Detroit city employees and private-sector workers gained expanded access this month to stress-management programs tied directly to state labor rules, with several downtown offices now offering on-site counseling referrals through the Detroit Health Department.
The shift follows a 2025 regional survey that found 62 percent of workers along the Woodward corridor reported chronic stress tied to long commutes and production targets, prompting local unions and the Detroit Regional Chamber to push for faster implementation of existing employee-assistance mandates.
Rights under Michigan law
State rules require employers with 50 or more staff to provide reasonable accommodations for mental-health conditions, including flexible scheduling that can reduce daily stress loads. Workers in the Corktown and Eastern Market districts have started using these provisions to request shorter shifts during peak summer heat, according to filings reviewed at the Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity office on West Fort Street.
Detroiters who believe their requests were denied can file complaints at the same Fort Street location or through the city’s employee-relations hotline, which logged 340 calls in the first half of 2026.
Local programs within reach
The Detroit Wayne Integrated Health Network runs free 45-minute stress-management workshops every Thursday at its Midtown clinic on Mack Avenue, with the next session set for July 17. Participants can also access the network’s 24-hour crisis line without an appointment.
Henry Ford Health’s employee-assistance program, based at its New Center campus on West Grand Boulevard, offers six confidential counseling sessions at no cost to workers from partner companies; the program reported serving 1,180 Detroit residents in the past fiscal year.
Both organizations accept walk-ins and maintain updated lists of neighborhood therapists who take most major insurance plans accepted in Wayne County.
Staff at the Detroit Public Library’s main branch on Woodward Avenue can print resource packets that list these programs along with contact numbers for MIOSHA inspectors who handle workplace complaints.
Employees who begin using the services this summer are encouraged to track session dates and any schedule changes they request, which creates a record if further accommodations become necessary later in the year.