“I am very pleased to sign these bills
today, because they set in motion key recommendations made by the Land Use
Leadership Council,” Granholm said, “and they are great strides forward in our
quest to have better land use coordination and planning in our
state.”
House Bill 4284, sponsored by
Representative Chris Kolb (D-Ann Arbor), creates a new law to allow two or more
municipalities to join together to establish joint planning commissions.
House Bills 4666-4668, sponsored by Representative Chris Ward (R-Brighton
Township), allow local planning officials to consider land that is not
contiguous to a large parcel of property being developed as part of the land use
plan for the property. This will help local officials preserve green space
and open land.
“Together, these new laws will help
local planning officials to look at an entire area or region when developing
land use plans,” Granholm said. “Looking only to city limits and township
boundary lines will not allow us to solve the challenges we all face. To
make headway against urban sprawl, we must think regionally and use new
tools.”
The Governor noted that the bills’
sponsors both represent areas that are especially impacted by urban sprawl,
making land use an important issue in their districts.
“Both of these bills received broad
bipartisan support, signaling awareness in the Legislature that it is time to
address the long-standing issue of land use,” Granholm said. “It is my
hope that the Legislature will continue to deliver on the recommendations made
by the Land Use Leadership Council, because the people of Michigan clearly have
said they want to preserve a certain quality and way of life in this
state.
“In the next 20 years, Michigan stands
to lose another two million acres of open space and farmland to urban sprawl,”
Granholm added. “These new laws give local communities some direction in
how to deal with sprawl, but they also represent the importance we put on the
legacy we will leave our children and
grandchildren.”