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Two injured in a pair of Tuesday Hillsdale County crashes

By Jim Measel May 5, 2021 | 11:41 AM HILLSDALE COUNTY, MI (WTVB) – Two persons were injured in a pair of Hillsdale County crashes on Tuesday. The Hillsdale County Sheriff’s Department says the first crash took place at about 2:00 p.m. on South Hillsdale Road north of East Card Road as a school bus was stopped nearby. Deputies report 40-year-old Angela Payne of Jonesville was able to avoid a car stopped for the bus but ran off the road and into a ditch. The vehicle then overturned. Payne was wearing her seat belt and was taken by the Reading Emergency Unit to Hillsdale Hospital.

DKG Alpha Iota tours Burchfield Homestead | News, Sports, Jobs

Apr 24, 2021 A tour of the Charles E. Burchfield Homestead was recently provided to the members of Delta Kappa Gamma by Madeline Shriver (left), Vice President, and Cheryl Mattevi, Curator of the Burchfield Homestead Society. (Submitted photo) SALEM The Alpha Iota chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma teachers’ honorary held its April meeting at the Emmanuel Lutheran Church in Salem. Maralyn Porter offered a reading and the invocation. Dinner was prepared and served by Sharon Walker, Brittany Walker and Marcia Spack. President Pam Todd conducted the business meeting. The minutes and treasurer’s report were approved. Members were reminded to continue saving their “Coins for Change” and their clothing drive for a local charity.

DKG Alpha Iota | News, Sports, Jobs - Morning Journal

Apr 22, 2021 A tour of the Charles E. Burchfield Homestead was recently provided to the members of Delta Kappa Gamma by left) Madeline Shriver, vice president, and Cheryl Mattevi, curator of the Burchfield Homestead Society. Pam Todd observes “Pang In the Night,”a painting Burchfield used to express the fear he felt on stormy nights as a child. A tour of the Charles E. Burchfield Homestead was recently provided to the members of Delta Kappa Gamma by left) Madeline Shriver, vice president, and Cheryl Mattevi, curator of the Burchfield Homestead Society. A tour of the Charles E. Burchfield Homestead was recently provided to the members of Delta Kappa Gamma by left) Madeline Shriver, vice president, and Cheryl Mattevi, curator of the Burchfield Homestead Society.

A Racist Past, a Flooded Future: Formerly Redlined Areas Have $107 Billion Worth of Homes Facing High Flood Risk--25% More Than Non-Redlined Areas

Share this article Share this article SEATTLE, March 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ (NASDAQ: RDFN) Americans living in formerly redlined neighborhoods many of whom are people of color are more likely than those living in non-redlined neighborhoods to see their homes jeopardized by water damage, according to a new redfin.com), the technology-powered real estate brokerage. There are $107 billion worth of homes at high risk of flooding in parts of the U.S. that were designated undesirable for mortgage lending under the racist 1930s-era practice known as redlining, according to a Redfin analysis of flood risk by redlining grade in 38 major U.S. metropolitan areas. That compares with $85 billion worth of homes at high risk of flooding in places that were deemed desirable for lending.

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