logo
GOP Lawmakers Advance Bills to Restore Local Zoning Control Over Green Energy Projects

GOP Lawmakers Advance Bills to Restore Local Zoning Control Over Green Energy Projects

Epoch Times24-04-2025

Michigan state House Republicans have put forward a pair of bills designed to return zoning and land use decisions about proposed green energy projects to local communities.
HB
None of the seven Democrats on the committee responded to requests for comment by publication time.
In 2023, shortly after the Democrats took control of both chambers of the state Legislature in the 2022 midterms, they approved legislation that transferred most of the approval process for all proposed large-scale windmill and solar farms to the Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC), a three-member panel appointed by Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat.
The zoning change was part of the Clean Energy and Jobs Act, which
Republicans regained the majority in the House in the November 2024 election and immediately sought to reverse the zoning provision.
Related Stories
11/27/2024
9/16/2024
House Speaker Pro Tem Rachelle Smit (R-Martin) in an April 22
Whitmer did not respond to a request for comment by publication time.
Rep. Greg Alexander (R-Carsonville), the main sponsor of the bills, said in an April 22
'Local governments and residents know their areas better than the state. … When unelected state bureaucrats come in, cast local input aside, and impose projects on communities, it's a textbook example of government overreach,' Alexander said.
According to Alexander, currently, green energy project applications can bypass local zoning ordinances and be taken directly to the MPSC for a certificate of approval to begin construction.
The Energy Committee
On record opposing the bills were the Michigan Public Service Commission, the Sierra Club and other environmental groups, several labor unions, the Solar Energy Industries Association and other green energy companies, and the League of Women Voters.
Michigan State Rep. Greg Alexander, R-Carsonville.
Courtesy of Michigan House Republicans
About 17,000 acres of rural Michigan are occupied by wind and solar energy operations.
Three counties in Alexander's district in eastern Michigan's Thumb Area—Huron, Tuscola, and Sanilac—contain nearly 60 percent of the wind turbines in the state.
With more wind and solar projects in the pipeline, Alexander said he was worried 'they will change the entire landscape of the region' and 'impact property values, small business viability, available farmland, and many other elements of a community.'
'The community should be able to make that decision for itself,' he said.
Thumb area resident and Worth Township Supervisor Walt Badgerow, a Republican, told The Epoch Times that the 2023 policy change was 'an egregious violation of civil rights and a blatant evasion of accountability.'
'We the people can vote out our local officials if they are not representing the community's best interest. We can't do anything to hold the Michigan Public Service Commission accountable.'
Badgerow, who is also a member of the Sanilac County Board of Health, cited the possible leaching over time of toxic chemicals from solar panels as a legitimate local concern that could be aired more easily at the town hall than at the MPSC offices in Lansing.
'I absolutely support the bills, but I'm not sure they will clear the Democrat-controlled Senate or be signed by the governor if they did pass,' Badgerow said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mayor Adams expected to hold re-election campaign kickoff event Thursday: ‘Major announcement'
Mayor Adams expected to hold re-election campaign kickoff event Thursday: ‘Major announcement'

New York Post

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Mayor Adams expected to hold re-election campaign kickoff event Thursday: ‘Major announcement'

Mayor Eric Adams is expected to hold a re-election campaign kickoff event Thursday, two days after the city's Democratic mayoral primaries close. Hizzoner will make a 'major announcement about the future of his re-election campaign' at the event, according to sources from his campaign. The announcement will be held on the steps of City Hall at noon and will include 'hundreds' of supporters, sources said. Mayor Eric Adams is holding an event for a 'major announcement' about his re-election bid on Thursday William Farrington Adams, 64, will be running for re-election as an independent following a tumultuous year in office, which saw him accused of corruption before the historic case was dropped by the Trump administration. He blamed the long duration of the 'bogus' case for tanking any hopes of campaigning for the primary and still insists he is a Democrat, but has been indicating a split from the party for several months. The city's Democratic primary will close Tuesday, with former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Democratic socialist Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani battling out for the nomination amidst a large field of contenders. Adams is running on the line 'safe streets, affordable city,' arguing that those are the two areas New Yorkers are most concerned about. 'Those are the issues that are important to New Yorkers,' Adams told 1010Wins in April. 'They want a safe city. They want an affordable city. And I want them to know that is what I produced for them.' An Adams aide also may have violated city laws while publicizing the Thursday event after they blasted out a message promoting it from their government email, the Daily News reported. Local law prohibits city employees from using municipal resources for 'political activity,' the city's Conflicts of Interest Board states. The aide later told the Daily News they 'accidentally' sent the message from the wrong email account while multitasking.

Who's running to replace Sen. Geraldine Thompson? Meet the candidates in Florida's district 15 race
Who's running to replace Sen. Geraldine Thompson? Meet the candidates in Florida's district 15 race

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Who's running to replace Sen. Geraldine Thompson? Meet the candidates in Florida's district 15 race

The Brief Four Democrats are vying to fill the late Sen. Geraldine Thompson's seat in a special primary election Tuesday, including Rep. LaVon Bracy Davis, her brother, former Sen. Randolph Bracy, former U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, and attorney Coretta Anthony-Smith. The race has drawn attention due to the Bracy siblings running against each other, with their mother endorsing her daughter. The winner will face Republican Willie Montague in the Sept. 2 general election. ORLANDO, Fla. - The death of State Senator Geraldine Thompson earlier this year left a notable vacancy in Central Florida politics, prompting a crowded field of candidates eager to fill her seat in the Florida Legislature. What we know A Democratic special election will be held on Tuesday with four candidates in the race: Representative LaVon Bracy Davis (Sister of Randolph Bracy) Former state Senator Randolph Bracy (Brother of LaVon Bracy Davis) Former firebrand congressman Alan Grayson Personal injury attorney Coretta Anthony-Smith This race comes with a sibling face-off between Representative LaVon Bracy Davis and former state Senator Randolph Bracy. The sibling's mother, civil rights icon LaVon Bracy, has endorsed her daughter over her son. Candidates will have to appeal to a diverse electorate spanning Orange County's urban core to its western suburbs, a region Thompson was known for fiercely advocating on behalf of. The Democratic primary will take place on Tuesday, June 24, with the special general election set for Tuesday, September 2. Dig deeper Thompson, a longtime lawmaker and champion for education, civil rights, and West Orlando communities, died in January, just weeks before the start of the 2025 legislative session. "Senator Geraldine Thompson was so much more than a dedicated public servant and visionary leader. She was a devoted wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother whose love, wisdom, and compassion shaped their lives and the lives of so many in their community and across the state," her family said in a statement following her passing. "Senator Geraldine Thompson was a true trailblazer in Florida politics. A lifelong public servant and a fighter for civil rights, her impact on Florida stretched far beyond the average elected official," the Florida Democratic Party said in a statement following her passing. Her passing marked the end of a decades-long career in public service that began in the Florida House and culminated with her return to the Senate in 2020. What's next Polls in Senate District 15 will be open Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. for the Democratic primary. The winner will advance to the Sept. 2 general election to face Republican Willie Montague, who secured his party's nomination unopposed. STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 35 ORLANDO: Download the FOX Local app for breaking news alerts, the latest news headlines Download the FOX 35 Storm Team Weather app for weather alerts & radar Sign up for FOX 35's daily newsletter for the latest morning headlines FOX Local: Stream FOX 35 newscasts, FOX 35 News+, Central Florida Eats on your smart TV The Source This story was written based on information shared by the News Service of Florida.

Senate parliamentarian rejects GOP's attempt to limit courts' contempt powers
Senate parliamentarian rejects GOP's attempt to limit courts' contempt powers

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Senate parliamentarian rejects GOP's attempt to limit courts' contempt powers

The Senate parliamentarian has ruled against a controversial provision in the Senate Republicans' megabill that would have made it significantly more difficult for courts to enforce contempt findings against the Trump administration. The parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough, ruled that limiting courts' ability to hold Trump officials in contempt violated the Senate's rules governing what can be passed with a simple-majority vote on the budget reconciliation fast track. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) hailed the parliamentarian's decision as a major victory. 'Senate Republicans tried to write Donald Trump's contempt for the courts into law — gutting judicial enforcement, defying the Constitution and bulldozing the very rule of law that forms our democracy,' Schumer said in a statement responding to the development. 'But Senate Democrats stopped them cold. We successfully fought for rule of law and struck out this reckless and downright un-American provision,' he said. The provision, tucked into the thousand-page bill House Republicans passed in May, would have required anyone suing the federal government to pay a bond before a court would be allowed to use its contempt power to enforce injunctions and other rulings. Courts have already ruled more than 190 times against the Trump administration since January. The controversial language received little notice when it came to the floor, and Rep. Mike Flood (R-Neb.) later caused an uproar at a town hall meeting when he admitted he didn't know the provision was in the legislation when he voted for it. 'If enacted, this would have been one of the most brazen power grabs we've seen in American history — an attempt to let a future President Trump ignore court orders with impunity, putting him above the law,' Schumer said Sunday afternoon. 'Donald Trump is not above the law. And thanks to Senate Democrats — including the tireless work of Senator Durbin and the Judiciary Democrats — the courts can still hold him and any president accountable,' Schumer said, referring to Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store