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Detroit tourism seeks rebound after year lost to pandemic

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DETROIT – Timothy Tharp has owned businesses in Detroit long enough to remember when parts of downtown resembled a ghost town.

He’s also seen its resurgence with new restaurants, hotels and throngs of people since the city's emergence from bankruptcy.

Then came COVID-19 and people stopped coming. Tharp estimates his three restaurants and bars have lost a combined $1 million since March 2020.

But now as vaccinations increase and government-ordered lockdowns and restrictions are lifted, Tharpe believes the coronavirus pandemic could be remembered as just another hurdle the Motor City has overcome. “We’ve gotten used to the apocalypse over and over and over again,” said Tharp who owns Grand Trunk Pub, the Whisky Parlor and the Checker Bar in

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Founder of Philly Fighting COVID agrees to destroy personal health data collected during clinic debacle
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