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Michigan State Guide
Michigan is a Midwestern state
of the United States, located in the east north central portion
of the country. It was named after Lake Michigan, the word 'Michigan'
itself
being a French derivative of the Ojibwe misshikama (read "mish-ih-GAH-muh"),
meaning "big lake" (compare kitchikama, meaning "Great
Lake" - pronounced "gitch-ih-GAH-ma," or "Gitchee-Gumee" as
rendered by Longfellow).
Bounded by four of the five Great Lakes, plus Lake Saint
Clair, Michigan has the longest freshwater shoreline in the United
States, the longest
total shoreline after Alaska (including island shorelines), and
more recreational boats than any other state in the union. A person
in Michigan
is never more than 85 miles (137 km) from open Great Lakes water
and is never more than 6 miles (10 km) from a natural water source.
Michigan is the only bi-peninsular state. The Lower Peninsula of Michigan,
to which the name Michigan was originally applied, is sometimes dubbed "the
mitten," owing to its shape. When asked where in Michigan one comes
from, a resident of the Lower Peninsula may often point to the corresponding
part of his or her hand. The Upper Peninsula (U.P.) is separated from
the Lower Peninsula by the Straits of Mackinac, a five-mile channel that
joins Lake Huron to Lake Michigan. The Upper Peninsula (whose residents
are often called "Yoopers") is economically important for tourism
and its natural resources.
The Upper and Lower Peninsulas are connected by the five-mile-long Mackinac
Bridge, which is the third longest suspension bridge between anchorages
in the world. The Great Lakes that border Michigan are Lake Erie, Lake
Huron, Lake Michigan and Lake Superior. Michigan also abuts Lake Saint
Clair, which is between Lake Erie and Lake Huron.
Michigan State Guide - History
Michigan was home to various Native Americans centuries
before colonization by Europeans. When the first European explorers arrived,
the most populous and influential tribes were Algonquian peoples - specifically,
the Ottawa, the Anishnabe (called "Chippewa" in French, after
their language, "Ojibwe"), and the Potawatomi. The Anishnabe
were the most populous, estimated at between 25,000 and 35,000 within
Michigan, where they were located throughout in the Upper Peninsula and
northern Lower Peninsula. The Anishabe also lived in northern Ontario,
northern Wisconsin, southern Manitoba, and northern and north-central
Minnesota. The Ottawa lived primarily south of the Straits of Mackinac
in northern and western Michigan, while the Potawatomi were primarily
in the southwest. The three nations co-existed peacefully as part of
a loose confederation called the Council of Three Fires. Other First
Nations people in Michigan, in the south and east, were the Mascouten,
the Miami, and the Wyandot, who are better known by their French name, "Huron".
1600s
French voyageurs explored and settled in Michigan in the 17th century.
The first Europeans to reach what later became Michigan were Étienne
Brûlé's expedition in 1622. The first European settlement
was made in 1641 on the site where Father (or Père, in French)
Jacques Marquette established Sault Sainte-Marie in 1668.
Saint-Ignace was founded in 1671, and Marquette in 1675. Together with
Sault Sainte-Marie, they are the three oldest cities in Michigan. "The
Soo" (Sault Ste. Marie) has the distinction of being the oldest
city in both Michigan and Ontario. It was split into two cities in 1818,
a year after the U.S.-Canada boundary in the Great Lakes was finally
established by the U.S.-UK Joint Border Commission.
In 1679, Lord La Salle of France directed the construction of the Griffin,
the first European sailing vessel on the upper Great Lakes. That same
year, La Salle built Fort Miami at present-day St. Joseph.
1700s
In 1701, French explorer and army officer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac
founded Le Fort Ponchartrain du Détroit or “Fort Ponchartrain
on-the-Strait” on the strait between Lakes St. Clair and Erie,
known as the Detroit River. Cadillac had convinced King Louis XIV's chief
minister, Louis Phélypeaux, Comte de Pontchartrain, that a permanent
community there would strengthen French control over the upper Great
Lakes and repel British aspirations.
The hundred soldiers and workers who accompanied Cadillac built a 200-square-foot
palisade and named it Fort Pontchartrain. Cadillac's wife, Marie Thérèse,
soon moved to Detroit, becoming one of the first white women to settle
in the Michigan wilderness. The town quickly became a major fur-trading
and shipping post. The “Église de Saint-Anne” or Church
of Saint Ann, a stone church built in Detroit as its first permanent
structure, still stands and remains an active congregation today, greatly
dwarfed by the skyscrapers around it. At the same time, the French strengthened
Fort Michilimackinac at the Straits of Mackinac in order to better control
their lucrative fur-trading empire. By the mid-eighteenth century, the
French had also occupied forts at present-day Niles and Sault Ste. Marie.
However, most of the rest of the region remained unsettled by whites.
From 1660 to the end of French rule, Michigan (along with Wisconsin,
eastern Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi,
Alabama, two-thirds of Georgia, and small parts of West Virginia, Pennsylvania,
New York, Vermont, and Maine) was part of the Royal Province of New France,
administered from the capital city of Québec. In 1759, following
the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, in the French and Indian War (1754–1763),
Québec City fell to British forces. Under the 1763 Treaty of Paris,
Michigan and the rest of New France passed to Great Britain.
Detroit was an important British supply center during the American Revolutionary
War, but most of the inhabitants - almost all of them - were either Aboriginal
people or French Canadians. Because of imprecise cartography and unclear
language defining the boundaries in the 1783 Treaty of Paris, the British
retained control of Detroit and Michigan. When Quebec was split into
Lower and Upper Canada in 1790, Michigan was part of Kent County, Upper
Canada, and held its first democratic elections in August 1792, to send
delegates to the new provincial parliament at Newark, (Now Niagara-on-the-Lake).
Under terms negotiated in the 1794 Jay Treaty, Britain withdrew from
Detroit and Michilimackinac in 1796. However, questions remained over
the boundary for many years and the United States did not have uncontested
control of the Upper Peninsula and Drummond Island until 1818 and 1847,
respectively.
1800s
During the War of 1812, Michigan Territory (effectively consisting of
Detroit and the surrounding area) was captured by the British and nominally
returned to Upper Canada until the Treaty of Ghent, which implemented
the policy of "Status Quo Ante Bellum" or "Just as Things
Were Before the War." That meant Michigan stayed American, and the
agreement to establish a joint U.S.-UK boundary commission also remained
valid. Subsequent to the findings of that commission in 1817, control
of the Upper Peninsula and of islands in the St. Clair River delta was
transferred from Ontario to Michigan in 1818, and Drummond Island (to
which the British had moved their Michilimackinac army base) was transferred
in 1847.
The population grew slowly until the opening of the Erie Canal in 1825,
which brought a large influx of settlers. By the 1830s, Michigan had
some 80,000 residents, which was more than enough to apply for statehood.
A state government was formed in 1836, although Congressional recognition
of the state languished because of a boundary dispute with Ohio, with
both sides claiming a 468 square mile (1,210 km²) strip of land
that included the newly incorporated city of Toledo on Lake Erie and
an area to the west then known as the "Great Black Swamp." The
dispute came to be called the Toledo War, with Michigan and Ohio militia
maneuvering in the area but never coming to blows. Ultimately, Congress
awarded the "Toledo Strip" to Ohio, and Michigan, having received
the western part of the Upper Peninsula as a concession, formally entered
the Union on January 26, 1837.
Thought to be useless at the time, the Upper Peninsula was soon discovered
to be a rich and important source of lumber, iron, and copper, which
would become the state's most sought-after natural resources. Geologist
Douglass Houghton and land surveyor William Austin Burt were among the
first to document and discover many of these resources, which led to
a nation-wide increase of interest in the state.
Michigan's economy underwent a massive change at the turn of the 20th
century. The birth of the automotive industry, with Henry Ford's first
plant in the Highland Park enclave of Detroit, marked the beginning of
a new era in transportation. It was a development that not only transformed
Detroit and Michigan, but permanently altered the socio-economic climate
of the United States and much of the world. Grand Rapids, the second-largest
city in Michigan, is also a center of automotive manufacturing. Since
1838, the city has also been noted for its thriving furniture industry.
1900s to the present
Since the 1970's, Michigan's industrial base has eroded as the auto
industry began to abandon the state's industrial parks in favor of less
expensive labor found overseas and in the southern U.S. states. Nevertheless,
with more than 10 million residents, Michigan continues to grow and remains
a large and influential state, ranking eighth in population among the
50 states.
The Detroit metropolitan area in the southeast corner of the state remains
the largest metropolitan area in Michigan (roughly 50% of the population
resides there) and one of the 10 largest metro areas in the country.
The Grand Rapids/Holland/Muskegon metro area on the west side of the
state is the fastest growing metro area in the state presently, with
over 1.3 million residents as of 2006.
Michigan State Guide - Law and Government
Lansing is the state capital and is home to all three
branches of state government. The Michigan State Capitol building
hosts the executive and legislative branches. The chief executive
is the Governor,
currently Jennifer Granholm. The legislative branch consists of
the bicameral Michigan Legislature, with a House of Representatives
and Senate. The
Supreme Court of Michigan sits with seven justices. The Constitution
of Michigan of 1963 provides for voter initiative and referendum
(Article II, § 9,
defined as "the power to propose laws and to enact
and reject laws, called the initiative, and the power to approve
or reject laws enacted by the legislature, called the referendum. The
power of
initiative extends only to laws which the legislature may enact
under this constitution ").
Michigan's state universities are immune from control by the legislature,
the governor and most aspects of the executive branch, and the cities
in or near which they are located; but they are not immune from the authority
of the courts. Some degree of political control is exercised as the legislature
approves appropriations for the schools. Further, the governor appoints
the board of trustees of most state universities with the advice and
consent of the state Senate; only the trustees of the University of Michigan,
Michigan State University, and Wayne State University are chosen in general
elections.
Michigan was the first state in the Union to abolish the death penalty,
in 1846. David G. Chardavoyne has suggested that the abolitionist movement
in Michigan grew as a result of enmity towards the state's neighbor,
Canada, which under British rule made public executions a regular practice.
Politics
As with other Rust Belt states, the Republican Party dominated Michigan
until the Great Depression. In 1912, Michigan was one of the few states
to support progressive third party candidate Theodore Roosevelt for President.
In recent years, the state has leaned toward the Democratic Party in
national elections. Michigan has supported Democrats in the last four
presidential elections. In 2004, John Kerry carried the state over George
W. Bush, winning Michigan's 17 electoral votes with 51.2% of the vote.
Democrats have won each of the last three, and nine of the last ten,
US Senate elections in Michigan. Republican strength is greatest in the
western, northern, and rural parts of the state, especially in the Grand
Rapids area. Democrats are strongest in the east, especially in Detroit,
Ann Arbor, Flint, and Saginaw.
County government
State government is decentralized among three tiers — statewide,
county and township. Counties are administrative divisions of the state,
and townships are administrative divisions of a county. Both of them
exercise state government authority, localized to meet the particular
needs of their jurisdictions, as provided by state law. There are 83
counties in Michigan.
Local government
Cities, state universities, and villages are vested with home rule powers
of varying degrees. Home rule cities can generally do anything that is
not prohibited by law. The fifteen state universities have broad power
and can do anything, within the parameters of their status as educational
institutions that is not prohibited by the state constitution. Villages,
by contrast, have limited home rule, in that they are not completely
autonomous from the county and township in which they are located.
There are two types of township in Michigan: general law township and
charter. Charter township status was created by the Legislature in 1947
and grants additional powers and stream-lined administration in order
to provide greater protection against annexation by a city. As of April
2001, there were 127 charter townships in Michigan. In general, charter
townships have many of the same powers as a city but without the same
level of obligations. For example, a charter township can have its own
fire department, water & sewage department, police department, and
so on—just like a city—but it is not required to have those
things, whereas cities must provide those services. Charter townships
can opt to use county-wide services instead, such as deputies from the
county sheriff's office instead of a home-based force of ordinance officers.
Michigan State Guide - Geography
Michigan consists of two peninsulas that lie between
82°30' to about 90º 30' west longitude, and are separated by
the Straits of Mackinac.
The state is bounded on the south by the states of Ohio and Indiana, sharing
both land and water boundaries with both. Michigan's western boundaries
are almost entirely water boundaries, from south to north, with Illinois
and Wisconsin in Lake Michigan; then a land boundary with Wisconsin and
the Upper Peninsula, that is principally demarcated by the Menominee and
Montreal rivers; then water boundaries again, in Lake Superior, with Wisconsin
and Minnesota to the west, capped by Ontario to the north. The northern
boundary then runs completely through Lake Superior, from the western boundary
with Minnesota to a point north of and around Isle Royale, thence travelling
southeastward through the lake in a reasonably straight line to the Sault
Ste. Marie area. Ontario is the sole neighbour to the north and east, and
is Michigan's largest trading partner. Windsor, Ontario, once the south
bank of Detroit, Upper Canada, has the distinction of being the only part
of Canada which lies to the due south of a part of the lower 48 continguous
United States. The eastern boundary ends in Lake Erie with a three-way convergence
of Michigan, Ohio and Ontario. Michigan also shares a water boundary with
the Canadian First Nation reserve of Walpole Island.
Michigan encompasses 58,110 square miles (150,504 km²) of land, 38,575
square miles (99,909 km²) of Great Lakes waters and 1,305 square miles
(3,380 km²) of inland waters. Only the state of Alaska has more territorial
water and Michigan is well ahead of third ranked Florida which has 11,827.77
square miles (30,633.8 km²). At a total of 97,990 square miles (253,793
km²), it is the largest state east of the Mississippi River (inclusive
of its territorial waters). It is the 10th largest state in the Union.
The heavily forested Upper Peninsula is relatively mountainous in the west.
The Porcupine Mountains, which are the oldest mountains in North America,
rise to an altitude of almost 2,000 feet above sea level and form the watershed
between the streams flowing into Lake Superior and Lake Michigan. The surface
on either side of this range is rugged. The state's highest point is Mount
Arvon at 1,979 feet (603 m). The peninsula is as large as Connecticut, Delaware,
Massachusetts, and Rhode Island combined, but has less than 330,000 inhabitants,
who are sometimes called "Yoopers" (from "U.P.'ers")
and whose speech (the "Yooper dialect") has been heavily influenced
by the large number of Scandinavian and Canadian immigrants who settled
the area during the mining boom of the late 1800's.
The Lower Peninsula, shaped like a mitten, is 277 miles (446 km) long from
north to south and 195 miles (314 km) from east to west and occupies nearly
two-thirds of the state's land area. The surface of the peninsula is generally
level, broken by conical hills rising to an elevation difference not exceeding
200 feet. It is divided by a low water divide running north and south. The
larger portion of the state is on the west of this and gradually slopes
toward Lake Michigan. The highest point in the Lower Peninsula is not definitely
established but is either Briar Hill at 1,705 feet (520 m), or one of several
points nearby. The lowest point is the surface of Lake Erie at 571 feet
(174 m).
The geographic orientation of Michigan's peninsulas make for a long distance
between the ends of the state. Ironwood, in the far western Upper Peninsula,
lies 630 highway miles (1,015 km) from the Toledo, Ohio suburb of Lambertville
in the Lower Peninsula's southeastern corner. The geographic isolation of
the Upper Peninsula from Michigan's political and population centers makes
it culturally and economically distinct, and the feeling that Lansing and
Detroit do not care about the U.P. has led to occasional calls for secession
from Michigan and admission as a new state called "Superior."
There are numerous lakes and marshes in both peninsulas, and the coast
is much indented. Keweenaw, Whitefish, and the Big and Little Bays De Noc
are the principal indentations on the Upper Peninsula, while the Grand and
Little Traverse, Thunder, and Saginaw bays indent the Lower Peninsula. After
Alaska, Michigan has the longest shoreline of any state—2,288 miles
(3,681 km). An additional 879 miles (1,415 km) can be added if islands are
included. This roughly equals the length of the Atlantic Coast from Maine
to Florida. The state has numerous large islands, the principal ones being
the Manitou, Beaver, and Fox groups in Lake Michigan; Isle Royale and Grande
Isle in Lake Superior; Marquette, Bois Blanc, and Mackinac Islands in Lake
Huron; and Nebish, Sugar, and Drummond Islands in St. Mary's River (see
also Islands of Michigan).
The state's rivers are small, short and shallow, and few are navigable.
The principal ones include the Au Sable, Thunder Bay, Cheboygan, and Saginaw,
all of which flow into Lake Huron; the Ontonagon, and Tahquamenon, which
flow into Lake Superior; and the St. Joseph, Kalamazoo, Grand, and Escanaba,
which flow into Lake Michigan. (See List of Michigan rivers). The state
has 11,037 inland lakes and 38,575 square miles (62,067 km) of Great Lakes
waters and rivers and 1,305 square miles of inland water on top of that.
No point in Michigan is more than 6 miles (10 km) from an inland lake or
more than 85 miles (137 km) from one of the Great Lakes.
Detroit is the only major city in the United States from which one must
travel southward to cross the border into Canada. Metropolitan Detroit/Ann
Arbor/Flint/Windsor is also the world's largest international metropolitan
area.
The state is home to one national park: Isle Royale National Park. Other
national protected areas in the state include: Keweenaw National Historical
Park, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore,
and Father Marquette National Memorial. The North Country National Scenic
Trail also passes through Michigan.
Michigan State Guide - Climate
Michigan has a Humid continental climate throughout
the state, although the southern portion of the state is characteried
by warm summers, while the area north of about Grand Rapids has relatively
cool summers, especially at night. Generally, the state has cold, snowy
winters, with most of the state averaging high temperatures below freezing
from December through February, and possibly early March. During the
late fall through the middle of February the state is frequently subjected
to heavy lake effect snow . The state receives a good amount of precipation
throughout the year, averaging from 30-40 inches (75–100 cm) annually.
Typically, from December through March is slightly drier, while July
through September is slightly wetter than the rest of the year, although
this difference isn't extreme as in some other states.
The entire state averages around 30 days of thunderstorm activity per
year, and these can be severe, especially the further south in the state
one goes. The state averages 17 tornadoes a year, and these are much
more common in the extreme southern portion of the state with portions
of the southern border nearly as vulnerable historically as parts of
Tornado alley. Further north, in the Upper Peninsula, tornadoes are rare,
but have occurred.
Michigan State Guide - Geology
The geological formation of the state is greatly varied.
Primary boulders are found over the entire surface of the Upper Peninsula
(being principally of primitive origin), while Secondary deposits cover
the entire Lower Peninsula. The Upper Peninsula exhibits Lower Silurian
sandstones, limestones, copper and iron bearing rocks, corresponding
to the Huronian system of Canada. The central portion of the Lower Peninsula
contains coal measures and rocks of the permo-Carboniferous period. Devonian
and sub-Carboniferous deposits are scattered over the entire state.
The soil is of a varied composition and in large areas is very fertile,
especially in the south. However, the Upper Peninsula for the most part
is rocky and mountainous, and the soil is unsuitable for agriculture.
The climate is tempered by the proximity of the lakes and is much milder
than in other locales with the same latitude. The principal forest trees
include basswood, maple, elm, sassafras, butternut, walnut, poplar, hickory,
oak, willow, pine, birch, beech, hemlock, witchhazel, tamarack, cedar,
locust, dogwood, and ash.
Michigan State Guide - Demographics
As of 2005, Michigan has an estimated population of
10,120,860, which is an increase of 16,654, or 0.2%, from the prior year
and an increase of 182,380, or 1.8%, since the year 2000. This includes
a natural increase since the last census of 235,760 people (that is 691,897
births minus 456,137 deaths) and a decrease from net migration of 42,183
people out of the state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted
in a net increase of 354,544 people, and migration within the country
produced a net loss of 165,084 people. The state's population increased
by 817,000 between 1990 and 2004, an 8.8% growth. As of 2000, the state
had the 8th largest population in the Union.
The center of population of Michigan is located in Shiawassee County,
in the village of Morrice.
As of 2006, the state had a foreign-born population
of 688,413. In recent years, the foreign born population has grown in
the state.
The five largest reported ancestries in Michigan are: German (20.4%),
African American (14.2%), Irish (10.7%), English (9.9%), Polish (8.6%).
Americans of German ancestry are present throughout most of Michigan.
People of Nordic (especially Finnish), British (notably Cornish), and
French ancestry have a notable presence in the Upper Peninsula. Western
Michigan is known for the Dutch heritage of many residents (the highest
concentration of any state), especially in the Grand Rapids-Holland area.
Metro Detroit has many residents of Polish and Irish descent, and is
home to the largest Arab and Chaldean community in the United States.
African-Americans form a majority of the population of the city of Detroit
and of several other cities, including Flint, Southfield and Benton Harbor.
Michigan State Guide - Economy
The Michigan economy is involved in information technology,
life sciences, and advanced manufacturing. Michigan ranks 4th nationally
in high tech employment with 568,000 high tech workers, including 70,000
in the automotive industry. Michigan ranks 3rd in overall Research & Development
investment expenditures in the U.S. The domestic Auto Industry accounts
directly and indirectly for one of every ten jobs in the U.S.
Michigan has been able to manage recent economic hardships brought on
by the severe stock market decline following the September 11, 2001 attacks
which caused a pension and benefit fund crisis for many American companies
including General Motors, Ford, and DaimlerChrysler. The American Auto
companies are proving to be more resilient than other affected industries
as each company implements its respective turnaround plan. Nevertheless,
Michigan ranked 2nd nationally in new corporate facilities and expansions
in 2004. From 1997 to 2004, Michigan was listed as the only state to
top the 10,000 mark for the number of major new developments, led by
Metro Detroit.
Even though Michigan is known as the birthplace of the automobile industry,
its diverse economy leads in many other areas. Michigan has a booming
biotechnology and life sciences corridor. Pfizer makes Michigan one of
its largest global employment locations; the company invests billions
of dollars in Michigan based research. As leading research institutions,
the University of Michigan and Michigan State University are both important
partners in the State's economy. Michigan's workforce is well educated
and highly skilled making it attractive to companies. Michigan's infrastructure
gives it a competitive edge, Michigan has 38 deep water ports. Detroit
Metropolitan Airport is one of the nation's most recently expanded and
modernized airports with six major runways and large aircraft maintenance
facilities capable of servicing and repairing the Boeing 747. Michigan's
schools and colleges rank among the nation's best. Michigan is a leading
grower of fruit including cherries, blueberries, apples, grapes, and
peaches. It produces wines and a multitude of food products. Some of
the major industries/products/services include automobiles (General Motors,
Ford, Daimler-Chrysler), Amway, cereal (Kellogg's), information technology,
computer software (Compuware, IBM), pharmaceuticals (Pfizer), medical
products (Stryker), aerospace systems equipment (Smith Aerospace, Eaton
Aerospace), military equipment (General Dynamics, Raytheon), lasers (Rofin-Sinar),
financial services (Quicken Loans, Comerica, National City Bank), energy
equipment (DTE Energy), fuel cells (Next Energy) seating (Lear), copper,
iron, furniture (Steelcase, Herman Miller, Haworth, and La-Z-Boy). In
July of 2006, Google announced it locate a new facility in Ann Arbor
and add 1000 new jobs.
Michigan has a thriving tourist industry, with destinations such as
Traverse City, Mackinac Island, Ludington, Muskegon, Saugatuck, the Upper
Peninsula, Frankenmuth, Grand Haven, and Detroit, drawing vacationers,
hunters, and nature enthusiasts from across the United States and Canada.
Although it has an urban image to non-visitors, Michigan is actually
fifty percent forest land, much of it quite remote. Both the forests
and thousands of miles of beaches are top attractions. Tourists also
flock to many of the museums, particularly those in Metro Detroit, including
The Henry Ford, the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Arab American National
Museum. The Metro Detroit area offers four major casinos, MGM Grand Detroit,
Greektown, Motor City, and Casino Windsor; moreover, Detroit is the largest
city to offer casino gambling.
Hunting is a major component of Michigan's economy. Michigan ranks first
in the nation in licensed hunters (over one million) who contribute $2
billion annually to its economy. Over three-quarters of a million hunters
participate in white-tailed deer season alone. Many K-12 school districts
in rural areas of Michigan go so far as to cancel school on the opening
day of rifle season, because of both safety and attendance concerns.
Michigan's Department of Natural Resources manages the largest dedicated
state forest system in the nation. The forest products industry and recreational
users contribute $12 billion and 200,000 associated jobs annually to
the state's economy. Michigan has more than 90 native species of trees,
more than all of Europe combined.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that Michigan's gross state
product in 2004 was $372 billion. Per capita personal income in 2003
was $31,178 and ranked twentieth in the nation.
Michigan's flat tax rate on personal income is 3.90 percent gives it
one of the lowest top brackets in the nation. Some cities impose additional
income taxes. There is single business tax on small businesses that is
set to expire by 2009, and a corporate tax is levied on larger concerns.
Michigan offers a number of tax incentives to attract and retain business.
Michigan ranks in the top 5 as a business friendly location. Michigan's
state sales tax is 6 percent. The state does not allow city or local
sales taxes. Property taxes are assessed on the local, not state, level.
However, based on Bureau of Economic Analysis, recent growth in Michigan
is 0.1%, the lowest quintile across United States.
Michigan State Guide - Education
Colleges and universities
* Adrian College
* Albion College
* Alma College
* Andrews University
* Aquinas College
* Ave Maria College
* Ave Maria School of Law
* Baker College
* Calvin College
* Calvin Theological Seminary
* Center for Humanistic Studies
* Central Bible College
* Central Michigan University
* Cleary University
* College for Creative Studies
* Concordia University
* Cornerstone University
* Cranbrook Academy of Art
* Davenport University
* Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary
* Eastern Michigan University
* Ecumenical Theological Seminary
* Ferris State University
* Finlandia University
* Grace Bible College
* Grand Rapids Theological Seminary
* Grand Valley State University
* Great Lakes Christian College
* Hillsdale College
* Hope College
* Kalamazoo College
* Kendall College of Art and Design
* Kettering University
* Kuyper College
* Lake Superior State University
* Lawrence Technological University
* Lewis College of Business
* Madonna University
* Marygrove College
* Michigan Jewish Institute
* Michigan State University
* Michigan Technological University
* Michigan Theological Seminary
* Northern Michigan University
* Northwood University
* Oakland University
* Olivet College
* Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary
* Rochester College
* Sacred Heart Major Seminary
* SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary
* Saginaw Valley State University
* Siena Heights University
* Spring Arbor University
* Theological School of the Protestant Reformed Churches
* Thomas M. Cooley Law School
* University of Detroit Mercy
* University of Michigan System
o University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
o University of Michigan-Dearborn
o University of Michigan-Flint
* Walsh College of Accountancy and Business
* Wayne State University
* Western Michigan University
* Western Theological Seminary
* William Tyndale College
* Yeshiva Beth Yehudah Gedolah
Michigan State Guide - Sports
Most major league sports teams in Michigan are located
in Metro Detroit, with the Detroit Tigers baseball team (MLB), Detroit
Lions football team (NFL), and Detroit Red Wings ice hockey team (NHL)
located within the city of Detroit. The Detroit Pistons men's basketball
team of NBA and the Detroit Shock women's basketball team of the WNBA
play at the Palace of Auburn Hills. (The Pistons played at Detroit's
Cobo Arena until 1978, and at Pontiac's Silverdome until 1988.) The Detroit
Lions played at Tiger Stadium in Detroit until 1974, then moved out to
the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac before moving back to Detroit's Ford
Field in 2002. The Arena Football League's Grand Rapids Rampage is the
state's other "major league" sports team. Seven-time Grand
Slam champion Serena Williams was born in Saginaw. Professional hockey
got its start in Houghton, Michigan in the U.P., when the Portage Lakers
were formed.
Michigan State Guide - Trivia
Michigan is simultaneously known for its cities, supported
by heavy industry, and its pristine wilderness, home to more than 11,000
lakes. The clang and clamor of Metro Detroit's crowded thoroughfares
and busy factories stand in vivid counterpoint to the tranquility found
in virtually every corner of the state.
An individual from Michigan is called a "Michiganian" or "Michigander".[18]
Also at times, but rarely, a "Michiganite". A resident of Michigan's
Upper Peninsula ("the U.P.") is often called a "Yooper" .
In turn, residents of the lower peninsula are referred to as "trolls" — because
they "live below the Mackinac Bridge." As the Lower Peninsula
is famously shaped like a mitten, residents often use their left hand
or right palm as a shorthand "map" to illustrate the part of
the state from which they hail, or any other location to which they may
be referring. This may also be done for the Upper Peninsula by using
the palm of the left hand turned on its side.
Its U.S. postal abbreviation is "MI" (traditional: "Mich.").
The U.S. Navy's three ships called USS Michigan were named in honor of
the state. Michigan is nicknamed the "Great Lakes State", and
also the "Wolverine State", from a nickname earned during the
Toledo War.
Michigan has over 130 lighthouses, the most of any U.S. state. The first
lighthouses in Michigan were built between 1818 and 1822. They were built
to project light at night and to serve as a landmark during the day to
safely guide the passenger ships and freighters traveling the Great Lakes.
See Lighthouses in the United States.
Michigan has the most registered boats (over 1 million) of any state
in the Union.
Michigan is home to the Soo Locks, the world's busiest lock system,
and the Mackinac and Ambassador Bridges, each formerly the world's longest
suspension bridge.
Michigan's 2004 commemorative quarter featured the outline of the state
and the surrounding lakes.
Michigan is home to more public golf courses than any other state.
Michigan has two official Governor's Residences. One is in Lansing,
the other is at Mackinac Island.
Article Source: Wikipedia
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