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On July 21, 2023, the OMB delineated eight combined statistical areas, 16 metropolitan statistical areas, and 19 micropolitan statistical areas in Michigan. [1] As of 2023, the largest of these was the Detroit-Warren-Ann Arbor, MI CSA , comprising the area surrounding Michigan's largest city, Detroit .
Michigan counts Detroit Public Schools as the only school district classified as a "first class school district". Circa 2002, due to the state government giving control of the district to the municipal government, the U.S. Census Bureau counted the Detroit district as a dependent school system, though the Census Bureau stated that it was an ...
School disturbance laws started to become integral to school discipline in the 1990s, in response to rising fears of school violence, high-profile shootings in schools (such as the Columbine High School massacre), and passage of "zero-tolerance laws" such as the Gun-Free Schools Act of 1994, following which many more police were installed in ...
See University of Michigan basketball scandal (also ). Ohio State, men: 113 games (82 regular-season and tournament wins and 31 regular-season and tournament losses) vacated covering four seasons from 1999 to 2002. See Jim O'Brien and NCAA Violations. Southern, women: 109 wins vacated, covering all results from 2009 to 2015.
St. Hope Public Schools has until Aug. 26 to address the violations and come up with a corrective action plan. If the response is unsatisfactory, the district could use information in the audit to ...
Combined statistical area (CSA) is a United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB) term for a combination of adjacent metropolitan (MSA) and micropolitan statistical areas (μSA) across the 50 U.S. states and the territory of Puerto Rico that can demonstrate economic or social linkage. CSAs were first designated in 2003.
Penalties: - three years of probation for Michigan - a fine & recruiting restrictions - one-year show-cause orders for the coaches — Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) April 16, 2024
CORRECTION (April 16, 2024, 11:20 p.m. ET): A headline on a previous version of this article misstated who was Michigan’s coach at the time of the violations. It was Jim Harbaugh, not John Harbaugh.