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Biden tourned and delivered remarks at a Ford plant in Dearborn, Michigan home to one of the largest Arab American populations in the United States to highlight the new F-150 electric truck on Tuesday. He made only a passing mention of the unrest in the Middle East between Hamas and Israel, telling a Michigan congresswoman who has family in the West Bank that he would do “everything” he could to keep them safe.
Upon his arrival at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport, Biden spoke with Michigan Democratic Reps. Debbie Dingell and Rashida Tlaib the first Palestinian American woman to serve in Congress for several minutes.
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NorthPoint Development almost ready to wrap construction on two-building industrial park in Michigan May 13, 2021
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Kansas City-based developer NorthPoint Development is near completion on a two-building industrial park, Ecorse Commons, in Romulus, Michigan.
Totaling 654,000 square feet of class-A industrial space, NorthPoint Development partnered with local brokerage firm CBRE, Lauren Scarpace and Eugene Agnone III to fully lease the development in just 12 months. At this time, the tenants scheduled to occupy the buildings cannot be disclosed, but include retail logistics, warehouse distribution and supply chain solutions.
Ecorse Commons offers site amenities that feature proximity to Detroit Metropolitan Airport, downtown Detroit, intermodal yards and several assembly plants for major car manufacturers. Ecorse was a large-scale brownfield vacant property previously owned by the Racer Trust portfolio.
Groceries, toilet paper, rental cars and more: 10 things that are more expensive right now
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Many restaurants and bars have increased prices on chicken wings, a food that has become popular during the pandemic.
File photo by Mark Pynes | mpynes@pennlive.com
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In the past year, COVID-19 has upended prices and spending habits.
Now as vaccines are administered and some semblance of normalcy begins, Americans are making vacation plans, heading to restaurants and buying homes.
The turbulence has created some supply and demand issues. Here, we take a look at some goods and services you’ll likely be paying more for in the coming weeks.
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