 - Catholic officials announced that Solanus Casey who co-founded the Capuchin Soup Kitchen in Detroit would be beatified.
  • May 9 - State Rep. John Kivela was found dead from an apparent suicide after being arrested suspected drunk driving.
  • May 12 - Two women testified in court that they were sexually abused by Michigan State University doctor Larry Nassar when they were teenagers.
  • May 12 - Detroit's QLINE streetcar service opened for business along Woodward Avenue from Campus Martius to Grand Boulevard.
  • May 16 - Ground was broken on redevelopment of Detroit's abandoned Packard plant into an office complex.
  • May 19 - Ford Motor announced a $350 million investment in its Livonia transmission plant that would add 800 new jobs.
  • May 22 - Jim Hackett, formerly CEO of Steelcase, took over as CEO of Ford Motor.[19]
  • May 23 - The U.S. Department of Justice sued Fiat Chrysler for selling diesel engines that violate the Clean Air Act.
  • May 24 - The 2016 Census estimate showed a 0.5% decline in Detroit's population to 672,795, dropping to the 23rd largest city in the United States. Detroit reached a peak population of 1,849,568 in 1950. The 2016 population represented a decline of 63.6% of the city's 1950 level.[20]

June

Chevrolet Bolt
  • June 5 - Three Michigan State football players were dismissed from the football program after being charged with sexually assaulting a woman in a bathroom at a party in January.[21][22]
  • June 13 - General Motors announced that it had manufactured 130 autonomous Chevrolet Bolts at its factory in Lake Orion, Michigan.
  • June 14 - In connection with the Flint water crisis, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette charged five officials with involuntary manslaughter in the death of a Legionnaire's disease patient. The five charged included Nick Lyon, director of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services. In addition, the state's top medical executive, Eden Wells, was charged with obstruction of justice.[23]
  • June 29 - Rock Ventures, owned by Dan Gilbert, proposed a new $520 million jail complex in Detroit.

July

Kid Rock
  • July 9 - Michigan State University doctor Larry Nassar agreed to enter a guilty plea to federal child pornography charges.
  • July 12 - Kid Rock teased about running against Debbie Stabenow for her U.S. Senate seat.[24]
  • July 14 - The Michigan Parole Board voted unanimously to parole Richard "White Boy Rick" Wershe Jr. who had been in prison since 1988 for possession of cocaine with intent to deliver.
  • July 18 - The Detroit Tigers traded J. D. Martinez to the Arizona Diamondbacks for three prospects.
  • July 21 - The Detroit Red Wings signed Tomáš Tatar to a four-year $21-million contract.
  • July 23-27 - The 50th anniversary of the 1967 Detroit riot.
  • July 25 - The film Detroit based on the Algiers Motel incident during the 1967 Detroit riot, was released.
  • July 29 - The final ticketed event was held at Joe Louis Arena, a WWE professional wrestling event featuring John Cena.

August

Matt Stafford
  • August 9 - Marygrove College in Detroit announced it was terminating its undergraduate program.
  • August 12 - The Detroit Red Wings announce that they are examining legal remedies to prevent use of a modified team logo by white supremacists at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville.
  • August 19 - Woodward Avenue Dream Cruise
  • August 25 - Volkswagen engineer James Liang was sentenced in federal court in Detroit to 40 months in prison for his role in the diesel emissions cheating scandal.
  • August 26 - A Michigan State Police trooper tasered an unarmed 15-year-old, Demond Grimes, as he rode an ATV, causing a crash that resulted in Grimes' death.[25] A wrongful death suit followed with Geoffrey Fieger representing Grimes' family.
  • August 28 - The Detroit Lions signed Matthew Stafford to the richest contract in NFL history, a five-year extension worth $135 million.

September

Justin Verlander
  • September 1 - The Detroit Tigers traded Justin Verlander to the Houston Astros.
  • September 5 - Ribbon-cutting ceremony for Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, built at cost of $863 million.
  • September 12 - Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette announced he would run for governor in 2018.
  • September 13 - Little Caesars Arena opened in Detroit with a Kid Rock concert.
  • September 18 - The mayor and a councilman of Fraser, Michigan, were removed from office for alleged sexual harassment of female city workers.[26]
  • September 23 - Brad Ausmus was fired as manager of the Detroit Tigers.
  • September 26-29 - Michigan State Police director Kriste Kibbey Etue came under fire after a Facebook post in which she referred to NFL players kneeling during the national anthem as "ungrateful, anti-American degenerates." Gov. Rick Snyder rejected calls to remove her.

October

  • October 3 - Ford Motor CEO Jim Hackett announced plans to focus on electric vehicles and to manufacture fewer models.
  • October 4 - Ferndale mother Rebecca Bredow was jailed for refusing to comply with a court order requiring her to vaccinate her nine-year-old son.
  • October 5 - The Detroit Red Wings played the first game at Little Caesars Arena. Anthony Mantha scored the first goal.
  • October 9 - Dr. Eden Wells, chief medical officer of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, was charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with the Flint water crisis.[27]
  • October 18 - Olympic gymnast McKayla Maroney stated that she was among the sexual abuse victims of Michigan State physician Larry Nassar.
  • October 18 - The Detroit Pistons played their first game in Little Caesars Arena, marking their return to Detroit after 40 years of playing in Pontiac and Auburn Hills.
  • October 19 - The Detroit Tigers hired Ron Gardenhire as their new manager.
  • October 23 - Detroit was named by Lonely Planet as the second best city in the world to visit in 2018.[28]
  • October 26 - Demolition began on the historic Northland Center shopping mall in Oakland County, Michigan
  • October 27 - Women's Convention opens in Detroit.

November

Solanus Casey
  • November 7 -
  • November 9 - The University of Michigan Intrafraternity Council suspended all social events at the school's 27 fraternities. The suspension was triggered by allegations of sexual assaults involving fraternity members and hazing incidents.
  • November 9 - A Marine drill instructor was found guilty in a court martial for mistreating three Muslim recruits, including Raheel Siddiqui of Taylor, Michigan, who died in 2016 after falling down three flights of stairs after being slapped by the drill instructor.
  • November 10 - Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman joins the group alleging that she was sexually abused by Larry Nassar.
  • November 18 - The Catholic Church beatified Solanus Casey who co-founded the Capuchin Soup Kitchen in Detroit.[30]
  • November 20 - A coalition turned in 400,000 signatures to place an initiative on the 2018 ballot to legalize recreational marijuana.
  • November 21 - The University of Detroit Mercy announced it was reducing tuition by 30% in the fall of 2018, from $41,158 to $28,000 per year.
  • November 25 - Michigan loses to Ohio State in the annual Michigan–Ohio State football rivalry game.
  • November 28 - Lt. Gov. Brian Calley announced his candidacy for governor in the 2018 election.
  • November 30 - Leaders in the House of Representatives, including Paul Ryan, Nancy Pelosi, and Jim Clyburn, called on John Conyers to resign over allegations of sexual harassment.

December

John Conyers
  • December 2 - Sander Levin, a Michigan Congressman for 35 years, announced at age 86 that he would not run for reelection in 2018.
  • December 2 - Four teenagers were shot outside the Detroit Institute of Arts during the city's "Noel Night" celebration.
  • December 4 - The implosion and demolition of the Pontiac Silverdome began.
  • December 5 - John Conyers resigned his seat in Congress amid allegations he had sexually abused members of his staff. Conyers had represented Detroit in Congress since first being elected in 1964. His tenure was the sixth longest in congressional history.[31]
  • December 7 - Ford Motor announced that it would build electric vehicles to Mexico. The company also announced plans to create 850 new jobs in Flat Rock, Michigan, to build autonomous vehicles.
  • December 8 - Gov. Rick Snyder announced that he would not set a special election to fill John Conyers' vacant seat in Congress until November 2018, leaving the 13th District unrepresented for 11 months.
  • December 11 - Ole Miss quarterback Shea Patterson announced he would transfer to Michigan.
  • December 13 - Detroiter Bernard Young was released from prison after 28 years. He had been convicted of molestation based on testimony from a five- and six-year-old who later recanted.[32]
  • December 14 - William Strampel, dean of the Michigan State College of Osteopathic Medicine, who had been Larry Nassar's boss, stepped down as dean, citing medical reasons.
  • December 15 - Michigan State University president Lou Anna Simon apologized for the misconduct of Michigan State doctor Larry Nassar in the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal.[33]

Deaths

Mike Ilitch
Della Reese

See also

References

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