@WWJ950 DTE should have focus group sessions with past outage retirees to see what they would have done better IF they’d had the proper tools, work environment and ideal setup.
@Reality_Slam@TomLeonard28 No. Instead they cut departments’ operating budgets by 15% each year. In early 2024 they off-loaded (bought out) another 400 employees.
@N67JC@DTE_Energy ☝🏼This!! Just be honest with the restoration estimates, not just blanket the whole service area for Monday 11:30pm. At least update the estimates when you do know more.
@Orthospherian@daverobby@GR_businessman Exactly, South Lyon is facing the same legal threat from their developer. The township residents are concerned about the impact to nearby Kensington Metropark, in addition to their groundwater and quality of life.
@ChowDownDetroit If a DTE employee comes in, send them out with some flyers. They’re always celebrating something…retirement, birthday, service anniversary, new kid.
As we showed you on our page in video a short while ago here at Michigan Storm Chasers, a fireball flamed out across parts of southern Michigan tonight. We can confirm the approximate triangulation of where the fireball flamed out courtesy of our weather camera network that caught the fireball from multiple angles.
We have 104 weather cameras set up around the state, so nothing really gets by us anymore, hence why you often see them now more than ever on social media. Like what employees at a fire tower do to triangulate a wildfire, we were able to draw viewing lines (in blue) from each of our host camera locations (red circles) to find both the direction of travel, and the last location the fireball was seen. It's likely the fireball continued traveling north in many pieces after its flare-out, but the orange hexagon in the graphic attached is the approximate area for any debris. If this fireball continued north, debris may have fallen out in Isabella, Clare, or even Missaukee/Osceola counties.
If you have reports of unknown rocks in your yard, this might just be the reason why. The fireball occurred at 10:41 pm EDT and approximately 52 seconds on June 1st, 2026, starting in Ohio/Kentucky, and burning out northwest of Lansing.
@marychelle@dokrauss@J0NB13@CrazyVibes_1 Nope, mom and dad hung house keys around our necks in the morning and told us to be home when the streetlights came on. “Fix yourself a peanut butter sandwich and change your clothes when you get home from school.”