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News That Affects You Archives for 2025-01

City Commission to approve electricity installation at Depot Park and watermain valve improvements

The Big Rapids City Commission will be meeting this coming Monday, Feb. 3 at 6:30 P.M. inside Big Rapids City Hall.

General business items include resolutions of bids for the following projects:

  • Adopting the "2025 Rules of Procedures" for conducting the Big Rapids City Commission business
  • Approving the City Manager’s request to waive requirement of sealed bids for Charter Revision Commission
  • Approving the Charter Revision Commission’s request for a budget increase and
    the hiring of Attorney Peter Letzmann
  • Approving the City Commission’s request of the Charter Revision Commission to
    make purchasing limits an ordinance
  • Awarding a bid to Gerber Construction for two inserta valve watermain
    improvements
  • Approving a Consumers Energy agreement for the installation of overhead and
    underground electricity at Depot Park (Contract No. 1072314793,
    Notification No. 1072642071)
  • Authorizing the purchase of an aeration influent flow meter for the Wastewater Treatment Plant
  • Adopting the proposed City of Big Rapids Master Plan

The meeting will also include an income tax enforcement ordinance discussion from City Attorney Brad Fowler and more on education and events within the 2025 Michigan Municipal League from Commissioner Amanda Johnson.

All city commission meetings are available to the public and are available to watch on YouTube.

Detroit Lions announce Offensive and Defensive Coordinator hires

The Detroit Lions announced today the hiring of John Morton as offensive coordinator and the promotion of Kelvin Sheppard to defensive coordinator. Contract terms were not disclosed.

 

JOHN MORTON – OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR
Serving as the Lions’ Senior Offensive Assistant in 2022, Morton returns to Detroit as the team’s offensive coordinator in 2025. Between his stints in Detroit, Morton spent two seasons as the Broncos’ Passing Game Coordinator (2023-24), helping Broncos QB Bo Nix account for the second-most passing touchdowns (29), third-most completions (376) and eighth-most passing yards (3,775) by a rookie quarterback in NFL history in 2024.

Embarking on his 23rd NFL season in 2025, Morton’s previous NFL experience includes serving as the Raiders’ senior offensive assistant (2019-21), New York Jets’ offensive coordinator (2017), New Orleans Saints’ wide receivers coach (2015-16), San Francisco 49ers’ wide receivers/passing game coach (2011-14), Saints’ offensive assistant/passing game coach (2006), as well as a variety of offensive coaching roles with the Raiders from 1998-2004. His first NFL experience came with the Raiders’ personnel department in 1997.

In 2005, Morton served as the passing game/wide receivers coach at the University of San Diego and from 2007-10, he served in a variety of roles on the offensive side of the ball at USC, including offensive coordinator. A native of Rochester Hills, Mich. and graduate of Western Michigan, Morton entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent in 1993 and had practice squad and training camp stints as a wide receiver with the Raiders, Green Bay Packers and Jacksonville Jaguars over the 1993-96 seasons. He also played with the Toronto Argonauts of the CFL from 1995-96 and with the Frankfurt Galaxy of NFL Europe in 1997.

 

KELVIN SHEPPARD – DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR
Sheppard enters his fifth season in Detroit and his first as the Lions’ defensive coordinator in 2025 after previously serving as the team’s linebackers coach (2022-24) and outside linebackers coach (2021). Under Sheppard’s tutelage, LB Jack Campbell became the first Lions player to produce at least 85 tackles and five tackles for loss in each of a player’s first two-career seasons since the data began being tracked in 1994, and LB Alex Anzalone (2022-23) became just the fourth player in franchise history to produce at least 125 tackles in multiple seasons. In 2022, Sheppard helped guide LB Malcolm Rodriguez to become Detroit’s first rookie selected in the sixth round-or-later to start in Week 1 of his same draft year since 1987.

Prior to entering the coaching ranks, Sheppard was originally selected by the Buffalo Bills in the third round (68th overall) of the 2011 NFL Draft out of LSU and split eight seasons (2011-18) with the Bills, Indianapolis Colts, Miami Dolphins, New York Giants and Lions. He appeared in 107 career games (63 starts) and logged 400 total tackles, 3.0 sacks and two interceptions. Following his playing career, he returned to the LSU football program in 2020 as director of player development under head coach Ed Orgeron. At LSU, Sheppard was tasked with helping players with their academic direction, social development and overall quality of life.

 

The Lions have seen many prominent coaches depart since the end of the 2024-2025, including former Offensive Coordinator Ben Johnson (now Chicago Bears Head Coach), former Defensive Coordinator Aaron Glenn (now New York Jets Head Coach), Defensive Line Coach Terrell Williams (now New England Patriots Defensive Coordinator), and Wide Receivers Coach Antwaan Randle El (now Chicago Bears Assistant Head Coach/Wide Receivers Coach).

Team USA, Tamarack Lake set to host 2025 Ice Fishing World Championship

Coming up Feb. 15, ten different countries will collide in Lakeview to compete for the world’s highest honor in ice fishing.

The 2025 championships will be 21st competition at the highest stage of winter angling, as well as the first contest in the United States since 2013.

According to Team USA Coach Myron Gilbert, getting the event to Michigan has been a passionate process working with the Michigan DNR to make the competition fit in state guidelines.

“It’s my hometown and we’ve got a lot of state pride,” Gilbert said. “It’s been five years in the making for me to get it to Michigan. It was an easy sell for the community and the people around as well.”

The fishing portion of the event will be held on 323-acre, 18-feet deep Tamarack Lake in Lakeview. Competition for the event includes a pair of three-hour segments, one on Saturday, Feb. 15 and the other Sunday, Feb. 16. All ten teams will be staying in Grand Rapids at the DoubleTree Hotel from Tuesday, Feb. 11 through Monday, Feb. 17 for registration, training sessions, and other various fan meet and greets.

The lake will be divided into five different competition zones, in which each country’s team will send one of their five representative anglers to fish in a specific zone. Each zone’s count will be tallied after the three-hour window, in which they will be scored by weight. The team member with the most weight in their assigned zone will receive one point, the second receiving two points, and so on through all ten fishermen in each zone. Each country will then tally their five fisherman’s scores from each zone to get a grand total and establish the standings, with the goal of lowest score wins over the two days.

According to Gilbert, scoring can vary frequently due to the natural fluctuation of catching fish.

“The amount (of fish) that might win in one zone could be a half a pound of fish, while another other guy may have 20 pounds and not win. It's all aggregate of what's going on in your zone. There are usually some big swings. A guy that wins his own zone one day, a lot of times, might be seventh or eighth in the zone the next day. There are huge swings all the time. That's very normal.”

When asked about a lake scouting report compared to the previous years’ international water, Gilbert said the U.S. team has an advantage this year’s tournament due to European lakes being much more bottom-feeding, compared to more mid-level, suspended fishing strategies in America. 

“They were a lot more comfortable (in previous years) because they know their fish,” Gilbert said. “They're very bottom-orientated fish over there that feed on bloodworms on the bottom. We’re putting them on a lake where the fish are suspended most of the time, halfway down and above, so this is home field advantage for us.”

Team USA will be represented by the following anglers: Kieth Kniffen of Eaton Rapids, MI, Zack George of Hastings, MI, Jeff Kelm of Wisconsin Rapids, WI, Kevin Kowalski of Duluth, MN, and Nate Winters of Ogdensburg, WI. Team USA won silver last year in Mongolia, finishing one spot behind Lithuania.

For more information on the Championships and Team USA, visit https://usangling.org/ice-fishing-worldchampionship-2025/.

Reed City Police: Weekly Blotter (1/20 - 1/26)

Monday, Jan. 20
  • No incidents reported.

Tuesday, Jan. 21

  • An officer responded to a call that came in about a dog left outside in the cold temperatures. The reports were unfounded.

Wednesday, Jan. 22

  • An officer assisted the Osceola County Sheriff's Department locating a teen who had runaway from a youth detention facility. She was found and taken to the hospital for evaluation due to cold temperatures.

  • An officer took a report of a domestic assault that had occurred the previous day. The report has been forwarded to the prosecutor for possible charges.

  • An officer responded to an alarm for an open door at a local business. The officer inspected and secured the building. No issues.

Thursday, Jan. 23

  • No incidents reported.

Friday, Jan. 24

  • An officer was dispatched to an address in reference to a domestic assault. Prior to the investigation, the female left the area and went to stay with a family member. This investigation will be submitted to the prosecutor for review.

  • An officer was dispatched to an unwanted family member.

  • An officer was dispatched to a criminal sexual conduct complaint. It was determined the matter had happened out of state and the caller was directed to the police agency who has jurisdiction.

Saturday, Jan. 25

  • An officer responded to a call for backup from an Osceola County Sheriff's Deputy at the Reed City Hospital due to a disorderly individual. The officer arrived at the hospital and assisted the deputy. No issues.

Sunday, Jan. 26

  • An officer was called to assist with an uncooperative mental health patient.

  • Officers arrested a 58-year-old man on an outstanding two count drug warrant. In addition, the man was also arrested on a new charge of possession of methamphetamine.

  • An officer took a report of stolen prescription drugs. The matter is under investigation.

  • An officer was dispatched to assist EMS regarding a suicidal individual. The individual agreed to get medical help.

Cardinals suffer non-conference setback to St. Francis

Despite a fourth-quarter comeback, Big Rapids fell to Traverse City St. Francis on Tuesday night 53-49.

Both teams got off to a sluggish start offensively, missing many shots in the first quarter to leave a 9-9 scoreline. Big Rapids used the transition game to score a few quick buckets offensively to start the second quarter, but they would lose their narrow lead and trail 20-18 at halftime following a couple late triples from the Gladiators.

The third quarter was all St. Francis. Their pesty defense forced many Big Rapids turnovers and their offense moved the ball around the Cardinal zone to score some easy looks. Big Rapids' threes weren't falling on offense either, as they would be outscored 16-5 in the third period. While the Gladiator lead would grow to 19 almost halfway through the fourth, Big Rapids would spark to life after a Moten steal and Gielczyk and-one conversion. From there, the Cardinals used defensive pressure to make a massive 12-2 run to cut the lead to single digits. Big Rapids would chip away to the lead late, but three-point misses and Gladiator free throws would put the game way 53-49.

Big Rapids suffers their fourth loss of the season and third loss on the road this year. The 10-4 Cardinals return to action on Friday as they travel to Tri County to face the 3-11 Vikings in conference play. Catch all the game coverage, starting at 6:30 P.M., on WBRN via 1460 AM, 96.5 FM, WBRN.com, and the WBRN mobile app.

Evart Police: Weekly Blotter (1/20 - 1/27)

Monday, Jan. 20
  • No incidents reported. 

Tuesday, Jan. 21

  • Missing Person - An officer was dispatched for a missing person. The person was located and did not require any services.
  • Assist - An officer investigated a potential child neglect case. The accusations were deemed unfounded.
  • Criminal Sexual Conduct - An officer investigated a sexual assault that occurred between two minors. The case remains open pending additional investigation.

Wednesday, Jan. 22

  • No incidents reported.

Thursday, Jan. 23

  • Warrant Arrest – Officers made contact with a subject with a warrant for their arrest.  The subject was arrested and lodged on the warrant.

Friday, Jan. 24

  • No incidents reported.

Saturday, Jan. 25

  •  Traffic Stop - An officer conducted a traffic stop. The driver of the vehicle had a valid felony warrant and two misdemeanor warrants for his arrest. The driver was taken into custody and lodged at the jail. 

Sunday, Jan. 26

  • Warrant attempt - Officers conducted a warrant check on a subject. The subject was located and arrested.

Monday, Jan. 27

  • Threats – Officers were dispatched to a neighbor dispute. Officers spoke with both parties to help resolve the issue. 

Ferris State's Shimadzu Lab earns $800,000 state grant to monitor wastewater, evaluate regional infectious disease prospects

Ferris State University’s Shimadzu Core Laboratory for Academic and Research Excellence investigators will continue scientific monitoring to track and predict possible infectious disease outbreaks.  

Michigan’s Department of Health and Human Services provided nearly $800,000 to continue wastewater evaluation and reporting by this study team into Fall 2025. 

Lab Director Schuyler “Sky” Pike said the project is funded as part of the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2021. 

“This is the last portion of funding for participating labs of what state government refers to as the ‘Sewer Network’ project,” Pike said. “What had first focused on COVID-19 monitoring now includes targets for outbreaks of influenza ‘A’ and ‘B,’ respiratory syncytial virus or ‘RSV,’ influenza H5N1 or ‘Bird Flu’ and norovirus.” 

Pike said student employees test wastewater samples to develop information and support forecasting of possible illness outbreaks on the Ferris campus and several communities in the geographic area of Michigan’s ‘District Health Department #10.’ 

“By collecting wastewater from the southern and western sections of campus, in the vicinity of North Hall and near the campus’ quad,’ we can produce a good snapshot for a majority of the on-campus community,” Pike said. “Our team will continue surveillance of wastewater systems in Big Rapids, Ludington, Cadillac and Grayling.” 

These monitoring activities may be altered in months to come, and Pike hopes the Shimadzu Laboratory can remain involved in what has been an excellent experiential learning opportunity for students. 

“MDHHS is currently in the process of ‘right-sizing’ the number of sampling sites to optimize its search system and provide efficient coverage of these strains statewide,” Pike said. “That could change the methods and requirements for laboratories involved in the reporting network.” 

Pike also expressed his thanks to the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs and Grants Administrator Wendy Stapp’s contributions, particularly in overseeing the application and reporting requirements of the Sewer Program grant. 

The Shimadzu Laboratory also tests for E. coli levels during the outdoor swimming season on lakes in the District Health Department #10 service area.

Release and photo provided by Ferris State University.

WEATHER ALERT: Winter Weather Advisory in effect for local counties due to hazardous Monday evening travel

A Winter Weather Advisory has been issued as of January 27 at 5:27 P.M.

Snow accumulations up to 2 inches and winds gusting as high as 40 MPH are expected throughout portions of central and west central Michigan. The advisory will be in effect until Tuesday, Jan. 28 at 1:00 A.M. for Clare, Lake, Mecosta, Newaygo, Oceana, and Osceola Counties.

Plan on slippery road conditions and poor visibilities during Monday evening commute. Hourly weather updates can be heard on NewsRadio WBRN.

Mecosta County Sheriff's Office: Weekly Blotter (1/20 - 1/26)

Monday, Jan. 20

Calls for Service: 13

 

Tuesday, Jan. 21

Calls for Service: 20

Traffic Accidents: 5

 

Wednesday, Jan. 22

Calls for Service: 10

Traffic Accidents: 2

 

Thursday, Jan. 23

  • At 1:04 P.M., deputies made a warrant arrest at a residence in Martiny Township. A male subject was arrested on a warrant and lodged at the Mecosta County Jail.

Calls for Service: 30

Traffic Accidents: 5

 

Friday, Jan. 24

Calls for Service: 24

Traffic Accidents: 2

 

Saturday, Jan. 25

  • At 5:05 P.M., deputies made a warrant arrest at a residence in Austin Township. A female subject was arrested on a warrant and lodged at the Mecosta County Jail.

Calls for Service: 11

Traffic Accidents: 4

 

Sunday, Jan. 26

Calls for Service: 20

Traffic Accidents: 3

WEATHER ALERT: Wind Advisory issued for majority of Lower Peninsula Monday

The National Weather Service office in Grand Rapids has issued a Wind Advisory until Monday, Jan. 27 at 8:00 P.M. EST

Forecasts are calling for southwest winds between 15 to 25 MPH, with some gusts reaching up to 45 MPH. The winds are projected to start at around 10:00 A.M. and last to about 8:00 P.M. The advisory will be in effect throughout the entire lower peninsula, especially local counties in our listening area including Isabella, Kent, Lake, Mecosta, Missaukee, Montcalm, Newaygo, Oceana, Osceola, and Wexford.

Gusty winds will blow around unsecured objects as well as tree limbs could be blown down. A few power outages may result, and driving can become difficult for lighter-weight vehicles. A few inches of additional snowfall, moving in from the north during the afternoon and evening, may result in blowing and drifting snow. 

Please be advised of changing conditions. More WeatherEye forecast information can be heard at the top of the hour on NewsRadio WBRN stations throughout the day.

NewsRadio WBRN airing live coverage of NFC and AFC Championship games

Today, NewsRadio WBRN will be airing today's AFC and NFC Championship games on 96.5 FM and 1460 AM.

 

NFC CHAMPIONSHIP - EAGLES vs COMMANDERS

The first game will be the NFC Championship at 3:00 P.M. This game will only be the second time since 2014 to have two teams from the same division and the first time since 1986 for teams specifically in the NFC East. 

The number one seed Philadelphia Eagles, entering the contest 16-3, will host the six-seed Washington Commanders from Lincoln Financial Field. Philadelphia defeated the four-seed Los Angeles Rams last week in a 28-22 barnburner while Washington upset the number one seeded Detroit Lions 45-31 at Ford Field. Here are some keys to the game:

  • Washington's run defense against Eagles RB Saquon Barkley and QB Jalen Hurts 
  • Philadelphia's pass rush and containment of Commanders QB Jayden Daniels
  • Home field advantage (the home team won each of two regular season matchups)

 

AFC CHAMPIONSHIP - CHIEFS vs BILLS

The second game will be the AFC Championship at 6:30 P.M. This game will be the fourth postseason meeting between the top-seeded Kansas City Chiefs and the second-seeded Buffalo Bills.

The 16-2 Chiefs defeated the Houston Texans 23-14 in the Divisional round last week while the 15-4 Bills took down the Baltimore Ravens 27-25. Buffalo defeated Kansas City 30-21 in the regular season meeting at home, while the Chiefs beat the Bills 27-24 in the playoffs last year. Here are some keys to the game:

  • Bills QB Josh Allen's scrambling against the Chiefs defensive front 
  • Chiefs' ability to finish offense drives with touchdowns versus field goals
  • Each team limiting third down penalties

 

Tune for each game on 96.5 FM and 1460 AM.

60-year-old man dies from snowmobile crash on White Pine Trail

On Saturday, Jan. 25 at approximately 3:35 P.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff’s Department were dispatched to a snowmobile crash on the White Pine Trail near 180th Ave.

The investigation revealed that a 60-year-old male from Newaygo County was traveling south on the trail and veered off the trails, crashing into trees. The 60-year-old male succumbed to his injuries on scene.

The Mecosta County Sheriff’s Department were assisted on scene by Mecosta County EMS, Mecosta Township Fire/Rescue, and Meceola Central Dispatch.

WEATHER ALERT: Special Weather Statement for snowfall in West Central Michigan Saturday night

A Special Weather Statement has been issued Saturday, Jan. 25 at 4:48 P.M. EST by NWS Grand Rapids.

At 4:40 P.M., a band of snow showers was developing to the west of Reed City and Big Rapids. These snow showers were tracking east at 35 MPH. They will track through the US-131 region by 6:00 PM and continue further east towards U.S. 127 by 7:00 PM.

This statement will be in effect for Lake, Osceola, Clare, Newaygo, Mecosta, Isabella, and Montcalm Counties until 9:00 P.M.

Some of this snow will be briefly heavy and winds gusts could temporarily reach 40 MPH with passage of these snow showers. Snowfall amounts of around an inch will be possible from these snow showers. Motorists should be alert for sudden changes to the visibility and possible slick conditions.

Cardinals down Warriors 49-34 for season series sweep

Big Rapids got back on track Friday, as the Cardinals defeated Chippewa Hills in a defense dogfight at home.

It was the first game in seven days for the Cardinals due to the snow day postponement of the Morley Stanwood game on Tuesday. While both offenses struggled to get going, Big Rapids was able to hold Chippewa Hills to single digit point totals in three of four quarters on the game. 

The Warriors started the game hot, hitting consecutive shots to take a six-point lead in the opening minute. Big Rapids would bounce back, making a 9-0 run to take the lead back and eventually hold it the rest of the way. The first half was summarized by good three-point shooting from Cole Haist, Liam McLaughlin, and Gabe Njenga. Defensive stops were also crucial using a full court trap, forcing double digit Warrior turnovers on the contest.

In the second half, Chippewa Hills was held off the three-point line thanks to a 1-3-1 zone look defensively by the Cardinals. The Warriors would bounce back with some points in the paint, but it would not be enough to overcome a double-digit deficit early in the fourth quarter. 

Cole Haist led the Big Rapids offensive attack with an estimated 17 points, followed by Gabe Njenga with eight. Ty Gielczyk added five rebounds, McLaughlin tallied over three assists, and Njenga also added six steals. For the Warriors, Maverick Chapman led with nine points.

Big Rapids moves to 10-3 on the season, including 5-1 in CSAA-Red play. The Cardinals will travel up north to face Traverse City St. Francis next Tuesday. 

Chippewa Hills falls to 4-8 overall and 2-3 in conference action. They will face Grant on the road on Jan. 28.

Moolenaar to serve Michigan on Appropriations Committee

Congressman John Moolenaar has been appointed to serve on the House Committee on Appropriations. The committee is considered one of the most powerful in Congress, and is responsible for writing legislation that sets the funding levels of the departments and agencies in the federal government.

"Michigan families work hard and their tax dollars should go toward what matters most to them. As their voice on the Appropriations Committee, I will advocate for their most important priorities including protecting the Great Lakes, supporting our rural communities, and championing Michigan farmers,” said Moolenaar.

Moolenaar is Michigan’s only member of the House Appropriations Committee. He will serve on three of its subcommittees:

  • The subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies
    • This subcommittee has oversight over the Department of Agriculture, including its Office of Rural Development.
  • The subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies
    • This subcommittee has oversight of the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, and the Department of Education.
  • The subcommittee on National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs 
    • This subcommittee has oversight of the Department of State, aspects of the Department of the Treasury, and foreign operations of the United States government. 

Detroit Lions Head Coach Dan Campbell Quote Sheet: 1/20/25

LIONS HEAD COACH DAN CAMPBELL QUOTE SHEET

January 20, 2025

Opening Statement: “That was tough. That was tough the other day and a tough pill to swallow. When you have goals and you have standards for yourself – and I mean that for us as a team, collectively, and you fail to reach those, man, it hurts, but, ultimately, man, we failed – we failed in that game. We had a hell of a season, and we overcame a lot of adversity. Guys – a ton of guys, man, that we needed to rely on and did and got us in that position. We got to where we wanted to get to and then we did not perform. And, man, credit Washington, they did what they needed to do, and they played a good game, but when, on our – a little bit for us, when you feel like, ‘Hey, you’ve got to bring your A game.’ I think if we bring our B game, we’ve got a chance to win that game and we didn’t bring that. So, that’s just a little bit of the – that’s the frustration. I know everybody’s frustrated, I know the fans are, certainly our team, coaches, everybody in the organization. So, that being said, I’m real proud of these guys, I am. I’m proud of them because I know the fight they’ve got in them, and I know what they’re made of and the amount of things that they did overcome speaks volumes. So, as I said in the loss, everybody’s got a hand in that – everybody’s got a hand, including me. And so, we definitely did that together, we earned that loss together. But listen, all we can do is move forward, man, you brush yourself off. I’ve already gone through the loss of a family member feeling to anger yesterday to now I’m back on my feet, ready to roll, and I’ve acknowledged – I can look in the mirror and say, ‘You know what, you failed, man. What are you going to do about it?’ So, that’s where we’re at and move forward, man.”

On if he feels like their Super Bowl window is still open given the construction of the team: “Yeah, I do. I do, man, I think that’s – we talk about that core, that core group is still intact and some of these guys are now – we’ve signed some back, some are up on contracts and that’ll be ongoing. But yeah, we absolutely do, and I think the most important thing is, you want to know – you’ve got your culture, you’ve got your identity, and you’ve got players that fit into that, and we’ve got that. We’ve got players in every pivotal position you can ask for to have success, and those guys are made the right way, so absolutely, our window is open.”

On how much their Super Bowl window changes if they lose both Lions Offensive Coordinator Ben Johnson and Lions Defensive Coordinator Aaron Glenn: “It can’t, right? It can’t – can’t allow that to happen. That’s my job, is to replenish and find the next man up and the guy who’s going to give us the best chance to have success on both sides of the ball. So, we’re not going to allow that to happen – I’m not. Does it hurt to lose those guys? Absolutely, they’re a part of what we’ve been here. I mean, they’ve been here for four years. They’re one of the major reasons why we’ve been able to get to where we’ve been, man, we came out of the dump and got to where we’re at. So, man, I will forever be grateful for those guys and our team will, and is it a loss? Absolutely, it would be a loss, but yet, man, we move forward, this train rolls on and I’ll find the next best guys for us.”

On what he learned from the situation with former Lions Offensive Coordinator Anthony Lynn about trying to have a seamless transition between coordinators: “Look, I think – let me start here, from that, what do you learn? OK, man, I just need – make sure that I am heavily involved in however we go. Man, I am very offensive heavy – I think is the best way to say that. So, certainly picking – I am picking that, but I need to know – I need to have my checklist done, but then, on top of that, I need to be part of the whole process. I need to be part of the whole process. There was a number of things when that transition took place, ‘Hey, your offense, you call it, I’ll have some things I want.’ And then I’m with (Lions Executive Vice President and General Manager) Brad (Holmes) because we’re getting ready for the Draft, looking for players, free agency, and so you kind of allow all those things to happen, and it’s a blind spot and it shouldn’t be because that’s my area of expertise, if you will. So, I’m not going to allow that to happen. I’m going to be involved no matter what because I think that’s best for our offense, but also (Lions QB Jared) Goff. This thing is set up for Goff to have success with our playmakers, (Lions WR Amon-Ra) St. Brown, our running backs, the O-line, the whole deal, (Lions WR Jameson Williams) Jamo. And so, I want to keep that in place. I want to keep our terminology in place, and I want to make sure that Goff is comfortable because he’s playing at a high level.”

On if he expects to lose one of or both Lions Offensive Coordinator Ben Johnson and Lions Defensive Coordinator Aaron Glenn: “I would expect to lose both, but I haven’t been told anything. I just – I’ve got a feeling, but I’m prepared to lose both.”

On if he feels the moment got too big or if they started pressing when things went wrong against Washington: “Yeah, I think it was just that combination, we just – it’s – there was one thing that happened in there that I think of, two weeks ago Washington plays Tampa Bay and Tampa is beginning to try to take control of that game, they’re up four points and they fumbled in backed-up territory, and then Washington gets it and that really was – you have an ability to go up two scores and then all of a sudden, woah, you’re down, and that kind of happened to us on the first turnover. We have the chance to go up 14-3 potentially and we fumble that ball, they go all the way down, it just kind of – it begins to change the narrative of where you’re going, and then they get some long drives, that one in the third quarter, eight-and-a-half minutes, 15 plays, and now all of a sudden, you look up and you’re down two scores, and I think there’s just enough element of, ‘OK, we’ve got to – we need to be able to score here.’ And whatever that does, things that have not crept up or that have had an effect on us did show up. And I do bring this up, I understand (Lions QB Jared) Goff, the four interceptions, but there’s also – there was a number of things that took place in two of those that are – there’s more than him, and I mentioned what had happened on the first one, but even the second one, man, I’ve got to hit my back foot, ball needs to be out, I don’t – I can’t let it rip, I’ve got to move up in the pocket. So, there’s – it’s just – man, it’s a combination of a lot of things and we were just a little bit off, and normally we can overcome being just a little bit off, and we just weren’t quite there. Now, listen, man, the guys played hard, it wasn’t the attitude, it wasn’t the effort, it wasn’t – it was just the little things – I mean, shoot, man, five turnovers, it’s like, ‘Wow.’ If we only turn it over three, we may have a chance. I mean, that’s crazy, we’re talking about three. And I don’t want to take anything away from Washington, I don’t, man, they earned that win. They earned it, but yet, man, we shot ourselves in the foot and we haven’t done it, and we did it that game, we just did.”

On Lions RB Jahmyr Gibbs’ usage in the game against Washington: “Well, yeah, I mean, you always want to give him more carries, you come out of a game like that and he’s had the carries he has, but we were pretty balanced – we were pretty balanced when you take away the, ‘Now we’re in got to go mode, we’re in two-minute mode.’ Those are 20 of the reps or something, and so you take that out, you’re left with 40 reps and you’re balanced. So, it was really – we were having success, really, no matter what we did. We felt like we could run it, we could throw it, explosives, and then we turned the ball over, so the turnovers created the issue. All of a sudden, you’re down a couple of scores and now you’re out of what you really feel like you can do. So, it’s – you really want to dissect it into more than what it is? Here’s what it is, we turned the ball over and then we get behind and then we turn the ball over and we get behind and – and so, it just – we couldn’t overcome it.”

On why they went with an empty backfield and did not run the ball on third-and-1 against the Commanders: “Yeah, look, we were ready to go for it on fourth, so we’d run it on fourth if that didn’t take place. We just – we liked the matchup with (Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown) Saint on (Commanders LB Bobby) Wagner and it’s a play we’ve run, man, I don’t know, 50 times this year or something, and it just didn’t – it didn’t work out. And it was the perfect storm, it was just a little bit of a slip, (Lions QB Jared) Goff has to choke the ball, then he moves up, we get beat in protection – on a three-step, it’s not a seven-step, it’s three-step so it happened fast and then disaster. So, I’m with you, I don’t worry about it, I’m not second-guessing that, and had we – if we were going to do it all over again, I’d do the same thing, and I know that’s a hard pill to swallow, but it just didn’t – it didn’t work out for us.”

On what he believes contributed to the team’s lack of takeaways toward the end of the season and against Washington: “Yeah, it’s a good question, but I’m with you, we hit a drought. We hit a drought again, and even particularly in this game, we knew we were going to need some takeaways and we just couldn’t get them. I thought we may get one on the long one to (Commanders WR Dyami) Brown, (Lions S) Kerby (Joseph) was coming over the top and I thought we were about to get that one and then it comes away and he gets an explosive catch out of it. We just – we couldn’t, man, we punched at some balls, we couldn’t get them out, the interceptions, really, other than that one I just talked about, we could never apply enough pressure to force him to get rid of the ball in a situation that was going to benefit us. But I know this, we must improve, and we did, it came in highs and lows, man, we had an uptick – we started low, had an uptick, then it went down in the season, then it came back up and then we lost it again, so we’ve got to be much more consistent. Look, that team’s been good with takeaways, and they did it again in a big way.”

On which position group he believes needs to improve the most going into next season: “Yeah that’s a good question, and I don’t know if I could – I should not answer that yet until I really do self-scout and I really look at it game-for-game, player-for-player, matchup-for-matchup, and (Lions Executive Vice President and General Manager) Brad (Holmes) and I sit down and talk about, ‘Man, where do we really need the most help?’ I know this, when you come away, it’s – in hindsight, looking at this, after what just happened, you’re like, ‘Man, can we have enough defensive depth. Is that possible?’ Because we were loaded – you don’t think about losing ones and twos in every group damn-near, but you only have 53 spots. And I just go back – we’re going to look at everything, but this was one of those bizarre, freakish years. It just – you do the same thing you did a year ago and you’re pretty healthy, and then this year it just – it was one of those years. But Brad and I, we’re going to get into that over the next two weeks, we’ll really deep dive our roster, ‘Where do we feel like we can get better?’ Because, ultimately, that’s what we want to do. We want to bring in more competition and that competition’s got to be right, it’s got to match the guys that are in that room. I already told them I owe them that, I’m not going to bring in somebody that doesn’t belong here or doesn’t endear themselves to their teammates or doesn’t believe in what we believe in, but they’ve got to be able to help us and bring competition. We’ll do that wherever that’s at.”

On if he believes anything fundamentally needs to change with the team or its philosophy: “No, I don’t see philosophy changing. No, I think we’re – what we are is what we are, and we’ve been that way since I’ve been here. So, does that mean a couple of things get tweaked? A couple of things will get tweaked, just the nature of new coordinators if that happens because you want it to be kind of their flavor, their style with it, but yet, what I want is what we’re going to do, and what we’re about and what (Lions QB Jared) Goff’s about and the runners and what we are on defense and the nature of the way we play. I want to play man. We want to play man, so I’m going to pressure a little bit. So, these things are not going to go away, we are what we are. But ultimately, it’s always going to be about, ‘How do we put the players we have in the best position to have success, which in turn gives us the ability to have success?’ And no matter what that is – and sometimes that changes. It could be with free agency, it could be with the Draft, maybe you’re more in these packages than the other because that’s your best players. But no, what we are is what we are.”

On how he balances internal and external candidates when looking for coordinators: “Yeah, I think there is a balance. Look, you – the easy thing to say is, you want the best candidate, OK? That’s one way to say it, but that’s also like saying, ‘Give me the best player.’ Give me the right player, give me the right coach, give me the right coordinator, that’s really what I’m looking for more than – if you’re going to start slapping a ‘best’ on them. I’ll just give an example, a guy like (Lions Run Game Coordinator/Defensive Line Coach) Terrell Williams, I’m fortunate that I believe he’s the best, but he’s also the right guy, they happened to go hand-in-hand. But I think we’ve got guys on staff that I think are more than qualified and would be outstanding in those roles, but that does not mean that I’m not looking outside either. So, I want what I believe is going to be as close to what we have been as possible, and we don’t lose what we’re about and our identity, and like what you just asked, we’re going to stay true to who we are, and if you’re somebody that doesn’t feel comfortable with that, then no, I don’t – this isn’t the job for you. So, I’m not going to be in a hurry, I’m not in a mad dash. No matter what happens I want to do what’s right by our team and what I believe is going to – those guys will be able to stand in front of that room and command respect and get everybody going in the same direction and will, ultimately, deliver the same message that I’m delivering.”

On how much he would incorporate Lions QB Jared Goff’s input in finding a new offensive coordinator: “Yeah, a lot – a lot. I want his input, to me that’s important. That’s important – that’s what (Lions Offensive Coordinator) Ben (Johnson) did a great job of, is working – those guys working together, and the system was kind of built from the ground up, and it was to help him and for him to be a part of. And so, yeah, that’s huge, he’ll have a lot of input. What he says is going to have a – says a lot to me, I should say. Now, is it going to be the ultimate decision? No, it’s not, but what he says is going to mean a lot to me.”

On if they can learn from other teams in the area that finally won a championship after years of getting close: “Yeah, look I – I just go back to this, when you have the right guys and you’re made the right way, failure only makes you stronger. You only come back better, I believe that, and unfortunately I’ve had a ton of those. But man, I think it makes – God, it makes you hungry. I’ll tell you the hard thing, is when you – I think when you have success on a certain level and trying to reload and do it again. That’s why I think what New England did for years and (former Head Coach) Bill Belichick, I mean, that’s unbelievable – that is unbelievable. But with where we’re at, we had these goals, we fell short. Man, we met two of those goals this year and, in a sense, went above and beyond what we were a year ago, but yet we didn’t get any further, and man, that’s disappointing. But also, it eats at me, that drives me, that motivates me. I got a text from (Lions WR Amon-Ra) St. Brown at four-o-clock in the morning yesterday, so I know the guys it eats away at, and they’re the right guys, they’re our guys for a reason. And that’s what will always give me hope and let me know we’re only going to be better. We’re going to come back stronger, we’re going to learn from this, and it’s just more fuel on the fire is what it is.”

On if he wants the loss against Washington to be a bruise that heals or a scar that they wear on their sleeves going into next season: “Well, look, I don’t know. Here’s – and I told the team this, just don’t forget it. Don’t forget it, look across the field at the end of that game. Somebody feels good and somebody doesn’t, just remember that feeling, no different than last year, that’s all. I mean, those are the things that you etch in your mind that you don’t ever want to forget. And I’m the type of person that replays every bad decision, every bad move in my head over and over on purpose just to let it burn and eat away at you, because that’s the stuff that makes you not want to feel that anymore, is to go back for more. So, we fell short, it wasn’t good enough, the players are extremely disappointed, I know the fans are, I certainly am, but we will reload, and we will be back.”

On Lions CB Amik Robertson’s injury: “Amik’s doing well, and as a matter of fact, he contacted me this morning – I have not be able to respond yet, but he’s doing well.”

On if Lions QB Jared Goff is in concussion protocol: “No, he’s good, I talked to him yesterday, so he’s good.”

BRDPS seeking information regarding light pole damage at Mitchell Creek Park

The Big Rapids Police Department is looking for help identifying three individuals in connection with an incident that happened near Pine St. and State St. in Big Rapids.

As reported on Wednesday morning via Facebook, these individuals may have information regarding $500 in damage that was caused to one of the light poles at Mitchell Creek Park.

For those that have information regarding the incident or the individuals pictured, please contact Sgt. Brian Hunt at 231-527-0005.

Big Rapids DPS announces art contest for local middle school students

The Big Rapids Department of Public Safety is partnering with Artworks to host a local art contest for middle school students. The art contest was inspired by a recent remodel of the front office of the Department of Public Safety.

Middle school students in Big Rapids are being asked to show their appreciation for all our police officers and firefighters do through an original piece of art depicting Public Safety in the community.

Two winners will be selected, one by Public Safety staff and one by citizens of our community during an art exhibition at the Big Rapids Department of Public Safety building from Monday, Apr. 15 through Thursday, Apr. 18. Each winner will receive a $75 gift card, and their art will be displayed on the glass in the front office of the Big Rapids Department of Public Safety building.

All entries are due by 4:00 P.M. on Mar. 28. Rules for entering the contest include the student must be between fifth and eighth grade, the artwork must be original, the piece must be made using of pencils, ink, markers, colored pencils, etc., and it cannot contain religious, political, copyrighted, or advertising images. Submissions that are considered to be disturbing or inappropriate will not be chosen.

For a complete list of rules and instructions on how to enter, visit https://www.bigrapidsdps.org/middle_school_art_contest.php. 

For any questions, please contact Officer William Sell at 231-527-0005 or wsell@bigrapidsdps.org.

WEATHER ALERT: Multiple severe weather alerts issued for West Michigan on Wednesday

Multiple severe weather alerts have been issued in West Michigan through Thursday morning.

 

WINTER STORM WARNING - LAKE COUNTY, NEWAYGO COUNTY

The highest warning goes for Newaygo and Lake County due to a Winter Storm Warning until Thursday, Jan. 23 at 10:00 A.M. 

Forecasts project heavy, blowing snow to fall in accumulations between 4 and 10 inches. Wind gusts may reach as high as 35 MPH and visibilities may drop below 1/4 mile due to blowing snow. Whiteout conditions are expected and will make travel treacherous and potentially life-threatening.

 

WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY - KENT COUNTY, MECOSTA COUNTY, OSCEOLA COUNTY

A Winter Weather Advisory will be in effect until Thursday, Jan. 23 at 10:00 A.M. for Kent, Mecosta, and Osceola Counties. 

Total snow accumulations between 2 and 6 inches are expected starting around 1:00 P.M. Wednesday afternoon. Please plan on slippery road conditions as areas of blowing snow could significantly reduce visibility. 

 

COLD WEATHER ADVISORY - ISABELLA COUNTY, KENT COUNTY, LAKE COUNTY, MECOSTA COUNTY, MISSAUKEE COUNTY, MONTCALM COUNTY, NEWAYGO COUNTY, OSECOLA COUNTY, WEXFORD COUNTY

The Cold Weather Advisory will continue for nearly the entire state of Michigan until Thursday, Jan. 22 at 12:00 P.M. 

Very cold wind chills, as low as 25 below, will be seen for portions of central and west Michigan. The dangerously cold wind chills as low as 20 below zero could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes. Please use caution while outdoors and wear appropriate clothing, a hat, and gloves.

 

Hourly WeatherEye forecasts can be heard at the top of the hour on WBRN via 96.5 FM, 1460 AM, WBRN.com, and the WBRN mobile app.

Reed City Police: Weekly Blotter (1/13 - 1/20)

Monday, Jan. 13
  • An officer responded to a call from a parent that reported her 14-year-old as a runaway after they were both arguing and he left home. The officer was able to locate him.
  • An officer received a tip regarding an intoxicated driver. The vehicle was a located and a stop was made. The investigation resulted in the arrest of a 28-year-old man for OWI 2nd of Subsequent Offense, Improper Use of a Registration Plate, and Operating Without Insurance. He was also cited for Refusing a PBT.

Tuesday, Jan. 14

  • An officer arrested a 27-year-old male after conducting a routine traffic stop for expired tag. The individual was arrested on outstanding warrants for his arrest. He was transported to the jail without any issues.

Wednesday, Jan. 15

  • An officer responded to an alarm call at a local business. The officer inspected the building and secured it. It was determined that the alarm was triggered by a motion sensor inside the building. Everything was fine.
  • An officer was dispatched to a possible domestic assault. While investigating a 36-year-old female was arrested on an outstanding warrant and transported to Osceola County Jail without incident. The domestic assault investigation will be sent to the prosecutor for review and possible charges.

Thursday, Jan. 16

  • An officer came across two individuals that were going home to home. Both subjects said they were unaware of the need to get a permit before peddling. Both subjects agreed to stop their activities until they obtain a permit from City Hall.

  • An officer received an anonymous tip regarding a wanted subject. The officer arrested the individual and transported him to the Osceola County Jail without incident.

  • While on patrol, an officer was stopped waiting for oncoming traffic before turning into a city parking lot. When traffic cleared, the officer turned and was struck by another vehicle leaving the parking lot. An investigation resulted in the arrest of a 73-year-old man for OWI. The vehicles had minor damage and there were no injuries.

Friday, Jan. 17

  • An officer performed a well being check on an individual who was believed to be too young to be home alone. The matter was unfounded.

  • An officer was dispatched to a two-car crash. The vehicles had minor damage and no injuries were reported.

  • An officer was dispatched to an injured deer in the roadway. Prior to the officer arriving, a second vehicle struck the deer and it became deceased. The deer was removed from the roadway.

Saturday, Jan. 18

  • No incidents reported.

Sunday, Jan. 19

  • An officer issued an abatement notice for a sofa that was curbside in violation of the city’s trash ordinance.

Evart Police: Weekly Blotter (1/13 - 1/20)

Monday, Jan. 13

  • No incidents reported. 

Tuesday, Jan. 14

  • Fraud - Officers responded to a possible fraud complaint. The complainant resided outside the city limits and was directed they would have to contact the Osceola County Sheriff's Department.

Wednesday, Jan. 15

  • Malicious Destruction of Property - An officer responded to a residence for a MDOP complaint involving damage to a mailbox.

Thursday, Jan. 16

  • Controlled Substance Violation - Officer responded to the Evart EZ Mart for a possible narcotics related complaint. The incident is still under investigation at this time.

Friday, Jan. 17

  • Assist Another Department - Officers were contacted and asked to assist CPS with a home visit.

Saturday, Jan. 18

  • No incidents reported. 

Sunday, Jan. 19

  • No incidents reported.

Administrators, alumnus to inform, promote change in Ferris State University's Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration

Ferris State University’s 39th annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration will reflect on history shaping the institution and offer an alum’s message of encouragement and inspiration in programs Tuesday, Jan. 21 through Thursday, Jan. 23.

Senior Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging Officer Colleen Green said from its legislative conception, MLK Jr. Day serves as “a day on, not a day off.”

“We celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. Week to honor his legacy of justice, equality and service,” Green said. “It is a time to replicate his vision of a united and compassionate world while recommitting ourselves to fostering diversity and inclusion by bringing positive change to our community.”

Volunteers are encouraged to post social media photos with the hashtag #FERRISMLK2025 while offering community service for a chance to win a hat or t-shirt.

The annual MLK Jr. March is slated to depart from the Rankin Atrium on Tuesday, Jan. 21 at 4 p.m., with a fireside chat in the David L. Eisler Center ballrooms to follow at 4:30 p.m. Ferris State President Bill Pink and Vice President of Diversity, Inclusion and Strategic Initiatives David Pilgrim will reflect on leadership and change, considering the history and future of the university in context with The King Center’s 2025 strategic theme “Mission possible: Protecting Freedom, Justice and Democracy in the Spirit of Nonviolence365.” These events are currently up in the air due to the weather.

Performances by the university’s Jazz Band and the West Michigan Jurisdiction Choir and Friends are also part of this program.

Class of 1998 College of Business graduate Mike Sears of Detroit will present “Metamorphosis: A Time to Change” in the Eisler Center Ballrooms on Wednesday, Jan. 22, at 5 p.m.

Sears followed his dream to be a first-generation graduate, earning his Bachelor of Science in Music Industry Management. Sears describes himself as a “purposepreneur,” offering educational and entertaining messages through storytelling, music and the spoken word. Student performances precede Sears’ presentation and light refreshments will be provided at the event.

The Office of Multicultural Student Services and the Diversity and Inclusion Office conclude activities with a Trivia Night Thursday, Jan. 23, at 5 p.m. in Eisler Center Ballroom C, giving prizes to those well-versed in Ferris and civil rights history and snacks for all who attend.

Other community contribution opportunities include Career and Professional Success-hosted sessions to create “Thank You” cards and coasters for local first responders on Jan. 21 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Room 209 of the Eisler Center, then from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Center’s Room 217. Finally, contributions can be dropped off for the Bulldog Food Pantry at Ferris State athletics events throughout the week.

Those with disabilities who may require assistance to participate in the Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration events are asked to contact the Office of Multicultural Student Services at (231) 591-2617 or by email at least 72 hours before their request.

Follow Ferris State University on Facebook for updates on cancellations regarding the celebration.

Fundraiser underway to rename Hemlock Park playground after Bob and Leslie Daniels

Amid his incoming retirement from coaching, many will reminisce Bob Daniels’ name for incredible achievements on the ice; however, a campaign has begun to put his name on a special project in the Big Rapids community.

Hemlock Park recently went through a renovation of an old wooden playscape that had been a hotspot for kids since 1996. What many might not know is it was the help of the head coach, and especially his late wife Leslie, that gave the playground its home.

“When we received the grant for the new playground, I instantly thought of contacting Pat Klarecki and Coach Daniels,” Fundraising leader Jon Coles said. “Pat and the late Leslie Daniels spearheaded the funding and building of the original Playscape.”

Klarecki, a marketing and digital media professor at Ferris State, along with the Daniels family, were supported by the city and community to put the playscape in. Once constructed, Coach Daniels and his team helped maintain the playscape woodchip floor and painted the structure for many of the 24 years it stood until its demolition this past August.

Now with the help of Coles and fellow hockey alum Nick Scheible, the program wants to raise $20,000 to help with the new playground maintenance and build a plaque to honor Leslie and Bob.

“Coach Daniels was the perfect fit for Ferris State and Big Rapids,” Coles said. “His Midwest values, including the down to earth personality, humor, wit, and caring demeanor, has made him a treasure for our community.”

The city has confirmed they will re-name the park if the fundraising goal is met. Coles, who has led the Hemlock Park Improvement efforts, says it couldn’t just Bob’s name on the plaque.

“He’s a family guy, so naming it the Daniels Family Playground fits him and how he would want it. He would never want it just about him. That’s the type of guy he is.”

As of Monday, Jan. 20, the fundraiser has over $5,000 raised already. For more information on the fundraiser and donating, visit https://givebutter.com/5Y0Q6Z.

15-year-old taken to hospital in snowmobiling accident

On Sunday, Jan. 19 at 11:30 A.M., deputies from Mecosta County were dispatched to a truck vs snowmobile accident on 18 Mile Rd. near 55th Ave. in Fork Township.

Through investigation of the incident, it was found that a 15-year-old male was riding the snowmobile and turned out of a private drive onto 18 Mile Rd., in the path of a westbound travelling vehicle. The 15-year-old was ejected from the snowmobile, recieving non life threatening injuries. He was transported by ambulance to the Corewell Hospital in Big Rapids.

Deputies were assisted on scene by Fork Township Fire/Rescue, Barryton Fire/Rescue, and Mecosta County EMS.

WEATHER ALERT: Cold Weather Advisory in effect for ten local counties due to extreme wind chills

A Cold Weather Advisory will be in effect until Wednesday, Jan. 22 at 12:00 P.M. due to expected cold wind chills as low as 23 below.

This advisory will be in effect for portions of west central Michigan, including Clare, Isabella, Kent, Lake, Mecosta, Montcalm, Newaygo, Oceana, Osceola, and Wexford Counties. According to the NWS alert, the dangerously cold wind chills as low as 23 below zero could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes.

Please use caution while outdoors and wear appropriate clothing, a hat, and gloves.

ORV accident on Tubbs Lake leaves two injured

On Saturday, Jan. 18, a Mecosta County Sheriff's Deputy responded to an ORV-pedestrian accident on Tubbs Lake.

The male driver was transported to Corwell Health Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. The pedestrian was taken to the Butterworth Hospital in Grand Rapids, via Aeromed, with non-life-threatening injuries. Alcohol is believed to be a factor and the incident is still under investigation. No further details are available at this time.

Assistance was provided by Meceola Central Dispatch, Fork Township Fire/Rescue, Morton Township Fire/Rescue, Chippewa Township Fire/Rescue, Mecosta County EMS, Osceola County EMS, and Aeromed. 

Detroit suffers shocking season-ending loss to Commanders in NFC Divisional round

The Detroit Lions' incredible season came to a shocking end Saturday night against the Washington Commanders in the NFC Divisional Round 45-31.

The Lions had a disastrous night in terms of ball security, committing five turnovers. Jared Goff was had three interceptions inthe contest, including a pick-six, as well as a fumble in the redzone. The other turnover came on a Jameson Williams trick play in which he was intercepted.

The Lions' defense, already depleted by injuries, couldn't contain the Commanders' offensive onslaught. Rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels was nearly flawless both passing and running effectively against the Lions blitzes.

There were criticisms regarding the coaching staff's decisions, particularly around play-calling and game management in the second half. The Lions' coordinators, Ben Johnson and Aaron Glenn, faced scrutiny for not making effective adjustments following the rough start. The Commanders' coaching staff, on the other hand, were praised for outmaneuvering Detroit with bold fourth-down decisions and effective use of their offensive playbook.

While the Lions' offense did manage to put up 31 points, it was not enough to overcome their own mistakes. Despite having explosive plays, like a 61-yard touchdown run by Jameson Williams and strong performances by Jahmyr Gibbs and Amon-Ra St. Brown, the turnovers and inability to control the game's pace were decisive.

Goff finished 23 of 40 passing, throwing for 313 yards, one touchdown, and three picks. Gibbs tallied 175 scrimmage yards on 20 touches and scored twice. St. Brown added 137 recieving yards on eight catches and Sam LaPorta notched 51 yards and a score on six receptions. Alex Anzalone led with 12 tackles for Detroit's defense, followed by Jack Campbell and Brian Branch with eight a piece.

The Lions finish the season with a franchise best 15-3 record, but fans will always think about how far they could've made, if it weren't for the shocking upset.

 

WEATHER ALERT: Winter Weather Advisory in effect for West Michigan Counties due to incoming snowfall and severe wind chill temperatures

A Winter Weather Advisory has been issued as of Sunday, Jan. 19 at 3:19 A.M EST until Tuesday, Jan. 21 at 7:00 P.M. EST by NWS Grand Rapids for expected lake effect snowfall and frigid wind chill temperatures.

The advisory is in effect for Kent, Lake, and Newaygo Counties and is projecting inclement weather to begin around 4:00 P.M. Sunday afternoon. Visibility and road conditions may change rapidly over short distances in lake effect snow, making travel potentially difficult. Wind chills in the 15 to 25 below zero range are likely Monday Morning through Wednesday. The hazardous conditions could impact the Monday morning and evening commutes.

Please slow down and use caution while traveling. Be prepared for rapid changes in weather, visibility, and road conditions. Listen in at the top of the hour for up-to-date WeatherEye forecasts on NewsRadio WBRN.

Cardinals fall to Tigers in battle for the conference lead

The Cardinals and Tigers squared off in Grant on Friday night in a battle of two of the best teams in West Michigan. While Big Rapids came in as winners of three-straight, Grant's high-powered scoring and defensive playmaking was too much for the Cardinals.

Grant came out firing in the first four minutes of the game, leading 11-2 behind some key triples and steals defensively. The Cardinals would cut into the Tiger lead, making it 17-13 at the end of the first, but Grant would extend their lead 29-21 at the half behind some crucial buckets from Sincere Hatch.

The Cardinal offense would get some key production from Liam McLaughlin in the second half, but struggles outside the arc and pestering defense from the Tigers on Cole Haist and Gabe Njenga would hold Big Rapids to their lowest scoring output since the Cedar Springs game on Dec. 17. Grant would follow their offensive memo, hitting many shots from 3-point range to secure a 61-47 home win. 

Unofficially, Cole Haist led Cardinal scores with 14 points, followed by Gielczyk with 11 and McLaughlin totaling 10. Njenga added four points and seven rebounds, while Haist and Gielczyk added four assists apiece. Grant was led in scoring by Hatch and Ethan DeLong with 13 each.

The Tigers move to 10-0 on the season with the win, while Big Rapids falls to 9-3. The Cardinals will travel to Morley Stanwood to face the Mohawks on Tuesday, Jan. 21, at 7:00 P.M. Big Rapids will face Grant again in the regular season finale on Feb. 21 at home.

For full radio broadcast information, visit WBRN.com for the weekly game schedule and pre-game start times.


 

Big Rapids Middle School cleared of bomb threat Friday afternoon

On Friday, Jan. 17 at approximately 4:15 P.M., an officer with the Big Rapids Police Department received a call from a staff member at the Big Rapids Middle School about a possible bomb threat that had been made by a student. 

Officers responded to the school and cleared the building of any students and staff that remained in the building, as school had ended about an hour prior to the officer being notified. A Michigan State Police K-9 Unit, who is trained in the detection of explosives, responded to the scene and worked for several hours to ensure the building was safe. Nothing suspicious was located during the search of the building. The students involved in the threat have been identified and spoken with. No charges have been filed at this time, but the investigation is ongoing, and charges could be filed later.

The Big Rapids Police Department was assisted on scene by the Michigan State Police K-9 Unit and Meceola Central Dispatch.

NFC Playoff Game Preview: Commanders @ Lions

Game Overview

 
  • Date: Saturday, January 18, 2025

  • Time: 8:00 PM ET

  • Location: Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan

  • Broadcast: WBRN 1460AM, 107.7FM, 96.5FM

Team Records

  • Detroit Lions: 15-2, NFC North Champions, No. 1 Seed in NFC

  • Washington Commanders: 12-5, Second in NFC East

 

The Lions will face off against the Commanders Saturday night in a battle to get to the NFC Championship.

Key matchups include the Lions' potent passing attack led by quarterback Jared Goff, who's thrown for 4,629 yards, 37 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions, against a Commanders defense that ranks 18th in points per game allowed. Goff's primary target, Amon-Ra St. Brown, has been a standout with 115 receptions for 1,263 yards and 12 touchdowns.

On the other side, rookie QB Jayden Daniels for Washington brings dynamic playmaking with 2,147 passing yards from no-huddle situations and 891 rushing yards, challenging the aggressive Lions' defense under Aaron Glenn.

The Lions' running back duo of Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery, who is back after an MCL injury, could exploit the Commanders' weak run defense which ranked 30th during the regular seaosn.

The passing game for Washington, driven by Terry McLaurin, will test the health and effectiveness of the Lions' secondary, particularly cornerback Terrion Arnold who is back to full strength.

Statistically, the Lions led the NFL in points per game with 33.2. They finished 2nd in passing yards and total yards. Jared Goff had the 2nd highest completion percentage at 72.4%, the 2nd most passing yards with 4,629, the 4th most TDs with 37, and the 2nd highest Passer Rating at 111.8.

 Jayden Daniels and the Commanders offense held their own as well. Washington averaged 27.5 points per game with Daniels adding 52.4 yards per game on the ground.

The Lions defense was decimated by injuries but held up under DC Aaron Glenn. The Lions D suffered 15 key injuries throughout the season including Aidan Hutchinson's broken leg, Marcus Davenport's week 3 elbow injury, Anzalone's broken forearm, Khalil Dorsey's bfractured leg in week 15, and Mekhi Wingo's Thanksgiving knee injury to name a few. Despite this, Detroit's defense has kept them in most games en route to their franchise record setting season.

Betting trends show the Lions favored by 9.5 points, with an over/under set at 55.5 points, hinting at expectations of a high-scoring affair. However, playoff games often lean towards the Under as teams play more conservatively.

The Lions' combination of offensive firepower and home advantage makes them the favorite, but Daniels' dual-threat capability could keep the game closer than expected, potentially making it an edge-of-your-seat contest.

 

Listen to every play on air with WBRN 1460am, 107.7fm, & 96.5fm

 

Game Notes:

1. Lions' Offense vs. Commanders' Defense

  • Lions' Passing Attack: Jared Goff has been in MVP conversations, completing 72.4% of his passes for 4,629 yards, 37 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions. His primary target, Amon-Ra St. Brown, has 115 receptions for 1,263 yards and 12 touchdowns.

  • Commanders' Defense: Struggles against the pass, ranking 18th in points per game allowed during the regular season. Jayden Daniels' mobility could challenge them, but they'll need to contain the Lions' passing game to have a chance.

2. Commanders' Rookie QB Jayden Daniels vs. Lions' Defense

  • Daniels: An electrifying rookie, Daniels has 2,147 passing yards from no-huddle situations, but his efficiency metrics rank mid-tier. His 891 rushing yards highlight his dual-threat capability.

  • Lions' Defense: Under Aaron Glenn, they've been aggressive, with man coverage and a pass rush aimed at keeping Daniels in the pocket. The return of key players like linebacker Alex Anzalone could be crucial.

3. Running Game: Gibbs and Montgomery vs. Commanders' Run Defense

  • Lions: Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery form a formidable duo, with Gibbs leading the league with 6.4 yards per touch. The Commanders' run defense has been notably weak, which could be exploited here.

4. Commanders' Passing Game vs. Lions' Secondary

  • Commanders: Terry McLaurin has been a consistent target, but the Lions' secondary, despite injuries, has shown resilience. The health of cornerback Terrion Arnold will be pivotal.

Player Stats to Watch

  • Jared Goff (DET): 4,629 passing yards, 37 TDs, 12 INTs

  • Jayden Daniels (WAS): 891 rushing yards, 2,147 passing yards from no-huddle

  • Jahmyr Gibbs (DET): 1,412 rushing yards, 16 rushing TDs

  • Amon-Ra St. Brown (DET): 115 receptions, 1,263 yards, 12 TDs

  • Terry McLaurin (WAS): Prolific receiver, expected to be a key player in Daniels' arsenal.

Team Stats

  • Lions: 1st in points scored per game (33.2), 6th in points allowed (20.2).

  • Commanders: 5th in points scored (27.5), 18th in points allowed (22.7).

Betting Trends

  • Spread: Lions are favored by 9.5 points, indicating a strong home advantage.

  • Over/Under: Set at 55.5 points, suggesting expectations of a high-scoring game. Both teams have been profitable to the Over during the season, but recent games suggest a lean towards the Under for playoff scenarios.

  • Moneyline: Lions -529, Commanders +393, reflecting the confidence in Detroit's performance at home.

Mecosta County Sheriff's Office: Weekly Blotter (1/6 - 1/12)

Monday, Jan. 6

Calls for Service: 36

Traffic Accidents: 2

 

Tuesday, Jan. 7

Calls for Service: 21

Traffic Accidents: 5

 

Wednesday, Jan. 8

  • At 1:30 P.M., deputies made a traffic stop in Chippewa Township. The traffic stop resulted in the male driver being arrested on a warrant. He was lodged at the Mecosta County Jail.

  • At 10:55 P.M., deputies made a warrant arrest in Big Rapids Township. A male subject was arrested on a warrant out of Osceola County. He was turned over to Osceola County.

Calls for Service: 28

 

Thursday, Jan. 9

  • At 9:40 P.M., deputies made an arrest in Wheatland Township. A male subject was arrested for a CCW violation. He was lodged at the Mecosta County Jail.

Calls for Service: 25

Traffic Accidents: 7

 

Friday, Jan. 10

  • No incidents reported.

 

Saturday, Jan. 11

  • No incidents reported.

 

Sunday, Jan. 12

  • No incidents reported.

Moolenaar, other out-of-state representatives reintroduce 'NO GOTION Act' to end taxpayer support of CCP companies

On Thursday, Jan. 16, Congressman John Moolenaar, along with Congressmen Darin LaHood (R-IL) and Jared Golden (D-ME), reintroduced the bipartisan No Official Giveaways Of Taxpayers’ Income to Oppressive Nations Act, or the 'NO GOTION Act' in the House of RepresentativesThe bill will also be introduced in the U.S. Senate by Senator Rick Scott (R-FL). 

The legislation would prohibit companies affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party, known as CCP, from qualifying for green energy production tax credits implemented by the Biden administration through the Inflation Reduction Act. If signed into law, the bill would prevent any company based in China, Russia, Iran or North Korea, and the subsidiaries of those companies from benefiting from these tax credits. 

“The 'NO GOTION Act' is a commonsense, bipartisan measure that prohibits our adversaries from benefitting from the tax dollars of hardworking American families, and right now there is a loophole that allows IRA tax credits to go to Chinese companies. This legislation closes that loophole and makes sure CCP-affiliated companies will not be able to receive tax credits. The United States is in competition with the CCP and under no circumstance should we be giving taxpayer money to Chinese companies,” said Moolenaar. 

The legislation comes as a response to Gotion, a CCP-affiliated company, claiming it was reviewing and assessing how it can utilize the green energy production tax credits. Gotion is currently planning to build factories in Green Charter Township and Kankakee, Illinois. In June 2024, investigations led by Moolenaar and the House Select Committee on the CCP uncovered Gotion’s close ties to the CCP, including its reliance on forced labor in Xinjiang Province.

In federal filings Gotion has admitted it is “wholly owned and controlled” by its China-based parent company, Gotion High-Tech, and it is subsidized by the Chinese government. According to Gotion High-Tech’s by-laws it is required to “carry out Party activities in accordance with the Constitution of the [Chinese Communist Party].”

The text of the NO GOTION Act can be found here. The legislation is cosponsored in the House by Representatives Jack Bergman (R-MI), Tim Walberg (R-MI), Bill Huizenga (R-MI), John James (R-MI), Tom Barrett (R-MI), Mike Bost (R-IL), Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY), Claudia Tenney (R-NY), Ben Cline (R-VA), Mike Kelly (R-PA), David Rouzer (R-NC), David Schweikert (R-AZ), Rick Allen (R-GA), Dan Newhouse (R-WA), Jake Ellzey (R-TX), Carlos Gimenez (R-FL), Gary Palmer (R-AL), Brad Finstad (R-MN), Greg Murphy (R-NC), and Neal Dunn (R-FL) .

JR Customs and Collision opening new body shop building

New construction has been seen on Northland Dr. and 19 Mile Rd. recently, which is going to be a new body shop building for JR Customs and Collision.

According to owner Jason Rehkopf, the new building will be used for every day, commercial vehicles. 

“I’ll be moving everything in my current building over to the new shop, with the exception of a brand-new paint booth, new frame and measuring equipment,” Rehkopf said. 

Rehkopf says he has invested 450,000 dollars in new equipment for the building, including a new welding unit. He also says he will keeping the old building to service bigger vehicles like busses and semi-tractors.

“It totally messes up with our production because it takes up the whole floor,” Rehkopf said. “The new facility will be all your everyday, general-public vehicles and then the existing the old shop will be more of our commercial, bigger stuff.”

While the timeline is fluid with reliance on weather, Rehkopf is hoping for completion somewhere between late-May and June.

“I'm in no real hurry to get in there since I know we won't be in for this winter, which is our busy season,” Rehkopf said. “I want to make sure that it is the shop is organized. There are so many things right now that fall through the cracks, because we just don't have the space to perform like we should.”

When asked about the shop growing and moving forward, Rehkopf said it’s been an incredible journey with the help of the people around him.

“Just over seven years ago, I was working out of my garage at home. I was able to rent the shop that we're in now, and then eventually buy it. Now, (it’s been) seven years in the community around us. Without their support and my employees, I wouldn't be here. We're blessed beyond belief.”

An open house for the building’s grand opening may take place later in the spring or early summer, but details or unknown at this time. JR Customs and Collision as well as Michigan ADAS Calibrations and Glass, both businesses of Jason and his wife Amber, are located at the corner of 19 Mile Rd. and Northland Dr. between Paris and Big Rapids.

School bus rear ended by SUV near Rogers Heights Thursday afternoon

On Jan. 16, 2025 at approximately 4:42 P.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office responded to a two-vehicle accident involving a school bus at the intersection of Northland Dr. and 12 Mile Rd. in Mecosta Township.

The accident occurred when an 18-year-old male from Stanwood was driving an SUV and had rear ended a school bus, from the Mecosta-Osceola ISD, as the school bus attempted to make a left-hand turn. There were no injuries reported from the accident.

Deputies were assisted by Mecosta Township Fire/Rescue, Mecosta County EMS, and Meceola Central Dispatch.

Detroit Lions Defensive Coordinator Aaron Glenn Quote Sheet: 1/15/25

LIONS DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR AARON GLENN QUOTE SHEET

January 15, 2025

Opening Statement: “Listen, since OTAs, going into training camp, this is what coaches and the players were fighting for, and we expected to be in this situation. We were going to fight to have home field, we wanted to have a chance to be in front of our fans, we know exactly what our fans do for us, the best fans in the NFL, so we’re excited to be able to play at home with them. During the bye week we did a lot of self-scout to see exactly what we can improve on, which was good to look at, to be able to step back from afar and say, ‘These are some things the we need to work on, these are some things that we’re doing really well at.’ And we’re excited about some of the things that we’re going to have going into this game. Quality opponent, obviously the quarterback, man, he has taken this League by storm by some of the things he can do, the way he operates, his calm demeanor, his accuracy, his ability to exactly know where the matchup’s at and get the ball to that player. And then, they have a receiver who I think is one of the top receivers in this League, he is highly, highly competitive – played against this player before, so we have to do a good job on him. We have to do a good job in general because this offense gives you a lot of eye candy to make sure you’re not on your Ps and Qs, and then they just run simple concepts, which, offensively, you like because it’s really easy for your players. So, looking forward to the challenge, it will be a good game, and our guys will be ready to play.”

On if he lost his voice from all of his Zoom calls last weekend: “No, they had nothing to do with it. It’s just – I guess just what happens at this time of year when it gets cold outside. Detroit did that.”

On how much better prepared he felt for this round of head coaching interviews and if he gets questions in those interviews that change the way he looks at coaching or leadership: “I think you learn a number of things from each year that you go through them and you try to improve on those each year, but I think the one thing that I get out of all these interview is, man, I’m going to be myself, either you’ll like it or you don’t, if you don’t, all good. I keep telling you guys, I have a great job here, and if you like it, if it’s an opportunity I think that’s best for me and my family, then we’ll take a look at it. But I had a really good time over the bye week looking at those, but now, man, we’re all locked in, ready to go and play this game against Washington.”

On how much time he allows himself to put a staff together for a head coaching job or anything else that may come with that: “I think those are things you always look at during the offseason, guys that you think that mesh well with you, that are compatible with how you think and how you want to operate. I think during the season you really don’t even mess with it at all because you’re so locked in to what you’re doing, and then once the interviews start, you start to come back to some of those things, some of those people that you talked to. You start to think about, ‘Is this a guy that I feel like I can win a Super Bowl with?’ And I always look at it that way.”

On if he turned down a head coaching interview with the New England Patriots and if he still harbors feelings against them from when he played for the New York Jets: “I’ve never felt anything against that organization, it just wasn’t the best situation for me.”

On how this season prepared him better to be a head coach: “Man, that’s a good question. Well, you know what, I’m going to go back to ’21 and going into this year because we started, as we all know, 3-13-1 and then the following year we go 1-6, but the thing that I could remember that sticks to me is, our head coach, our coordinators, our coaches, we never wavered from the things that we believed in, and I think that’s a strong statement when you stand in front of a group of men and say, ‘This is how you have to win, and we believe that you’ll win this way.’ And those guys believed it too. And then, once our owner had an interview and she backed everybody, all the coaches, that we have a formula to win and it's this close, and from then on I think we went 8-2, and to now – so here’s what it taught me, we know, as a staff, how to build a winner, and now we know, as a staff, how to sustain winning, so we want to continue to do that as long as we’re all here. So, to answer your question, building it from the beginning, and sustaining it from here on out.”

On why it seems that offensive coaches tend to go on to be Super Bowl winning coaches as opposed to defensive coaches: “Well, I don’t know if that’s truly accurate. I can just go off the top of my head with (former Steelers Head Coach) Bill Cowher, (Steelers Head Coach) Mike Tomlin, (former Patriots Head Coach) Bill Belichick, that have won a ton of Super Bowls as a defensive coach, and here’s the one thing that I will say about myself, I’m a coach, I just happen to be on defense. I understand the offense just as well as a number of people, so if you want to hire me, you’re going to hire a coach, you’re not going to hire a defensive coach. I’m going to talk to the offense just as much as I’m going to talk to the defense.”

On if they ever try to force mobile quarterbacks to a certain direction and play to their weaknesses in their games: “Absolutely, especially when you look at his rush pattern and the way he tries to escape from the pocket. If there’s a guy that really wants to escape to his right or to his left, you try not to let him escape that way for the most part, but as you see, this League is trending toward all these quarterbacks that are just so athletic that it’s hard for your defensive linemen to try to contain these guys, so you have to do a lot as far as being disciplined in your rush, obviously sending more people at him so you can make sure you close up as many lanes as you can, and man, we try our best to do that. Against (Cardinals QB) Kyler (Murray) I think we did a really good job, obviously Buffalo we didn’t do as good of a job, we expect to do a really good job this week against (Commanders QB) Jayden (Daniels).”

On how the team’s aggressiveness on fourth down affects him in the moment and his game planning in a game: “Listen, this is what I teach our guys from OTAs and training camp, that any time we have a sudden change – say, if we don’t make a fourth down, say, if our offense throws an interception, they have a fumble or whatnot, man, it’s more TV time for us, alright, so we look forward to going on the field. So, every time you see something like that happens, our guys immediately run on the field because that’s the mindset. So, listen, we’re behind our head coach 100 percent, I actually believe in that – actually believe in it. So, I’m not surprised, I know everybody else is surprised, but I’m not surprised, the players are not surprised, the coaches are not surprised, we’re just ready to play. Whatever happens, we’re behind him.”

On how playing against a team like Washington that uses all four downs on offense affects how they play on defense: “Yes, so now you look at what they’re going to do on third down, alright? They might tend – it really opens up their offense because they might tend to run the ball more on third-and-5, third-and-6, because they know they’re going for it on fourth down, so we have to be in-tune to that, and that comes from film study. So, we’ve done a good job of understanding who this head coach is, how they try to operate, to try to make sure we’re prepared for all those things.”

On how impressed he is with Commanders QB Jayden Daniels’ mental game and if there are things that he does that you do not often see from rookie quarterbacks: “Absolutely, his demeanor and how calm he is, I mean, it pops out all over the TV copy when you watch the TV copy, and another thing that pops out is, he’s having fun playing this game, which we all should, but you can tell that he’s having fun, and there’s no better way to play this game than when you’re in a situation where you’re having fun. I mean, obviously winning has a lot to do with that, but his ability to go make plays, even when he doesn’t make plays, he’s having fun playing the game, and I think that’s one of the reasons why he’s so successful. He’s not taking this for more than what it is, he understands what his skillset is, and he’s utilizing everybody on that offense to make him better. It’s almost like he’s trying to be a point guard, and he’s just delivering and leading.”

On what Lions LB Alex Anzalone brought to the team in his return against Minnesota and how he thought he played: “Listen, he’s our captain. Any time your captain’s gone, you lose a little something, and obviously when he comes back you gain something. He understands me to a T, he understands how I’m going to call the game, he studies the game plan just as well as anybody, and if something goes down with my mic, he knows exactly what AG’s going to call, and he does a good job with that, and we have so much conversation on, ‘How do I see it?’ That he understands how I’m going to call the game.”

On how critical it was for Lions Director of Pro Scouting Rob Lohman to bring in players for the defense in the midst of so many injuries: “I think everybody will attest to the first thing I would always say, is how good our personnel department has done a good job of bringing guys in that fit us, not just bringing guys in, but guys that fit us, because at some point, when you start to bring so many guys in and they have to play the following week, it’s not about the playbook, it’s the playstyle, and these guys fit our style. So, I’m going to always praise those men and women that are over there, they do a really good job of getting us the types of players we need.”

On what makes Commanders WR Terry McLaurin so good and why his touchdown production has increased: “Well, (Commanders QB) Jayden Daniels had a lot to do with that, but he’s highly, highly competitive, he does a really good job on 50-50 balls, which you wouldn’t think that he would because of his stature, but he does a really good job of that. He’s always been a good player, we went against this player several times, but that’s the one thing that really stands out, is his competitive nature. He kind of reminds me of how (Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown) Saint goes about, because he will block, he’ll go across the middle, he’ll take hits, he’ll get back up, get back to the huddle, so he’s a gamer. He’s a gamer, so it doesn’t surprise me, the success he’s having.”

On his leadership and having players like Lions LB Alex Anzalone vouch for him and his leadership: “Listen, here’s how I sum up leadership. It’s really one word, it’s influence, and everybody that I come into contact with, I want to influence them in some positive way, and I don’t take that for granted when it comes to players, because that’s my responsibility, it’s almost the same as my children. I want to make sure that everybody that I come into contact with, that when they leave AG that they have something positive to say, and it’s not always going to be like that because I do get pissed off at people too, but to me, that’s what I want to impart on every player that I come across with, even the players that end up leaving here, I want to impart something positive into them, so as they go about their way, that I’ve taught them something that can make them a better person and a better player.”

Mecosta County Youth Academy accepting applications for 2025 camp

The Mecosta County Youth Academy is now accepting applications for its June camp.

The Mecosta County Youth Academy is a one-week program for boys and girls ages 12 to 14. This year, it is scheduled to be held Jun. 16 to 20 from 8:00 A.M. until 4:00 P.M. The academy will focus on several topics, including teamwork, leadership, physical fitness, defensive tactics, firearms safety, first aid, and fire safety. The academy is being sponsored by the Mecosta County Sheriff’s Office and the Big Rapids Department of Public Safety. This is the fifth year the departments are hosting this event.

For more information, don't hesitate to get in touch with Officer William Sell at the Big Rapids Department of Public Safety, at wsell@bigrapidsdps.org or 231-527-0005, or visit
https://cityofbr.seamlessdocs.com/f/YouthAcademyApplication to apply.

Applications are due by Friday, Apr. 18, at 4:00 P.M. and can be either emailed to Officer Sell or dropped off at the Big Rapids Department of Public Safety on 435 N. Michigan Ave.

Photo provided by Mecosta County Youth Academy.

Reed City Police: Weekly Blotter (1/6 - 1/12)

Monday, Jan. 6

  • An officer transported an individual from Reed City Hospital to Kalamazoo for mental health treatment.

Tuesday, Jan. 7

  • An officer was dispatched to a possible domestic assault. It was determined to be two siblings arguing.

  • An officer took a report of a criminal sexual conduct involving a minor. An 18-year-old male has been arrested in conjunction with the matter on three counts of criminal sexual conduct in the first degree.

Wednesday, Jan. 8

  • An officer issued five abatement notices to residents for violations to the city ordinances.

Thursday, Jan. 9

  • No incidents reported.

Friday, Jan. 10

  • An officer assisted Sheriff's deputies with the investigation of a single rollover accident, where the driver was taken to the hospital by another driver. The cause of the accident is still unknown and under investigation.

  • An officer was dispatched to a violation of felony probation by a teen offender. The individual was located and turned over to a parent. The matter has been turned over to the probation officer.

Saturday, Jan. 11

  • An officer received a referral from Adult Protective Services regarding possible elder abuse. An investigation was completed and an arrest was made on a 37-year-old man. While attempting to arrest the man, he fled the residence on foot but was taken into custody a short distance from the residence. The man was arrested for domestic assault, elder abuse, unlawful use of a motor vehicle, resisting an officer, giving false information to an officer, and driving without a license. Officers were assisted by Osceola County Sheriff's Deputies and Evart Police.

  • An officer responded to a possible domestic call. After arriving at the location, the reports were unfounded.

Sunday, Jan. 12

  • An officer responded to a call from a resident that was making reports of a suspicious vehicle driving around her house. Reports were unfounded.

  • An officer issued an abatement notice for dangerous structure due to the roof of a porch being rotten and falling in on itself.

19-year-old taken to hospital following vehicle flipping in crash

On Tuesday, Jan. 14 at 2:00 P.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office were dispatched to a single vehicle crash on Jefferson Rd. near 165th Ave.

The 19-year-old male driver from Stanwood reportedly lost control of his vehicle on the icy roadway before overturning. The driver was transported to the Big Rapids Corewell Health Hospital for minor injuries. Another male passenger, also from Stanwood, was in the vehicle during the crash and was uninjured. 

Deputies were assisted by Meceola Central Dispatch, Mecosta County EMS, Morley Township Fire Department, and Morton Township Fire Department.

Mecosta County man arrested for Criminal Sexual Conduct and Child Sexually Abusive Activity

The Michigan State Police Computer Crimes Unit and the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force announced the arrest of Lukas Munro, age 25 of Mecosta County, on Wednesday morning.

Munro was arrested on several counts including criminal sexual conduct in the first degree, criminal sexual conduct to the first degree, aggravated child sexually abusive activity, aggravated possession of child sexually abusive material, and using a computer to commit a crime.

Munro was arrested in Grand Rapids following an investigation into the alleged activity. The investigation was initiated when it was learned that Munro was creating and uploading files of child sexually abusive material on the internet. The Mecosta County Sheriff’s Office, Michigan Department of Corrections, and Grand Rapids Police Department assisted with the arrest of Munro.

Munro was arraigned in the 77th District Court on Friday, Jan. 10. If convicted, Munro could face up to life in prison for criminal sexual conduct in the first degree, 25 years for aggravated child sexually abusive activity, 20 years for using a computer to commit a crime, 15 years for criminal sexual conduct in the second degree, and 10 years for aggravated possession of child sexually abusive material.

Cardinals take down White Cloud, Fremont for back-to-back wins

In a rare back-to-back slate of games, Big Rapids collected two more wins with victories over Fremont and White Cloud.

The Cardinals travelled Monday night to face the Packers, a team they had won the previous won by three a year ago. After a strong 17-point first quarter, the Cardinals were held to five in the second quarter to hold a 22-17 lead at halftime. Thanks to some key defensive steals and scores down the stretch, Big Rapids overcame costly turnovers to hold off two-win Fremont 50-43. Cole Haist and Gabe Nejenga led with 17 points apiece while Ty Gielczyk added seven.

On Tuesday night, Big Rapids face a seven-win White Cloud team in a battle of former conference divisional opponents. While the Indians came into the contest as one of the best defensive teams statistically in the league, the Cardinals dissected White Cloud's defensive zone scheme with some great passing on offense. Big Rapids led 31-14 at the half and didn't look back, holding off White Cloud 56-35 for win number nine on the season. Unofficially, Haist and Njenga paced the offensive attack with 14 and 13 respectively. Gielczyk also added 10 points for Big Rapids. 

The Cardinals return to action on Friday, Jan. 17, where they will face their toughest opponent yet in Grant. The 7:00 P.M. contest is a tussle for the top of the CSAA-Red Division standings, as both the Tigers and Cardinals remain the only undefeated teams in the conference table. Pregame will begin at 6:30 P.M. on NewsRadio WBRN via 96.5 FM and 1460 AM, as well as WBRN.com and the WBRN mobile app.

For replays of previous games on WBRN, visit https://bigrapidsdailynews.com/podcasts/2024-2025-big-rapids-basketball-radio-broadcast-archive.

Legendary Ferris State hockey coach Bob Daniels retiring after 500 wins, 33 years behind the bench

Ferris State University hockey coach Bob Daniels, respected nationally for building the program into one of the best in the nation for years, is retiring after more than three decades behind the bench.

Daniels is among the winningest active coaches in NCAA Division I hockey history. As just the 17th coach to surpass 500 career wins, his achievements span decades of dedication and excellence. His 33 seasons as a head coach rank second among active Division I coaches.

"Coach Daniels is an iconic figure in the hockey world and has been a huge ambassador for the sport and Ferris State University," Ferris State Athletics Director Steve Brockelbank said. "He has invested so much over the last 36 years to both Bulldog Hockey and the Big Rapids community. We are grateful for all he has done and the countless lives he has impacted along the way. Today, we celebrate all his accomplishments and thank him for his extraordinary efforts."

Under Daniels’ leadership, Ferris State achieved unprecedented success, including four NCAA tournament appearances. The Bulldogs reached the Frozen Four for the first time in 2012, culminating in a historic berth in the national championship game. They also advanced to the tournament’s final eight in 2003, 2014, and 2016, each time coming within a game of another Frozen Four appearance.

Daniels, who reached the milestone of 500 career wins in November, earned a reputation as a master strategist and inspiring leader. In 1994, he coached Team West to a bronze medal at the United States Olympic Festival and contributed to the U.S. Junior National Team’s competitions against international powerhouses like Canada, Sweden, and Russia.

His tenure with Ferris State spans 36 of the program's 50-year history. After serving as an assistant coach from 1989 to 1992, Daniels was named the fifth head coach, ushering in an era of unparalleled success. He has the longest tenure of any Ferris State head coach, regardless of sport.

“When I came to Ferris State University in 1989, I never imagined being here 36 years later,” Daniels said. "I feel extremely blessed to have worked at such an outstanding institution with such wonderful people. It’s been an honor and privilege to serve as coach.”

Daniels said he wanted to thank coaches, players, support staff and administrators he has worked with over the years, including current coaching staff members Mark Kaufman, Drew Famulak and Dave Cencer, along Ferris President Bill Pink, Brockelbank and Sport Administrator Tim Blashill.

He also appreciates the support from the boosters including the Blueline Club and Solid Ice.

"For the immediate future, I would like the focus of attention placed where it belongs, with our current team," Daniels said. "I’m very proud of their hard work and determination in pursuit of bringing a championship to Ferris, and they deserve our staff’s undivided attention in the remainder of the season."

 Along with serving as Ferris State's head coach, Daniels and his family have been active in the local community and involved in charitable endeavors while supporting local youth hockey and skating activities.

Daniels' coaching staff ranks among the most tenured in all of college hockey. Associate head coach Drew Famulak has been by his side for 32 years. Fellow assistant Mark Kaufman is in his 21st season at over two different stints while assistant coach Dave Cencer has been with the program for the past 19 years.

He coached 10 players named All-Americans, including 2002-03 Hobey Baker Hat Trick Award national finalist and four-time Stanley Cup champion Chris Kunitz.

Hundreds of former players have gone on to enjoy success on the professional and international levels in leagues around the globe, including the National Hockey League. He's mentored others who have gone on to achieve coaching success, such as notable NHL names Jeff Blashill, Derek Lalonde, Seth Appert and John Gruden.

A Michigan State University graduate, Daniels began his collegiate coaching career as a graduate assistant coach at Miami University in Ohio in 1986-1987 and broke into the CCHA as an assistant at the University of Illinois-Chicago from 1987 to 1989.

He was quickly successful after becoming Ferris State’s head coach on the eve of the 1992-93 season, leading the Bulldogs to 21 victories and a CCHA Tournament semifinal berth. It was just the fourth time a Ferris State team had won 20 games in a season and the second time in which a first-year coach won more than 16 games.

Under Daniels' guidance, Ferris State turned in one of its best performances ever in the program's NCAA Division I history for the 2002-03 campaign with a school-best 31-10-1 overall record.

The Bulldogs also claimed their first-ever CCHA Regular-Season Championship title with a first place 22-5-1 league mark and advanced to the NCAA Championship Tournament's West Regional title game in their initial NCAA Tourney appearance.

Ferris State also earned the distinction of being the nation's first team to reach the 30-win plateau in 2002-03 and also competed in the CCHA Super Six Championship Tourney for the first time since 1993.

Daniel’s career honors include being named 2002-03 Coach of the Year by both Inside College Hockey and the March of Dimes West Michigan Sports Awards along with being a unanimous choice as the CCHA's Coach of the Year. He also earned the 2003 Spencer Penrose Award as the AHCA's Division I National Hockey Coach of the Year.

Daniels claimed CCHA and National Coach of the Year accolades for the second time in 2011-2012 after leading the Bulldogs to the program’s second-ever league regular-season championship and a historic first-ever trip to the Frozen Four where Ferris State reached the national championship game. The team was ranked No. 1 in the nation.

Daniels also guided the Bulldogs to the WCHA Regular-Season Championship in 2013-14 along with an NCAA Elite Eight appearance while earning WCHA Coach of the Year accolades and runner-up honors for National Coach of the Year.

Daniels in the 2015-2016 season led Ferris State to the school’s first postseason tournament championship ever, claiming the WCHA Final Five Championship. The team advanced to the national tournament for the third time in five years while reaching the NCAA Final Eight.

In addition to his coaching duties, Daniels served a four-year term on the American Hockey Coaches Association's Board of Governors and was a representative of the NCAA Tournament West Regional Selection Advisory Committee. Most recently, he served on the NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey National Committee.

Daniels’ final day is May 31, and the university will conduct a national search.

Image and release provided by Ferris State University.

39-year-old Howard City man injured after sliding off road and overturning vehicle

On Monday, Jan. 13 at 10:19 A.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office were dispatched to northbound US-131 near mile marker 139 for a single vehicle accident.

The vehicle was occupied by the driver and a single passenger. The 39-year-old male driver from Howard City lost control on the slippery road, causing the vehicle to leave the roadway and overturn. The driver was transported to the Big Rapids Hospital for minor injuries, while the 39-year-old male passenger from Stanwood was uninjured. 

Deputies were assisted by Meceola Central Dispatch, Mecosta County EMS, Big Rapids Department of Public Safety, Currie's and M&M Towing. 

A bond breakdown of Reed City Area Public Schools' 88-million-dollar proposal

To help improve the safety, education, and experience at Reed City Area Public Schools, residents will have the opportunity to vote in a new bond millage in May.

The total price tag for the whole project is to 88-million-dollars, spread out into three “chunks.” The first series of funding will be $11.2 million in 2025, followed by the biggest chunk in 2028 of $61.2 million, and then $15.6 million to finish the bond in 2030. Currently, the district owes about $5.7 million in total debt.

When asked about the financial piece, superintendent Michael Sweet said this was the hardest battle throughout the process and even involved looking at over 24 different funding scenarios.

“We struggled and wrestled with (financials) over and over again,” Sweet said. “The history in Reed City is that when two proposals are put forward, the community votes for the first one or the lesser cost one and then votes down the second one. We could try to tear things apart and try to do it in little chunks, but everything is so integral to each other.”

 

Image of the proposed rendering for Reed City High School's entrance doors for athletic facilites (Courtesy of Michael Sweet).

 

When it comes to the focal points of the proposal, the school is valuing six different pieces in the project. The first is safety considerations by adding a new secure entrance to the middle school. This would involve a remodel of the school’s shared library, which will be renovated to serve as the high school’s and middle school’s central office area. There will also be changes to the parking lot outside the building, which would use a circular drive for bus parking and designate lanes of travel for incoming traffic. 

“The library, also known as the Porteous Academic Center, right now is underutilized because of how it's set up,” Sweet said. “It's almost like there's a corridor or a hallway that goes in between that's not actually in existence between the middle school and the high school. Part of the big re-purpose there is to take that and turn that into the main entrance for the middle school and high school. It lets us create safer student parking area, a safe walk into the building and creates a secure entrance.”

Most notably known in the proposal are two large facility upgrades. The first is renovating the current high school gymnasium into a 600-seat performance arts center, which would be dedicated to hosting music, theater, and community events. In response to this change, the district would then construct a new 14000-seat gymnasium only a few feet to the east of the former space. The space will include two-sides of bleachers, new locker rooms, a walking track, and a larger weight room and fitness center for athletes to train in. There would also be reconstructed baseball and softball fields along the main road.

 

Image of the proposed remodeled Reed City High School and Middle School renderings from an aerial view (Courtesy of Michael Sweet).

 

“Before I landed the (superintendent) job, I've been thinking about what needs to be done in Reed City. We did a facilities audit, where we had company, architecture firm and a construction management company come through all our buildings, look at our roofs, look at our walls, casements, furniture, technology, and everything so that we could get a picture of every building in the district. We want to give Reed City Schools a fresh look and bring everything up to date and take care of the needs that were identified in that assessment.”

The high school also would like to make a new loading dock area, which would be moved to near the southwest side of the high school across from the cafeteria, to help with shipping a receiving throughout the schools. Along with facilities comes the hopeful renovation of the G.T. Norman Elementary school kindergarten through second grade wing. Constructed in 1954, it stands as the oldest portion of all buildings in the district. Additional restrooms and “curb” appeal fixes were also included for several buildings.

When asked about the ideas for the proposal, Sweet said many of the ideas came from the community’s input via conversations and various surveys. 

“We ran a big survey through ‘Thought Exchange’, a platform that the district uses, and had hundreds of people reply. Out of that, we were able to disaggregate the data and came up with a few big pieces.”

Out of the responses, Sweet said the most popular was safety with parking lots and entrances, more performing arts opportunities, and bigger athletics spaces. 

 

Image of the proposed new Reed City High School gymnasium renderings (Courtesy of Michael Sweet).

 

“We took information from the survey and all the personal connections that these people had throughout the community. This allowed us to talk to people about their knowledge of what had worked in the past and what did people want to do. It took about seven months to really examine the information and then bring it back together to come up with the proposal.”

Sweet wants the public to know he will be scheduling meetings coming up to share information around the city with various groups and interested residents.

For more on the proposal, visit https://breedlove23.wixsite.com/rcapsyes.

 

 

Evart Police: Weekly Blotter (1/6 - 1/12)

Monday, Jan. 6

  • No incidents reported. 

Tuesday, Jan. 7

  • No incidents reported. 

Wednesday, Jan. 8

  • No incidents reported. 

Thursday, Jan. 9

  • Property Damage Accident - no further details listed.

Friday, Jan. 10

  • Civil – Officers were dispatched for a domestic dispute. After investigation was complete, it was determined to be a verbal dispute. The parties agreed to separate for a cool down period. 
  • Assist OCSO – An officer was dispatched to assist Osceola County Sheriff's Department at the Evart Middle School. 
  • Personal Injury Accident – An officer was dispatched to a two-car accident. One of the drivers suffered a medical condition resulting from the crash and was taken to hospital. Both vehicles were inoperable and were towed from the scene. 
  • Personal Injury Accident – An officer responded to a two-car accident. One of the drivers suffered injuries and was transported to the hospital. Both cars were towed from the scene.

Saturday, Jan. 11

  • No incidents reported. 

Sunday, Jan. 12

  • Retail Fraud – Officers were dispatched to a retail fraud complaint. The complaint remains open pending additional follow-up. 

78-year-old male from White Cloud crashes vehicle into hunting blinds

On Sunday, Jan. 12 at 7:02 P.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff''s Office investigated a single vehicle crash on Northland Dr. north of 3 Mile Rd. in Aetna Township.

The report states a 78-year-old male from White Cloud suffered a medical emergency while behind the wheel. The vehicle he was operating then left the roadway, went into a yard, and struck some hunting blinds. The driver was transported to the Corewell Health hospital in Big Rapids by Mecosta County EMS.

Deputies were assisted on scene by Morley Rescue, Mecosta County EMS, and Frontline Towing.

WEATHER ALERT: Winter Weather Advisory in effect for severe wind chills through Tuesday

A Winter Weather Advisory has issued by NWS Grand Rapids until Tuesday, Jan. 14 at 7:00 P.M. for Lake, Kent, Mecosta, Montcalm, Newaygo, Oceana, and Osceola Counties.

Forecasts are calling for lake effect snow accumulations of up to two or three inches in some spots as well as temperatures projected in the single digits. Wind chills as low as 5 degrees below zero and predicted snowfall are expected to begin after 7:00 P.M. Monday evening and continue through Tuesday. 

Visibility and road conditions may change rapidly over short distances in lake effect snow. Plan on slippery road conditions as well as cold temperatures.

72-year-old male hospitalized after being ejected from vehicle in accident

On Sunday, Jan. 12 at 1:18 P.M., emergency response was dispatched to a single vehicle crash occurred on southbound US-131 near mile marker 132.

The driver, a 72-year-old male from Newaygo lost control, slid off the roadway, and struck a road sign. The vehicle then rolled over twice and ejected the driver. The driver was transported to Butterworth by Mecosta County EMS and the passenger, a 35-year-old male from Newaygo, suffered minor injuries. 

The Mecosta County Sheriff's Office was assisted by Mecosta County EMS, Big Rapids Fire, Mecosta Township Fire, Meceola Central Dispatch, and M&M Towing. 

UPDATE: Shots fired on Ferris State campus Saturday night found to be unsubstantiated

UPDATE: As of 11:14 A.M. this morning, Ferris State Police Department has found the report of shots fired to be unsubstantiated following an investigation. There is no threat to the public. 

 

Ferris State Police are investigating reports of several additional shots fired on Saturday night and early Sunday morning.

Multiple emergency alerts stated shots were heard near Top Taggart Field around 8:30 P.M. Saturday night and 12:30 A.M. Sunday morning. No additional information is available at this time.

Anyone with information regarding the instances is asked to call 911 or campus police at (231) 591-5000.

Cardinals tame Lions for first win of 2025

In their first game back since Dec. 21, the Big Rapids Cardinals boys’ basketball team got the new year started with a 70-54 win over the Newaygo Lions at home Friday night.

The Cardinals started the first quarter red hot, scoring a season-high 23 points in the first quarter to lead 23-12. Ball movement against Newaygo’s zone defense opened looks down low and then 3-point shots from Cole Haist and Ty Gielczyk extended the lead to 22 at the half.

Dominant defense was part of the recipe for the Cardinals, slowing down Hunter Yearsovich in the second half to single digits after over 12 points in the first half. Steals by Liam McLaughlin and JaReese Moten gave Big Rapids open transition points to hold their edge in the third quarter and eventual to secure the win.

Cole Haist led Big Rapids scorers with 21 points unofficially, followed by 20 from Gabe Njenga and 14 from Gielczyk. Gielczyk, Moten, and Njenga each added over four rebounds and Gielczyk added a game-high six assists. 

Yearsovich led Lion scorers with an estimated 17 points, followed by Isaiah Miedema with 15 and Russell Toth with 15.

Big Rapids moves to 7-2 overall and 4-0 in conference play, while Newaygo falls to 4-5 overall and 2-2 in CSAA-Red games. The Cardinals will hit the road to play Fremont on a non-conference tilt on Monday, followed by a home game the following night against White Cloud Tuesday evening.

Listen to all the coverage, for both games, starting at 6:30 P.M. on NewsRadio WBRN via 1460 AM, 96.5 FM, WBRN.com, and the WBRN mobile app.

 

Michigan representatives Huizenga and Dingell introduce bipartisan bill to reauthorize Great Lakes Restoration Initiative

On Thursday, U.S. Representatives Bill Huizenga (R-MI), Debbie Dingell (D-MI), Dave Joyce (R-OH), Marcy Kaptur (D-OH) and members of the bipartisan Great Lakes Task Force introduced the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) Act of 2025.

The bipartisan bill will reauthorize the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which is set to expire at the end of FY 2026, for another five years through FY 2031. The bill increases the current authorization level from $475 million to $500 million in FY 2026. 

The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative is critical in cleaning up the Great Lakes and waterways and addressing problems that directly impact public health and safety. Since 2010, the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative has provided more than $4.1 billion to fund 8,000 projects throughout the Great Lakes region.

“The Great Lakes serve as a vital source of economic activity, recreation, and drinking water for millions of Americans,” said Congressman Bill Huizenga, Republican Co-Chair of the House Great Lakes Task Force. “Studies from both Grand Valley State University and the University of Michigan show how the economic health of the Great Lakes is directly tied to their ecological well-being. In fact, according to the University of Michigan, for every $1 invested in the Great Lakes through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, $3.35 of economic output is produced. The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative is the leading federal program designed to clean up legacy pollution, restore habitats, and combat invasive species across the basin.  I am proud to lead this bipartisan effort to fund the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative and make preserving, protecting, and strengthening the Great Lakes a national priority.”

House cosponsors of this legislation include Jack Bergman (R-MI), Hillary Scholten (D-MI), John Moolenaar (R-MI), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), John James (R-MI), Kristen McDonald Rivet (D-MI), and Tim Walberg (R-MI).

“The Great Lakes are not only an important natural resource but a critical economic driver that supports communities, jobs, commerce, agriculture, transportation, and tourism for millions of people across the country. Since it was established, the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative has been an environmental and economic success, and is fundamental to protecting, restoring, and maintaining the Great Lakes ecosystem and economy,” said Congresswoman Dingell, Co-Chair of the House Great Lakes Task Force. “I’m proud to join my Great Lakes Task Force colleagues again this Congress to fight for robust, bipartisan support and funding for the GLRI to ensure we can protect the Great Lakes, their wildlife, and the communities that depend on them for generations to come.”

“The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative supports efforts that confront direct threats facing the lakes like harmful algal blooms, water pollution, invasive species, and coastal erosion,” said Congressman Joyce, Co-Chair of the Great Lakes Task Force. “I am proud to not only introduce this bill as my first piece of legislation this Congress but also relaunch the bipartisan Great Lakes Task Force in the House of Representatives. I will continue to work with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to protect and preserve the national treasure that is the Great Lakes ecosystem.”

“Demonstrating a tangible return on investment, every Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) dollar spent produces $3.35 in economic activity. As a co-chair of the Congressional Great Lakes Task Force and a senior member of the House Committee on Appropriations, funding the GLRI is among my highest priorities,” said Congresswoman Kaptur, Co-Chair of the House Great Lakes Task Force. “The GLRI is instrumental in funding unmet needs for our region and the millions of people who depend on our Great Lakes as a source of clean and safe drinking water, for their livelihood, and for recreation and leisure activities. In 2020 alone, the GLRI contributed $3.1 Trillion to our economy, including 25.8 million jobs and $1.3 Trillion in wages. Robust funding that benefits our communities and people isn’t just common sense, it is vital to maintaining and growing our communities for generations to come.”

This bill is endorsed by Great Lakes Commission, American Sportfishing Association, Healing Our Waters – Great Lakes Coalition, National Parks Conservation Association, American Great Lakes Port Association, Environmental Law & Policy Center, Western Reserve Land Conservancy, Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, Alliance for the Great Lakes, National Wildlife Federation, The Nature Conservancy, Ohio Environmental Council, National Audubon Society, Citizens Campaign for the Environment, Great Lakes Fishery Commission, Great Lakes Business Network, Save the Dunes.

Tigers, Skubal agree to one-year, 10-million-dollar deal

According to multiple MLB insiders, the Detroit Tigers and starting pitcher Tarik Skubal have agreed to a one-year deal for 2025.

The deal, worth 10.15 million dollars, will keep Skubal under contract for the next year and avoid tonight's 8:00 P.M. arbitration deadline. The Tigers will have another year to potentially negotiate a long term deal with Skubal before he becomes an unrestricted free agent following the 2026 season. He was previously signed to a one-year, 2.65 million dollar deal to avoid arbitration in 2024.

Skubal won the American League Cy Young award this past season as the league's best pitcher. The five-year Tiger had a 18-4 record last season with a 2.39 E.R.A., 228 strikeouts, and a .201 batting average allowed. 

Detroit finished last season 86-76 and won the AL Wild Card Series against the Astros. 

Subject detained in relation to shots fired incident south of Baldwin

On Monday, Jan. 6, at 4:24 P.M., deputies from the Lake County Sheriff’s Office were given a BOL (be on the lookout) for a subject in a vehicle that had fired shots at a domestic incident in Newaygo County.

Lake County Deputies located the vehicle as it pulled into the Big Star EZ-Mart gas station on M-37 in Baldwin. The male subject was detained until the Michigan State Police arrived and took custody of him. The vehicle and incident were turned over to the Michigan State Police.

No further information has been released regarding the incident. The Sheriff’s Office was assisted by Lake County Central Dispatch, Newaygo County Central Dispatch, Newaygo County Sheriff’s Office, and the Michigan State Police.

'The Rundown' to replace 'The West Michigan Sports Show' on NewsRadio WBRN

Big Rapids Media Network announced Wednesday that there will be a change in local sports programming for the upcoming year.

Due to its rising popularity, The Rundown will now be aired on Saturdays at 3:30 P.M. on WBRN. It will be taking place of The West Michigan Sports Show, which has been airing in that slot for almost two years.

“This move symbolizes a conjunction between the two shows,” host Brandon Wirth said. “While under The Rundown’s nameplate, there will still be discussions and score reports like the former show’s format. Our network feels this is the best way to eliminate in-house competition and provided a centralized sports show for our local viewers.”

The Rundown will continue to produce video episodes on YouTube for the upcoming basketball season but will also further expand on the coverage for the weekend radio program. 

Behind the Bulldogs will continue in 2025, as the show will keep it’s 3:00 P.M. time slot on Saturdays. This show covers local Ferris State sports throughout the year, including interviews with coaches and players.

Both shows can be heard on 107.7 FM, WBRN.com, and the WBRN mobile app from 3:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. For more programming schedule information, visit wbrn.com.

Reed City Police: Weekly Blotter (12/30 - 1/5)

Monday, Dec. 30

  • An officer took a threat complaint regarding two teens who have a child in common.

Tuesday, Dec. 31

  • An officer was dispatched to a location for a noise complaint of screaming and hollering. It was determined that it was children playing and yelling. No issues found.
  • An officer conducted a traffic stop expired registration. The driver had no insurance. The vehicle was towed, and the driver was cited for registration and insurance violations.
  • An officer assisted the Mecosta County Sheriff’s Department on an investigation.

Wednesday, Jan. 1

  • An officer responded to a call for a possible domestic incident. The officer arrived at an Airbnb rental to find several young adults from out of state and tried to speak with the parties involved. Upon entering the residence, the officer found individuals intoxicated and unresponsive. EMS responded and one was taken to Reed City Hospital and was later released after recovering. All were issued MIP citations, and a report has been forwarded to the prosecutor for a possible charge of possessing a false identification.
  • An officer trespassed an individual from a local store after the store manager complained about him yelling at the employees.
  • While investigating another matter, an officer obtained permission to search a vehicle and located paraphernalia and meth residue. The matter has been turned over to the prosecutor for possible charges.

Thursday, Jan. 2

  • An Officer transported a 28-year-old male from Newaygo County Jail to Osceola County Jail on an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court.
  • An officer was dispatched to an apartment complex with complaints of loud music. The matter was unfounded.
  • An officer responded to a call that turned out to be a child custody civil matter. The officer advised the caller to contact the court.

Friday, Jan 3.

  • An officer was dispatched to a home for a welfare check on an individual that suffers from mental illness. He was taken to the hospital for evaluation.
  • An officer was dispatched to Community Mental Health regarding a pre-teen who was refusing to get into their parent’s vehicle. The child got into the vehicle and complied after hearing the police had been called.
  • An officer was called to assist CPS with an investigation regarding possible nude photos of an adolescent. It was determined the adolescent had photographed a medical issue on their phone and sent it to their mother to ask what they should do. No criminal activity.
  • An officer was dispatched to an apartment complex after someone called to make reports of loud noises and banging coming from one of the apartments. After the officer arrived, was able to contact the resident and it turned out he was just playing video games.

Saturday, Jan. 4

  • An officer responded to a 911 called that came from a 5-year-old boy that turned out to just be playing with his mom’s phone.

Sunday, Jan. 5

  • An officer was called to the hospital to assist with a patient that was disorderly and aggressive with staff.

32-year-old hits utility pole after suffering medical emergency behind the wheel

On Tuesday, Jan. 7 at 7:17 A.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office were dispatched to a single vehicle personal injury accident on Cramer Dr. at Hayes Rd.

The investigation found that a 32-year-old male from Morley had been travelling northbound on Cramer Dr. when experienced a medical emergency. The male's vehicle then went off the road way and struck a utility pole.

The driver was transported to the Big Rapids Corewell Health Hospital for minor injuries. Deputies were assisted by Meceola Central Dispatch, Mecosta County EMS, and Mecosta Township Fire.

New restroom facility installed at Northend Riverside Park

After several years of portable bathroom facilities, Northend Riverside Park now has a permanent restroom building slated to be open this spring.

According to City of Big Rapids Communications Coordinator Steve Gove, the $180,000 dollar facility is fully covered by the City’s General Fund. 

“The City of Big Rapids has prioritized getting a new restroom area at Northend Park over the last several years,” Gove said. “We are excited for residents and visitors to use these new amenities when the weather gets nicer.”

The project is due for plumbing once the weather gets warmer this spring. A new sidewalk will also be installed near the building, connecting to the trail’s path.

This is not the only recreation project happening in Big Rapids currently, as Swede Hill will continue work on a new skate park in the Spring and the Depot Trail Head Park has been under construction for a new paved parking area and overhead pavilion since November.

Evart Police: Weekly Blotter (12/30 - 1/5)

Monday, Dec. 30

  • No incidents reported.

Tuesday, Dec. 31

  • No incidents reported.

Wednesday, Jan. 1

  • No incidents reported.

Thursday, Jan. 2

  • No incidents reported.

Friday, Jan. 3

  • Property Damage Accident – An officer responded to a residence for a possible ongoing domestic/harassment complaint. Subject arrested on a probation violation. A report will be forwarded to the Prosecutor for further review. 

  • Probation Violation – Officers responded to a trespassing complaint. Upon investigating the complaint further, it was discovered that a criminal offense had occurred and the subject was on probation. The subject was arrested on a probation violation and a report was forwarded to the Prosecutor for review for charges.

Saturday, Jan. 4

  • No incidents reported.

Sunday, Jan. 5

  • Retail Fraud – Officers were dispatched to a retail fraud complaint that was not in progress. The complaint remains open pending further investigation.

Community invited to celebrate Ferris State football national championship and volleyball team's historic season

Ferris State University students and community members are invited to a campus celebration of the football team’s national championship and the volleyball team’s historic season.

The event is planned for 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 13 at Ferris State’s David L. Eisler Center, 805 Campus Drive.

"We are so proud of how our Bulldogs performed on the national stage,” Ferris State President Bill Pink said. “Our students, fans, and entire community rallied behind them with unmatched passion and pride. This is a truly extraordinary moment for our university—a time to come together, celebrate, and embrace the spirit of Ferris State as one big family!”

People attending the celebration will be able to pose with the National Championship and GLIAC Championship trophies, hear from coaches and student-athletes, and enjoy snacks and other surprises.

Both teams were ranked No. 1 in the nation in the final stretches of their seasons and were recognized at the conference and national levels for their performance on the field and in the classroom.

The football team earned the NCAA DII National Championship for the third time in four years. The volleyball team was undefeated in the regular season and reached the Elite Eight round of the NCAA DII National Tournament.

The Bulldogs dominated Valdosta State University 49-14 on Dec. 21 in McKinney, Texas to earn the crown. The team returned to the championship game after winning back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022, winning 14 games in a row.

Quarterback Trinidad Chambliss, a Grand Rapids resident majoring in Business Administration, finished third overall in voting for the 2024 Harlon Hill Trophy, which is awarded to the Division II College Football Player of the Year.

Chambliss was one of four players who earned All-American honors, and Tony Annese was named National Coach of the Year.

Long snapper Sam Wahlberg, a Building Construction Technology major from Norton Shores, earned the NCAA’s Elite 90 award for the 2024 Division II Football National Championship, saluting his academic and athletic excellence.

The volleyball team finished its historic year undefeated in the regular season and dominating national awards. The team’s only setback was in the Elite Eight round of the NCAA DII National Tournament, finishing with a 34-1 record.

Ferris State senior Olivia Henneman-Dallape of Oregon, Ohio, was named National Player of the Year by the American Volleyball Coaches Association, becoming the first Bulldog to claim the prestigious distinction.

Tia Brandel-Wilhelm was chosen AVCA Division II National Coach of the Year, the first time she has received the honor in her 30-year career.

Henneman-Dallape, majoring in Nursing, also garnered AVCA All-America First Team honors while senior setter Kaylee Maat, of Hudsonville, an Elementary Education major, was chosen as a AVCA All-America Second Team selection and senior outside hitter Claire Nowicki, a radiography major, of Clarkston garnered AVCA Honorable Mention All-America honors.

Outside hitter Logyn Geren, an Accountancy major from Fort Myers, Florida, earned the Elite 90 Award for her academics and on-court performance.

Mecosta County Sheriff's Office: Weekly Blotter (12/30 - 1/5)

Monday, Dec. 30

Calls for Service: 21

Traffic Accidents: 1

 

Tuesday, Dec. 31

  • No incidents reported.

 

Wednesday, Jan. 1

Calls for Service: 16

Traffic Accidents: 11

 

Thursday, Jan. 2

Calls for Service: 27

Traffic Accidents: 3

 

Friday, Jan. 3

  • At 7:04 P.M., deputies made a warrant arrest in Big Rapids Townshiop. A male subject was arrested on two felony warrants. He was lodged at the Mecosta County Jail.

Calls for Service: 23

Traffic Accidents: 2

 

Saturday, Jan. 4

  • At 6:35 A.M., deputies made a warrant arrest in Big Rapids Township. A male subject was arrest on a warrant out of Montcalm County. The male subject was turned over to Montcalm County.

Calls for Service: 32

Traffic Accidents: 3

 

Sunday, Jan. 5

  • At 2:45 A.M., deputies investigated a one vehicle accident in Hinton Township. The investigation resulted in the male driver being arrested for OWI. He was lodged at the Mecosta County Jail.

Calls for Service: 25

Traffic Accidents: 3

Big Rapids City Commission discussing community pool site plan and introducing new deputy clerk at tonight's meeting

The Big Rapids City Commission will be meeting tonight at 6:30 P.M at City Hall. 

General business items include a special proclamation for Ferris State's football national championship and the introduction of Amy Cole as the city's new Deputy Clerk. Other agenda items include finalizing the 2025 commission meeting schedule and a land permit resolution regarding the dog grooming business on 507 Winter Ave.

The meeting will also include multiple study sessions regarding Fleis & VandenBrink's site plan for the Charles E. Fairman Community Pool and a monthly financial report regarding revenue sharing.

All city commission meetings are available to the public and are streamed on YouTube. For more information on the agenda, visit the Big Rapids City Commission website here: https://cms6.revize.com/revize/bigrapids/government/boards_and_commission/city_commission.php

 

Lions make history, take down Vikings 31-9 to earn first-ever top seed

In a game that had playoff stakes as a regular season finale, the Detroit Lions stood tall behind an impressive defensive effort to defeat the Minnesota Vikings 31-9.

With the victory, the Lions earn the top-seed in the NFC and a bye for next week’s opening Wild Card round. Detroit will play the winner of the four-seed Los Angeles Rams, led by former Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford, or the fifth-seeded Vikings for the third time this season.

Detroit was led by a monstrous defensive effort, holding the Vikings offense to their lowest point (9) and yardage (262) outputs of the season. The Lions keyed their defense stops in the redzone, holding the Vikings to only six points on four trips inside the 20-yard-line. They also held the Viking offense to 3 of 13 on third-down conversions, a 23% success rate moving the sticks. 

Opposing quarterback Sam Darnold only completed 18 of 41 passes for 166 yards, including two sacks and many more pressures. Star wideout Justin Jefferson, shadowed by a stellar effort from defensive back Amir Robertson, only caught three of nine targets for 54 yards. Detroit’s leading tackler was linebacker Alex Anzalone, who added seven stops and a pass break up in his first game back from breaking his forearm against Jacksonville on Nov. 17.

The Lions didn’t play their best offensively, including two interceptions from Jared Goff, but the running game carried the load. Jahmyr Gibbs scored all four touchdowns for Detroit, three on the ground and one in the air. Those four scores tied a Lions record for most in a single game and topped the NFL statistic lead with 19. The former Crimson Tide tail back rushed for 139 yards on 23 carries and added five catches for 31 yards on the contest.

Goff finished 27 of 33 for 231 yards and one touchdown, finding Amon-Ra St. Brown six times for 77 yards as well as Sam LaPorta seven times for 63 yards. Jameson Williams also added 34 receiving yards, helping him eclipse the 1,000-yard mark on the season. Kicker Jake Bates was 4 for 4 on extra points and made his sole field goal attempt from 48 yards out.

Detroit finishes with its best regular season record ever of 15-2, including 7-2 at Ford Field, 8-0 on the road, and 6-0 against NFC North teams. For more game and radio broadcasting, visit WBRN.com.

Reed City Police: Weekly Blotter (12/23 - 12/29)

Monday, Dec. 23

  • An officer took a report of a church being entered after hours. The investigation showed the individual had come in and stayed the night.

Tuesday, Dec. 24

  • An officer did a welfare check on a man after a friend called saying that his friend was making suicidal comments online. The officer talked to the man, who admitted to being depressed, and he agreed to go into the hospital for some counseling.

Wednesday, Dec. 25

  • An officer took a report of a car vs deer accident. No major damage to the vehicle and no injuries were found.
  • An officer assisted a driver that was having car trouble.

Thursday, Dec. 26

  • An officer observed a man passed out or sleeping in a vehicle in the park. It was determined the man was just taking a nap before he continued his journey.

  • An officer pulled over a moped driven by an 18-year-old male for no tail light. The driver had a warrant and was arrested and lodged at Osceola County Jail. No issues.

Friday, Dec. 27

  • An officer took a report of possible embezzlement. The matter is under investigation.
    An officer took a report of a resident who fell at a senior living facility. The facility was required to report it per state regulations. There was no serious injury and no foul play.

Saturday, Dec. 28

  • An officer was called to a residence regarding methamphetamine use. A 22-year-old woman was arrested for possession of methamphetamines. The residence is located within a drug-free school zone.

Sunday, Dec. 29

  • No incidents reported.

Rollover accident injuries 26-year-old driver from Big Rapids

On Sunday, Jan. 5 at 5:46 A.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff Office responded to a single vehicle rollover accident that occurred in Green Township on 195th Ave. and Round Lake Rd.

The driver, a 26-year-old male from Big Rapids, lost control due to the icy roads and hit a metal guardrail, causing the vehicle to roll over. He was taken to Corwell Health in Big Rapids for non-life-threatening injuries. 

Mecosta County Sheriff Office was assisted by Meceola Central Dispatch, Big Rapids City Rescue, Mecosta County EMS, and Currie's Towing. 

Detroit Lions Offensive Coordinator Ben Johnson Quote Sheet: 1/2/25

LIONS OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR BEN JOHNSON QUOTE SHEET

January 2, 2025

Opening Statement: “I’m going to just talk about this one coming up. This is a huge one as we all know, great game against a great opponent back at home here. So, really looking forward to it. The last time we played these guys, there was a lot of back and forth, they started off hot, then we were able to respond there, second quarter and third quarter then it came down the wire. So, good team, great defense, really well-coached, great players all across the board, and looking forward to this opportunity.”

On the key to getting a consistent offense in terms of point production that coaches strive for: “I don’t know if I always feel the same way that you do by saying that. We’ve had a number of 20-point games that we felt like, as a coaching staff and players, that there was more out there to be had. I would say probably the last four or five games we’ve been playing more consistent football, less three-and-outs. That’s really where I gauge it more off of is, are we able to move the ball? Not everything’s going to be perfect every week or every series or every play, but we’ve had guys stepping up and when it’s not perfect, they’re over there making it right. (Lions WR Jameson Williams) Jamo is one of those guys, (Lions WR Amon-Ra) St. Brown is one of those guys, (Lions RB Jahmyr Gibbs) Gibby is one of those guys. We had a play last week where we’re trying to do a bit of misdirection and the end didn’t take the cheese, it should’ve been a tackle for loss and then the next thing you know, Gibby is crossing the court and going to the other direction and makes it a positive play. I think that has a lot to do with it. These guys are going out there and playing confident football and they’re playing really well right now.”

On Lions QB Jared Goff getting a block: “Yeah, Jared got a nice one. That helps his PFF grade I think.”

On how long it took him to form a relationship with Lions WR Jameson Williams to where they are on the same page with his demands: “Yeah, it’s been a learning experience for everybody, I think. Since he got in the building here, it’s been all of us coaches, (Lions Head) Coach (Dan) Campbell, myself, (Lions Wide Receivers Coach Antwaan Randle) El, all of us have been on board trying to have him understand the expectation and what we really need, what (Lions QB) Jared (Goff) needs, what the O-line needs, what we all need for this whole thing to work and it’s taken a little bit of time, but it’s really taken off now at this point. He’s very detailed, very smart, very smart and that might go unnoticed, but you say something to him, and you coach him, and it hits him. He understands it and I think because he’s so smart, he’s able to really grasp what we’re trying to do and it’s just a matter of getting him all of the reps and all of the looks and he’s been really good here second half of the season.”

On changing the play-calling to beat Vikings Defensive Coordinator Brian Flores’ tendencies as the matchups continue: “Yeah, he does a great job. He does a great job. Each week you try to find a weakness in the armor and look to attack it, and this defense, it just doesn’t have much. It’s been that way for two years now. You can tell that this whole unit, they’ve been together, they’ve been playing in this scheme, they have the answers, they know when they get hit with something how to respond. He always has a curve ball every week, I think (Packers Head Coach) Matt LaFleur said last week that they weren’t anticipating quite as much man as they got early in the game and had to make some adjustments. There’s no question, as a coaching staff, all of us, we have to be on our Ps and Qs and just make sure we’re able to respond if he’s hitting them with something that we weren’t necessarily prepared for.”

On his relationship with Vikings Defensive Coordinator Brian Flores: “I knew of him because he’s a Boston College guy and that’s where I did my GA spot, and of course he’s in New England and we faced across the sideline there for a couple of years. I didn’t get to know him, I met him at the Combine a couple of years ago, seems like a great guy, has a great reputation. When he took that job at Miami, he had a staff already in his head of who he wanted, so I was let go and that was that.”

On when he realized he found something in Lions T Dan Skipper and what about him makes him trust him: “Yeah, this goes back to the (Lions Head Coach) pre-(Dan) Campbell days because he was – Dan’s been in and out for a number of years here. What you notice right away was that he’s the guy that every couple of weeks was going to get into a fight during training camp and that’s really because he loves the game so much, he’s passionate about what he does, he brings all that energy and enthusiasm to the practice field every day. He only knows green light, red light. It’s stop or go and that’s what you’re going to get from him. So, when you see a guy that practices that way and loves the game like he does, once we got him on the roster, we knew that we wanted to get him out on the field because we know what he's going to bring to the table. He’s one of those glue guys, we have a number of those guys on this team that fly under the radar a little bit, but they play critical roles for us, and he certainly does that.”

On how he drowns out the media attention about his head coaching candidacy: “This is exactly where I need to be right now. I think I’ve talked about it before, there’s an obligation to the people in this building and I’m going to honor that obligation. It’s nothing but the Minnesota Vikings right now.”

On how Lions WR Jameson Williams can be considered a number one wide receiver: “He certainly has that ability. Obviously, his superpower is his speed and that’s shown up every game. Every game we’re looking to create space for him and get the ball in his hands so that he can have run after catch or get over the top of the defense and what we’ve seen from training camp until now is other parts of the game develop. Have a lot more trust in his route tree, that’s really grown over the course of the season, we try to challenge him with some new things every week that maybe he hasn’t done quite yet and I’m really excited to see how that expands. A full offseason of spring, training camp, healthy, no outside noise would continue his development in a good way.”

On how the run game evolved with Lions RB Jahmyr Gibbs and Lions RB Craig Reynolds through two games without Lions RB David Montgomery: “Yeah, both of those guys have done a great job for us. (Lions RB Jermar) Jefferson got some burn too and same with (Lions RB Sione) Vaki, we really like that rotation right now and honestly, it hasn’t really changed how we approach the run game in terms of schematics. We felt all year long that Gibby and D-Mo are equally successful doing the same things and that really hasn’t changed our mindset the last couple of games. So, hopefully we continue that trend, and both of those guys play big roles for us, Craig and Gibby.”

On if defenses have changed with Lions RB Jahmyr Gibbs carrying more of the load: “I have not seen that, maybe, I have not seen that quite as much. Each week we do something a little bit different with him, maybe from the backfield or extend him out wide, but that’s kind of been the theme all year long. Didn’t see anything from San Fran that was anything different than we expected.”

On how much of Lions QB Jared Goff’s ability under pressure is him or the play design: “The guy was a number one pick for a reason. He’s been super talented throwing the football and here he is entering year nine and he’s got all of these banked reps from L.A. and now Detroit and they all add up. The defense is moving slower, he knows where his eyes need to go, he knows what he’s trying to do. We’re really aggressive at times with what we put on his plate, and he doesn’t bat an eye, really, he embraces it. He came in this morning, he’s like, ‘Hey, load me up. I’m ready to go.’ So, that’s what we try to do and it’s a credit to him that he really wants to be able to control all – he’s playing so well post-snap, and you guys are seeing that, that there’s not enough appreciation for what he does before the snap with the cadence, the motions, the shifts, the premiere plays that we try to get into at times. That’s what really, I think, makes our offense special.”

On how important Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown is to be an option when Lions QB Jared Goff is under pressure: “The stress, obviously, is on the unit up front, the O-line, the running backs when we face a team like this. I think the big completion to Saint that you’re talking about, (Lions T) Penei (Sewell) had a hell of a block on that one. So, really as long as we can buy him enough time, he’s doing a nice job finding those outlets and Saint has found a way to be that guy over the last couple of years. So, it’ll take all hands on deck though with this crew. I know he’ll throw something at us that we haven’t seen.”

On how important intelligence is across the entire offense: “We do it because we can. That’s why this offense is the way it is, is because we have smart players. We have a veteran offensive line that’s played a lot of ball, we have a quarterback that can handle a lot on his plate and we’ve got good, smart perimeter guys that are willing to block and do all of the dirty work and prepare during the course of the week. I’m so fortunate as a coordinator because when you have that, now you take the governor off and you can do almost anything that you want to do. And it’s not like that at every place. I’ve been a number of places, a number of different offenses and coordinators and we just couldn’t push it to this level and that’s a credit to the guys, that has nothing to do with us as a coaching staff. But we’ll push it as long as we think it’s sound and it can help them out, we’ll push it to the limit.”

On what is clicking with Lions TE Sam LaPorta: “I’ll have to go back at the end of the year and look at why it didn’t click sooner. I really felt like early in the year we were going to have some of the games that he’s had over the last few. I know that he’s feeling as healthy as he has all year long, he’s playing confident football right now. I know (Lions QB) Jared (Goff) has a lot of faith in him. I certainly felt that way earlier in the year too, so I can’t tell you why it’s different now than it was before but we’ve always seen him as an integral part of what we do in the passing game and the ball seems to just be finding it’s way there right now.”

Vehicle overturns after sliding off roadway in Green Township

On Friday, Jan. 3 at 6:12 A.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office were dispatched to Hoover Rd. and 190th Ave. in Green Township regarding a single vehicle accident.

It was found the vehicle was heading westbound on Hoover Rd., when it lost control on the snowy roadway. The vehicle then went off the side of the roadway and overturned. The 53-year-old-male driver from Big Rapids was transported for non-life threatening injuries via EMS.

Deputies were assisted by Big Rapids City Rescue/Fire, Mecosta County EMS, and Meceola Central Dispatch.  

Northern Michigan lawmakers call for firings after DNR sells out to solar farm industry

State Reps. Ken Borton (Gaylord) and Mike Hoadley (Au Gres) and State Sen. Michele Hoitenga (Manton) called for mass firings within the Department of Natural Resources on Thursday in light of a reported DNR plot to destroy more than 400 acres of forest. The plot, located just west of Gaylord, was to be cleard for development of solar farms.

The legislators said that any person involved in this decision should be fired, arguing that this proposal was made in complete contrast to the DNR’s responsibility to protect Michigan’s wildlife and forests.

“Mind-numbing decisions like this are absolute proof that the DNR is completely rotten to its core,” said Borton. “This deforestation will destroy habitats and effectively kill wildlife. Let me make that clear, the DNR is choosing to kill wildlife so they can build solar panels. We’ve all read the Lorax. If he thought like the DNR, he’d only be speaking for trees for as long as it took to fill his chainsaw with gas after the solar industry waved a fat wad of cash in his face.”

The legislators questioned whether the DNR even had the authority to lease public land for private use, especially when that decision leads to the destruction of wildlife and forests.

“The people who made this absurd decision signed up for a job to protect our natural resources. Their department is supposed to stand up for outdoor enthusiasts; instead, they sold us out,” said Hoitenga. “Just as the state rightfully holds citizens accountable for their use of unethical conservation actions—likewise, people are demanding accountability from the government for their unethical conservation management practices.”

In fall 2023, legislative Democrats rammed through radical green energy legislation mandating 100% “clean” energy by 2040, closing reliable natural gas plants and increasing dependence on less reliable wind and solar power. An expert analysis projects that average monthly electric bills could nearly double because of the new laws.

The plan also gave the Michigan Public Service Commission, a three-member panel of state bureaucrats, authority to approve green energy projects, taking away local communities’ discretion over the placement of wind turbines and solar farms.

“It was clear that Democrat-backed laws enacted during the most recent term would strip local control and lessen local input when it came to these decisions,” said Hoadley. “Unfortunately, we are seeing the results of that with this project that’s being forced onto northern Michigan. Rural areas were always going to bear the brunt of this government overreach, even when a lot of rural areas don’t want these projects and their elected officials voted against bills that pushed them. What good is so-called green energy when we’re cutting down hundreds of acres of trees to put in the infrastructure that will support it?”

The plot is located in Otsego County.

Two Mecosta County men arrested in connection with Sand Lake bank robbery

The Kent County Sheriff’s Office have arrested and charged a 25-year-old man and a 19-year-old man from Mecosta County in connection with a bank robbery.

The robbery, which took place at the Independent Bank in Sand Lake, occurred back on Dec. 30, 2024 around 12:00 P.M.. The amount of money taken during the robbery was reported to be $335, with the robbers describing the bank as a "small-town, easy way to escape" according to records.

These arrests were made possible through the collaborative efforts of the Newaygo County Sheriff’s Office's Emergency Response Team and the Mecosta County Sheriff’s Office.

75-year-old taken to hospital after speeding through curve and colliding with tree

On Thursday, Jan. 2 at approximately 12:09 P.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff’s Office were dispatched to a one-vehicle crash on Northland Dr. near 4 Mile Rd. 

It was found that a 75-year-old male from Stanwood was traveling northbound and went around a curve too fast. The car went off the roadway and collided with a tree. The driver was transported to Grand Rapids Butterworth Hospital for non-life-threatening injuries. 

The Mecosta County Sheriff’s Office were assisted by, Mecosta County EMS, Morley Fire and Rescue, Frontline Towing, and Meceola Central Dispatch. 

WEATHER ALERT: Winter Weather Advisory in effect for up to five inches of expected snowfall for West Michigan counties

A Winter Weather Advisory will be in effect for five local counties until Friday, Jan. 3 at 7:00 P.M. due to expected snow accumulations between two and five inches.

The expected timeframe for the winter weather will be from 12:00 A.M. until 7:00 P.M. on Friday. Counties listed in the advisory, as of Thursday afternoon, includes Kent, Lake, Missaukee, Newaygo, and Wexford.

Please plan on slippery road conditions for Friday morning and evening commutes. For hourly WeatherEye forecasts, listen in at the top of the hour on NewsRadio WBRN via 96.5 FM, 107.7 FM, 1460 AM, WBRN.com, and the WBRN mobile app.

BREAKING: Mecosta County Board of Commissioners rescind support for Gotion factory

The newly elected Mecosta County Commissioners met for the first time in 2025 on Thursday, in which they went right to business regarding a hot topic in the community: support for the Gotion Battery Factory.

The meeting began with nominations for the Commission Chair position, in which Chris Zimmerman was voted in favor of. Zimmerman then shortly after motioned to move a resolution for Gotion ahead into new business items, which was passed.

Following discussion from multiple board members, a vote was requested to adopt an opposing stance towards the proposed factory. The accepted resolution passed by a vote of 5-2, leading to cheers and claps from several attendees in the crowd. Voting yes was Chris Zimmerman, Greg Adams, Jeff Jackson, Tom O’Neil, and Gary Lambrix. Voting no was Bill Routley and Chris Jane.

“When I decided to run for county commissioner, it was the Gotion issue that got me off the sidelines,” Zimmerman said in a statement. “When 92 percent of Mecosta residents oppose the Chinese battery plant in our community, the board of commissioners should have listened. When our congressman says there are security concerns with China and our community, the board of commissioners should have reversed their approval of the project.”

Other business items from the Jan. 2 agenda included two new budgeted cars for the County Sheriff’s Office, the EMS fee schedule for 2025, and recognition for the Ferris State Football National Championship. There was also discussion about changing meeting times moving forward in 2025, which was heavily commented by the public audience in favor of later times for easier attendance.

More information regarding the meeting’s agenda and the commissioners can be found at https://www.mecostacounty.org/government/boc.php.

Detroit Lions Head Coach Dan Campbell Quote Sheet: 1/2/25

LIONS HEAD COACH DAN CAMPBELL QUOTE SHEET

January 1, 2025

Opening Statement: “Real good opponent we’re getting ready to face here. They’re well-coached, got a lot of good players – lot of good players and they create issues, really, in all three phases that we’re going to need to be prepared for, but it’s a challenge we’re looking forward to. So, like I said after the game, these are exciting times, to be able to play in these types of games, so we’re looking forward to it.”

On why they did not go for two after they scored a touchdown at the end of the game at San Francisco: “Yeah, I ordinarily would’ve, I just chose not to. But yeah, normally I’d go for two. Yeah, I would normally, so you won’t have to worry about it moving forward. Ordinarily, yes.”

On what he respects about Vikings Head Coach Kevin O'Connell: “Yeah, listen, he’s an excellent coach. I mean, you look at what he’s done, now, going on three years, he – their offensive scheme is – they do a great job, man. Very creative and they understand how to find weaknesses and pick at them, get the most out of their players, put their players in position to have success. I think sometimes it’s – when you have a player like (Vikings WR Justin) Jefferson, it’s, ‘Well, you’ve got Jefferson.’ So you – but it’s not always that easy because everybody’s trying to – you’re trying to double him, you’re trying to do your best to take him away, and for them, he’s your best player, so you still have to find ways to get him involved and get him in the game so that he helps you, and they do a really good job of that. They move him around, Jefferson’s smart as well as everything else, he can handle all that. And so, that’s just a couple things they do. I like what they do in the run game as well, and then he’s just – you can’t argue with the production of this team, what they’ve done. Had some tough games last year, they had some injuries and they were able to battle through it and finish with a positive – on a positive note just for the season itself, and to get through that and come back battling this year – and he’s made the most out of that personnel, man they’ve got really good personnel and they’re playing at a high level.”

On if there is any time this week where he can appreciate the magnitude of the game against Minnesota: “I mean, I don’t know. Like I said, we’re all excited, I mean, this is exciting, but it’s not like it’s the playoffs. So yeah, for where we’re at it’s the next one and it is exciting, but it’s – we all know it’s still going to come down to the prep and we’ve got to put the work in. It’s going to start today, we’ll be out there in walkthrough, and then, man, you put your best foot forward and you give your guys all you can, you cut them loose and let them go make plays and see where you stack up. So, that’s the exciting part.”

On if the game against Minnesota is not as big because both teams will play in the playoffs: “Yeah, well I don’t – I mean, I just think it is what it is. I mean, it’s – I don’t know, I don’t know how to answer it really. I mean, yeah, it’s big, it’s great, but it’s like – yeah, it is what it is.”

On at what point they set the goal of being the one seed in the NFC and what it would mean to clinch the one seed: “Well, I mean I think that was really – that was the end of last year. You come out of that game and feel like it gives you the best odds to get to where the ultimate is, which is, as well all know what the prize is, and that’s the Super Bowl, well, you just – you try to set yourself up the best you can and that’s why you put those goals out there. So yeah, it’s been there for a while, so certainly this is something we want to do and we’ve had in our minds – division and one seed and all that, and it’s right here in our hands.”

On if there is a chance that Lions LB Alex Anzalone can play this week: “He’ll be out there running around today, so we’ll see how he does. It’s really going to be how he – tomorrow’s going to be, I think, a really big day for us to see where he’s at.”

On what it is about Lions QB Jared Goff’s personality that has allowed him to make the strides that he has made this season: “Well, I would say he’s a student of the game and he – he’s a student of the game, he’s student of what we’re doing offensively, he’s a student of defenses, so he puts in the legwork. And then, he constantly – I think with anybody, he wants to learn the next thing, he absorbs everything, and I think he’s always looking for the next, ‘If I see something, what can I use and put it into my game?’ Or, ‘Is this something we can us?’ Where can he grow as a quarterback? I think he’s always thinking that way like, ‘Can I be better with my eyes, do I need to progress faster here, can I see things a tick quicker?’ So I just think it’s – man it’s time on task, it’s his ability to process, and I think it’s just that he just wants to continue to learn and grow, and I think that most successful people, no matter what you do, they’re always trying to learn and grow, and he’s obviously got the skillset to be able to do what he does and play at a high level. He’s an accurate passer, big arm, so he just keeps going, man. He just continues to get better.”

On what the mindset of the defense is after giving up more points than they would like but still coming up with big plays in critical moments at San Francisco: “Yeah, it’s to reload and go back to work and execute this plan that we have for these guys and find a way to get some takeaways and make plays. I mean, it’s really that simple and we came up with two critical takeaways in that game that were big for us. So, as with anything, are there things we want to clean up? Yeah, but (Lions Defensive Coordinator Aaron Glenn) AG’s got a good plan, guys will be ready for this. We know the challenge, I mean, we just talked about it. I mean, this quarterback’s playing at high level and you’ve got (Vikings WR Justin) Jefferson over there, (Vikings WR Jordan) Addison’s playing well, (Vikings WR Jalen) Nailor’s making some plays, (Vikings TE T.J.) Hockenson, now that he’s back, is making some plays, it’s a solid offensive line, smart crew, they do a good job up front, play hard, and you’ve got (Vikings RB Aaron) Jones (Sr.) in the backfield who – he can run it, he’s also good out of the backfield as a receiver. So, we know we’ve got our hands full but, there again, it’s something we look forward to. These are the types of challenges you want, this is what you do it for.”

On how freeing it is to know that they went undefeated on the road this season given the possibility that they may have to play on the road in the playoffs: “Yeah, I mean, I think that – look, we’re very comfortable on the road, and I’ve said it before, I think that’s just – that comes with your preparation, time on task, guys doing it for a long period of time, the way we train, guys – they just handle those things well. So yeah, I’m – hey, we’ll do what we’ve got to do. Now our mindset is wholly on this game right now, and it’s – you don’t see it another way, I don’t see it another way. It’s about this next game and it’s about finding a way to win, no different than what we just did, we had to find a way to win that game, San Francisco, against a team that really – they gave us what they had and they played hard. We had to do it in Chicago the week before, so it’s the next one in front of us, and we’ve got to find a way to win this game, period, and really don’t care what it looks like, we’ve just got to win.”

On how the last few games and weeks have prepared them for the game against Minnesota on Sunday: “Well, I mean, I think I mentioned this, and maybe it was why my response was the way it was earlier, was that I mentioned this – what was it, after Buffalo? I don’t know, but I feel like we’ve, somewhat, been in the playoffs for a while now. I mean, we’ve been in it for three games now or something, so that’s kind of what this last stretch has been. Just the type of – the way we’re going to have to play, and it’s more about finding a way to win, and that’s really the objective here, is do what we’ve got to do, put our guys in position to make plays and find a way to win, no matter what it looks like, and we’ve been in that mode for a few weeks now, and same thing this week.”

On if it is taxing to have to play games like they are playoff games for that long: “No, I mean, I think you do what you’ve got to do, and we’re going to do what we have to do to give us the best chance to win.”

On how much of an advantage the atmosphere at Ford Field being like a playoff game can be for them this week: “Yeah, we – look, we always look forward to that. I mean, our fans are – we’ve got the best fans in the League, and so, look, it’s the whole reason you talk about the one seed because you feel like you’ve got an advantage when you play at home, and not everybody can say that, we can because we do. The way our fans and our stadium are set up, it’s a special environment, so I look forward to it, we’re looking forward to it.”

Passenger taken to the hospital after car slides into the ditch near Barryton

On Wednesday, Jan. 1, the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office responded to an accident located on Coolidge Rd at 20th Ave. in Barryton.

The investigation found that the male driver, who is from Barryton, was distracted and slid through the intersection of Coolidge Rd. and 20th Ave. This led to his vehicle colliding with the ditch. The female passenger in the vehicle was transported by Mecosta County EMS to McLaren Hospital in Mount Pleasant for minor injuries. The male driver was not injured in the incident.

The Mecosta County Sheriff's Office was assisted by Meceola Central Dispatch, Barryton Fire Department, and Mecosta County EMS.

WEATHER ALERT: Special Weather Statement issued for snowfall, potential slushy and icy roads through Thursday morning

A Special Weather Statement has been issued by the National Weather Service office in Grand Rapids due to reduced visibility and potentially hazardous road conditions.

Reports state the potential of snowfall continuing this afternoon through the evening for up to one to three inches of accumulation. Reduced visibilities and slushy accumulations, especially on overpasses and elevated surfaces, will be likely for travel Wednesday evening and Thursday morning. Temperatures will also fall this evening below freezing, resulting in any untreated surface to become icy.

The statement was issued at 1:08 P.M. and will be in effect locally for Clare, Isabella, Kent, Lake, Mecosta, Montcalm, Newaygo, and Osceola Counties until Thursday, Jan. 2 at 1:00 P.M.

 

Female driver injured after deer crashes through vehicle's windshield

On Tuesday, Dec. 24 at 2:18 P.M., Mecosta County deputies were dispatched to a single vehicle accident on US-131 near mile marker 125.

Following an initial investigation, it was found that a 26-year-old female from Traverse City was travelling northbound and struck a deer in the roadway. The deer the went through the windshield of the vehicle and injured the driver.

The driver was transported to the Big Rapids Corewell Health Hospital for minor injuries. Deputies were assisted by Meceola Central Dispatch, Mecosta County EMS, and Morley Fire and Rescue. 

BREAKING: Shot fired in Bulldog Square Tuesday afternoon

On Tuesday, Dec. 31 at approximately 4:30 P.M., deputies from the Mecosta County Sheriff's Office responded to a shot being fired at a business in the Bulldog Square complex.

Initial reports say the projectile went through the wall of a business while it was occupied and opened at the time of the incident. Luckily, there were no injuries at the business.

After investigation, the shooter has been identified and the gun has been recovered.

The incident remains under investigation however there is no current danger to the public regarding this incident. Thank you for the public’s information.

If anyone has information regarding this incident please contact the Mecosta County Sheriff’s Office at 231-592-0150 or tips@mecostasheriff.org.

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