Detroit Evening Report: Slush creates dangerous driving conditions
Jerome Vaughn December 10, 2025Updates on weather, casino revenue, proposed Michigan marijuana tax and more in this Detroit Evening Report.
Ice and rain make road conditions worsen as slush and ice forms.
Detroiters had to deal with a messy commute this morning – as snow overnight turned to rain, making a slushy mess on area roads and sidewalks. While northern suburbs received as much as five inches of snow, the city got about two inches before rain moved in.
The National Weather Service says the rain is expected to turn back into snow this evening. Temperatures will drop through the day as a cold front moves into town. Make sure to shovel your sidewalks or driveways today, because any slush will freeze tonight, with lows dropping to around 19 degrees. Highs for the rest of the week will only be in the 20s.
The Detroit Public Schools Community District closed today because of the weather. Students, teachers and staff got to stay home and all district buildings remained closed. Hundreds of other schools in metro Detroit were also closed today.
With temperatures expected to fall into the 20s over the next few days, the City of Detroit has put out a list of places where residents can warm up. The city’s 13 recreation centers will be available. Some will be open until 7 p.m.; others until 9 p.m. Detroit Public Library branches are also places where you can go to warm up.
Additional headlines from Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Detroit casino earnings rise slightly
Detroit casinos brought in just over $108 million in revenue last month. That’s up one-tenth of a percentage point from November 2024.
MGM Grand retained the top spot in Detroit with 47% of the market share. Motor City had 30%. Hollywood Casino at Greektown controlled 23% of the market.
The three casinos paid $13.2 million in taxes and development agreement payments to the City of Detroit last month. They paid another $8.6 million in taxes to the State of Michigan.
Kilpatrick wants restitution cut
Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick wants to have a federal judge reduce his restitution payments.
Kilpatrick appeared on WJR saying assets previously seized and restitution already paid should cover the remainder of what he owes the city.
The Detroit News reports Kilpatrick owed the city hundreds of thousands of dollars last year at this time. He was sentenced to 28 years in federal prison on racketeering conspiracy and other charges, but President Trump commuted his sentence in 2021.
Court refuses to block marijuana tax
A Michigan Court of Claims judge has declined to block a 24% wholesale tax on marijuana in the state less than a month before it’s scheduled to go into effect.
However, Judge Sima Patel allowed the challenge to the tax to proceed.
The Michigan Cannabis Industry Association claims the new tax is unconstitutional because it improperly alters a 2018 ballot measure that legalized the drug. Patel disagreed, writing that the new law was “another tax,” not an amendment to the ballot measure.
Detroit celebrates free “Rides to Care”
The City of Detroit is celebrating its “Rides to Care” program. Over the past year, the service has provided more than 20,000 free roundtrip rides for pregnant women and caregivers of babies up to a year old to get to medical appointments.
The goal of the program is to make it easier for those women to get to important prenatal and early childhood medical care.
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