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262,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine set to expire in Michigan in the coming months
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LANSING – Legislation aimed at helping food service establishments could leave local health departments operating at a loss.
The two Michigan Senate bills would waive licensing fees for one year to help food service establishments recover from financial losses suffered during the pandemic. But waiving those fees could leave local health departments hundreds of thousands of dollars in the hole because the legislation does not include a mechanism to offset the local revenue loss.
The bills, introduced by Sen. Curt VanderWall, R-Ludington, passed the Senate in May by a 20-16 vote and are currently pending before the House of Representatives.
“It’s not a bad idea at all, in concept,” Ingham County Health Officer Linda Vail said. “There should be a way to fill that budget hole.”
Who foots the bill if Michigan legislators waive licensing fees for restaurants? Craig Lyons, Lansing State Journal © Nick King/Lansing State Journal Customers wait to prepare takeout buffet orders at the Asian Buffet restaurant on Friday, Dec. 11, 2020, in Okemos. The business offers buffet and menu items for takeout during the pandemic.
LANSING – Legislation aimed at helping food service establishments could leave local health departments operating at a loss.
The two Michigan Senate bills would waive licensing fees for one year to help food service establishments recover from financial losses suffered during the pandemic. But waiving those fees could leave local health departments hundreds of thousands of dollars in the hole because the legislation does not include a mechanism to offset the local revenue loss.
7 lessons learned from Michigan’s spring COVID-19 surge
Today 8:10 AM
Saginaw resident Linda Moton receives a dose of the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine during a clinic hosted by the Saginaw County Department of Health in the former Sears located in the Fashion Square Mall in Saginaw. The site will have vaccine May 11 through June 30 Tuesdays and Wednesdays. (Cody Scanlan | MLive.com)
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It’s been a difficult spring for Michigan, which quickly went from a state with one of the lowest rates of COVID-19 transmission to the worst state in the country.
Since March 1, the state has had more than 240,000 confirmed coronavirus case and almost 2,700 deaths. Since late March, more than 20,000 have been hospitalized with COVID.
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