Developer asks Flint for tax break to build new apartments near Hurley, Atwood Stadium
Updated May 11, 2021;
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FLINT, MI A developer is asking the city for a tax break to build new apartments for low- and moderate-income renters in the area of Hurley Medical Center and Atwood Stadium, a potential $14-million investment by the same company that built The Marketplace townhome project on the old YWCA property in downtown Flint.
The proposed five-story Flushing Place Apartments would be built on Stevenson Street, just south of Flushing Road, with 60 apartments and 3,800 square feet of first-floor commercial space, according to plans submitted to the city by Flushing Place LDHA LP and PK Construction Companies LLC.
Flint mayor, police chief and City Council to meet after 5 homicides to start 2021
Updated Feb 02, 2021;
Posted Feb 02, 2021
Flint Police Chief Terence Green, center left, stands alongside Flint Mayor Sheldon Neeley moments before Green s swearing-in ceremony on Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020 outside of the Flint Police Department in downtown Flint. (Jake May | MLive.com)Jake May | Mlive.com
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FLINT, MI After five homicides in the first 32 days of 2021, Flint City Council members say they’ve seen enough.
A special virtual meeting has been called for 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 2, to discuss public safety as violent crime shows no signs of slowing.
Water analysis test kits are seen at a fire station in Flint, Mich., in 2016. (Ryan Garza/Detroit Free Press via AP, File)
FLINT, Mich. (CN) The Flint City Council voted early Tuesday to approve the city’s $20 million share of a massive $641 million settlement for injury claims stemming from the contaminated water crisis that first poisoned citizens in 2014.
The council members voted last week to hire their own attorney to advise them on the settlement and handle any of their objections with the court. They had also postponed the vote to allow the use of $20 million from an insurance carrier to pay Flint’s portion of the deal, as some members expressed apprehension about leaving some victims behind.
Divided Flint council agrees for city to join in settlement of residents water crisis claims
Updated Dec 22, 2020;
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FLINT, MI A divided City Council has signed off on Flint’s part of a $641-million settlement of water crisis lawsuits filed against it by residents, ending weeks of indecision and debate.
Council members voted 6-1 with two abstentions Tuesday, Dec. 22, to accept $20 million from an insurance policy to settle more than 100 pending civil lawsuits against it in state and federal courts, signing onto an agreement initially negotiated by the state of Michigan and attorneys for thousands of Flint residents.
Flint Council votes to hire own attorney, delays decision to settle water crisis cases against city
Updated Dec 17, 2020;
Posted Dec 17, 2020
Kate Fields looks through documents during the Flint City Council meeting at City Hall on Monday, Jan. 14, 2019 in downtown Flint. Kaiti Sullivan | MLive.comKaiti Sullivan
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FLINT, MI The City Council is hiring its own attorney to represent it in matters tied to the Flint water crisis and will wait before deciding whether to join in a settlement of residents’ lawsuits against the city, the state of Michigan and others.
Council members voted 8-1 on Thursday, Dec. 17, to postpone a vote until its meeting Monday, Dec. 21, on whether to use $20 million from its insurance carrier to join the proposed $641-million settlement.