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Senate panel takes testimony on renewed policies seeking accountability from Michigan polluters

Senate panel takes testimony on renewed policies seeking accountability from Michigan polluters

Yahoo11-06-2025

Sen Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor) testifies on a slate of bills aimed at improving polluter accountability during a June 11, 2025 meeting of the Senate Energy and Environment Committee. | Kyle Davidson
Lawmakers from the state House and Senate called for an update to Michigan's laws on environmental contamination on Wednesday, arguing the current system does not offer enough protections for individuals impacted by pollution.
Testifying before the Senate Energy and Environment Committee, Sens. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor), Sue Shink (D-Northfield Township), and Stephanie Chang (D-Detroit), as well as Rep. Jason Morgan (D-Ann Arbor), underscored how the state's current regulations have impacted Michigan residents, arguing that they focus too heavily on limiting exposure rather than cleaning up pollution, leaving Michiganders to bear the costs.
Last week, members of the House and Senate announced they would be reintroducing 'polluter pay' legislation in each chamber, with House Democrats introducing H.B. 4636–4640 and Senate Democrats introducing S.B. 385–387 and S.B. 391–393.
'Some people are calling for a restoration of a model that requires strict liability and full residential cleanups on every site. In fact, I proposed legislation like that in the past. But that's not what is being proposed today,' Irwin said. 'What is being proposed today is a modest change that preserves the current risk-based system, but that makes modest changes to improve protections for our water, improve protections for our land and improve protections for our health.'
As a whole, the package aims to implement stricter pollution reporting and cleanup requirements, extend the statute of limitations for citizens bringing claims against polluters and allow residents impacted by pollution to sue companies for the cost of medical monitoring, Irwin explained.
With more than 25,000 polluted sites across the state and 4,603 sites with land or resource controls, Irwin questioned how many aquifers the state is willing to give up to pollution.
He also warned the panel that industry lobbyists would testify against these additional measures, arguing they would harm investment in Michigan business.
'Not only do I think that's not true, but we developed these bills in consultation with industry stakeholders,' Irwin said, noting that the sponsors had held workgroup meetings on the policies introduced during the previous Legislative session. The end result was more modest, but would still provide real benefits to the public, Irwin said.
Andrea Pierce, policy director for the Michigan Environmental Justice Coalition and founder of the Anishinaabek Caucus said these laws are the beginning step in addressing environmental contamination in Michigan, not the end.
Should these bills become law, Michigan would return to the pollution accountability standard it had before the state's polluter pay law was restructured in 1995, Pierce said.
'We need to go back to stronger laws that protect the people and communities of Michigan. Michigan needs a comprehensive legal framework for strengthening accountability and real recourse from those who pollute in our communities,' Pierce said, emphasizing that Michigan's most marginalized communities were also the ones most affected by pollution.
Mike Witkowksi, director of environmental and regulatory policy for the Michigan Manufacturers Association argued shifting the system to require more from businesses would hinder the state's brownfield redevelopment efforts.
'These are not technical fixes or minor clarifications. These are fundamental changes that would undermine one of Michigan's most effective tools for addressing environmental contamination and supporting economic growth,' Witkowksi said, criticizing the additional requirements and arguing the package would increase clean up costs and liabilities for businesses.
During his testimony earlier in the hearing, Irwin predicted industry stakeholders would argue that the legislation would hamper redevelopment by requiring polluted sites to be restored to pristine condition.
'That's not what this bill does,' Irwin said, arguing that pollution already hampers redevelopment efforts.
With the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy lacking both the funding and the personnel to address the thousands of contaminated sites throughout the state, Witkowski said private-sector investors and developers are essential to cleaning up contamination throughout the state. Should these bills take effect, those sites would sit idle and remain polluted, he argued.
Shink countered, noting that she'd served on Washtenaw County's brownfield redevelopment board during her time as a county commissioner.
'I can assure you that it isn't just private funds that's cleaning up these brownfield sites. There's a lot of public funds. That means the taxpayers, after the company has made its profit and maybe taken that profit out of state, the community is paying to clean that up,' Shink said, noting that the state is paying to clean up the former Federal Screw Works site in Washtenaw County.
Alongside testimony from several environmental advocacy groups, the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy also offered its support for the package with Aaron Keatley, the department's chief deputy director, noting that the bills aligned with their priorities for environmental legislation.
Those priorities include transparency, ensuring predictable processes, securing assurances that companies will manage any releases of contaminants until the contamination is cleaned up, ensuring sites are redeveloped and streamlining the department's cleanup criteria so that the standards match the science, Keatley said.
'It is unfortunate that I look at you and I say I cannot tell you how many sites right now are managed by responsible parties, because they're not obligated to inform me of their day to day activities to keep that property safe,' Keatley said.
The committee did not take votes on the legislation.
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A Dec. 9, 2019, news release (archived) from Walz's office announced a list of appointees to the board, and Boelter was one of them. His appointment was set to end on Jan. 2, 2023. The most recent board meeting minutes Snopes could find that included his name were from Oct. 26, 2022. Walz replaced him on the board with someone else in March 2023. However, Boelter's 2019 appointment by Walz was reportedly a reappointment. Boelter was first appointed in 2016 by former Gov. Mark Dayton (like Walz, a Democrat), according to The Minnesota Star Tribune. Dayton was elected in 2011 and left office in 2019, when Walz took over. The Daily Beast shared an appointment letter signed by Walz that was archived on the state of Minnesota's website. Snopes contacted the Governor's Workforce Development Board staff, which declined to comment. A spokesperson for Walz's office replied, providing more context regarding the board appointments (more on this later). Workforce Development Boards exist across localities in the U.S. Their role is to cultivate talent, linking it to economic growth, and to develop strategic plans to set funding priorities. For example, they might advise on training for a local workforce to meet the needs of companies investing locally. The Star Tribune further reported, citing an unnamed board member, that while Boelter served as the appointee of two successive Democratic governors, the board is bipartisan. The Minnesota Star Tribune reported in another article that Boelter had registered to vote as a Republican and, citing his roommate David Carlson, that he had last voted for U.S. President Donald Trump, a Republican. It also appeared, according to various reports, that Boelter was an evangelical Christian and staunchly opposed to abortion. In addition, according to the Star Tribune, while it's true Walz had reappointed Boelter to the board, he did not know him personally, according to an unnamed source in Walz's office (a detail Snopes has not independently verified). The governor's office is in charge of appointing hundreds of people to various advisory boards and commissions. Snopes found the Workforce Development Board included 58 members as of this writing. These various boards do not have the power to legislate. "These are unpaid, nonpartisan, external boards that the legislature creates and the Governor does not interview applicants for," the spokesperson for Walz said in an emailed statement. "They are not appointments to a position in the Governor's cabinet. They also have no authority to make decisions, change laws, or implement policies." Chapman, Isabelle, et al. "What We Know about the Minnesota Shooting Suspect." CNN, 15 June 2025, Accessed 16 June 2025. Faircloth, Ryan, et al. "Suspect Showed Few Signs of Political Extremism before Lawmaker Shootings." 16 June 2025, Accessed 16 June 2025.. "Governor's Workforce Development Board - Minutes." 26 Oct. 2022, Accessed 16 June 2025. and "Friends Say Minnesota Shooting Suspect Was Deeply Religious and Conservative." AP News, 15 June 2025, Accessed 16 June 2025. "Members / Governor's Workforce Development Board." Governor's Workforce Development Board, 2025, Accessed 16 June 2025. "On June 14, Champlin Police Responded to an Early Morning Shooting Involving a State Legislator." Champlin, MN, 2025, Accessed 16 June 2025. Orenstein, Walker, and Walker Orenstein. "Fact Check: Was Suspected Assassin Boelter Close with MN Gov. Walz? No." 15 June 2025, Accessed 16 June 2025. "Walz, Flanagan Announce Appointments." Office of Governor Tim Walz and Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan, 22 Mar. 2023, Accessed 16 June 2025. "Walz, Flanagan Announce Appointments to the Governor's Workforce Development Board." Office of Governor Tim Walz and Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan, 9 Dec. 2019, Accessed 16 June 2025.

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