Tracy Samilton
Energy and Transportation Reporter / ProducerTracy Samilton covers energy and transportation, including the auto industry and the business response to climate change for Michigan Public. She began her career at Michigan Public as an intern, where she was promptly “bitten by the radio bug,” and never recovered.
She took over the auto beat in January, 2009, just a few months before Chrysler and General Motors filed for bankruptcy.
Tracy’s reports can frequently be heard on Morning Edition and All Things Considered, as well as on Michigan Public.
Her coverage of Michigan’s Detroit Three automakers has taken her as far as Germany, and China. Tracy graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in English Literature.
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An annual report by the County Road Association of Michigan says road commissions in the state face an underfunding problem of $2.4 billion.
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Ann Arbor's city council is working on what it calls a "Sustainable Energy Utility," which would operate as a clean-energy supplement to DTE's electricity.
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Environmental groups are calling a carbon offset credit program available to DTE residential customers a marketing ploy, that offers only an illusion of reducing emissions from gas use in their homes. The utility defends the pilot project as one of many ways it's reducing carbon emissions.
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A now-shuttered metal plating company contaminated a drain in Macomb County last week, and a closed steel plant left corrosive chemicals in puddles in Wayne County. The incidents are leading to renewed calls for the state Legislature to pass recently introduced Polluter Pay bills.
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Activists fighting to restore long-term care for catastrophically injured car crash survivors have begun a campaign to call attention to House Committee Chair Brenda Carter's inaction on Senate bills that would restore access to many forms of longer care. "We've had enough, and we're going to start calling her out by name," the group's statement said.
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A chemical spill turned a Macomb County drain bright blue-green.
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Governors ask grid operator to "act urgently" on final approval of new high speed transmission linesOperators of the electric power grid that includes Michigan are being urged to approve a set of new high speed transmission lines "without delay."
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A University of Michigan economic forecast for the city of Detroit says the city's economic picture should brighten in multiple areas over the next few years.
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An annual report from the Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services shows consumer savings from the 2019 no-fault law. Groups are drawing very different conclusions about what the report means.
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Veolia North America, a private engineering firm that provided consulting services to the city of Flint, has agreed to pay $25 million to settle claims in a Flint Water Crisis lawsuit.