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Stateside: Oakland County’s new executive; treaties and tribal lands; Planned Parenthood changes

Little Traverse Bay
Michigan Radio
The Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians filed a lawsuit arguing that the boundaries of the tribe’s reservation includes the cities of Charlevoix, Harbor Springs, and Petoskey, pictured above.";

 

Today on Stateside, Planned Parenthood withdraws from Title X which funds services for 42,000 patients in Michigan. Plus, new Oakland County County Executive Dave Coulter is the first Democrat in 27 years.

Listen to the full show above or find individual segments below. 

New Oakland County executive outlines key priorities in post-Patterson era

 

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Stateside’s conversation with Dave Coulter

For the first time in 27 years, Oakland County has a Democrat as county executive. Dave Coulter was sworn-in Monday to serve out the remainder of the late L. Brooks Patterson's term until the end of 2020. That capped several weeks of chaotic political jockeying after Patterson's death from pancreatic cancer. Brand-new Oakland County Executive Coulter talks about the turnover process and his priorities.

CMU project uses dance to teach science 

 

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Stateside’s conversation with Heather Trommer-Beardslee and Wiline Pangle

Anyone who's gone through a biology class has sat through the lecture on cell division. CMU biologist Wiline Pangle and Heather Trommer-Beardslee, director of the University Theatre Dance Company, have created a lesson plan that portrays biological functions through the art of dance. 

Book review: Rick Bailey transforms the stuff of daily life into occasions for wonder

 

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Stateside’s conversation with Rick Bailey

Rick Bailey, a now-retired professor who taught writing at Henry Ford Community College for 38 years, has published a new collection of essays called “The Enjoy Agenda: At Home and Abroad” that is part memoir, part travelogue. Stateside’s John Freeman brings us this review. 

What’s next for tribe that lost ruling for reservation to include Petoskey, Charlevoix

 

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Stateside’s conversation with Matthew Fletcher

Last week, a federal judge ruled against the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians in a lawsuit seeking to affirm the boundaries of its reservation. The tribe argued that a treaty from 1855 established a 337-square mile reservation on lands that include the cities of Petoskey, Charlevoix, and Harbor Springs. Matthew Fletcher is the director of the Indigenous Law and Policy Center at Michigan State University. He breaks down the lawsuit, the judge's decision and what this means for tribal treaty rights in Michigan going forward. 

Planned Parenthood of MI to lose 20 percent of budget with Title X pullout

 

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Stateside’s conversation with Lori Carpentier

Planned Parenthood says its decision to leave the federal Title X program could affect health care for millions of Americans, including over 42,000 here in Michigan. The group announced it's leaving the program rather than comply with new Trump Administration rules that prohibit it from providing abortion referrals to patients. Lori Carpentier, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Michigan talks about what this means for patients in Michigan.

Stateside is produced daily by a dedicated group of producers and production assistants. Listen daily, on-air, at 3 and 8 p.m., or subscribe to the daily podcast wherever you like to listen.
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