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.
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.
Republicans regained the majority in the House in the November 2024 election and immediately sought to reverse the zoning provision.
Whitmer did not respond to a request for comment by publication time.
“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.
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.
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.