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“Obviously it’s a really historical building,” said Kramer Commercial Realty associate broker Korissa Wilkins.
She said the developer has decided not to develop the building and is putting it back on the market.
According to its online listing, the building’s interior has a central grand staircase that leads upward three stories to the dome. The lobby surrounding the stairs has a decorative tile floor and is decorated with Corinthian columns.
Wilkins said it’s a “big, beautiful building” with cathedral ceilings, great trim and 10-foot doors. It has office suites and could be a mixed-use building. The building is in Port Huron’s central business district and has its own private parking.
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COVID-19 cases have been declining in St. Clair County for a few weeks, and local health officials are already contemplating how to prevent the next surge when and if it comes.
Dr. Annette Mercatante, the county’s medical health officer, said immunizations against the virus continue to be the health department’s primary goal.
But in an interview Wednesday, she admitted progress is slowing down.
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“So, what keeps me awake at night is realizing that this pace of vaccination that we re at now is probably not fast enough to have the kind of impact we d like on more infections the summer, but I hope I m wrong,” Mercatante said. “The virus has proven one thing, and that is that we don t know a lot about it.”
In an age of scarcity (for many) and excess (for the few), the language and policies of diversity become zero-sum. What another gets, you lose. So goes the polarized thinking that has turned our public square into a fever swamp of resentments and recriminations.
For too many rural Americans, the