STATE OF MICHIGAN
Journal of the Senate
100th Legislature
REGULAR SESSION OF 2020
Senate Chamber, Lansing, Wednesday, September
9, 2020.
10:00
a.m.
The
Senate was called to order by the Assistant President pro tempore, Senator Lana
Theis.
The roll was called by the
Secretary of the Senate, who announced that a quorum was present.
Alexander—present Horn—present Outman—present
Ananich—present Irwin—present Polehanki—present
Barrett—present Johnson—present Runestad—present
Bayer—present LaSata—present Santana—present
Bizon—present Lauwers—present Schmidt—present
Brinks—present Lucido—present Shirkey—present
Bullock—present MacDonald—present Stamas—present
Bumstead—present MacGregor—present Theis—present
Chang—present McBroom—present VanderWall—present
Daley—present McCann—present Victory—present
Geiss—present McMorrow—present Wojno—present
Hertel—present Moss—present Zorn—present
Hollier—present Nesbitt—present
Senator Jeremy Moss of the 11th
District offered the following invocation:
The reflections on the days of
difficulty and danger which are past is rendered the more sweet from a
consciousness that they are succeeded by days of uncommon prosperity and
security.
If we have wisdom to make the
best use of the advantages with which we are now favored, we cannot fail, under
the just administration of a good government, to become a great and happy
people.
The citizens of the United States
of America have a right to applaud themselves for having given to mankind examples
of an enlarged and liberal policy—a policy worthy of imitation. All possess
alike liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship.
It is now no more that toleration
is spoken of as it were the indulgence of one class of people that another
enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights, for, happily, the
government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to
persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its
protection should demean themselves as good citizens in giving it on all
occasions their effectual support.
May the children of the stock of
Abraham who dwell in this land continue to merit and enjoy the good will of
other inhabitants—while everyone shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig
tree and there shall be none to make him afraid.
May the Father of all mercies
scatter light, and not darkness, upon our paths, and make us all in our several
vocations useful here, and in His own due time and way everlastingly happy.
That was George Washington’s
letter to the Touro Synagogue of Newport, Rhode Island in 1790. Amen.
The Assistant President pro
tempore, Senator Theis, led the members of the Senate in recital of the Pledge of Allegiance.
Senators Ananich and Hertel entered the
Senate Chamber.
Motions and Communications
The following communication was
received:
Office of Senator Sean McCann
August 24, 2020
I respectfully request that my name be
added as a co-sponsor to Senate Bill 1036, introduced by Senator Hertel.
If you have any questions, please do
not hesitate to contact my office. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
Sean
McCann
State
Senator
20th
District
The communication was referred to the
Secretary for record.
The following communication was
received:
Office of Senator Stephanie Chang
September 2, 2020
Per Senate Rule 1.110(c) I am
requesting that my name be added as a co-sponsor to Senate Bill 453 which was
introduced on August 20, 2019 by Senator Wojno and was referred to the Senate
Committee on Government Operations.
Sincerely,
Senator
Stephanie Chang
District
1
The communication was referred to the
Secretary for record.
The following communication was
received:
Office of Senator Betty Jean
Alexander
September 3, 2020
Please add my name, State Senator Betty
Jean Alexander, as a cosponsor for: SB 757.
Respectfully
Requested,
Betty
Jean Alexander
Michigan
State Senator
5th
Senate District- Redford, Inkster, Garden
City, Dearborn Heights, and Detroit
The communication was referred to the
Secretary for record.
The motion prevailed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor.
Senate Bill No. 1059, entitled
A bill to amend 1927 PA 372,
entitled “An act to regulate and license the selling, purchasing, possessing,
and carrying of certain firearms, gas ejecting devices, and electro-muscular
disruption devices; to prohibit the buying, selling, or carrying of certain
firearms, gas ejecting devices, and electro-muscular disruption devices without
a license or other authorization; to provide for the forfeiture of firearms and
electro-muscular disruption devices under certain circumstances; to provide for
penalties and remedies; to provide immunity from civil liability under certain circumstances;
to prescribe the powers and duties of certain state and local agencies; to
prohibit certain conduct against individuals who apply for or receive a license
to carry a concealed pistol; to make appropriations; to prescribe certain
conditions for the appropriations; and to repeal all acts and parts of acts
inconsistent with this act,” by amending sections 2 and 2a (MCL 28.422 and
28.422a), section 2 as amended by 2015 PA 200 and section 2a as amended by
2016 PA 301.
The motion prevailed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor,
and the bill was placed on the order of General Orders.
Senator MacGregor moved that the bill
be referred to the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety.
The motion prevailed.
Senate
Bill No. 1066
Senate
Bill No. 1067
Senate
Bill No. 1068
Senate
Bill No. 1069
Senate
Bill No. 1070
Senate
Bill No. 1071
The motion prevailed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor.
Messages from the Governor
The
following message from the Governor was received:
Date: September 8, 2020
Time: 1:39 p.m.
To the President of the Senate:
Sir—I
have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 745 (Public Act No. 150), being
An
act to make, supplement, and adjust appropriations for various state
departments and agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2020; and to provide
for the expenditure of the appropriations.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on
September 8, 2020, at 2:41 p.m.)
Respectfully,
Gretchen
Whitmer
Governor
The following message from the Governor
was received on September 3, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020-175
Safeguards
to protect Michigan’s workers from COVID‑19
Rescission
of Executive Order 2020-161
Businesses
must continue to do their part to protect their employees, their patrons, and
their communities. Many businesses have already done so by implementing robust
safeguards to prevent viral transmission. But we can and must do more: no one
should feel unsafe at work. With Executive Orders 2020-91, 2020-97, 2020-114,
2020-145, and 2020-161, I created workplace standards that apply to all
businesses across the state. I am now rescinding and reissuing an amended
version of those standards to add new safeguards for sports and exercise
facilities.
The
novel coronavirus (COVID‑19) is a respiratory disease that can result in serious
illness or death. It is caused by a new strain of coronavirus not previously
identified in humans and easily spread from person to person. There is
currently no approved vaccine or antiviral treatment for this disease.
On
March 10, 2020, the Department of Health and Human Services identified the
first two presumptive-positive cases of COVID‑19 in Michigan. On that
same day, I issued Executive Order 2020-4. This order declared a state of
emergency across the state of Michigan under section 1 of article 5 of the
Michigan Constitution of 1963, the Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390,
as amended (EMA), MCL 30.401 et seq.,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended (EPGA), MCL 10.31 et seq.
Since
then, the virus spread across Michigan, bringing deaths in the thousands,
confirmed cases in the tens of thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s
economy, homes, and educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. On
April 1, 2020, in response to the widespread and severe health, economic, and
social harms posed by the COVID‑19 pandemic, I issued Executive Order
2020-33. This order expanded on Executive Order 2020-4 and declared both a
state of emergency and a state of disaster across the State of Michigan under section
1 of article 5 of the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the Emergency Management
Act, and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945. And on April 30,
2020, finding that COVID‑19 had created emergency and disaster conditions
across the State of Michigan, I issued Executive Order 2020-67 to continue the
emergency declaration under the EPA, as well as Executive Order 2020-68 to
issue new emergency and disaster declarations under the EMA.
Those executive orders have been challenged in Michigan House of Representatives and
Michigan Senate v.
Whitmer. On August 21, 2020, the Court
of Appeals ruled that the Governor’s declaration of a state of emergency, her
extensions of the state of emergency, and her issuance of related EOs clearly
fell within the scope of the Governor’s authority under the EPGA.
On
August 7, 2020, I issued Executive Order 2020-165, again finding that the COVID‑19
pandemic constitutes a disaster and emergency throughout the State of Michigan.
That order constituted a state of emergency declaration under the Emergency
Powers of the Governor Act of 1945. And, to the extent the governor may declare
a state of emergency and a state of disaster under the Emergency Management Act
when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the legislature had declined
to grant an extension request, that order also constituted a state of emergency
and state of disaster declaration under that act.
The
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act provides a sufficient legal basis for
issuing this executive order. In relevant part, it provides that, after
declaring a state of emergency, “the governor may promulgate reasonable orders,
rules, and regulations as he or she considers necessary to protect life and
property or to bring the emergency situation within the affected area under
control.” MCL 10.31(1).
Nevertheless,
subject to the ongoing litigation and the possibility that current rulings may
be overturned or otherwise altered on appeal, I also invoke the Emergency
Management Act as a basis for executive action to combat the spread of COVID‑19
and mitigate the effects of this emergency on the people of Michigan, with the
intent to preserve the rights and protections provided by the EMA. The EMA
vests the governor with broad powers and duties to “cop[e] with dangers to this
state or the people of this state presented by a disaster or emergency,” which
the governor may implement through “executive orders, proclamations, and
directives having the force and effect of law.” MCL 30.403(1)–(2). This
executive order falls within the scope of those powers and duties, and to the
extent the governor may declare a state of emergency and a state of disaster
under the Emergency Management Act when emergency and disaster conditions exist
yet the legislature has not granted an extension request, they too provide a
sufficient legal basis for this order.
Acting
under the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I find it reasonable
and necessary, for the reasons outlined above, to order:
1. Workplace
safeguards for all businesses. All businesses or operations that require
their employees to leave the homes or residences for work must, at a minimum:
(a) Develop a COVID‑19 preparedness and
response plan, consistent with recommendations in Guidance on Preparing
Workplaces for COVID‑19, developed by the Occupational Health and Safety
Administration (“OSHA”) and available here [https://www.osha.gov/Publications/OSHA3990.pdf]. Within two weeks of resuming
in-person activities, a business’s or operation’s plan must be made readily
available to employees, labor unions, and customers, whether via website,
internal network, or by hard copy.
(b) Designate one or more worksite supervisors to
implement, monitor, and report on the COVID‑19 control strategies
developed under subsection (a). The supervisor must remain on-site at all times
when employees are present on site. An on-site employee may be designated to
perform the supervisory role.
(c) Provide COVID‑19 training to employees
that covers, at a minimum:
(1) Workplace infection-control practices.
(2) The proper use of personal protective
equipment.
(3) Steps the employee must take to notify the
business or operation of any symptoms of COVID‑19 or a suspected or
confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19.
(4) How to report unsafe working conditions.
(d) Provide any communication and training on COVID‑19
infection control practices in the primary languages common in the employee
population.
(e) Place posters in the languages common in the
employee population that encourage staying home when sick, cough and sneeze
etiquette, and proper hand hygiene practices.
(f) Conduct a daily entry self-screening protocol
for all employees or contractors entering the workplace, including, at a
minimum, a questionnaire covering symptoms and suspected or confirmed exposure
to people with possible COVID‑19.
(g) Keep everyone on the worksite premises at least
six feet from one another to the maximum extent possible, including through the
use of ground markings, signs, and physical barriers, as appropriate to the
worksite.
(h) Provide non-medical grade face coverings to
their employees, with supplies of N95 masks and surgical masks reserved, for
now, for health care professionals, first responders (e.g., police officers,
fire fighters, paramedics), and other critical workers.
(i) Require face coverings to be worn when
employees cannot consistently maintain six feet of separation from other
individuals in the workplace, and consider face shields when employees cannot
consistently maintain three feet of separation from other individuals in the
workplace.
(j) Require face coverings in shared spaces,
including during in-person meetings and in restrooms and hallways.
(k) Increase facility cleaning and disinfection to
limit exposure to COVID‑19, especially on high-touch surfaces (e.g., door
handles), paying special attention to parts, products, and shared equipment (e.g.,
tools, machinery, vehicles).
(l) Adopt
protocols to clean and disinfect the facility in the event of a positive COVID‑19
case in the workplace.
(m) Make cleaning supplies available to employees
upon entry and at the worksite and provide time for employees to wash hands
frequently or to use hand sanitizer.
(n) When an employee is identified with a confirmed
case of COVID‑19:
(1) Immediately notify the local public health
department, and
(2) Within 24 hours, notify any co-workers,
contractors, or suppliers who may have come into contact with the person with a
confirmed case of COVID‑19.
(o) Allow employees with a confirmed or suspected
case of COVID‑19 to return to the workplace only after they are no longer
infectious according to the latest guidelines from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (“CDC”) and they are released from any quarantine or
isolation by the local public health department.
(p) Follow Executive Order 2020-36, and any
executive orders that follow it, that prohibit discharging, disciplining, or
otherwise retaliating against employees who stay home or who leave work when
they are at particular risk of infecting others with COVID‑19.
(q) Establish a response plan for dealing with a
confirmed infection in the workplace, including protocols for sending employees
home and for temporary closures of all or part of the workplace to allow for
deep cleaning.
(r) Restrict business-related travel for employees
to essential travel only.
(s) Encourage employees to use personal protective
equipment and hand sanitizer on public transportation.
(t) Promote remote work to the fullest extent
possible.
(u) Adopt any additional infection-control measures
that are reasonable in light of the work performed at the worksite and the rate
of infection in the surrounding community.
2. Outdoor
work. Businesses or operations whose work is primarily and traditionally
performed outdoors must:
(a) Prohibit gatherings of any size in which people
cannot maintain six feet of distance from one another.
(b) Limit in-person interaction with clients and
patrons to the maximum extent possible, and bar any such interaction in which
people cannot maintain six feet of distance from one another.
(c) Provide and require the use of personal protective
equipment such as gloves, goggles, face shields, and face coverings, as
appropriate for the activity being performed.
(d) Adopt protocols to limit the sharing of tools
and equipment to the maximum extent possible and to ensure frequent and
thorough cleaning and disinfection of tools, equipment, and frequently touched
surfaces.
3. Construction.
Businesses or operations in the construction industry must:
(a) Conduct a daily entry screening protocol for
employees, contractors, suppliers, and any other individuals entering a
worksite, including a questionnaire covering symptoms and suspected or
confirmed exposure to people with possible COVID‑19, together with, if
possible, a temperature screening.
(b) Create dedicated entry point(s) at every
worksite, if possible, for daily screening as provided in subsection (a) of
this section, or in the alternative issue stickers or other indicators to
employees to show that they received a screening before entering the worksite
that day.
(c) Provide instructions for the distribution of
personal protective equipment and designate on-site locations for soiled face
coverings.
(d) Require the use of work gloves where
appropriate to prevent skin contact with contaminated surfaces.
(e) Identify choke points and high-risk areas where
employees must stand near one another (such as hallways, hoists and elevators,
break areas, water stations, and buses) and control their access and use
(including through physical barriers) so that social distancing is maintained.
(f) Ensure there are sufficient hand-washing or
hand-sanitizing stations at the worksite to enable easy access by employees.
(g) Notify contractors (if a subcontractor) or
owners (if a contractor) of any confirmed COVID‑19 cases among employees
at the worksite.
(h) Restrict unnecessary movement between project
sites.
(i) Create protocols for minimizing personal
contact upon delivery of materials to the worksite.
4. Manufacturing.
Manufacturing facilities must:
(a) Conduct a daily entry screening protocol for
employees, contractors, suppliers, and any other individuals entering the
facility, including a questionnaire covering symptoms and suspected or
confirmed exposure to people with possible COVID‑19, together with
temperature screening.
(b) Create dedicated entry point(s) at every
facility for daily screening as provided in sub-provision (a) of this section,
and ensure physical barriers are in place to prevent anyone from bypassing the
screening.
(c) Suspend all non-essential in-person visits,
including tours.
(d) Train employees on, at a minimum:
(1) Routes by which the virus causing COVID‑19
is transmitted from person to person.
(2) Distance that the virus can travel in the air,
as well as the time it remains viable in the air and on environmental surfaces.
(3) The use of personal protective equipment,
including the proper steps for putting it on and taking it off.
(e) Reduce congestion in common spaces wherever
practicable by, for example, closing salad bars and buffets within cafeterias
and kitchens, requiring individuals to sit at least six feet from one another,
placing markings on the floor to allow social distancing while standing in
line, offering boxed food via delivery or pick-up points, and reducing cash
payments.
(f) Implement rotational shift schedules where
possible (e.g., increasing the number of shifts, alternating days or weeks) to
reduce the number of employees in the facility at the same time.
(g) Stagger meal and break times, as well as start
times at each entrance, where possible.
(h) Install temporary physical barriers, where
practicable, between workstations and cafeteria tables.
(i) Create protocols for minimizing personal
contact upon delivery of materials to the facility.
(j) Adopt protocols to limit the sharing of tools
and equipment to the maximum extent possible.
(k) Ensure there are sufficient hand-washing or
hand-sanitizing stations at the worksite to enable easy access by employees,
and discontinue use of hand dryers.
(l) Notify
plant leaders and potentially exposed individuals upon identification of a
positive case of COVID‑19 in the facility, as well as maintain a central
log for symptomatic employees or employees who received a positive test for COVID‑19.
(m) Send potentially exposed individuals home upon
identification of a positive case of COVID‑19 in the facility.
(n) Require employees to self-report to plant
leaders as soon as possible after developing symptoms of COVID‑19.
(o) Shut areas of the manufacturing facility for
cleaning and disinfection, as necessary, if an employee goes home because he or
she is displaying symptoms of COVID‑19.
5. Research
labs. Research laboratories, other than laboratories that perform
diagnostic testing, must:
(a) Assign dedicated entry point(s) or times into
lab buildings.
(b) Conduct a daily entry screening protocol for
employees, contractors, suppliers, and any other individuals entering a
worksite, including a questionnaire covering symptoms and suspected or
confirmed exposure to people with possible COVID‑19, together with, if
possible, a temperature screening.
(c) Create protocols or checklists as necessary to
conform to the facility’s COVID‑19 preparedness and response plan.
(d) Suspend all non-essential visitors.
(e) Establish and implement a plan for distributing
face coverings.
(f) Limit the number of people per square feet of
floor space permitted in a particular laboratory at one time.
(g) Close open workspaces, cafeterias, and
conference rooms.
(h) As necessary, use tape on the floor to
demarcate socially distanced workspaces and to create one-way traffic flow.
(i) Require all office and dry lab work to be
conducted remotely.
(j) Minimize the use of shared lab equipment and
shared lab tools and create protocols for disinfecting lab equipment and lab
tools.
(k) Provide disinfecting supplies and require
employees to wipe down their work stations at least twice daily.
(l) Implement
an audit and compliance procedure to ensure that cleaning criteria are
followed.
(m) Establish a clear reporting process for any
symptomatic individual or any individual with a confirmed case of COVID‑19,
including the notification of lab leaders and the maintenance of a central log.
(n) Clean and disinfect the work site when an
employee is sent home with symptoms or with a confirmed case of COVID‑19.
(o) Send any potentially exposed co-workers home if
there is a positive case in the facility.
(p) Restrict all non-essential work travel,
including in-person conference events.
6. Retail,
libraries, and museums. Retail stores that are open for in-store sales, as
well as libraries and museums, must:
(a) Create communications material for customers
(e.g., signs or pamphlets) to inform them of changes to store practices and to
explain the precautions the store is taking to prevent infection.
(b) Establish lines to regulate entry in accordance
with subsection (c) of this section, with markings for patrons to enable them
to stand at least six feet apart from one another while waiting. Stores should
also explore alternatives to lines, including by allowing customers to wait in
their cars for a text message or phone call, to enable social distancing and to
accommodate seniors and those with disabilities.
(c) Except in Regions 6 and 8, adhere to the
following restrictions:
(1) Stores of less than 50,000 square feet of
customer floor space must limit the number of people in the store (including
employees) to 25% of the total occupancy limits established by the State Fire
Marshal or a local fire marshal.
(2) Stores of more than 50,000 square feet must:
(A) Limit the number of customers in the store at
one time (excluding employees) to 4 people per 1,000 square feet of
customer floor space.
(B) Create at least two hours per week of dedicated
shopping time for vulnerable populations, which for purposes of this order are
people over 60, pregnant women, and those with chronic conditions such as heart
disease, diabetes, and lung disease.
(3) The director of the Department of Health and
Human Services is authorized to issue an emergency order varying the capacity
limits described in this subsection as necessary to protect the public health.
(d) Post signs at store entrances instructing
customers of their legal obligation to wear a face covering when inside the
store.
(e) Post signs at store entrances informing
customers not to enter if they are or have recently been sick.
(f) Design spaces and store activities in a manner
that encourages employees and customers to maintain six feet of distance from
one another.
(g) Install physical barriers at checkout or other
service points that require interaction, including plexiglass barriers, tape
markers, or tables, as appropriate.
(h) Establish an enhanced cleaning and sanitizing
protocol for high-touch areas like restrooms, credit-card machines, keypads,
counters, shopping carts, and other surfaces.
(i) Train employees on:
(1) Appropriate cleaning procedures, including
training for cashiers on cleaning between customers.
(2) How to manage symptomatic customers upon entry
or in the store.
(j) Notify employees if the employer learns that an
individual (including a customer or supplier) with a confirmed case of COVID‑19
has visited the store.
(k) Limit staffing to the minimum number necessary
to operate.
7. Offices.
Offices must:
(a) Assign dedicated entry point(s) for all
employees to reduce congestion at the main entrance.
(b) Provide visual indicators of appropriate
spacing for employees outside the building in case of congestion.
(c) Take steps to reduce entry congestion and to
ensure the effectiveness of screening (e.g., by staggering start times,
adopting a rotational schedule in only half of employees are in the office at a
particular time).
(d) Increase distancing between employees by
spreading out workspaces, staggering workspace usage, restricting non-essential
common space (e.g., cafeterias), providing visual cues to guide movement and
activity (e.g., restricting elevator capacity with markings).
(e) Prohibit social gatherings and meetings that do
not allow for social distancing or that create unnecessary movement through the
office. Use virtual meetings whenever possible.
(f) Provide disinfecting supplies and require
employees wipe down their workstations at least twice daily.
(g) Post signs about the importance of personal
hygiene.
(h) Disinfect high-touch surfaces in offices (e.g.,
whiteboard markers, restrooms, handles) and minimize shared items when possible
(e.g., pens, remotes, whiteboards).
(i) Institute cleaning and communications protocols
when employees are sent home with symptoms.
(j) Notify employees if the employer learns that an
individual (including a customer, supplier, or visitor) with a confirmed case
of COVID‑19 has visited the office.
(k) Suspend all non-essential visitors.
(l) Restrict
all non-essential travel, including in-person conference events.
8. Restaurants
and bars. Restaurants and bars must:
(a) Limit capacity to 50% of normal seating.
(b) Require six feet of separation between parties
or groups at different tables or bar tops (e.g., spread tables out, use every
other table, remove or put up chairs or barstools that are not in use).
(c) Require patrons to wear a face covering except
when seated at their table or bar top (unless the patron is unable medically to
tolerate a face covering).
(d) Require patrons to remain seated at their
tables or bar tops, except to enter or exit the premises, to order food, or to
use the restroom.
(e) Sell alcoholic beverages only via table
service, not via orders at the bar except to patrons seated at the bar.
(f) Prohibit access to common areas in which people
can congregate, dance, or otherwise mingle.
(g) Create communications material for customers
(e.g., signs, pamphlets) to inform them of changes to restaurant or bar
practices and to explain the precautions that are being taken to prevent
infection.
(h) Close waiting areas and ask customers to wait
in cars whenever possible, or else outside the restaurant or bar, for a
notification when their table is ready. Restaurants and bars should take
measures to encourage social distancing among those customers waiting for
tables who are not waiting in their cars.
(i) Close self-serve food or drink options, such as
buffets, salad bars, and drink stations.
(j) Provide physical guides, such as tape on floors
or sidewalks and signage on walls to ensure that customers remain at least six
feet apart in any lines.
(k) Post signs at store entrances informing
customers not to enter if they are or have recently been sick.
(l) Post
signs instructing customers to wear face coverings until they are seated at
their table.
(m) Require hosts, servers, and staff to wear face
coverings in the dining area.
(n) Require employees to wear face coverings and
gloves in the kitchen area when handling food, consistent with guidelines from
the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”).
(o) Limit shared items for customers (e.g.,
condiments, menus) and clean high-contact areas after each customer (e.g.,
tables, chairs, menus, payment tools).
(p) Train employees on:
(1) Appropriate use of personal protective
equipment in conjunction with food safety guidelines.
(2) Food safety health protocols (e.g., cleaning
between customers, especially shared condiments).
(3) How to manage symptomatic customers upon entry
or in the restaurant.
(q) Notify employees if the employer learns that an
individual (including an employee, customer, or supplier) with a confirmed case
of COVID‑19 has visited the store.
(r) Close restaurant immediately if an employee
shows symptoms of COVID‑19, defined as either the new onset of cough or
new onset of chest tightness or two of the following: fever (measured or
subjective), chills, myalgia, headache, sore throat, or disorders of taste or
smell, and perform a deep clean, consistent with guidance from the FDA and the
CDC. Such cleaning may occur overnight.
(s) Install physical barriers, such as sneeze
guards and partitions at cash registers, bars, host stands, and other areas
where maintaining physical distance of six feet is difficult.
(t) To the maximum extent possible, limit the
number of employees in shared spaces, including kitchens, host stands, break
rooms, and offices, to maintain at least a six-foot distance between employees.
9. Health
care. Outpatient health-care facilities, including clinics, primary care
physician offices, dental offices, and veterinary clinics, must:
(a) Post signs at entrance(s) instructing patients
to wear a face covering when inside.
(b) Limit waiting-area occupancy to the number of
individuals who can be present while staying six feet away from one another and
ask patients, if possible, to wait in cars for their appointment to be called.
(c) Mark waiting rooms to enable six feet of social
distancing (e.g., by placing X’s on the ground and/or removing seats in the
waiting room).
(d) Enable contactless sign-in (e.g., sign in on
phone app) as soon as practicable.
(e) Add special hours for highly vulnerable
patients, including the elderly and those with chronic conditions.
(f) Conduct a common screening protocol for all
patients, including a temperature check and questions about COVID‑19
symptoms.
(g) Place hand sanitizer and face coverings at
patient entrances.
(h) Require employees to make proper use of personal
protective equipment in accordance with guidance from the CDC and OSHA.
(i) Require patients to wear a face covering when
in the facility, except as necessary for identification or to facilitate an
examination or procedure.
(j) Install physical barriers at sign-in,
temperature screening, or other service points that normally require personal
interaction (e.g., plexiglass, cardboard, tables).
(k) Employ telehealth and telemedicine to the
greatest extent possible.
(l) Limit
the number of appointments to maintain social distancing and allow adequate
time between appointments for cleaning.
(m) Employ specialized procedures for patients with
high temperatures or respiratory symptoms (e.g., special entrances, having them
wait in their car) to avoid exposing other patients in the waiting room.
(n) Deep clean examination rooms after patients
with respiratory symptoms and clean rooms between all patients.
(o) Establish procedures for building disinfection
in accordance with CDC guidance if it is suspected that an employee or patient
has COVID‑19 or if there is a confirmed case.
10. In-home
services. All businesses or operations that provide in-home services,
including cleaners, repair persons, painters, and the like, must:
(a) Require their employees (or, if a sole-owned
business, the business owner) to perform a daily health screening prior to
going to the job site.
(b) Maintain accurate appointment record, including
date and time of service, name of client, and contact information, to aid with
contact tracing.
(c) Limit direct interaction with customers by
using electronic means of communication whenever possible.
(d) Prior to entering the home, inquire with the
customer whether anyone in the household has been diagnosed with COVID‑19,
is experiencing symptoms of COVID‑19, or has had close contact with
someone who has been diagnosed with COVID‑19. If so, the business or
operation must reschedule for a different time.
(e) Limit the number of employees inside a home to
the minimum number necessary to perform the work in a timely fashion.
(f) Gloves should be worn when practical and
disposed of in accordance with guidance from the CDC.
11. Personal-care
services. All businesses or operations that provide barbering, cosmetology
services, body art services (including tattooing and body piercing), tanning
services, massage services, or similar personal-care services must:
(a) Maintain accurate appointment and walk-in
records, including date and time of service, name of client, and contact
information, to aid with contact tracing.
(b) Post signs at store entrances informing
customers not to enter if they are or have recently been sick.
(c) Restrict entry to customers, to a caregiver of
those customers, or to the minor dependents of those customers.
(d) Require in-use workstations to be separated by
at least six feet from one another and, if feasible, separate workstations with
physical barriers (e.g., plexiglass, strip curtains).
(e) Limit waiting-area occupancy to the number of
individuals who can be present while staying six feet away from one another and
ask customers, if possible, to wait in cars for their appointment to be called.
(f) Discontinue all self-service refreshments.
(g) Discard magazines in waiting areas and other
non-essential, shared items that cannot be disinfected.
(h) Mark waiting areas to enable six feet of social
distancing (e.g., by placing X’s on the ground and/or removing seats in the
waiting room).
(i) Require employees to make proper use of
personal protective equipment in accordance with guidance from the CDC and
OSHA.
(j) Require employees and customers to wear a face
covering at all times, except that customers may temporarily remove a face
covering when receiving a service that requires its removal. During services
that require a customer to remove their face covering, an employee must wear a
face shield or goggles in addition to the face covering.
(k) Install physical barriers, such as sneeze
guards and partitions at cash registers, where maintaining physical distance of
six feet is difficult.
(l) Cooperate
with the local public health department if a confirmed case of COVID‑19
is identified in the facility.
12. Public
accommodations. Sports and entertainment facilities, including arenas,
cinemas, concert halls, performance venues, sporting venues, stadiums and
theaters, as well as places of public amusement, such as amusement parks,
arcades, bingo halls, bowling alleys, night clubs, skating rinks, and
trampoline parks, must:
(a) Post signs outside of entrances informing
customers not to enter if they are or have recently been sick.
(b) Encourage or require patrons to wear face
coverings.
(c) Establish crowd-limiting measures to meter the
flow of patrons (e.g., digital queuing, delineated waiting areas, parking
instructions, social distance markings on ground or cones to designate social
distancing, etc.).
(d) Use physical dividers, marked floors, signs,
and other physical and visual cues to maintain six feet of distance between
persons.
(e) Limit seating occupancy to the extent necessary
to enable patrons not of the same household to maintain six feet of distance
from others (e.g., stagger group seating upon reservation, close off every
other row, etc.).
(f) For sports and entertainment facilities, establish
safe exit procedures for patrons (e.g., dismiss groups based on ticket number,
row, etc.).
(g) For sports and entertainment facilities, to the
extent feasible, adopt specified entry and exit times for vulnerable
populations, as well as specified entrances and exits.
(h) Train employees who interact with patrons
(e.g., ushers) on how to:
(1) Monitor and enforce compliance with the
facility’s COVID‑19 protocols.
(2) Help patrons who become symptomatic.
(i) Frequently disinfect high-touch surfaces during
events or, as necessary, throughout the day.
(j) Disinfect and deep clean the facility after
each event or, as necessary, throughout the day.
(k) Close self-serve food or drink options, such as
buffets, salad bars, and drink stations.
13. Sports
and exercise facilities. Gymnasiums, fitness centers, recreation centers,
exercise facilities, exercise studios, bowling alleys, roller rinks, ice rinks,
and like facilities must:
(a) Use best efforts to provide opportunities for
patrons to exercise outdoors.
(b) Maintain accurate records, including date and
time of entry and exit, names of patrons, and contact information, to aid with
contact tracing; and deny entry to any visitor who does not provide at a
minimum their name and phone number.
(c) Mandate wearing of facial coverings at all
times except when swimming.
(d) Limit capacity in the facility to 25% of the
total occupancy limits established by the State Fire Marshal or a local fire
marshal.
(e) Configure workout stations or implement
protocols to enable six feet of distance between individuals during exercise
sessions (or six feet of distance with barriers).
(f) Reduce class sizes, as necessary, to enable at
least six feet of separation between individuals, and comply with relevant
restrictions on social gatherings and organized events in the Michigan Safe
Start Order.
(g) Provide equipment-cleaning products throughout
the facility for use on equipment.
(h) Make hand sanitizer, disinfecting wipes, soap
and water, or similar disinfectant readily available.
(i) Regularly disinfect exercise equipment,
including immediately after use. If patrons are expected to disinfect, post
signs encouraging patrons to disinfect equipment.
(j) Ensure that ventilation systems operate
properly.
(k) Increase introduction and circulation of
outdoor air as much as possible by opening windows and doors, using fans, or
other methods.
(l) Regularly
clean and disinfect public areas, locker rooms, and restrooms.
(m) Close steam rooms, saunas, jacuzzis, and cold
plunge pools.
(n) Post signs outside of entrances instructing
individuals not to enter if they are or have recently been sick.
14. Pools.
Swimming pools must:
(a) If they are outdoors, limit capacity to 50% of
the bather capacity limits described in Rule 325.2193 of the Michigan
Administrative Code;
(b) If they are indoors, limit capacity to 25% of
the bather capacity limits described in Rule 325.2193 of the Michigan
Administrative Code;
(c) Limit capacity on the pool deck to ensure that
persons not part of the same household maintain six feet of distance from one
another.
15. Meat and
poultry processing. Meat and poultry processing plants must:
(a) Conduct a daily entry screening protocol for
employees, contractors, suppliers, and any other individuals entering the
facility, including a questionnaire covering symptoms and suspected or
confirmed exposure to people with possible COVID‑19, together with
temperature screening.
(b) Create at
least one dedicated entry point at every facility for daily screening as
provided in subsection (a) of this section, and ensure physical
barriers are in place to prevent anyone from bypassing the screening.
(c) Configure communal work environments so that
employees are spaced at least six feet apart in all directions (e.g.,
side-to-side and when facing one another).
(d) Require employees to wear a face covering
whenever present at the facility, except when removal is necessary to eat or
drink.
(e) Provide clean cloth face coverings or disposable
mask options for employees to use when the coverings become wet, soiled, or
otherwise visibly contaminated over the course of a workday.
(f) Use face shields in addition to face coverings
as necessary when engineering and administrative controls are difficult to
maintain and there may be exposure to other workplace hazards, such as splashes
or sprays of liquids on processing lines
(g) Install physical barriers, such as strip
curtains, plexiglass, or other impermeable dividers or partitions, to separate
meat and poultry processing employees from each other.
(h) Take measures to ensure adequate ventilation in
work areas to help minimize employees’ potential exposures.
(i) Encourage single-file movement with a six-foot
distance between each employee through the facility.
(j) Stagger employees’ arrival, departure, break,
and lunch times to avoid congregations of employees in parking areas, locker
rooms, lunch areas, and near time clocks.
(k) Provide visual cues (e.g., floor markings,
signs) as a reminder to employees to maintain social distancing.
(l) Designate
employees to monitor and facilitate social distancing on the processing floor.
(m) Reduce processing capacity or modify the
processing or production lines or stagger workers across shifts to minimize the
number of employees in the facility at any one time.
(n) Adopt sick leave policies that discourage
employees from entering the workplace while sick and modify any incentive
programs that penalize employees for taking sick leave.
(o) Group employees together in cohorts, if
feasible, in a manner that allows a group of employees to be assigned to the
same shifts with the same coworkers, so as to minimize contacts between
employees in each cohort.
(p) If an employee becomes or reports being sick,
disinfect the workstation used and any tools handled by the employee.
(q) Provide personal protective equipment that is
disposable if possible or else, if reusable equipment is provided, ensure
proper disinfection and storage in a clean location when not in use.
16. Casinos.
Casinos must:
(a) Conduct a daily entry screening protocol for
customers, employees, contractors, suppliers, and any other individuals
entering the facility, including a questionnaire covering symptoms and
suspected or confirmed exposure to people with possible COVID‑19,
together with temperature screening.
(b) Limit and enforce patron occupancy of 15% of
total occupancy limits established by the State Fire Marshal or a local fire
marshal.
(c) Designate entry points and exit points with
extensive signage of the directional flow of patrons.
(d) Place signs at each entrance point, cage, and
throughout the casino reminding patrons of CDC guidelines for social distancing
practices, proper washing of hands, wearing face coverings, and to stay at home
if feeling ill or sick.
(e) Require patrons to wear a face covering, except
while eating or drinking or for identification purposes.
(f) Prohibit smoking indoors.
(g) Designate a Liaison Officer (or Officers),
identify such Officer (or Officers) to all casino employees, and require any
employee who believes they may have contracted COVID‑19 or been exposed
to COVID‑19 to report this to an Officer.
(h) Stagger break schedules and employee starting
and ending times to the extent possible to avoid congregation of individuals in
back-of-house areas.
(i) Provide frequent opportunities for employees to
wash and/or sanitize their hands to reduce the risk of surface transmission.
(j) In addition to the cleaning required under
subsection 1(k), clean and disinfect all high-touch objects that are accessible
to the public (e.g., ATMs, counters, door handles, elevator panels and buttons,
restrooms, dining tables, employee break rooms, carts, chairs, table rails,
trash bins, light switches, phones, kiosks, time clocks, etc.).
(k) Provide disinfecting wipes (to the extent they
are available) throughout the casino to enable patrons to disinfect frequently
touched surfaces.
(l) Place
hand sanitizer stations in high traffic areas, including throughout the casino
floor and employee break rooms.
(m) Regularly maintain their HVAC systems and
maximize the delivery of fresh air into the facility.
(n) Frequently disinfect slot machines, provide
wipe dispensaries for slot machines, and post signs encouraging patrons to wipe
down slot machines before and after use.
(o) Enable social distancing between slot machines
by either:
(1) Installing a plexiglass barrier between slot
machines.
(2) Disabling machines or removing chairs from
machines as necessary to maintain six feet of distance between machines in
operation.
(p) Require dealers and customers to wear face
coverings.
(q) Require casino employees who provide food and
drink service on the casino floor to follow the rules described in section 8,
which governs servers at restaurants, including but not limited to, the wearing
of face coverings.
(r) Close the following services or offerings:
(1) Concerts, nightclubs, live events, and shows.
(2) Valet service.
(3) Coat check.
(4) Self-serve buffets and self-serve soda and
coffee stations.
(s) Follow any infection-control guidance provided
by the Michigan Gaming Control Board, including, but not limited to, any
guidance on the conduct of table games.
17. Racetracks.
In addition to following any other applicable rules, including the gathering
restrictions of the Safe Start order (Executive Order 2020-160 or any order
that may follow from it), racetracks licensed by the Executive Director of the
Michigan Gaming Control Board must follow all orders issued by the Executive
Director for reopening and operation consistent with this order or any order
that follows from it.
18. Recordkeeping.
Employers must maintain a record of the requirements set forth in subsections
1(c) (training), 1(f) (screening protocol), and 1(n) (required notifications).
19. Effective
date and effect on other orders. This order is effective immediately upon
issuance. Executive Order 2020-161 is rescinded, except that nothing in this
order shall be construed to affect any prosecution based on conduct that
occurred before the effective date of this order. This order rescinds section 2(d)
of Executive Order 2020-153, Masks. Except as otherwise specified, nothing in
this order supersedes any other executive order.
20. Non-exclusivity.
Nothing in this order shall be taken to limit or affect any rights or remedies
otherwise available under law.
21. Penalty.
Consistent with MCL 10.33 and MCL 30.405(3), a willful violation of this order
is a misdemeanor.
Given under my hand and the Great
Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date:
September 3, 2020
Time:
2:30 p.m.
Gretchen
Whitmer
[SEAL] Governor
By
the Governor:
Jocelyn
Benson
Secretary
of State
The
executive order was referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
The following message from the
Governor was received on September 3, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020-176
Safe
Start
Rescission
of Executive Orders 2020-160 and 2020-162
Where Michigan was once among the
states most heavily hit by COVID‑19, our per-capita rate of new daily
cases is now well below the national average. Our progress in suppressing the
disease has plateaued. Michigan’s seven-day case positivity rate has remained
between 3.0% and 3.5% since early June. And although cases have continued to
rise slightly—from a rolling seven-day average of 612 cases per day on July 25
to 745 cases per day on August 25—so has our testing volume.
Recognizing the need for ongoing
vigilance, this plateau allows us to carefully and deliberately relax some
restrictions. An incremental approach—where some activities reopen before
others—is essential to avoiding uncontrolled spread, measuring the result of
changes, and allowing our gradual reopening to continue. This order therefore
allows for organized sports competitions to resume, if organizers take
appropriate precautions. It also allows for gyms and pools to reopen across the
state, subject to stringent safety protocols.
Additional safeguards specific to
the workplace can be found in Executive Order 2020-175 or any order that may
follow from it.
The novel coronavirus (COVID‑19)
is a respiratory disease that can result in serious illness or death. It is
caused by a new strain of coronavirus not previously identified in humans and
easily spread from person to person. There is currently no approved vaccine for
this disease.
On March 10, 2020, the Department
of Health and Human Services identified the first two presumptive-positive
cases of COVID‑19 in Michigan. On that same day, I issued Executive Order
2020-4. This order declared a state of emergency across the state of Michigan
under section 1 of article 5 of the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the
Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390, as amended (EMA), MCL 30.401 et seq., and the Emergency Powers
of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended (EPGA), MCL 10.31 et seq.
Since then, the virus spread
across Michigan, bringing deaths in the thousands, confirmed cases in the tens
of thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. On April 1, 2020, in
response to the widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed
by the COVID‑19 pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020-33. This order
expanded on Executive Order 2020-4 and declared both a state of emergency and a
state of disaster across the State of Michigan under section 1 of article 5 of
the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the Emergency Management Act, and the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945. And on April 30, 2020, finding
that COVID‑19 had created emergency and disaster conditions across the
State of Michigan, I issued Executive Order 2020-67 to continue the emergency
declaration under the EPA, as well as Executive Order 2020-68 to issue new
emergency and disaster declarations under the EMA.
Those
executive orders have been challenged in Michigan
House of Representatives and Michigan Senate v.
Whitmer. On August 21, 2020, the Court
of Appeals ruled that the Governor’s declaration of a state of emergency, her
extensions of the state of emergency, and her issuance of related EOs clearly
fell within the scope of the Governor’s authority under the EPGA.
On August 7, 2020, I issued
Executive Order 2020-165, again finding that the COVID‑19 pandemic
constitutes a disaster and emergency throughout the State of Michigan. That
order constituted a state of emergency declaration under the Emergency Powers
of the Governor Act of 1945. And, to the extent the governor may declare a
state of emergency and a state of disaster under the Emergency Management Act
when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the legislature had declined
to grant an extension request, that order also constituted a state of emergency
and state of disaster declaration under that act.
The Emergency Powers of the
Governor Act provides a sufficient legal basis for issuing this executive
order. In relevant part, it provides that, after declaring a state of
emergency, “the governor may promulgate reasonable orders, rules, and
regulations as he or she considers necessary to protect life and property or to
bring the emergency situation within the affected area under control.” MCL
10.31(1).
Nevertheless, subject to the
ongoing litigation and the possibility that current rulings may be overturned
or otherwise altered on appeal, I also invoke the Emergency Management Act as a
basis for executive action to combat the spread of COVID‑19 and mitigate
the effects of this emergency on the people of Michigan, with the intent to
preserve the rights and protections provided by the EMA. The EMA vests the
governor with broad powers and duties to “cop[e] with dangers to this state or
the people of this state presented by a disaster or emergency,” which the
governor may implement through “executive orders, proclamations, and directives
having the force and effect of law.” MCL 30.403(1)–(2). This executive order
falls within the scope of those powers and duties, and to the extent the
governor may declare a state of emergency and a state of disaster under the
Emergency Management Act when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the
legislature has not granted an extension request, they too provide a sufficient
legal basis for this order.
Acting under the Michigan
Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I find it reasonable and necessary, for
the reasons outlined above, to order:
1. Remote
work. Except in Regions 6 and 8, any work capable of being performed
remotely (i.e., without the worker leaving his or her home or place of
residence) must be performed remotely. Although not required, in Regions 6 and
8, any work capable of being performed remotely should be performed remotely.
2. Individual
responsibility. Any individual who leaves his or her home or place of
residence must:
(a) Follow social distancing measures recommended
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”), including remaining
at least six feet from people from outside the individual’s household to the
extent feasible under the circumstances; and
(b) Follow the rules described in Executive Order
2020-153, Masks, or any order that may follow from it.
3. Public
accommodations restrictions. Subject to the exceptions in section 8 (“Regions
6 and 8”) and 9 (“Exceptions”), the following places are closed to entry, use,
and occupancy by members of the public:
(a) Indoor theaters, cinemas, and performance
venues;
(b) Until September 8, 2020 at 11:59 p.m., indoor
gymnasiums, fitness centers, recreation centers, sports facilities, exercise
facilities, exercise studios, and the like;
(c) Millionaire Parties licensed by the Michigan
Gaming Control Board; and
(d) Except as provided in subsection (e) of this
section, indoor services or facilities, or outdoor services or facilities
involving close contact of persons, for amusement or other recreational or
entertainment purposes, such as amusement parks, arcades, bingo halls, bowling
alleys, indoor climbing facilities, indoor dance areas, roller rinks, ice
rinks, trampoline parks, carnival or amusement rides as defined by MCL
408.652(2), waterparks, and other similar recreational or entertainment
facilities.
(e) Bowling alleys, roller rinks, and ice rinks may
be open for the sole purpose of serving as a venue for organized sports under
section 7 of this order.
4. Bars.
Food service establishments, as defined in section 1107(t) of the Michigan Food
Law, 2000 PA 92, as amended, MCL 289.1107(t), that hold on-premises
retailer licenses to sell alcoholic beverages must close for indoor service if
they earn more than 70% of their gross receipts from sales of alcoholic
beverages (for purposes of calculating gross receipts, sales of lottery tickets
do not count because they are remitted to the state, although commissions,
incentives, bonuses and other payments from the Michigan Lottery do count).
(a) Food service establishments that are closed for
indoor service but open for outdoor service must prohibit patrons from entering
the establishment, except to walk through in order to access the outdoor area,
to leave the establishment, or to use the restroom.
(b) For purposes of calculating its percentage of
gross receipts from sales of alcoholic beverages under this section, a food
service establishment must use:
(1) Gross receipts from 2019; or
(2) If the establishment was not in operation in
2019, gross receipts from the date the establishment opened in 2020.
5. Liquor
license restrictions. Dance and topless activity permits issued under
subsections 2 or 3 of section 916 of the Michigan Liquor Control Code, 1998 PA 58,
as amended, MCL 436.1916(2) and (3), are temporarily suspended. Combination
dance–entertainment permits and topless activity–entertainment permits issued
under subsection 4 of section 916 of the Michigan Liquor Control Code, MCL
436.1916(4), are suspended to the extent they allow dancing and topless
activity, but remain valid to the extent they allow other entertainment.
(a) In enforcing the Michigan Liquor Control Code,
the Michigan Liquor Control Commission will consider whether the public health,
safety or welfare requires summary, temporary suspension of a license under
section 92(2) of the Administrative Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306,
as amended, MCL 24.292(2).
(b) Nothing in this order or in the Executive Order
2020-175, Workplace Safeguards, prevents food service establishments from
selling alcoholic beverages for off-premises consumption to patrons who are not
seated at a table, or requires such patrons to remain seated when ordering such
beverages.
(c) Nothing in this order or in Executive Order
2020-175, Workplace Safeguards prevents the holder of a social district license
under section 551 of the Michigan Liquor Control Code, 1998 PA 58, as
amended, MCL 436.1551 from selling alcoholic beverages for consumption in a
commons area within a designated social district to patrons who are not seated
at a table, or requires such patrons to remain seated when ordering such
beverages.
6. Gatherings,
events, and large venues.
(a) Except in Regions 6 and 8 (see section 8),
social gatherings and organized events among persons not part of the same
household are permitted provided that organizers and venues ensure that:
(1) Persons not part of the same household maintain
six feet of distance from one another, including by designing the gathering or
event to encourage and maintain social distancing;
(2) If a gathering or event is indoors, it does not
exceed 10 people; and
(3) If a gathering or event is outdoors, it does
not exceed 100 people.
(b) Subsection (a) applies to workplace gatherings
and events (such as meetings and trainings), but does not apply to the
incidental gathering of persons in a shared space, including an airport, bus
station, factory floor, restaurant, shopping mall, public pool, or workplace.
7. Organized
sports.
(a) For purposes of this order, “organized sports”
means competitive athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and
organized by an institution or association that sets and enforces rules to
ensure the physical health and safety of all participants (“sports organizer”
or “sports organizers”).
(b) Athletes participating in an organized sport,
while on the field of play, are not subject to the social distancing
requirements of this order found in sections 2(a) and 6(a)(1), but instead must
maintain six feet of distance from one another to the extent compatible with
that organized sport, and wear a facial covering except when swimming. Sports
organizers shall ensure that athletes comply with this subsection for each
organized sporting event.
(c) Sports organizers should follow the guidance of
the Department of Health and Human Services regarding whether and how a sport
can be played safely.
(d) For indoor organized sports competitions,
sports organizers must ensure that the live audience is limited to the guests
of the athletes with each athlete designating up to two guests. For outdoor
organized sports competitions, sports organizers must ensure that either (i)
the live audience is limited to the guests of the participants with each
athlete designating up to two guests or (ii) the live audience is limited to
the extent that 100 people or fewer are gathered for the event including all
participants (athletes, coaches, staff, etc.).
(e) For indoor organized sports, sports organizers
must ensure that no concessions are sold at the venue.
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
order, professional sports leagues and teams, including professional athletes
engaged in individual sports, may engage in professional sports operations,
provided that:
(1) No live audiences are allowed, except for staff
of the facility at which a sporting event is held and media personnel reporting
on, filming, or otherwise documenting the sporting event;
(2) The activities are conducted pursuant to a COVID‑19
safety plan that is consistent with any guidance from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention and the Michigan Department of Health and Human
Services; and
(3) Participants maintain six feet of distance from
one another to the extent compatible with the sporting activity.
8. Regions
6 and 8.
(a) Notwithstanding section 6(a)(3) of this order,
an outdoor social gathering or outdoor organized event among persons not part
of the same household is permitted in Regions 6 and 8 provided that the
gathering or event does not exceed 250 people and complies with the social
distancing requirement of subsection 6(a)(1) of this order.
(b) In Regions 6 and 8, a business or venue whose
operations would otherwise be restricted by section 3 of this order may be open
to spectators or patrons provided that it:
(1) Arranges the venue such that persons not part
of the same household may maintain six feet of distance from one another at all
times while in the venue; and
(2) Limits the number of people in the venue to 25%
of its maximum capacity or to 250, whichever is smaller. For purposes of this
order, each separate auditorium or screening room is a separate venue.
(c) In Regions 6 and 8, and notwithstanding the
restrictions in subsection (a) of this section, an outdoor concert space, race
track, sports arena, stadium, or similar outdoor venue may be open to
spectators or patrons provided that it:
(1) Arranges the venue such that persons not part
of the same household may maintain six feet of distance from one another at all
times while in the venue; and
(2) Limits the number of people in the venue to 25%
of its maximum capacity or to 500, whichever is smaller.
9. Exceptions.
(a) The public accommodations restrictions imposed
by section 3 of this order do not apply to any of the following:
(1) Services necessary for medical treatment as
determined by a licensed medical provider;
(2) Health care facilities, residential care
facilities, congregate care facilities, and juvenile justice facilities;
(3) Crisis shelters or similar institutions;
(4) Food courts inside the secured zones of
airports; and
(5) Employees, contractors, vendors, or suppliers
who enter, use, or occupy the places described in section 3 of this order
in their professional capacity.
(b) The 10-person indoor gathering limitation
imposed by section 6(a)(2) does not apply to any of the following:
(1) Aspects of training of law enforcement,
medical, or first responder personnel not capable of being performed remotely;
(2) Polling places.
10. Parks.
Unless otherwise prohibited by local regulation, outdoor parks and recreational
facilities may be open, provided that they make any reasonable modifications
necessary to enable employees and patrons not part of the same household to
maintain six feet of distance from one another, and provided that areas in
which social distancing cannot be maintained are closed, subject to guidance
issued by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.
11. Pools.
Effective September 9, 2020, unless otherwise prohibited by local regulation,
public swimming pools may be open in all Regions, subject to the rules in the
Workplace Safeguards order (Executive Order 2020-175 or any order that may
follow from it). This section does not apply to waterparks, which are subject
to section 3(c) of this order, except in Regions 6 and 8.
12. Region
definitions. For purposes of this order, Michigan comprises eight separate
regions.
(a) Region 1 includes the following counties:
Monroe, Washtenaw, Livingston, Genesee, Lapeer, Saint Clair, Oakland,
Macomb, and Wayne.
(b) Region 2 includes the following counties:
Mason, Lake, Osceola, Clare, Oceana, Newaygo, Mecosta, Isabella, Muskegon,
Montcalm, Ottawa, Kent, and Ionia.
(c) Region 3 includes the following counties:
Allegan, Barry, Van Buren, Kalamazoo, Calhoun, Berrien, Cass, Saint Joseph, and
Branch.
(d) Region 4 includes the following counties:
Oscoda, Alcona, Ogemaw, Iosco, Gladwin, Arenac, Midland, Bay, Saginaw, Tuscola,
Sanilac, and Huron.
(e) Region 5 includes the following counties:
Gratiot, Clinton, Shiawassee, Eaton, and Ingham.
(f) Region 6 includes the following counties:
Manistee, Wexford, Missaukee, Roscommon, Benzie, Grand Traverse, Kalkaska,
Crawford, Leelanau, Antrim, Otsego, Montmorency, Alpena, Charlevoix, Cheboygan,
Presque Isle, and Emmet.
(g) Region 7 includes the following counties:
Hillsdale, Lenawee, and Jackson.
(h) Region 8 includes the following counties:
Gogebic, Ontonagon, Houghton, Keweenaw, Iron, Baraga, Dickinson, Marquette,
Menominee, Delta, Alger, Schoolcraft, Luce, Mackinac, and Chippewa.
13. Separation
of powers. Nothing in this order should be taken to interfere with or
infringe on the powers of the legislative and judicial branches to perform
their constitutional duties or exercise their authority. Similarly, nothing in
this order shall be taken to abridge protections guaranteed by the state or
federal constitution under these emergency circumstances.
14. Religious
worship. Consistent with prior guidance, neither a place of religious
worship nor its owner is subject to penalty under section 18 of this order for
allowing religious worship at such place. No individual is subject to penalty
under section 18 of this order for engaging in religious worship at a place of
religious worship.
15. Consistency
with state and federal law. Nothing in this order, or any other executive
order, should be taken to modify, limit, or abridge protections provided by
state or federal law for a person with a disability.
16. Effective
date and effect on prior orders. Except as otherwise specified, this order
takes effect at 12:01 a.m. on September 4, 2020. At that time, Executive Orders
2020-160 and 2020-162 are rescinded, except that nothing in this order shall be
construed to affect any prosecution based on conduct that occurred before the
effective date of this order. Except as otherwise specified, nothing in this
order supersedes any other executive order.
17. Future
orders. In determining whether to maintain, intensify, or relax the
restrictions in this order, I will consider, among other factors, (1) data on COVID‑19
infections and the disease’s rate of spread; (2) whether sufficient
medical personnel, hospital beds, and ventilators exist to meet anticipated
medical need; (3) the availability of personal protective equipment for the
health care workforce; (4) the state’s capacity to test for COVID‑19
cases and isolate infected people; and (5) economic conditions in the state.
18. Penalty.
Consistent with MCL 10.33 and MCL 30.405(3), willful violation of this order is
a misdemeanor.
Given under my hand and the Great
Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date:
September 3, 2020
Time:
2:32 p.m.
Gretchen
Whitmer
[SEAL] Governor
By
the Governor:
Jocelyn
Benson
Secretary
of State
The
executive order was referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
The
following message from the Governor was received on September 4, 2020, and
read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020-177
Declaration
of state of emergency and state of disaster
related to the COVID‑19 pandemic
Rescission
of Executive Order 2020-165
Where Michigan was once among the
states most heavily hit by COVID‑19, our per-capita rate of new daily
cases is now well below of the national average. Our progress in suppressing
the disease, however, has eroded. Cases rose from a rolling seven-day average
of about 25 cases per million per day in mid-June to about 60 cases per million
per day through most of July and August. Moreover, many Michigan students have
returned or will soon be returning to in-person instruction, increasing the
risk of outbreaks. In an alarming trend, both nationwide and here in Michigan,
younger people have constituted a growing share of new cases.
There is much we do not know
about this novel virus, but we know at least three things for certain: it is
widespread, it is easily transmitted by airborne particles, and its effects can
be fatal. That lethal combination, combined with ongoing uncertainty about how
to defeat it, means that the health, economic, and social harms of the COVID‑19
pandemic remain severe and affect every corner of this state. The COVID‑19
pandemic therefore constitutes a statewide emergency and disaster.
On March 10, 2020, I issued
Executive Order 2020-4, which declared a state of emergency in Michigan to
address the COVID‑19 pandemic. This disease, caused by a novel
coronavirus not previously identified in humans, can easily spread from person
to person and can result in serious illness or death. There is currently no
approved vaccine or antiviral treatment.
Once detected, the virus quickly
spread across Michigan. As of April 1, 2020, the state had 9,334 confirmed
cases of COVID‑19 and 337 deaths from the disease, with many thousands
more infected but not yet tested. Exactly one month later, this number had
ballooned to 42,356 confirmed cases and 3,866 deaths from the disease—a tenfold
increase in deaths. The virus’s rapid spread threatened to overwhelm the state’s
health care system: hospitals in multiple counties were reportedly at or near
capacity; medical personnel, supplies, and resources necessary to treat COVID‑19
patients were in high demand but short supply; dormitories and a convention
center were being converted to temporary field hospitals.
On April 1, 2020, in response to
the widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed by the COVID‑19
pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020-33. This order expanded on Executive
Order 2020‑4 and declared both a state of emergency and a state of
disaster across the state of Michigan. Like Executive Order 2020-4, this
declaration was based on multiple independent authorities: section 1 of article
5 of the Michigan Constitution of 1963; the Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390,
as amended, MCL 30.401 et seq.;
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31 et seq. On
April 7, 2020, the Michigan legislature adopted a concurrent resolution to
extend the states of emergency and disaster declared under the Emergency
Management Act until April 30, 2020.
On April 30, 2020, finding that COVID‑19
had created emergency and disaster conditions across the State of Michigan, I
issued Executive Order 2020-67 to continue the emergency declaration under the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act, as well as Executive Order 2020-68 to
issue new emergency and disaster declarations under the Emergency Management
Act.
Those executive orders have been
challenged in Michigan House of
Representatives and Michigan Senate v Whitmer. On August 21, 2020, the
Court of Appeals ruled that my declaration of a state of emergency, my
extensions of the state of emergency, and my issuance of related executive
orders clearly fell within the scope of the governor’s authority under the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act.
Since I first declared an
emergency in response to this pandemic, my administration has taken aggressive
measures to fight the spread of COVID‑19, prevent the rapid depletion of
this state’s critical health care resources, and avoid needless deaths. The
best way to slow the spread of the virus is for people to stay home and keep
their distance from others. To that end, and in keeping with the
recommendations of public health experts, I issued orders restricting access to
places of public accommodation and school buildings, limiting gatherings and
travel, and requiring workers who are not necessary to sustain or protect life
to remain at home. I also issued orders enhancing the operational capacity and
efficiency of health care facilities and operations, allowing health care
professionals to practice to the full extent of their training regardless of
licensure, and facilitating the delivery of goods, supplies, equipment, and
personnel that are needed to combat this pandemic. And I took steps to build
the public health infrastructure in this state that is necessary to contain the
spread of infection.
These statewide measures were
effective. For example, a report released by the Imperial College COVID‑19
Response Team showed that my actions significantly lowered the number of cases
and deaths that would have occurred had the state done nothing. And while the
virus remains aggressive and persistent—on September 2, Michigan reported a
total of 103,710 confirmed cases and 6,509 deaths—the strain on our health care
system has relented, even as our testing capacity has increased.
In early June, with the steep
reduction in case counts, I moved progressively to relax restrictions on
business activities and daily life. On June 1, I announced that most of the
state would move to Phase 4 of my Safe Start plan, thereby allowing retailers
and restaurants to resume operations. Hair salons and other personal care
services followed two weeks later. And on June 10, I moved the Upper Peninsula
and the region surrounding Traverse City to Phase 5, allowing for the reopening
of movie theaters, gyms, bowling alleys, and other businesses.
Since then, however, our progress
in suppressing the pandemic has stalled and begun to erode. Daily case counts
in Michigan have exceeded 50 new cases per million statewide through most of
July and August. Our statewide positivity rate has not decreased, remaining at
about 3%. This reflects a national trend: COVID‑19 cases are growing or
holding steady in most other states.
Michigan continues to face an
acute risk of a second wave, one that not only threatens lives but also our
economy and the education of our children. In response, I have slowed the
reopening of the economy. Performance venues remain closed across most of the
state, and large gatherings remain curtailed. At the same time, consistent with
the accumulating evidence that COVID‑19 often spreads via aerosolized
droplets, I have adopted additional measures—including the closure of certain
bars, and a requirement that stores refuse entry and service to those without
face coverings—to reduce the risk of spread in indoor spaces. Life will not be
back to normal for some time to come.
In the meantime, the economic
toll continues to mount. Between March 15 and May 30, Michigan received 2.2
million initial unemployment claims—the fifth-highest nationally, amounting to
more than a third of the Michigan workforce. During this crisis, Michigan has
often processed more unemployment claims in a single day than in the most
painful week of the Great Recession, and the state already saw its highest
unemployment rate since the Great Depression (22.7% in April). The Michigan
Department of Treasury projects that in the coming fiscal year, this pandemic
will cost the state $1 billion in revenue. Even as Michigan experiences
unemployment rates not seen in decades, federal unemployment assistance has
dwindled from $600 per week to $300. Without further action by Congress, even
this limited federal assistance run out.
In addition to these challenges,
many Michigan students will return to in-person instruction over the next
month, increasing the risk of outbreaks. States that have reopened schools have
already begun to see new cases—a second-grader in Cherokee County, Georgia, a
middle schooler in Greenfield, Indiana, and a high schooler in Corinth,
Mississippi, have already tested positive for COVID‑19 after attending
school in person, triggering quarantines in those districts.
The health, economic, and social
harms of the COVID‑19 pandemic thus remain widespread and severe, and
they continue to constitute a statewide emergency and disaster. Though local
health departments have some limited capacity to respond to cases as they arise
within their jurisdictions, state emergency operations are necessary to bring
this pandemic under control in Michigan and to build and maintain
infrastructure to stop the spread of COVID‑19, trace infections, and to
quickly direct additional resources to hot-spots as they emerge. State
assistance to bolster health care capacity and flexibility also has been, and
will continue to be, critical to saving lives, protecting public health and
safety, and averting catastrophe. Moreover, state disaster and emergency
recovery efforts remain necessary not only to support Michiganders in need due
to the economic effects of this pandemic, but also to ensure that the prospect
of lost income does not impel workers who may be infected to report to work.
Statewide coordination of these
efforts is crucial to creating a stable path to recovery. Until that recovery
is underway, the economic and fiscal harms from this pandemic have been contained,
and the threats posed by COVID‑19 to life and the public health, safety,
and welfare of this state have been neutralized, statewide disaster and
emergency conditions will exist.
Acting under the Michigan
Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. The COVID‑19 pandemic constitutes a
disaster and emergency throughout the State of Michigan.
2. This order constitutes a state of emergency
declaration under the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945. Subject to
the ongoing litigation, and the possibility that current rulings may be
overturned or otherwise altered on appeal, and to the extent the governor may
declare a state of emergency and a state of disaster under the Emergency
Management Act of 1976 when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the
legislature has not granted an extension request, this order constitutes a
state of emergency and state of disaster declaration under that act.
3. This order is effective immediately and
continues through October 1, 2020 at 11:59 p.m. I will evaluate the continuing
need for this order.
4. Executive Order 2020-165 is rescinded. All
previous orders that rested on that order now rest on this order.
Given under my hand and the Great
Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date:
September 3, 2020
Time:
5:44 p.m.
Gretchen
Whitmer
[SEAL] Governor
By
the Governor:
Jocelyn
Benson
Secretary
of State
The
executive order was referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
The
following message from the Governor was received on September 8, 2020, and
read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020-178
Temporary
safety measures for food-selling establishments and pharmacies and
temporary relief from requirements applicable to the renewal of licenses for
the
food-service industry
Rescission
of Executive Order 2020-168
Beginning in May 2020, I put in
place special protocols to minimize the risk of COVID‑19 transmission in
food-selling establishments and pharmacies. Because buying food and medicine
remains an unavoidable source of infection risk for many Michiganders, and the COVID‑19
pandemic remains a serious and deadly threat, it is reasonable and necessary to
again extend these policies.
The novel coronavirus (COVID‑19)
is a respiratory disease that can result in serious illness or death. It is
caused by a new strain of coronavirus not previously identified in humans and
easily spread from person to person. There is currently no approved vaccine or
antiviral treatment for this disease.
On March 10, 2020, the Department
of Health and Human Services identified the first two presumptive-positive
cases of COVID‑19 in Michigan. On that same day, I issued Executive Order
2020-4. This order declared a state of emergency across the state of Michigan
under section 1 of article 5 of the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the
Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390, as amended (EMA), MCL 30.401 et seq., and the Emergency Powers
of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended (EPGA), MCL 10.31 et seq.
Since then, the virus spread
across Michigan, bringing deaths in the thousands, confirmed cases in the tens
of thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. On April 1, 2020, in
response to the widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed
by the COVID‑19 pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020-33. This order
expanded on Executive Order 2020-4 and declared both a state of emergency and a
state of disaster across the State of Michigan under section 1 of article 5 of
the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the Emergency Management Act, and the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945. And on April 30, 2020, finding
that COVID‑19 had created emergency and disaster conditions across the
State of Michigan, I issued Executive Order 2020-67 to continue the emergency
declaration under the EPA, as well as Executive Order 2020-68 to issue new
emergency and disaster declarations under the EMA.
Those
executive orders have been challenged in Michigan
House of Representatives and Michigan Senate v.
Whitmer. On August 21, 2020, the Court
of Appeals ruled that the Governor’s declaration of a state of emergency, her
extensions of the state of emergency, and her issuance of related EOs clearly
fell within the scope of the Governor’s authority under the EPGA.
On August 7, 2020, I issued
Executive Order 2020-165, again finding that the COVID‑19 pandemic
constitutes a disaster and emergency throughout the State of Michigan. That
order constituted a state of emergency declaration under the Emergency Powers
of the Governor Act of 1945. And, to the extent the governor may declare a
state of emergency and a state of disaster under the Emergency Management Act
when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the legislature had declined
to grant an extension request, that order also constituted a state of emergency
and state of disaster declaration under that act.
The Emergency Powers of the
Governor Act provides a sufficient legal basis for issuing this executive
order. In relevant part, it provides that, after declaring a state of
emergency, “the governor may promulgate reasonable orders, rules, and
regulations as he or she considers necessary to protect life and property or to
bring the emergency situation within the affected area under control.” MCL
10.31(1).
Nevertheless, subject to the
ongoing litigation and the possibility that current rulings may be overturned
or otherwise altered on appeal, I also invoke the Emergency Management Act as a
basis for executive action to combat the spread of COVID‑19 and mitigate
the effects of this emergency on the people of Michigan, with the intent to preserve
the rights and protections provided by the EMA. The EMA vests the governor with
broad powers and duties to “cop[e] with dangers to this state or the people of
this state presented by a disaster or emergency,” which the governor may
implement through “executive orders, proclamations, and directives having the
force and effect of law.” MCL 30.403(1)–(2). This executive order falls within
the scope of those powers and duties, and to the extent the governor may
declare a state of emergency and a state of disaster under the Emergency
Management Act when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the legislature
has not granted an extension request, they too provide a sufficient legal basis
for this order.
Acting under the Michigan
Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Grocery stores and pharmacies must create at
least two hours per week of dedicated shopping time for vulnerable populations,
which for purposes of this order are people over 60, pregnant people, and those
with chronic conditions, including heart disease, diabetes, and lung disease.
2. Food-selling establishments and pharmacies must
deploy strategies to reduce COVID‑19 exposure for their customers and
employees consistent with the strategies described in Executive Orders 2020-153
and 2020-175 or any order that follows from either order, as well as the
following:
(a) Provide access to handwashing facilities,
including those available in public restrooms;
(b) Allow employees sufficient break time to wash
hands as needed;
(c) Use best efforts to ensure checkout employees
disinfect their hands between orders to prevent cross-contamination;
(d) Use best efforts to provide employees and
customers access to an alcohol-based hand sanitizer that contains at least 60%
alcohol, as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC);
(e) Use best efforts to provide disinfecting wipes
at cash registers and entrance points for customers to disinfect carts and
baskets, as well as at other appropriate locations;
(f) Ensure that both employees and customers remain
at least six feet apart to the maximum extent possible, including during
employee breaks, for example by reviewing floor plans, creating temporary
barriers, designating aisles as one-way only, and demarcating queueing
distances;
(g) Close self-serve prepared food stations such as
salad bars;
(h) Eliminate free samples and tasting stations;
(i) Adopt procedures to meet the environmental
cleaning guidelines set by the CDC, including by cleaning and disinfecting
frequent touchpoints throughout the day such as point of sale terminals at
registers, shopping carts, and shopping baskets;
(j) Prohibit employees who are sick from reporting
to work and send employees home if they display symptoms of COVID‑19. Employees
who test positive for COVID‑19 or who display one or more of the
principal symptoms of COVID‑19 should follow the procedures of Executive
Order 2020-166 or any order that follows from it;
(k) Accommodate employees who fall within a
vulnerable population by providing lower-exposure work assignments or giving
them the option to take an unpaid leave of absence with a return date of
September 30, 2020 or later. Nothing in this executive order abrogates any
right to disability benefits. Employees who take an unpaid leave of absence as
described in this subsection are encouraged to apply for unemployment benefits;
(l) Close
to the public for sufficient time each night to allow stores to be properly
sanitized;
(m) Encourage cash transactions to be processed at
self-checkout kiosks when possible; and
(n) Adhere to all applicable safeguards, including
but not limited to conducting a daily self-screening protocol for all employees
and contractors, that are required under Executive Order 2020-175 or any order
that follows from it.
3. Vendors moving between food-selling
establishments must frequently clean and disinfect frequent touch points.
4. If an employee at a food-selling establishment
tests positive for COVID‑19, the establishment must notify food vendors
and other employees of the positive test result as soon as possible and in no
case later than 12 hours after receiving the test result, without revealing the
personal health-related information of any employee.
5. Strict compliance with sections 3119, 4109,
4113, and 4115 of the Food Law, 92 PA 2000, as amended, MCL 289.3119, MCL
289.4109, MCL 289.4113, and MCL 289.4115, is temporarily suspended to the
extent necessary to extend the deadline for local health departments to submit
fees under section 3119, and to extend the license and registration expiration
dates under sections 4109 and 4115, until 60 days after the end of the states
of emergency and disaster declared in Executive Order 2020-165 or the end of
any subsequently declared states of disaster or emergency arising out of the COVID‑19
pandemic, whichever comes later. Furthermore, late fees shall not be assessed
under sections 4113 or 4115 during the 2020–2021 license year.
6. Strict compliance with subsection 6137 of the
Food Law, MCL 289.6137, is suspended to the extent necessary to make a license
holder eligible for a special transitory temporary food unit for the 2020–2021
licensing year, even if the license holder received only 1 evaluation during
the 2019–2020 licensing year.
7. For the purposes of this order, “food-selling
establishments” means grocery stores, convenience stores, restaurants that sell
groceries or food available for takeout, and any other business that sells
food.
8. Consistent with MCL 10.33 and MCL 30.405(3), a
willful violation of this order is a misdemeanor.
9. This order is effective immediately and
continues through September 30, 2020.
10. Executive Order 2020-168 is rescinded.
Given under my hand and the Great
Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date:
September 5, 2020
Time:
11:10 a.m.
Gretchen
Whitmer
[SEAL] Governor
By
the Governor:
Jocelyn
Benson
Secretary
of State
The
executive order was referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
The
following message from the Governor was received on September 8, 2020, and
read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020-179
Enhanced
protections for residents and staff of long-term care facilities
during the COVID‑19 pandemic
Rescission
of Executive Order 2020-169
From day one, I have taken action
to protect seniors from the deadly COVID‑19 pandemic. Because of the
inordinate risk of COVID‑19 to elderly Michiganders living in congregate
settings, I have issued executive orders implementing special protections for
residents and employees of long-term care facilities. To ensure our nursing
homes are as safe as possible, I pushed our inspectors to complete 100% of
infection control surveys more than two months before the federal deadline, and
they delivered. And I have worked tirelessly to procure tests and PPE to keep
seniors safe, and to facilitate testing for all nursing home residents and
staff, with little to no assistance from federal authorities. To protect
against a possible second wave, I created the nursing home preparedness task
force, which is set to produce its report August 31. Finally, my stay-home and
safe-start orders have dramatically cut the infection rate and limited
community spread, the single-greatest threat to the residents of long-term care
facilities.
Because COVID‑19 continues
to threaten the health and safety of elderly Michiganders living in long-term
care facilities, it is reasonable and necessary to continue the enhanced
protections for residents and staff of long-term care facilities put in place
back in April 2020. This order rescinds my prior executive order on this topic
and extends those protections through the end of this month. The Michigan
Department of Health and Human Services remains empowered to issue orders and
directives to implement these protections and should carefully consider the
recommendations of the Nursing Home Task Force, released August 31, 2020, in
doing so.
The novel coronavirus (COVID‑19)
is a respiratory disease that can result in serious illness or death. It is caused
by a new strain of coronavirus not previously identified in humans and easily
spread from person to person. There is currently no approved vaccine or
antiviral treatment for this disease.
On March 10, 2020, the Department
of Health and Human Services identified the first two presumptive-positive
cases of COVID‑19 in Michigan. On that same day, I issued Executive Order
2020-4. This order declared a state of emergency across the state of Michigan
under section 1 of article 5 of the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the
Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390, as amended (EMA), MCL 30.401 et seq., and the Emergency Powers
of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended (EPGA), MCL 10.31 et seq.
Since then, the virus spread
across Michigan, bringing deaths in the thousands, confirmed cases in the tens
of thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. On April 1, 2020, in
response to the widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed
by the COVID‑19 pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020-33. This order
expanded on Executive Order 2020-4 and declared both a state of emergency and a
state of disaster across the State of Michigan under section 1 of article 5 of
the Michigan Constitution of 1963, the Emergency Management Act, and the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945. And on April 30, 2020, finding
that COVID‑19 had created emergency and disaster conditions across the
State of Michigan, I issued Executive Order 2020-67 to continue the emergency
declaration under the EPA, as well as Executive Order 2020-68 to issue new
emergency and disaster declarations under the EMA.
Those
executive orders have been challenged in Michigan
House of Representatives and Michigan Senate v.
Whitmer. On August 21, 2020, the Court
of Appeals ruled that the Governor’s declaration of a state of emergency, her
extensions of the state of emergency, and her issuance of related EOs clearly
fell within the scope of the Governor’s authority under the EPGA.
On August 7, 2020, I issued
Executive Order 2020-165, again finding that the COVID‑19 pandemic
constitutes a disaster and emergency throughout the State of Michigan. That
order constituted a state of emergency declaration under the Emergency Powers
of the Governor Act of 1945. And, to the extent the governor may declare a
state of emergency and a state of disaster under the Emergency Management Act
when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the legislature had declined
to grant an extension request, that order also constituted a state of emergency
and state of disaster declaration under that act.
The Emergency Powers of the
Governor Act provides a sufficient legal basis for issuing this executive
order. In relevant part, it provides that, after declaring a state of
emergency, “the governor may promulgate reasonable orders, rules, and
regulations as he or she considers necessary to protect life and property or to
bring the emergency situation within the affected area under control.” MCL
10.31(1).
Nevertheless, subject to the
ongoing litigation and the possibility that current rulings may be overturned
or otherwise altered on appeal, I also invoke the Emergency Management Act as a
basis for executive action to combat the spread of COVID‑19 and mitigate
the effects of this emergency on the people of Michigan, with the intent to
preserve the rights and protections provided by the EMA. The EMA vests the
governor with broad powers and duties to “cop[e] with dangers to this state or
the people of this state presented by a disaster or emergency,” which the
governor may implement through “executive orders, proclamations, and directives
having the force and effect of law.” MCL 30.403(1)–(2). This executive order
falls within the scope of those powers and duties, and to the extent the
governor may declare a state of emergency and a state of disaster under the
Emergency Management Act when emergency and disaster conditions exist yet the
legislature has not granted an extension request, they too provide a sufficient
legal basis for this order.
Acting under the Michigan
Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
I. Protections for residents of long-term care
facilities
1. Notwithstanding any statute, rule, regulation,
or policy to the contrary, a long-term care facility must not effectuate an
eviction or involuntary discharge against a resident for nonpayment, nor deny a
resident access to the facility, except as otherwise provided in this order.
2. A long-term care facility must not prohibit
admission or readmission of a resident based on COVID‑19 testing
requirements or results in a manner that is inconsistent with this order or
relevant guidance issued by the Department of Health and Human Services (“DHHS”).
3. The following apply to a resident that
voluntarily obtained housing outside of a long-term care facility such as by
moving in with a family member (but not to a resident who was hospitalized)
during any state of emergency or state of disaster arising out of the COVID‑19
pandemic:
(a) The resident does not forfeit any right to
return that would have been available to the resident under state or federal
law had they been hospitalized or placed on therapeutic leave. Nothing in this
section affects the rights of a resident who was hospitalized or placed on
therapeutic leave.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (c), as soon
as capacity allows, the long-term care facility of origin must accept the
return of the resident, provided it can meet the medical needs of the resident,
and there are no statutory grounds to refuse the return.
(c) Prior to accepting the return of such a
resident, the long-term care facility must undertake screening precautions that
are consistent with relevant DHHS guidance when receiving the returning
resident. A facility must not accept the return of a COVID‑19-positive
resident if the facility does not have a dedicated unit or regional hub meeting
the requirements of this order.
4. Nothing in this order abrogates the obligation
to pay or right to receive payment due under an admission contract between a
resident and a long-term care facility.
5. All long-term care facilities must use best
efforts to facilitate the use of telemedicine in the care provided to their
residents, including, but not limited to, for regular doctors’ visits,
telepsychology, counseling, social work and other behavioral health visits, and
physical and occupational therapy.
II. Protections for employees and residents of
long-term care facilities
1. It is the public policy of this state that
employees of long-term care facilities or regional hubs who test positive for COVID‑19
or who display one or more of the principal symptoms of COVID‑19 should
remain in their homes or places of residence, as provided in section 2 of
Executive Order 2020-172 or any order that may follow from it, and that their
employers shall not discharge, discipline, or otherwise retaliate against them
for doing so, as provided in section 1 of Executive Order 2020-172 or any order
that may follow from it.
2. Long-term care facilities must:
(a) Cancel all communal dining and all internal and
external group activities;
(b) Take all necessary precautions to ensure the
adequate disinfecting and cleaning of facilities, in accordance with relevant guidance
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”);
(c) Use best efforts to provide appropriate
personal protective equipment (“appropriate PPE”) and hand sanitizer to all
employees that interact with residents;
(d) As soon as reasonably possible, but no later
than 12 hours after identification, inform employees of the presence of a COVID‑19-affected
resident;
(e) Notify employees of any changes in CDC
recommendations related to COVID‑19;
(f) Keep accurate and current data regarding the
quantity of each type of appropriate PPE available onsite, and report such data
to EMResource upon DHHS’s request or in a manner consistent with DHHS guidance;
and
(g) Report to DHHS all presumed positive COVID‑19
cases in the facility together with any additional data required under DHHS
guidance.
III. Procedures related to transfers and
discharges of COVID‑19-affected residents
1. A long-term care facility must report the
presence of a COVID‑19-affected resident to their local health department
within 24 hours of identification.
2. Except as otherwise provided by an advance
directive, a long-term care facility must transfer a COVID‑19-affected
resident who is medically unstable to a hospital for evaluation.
3. A nursing home must make all reasonable efforts
to create a unit dedicated to the care and isolation of COVID‑19-affected
residents (“dedicated unit”).
(a) A nursing home with a dedicated unit must
provide appropriate PPE to direct-care employees who staff the dedicated unit.
(b) A nursing home provider that operates multiple
facilities may create a dedicated unit by designating a facility for such a
purpose.
(c) A nursing home must not create or maintain a
dedicated unit unless it can implement effective and reliable infection control
procedures.
4. A long-term care facility must adhere to the
following protocol with respect to a COVID‑19-affected resident who is
medically stable:
(a) If the long-term care facility has a dedicated
unit, the facility must transfer the COVID‑19-affected resident to its
dedicated unit.
(b) If the long-term care facility does not have a
dedicated unit, it must attempt to transfer the COVID‑19-affected
resident to a regional hub, an alternate care facility with physical and
operational capacity to care for the resident, or an available swing bed at a
hospital.
(c) If a transfer under subsection (b) of this
section is not possible, the long-term care facility must attempt to send the
resident to a hospital within the state that has available bed capacity.
5. Once a long-term care facility resident who has
been hospitalized due to onset of one or more of the principal symptoms of COVID‑19
becomes medically stable, the hospital must conduct testing consistent with
best practices identified by the CDC prior to discharge. Discharge may be made
to any of the following: a regional hub, the facility where the resident
resided prior to hospitalization, an alternate care facility with physical and
operational capacity to care for the resident, or an available swing bed.
6. Discharge destinations should be determined
consistent with CDC and DHHS guidelines. Decisionmakers should consider patient
safety, the safety of the residents of any destination facility, the wishes of
the patient and patient’s family, and any guidance or recommendations from the
local health department. However, a resident may only be discharged to a
facility capable of safely isolating the resident, consistent with any
applicable CDC and DHHS guidelines.
7. Until an acceptable discharge destination is
identified, the individual must remain in the care of the hospital where they
reside.
8. For any transfer or discharge of a resident,
the transferring or discharging entity must ensure that the resident’s advance
directive accompanies the resident and must disclose the existence of any
advance directive to medical control at the time medical control assistance is
requested.
9. A long-term care facility that transfers or
discharges a resident in accordance with this order must notify the resident
and the resident’s representative (if reachable) of the transfer or discharge
within 24 hours.
10. The department of licensing and regulatory
affairs is authorized to take action to assure proper level of care and
services in connection with this order, consistent with section 21799b of the
Public Health Code, MCL 333.21799b, and any other relevant provisions of law.
11. A transfer or discharge of a long-term care
facility resident that is made in accordance with this order constitutes a
transfer or discharge mandated by the physical safety of other facility residents
and employees as documented in the clinical record, for purposes of section
21773(2)(b) of the Public Health Code, 1978 PA 368, as amended, MCL
333.21773(2)(b), and constitutes a transfer or discharge that is necessary to
prevent the health and safety of individuals in the facility from being
endangered, for purposes of 42 CFR 483.15(c)(1)(i)(C)–(D) and
(c)(4)(ii)(A)–(B).
12. To the extent necessary to effectuate this
terms of this order, strict compliance with any statute, rule, regulation, or
policy pertaining to bed hold requirements or procedures, or to pre-transfer or
pre-discharge requirements or procedures, is temporarily suspended. This
includes, but is not limited to, strict compliance with the requirements and
procedures under sections 20201(3)(e), 21776, 21777(1), and 21777(2) of the
Public Health Code, MCL 333.20201(3)(e), MCL 333.21773(2), MCL 333.21776, MCL
333.21777(1), and MCL 333.21777(2), as well as Rules 325.1922(13)-(16),
400.1407(12), 400.2403(9), and 400.15302 of the Michigan Administrative Code.
IV. Definitions and general provisions
1. For purposes of this order:
(a) “Adult foster care facility” has the same
meaning as provided by section 3(4) of the Adult Foster Care Facility Licensing
Act, 1979 PA 218, as amended, MCL 400.703(4).
(b) “Alternate care facility” means any facility
activated by the state to provide relief for hospitals that surge past their
capacity,
(c) “Appropriate PPE” means the PPE that DHHS
recommends in relevant guidance.
(d) “Assisted living facility” means an unlicensed
establishment that offers community-based residential care for at least three
unrelated adults who are either over the age of 65 or need assistance with
activities of daily living (ADLs), including personal, supportive, and
intermittent health-related services available 24‑hours a day.
(e) “COVID‑19-affected resident” means a
resident of a long-term care facility who is COVID‑19 positive, who is a
person under investigation, or who displays one or more of the principal
symptoms of COVID‑19.
(f) “Home for the aged” has the same meaning as
provided by section 20106(3) of the Public Health Code, MCL 333.20106(3).
(g) “Long-term care facility” means a nursing home,
home for the aged, adult foster care facility, or assisted living facility.
(h) “Medically unstable” means a change in mental
status or a significant change or abnormality in blood pressure, heart rate,
oxygenation status, or laboratory results that warrants emergent medical
evaluation.
(i) “Nursing home” has the same meaning as provided
by section 20109(1) of the Public Health Code, MCL 333.20109(1).
(j) “Person under investigation” means a person who
is currently under investigation for having the virus that causes COVID‑19.
(k) “Principal symptoms of COVID‑19” are
fever, atypical cough, or atypical shortness of breath.
(l) “Regional
hub” means a nursing home that is designated by DHHS as a dedicated facility to
temporarily and exclusively care for and isolate COVID‑19-affected residents.
A regional hub must accept COVID‑19-affected residents in accordance with
relevant DHHS orders and guidance.
(m) “Swing bed” has the meaning provided by 42 CFR
413.114(b).
2. DHHS may issue orders and directives, and take
any other actions pursuant to law, to implement this executive order.
3. This order is effective immediately and
continues through September 30, 2020.
4. Executive Order 2020-169 is rescinded.
5. Consistent with MCL 10.33 and MCL 30.405(3), a
willful violation of this order is a misdemeanor.
Given under my hand and the Great
Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date:
September 5, 2020
Time:
11:12 a.m.
Gretchen
Whitmer
[SEAL] Governor
By
the Governor:
Jocelyn
Benson
Secretary
of State
The
executive order was referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
The following messages from the
Governor were received and read:
September 8, 2020
I respectfully submit to the
Senate the following appointments to office pursuant to Public Act 58 of 1998,
MCL 436.1209:
Michigan
Liquor Control Commission
Mr. Lee Gonzales of P.O. Box 898,
Fenton, Michigan 48430, county of Genesee, succeeding Edward Clemente whose
term has expired, appointed to represent Democrats, for a term commencing
October 5, 2020 and expiring June 12, 2024.
Mr. Edward Toma of 5157 Nob Hill
Court, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48302, county of Oakland, succeeding Bradford
Jacobsen whose term has expired, appointed to represent Republicans, for a term
commencing October 5, 2020 and expiring June 12, 2024.
September 8, 2020
I respectfully submit to the
Senate the following appointments to office pursuant to Public Act 35 of 1970,
MCL 390.152:
Oakland
University Board of Trustees
Mr. Joseph Jones of 2528 Orchard
View Drive, N.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49505, county of Kent, succeeding
Marianne Fey Miller whose term has expired, appointed for a term commencing
September 8, 2020 and expiring August 11, 2028.
Mrs. Trina Govan Scott of 26582
Primary Drive, Southfield, Michigan 48034, county of Oakland, succeeding
Richard DeVore whose term has expired, appointed for a term commencing
September 8, 2020 and expiring August 11, 2028.
Respectfully,
Gretchen
Whitmer
Governor
The appointments were referred to
the Committee on Advice and Consent.
Recess
Senator MacGregor moved that the
Senate recess subject to the call of the Chair.
The motion prevailed, the time
being 10:07 a.m.
The Senate was called to order by
the President pro tempore, Senator Nesbitt.
By unanimous consent the Senate
proceeded to the order of
Third Reading of Bills
Senator MacGregor moved that the Senate
proceed to consideration of the following bill:
Senate
Bill No. 691
The motion prevailed.
The following bill was read a third
time:
Senate Bill No. 691, entitled
A bill to amend 1980 PA 299, entitled “Occupational code,” by
amending section 1108 (MCL 339.1108), as amended by 2014 PA 136.
The
question being on the passage of the bill,
The
bill was passed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor, as follows:
Roll Call No. 278 Yeas—38
Alexander Geiss MacGregor Santana
Ananich Hertel McBroom Schmidt
Barrett Hollier McCann Shirkey
Bayer Horn McMorrow Stamas
Bizon Irwin Moss Theis
Brinks Johnson Nesbitt VanderWall
Bullock LaSata Outman Victory
Bumstead Lauwers Polehanki Wojno
Chang Lucido Runestad Zorn
Daley MacDonald
Nays—0
Excused—0
Not
Voting—0
In The
Chair: Nesbitt
The Senate agreed to the title of the
bill.
The following bill was read a third
time:
House Bill No. 5502, entitled
A bill to amend 1941 PA 207, entitled “Fire prevention code,” by
amending section 22 (MCL 29.22), as amended by 1980 PA 247.
The
question being on the passage of the bill,
The
bill was passed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor, as follows:
Roll Call No. 279 Yeas—38
Alexander Geiss MacGregor Santana
Ananich Hertel McBroom Schmidt
Barrett Hollier McCann Shirkey
Bayer Horn McMorrow Stamas
Bizon Irwin Moss Theis
Brinks Johnson Nesbitt VanderWall
Bullock LaSata Outman Victory
Bumstead Lauwers Polehanki Wojno
Chang Lucido Runestad Zorn
Daley MacDonald
Nays—0
Excused—0
Not
Voting—0
In The
Chair: Nesbitt
The question being on concurring in the
committee recommendation to give the bill immediate effect,
The recommendation was concurred in, 2/3 of the members serving voting
therefor.
Pursuant
to Joint Rule 20, the full title of the act shall be inserted to read as
follows:
“An act to provide for the prevention of fires and the protection of
persons and property from exposure to the dangers of fire or explosion; to
authorize the investigation of fires and the discovery of crime or other
offenses in relation thereto; to require the razing, repair, or alteration of
buildings, and the clearing and improvement of premises which constitute a fire
hazard or a menace to the peace, security, or safety of persons or property; to
control the construction, use, and occupancy of buildings and premises in
relation to safety, including fire safety; to provide for the certification of
fire inspectors and the delegation of certain powers to those certified fire
inspectors; to provide for the regulation of the storage and transportation of
hazardous material; to provide for the issuance of certificates; to prohibit the
use of certain fire extinguishers and fire extinguishing agents; to provide
immunity from liability for certain persons; to provide for the administration
and enforcement of this act; to prescribe penalties; to provide for the
promulgation of rules; to provide for the assessment of fees; and to repeal
acts and parts of acts,”.
The Senate agreed to the full title.
The following bill was read a third
time:
House Bill No. 5503, entitled
A bill to amend 1972 PA 230, entitled “Stille-DeRossett-Hale single
state construction code act,” by amending section 28 (MCL 125.1528), as amended
by 2018 PA 307.
The
question being on the passage of the bill,
The
bill was passed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor, as follows:
Roll Call No. 280 Yeas—38
Alexander Geiss MacGregor Santana
Ananich Hertel McBroom Schmidt
Barrett Hollier McCann Shirkey
Bayer Horn McMorrow Stamas
Bizon Irwin Moss Theis
Brinks Johnson Nesbitt VanderWall
Bullock LaSata Outman Victory
Bumstead Lauwers Polehanki Wojno
Chang Lucido Runestad Zorn
Daley MacDonald
Nays—0
Excused—0
Not
Voting—0
In The
Chair: Nesbitt
The question being on concurring in the
committee recommendation to give the bill immediate effect,
The recommendation was concurred in, 2/3 of the members serving voting
therefor.
Pursuant
to Joint Rule 20, the full title of the act shall be inserted to read as
follows:
“An act to create a construction code commission and prescribe its
functions; to authorize the director to promulgate rules with recommendations
from each affected board relating to the construction, alteration, demolition,
occupancy, and use of buildings and structures; to prescribe energy
conservation standards for the construction of certain buildings; to provide
for statewide approval of premanufactured units; to provide for the testing of
new devices, materials, and techniques for the construction of buildings and
structures; to define the classes of buildings and structures affected by the
act; to provide for administration and enforcement of the act; to create a
state construction code fund; to prohibit certain conduct; to establish
penalties, remedies, and sanctions for violations of the act; to repeal acts
and parts of acts; and to provide an appropriation,”.
The Senate agreed to the full title.
By unanimous consent the Senate
proceeded to the order of
General Orders
The motion prevailed, and the
President pro tempore, Senator Nesbitt, designated Senator Santana as
Chairperson.
After some time spent therein,
the Committee arose; and the President pro tempore, Senator Nesbitt, having
resumed the Chair, the Committee reported back to the Senate, favorably and
without amendment, the following bills:
House Bill No. 4965, entitled
A bill to amend 1951 PA 51,
entitled “An act to provide for the classification of all public roads,
streets, and highways in this state, and for the revision of that
classification and for additions to and deletions from each classification; to
set up and establish the Michigan transportation fund; to provide for the
deposits in the Michigan transportation fund of specific taxes on motor
vehicles and motor vehicle fuels; to provide for the allocation of funds from
the Michigan transportation fund and the use and administration of the fund for
transportation purposes; to promote safe and efficient travel for motor vehicle
drivers, bicyclists, pedestrians, and other legal users of roads, streets, and
highways; to set up and establish the truck safety fund; to provide for the
allocation of funds from the truck safety fund and administration of the fund
for truck safety purposes; to set up and establish the Michigan truck safety
commission; to establish certain standards for road contracts for certain
businesses; to provide for the continuing review of transportation needs within
the state; to authorize the state transportation commission, counties, cities,
and villages to borrow money, issue bonds, and make pledges of funds for
transportation purposes; to authorize counties to advance funds for the payment
of deficiencies necessary for the payment of bonds issued under this act; to
provide for the limitations, payment, retirement, and security of the bonds and
pledges; to provide for appropriations and tax levies by counties and townships
for county roads; to authorize contributions by townships for county roads; to
provide for the establishment and administration of the state trunk line fund,
local bridge fund, comprehensive transportation fund, and certain other funds;
to provide for the deposits in the state trunk line fund, critical bridge fund,
comprehensive transportation fund, and certain other funds of money raised by
specific taxes and fees; to provide for definitions of public transportation
functions and criteria; to define the purposes for which Michigan
transportation funds may be allocated; to provide for Michigan transportation
fund grants; to provide for review and approval of transportation programs; to
provide for submission of annual legislative requests and reports; to provide
for the establishment and functions of certain advisory entities; to provide
for conditions for grants; to provide for the issuance of bonds and notes for
transportation purposes; to provide for the powers and duties of certain state
and local agencies and officials; to provide for the making of loans for
transportation purposes by the state transportation department and for the
receipt and repayment by local units and agencies of those loans from certain
specified sources; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,” by amending sections
11h, 12, 14, and 15 (MCL 247.661h, 247.662, 247.664, and 247.665), section 11h
as amended by 2018 PA 471, sections 12 and 14 as amended by 2015 PA 175,
and section 15 as amended by 1999 PA 50.
House Bill No. 4966, entitled
A bill to amend 1951 PA 51,
entitled “An act to provide for the classification of all public roads,
streets, and highways in this state, and for the revision of that
classification and for additions to and deletions from each classification; to
set up and establish the Michigan transportation fund; to provide for the
deposits in the Michigan transportation fund of specific taxes on motor
vehicles and motor vehicle fuels; to provide for the allocation of funds from
the Michigan transportation fund and the use and administration of the fund for
transportation purposes; to promote safe and efficient travel for motor vehicle
drivers, bicyclists, pedestrians, and other legal users of roads, streets, and
highways; to set up and establish the truck safety fund; to provide for the
allocation of funds from the truck safety fund and administration of the fund
for truck safety purposes; to set up and establish the Michigan truck safety
commission; to establish certain standards for road contracts for certain
businesses; to provide for the continuing review of transportation needs within
the state; to authorize the state transportation commission, counties, cities,
and villages to borrow money, issue bonds, and make pledges of funds for
transportation purposes; to authorize counties to advance funds for the payment
of deficiencies necessary for the payment of bonds issued under this act; to
provide for the limitations, payment, retirement, and security of the bonds and
pledges; to provide for appropriations and tax levies by counties and townships
for county roads; to authorize contributions by townships for county roads; to
provide for the establishment and administration of the state trunk line fund,
local bridge fund, comprehensive transportation fund, and certain other funds;
to provide for the deposits in the state trunk line fund, critical bridge fund,
comprehensive transportation fund, and certain other funds of money raised by
specific taxes and fees; to provide for definitions of public transportation
functions and criteria; to define the purposes for which Michigan
transportation funds may be allocated; to provide for Michigan transportation
fund grants; to provide for review and approval of transportation programs; to
provide for submission of annual legislative requests and reports; to provide
for the establishment and functions of certain advisory entities; to provide
for conditions for grants; to provide for the issuance of bonds and notes for
transportation purposes; to provide for the powers and duties of certain state
and local agencies and officials; to provide for the making of loans for
transportation purposes by the state transportation department and for the
receipt and repayment by local units and agencies of those loans from certain
specified sources; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,” by amending section
13 (MCL 247.663), as amended by 2015 PA 175.
House Bill No. 4971, entitled
A bill to amend 1951 PA 51,
entitled “An act to provide for the classification of all public roads,
streets, and highways in this state, and for the revision of that
classification and for additions to and deletions from each classification; to
set up and establish the Michigan transportation fund; to provide for the
deposits in the Michigan transportation fund of specific taxes on motor
vehicles and motor vehicle fuels; to provide for the allocation of funds from
the Michigan transportation fund and the use and administration of the fund for
transportation purposes; to promote safe and efficient travel for motor vehicle
drivers, bicyclists, pedestrians, and other legal users of roads, streets, and
highways; to set up and establish the truck safety fund; to provide for the
allocation of funds from the truck safety fund and administration of the fund
for truck safety purposes; to set up and establish the Michigan truck safety
commission; to establish certain standards for road contracts for certain
businesses; to provide for the continuing review of transportation needs within
the state; to authorize the state transportation commission, counties, cities,
and villages to borrow money, issue bonds, and make pledges of funds for
transportation purposes; to authorize counties to advance funds for the payment
of deficiencies necessary for the payment of bonds issued under this act; to provide
for the limitations, payment, retirement, and security of the bonds and
pledges; to provide for appropriations and tax levies by counties and townships
for county roads; to authorize contributions by townships for county roads; to
provide for the establishment and administration of the state trunk line fund,
local bridge fund, comprehensive transportation fund, and certain other funds;
to provide for the deposits in the state trunk line fund, critical bridge fund,
comprehensive transportation fund, and certain other funds of money raised by
specific taxes and fees; to provide for definitions of public transportation
functions and criteria; to define the purposes for which Michigan
transportation funds may be allocated; to provide for Michigan transportation
fund grants; to provide for review and approval of transportation programs; to
provide for submission of annual legislative requests and reports; to provide
for the establishment and functions of certain advisory entities; to provide
for conditions for grants; to provide for the issuance of bonds and notes for
transportation purposes; to provide for the powers and duties of certain state
and local agencies and officials; to provide for the making of loans for
transportation purposes by the state transportation department and for the
receipt and repayment by local units and agencies of those loans from certain
specified sources; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,” by amending section
9a (MCL 247.659a), as amended by 2018 PA 325.
Senate Bill No. 1066, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 270,
entitled “Michigan strategic fund act,” by amending section 29d (MCL
125.2029d), as amended by 2011 PA 291.
Senate Bill No. 1068, entitled
A bill to amend 1994 PA 451,
entitled “Natural resources and environmental protection act,” by amending
sections 11550 and 16908 (MCL 324.11550 and 324.16908), section 11550 as
amended by 2018 PA 640 and section 16908 as amended by 2014 PA 543.
Senate Bill No. 1069, entitled
A bill to amend 1994 PA 295,
entitled “Sex offenders registration act,” by amending section 5b (MCL
28.725b), as amended by 2011 PA 17.
Senate Bill No. 1070, entitled
A bill to amend 1949 PA 300,
entitled “Michigan vehicle code,” by amending section 819 (MCL 257.819), as
amended by 2016 PA 280.
Senate Bill No. 1071, entitled
A bill to amend 1987 PA 231,
entitled “An act to create a transportation economic development fund in the
state treasury; to prescribe the uses of and distributions from this fund; to
create the office of economic development and to prescribe its powers and
duties; to prescribe the powers and duties of the state transportation
department, state transportation commission, and certain other bodies; and to
permit the issuance of certain bonds,” by amending section 11 (MCL 247.911), as
amended by 2018 PA 473.
The bills were placed on the order of
Third Reading of Bills.
Senate Bill No. 892, entitled
A bill to amend 1949 PA 300,
entitled “Michigan vehicle code,” by amending the title and sections 35a, 36,
53, 69, 79, 612, and 679a (MCL 257.35a, 257.36, 257.53, 257.69, 257.79,
257.612, and 257.679a), the title as amended by 2016 PA 32, sections 35a
and 36 as amended by 2013 PA 231, section 79 as amended by 1992 PA 134,
and section 612 as amended by 2014 PA 386, and by adding section 40d and
chapter VIA.
Substitute (S-3)
Senate Bill No. 1067, entitled
A bill to amend 1998 PA 58,
entitled “Michigan liquor control code of 1998,” by amending section 303a (MCL
436.1303a), as added by 2018 PA 155.
Substitute (S-1)
By unanimous consent the Senate
proceeded to the order of
Resolutions
Senator Theis offered the following
resolution:
Senate
Resolution No. 139.
A resolution to recognize and
honor independent workers in the state of Michigan.
Whereas, In recent years,
independent workers have played a large role in the prosperity of the state of
Michigan and the country overall; and
Whereas, The increase in work
arrangements outside of the traditional employment model has allowed people
with busy or unpredictable schedules to choose the hours when they want to
work, and the flexibility allows some to participate in the workforce who would
not be able to accept traditional employment; and
Whereas, Independent work can
help households quickly overcome a financial emergency without going into debt
or take on a long-term commitment. This enables individuals to experience more
variety in their careers while exploring new interests and expanding their
marketable skill sets; and
Whereas, Acting as their own
bosses, independent workers enhance their entrepreneurial abilities and
practice self-reliance and independence; and
Whereas, In 2018, independent
workers contributed over $1.4 trillion to the U.S. economy; and
Whereas, In a recent study,
independent workers are 19 points more politically active compared to workers
in conventional full-time positions, and nearly 80 percent reported voting in
the recent mid-term elections; and
Whereas, As leading innovators
and adapters to the changing labor landscape, independent workers facilitate
necessary change and growth by both diversifying the economy and providing
existing industries with access to their expertise due to their agile work
style; now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the Senate, That we
recognize and honor independent workers in the state of Michigan; and be it
further
Resolved, That we extend sincere
wishes for their continued success, while pledging to promote and protect their
unique and valuable work style.
Senator MacGregor moved that the
rule be suspended.
The motion prevailed, a majority of the members serving voting therefor.
By unanimous consent the Senate
proceeded to the order of
Introduction and Referral of Bills
The motion prevailed, a majority
of the member serving voting therefor.
Senate Bill No. 1086, entitled
A
bill to amend 1964 PA 208, entitled “An act to grant scholarships to
students enrolled in postsecondary education institutions; and to provide for
the administration of the scholarship program,” by amending section 3 (MCL
390.973), as amended by 1980 PA 500.
The
bill was read a first and second time by title and referred to the Committee on
Appropriations.
Senators Schmidt, Hollier, Stamas, McBroom and
VanderWall introduced
Senate Bill No. 1087, entitled
A bill to amend 1855 PA 105, entitled “An
act to regulate the disposition of the surplus funds in the state treasury; to
provide for the deposit of surplus funds in certain financial institutions; to
lend surplus funds pursuant to loan agreements secured by certain commercial,
agricultural, or industrial real and personal property; to authorize the loan
of surplus funds to certain municipalities; to authorize the participation in
certain loan programs; to authorize an appropriation; and to prescribe the
duties of certain state agencies,” (MCL 21.141 to 21.147) by adding section 2g.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Appropriations.
Senators Chang, Geiss, Polehanki, Wojno,
Brinks and Bullock introduced
Senate Bill No. 1088, entitled
A bill to amend 1976 PA 451, entitled “The
revised school code,” (MCL 380.1 to 380.1852) by adding section 1264a.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Education and Career Readiness.
Senator Outman introduced
Senate Bill No. 1089, entitled
A bill to authorize the department of
technology, management, and budget to transfer state-owned property in Gratiot
County; to prescribe conditions for the transfer; to provide for powers and
duties of state departments, agencies, and officers in regard to the property;
and to provide for disposition of revenue derived from the transfer.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Appropriations.
Senator Bizon introduced
Senate Bill No. 1090, entitled
A bill to amend 1982 PA 295, entitled “Support
and parenting time enforcement act,” by amending section 5d (MCL
552.605d), as amended by 2014 PA 380.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Families, Seniors, and Veterans.
Senator Bizon introduced
Senate Bill No. 1091, entitled
A bill to amend 1982 PA 294, entitled “Friend
of the court act,” by amending section 17 (MCL 552.517), as amended by 2019 PA 27,
and by adding section 17f.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Families, Seniors, and Veterans.
Senator Lucido introduced
Senate Bill No. 1092, entitled
A bill to amend 1949 PA 300, entitled “Michigan
vehicle code,” by amending sections 307, 307a, 310, and 315 (MCL 257.307,
257.307a, 257.310, and 257.315), section 307 as amended by 2018 PA 604,
section 307a as amended by 2011 PA 159, section 310 as amended by
2018 PA 177, and section 315 as amended by 2008 PA 7.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety.
Senator Lucido introduced
Senate Bill No. 1093, entitled
A bill to amend 1927 PA 175, entitled “The
code of criminal procedure,” by amending section 26a of chapter IV (MCL
764.26a), as added by 2018 PA 65.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety.
Senator Lucido introduced
Senate Bill No. 1094, entitled
A bill to amend 1978 PA 368, entitled “Public
health code,” by amending section 21717 (MCL 333.21717), as amended by 2014 PA 66,
and by adding section 5145.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Health Policy and Human Services.
A bill to amend 2004 PA 452, entitled “Identity
theft protection act,” by amending section 4 (MCL 445.64), as added by 2018 PA 649.
The House of Representatives passed the bill
and ordered that it be given immediate effect.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Regulatory Reform.
A bill to require certain entities to provide
notice to certain persons in the event of a breach of security that results in
the unauthorized acquisition of sensitive personally identifying information;
to provide for the powers and duties of certain state governmental officers and
entities; and to prescribe penalties and provide remedies.
The House of Representatives passed the bill
and ordered that it be given immediate effect.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Regulatory Reform.
A bill to amend 1976 PA 451, entitled “The
revised school code,” by amending section 1220 (MCL 380.1220), as added by 2015
PA 111.
The House of Representatives passed the bill
and ordered that it be given immediate effect.
The bill was read a first and second time by
title and referred to the Committee on Education and Career Readiness.
Announcements
of Printing and Enrollment
The Secretary announced that the
following House bills were received in the Senate and filed on Wednesday,
September 2:
House
Bill Nos. 4186 4187 5470
The
Secretary announced the enrollment printing and presentation to the Governor on
Tuesday, September 8 for her approval the following
bill:
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 745 at 12:08 p.m.
The Secretary announced that the following
bills were printed and filed on Wednesday, September 2, and are available on
the Michigan Legislature website:
Senate
Bill Nos. 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085
House
Bill Nos. 6148 6149 6150 6151 6152 6153 6154 6155 6156 6157 6158 6159 6160 6161 6162 6163 6164
The Secretary announced that the
following bills and joint resolutions were printed and filed on Thursday,
September 3, and are available on the Michigan Legislature website:
House
Bill Nos. 6165 6166 6167 6168 6169 6170 6171 6172 6173 6174 6175 6176 6177 6178 6179 6180 6181 6182 6183 6184 6185 6186 6187
House
Joint Resolutions U V
Committee Reports
The Committee on Regulatory Reform
reported
Senate Bill No. 986, entitled
A bill to amend 1980 PA 299,
entitled “Occupational code,” by amending sections 2401 and 2403 (MCL 339.2401
and 339.2403), section 2401 as amended by 1991 PA 166 and section 2403 as
amended by 2016 PA 412.
With the recommendation that the substitute
(S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Aric
Nesbitt
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Nesbitt, Theis,
Lauwers, VanderWall and Zorn
Nays: None
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Regulatory
Reform reported
House Bill No. 5339, entitled
A bill to amend 1995 PA 29,
entitled “Uniform unclaimed property act,” by amending section 36a (MCL
567.256a), as added by 2016 PA 312.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-3) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Aric
Nesbitt
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Nesbitt, Theis,
Lauwers, VanderWall and Zorn
Nays: Senators Moss, Polehanki
and Wojno
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Regulatory
Reform reported
House Bill No. 5340, entitled
A bill to amend 1995 PA 29,
entitled “Uniform unclaimed property act,” by amending section 36 (MCL
567.256), as amended by 2016 PA 312.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-2) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Aric
Nesbitt
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Nesbitt, Theis,
Lauwers, VanderWall and Zorn
Nays: Senators Moss, Polehanki
and Wojno
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Regulatory
Reform reported
House Bill No. 5602, entitled
A bill to amend 1972 PA 230,
entitled “Stille-DeRossett-Hale single state construction code act,” by
amending section 28a (MCL 125.1528a), as amended by 2018 PA 332.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Aric
Nesbitt
Chairperson
To
Report Out:
Yeas:
Senators Nesbitt, Theis, Lauwers, VanderWall, Zorn and Moss
Nays:
Senators Polehanki and Wojno
The
bill was referred to the Committee of the Whole.
COMMITTEE ATTENDANCE REPORT
The
Committee on Regulatory Reform submitted the following:
Meeting
held on Tuesday, September 1, 2020, at 3:00 p.m., Harry T. Gast Appropriations
Room, 3rd Floor, Capitol Building
Present:
Senators Nesbitt (C), Theis, Lauwers, VanderWall, Zorn, Moss, Polehanki and
Wojno
Excused:
Senator Johnson
The Committee on Insurance and Banking
reported
House
Bill No. 4459, entitled
A bill
to amend 1978 PA 368, entitled “Public health code,” (MCL 333.1101 to
333.25211) by adding article 18.
With
the recommendation that the substitute (S-4) be adopted and that the bill then
pass.
The
committee further recommends that the bill be given immediate effect.
Lana
Theis
Chairperson
To
Report Out:
Yeas:
Senators Theis, Lauwers, LaSata, Daley, Barrett, Horn and Bullock
Nays:
Senator Nesbitt
The
bill and the substitute recommended by the committee were referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The
Committee on Insurance and Banking reported
House
Bill No. 4460, entitled
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-4) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends that
the bill be given immediate effect.
Chairperson
To
Report Out:
Yeas:
Senators Theis, Lauwers, LaSata, Daley, Barrett, Horn and Bullock
Nays:
Senator Nesbitt
The
bill and the substitute recommended by the committee were referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The
Committee on Insurance and Banking reported
House
Bill No. 4990, entitled
A bill
to amend 1978 PA 368, entitled “Public health code,” by amending section
16221 (MCL 333.16221), as amended by 2018 PA 463.
With
the recommendation that the substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then
pass.
The
committee further recommends that the bill be given immediate effect.
Lana
Theis
Chairperson
To
Report Out:
Yeas:
Senators Theis, Lauwers, LaSata, Daley, Barrett and Horn
Nays:
Senators Nesbitt, Bullock and McMorrow
The
bill and the substitute recommended by the committee were referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The
Committee on Insurance and Banking reported
House
Bill No. 4991, entitled
A bill
to amend 1978 PA 368, entitled “Public health code,” by amending section
16226 (MCL 333.16226), as amended by 2018 PA 463.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends that
the bill be given immediate effect.
Lana
Theis
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Theis, Lauwers, LaSata,
Daley, Barrett and Horn
Nays: Senators Nesbitt, Bullock and
McMorrow
The bill and the substitute recommended
by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
COMMITTEE
ATTENDANCE REPORT
The Committee on Insurance and Banking
submitted the following:
Meeting held on Wednesday, September 2,
2020, at 9:00 a.m., Harry T. Gast Appropriations Room, 3rd Floor, Capitol
Building
Present: Senators
Theis (C), Lauwers, LaSata, Nesbitt, Daley, Barrett, Horn, Geiss, Bullock and
McMorrow
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
Senate Bill No. 1066, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 270,
entitled “Michigan strategic fund act,” by amending section 29d (MCL
125.2029d), as amended by 2011 PA 291.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
Senate Bill No. 1067, entitled
A bill to amend 1998 PA 58,
entitled “Michigan liquor control code of 1998,” by amending section 303a (MCL
436.1303a), as added by 2018 PA 155.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
Senate Bill No. 1068, entitled
A bill to amend 1994 PA 451,
entitled “Natural resources and environmental protection act,” by amending
sections 11550 and 16908 (MCL 324.11550 and 324.16908), section 11550 as
amended by 2018 PA 640 and section 16908 as amended by 2014 PA 543.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
Senate Bill No. 1069, entitled
A bill to amend 1994 PA 295,
entitled “Sex offenders registration act,” by amending section 5b (MCL
28.725b), as amended by 2011 PA 17.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
Senate Bill No. 1070, entitled
A bill to amend 1949 PA 300,
entitled “Michigan vehicle code,” by amending section 819 (MCL 257.819), as
amended by 2016 PA 280.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
Senate Bill No. 1071, entitled
A bill to amend 1987 PA 231,
entitled “An act to create a transportation economic development fund in the
state treasury; to prescribe the uses of and distributions from this fund; to
create the office of economic development and to prescribe its powers and
duties; to prescribe the powers and duties of the state transportation
department, state transportation commission, and certain other bodies; and to
permit the issuance of certain bonds,” by amending section 11 (MCL 247.911), as
amended by 2018 PA 473.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
House Bill No. 4831, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431,
entitled “The management and budget act,” by amending section 261 (MCL
18.1261), as amended by 2017 PA 21.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the Committee
of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
House Bill No. 5053, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431,
entitled “The management and budget act,” by amending section 261 (MCL
18.1261), as amended by 2017 PA 21.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
House Bill No. 5492, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431,
entitled “The management and budget act,” (MCL 18.1101 to 18.1594) by adding
section 385.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill was referred to the
Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
House Bill No. 5493, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431,
entitled “The management and budget act,” (MCL 18.1101 to 18.1594) by adding
section 490.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
House Bill No. 5494, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431,
entitled “The management and budget act,” (MCL 18.1101 to 18.1594) by adding
section 261e.
With the recommendation that the
substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To Report Out:
Yeas: Senators Stamas, Bumstead,
Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad,
Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
Nays: None
The bill and the substitute
recommended by the committee were referred to the Committee of the Whole.
The Committee on Appropriations
reported
House Bill No. 5495, entitled
A bill to amend 1984 PA 431,
entitled “The management and budget act,” (MCL 18.1101 to 18.1594) by adding
section 261f.
With the recommendation that the
bill pass.
The committee further recommends
that the bill be given immediate effect.
Jim
Stamas
Chairperson
To
Report Out:
Yeas:
Senators Stamas, Bumstead, Barrett, Bizon, LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor,
Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad, Schmidt, Victory, Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin,
McCann and Santana
Nays:
None
The
bill was referred to the Committee of the Whole.
COMMITTEE ATTENDANCE REPORT
The
Committee on Appropriations submitted the following:
Meeting
held on Wednesday, September 2, 2020, at 2:00 p.m., Senate Hearing Room, Ground
Floor, Boji Tower
Present: Senators Stamas (C), Bumstead, Barrett, Bizon,
LaSata, MacDonald, MacGregor, Nesbitt, Outman, Runestad, Schmidt, Victory,
Hertel, Bayer, Hollier, Irwin, McCann and Santana
The Committee on Families, Seniors, and
Veterans reported
Senate
Resolution No. 135.
A
resolution to urge the United States Congress, the President of the United
States, the Secretary of the Air Force, and the Assistant Secretary of the
Air Force to consider the City of Sterling Heights, Michigan as the location
for the headquarters of the United States Space Force.
(For
text of resolution, see Senate Journal No. 59, p. 1220.)
With
the recommendation that the resolution be adopted.
John
Bizon, M.D.
Chairperson
To
Report Out:
Yeas:
Senators Bizon, Barrett, Runestad, Zorn, Bullock and Alexander
Nays:
None
The
resolution was placed on the order of Resolutions.
COMMITTEE ATTENDANCE REPORT
The
Committee on Families, Seniors, and Veterans submitted the following:
Meeting
held on Wednesday, September 2, 2020, at 3:00 p.m., Room 403, 4th Floor, Capitol
Building
Present:
Senators Bizon (C), Barrett, Runestad, Zorn, Bullock and Alexander
Excused:
Senator Johnson
COMMITTEE ATTENDANCE REPORT
The
Committee on Natural Resources submitted the following:
Meeting
held on Wednesday, September 2, 2020, at 8:30 a.m., Room 403, 4th Floor,
Capitol Building
Present:
Senators McBroom (C), Bumstead, Outman, Schmidt and McCann
The
Joint Select Committee on the COVID‑19 Pandemic (HCR 20) submitted the
following:
Meeting
held on Thursday, September 3, 2020, at 8:30 a.m., Room 352, 3rd Floor, House
Appropriations Room, Capitol Building
Present:
Senators Nesbitt, LaSata, Schmidt, Hertel and Hollier
COMMITTEE
ATTENDANCE REPORT
The
Joint Select Committee on the COVID‑19 Pandemic (HCR 20) submitted the
following:
Meeting
held on Wednesday, September 9, 2020, at 8:00 a.m., Room 352, 3rd Floor, House
Appropriations Room, Capitol Building
Present:
Senators Nesbitt, LaSata, Schmidt, Hertel and Hollier
Advice and Consent - Thursday, September 10, 12:00 noon, Room 1100, Binsfeld Office
Building (517) 373-5314
Economic and Small Business Development - Thursday, September 10, 12:00 noon, Harry T. Gast
Appropriations Room, 3rd Floor, Capitol Building (517) 373-1721
Education and Career Readiness - Tuesday, September 15, 12:00 noon, Room 403, 4th
Floor, Capitol Building (517) 373-5314
Environmental Quality - Thursday, September 10, 9:00 p.m., Room 403, 4th
Floor, Capitol Building (517) 373-5323
Health Policy and Human Services - Thursday, September 10, 1:00 p.m., Senate Hearing
Room, Ground Floor, Boji Tower (517) 373-5323
Judiciary and Public Safety - Thursday, September 10, 8:30 a.m., Harry T. Gast
Appropriations Room, 3rd Floor, Capitol Building (517) 373-5312
Senate Fiscal Agency Governing Board - Wednesday, September 16, 8:30 a.m., Harry T. Gast
Appropriations Room, 3rd Floor, Capitol Building (517) 373-2768
Senator
MacGregor moved that the Senate adjourn.
The
motion prevailed, the time being 11:33 a.m.
The
President pro tempore, Senator Nesbitt, declared the Senate adjourned until
Thursday, September 10, 2020, at 10:00 a.m.
MARGARET O’BRIEN
Secretary of the Senate