Michigan Republicans propose luxury tax

Luxury Lanes by Wes Booden

Luxury Lanes by Wes Booden

Bridge Michigan shares that Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall is proposing a 6% sales tax on luxury services to pay for a cumulative $5 billion dollar tax overhaul and utility rate rollback plan:

Among the services Hall, R-Richland Township, is proposing to tax: Limousines, country club memberships, tourist services, skiing, golf, artificial intelligence services, performing arts, private jets, environmental consulting, newspaper publishing, marinas and political ads.

Those proposed service taxes, as first reported by WLNS-TV in Lansing, could generate roughly $4.73 billion in state revenue, nearly offsetting $5 billion tax overhaul he proposed earlier this month, including elimination of the State Education Tax, real estate transfer tax and remaining personal property taxes.

You can click through to see if bowling is one of the included services.

Wes shared this photo of Luxury Lanes in Ferndale way back in 2009. See more in his Canon 30D gallery on Flickr.

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Wednesday’s windstorm leaves Southeast Michigan powerless

Storm Damage, Ferndale Michigan, photo courtesy DTE Energy

The Detroit Free Press reports that millions of people in Michigan lost power in yesterday’s crazy winds and many are still without power:

A barrage of high winds Wednesday cut power to a record 700,000 DTE Energy customers and 290,000 customers of Consumers Energy across southeast and south-central Michigan, utility officials said.

A number of customers had been restored by about 10 p.m., bringing DTE’s outage number down to about 650,000 and Consumers’ down to 210,000.

…The total number of customers equates to an even higher number of people because the utilities’ term “customer” refers to electric meters, not individuals. “During the height of the storm, we were seeing 1,000 customer outages a minute,” said Randi Berris, a communications manager for DTE Energy.

As utility crews from Michigan began 16-hour shifts, and crews from four other states were due to arrive around dawn Thursday, families in the dark faced forecasts of possible snow and sliding temperatures for southeast Michigan, with a low of 12 predicted in Detroit by early Saturday, according to the National Weather Service.

Across the region, as winds clocked as high as 68 m.p.h. at Metro Airport, the weather knocked down even more trees and power lines than usual because the ground, instead of being frozen at this time of year, was soft and super-saturated with this winter’s unusually heavy rains, DTE Energy said.

View DTE’s photo bigger on their Facebook and thanks to the crews from both companies and elsewhere for their hard work – stay warm everyone!