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This week, the Michigan League for Public Policy released its biennial Kids Count in Michigan Data Book, providing a deep dive into child well-being along four metrics: economic security, education, health and safety, and family and community. For the first time, we also included a feature on Michigan’s young adults, who have their own challenges as they make the transition from childhood to adulthood.

This year’s findings are unique because they focus on data from 2020, 2021 and 2022, when pandemic disruptions for kids and their families may have worsened outcomes on the one hand, but when large, temporary federal investments may have improved outcomes on the other.

Read more in the Michigan Advance.

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