STATE OF MICHIGAN
Journal of the Senate
100th Legislature
REGULAR SESSION OF 2020
Senate Chamber, Lansing, Tuesday, April 7, 2020.
10:00 a.m.
The Senate was called to order by the
President, Lieutenant Governor Garlin D. Gilchrist II.
The roll
was called by the Secretary of the Senate, who announced that a quorum was
present.
Alexander—excused Horn—present Outman—present
Ananich—present Irwin—present Polehanki—present
Barrett—present Johnson—excused Runestad—excused
Bayer—excused LaSata—present Santana—present
Bizon—present Lauwers—present Schmidt—present
Brinks—excused Lucido—excused Shirkey—present
Bullock—excused MacDonald—excused Stamas—present
Bumstead—present MacGregor—present Theis—present
Chang—present McBroom—excused VanderWall—present
Daley—present McCann—excused Victory—present
Geiss—present McMorrow—excused Wojno—excused
Hertel—present Moss—present Zorn—excused
Hollier—excused Nesbitt—present
Senator Mike Shirkey of the 16th District
offered the following invocation:
“When peace like a river, attendeth my way.
When sorrows like sea billows roll. Whatever my lot, thou has taught me to say
it is well, it is well, with my soul.”
In Timothy 1:6, Jesus tells us to not be
timid, but to bathe ourselves in the power, strength, wisdom, and self‑control
of the Holy Spirit that God himself gave us. It is in these times that we need
to lean heavily into that spirit, Lord, and we thank You for providing that
gift for us. I think the operating principles for us are well‑deserved
and well‑outlined by the fruit of the spirit that You lay out for us:
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and
self‑control. May those words ring soundly through us today and from this
point forward, as we wrestle with very important life‑threatening,
incredibly challenging decisions on an hour‑by‑hour and day‑by‑day
basis. I bless this body, I bless the members, I bless the entirety of the
state of Michigan. Lord, we just ask that You continue to show Your presence to
us in still, many inspiring ways. It is in the powerful name of Jesus Christ we
pray. Amen.
The President, Lieutenant
Governor Gilchrist, led the members of the Senate in recital of the Pledge of Allegiance.
Senator MacGregor moved that rule 1.102 be
suspended to direct the Secretary of the Senate to call the roll orally and
record and announce the results.
The motion prevailed, a majority of the
members serving voting therefor.
Motions and Communications
The motion prevailed.
The motion prevailed.
The following communication was received and
read:
Office of the Senate Majority Leader
March 31, 2020
Senate session is canceled for Wednesday,
April 1, 2020 out of an abundance of caution being taken for the safety of all
Senators and staff due to the increasing threat of COVID‑19. According to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, COVID‑19 is spread easily
from person‑to‑person and poses a serious public health risk. The
United States is currently in the acceleration phase of the pandemic, and the
Governor has issued Executive Order 2020‑21 urging non‑essential
business cease. Keeping the health and safety of all Senators and staff in
mind, in coordination with the Governor’s office and the House of
Representatives, the Senate has closed. The Senate continues to work
with the House of Representatives and Governor’s Office to hold future
legislative session dates in a manner that minimizes health risks to the extent
possible.
The Senate also sends its deepest condolences
to the family and friends of Representative Isaac Robinson, who passed away on
March 29. We are grateful for Representative Robinson’s contributions to his
constituents and to the state of Michigan as a whole. He will be forever
remembered and missed by many.
If you have any questions regarding this
manner, please do not hesitate to contact me.
Sincerely,
Mike
Shirkey
Senate
Majority Leader
16th
District
The communication was referred to the Secretary for record.
Committee Chairperson
Advice and Consent Senator
Peter Lucido
Agriculture Senator
Kevin Daley
Appropriations Senator
Jim Stamas
Economic and Small Business Development Senator Ken Horn
Education and Career Readiness Senator
Lana Theis
Elections Senator
Ruth Johnson
Energy and Technology Senator Dan
Lauwers
Environmental Quality Senator
Rick Outman
Families, Seniors, and Veterans Senator
John Bizon
Finance Senator
Jim Runestad
Government Operations Senator
Mike Shirkey
Health Policy and Human Services Senator
Curt VanderWall
Insurance and Banking Senator
Lana Theis
Judiciary and Public Safety Senator
Peter Lucido
Local Government Senator
Dale Zorn
Natural Resources Senator
Ed McBroom
Oversight Senator
Ed McBroom
Regulatory Reform Senator
Aric Nesbitt
Transportation and Infrastructure Senator
Tom Barrett
Messages from the Governor
Senators Polehanki and Theis entered the Senate Chamber.
The following messages from the Governor were received:
Time:
8:20 a.m.
To the President of the
Senate:
Sir—I
have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 151 (Public Act No. 66), being
An act
to make, supplement, and adjust appropriations for various state departments
and agencies and capital outlay purposes for the fiscal year ending September
30, 2020; to provide for the expenditure of the appropriations; and to repeal
acts and parts of acts.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on
March 30, 2020, at 9:30 a.m.)
Time: 8:50 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 415 (Public Act No. 76), being
An act to amend 1984 PA 379, entitled “An
act to define and regulate certain credit card transactions, agreements,
charges, and disclosures; to prescribe the powers and duties of the financial
institutions bureau and certain state agencies; to provide for the promulgation
of rules; and to provide for fines and penalties,” by amending the title and
section 1 (MCL 493.101).
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:02 a.m.)
Date: April 2, 2020
Time: 8:52 a.m.
To the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 269 (Public Act No. 77), being
An act to amend 1941 PA 122, entitled “An
act to establish the revenue collection duties of the department of treasury;
to prescribe its powers and duties as the revenue collection agency of this
state; to prescribe certain powers and duties of the state treasurer; to
establish the collection duties of certain other state departments for money or
accounts owed to this state; to regulate the importation, stamping, and
disposition of certain tobacco products; to provide for the transfer of powers
and duties now vested in certain other state boards, commissions, departments,
and offices; to prescribe certain duties of and require certain reports from
the department of treasury; to provide procedures for the payment,
administration, audit, assessment, levy of interests or penalties on, and
appeals of taxes and tax liability; to prescribe its powers and duties if an
agreement to act as agent for a city to administer, collect, and enforce the
city income tax act on behalf of a city is entered into with any city; to
provide an appropriation; to abolish the state board of tax administration; to
prescribe penalties and provide remedies; and to declare the effect of this
act,” (MCL 205.1 to 205.31) by adding section 4a.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:04 a.m.)
Time: 8:54 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 543 (Public Act No. 78), being
An act to amend 1998 PA 58, entitled “An
act to create a commission for the control of the alcoholic beverage traffic
within this state, and to prescribe its powers, duties, and limitations; to
provide for powers and duties for certain state departments and agencies; to
impose certain taxes for certain purposes; to provide for the control of the
alcoholic liquor traffic within this state and to provide for the power to
establish state liquor stores; to prohibit the use of certain devices for the
dispensing of alcoholic vapor; to provide for the care and treatment of
alcoholics; to provide for the incorporation of farmer cooperative wineries and
the granting of certain rights and privileges to those cooperatives; to provide
for the licensing and taxation of activities regulated under this act and the
disposition of the money received under this act; to prescribe liability for
retail licensees under certain circumstances and to require security for that
liability; to provide procedures, defenses, and remedies regarding violations
of this act; to provide for the enforcement and to prescribe penalties for
violations of this act; to provide for allocation of certain funds for certain
purposes; to provide for the confiscation and disposition of property seized
under this act; to provide referenda under certain circumstances; and to repeal
acts and parts of acts,” by amending section 701 (MCL 436.1701), as amended by
2019 PA 131.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:06 a.m.)
Date: April 2, 2020
Time: 8:56 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 125 (Public Act No. 79), being
An act to amend 1995 PA 29, entitled “An
act concerning unclaimed property; to provide for the reporting and disposition
of unclaimed property; to make uniform the law concerning unclaimed property;
to prescribe the powers and duties of certain state agencies and officials; to
prescribe penalties and provide remedies; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,”
by amending section 18 (MCL 567.238), as amended by 2010 PA 197.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:08 a.m.)
Time: 8:58 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 711 (Public Act No. 80), being
An act to amend 1998 PA 58, entitled “An
act to create a commission for the control of the alcoholic beverage traffic
within this state, and to prescribe its powers, duties, and limitations; to
provide for powers and duties for certain state departments and agencies; to
impose certain taxes for certain purposes; to provide for the control of the
alcoholic liquor traffic within this state and to provide for the power to
establish state liquor stores; to prohibit the use of certain devices for the
dispensing of alcoholic vapor; to provide for the care and treatment of
alcoholics; to provide for the incorporation of farmer cooperative wineries and
the granting of certain rights and privileges to those cooperatives; to provide
for the licensing and taxation of activities regulated under this act and the
disposition of the money received under this act; to prescribe liability for
retail licensees under certain circumstances and to require security for that
liability; to provide procedures, defenses, and remedies regarding violations of
this act; to provide for the enforcement and to prescribe penalties for
violations of this act; to provide for allocation of certain funds for certain
purposes; to provide for the confiscation and disposition of property seized
under this act; to provide referenda under certain circumstances; and to repeal
acts and parts of acts,” by amending section 109 (MCL 436.1109), as amended by
2018 PA 409, and by adding section 504.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:10 a.m.)
Time: 9:00 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 712 (Public Act No. 81), being
An act to amend 1895 PA 3, entitled “An
act to provide for the government of certain villages; to define their powers
and duties; to provide for the levy and collection of taxes, borrowing of
money, and issuance of bonds and other evidences of indebtedness by villages
subject to this act; to define the powers and duties of certain state and local
officers and entities; to define the application of this act and provide for
its amendment by villages subject to this act; to validate prior amendments and
certain prior actions taken and bonds issued by villages subject to this act;
to provide for the disincorporation of villages; and to prescribe penalties and
provide remedies,” by amending section 10 of chapter II and section 5 of
chapter V (MCL 62.10 and 65.5), section 5 of chapter V as amended by 1998 PA 255.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:12 a.m.)
Time: 9:02 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 754 (Public Act No. 82), being
An act to amend 1961 PA 236, entitled “An
act to revise and consolidate the statutes relating to the organization and
jurisdiction of the courts of this state; the powers and duties of the courts,
and of the judges and other officers of the courts; the forms and attributes of
civil claims and actions; the time within which civil actions and proceedings
may be brought in the courts; pleading, evidence, practice, and procedure in
civil and criminal actions and proceedings in the courts; to provide for the
powers and duties of certain state governmental officers and entities; to
provide remedies and penalties for the violation of certain provisions of this
act; to repeal all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with or contravening any
of the provisions of this act; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,” by
amending section 8144 (MCL 600.8144), as amended by 2012 PA 18.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:14 a.m.)
Time: 9:04 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 812 (Public Act No. 83), being
An act to amend 1936 (Ex Sess) PA 1,
entitled “An act to protect the welfare of the people of this state through the
establishment of an unemployment compensation fund, and to provide for the
disbursement thereof; to create certain other funds; to create the Michigan
employment security commission, and to prescribe its powers and duties; to
provide for the protection of the people of this state from the hazards of
unemployment; to levy and provide for contributions from employers; to levy and
provide for obligation assessments; to provide for the collection of those
contributions and assessments; to enter into reciprocal agreements and to
cooperate with agencies of the United States and of other states charged with
the administration of any unemployment insurance law; to furnish certain
information to certain governmental agencies for use in administering public
benefit and child support programs and investigating and prosecuting fraud; to
provide for the payment of benefits; to provide for appeals from
redeterminations, decisions and notices of assessments; and for referees and a
board of review to hear and decide the issues arising from redeterminations,
decisions and notices of assessment; to provide for the cooperation of this
state and compliance with the provisions of the social security act and the
Wagner‑Peyser act passed by the Congress of the United States of America;
to provide for the establishment and maintenance of free public employment
offices; to provide for the transfer of funds; to make appropriations for
carrying out the provisions of this act; to prescribe remedies and penalties
for the violation of this act; and to repeal all acts and parts of acts
inconsistent with this act,” by amending section 28 (MCL 421.28), as amended by
2017 PA 228.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:16 a.m.)
Time: 9:06 a.m.
To
the President of the Senate:
Sir—I have this day approved and signed
Enrolled
Senate Bill No. 268 (Public Act No. 84), being
An act to establish certain financial aid
programs for certain residents of this state seeking associate degrees or
industry‑recognized certificates or credentials from certain educational
and jobs training programs; to provide for the administration of the financial
aid programs; and to prescribe certain powers and duties of certain state
officers, agencies, and departments.
(Filed with the Secretary of State on April 2,
2020, at 10:18 a.m.)
Respectfully,
Gretchen
Whitmer
Governor
The
following message from the Governor was received on March 25, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑22
Extension
of county canvass deadlines for the
March 10, 2020 Presidential Primary Election
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421, and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act
of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The
Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of
1945 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).
To
mitigate the spread of COVID‑19, protect the public health, and provide
essential protections to vulnerable Michiganders, it is reasonable and
necessary to extend the post‑election county canvass deadlines related to
the March 10, 2020 Presidential Primary Election. This will ensure that the
canvass is carried out in a manner that is both orderly and compatible with the
demands presented by the current state of emergency, including the need to
practice social distancing and to limit gatherings, travel, and in‑person
work as much as possible.
Acting
under the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the
following:
1. Strict compliance with rules and procedures
under section 822(1) of the Michigan Election Law, 1954 PA 116, as
amended, MCL 168.822(1), is temporarily suspended to extend the deadline to
April 24, 2020 for a board of county canvassers to complete the canvass of the
election held on March 10, 2020.
2. Strict compliance with rules and procedures
under section 822(2) of the Michigan Election Law, MCL 168.822(2), is
temporarily suspended to extend the deadline to April 24, 2020 for a board of
county canvassers, if it has not yet certified the results of the March 10,
2020 election, to immediately deliver to the secretary of the board of state
canvassers all records and other information pertaining to that election.
3. Strict compliance with rules and procedures
under section 842(1) of the Michigan Election Law, MCL 168.842(1), is
temporarily suspended to extend the deadline to April 30, 2020 for the board of
state canvassers to ascertain and determine the results of the March 10, 2020
election.
4. To prevent the spread of COVID‑19,
boards of county canvassers and the board of state canvassers are strongly
encouraged to meet electronically, as feasible and otherwise authorized. If
meeting in‑person is necessary, boards of county canvassers and the board
of state canvassers must follow the mitigation measures set forth in section
5(c) of Executive Order 2020‑21.
5. This order does not affect the status of a
canvass of an election already completed by a board of county canvassers before
the issuance of this order.
6. This order is effective retroactive to March
24, 2020.
Given
under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date: March 25, 2020
Time: 10:22 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 March 26, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑23
Enhanced
authorization of remote means for carrying out
state administrative procedures
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421, and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act
of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The
Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945
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).
To
mitigate the impact of efforts to reduce the spread of COVID‑19, protect
the public health, limit the number of people interacting at public gatherings,
encourage social distancing, and provide essential protections to vulnerable
Michiganders, it is reasonable and necessary to temporarily suspend rules and
procedures relating to service of process and provision of notice relating to
certain administrative proceedings and the use of electronic signatures. State
administrative entities must continue to conduct public business during this
emergency, including actions to respond to the COVID‑19 pandemic, without
unduly compromising public health, safety, and welfare.
Acting
under the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the
following:
1. Hearing officers or arbitrators may conduct
Michigan Employment Relations Commission (“MERC”) hearings by electronic means,
including video conferencing. To the extent necessary, strict compliance with
the procedural requirements of 1939 PA 176, as amended, MCL 423.1 et seq. (employment relations
commission), 1947 PA 336, as amended, MCL 423.201 et seq. (public employment relations), and 1969 PA 312, as
amended, MCL 423.231 et seq.
(compulsory arbitration of labor disputes in police and fire departments), is
temporarily suspended.
2. Notice to MERC, as well as personal service of
notice, service of process, or written notice of a dispute relating to an
impending strike or an impending lockout, may be provided by mail or by
electronic means, including email. To the extent necessary, strict compliance
with rules and procedures under sections 9, 9a, 9d(3), 11, 23(2), and 27 of
1939 PA 176, as amended, MCL 423.9, 423.9a, 423.9d(3), 423.11, 423.23(2),
and 423.27, and any other procedural statutes governing MERC, is temporarily
suspended.
3. The Unemployment Insurance Agency may permit
hearings to be held by telephone or electronic means, including video
conferencing. To the extent necessary, strict compliance with rules and
procedures under the Michigan Employment Security Act, 1936 (Ex Sess) PA 1,
as amended, MCL 421.1 et seq., is
temporarily suspended.
4. Notice to the Unemployment Insurance Agency
and written notice by the Unemployment Insurance Agency may be provided by mail
or by electronic means, including email. To the extent necessary, strict
compliance with rules and procedures under the Michigan Employment Security
Act, 1936 (Ex Sess) PA 1, as amended, MCL 421.1 et seq., is temporarily suspended.
5. Hearings held under the Administrative
Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, as amended, MCL 24.201 et seq., as well as under the MAHS
Administrative Hearing Rules, R 792.10101 et
seq., and any informal hearings required by statute, rule, or regulation,
may proceed by telephone or by electronic means, including video conferencing.
To the extent necessary, strict compliance with the rules and procedures of the
Administrative Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, as amended, MCL 24.201
et seq., and the MAHS Administrative
Hearing Rules, R 792.10101 et seq.,
is temporarily suspended. This does not apply to hearings by the Joint
Committee on Administrative Rules.
6. Notice and service of process required by the
Administrative Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, as amended, MCL 24.201
et seq., and the MAHS Administrative
Hearing Rules, R 792.10101 et seq.,
may be provided by mail or by electronic means, including email. To the extent
necessary, strict compliance with rules and procedures under the Administrative
Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, as amended, MCL 24.201 et seq., and the MAHS Administrative
Hearing Rules, R 792.10101 et seq.,
is temporarily suspended.
7. Administrative rules or emergency rules may be
filed with the secretary of state electronically, including by email. To the
extent necessary, strict compliance with rules and procedures under the
Administrative Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, as amended, MCL 24.201
et seq., is temporarily suspended.
8. Pursuant to section 18 of the Uniform
Electronic Transactions Act, 2000 PA 305, as amended, MCL 450.848, the
Department of Technology, Management and Budget is directed to authorize the
acceptance, use, and reliance upon electronic signatures for a signature
required by sections 11(b)(4), 32b(3), and 54f of the Michigan Employment
Security Act, 1936 (Ex Sess) PA 1, as amended, MCL 421.11(b)(4),
421.32b(3), and 421.54f. Pursuant to section 7 of the Uniform Electronic
Transactions Act, 2000 PA 305, as amended, MCL 450.837, a signature must
not be denied legal effect or enforceability solely because it is in electronic
form, and if a law requires a signature, an electronic signature satisfies the
law.
9. Pursuant to section 18 of the Uniform
Electronic Transactions Act, 2000 PA 305, as amended, MCL 450.848, the
Department of Technology, Management and Budget is directed to authorize the
acceptance, use, and reliance upon electronic signatures for a signature
required under the Administrative Procedures Act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, as
amended, MCL 24.201 et seq.,
including any requirement of a signature for filing administrative rules or emergency
rules with the secretary of state. Pursuant to section 7 of the Uniform
Electronic Transactions Act, 2000 PA 305, as amended, MCL 450.837, a
signature must not be denied legal effect or enforceability solely because it
is in electronic form, and if a law requires a signature, an electronic
signature satisfies the law.
10. This order is effective immediately and remains
in effect through April 13, 2020 at 11:59 p.m.
11. 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: March 25, 2020
Time: 4:14 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 March 26, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑24
Temporary
expansions in unemployment eligibility and cost‑sharing
Rescission
of Executive Order 2020‑10
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421, and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act
of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The
Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of
1945 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).
To
mitigate the spread of COVID‑19, protect the public health, and provide
essential protections to vulnerable Michiganders, it is reasonable and
necessary to temporarily suspend rules and procedures to expand eligibility for
unemployment benefits and cost‑sharing with employers.
Executive
Order 2020‑10 took such action. This order reaffirms that action and
clarifies and strengthens its expansion of eligibility for unemployment
benefits and cost‑sharing with employers. With this order, Executive
Order 2020‑10 is rescinded.
Acting
under the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the
following:
1. Strict compliance with subdivision (a) of
subsection (1) of section 29 of the Michigan Employment Security Act, 1936 (Ex
Sess) PA 1, as amended (“Employment Security Act”), MCL 421.29(1)(a), is
temporarily suspended, as follows:
(a) An individual must be considered to have left
work involuntarily for medical reasons if they leave work because of self‑isolation
or self‑quarantine in response to elevated risk from COVID‑19 due
to being immunocompromised, displaying the symptoms of COVID‑19, having
contact in the last 14 days with someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19,
the need to care for someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19, or a
family care responsibility as a result of a government directive.
(b) An individual may be deemed laid off if they
became unemployed because of self‑isolation or self‑quarantine in
response to elevated risk from COVID‑19 due to being immunocompromised,
displaying the symptoms of COVID‑19, having contact in the last 14 days
with someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19, the need to care for
someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19, or a family care
responsibility as a result of a government directive.
2. Strict compliance with subsection (3) of
section 48 of the Employment Security Act, MCL 421.48(3), is temporarily
suspended. An individual on a leave of absence because of self‑isolation
or self‑quarantine in response to elevated risk from COVID‑19 due
to being immunocompromised, displaying the symptoms of COVID‑19, having
contact in the last 14 days with someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19,
the need to care for someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19, or a
family care responsibility as a result of a government directive, must be
considered to be unemployed unless the individual is already on sick leave or
receives a disability benefit.
3. Strict compliance with subsections (4) through
(7) of Rule 421.210 of the Michigan Administrative Code is temporarily
suspended. An individual who becomes unemployed and files a claim for
unemployment benefits within 28 days of the last day worked must be considered
to have filed on time.
4. Strict compliance with subsection (d) of
section 27 of the Employment Security Act, MCL 421.27(d), is temporarily
suspended. Each eligible individual who files a claim or has an active claim as
of the effective date of this order will receive not more than 26 weeks of
benefits payable in a benefit year.
5. Strict compliance with subsection (1) of
section 28c of the Employment Security Act, MCL 421.28c(1), is temporarily
suspended. The Unemployment Insurance Agency may approve an employer’s
participation in a shared‑work plan upon application by the employer,
regardless of whether the employer has met the requirements of MCL 421.28c(1).
6. Any benefit paid to a claimant that is laid
off or placed on a leave of absence must not be charged to the account of the
employer(s) who otherwise would have been charged but instead must be charged
to the Unemployment Insurance Agency’s non‑chargeable account. Effective
March 25, 2020 at 11:59 p.m., the benefits conferred on employers by this
section are not available to employers determined to have misclassified
workers.
7. Strict compliance with subdivision (a) of
subsection (1) of section 28 of the Employment Security Act, MCL 421.28(1)(a),
is temporarily suspended. For purposes of the able, available and seeking work
requirements in section 28, MCL 421.28, suitable work is unavailable because of
COVID‑19, which satisfies the requirements of section 28 for all
claimants.
8. Unless otherwise specified in this order, this
order is effective retroactive to March 16, 2020. This order expires on April
22, 2020 at 11:59 p.m.
9. Executive Order 2020‑10 is rescinded.
10. 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: March 25, 2020
Time: 7:36 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 March 26, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑25
Temporary
enhancements to operational capacity,
flexibility, and efficiency of pharmacies
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421, and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act
of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The
Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of
1945 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).
To
respond effectively to the urgent and steep demands created by this emergency,
the public requires increased access to therapeutic pharmaceuticals. Meeting
this critical need requires swiftly but safely expanding access to pharmacy
services. To that end, it is reasonable and necessary to provide temporary and
limited relief from certain regulatory restrictions regarding pharmacies in
order to enhance their operational capacity, flexibility, and efficiency.
Acting
under the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the
following:
1. Pharmacists located in any county in this
state may dispense emergency refills of up to a sixty (60) day supply of any
non‑controlled maintenance medication for residents of any county in this
state if, in the pharmacist’s professional judgment, failure to refill the
prescription might interrupt the patient’s ongoing care and have a significant
adverse effect on the patient’s well‑being.
2. The following shall apply to all emergency refills
dispensed under section 1 of this order:
(a) The pharmacist must inform the patient that the
prescription was refilled under section 1 of this order.
(b) The pharmacist must inform the prescriber in
writing within a reasonable period of time of any refills the pharmacist
dispensed under section 1 of this order.
(c) Prior to refilling a prescription under section
1 of this order, the pharmacist, clinic, or mobile pharmacy must make every
reasonable effort to communicate with the prescriber regarding the refilling of
the prescription. The pharmacist must make an appropriate record of that
effort, including the basis for proceeding under section 1 of this order.
(d) A prescriber must not incur any criminal or
civil liability or licensing disciplinary action as the result of a pharmacist
refilling a prescription under section 1 of this order.
3. Pharmacists may temporarily operate a pharmacy
in an area not designated on the pharmacy license, but they may not prepare
sterile drug products beyond low‑risk preparations, as defined by USP
standards, for immediate inpatient administration in such temporary facilities.
4. Pharmacists may dispense and/or administer
drugs as needed to treat COVID‑19 pursuant to protocols established by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the National Institute of
Health, or as determined appropriate by the chief medical executive of the
Department of Health and Human Services or her designee.
5. Pharmacists may substitute a therapeutically
equivalent medication for a medication subject to critical shortages without
the authorization of a prescriber. The pharmacist must inform the patient of
any such substitution. The pharmacist must inform the prescriber within a
reasonable period of time of any prescriptions or refills dispensed under this
section. A prescriber must not incur any criminal or civil liability or
licensing disciplinary action as the result of a pharmacist filling or
refilling a prescription under this section.
6. To increase the number of pharmacists who can
serve patients during this time of need, preceptors may supervise student
pharmacists remotely to fulfill eligibility for licensure and avoid delaying
graduation.
7. Insurers and health maintenance organizations
issuing health insurance or disability insurance policies that provide
prescription drug benefits must cover any emergency refills of covered
prescription drugs dispensed by a pharmacist under section 1 of this order.
Insurers and health maintenance organizations must also allow for early refills
of all 30‑day or 60‑day covered prescription maintenance
medications to allow for up to a 90‑day supply to be dispensed by a
pharmacy, without regard to whether the pharmacy is mail‑order or in‑person.
Insurers and health maintenance organizations may still apply policy or
contract provisions governing out‑of‑network benefits and cost‑sharing.
8. Pharmacists may supervise pharmacy technicians
and other pharmacy staff remotely. Supervision must be conducted through a real‑time,
continuous audiovisual camera system, capable of allowing the pharmacist to
visually identify the markings on tablets and capsules. The pharmacist must
have access to all relevant patient information to accomplish the remote
supervision and must be available at all times during the supervision to
provide real‑time patient consultation. A pharmacy technician may not
perform sterile or nonsterile compounding without a pharmacist on the premises.
9. Pharmacies holding a license, certificate, or
other permit in good standing issued by another state must be deemed licensed
to do business in this state. These out‑of‑state licensed
pharmacies must not deliver controlled substances into this state; must abide
by all Michigan regulations applicable to the practice of pharmacy, but need
not have a pharmacist‑in‑charge with a license to practice in
Michigan; and must hold a current accreditation from a national organization
approved by the Michigan Board of Pharmacy before providing sterile compounding
services to patients in this state.
10. Wholesale distributors holding a license,
certificate, or other permit in good standing issued by another state must be
deemed licensed to do business in this state. These out‑of‑state
wholesale distributors must not deliver controlled substances into this state
and must abide by all Michigan regulations applicable to a Michigan‑licensed
wholesale distributor.
11. To the extent any statutes, rules, or
regulations may be inconsistent with this order, strict compliance with them is
temporarily suspended. This includes, but is not limited to: sections 17707(5),
17739(2)(c), 17739a(3), 17741(1)‑(2), 17743, 17748, 17748a, 17748b,
17751, 17755(3), and 17763(b) of the Public Health
Code, 1978 PA 368, as amended, MCL 333.17707(5), 333.17739(2)(c),
333.17739a(3), 333.17741(1)‑(2), 333.17743, 333.17748, 333.17748a,
333.17748b, 333.17751, 333.17755(3), and 333.17763(b); and Rules 338.473(2), 338.473a(5)(a), 338.477(1)‑(2),
338.482(2)‑(3); 338.486(1)(b), 338.486(3), 338.489(3), 338.490(3),
338.490(4)(a), 338.490(5), 338.3041(4), and 338.3162(1) of the Michigan
Administrative Code.
12. This order is effective immediately and
continues through April 22, 2020 at 11:59 p.m.
13. 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: March 25, 2020
Time: 9:14 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 March 30, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑26
Extension
of April 2020 Michigan income tax filing deadlines
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
The COVID‑19 pandemic has caused extreme
disruption to the lives and livelihoods of all Michiganders. To protect the
public health of this state and to provide essential relief to Michigan
taxpayers during this unprecedented state of emergency, it is reasonable and
necessary to temporarily suspend certain rules and procedures so as to
automatically extend to July 2020 certain deadlines for filing and paying state
and city income taxes in Michigan. This temporary relief comports with the
filing and payment extensions the Internal Revenue Service has provided to
federal taxpayers, and it will help Michiganders, as well as their state and
local governments, focus their resources and efforts as fully as possible on
the immediate and steep demands created by this pandemic
Acting under the Michigan Constitution of 1963
and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 315, 681, and 685 of the
Income Tax Act of 1967 (“Income Tax Act”), 1967 PA 281, as amended, MCL
206.315, 206.681, and 206.685, is temporarily suspended so as to extend the
deadline for all taxpayers required to file an annual state income tax return
in April 2020, as follows:
(a) An
annual state income tax return otherwise due on April 15, 2020 will instead be
due on July 15, 2020.
(b) An
annual state income tax return otherwise due on April 30, 2020 will instead be
due on July 31, 2020.
2. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 311 and 685 of the Income
Tax Act, MCL 206.311 and 206.685, is temporarily suspended so as to extend the
deadline for all taxpayers to pay state income taxes in connection with an
annual state income tax return in April 2020, as follows:
(a) A
state income tax payment otherwise due on April 15, 2020 will instead be due on
July 15, 2020.
(b) A
state income tax payment otherwise due on April 30, 2020 will instead be due on
July 31, 2020.
3. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 301(1) and 681(2) of the
Income Tax Act, MCL 206.301(1) and 206.681(2), is temporarily suspended so as
to extend until July 15, 2020 the deadline for all taxpayers required to pay
estimated state income taxes that would otherwise be due on April 15, 2020.
4. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 24 and 27 of 1941 PA 122,
as amended, MCL 205.24 and 205.27, is temporarily suspended so as to ensure
that penalties and interest for failure to file a state income tax return or
failure to pay state income taxes are aligned with the extensions set forth in
sections 1 to 3 of this order. Any applicable penalties and interest will not
begin to accrue until July 16, 2020 for any remaining unpaid balances due on
July 15, 2020, and will not begin to accrue until August 1, 2020 for any
remaining unpaid balances due on July 31, 2020.
5. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 30 of 1941 PA 122, MCL
205.30, is temporarily suspended so as to clarify that interest at the rate
provided in MCL 205.30(3) will be added to a refund for amounts paid for tax
year 2019 beginning 45 days after the claim for the refund is filed or 45 days
after the date by which a return must be filed under section 1 of this order,
whichever is later. Additional interest under MCL 205.30(4) or (5) shall not
apply to a 2019 income tax return for which the filing deadline was extended
under section 1 of this order.
6. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 41, 43, and 64(1) of the
City Income Tax Act, 1964 PA 284, as amended, MCL 141.641, 141.643, and
141.664(1), is temporarily suspended so as to extend the deadline for all
taxpayers required to file an annual city income tax return in April 2020, as
follows:
(a) An
annual city income tax return otherwise due on April 15, 2020, and any
accompanying city income tax payment due with the return, will instead be due
on July 15, 2020.
(b) An
annual city income tax return otherwise due on April 30, 2020, and any
accompanying city income tax payment due with the return, will instead be due
on July 31, 2020.
7. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 64(2) of the City Income Tax
Act, MCL 141.664(2), is temporarily suspended so as to extend the deadline for
all taxpayers required to pay estimated city income tax extension payments in
April 2020, as follows:
(a) An
estimated city income tax extension payment otherwise due on April 15, 2020
will instead be due on July 15, 2020.
(b) An
estimated city income tax extension payment otherwise due on April 30, 2020
will instead be due on July 31, 2020.
8. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 62 and 63 of the City
Income Tax Act, MCL 141.662 and 141.663, is temporarily suspended so as to
extend the deadline for all taxpayers required to pay estimated city income
taxes in April 2020, as follows:
(a) An
estimated city income tax payment otherwise due on April 15, 2020 will instead
be due on July 15, 2020.
(b) An
estimated city income tax payment otherwise due on April 30, 2020 will instead
be due on July 31, 2020.
9. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 64 and 82 of the City
Income Tax Act, MCL 141.664 and 141.682, is temporarily suspended so as to
ensure that penalties and interest for failure to file a city income tax return
or failure to pay city income taxes are aligned with the extensions set forth
in sections 6 to 8 of this order. Any applicable penalties and interest will
not begin to accrue until July 16, 2020 for any remaining unpaid balances due
on July 15, 2020, and will not begin to accrue until August 1, 2020 for any
remaining unpaid balances due on July 31, 2020.
10. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 43 of the City Income Tax
Act, MCL 141.643, is temporarily suspended so as to clarify that, except for a
refund under MCL 141.661, interest at the rate established in MCL 205.30 will
be added to a refund for an overpayment of taxes for tax year 2019 beginning 45
days after the claim for the refund is filed or 45 days after the date by which
a return must be filed under section 6 of this order, whichever is later.
11. The
extensions in this order are automatic. Taxpayers do not need to file any
additional forms or call the Michigan Department of Treasury to qualify.
12. This
order is effective immediately.
Given
under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date: March 27, 2020
Time: 4:51 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 March 30, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑27
Conducting
elections on May 5, 2020 using absent voter ballots
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To mitigate the spread of COVID‑19,
protect the public health, and provide essential protections to vulnerable
Michiganders, it is crucial that all Michiganders take steps to limit in‑person
contact. These critical mitigation measures include social distancing and
limiting the number of people interacting at public gatherings. To that end, it
is reasonable and necessary to temporarily suspend rules and procedures
relating to the May 5, 2020 elections so that these elections may be conducted
by absent voter ballot to the greatest extent possible. It also reasonable and
necessary to suspend rules and procedures relating to the withdrawal of ballot
proposals from the May 5, 2020 elections to better enable jurisdictions to move
those elections to the August 4, 2020 election date.
From history and experience, when elections
are held at polling locations, a large number of people often gather,
increasing the risk of transmission of COVID‑19. Section 641 of the
Michigan Election Law, 1954 PA 116, as amended, MCL 168.641, provides for
the May regular election to be held on May 5, 2020. Numerous school districts,
counties, and other local governments have scheduled elections on May 5, 2020
with in‑person voting at polling locations. At this time, conducting an
in‑person election would force voters and poll workers to be exposed to
an unacceptably high risk of contracting or spreading COVID‑19.
Because all registered electors in Michigan
have the right to vote by absent voter ballot under section 4 of article 2 of
the Michigan Constitution of 1963, conducting the May 5, 2020 elections by
absent voter ballot provides a viable alternative to in‑person voting at
polling locations. Doing so permits Michigan voters to exercise their
democratic rights while minimizing their exposure to the imminent and severe
threat posed by COVID‑19. And enabling jurisdictions to delay elections
currently scheduled for May 5, 2020 where possible will further limit the
disruption and harm caused by this pandemic.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution of 1963
and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. To
protect the public health, safety, and welfare of this state and its residents,
strict compliance with rules and procedures under chapter 28 of the Michigan
Election Law (“Election Law”), 1954 PA 116, as amended, MCL 168.641 to
168.799a (conducting an election at a polling place) and under chapter 29 of
the Election Law, MCL 168.801 to 168.813 (canvassing of the vote by inspectors
of an election at a polling place) is temporarily suspended for elections on
May 5, 2020, so that those elections may be conducted as specified in this
order.
2. Elections
on May 5, 2020 must be conducted to the greatest extent possible by absent
voter ballots issued and submitted without in‑person interaction. Each
jurisdiction must maintain at least one (1) location on election day where any
voter can appear in‑person to receive and submit a ballot, including an
individual with a disability that inhibits the individual from voting an absent
voter ballot remotely. A local clerk, county clerk, or election administrator
with an election on May 5, 2020 must immediately begin preparations to conduct
that election primarily by mail, including the preparation of postage‑prepaid
absent voter ballot return envelopes for the return of voted ballots.
3. An
individual possessing the qualifications of an elector under section 492 of the
Election Law, MCL 168.492, who is not registered to vote but wants to register
and vote in the May 5, 2020 election, is strongly encouraged to register online
or by mail not later than Monday, April 20, 2020, and is strongly discouraged
from going in‑person to the office of the clerk of the township or city
in which the individual resides to apply to
register to vote. An individual can register to vote either online (by visiting
mvic.sos.state.mi.us/registervoter) or by mail (using the form available at
michigan.gov/documents/MIVoterRegistration_97046_7.pdf).
4. Notwithstanding
section 3 of this order, an individual possessing the qualifications of an
elector under section 492 of the Election Law, MCL 168.492, who is not
registered to vote but wants to register and vote in the May 5, 2020 election
after April 20, 2020, may apply to register to vote at the office of the clerk
of the city or township in which the individual resides during any hours in
which the clerk’s office is open, as provided in chapter 23 of the Election
Law, MCL 168.491 to 168.530, and as provided in sections 5 and 6 of this order.
5. An
individual seeking to register to vote in‑person at the office of the
clerk of the city or township in which the individual resides is strongly
encouraged to contact the clerk’s office before doing so. To facilitate the
timely processing of applications to register to vote and to minimize social
interaction, beginning on April 21, 2020 and continuing through May 5, 2020, a
township or city clerk may accept copies of applications to register to vote
and residency verifications by mail, email, or facsimile for purposes of
registration and verification by the clerk.
6. A
clerk processing an in‑person application to register to vote, any in‑person
voting in the clerk’s office, and any individuals in the clerk’s office must
use best practices to mitigate the spread of COVID‑19 and must comply
with any applicable restrictions or requirements to that effect.
7. Any
application to register to vote that is properly submitted beginning on the
effective date of this order and continuing through May 5, 2020 by a voter
residing in a jurisdiction holding an election on May 5, 2020 must also be
considered a request for an absent voter ballot for the May 5, 2020 election.
8. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 646a of the Election Law,
MCL 168.646a, is temporarily suspended for the limited purpose of permitting a
political subdivision of this state that has certified a ballot question for
placement on the ballot on May 5, 2020 to withdraw the ballot question. Removal
of the question must be by the same method used by the local legislative body
to certify the question to the ballot (such as by the adoption or rescission of
a resolution or ordinance). If the county clerk is notified of the withdrawal
by March 27, 2020, the ballot question must not be canvassed for the May 5,
2020 election. Ballot questions removed from a May 5, 2020 election may be
submitted to voters at the August 4, 2020 or a later election date.
9. The
Department of State may assist local clerks, county clerks, and election
administrators with: the mailing of absent voter ballot applications with a
postage‑prepaid, pre‑addressed return envelope to each registered
voter within any jurisdiction conducting a May 5, 2020 election; the
preparation of postage-prepaid absent voter ballot return envelopes; the
coordination of county and state assistance in processing ballots; changes to
election dates; and other local clerk functions to the extent local
jurisdictions are unable to perform them.
10. This
order is effective immediately.
Given
under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date: March 27, 2020
Time: 7:03 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 March 30, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑28
Restoring
water service to occupied residences during the COVID‑19 pandemic
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To mitigate the spread of COVID‑19,
protect the public health, and avoid needless deaths, it is crucial that all
Michiganders remain in their homes or residences to the greatest extent
possible and wash their hands thoroughly and regularly. Now more than ever, the
provision of clean water to residences is essential to human health and
hygiene, and to the public health and safety of this state. Correspondingly,
many water utilities have already suspended water shutoffs during this
difficult time. Due to the vital need to ensure that Michigan residents have
access to clean water at home during the COVID‑19 pandemic, it is
reasonable and necessary to require the restoration of clean water to
residences across the State of Michigan throughout this state of emergency. And
because it is also vitally important for state government to have up‑to‑date
and accurate information regarding access to clean water, it is reasonable and
necessary to require public water supplies to report on the status of water
service within their respective service areas.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution of 1963
and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. A
public water supply must restore water service to any occupied residence where
water service has been shut off due to non‑payment, so long as the public
water supply does not have reason to believe that reconnection would create a
risk to public health (e.g., due to cross‑contamination). To facilitate
the restoration of water service, a public water supply must immediately make
best efforts to determine which occupied residences within their service areas
do not have water service. For purposes of this order, a public water supply’s “service
area” means the area for which the public water supply collects payment for
water service.
2. If a
public water supply determines that any occupied residences within its service
area have had water service shut off for any reason other than non‑payment
or that reconnection would create a risk to public health, it must make best
efforts to remedy such conditions and restore water service to such occupied
residences as soon as possible.
3. As
soon as possible and no later than April 12, 2020, all public water supplies
that have used water shutoffs as a remedy for non‑payment within the last
year must report to the State Emergency Operations Center regarding access to
water in their service areas. The report must include:
(a) An
account of what efforts have been made to determine which occupied residences
within the public water supply’s service area do not have water service.
(b) The
number of occupied residences within the public water supply’s service area
that do not have water service as a result of a shutoff due to non‑payment.
(c) The
number of occupied residences within the public water supply’s service area
that do not have water service as a result of any reason other than non‑payment.
(d) A
certification, if true, that best efforts have been exercised to determine
which occupied residences within the service area do not have water service;
that, to the best of the public water supply’s knowledge, no occupied residences
have their water service shut off due to non‑payment; that the public
water supply has reconnected water service for all occupied residences that can
be reconnected without creating a risk to public health; and that the public
water supply has exercised best efforts to remedy the conditions that prevent
reconnection due to a risk to public health.
4. If a
public water supply submits a report under section 3 of this order that does
not meet all of the requirements described in section 3, then the public water
supply must submit a supplemental report every 30 days until it submits a
report that meets all of section 3’s requirements.
5. Nothing
in this order abrogates the obligation of a resident to pay for water, prevents
a public water supply from charging any customer for water service, or reduces
the amount a resident may owe to a public water supply.
6. This
order is effective immediately and continues until the termination of the state
of emergency under section 3 of Executive Order 2020‑4.
Given
under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date: March 28, 2020
Time: 7:09 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 March 30, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑29
Temporary
COVID‑19 protocols for entry into Michigan Department of
Corrections facilities and transfers to and from Department custody;
temporary recommended COVID‑19 protocols and enhanced early‑release
authorization for county jails, local lockups, and juvenile detention centers
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To mitigate the spread of COVID‑19,
protect the public health, and provide essential protections to vulnerable
Michiganders who work at or are incarcerated in prisons, county jails, local
lockups, and juvenile detention centers across the state, it is reasonable and
necessary to implement limited and temporary COVID‑19‑related
protocols and procedures regarding entry into facilities operated by the
Michigan Department of Corrections and transfers to and from the Department’s
custody; to recommend limited and temporary COVID‑19‑related
protocols and measures for county jails, local lockups, and juvenile detention
centers; and to temporarily suspend certain rules and procedures to facilitate
the implementation of those recommendations.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution of 1963
and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. The
Michigan Department of Corrections (the “Department”) must continue to
implement risk reduction protocols to address COVID‑19 (“risk reduction
protocols”), which the Department has already developed and implemented at the
facilities it operates and which include the following:
(a) Screening
all persons arriving at or departing from a facility, including staff,
incarcerated persons, vendors, and any other person entering the facility, in a
manner consistent with guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (“CDC”). Such screening includes a temperature reading and obtaining
information about travel and any contact with persons under investigation for
COVID‑19 infection.
(b) Restricting
all visits, except for attorney‑related visits, and conducting those
visits without physical contact to the extent feasible.
(c) Limiting
off‑site appointments for incarcerated persons to only appointments for
urgent or emergency medical treatment.
(d) Developing
and implementing protocols for incarcerated persons who display symptoms of
COVID‑19, including methods for evaluation and processes for testing,
notification of the Department of Health and Human Services (“DHHS”), and
isolation during testing, while awaiting test results, and in the event of
positive test results. These protocols should be developed in consultation with
local public health departments.
(e) Notifying
DHHS of any suspected case that meets the criteria for COVID‑19 through
communication with the applicable local public health department.
(f) Providing,
to the fullest extent possible, appropriate personal protective equipment to
all staff as recommended by the CDC.
(g) Conducting
stringent cleaning of all areas and surfaces, including frequently touched
surfaces (such as doorknobs, handles, light switches, keyboards, etc.), on a
regular and ongoing basis.
(h) Ensuring
access to personal hygiene products for incarcerated persons and correctional
staff, including soap and water sufficient for regular handwashing.
(i) Ensuring
that protective laundering protocols are in place.
(j) Posting
signage and continually educating on the importance of social distancing,
handwashing, and personal hygiene.
(k) Practicing
social distancing in all programs and classrooms—meaning a distance of at least
six feet between people in any meeting, classroom, or other group.
(l) Minimizing crowding, including interactions of
groups of 10 or more people, which may include scheduling more times for meal
and recreation to reduce person‑to‑person contact.
2. To
mitigate the risk of COVID‑19 spreading in county jails, strict
compliance with the capacity and procedural requirements regarding county jail
overcrowding states of emergency in the County Jail Overcrowding Act (“CJOA”),
1982 PA 325, MCL 801.51 et seq.,
is temporarily suspended. While this order is in effect, all actions that would
be authorized under the CJOA in the event of a declaration of a county jail
overcrowding state of emergency are authorized and shall remain authorized
without regard to any reduction in jail population or any other such
limitations on the duration of authorization imposed by the CJOA.
3. Anyone
authorized to act under section 2 of this order is strongly encouraged to
consider early release for all of the following, so long as they do not pose a
public safety risk:
(a) Older
people, people who have chronic conditions or are otherwise medically frail,
people who are pregnant, and people nearing their release date.
(b) Anyone
who is incarcerated for a traffic violation.
(c) Anyone
who is incarcerated for failure to appear or failure to pay.
(d) Anyone
with behavioral health problems who can safely be diverted for treatment.
4. Effective
immediately, all transfers into the Department’s custody are temporarily
suspended. Beginning seven (7) days from the effective date of this order, and
no more than once every seven (7) days, a county jail or local lockup may
request that the director of the Department determine that the jail or lockup
has satisfactorily implemented risk reduction protocols as described in section
1 of this order. Upon inspection, if the director of the Department determines
that a county jail or local lockup has satisfactorily implemented risk
reduction protocols, transfers from that jail or lockup will resume in
accordance with the Department’s risk reduction protocols. The director of the
Department may reject transfers that do not pass the screening protocol for
entry into a facility operated by the Department.
5. Parole
violators in the Department’s custody must not be transported to or lodged in a
county jail or local lockup unless the director of the Department has
determined that such county jail or local lockup has satisfactorily implemented
risk reduction protocols as described in section 1 of this order.
6. The
State Budget Office must immediately seek a legislative transfer so that
counties may be reimbursed for lodging incarcerated persons that would have
been transferred into the Department’s custody if not for the suspension of
transfers described in section 4 of this order.
7. Juvenile
detention centers are strongly encouraged to reduce the risk that those at
their facilities will be exposed to COVID‑19 by implementing as feasible
the following measures:
(a) Removing
from the general population any juveniles who have COVID‑19 symptoms.
(b) Eliminating
any form of juvenile detention or residential facility placement for juveniles
unless a determination is made that a juvenile is a substantial and immediate
safety risk to others.
(c) Providing
written and verbal communications to all juveniles at such facilities regarding
COVID‑19, access to medical care, and community‑based support.
(d) To
the extent feasible, facilitating access to family, education, and legal
counsel through electronic means (such as telephone calls or video
conferencing) at no cost, rather than through in‑person meetings.
8. Unless
otherwise directed by court order, for juveniles on court‑ordered
probation, the use of out‑of‑home confinement for technical
violations of probation and any requirements for in‑person meetings with
probation officers are temporarily suspended.
9. This
order is effective immediately and continues through April 26, 2020 at 11:59 p.m.
Given
under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date: March 29, 2020
Time: 7:23 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 March 30, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑30
Temporary
relief from certain restrictions and requirements
governing the provision of medical services
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 Michigan 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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
Responding effectively to the urgent and steep
demands created by the COVID‑19 pandemic will require the help of as many
health care professionals as possible, working in whatever capacities are
appropriate to their respective education, training, and experience. To ensure
health care professionals and facilities are fully enabled to provide the
critical assistance and care needed by this state and its residents during this
unprecedented emergency, it is reasonable and necessary to provide limited and
temporary relief from certain restrictions and requirements governing the
provision of medical services.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution of 1963
and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Any
and all provisions in Article 15 of the Public Health Code, 1978 PA 368,
as amended, MCL 333.16101 et seq.,
relating to scope of practice, supervision, and delegation, are temporarily
suspended, in whole or part, to the extent necessary to allow licensed,
registered, or certified health care professionals to provide, within a
designated health care facility at which the professional is employed or
contracted to work, medical services that are necessary to support the facility’s
response to the COVID‑19 pandemic and are appropriate to the professional’s
education, training, and experience, as determined by the facility in
consultation with the facility’s medical leadership.
(a) Medical
services may be provided under this section without supervision from a licensed
physician, without regard to a written practice agreement with a physician, and
without criminal, civil, or administrative penalty related to a lack of
supervision or to the lack of such agreement.
(b) The
suspensions of Article 15 under this section include, but are not limited to,
the following:
(1) Parts
170, 175, and 180, and related provisions of the Public Health Code, as they
relate to scope of practice, supervision, and delegation, to the extent
necessary to permit physician assistants to provide medical services
appropriate to the professional’s education, training, and experience, without
a written practice agreement with a physician and without criminal, civil, or
administrative penalty related to a lack of such agreement.
(2) Parts
170, 172, and 175, and related provisions of the Public Health Code, as they
relate to scope of practice, supervision, and delegation, to the extent
necessary to permit advanced practice registered nurses, as defined in MCL
333.17201 and including nurse anesthetists, to provide medical services
appropriate to the professional’s education, training, and experience, without
physician supervision and without criminal, civil, or administrative penalty
related to a lack of such supervision.
(3) Parts
170, 172, and 175, and related provisions of the Public Health Code, as they relate
to scope of practice, supervision, and delegation, to the extent necessary to
permit registered nurses and licensed practical nurses to order the collection
of throat or nasopharyngeal swab specimens from individuals suspected of being
infected by COVID‑19, for purposes of testing.
(4) Part
172 and related provisions of the Public Health Code, as they relate to scope
of practice, supervision, and delegation, to the extent necessary to permit
licensed practical nurses to provide medical services appropriate to the
professional’s education, training, and experience, without registered nurse
supervision and without criminal, civil, or administrative penalty related to a
lack of such supervision.
(5) Part
177 and related provisions of the Public Health Code, as they relate to scope
of practice, supervision, and delegation, to the extent necessary to permit
licensed pharmacists to provide care for routine health maintenance, chronic
disease states, or similar conditions, as appropriate to the professional’s
education, training, and experience, without physician supervision and without
criminal, civil, or administrative penalty related to a lack of such
supervision.
(c) Nothing
in this section diminishes the ability of unlicensed health care professionals
to practice in Michigan under MCL 333.16171, which provides certain exceptions
to licensure and which remains in full force and effect.
2. Notwithstanding
any law, regulation, or executive order to the contrary, and without the need
for a clinical affiliation agreement, a designated health care facility is
temporarily authorized:
(a) To
allow students who are enrolled in programs to become licensed, registered, or
certified health care professionals to volunteer or work within the facility in
whatever roles that are necessary to support the facility’s response to the
COVID‑19 pandemic and are appropriate to the student’s education,
training, and experience, as determined by the facility in consultation with
the facility’s medical leadership.
(b) To
allow medical students, physical therapists, and emergency medical technicians
to volunteer or work within the facility as “respiratory therapist extenders”
under the supervision of physicians, respiratory therapists, or advanced
practice registered nurses. Such extenders may assist respiratory therapists
and other health care professionals in the operation of ventilators or related
devices. Nothing in this section shall be taken to preclude such extenders from
providing any other services that are necessary to support the facility’s
response to the COVID‑19 pandemic and are appropriate to their education,
training, and experience, as determined by the facility in consultation with
the facility’s medical leadership.
3. Any
and all provisions in Article 15 of the Public Health Code are temporarily
suspended, in whole or part, to the extent necessary to allow health care
professionals licensed and in good standing in any state or territory in the
United States to practice in Michigan without criminal, civil, or administrative
penalty related to lack of licensure. A license that has been suspended or
revoked is not considered a license in good standing, and a licensee with
pending disciplinary action is not considered to have a license in good
standing. Any license that is subject to a limitation in another state is
subject to the same limitation in this state.
4. Notwithstanding
any law, regulation, or executive order to the contrary, any drug manufacturer
or wholesale distributor of prescription drugs licensed in another state whose
license is in good standing is temporarily authorized to distribute and ship
controlled substances into Michigan to a hospital or to a licensed manufacturer
or wholesale distributor under MCL 333.17748. A license that has been suspended
or revoked is not considered a license in good standing, and a licensee with
pending disciplinary action is not considered to have a license in good
standing. Any license that is subject to a limitation in another state is
subject to the same limitation in this state.
5. Notwithstanding
any law or regulation to the contrary, a designated health care facility is
temporarily authorized to use qualified volunteers or qualified personnel
affiliated with other designated health care facilities, and to adjust the
scope of practice of these volunteers or personnel under section 1 or 2 of this
order as if the volunteers or personnel were affiliated with the facility. This
section is subject to any terms and conditions that may be established by the
director of the Department of Health and Human Services.
6. Any
unlicensed volunteers or students at a designated health care facility who
perform activities in support of this state’s response to the COVID‑19
pandemic constitute personnel of a disaster relief force under section 11 of
the Emergency Management Act, MCL 30.411, and, with respect to such activities,
are entitled to the same rights and immunities as provided by law for the
employees of this state, as provided under MCL 30.411(1)(c).
7. Consistent
with MCL 30.411(4), any licensed health care professional or designated health
care facility that provides medical services in support of this state’s
response to the COVID‑19 pandemic is not liable for an injury sustained
by a person by reason of those services, regardless of how or under what
circumstances or by what cause those injuries are sustained, unless it is
established that such injury or death was caused by the gross negligence, as
defined in MCL 30.411(9), of such health care professional or designated health
care facility.
8. Any
law or regulation is temporarily suspended to the extent that it requires for
any health care professional, as a condition of licensure, certification,
registration, or the renewal of a license, certification, or registration:
(a) An
exam, to the extent that the exam’s administration has been canceled while the
emergency declaration is in effect.
(b) Fingerprinting,
to the extent that, in the judgment of the director of the Department of
Licensing and Regulatory Affairs, locations to have fingerprints taken are
substantially unavailable on account of closures arising from the COVID‑19
pandemic.
(c) Continuing
education while the emergency declaration is in effect.
9. For
individuals who hold professional certifications in basic life support, advanced
cardiac life support, or first aid, such certifications shall continue to
remain in effect while the emergency declaration is in effect, even if they are
otherwise due to expire during the emergency.
10. For
telecommunicators and trainee telecommunicators who are employed by primary
public safety answering points, any deadlines for completing training modules
or continuing education under Rules 484.803, 484.804, and 484.805 of the
Michigan Administrative Code are suspended for 60 days.
11. Any
law or regulation is temporarily suspended to the extent that it requires
employee fingerprinting as a condition of licensure and certification for
hospitals, nursing homes, county medical care facilities, or psychiatric
hospitals.
12. For
purposes of this order, “designated health care facility” means the following
facilities, including those which may operate under shared or joint ownership:
(a) The
entities listed in section 20106(1) of the Public Health Code, MCL
333.20106(1).
(b) State‑owned
surgical centers.
(c) State‑operated
outpatient facilities.
(d) State‑operated
veterans facilities.
(e) Entities
used as surge capacity by any of the entities listed in subsections (a)‑(d)
of this section.
13. This
order is effective immediately and continues until the end of the declared
emergency.
Given
under my hand and the Great Seal of the State of Michigan.
Date: March 29, 2020
Time: 7:29 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 April 2, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑31
Temporary
relief from standard vapor pressure restrictions on gasoline sales
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 Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To mitigate the impact of the COVID‑19
pandemic on the health and safety of this state and its residents, it is
crucial that all travel and in‑person work in Michigan be limited to as
great an extent as possible. It is also crucial that the supplies necessary to
support the critical functions of this state that must carry on during this
crisis, including gasoline, remain adequately available. To that end, it is
reasonable and necessary to provide limited and temporary relief from certain
vapor pressure requirements applicable to the sale of gasoline in Michigan. As
result of changed behavior in response to COVID‑19, there is currently an
unexpected oversupply of higher volatility winter‑blend gasoline, which
cannot be sold as of April 1, 2020 under standard vapor pressure requirements.
Temporarily extending the period of time during which the winter‑blend
gasoline can be sold will enable distributors to safely shift to a lower
volatility gasoline supply with as little in‑person work and travel as
possible, while also ensuring that this state maintains a reliable supply of
gasoline adequate to meet its critical needs during this emergency.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Rule
4(g) of Regulation No. 564, promulgated by the Laboratory Division of the
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, 1987 AACS, as amended, R
285.564.4(g) of the Michigan Administrative Code, is temporarily suspended.
2. The
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development shall coordinate state
compliance with this order.
3. This
order is effective immediately and continues through May 31, 2020.
Date: March 30, 2020
Time: 2:38 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 April 2, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑32
Temporary
restrictions on non‑essential veterinary services
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 Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To suppress the transmission of COVID‑19,
it is crucial to limit in‑person contact to the greatest extent possible.
While there is currently no evidence that common pets can transmit COVID‑19,
the provision of veterinary services in‑person nonetheless presents the
risk of that the virus will be spread from person to person. Furthermore, the
provision of veterinary services entails the use of health care resources, such
as personal protective equipment, that are in immediate and critically high
demand as a result of this pandemic. Accordingly, to mitigate the spread of
COVID‑19, protect the public health, provide essential protections to
vulnerable Michiganders, and ensure the availability of critical health care
resources, it is reasonable and necessary to impose temporary restrictions on
the in‑person provision of non‑essential veterinary services.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Beginning
as soon as possible but no later than March 31, 2020 at 5:00 p.m., and
continuing while the declared emergency is in effect, all veterinary facilities
must implement a plan to temporarily postpone all in‑person non‑essential
veterinary services until the declared emergency has ended (“plan”).
2. A
plan must provide that all veterinary services, essential and non‑essential,
must be performed by telemedicine to the fullest extent possible while the
declared emergency is in effect. If a non‑essential service cannot be
performed by telemedicine, a plan must require that it be postponed. If an
essential service cannot be performed by telemedicine, a plan need not postpone
it and may allow it to be performed in person.
3. A
veterinary facility must comply with the restrictions contained in its plan.
4. For
purposes of this order:
(a) “Non‑essential
veterinary services” means all veterinary services other than those that are:
(1) necessary
to preserve the life of a pet, as determined by a licensed veterinarian;
(2) necessary
to treat serious pain that threatens the health and safety of a pet, as
determined by a licensed veterinarian;
(3) necessary
to euthanize a pet, as determined by a licensed veterinarian; or
(4) necessary
to treat or prevent the transmission of any infectious disease that can be
transmitted between animals and human beings, as determined by a licensed
veterinarian.
(b) “Pet”
means any domestic animal not raised for food or fiber.
5. Nothing
in this order shall be construed to prohibit any medically indicated
vaccination of any animal. Nothing in this order alters any obligation of an
owner of an animal to vaccinate their animal as required by law or regulation.
6. This
order does not alter any of the obligations under law of a veterinary facility
to its employees or to the employees of another employer.
7. The
director of the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs shall issue
orders or directives pursuant to law as necessary to enforce this order.
8. 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: March 30, 2020
Time: 2:41 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 April 1, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑33
Expanded
emergency and disaster declaration
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 new 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.
Scarcely three weeks later, the virus
has spread across Michigan. To date, the state has 9,334 confirmed cases of
COVID‑19 and 337 people have died of the disease. Many thousands more are
infected but have not been tested. Hospitals in Oakland, Macomb, Wayne, and
Washtenaw counties are reporting that they are full or nearly full to capacity.
Ventilators and personal protective equipment are in short supply and high
demand. Michigan needs more medical personnel than are currently available to
care for COVID‑19 patients. Dormitories and a convention center are being
converted to temporary field hospitals.
The best way to slow the spread of COVID‑19
is for people to stay home and keep their distance from others. To that end,
and pursuant to the recommendations of public health experts, I have restricted
access to places of public accommodation and school buildings in Executive
Orders 2020‑20 and 2020‑11, respectively. And in Executive Order
2020‑21, I have limited gatherings and travel, and have required all
workers who are not necessary to sustain or protect life to remain at home.
Social distancing, though necessary to
combat COVID‑19, has harsh economic consequences. Almost overnight,
businesses and government agencies have had to dramatically adjust how they
work. Where working from home is not possible, businesses have closed or
significantly restricted their normal operations. Michiganders are losing their
jobs in record numbers: over the past two weeks alone, nearly a half‑million
of them submitted claims for unemployment insurance. That is more claims than
were filed in the entirety of the prior calendar year.
The economic damage—already severe—will
compound with time. On March 19, 2020, economists at the University of Michigan
forecasted that as many as 1 in 10 Michiganders could be unemployed by the fall
and that economic sectors that feature substantial social interaction could
contract by as much as 50%. As a result, many families in Michigan will
struggle to pay their bills or even put food on the table.
My administration has already taken
aggressive measures to mitigate the economic harms of this pandemic. In
Executive Order 2020‑18, we placed strict rules on businesses to prevent
price gouging. In Executive Order 2020‑19, we put a temporary hold on
evictions for families that cannot make their rent. And in Executive Order 2020‑24,
we expanded eligibility for unemployment benefits.
Nonetheless, the COVID‑19 pandemic
has disrupted and will continue to disrupt our economy, our homes, and our
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. School closures have
made it harder to educate our children and have increased strain on parents,
many of whom continue to work from home. The closure of museums and theaters
will limit people’s ability to enrich themselves through the arts. And curtailing
gatherings has left many seeking new ways to connect with their community
during these challenging times.
The health, economic, and social harms
of the COVID‑19 pandemic are widespread and severe, and they demand we do
more.
Section 1 of article 5 of the Michigan
Constitution of 1963 vests the executive power of the State of Michigan in the
governor.
The Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390,
as amended, MCL 30.403(3)‑(4), provides that “[t]he governor shall, by
executive order or proclamation, declare a state of emergency” and/or a “state
of disaster” upon finding that an emergency and/or disaster has occurred or is
threatening to occur.
The Emergency Powers of the Governor Act
of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as amended, MCL 10.31(1), provides that “[d]uring
times of great public crisis, disaster, rioting, catastrophe, or similar public
emergency within the state . . . the governor may proclaim a state of emergency
and designate the area involved.”
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. A
state of emergency and a state of disaster are both declared across the State
of Michigan.
2. The
Emergency Management and Homeland Security Division of the Department of State
Police must coordinate and maximize all state efforts that may be activated to
state service to assist local governments and officials and may call upon all
state departments to utilize available resources to assist.
3. The
state of emergency and the state of disaster will terminate when emergency and
disaster conditions no longer exist and appropriate programs have been
implemented to recover from any effects of the statewide emergency and
disaster, consistent with the legal authorities upon which this declaration is
based and any limits imposed by those authorities, including section 3 of the
Emergency Management Act, 1976 PA 390, as amended, MCL 30.403.
4. Executive
Order 2020‑4 is rescinded and replaced. All previous orders that rested
on Executive Order 2020‑4 now rest on this order.
Given under my hand and the Great Seal
of the State of Michigan.
Date: April 1, 2020
Time: 3:30 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 April 2, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑34
Temporary
restrictions on veterinary services
Rescission of
Executive Order 2020‑32
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 Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
In the three weeks that followed, the
virus spread across Michigan, bringing deaths in the hundreds, confirmed cases
in the thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and educational,
civic, social, and religious institutions. In response to the widespread and
severe health, economic, and social harms posed by the COVID‑19 pandemic,
I issued Executive Order 2020‑33 on April 1, 2020. 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.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To suppress the transmission of COVID‑19,
it is crucial to limit in‑person contact and services to the greatest
extent possible. Veterinary services are no exception; while their focus is the
care of animals, the provision of these services in‑person nonetheless
risks spreading the virus from person to person. Furthermore, the provision of
veterinary services entails the use of health care resources, such as personal
protective equipment, that are in immediate and critically high demand as a
result of this pandemic. Accordingly, to mitigate the spread of COVID‑19,
protect the public health, provide essential protections to vulnerable
Michiganders, and ensure the availability of critical health care resources, it
is reasonable and necessary to impose temporary restrictions on the in‑person
provision of veterinary services.
Executive Order 2020‑32 imposed
such restrictions. This order adjusts and clarifies their scope. With this
order, Executive Order 2020‑32 is rescinded.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Beginning
as soon as possible but no later than April 2, 2020 at 5:00 p.m., and
continuing while the declared emergency is in effect, all veterinary facilities
must implement a plan to temporarily postpone all in‑person non‑essential
veterinary services until the declared emergency has ended (“plan”).
2. A
plan must provide that all veterinary services, essential and non‑essential,
must be performed by telemedicine to the fullest extent possible while the
declared emergency is in effect. If a non‑essential service cannot be
performed by telemedicine, a plan must require that it be postponed. If an
essential service cannot be performed by telemedicine, a plan need not postpone
it and may allow it to be performed in person.
3. A
plan must require that, in performing veterinary services, the use of personal
protective equipment that could be used for the care of humans must be
minimized to the fullest extent possible while the declared emergency is in
effect.
4. A
veterinary facility must comply with the restrictions contained in its plan.
5. For
purposes of this order, “non‑essential veterinary services” means all
nonagricultural veterinary services other than those that are:
(1) necessary
to preserve the life of an animal, as determined by a licensed veterinarian;
(2) necessary
to treat serious pain that threatens the health and safety of an animal, as
determined by a licensed veterinarian;
(3) necessary
to euthanize an animal, as determined by a licensed veterinarian; or
(4) necessary
to treat or prevent the transmission of any infectious disease that can be
transmitted between animals and human beings, as determined by a licensed
veterinarian.
6. Nothing
in this order shall be construed to prohibit any medically indicated
vaccination of any animal. Nothing in this order alters any obligation of an
owner of an animal to vaccinate their animal as required by law or regulation.
7. This
order does not alter any of the obligations under law of a veterinary facility
to its employees or to the employees of another employer.
8. The
director of the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs shall issue
orders or directives pursuant to law as necessary to enforce this order.
9. Consistent
with MCL 10.33 and MCL 30.405(3), a willful violation of this order is a
misdemeanor.
10. Executive
Order 2020‑32 is rescinded.
Given under my hand and the Great Seal
of the State of Michigan.
Date: April 2, 2020
Time: 7:09 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 April 2, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑35
Provision of K‑12
education during the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year
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 Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
In the three weeks that followed, the
virus spread across Michigan, bringing deaths in the hundreds, confirmed cases
in the thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. In response to the
widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed by the COVID‑19
pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020‑33 on April 1, 2020. 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.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
The COVID‑19 pandemic has already
required, among other things, the closure of elementary and secondary schools
throughout the state. Given virus’s aggressively persistent spread and
potentially fatal consequences, in‑person instruction in our schools is
too dangerous to resume in the near future, and very likely for the remainder
of the 2019‑2020 school year. Nonetheless, as section 1 of article 8 of
the Michigan Constitution provides, “schools and the means of education shall
forever be encouraged.” In the face of this pandemic, the education of K‑12
students must continue as fully and effectively as possible. While there is no
substitute for a highly trained and experienced teacher interacting with
students in a classroom, schools must continue to provide, and students must
continue to receive, the highest level of educational opportunities possible
under the difficult circumstances now before us. To do so, schools and students
alike must be enabled to innovate and adapt, and those efforts must not be
unduly inhibited by requirements or restrictions that are misplaced in this
time of unprecedented crisis.
Accordingly, to mitigate the spread of
COVID‑19, protect the health and safety of this state and its residents,
and ensure the ongoing encouragement of education enshrined in this state’s
constitution, it is reasonable and necessary to temporarily suspend in‑person
instruction of K‑12 students and provide limited and temporary relief
from certain restrictions and requirements so that K‑12 education may
continue by the best alternative means possible.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
I. Suspension
of in‑person K‑12 instruction for the remainder of 2019‑2020
school year
A. Except
as provided in section III of this order, in‑person instruction for
pupils in kindergarten through grade 12 (“K‑12”) is suspended for the
remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year and school buildings used for the
provision of K‑12 education must remain closed for the purpose of
providing K‑12 education in person for the remainder of the 2019‑2020
school year, unless restrictions on public gatherings and use of school
buildings are lifted before the end of the 2019‑2020 school year. K‑12
school sports activities and other in‑person extracurricular school
activities are suspended while any state of emergency or state of disaster
prompted by COVID‑19 is in effect. This section I.A applies to all
public, nonpublic, and boarding schools in the state.
B. For
a district implementing a Continuity of Learning and COVID‑19 Response
Plan (“Plan”) pursuant to section II of this order, all of the following apply:
1. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under subdivisions (d) to (f) of
subsection (3) of section 101 of the State School Aid Act of 1979 (“School
Aid Act”), 1979 PA 94, as amended, MCL 388.1701(3)(d) to (f), is
temporarily suspended for the period beginning on March 11, 2020 and ending on
the last day of the 2019‑2020 school year, so as to waive any requirement
that a district have a minimum number of the district’s membership in
attendance on any day of pupil instruction and waive any requirement that a
district report the percentage of the district’s membership in attendance to
the Department of Education (“Department”).
2. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 101(3)(a), 101(3)(b),
101(4), 101(6), and 101(10) of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1701(3)(a),
388.1701(3)(b), 388.1701(4), 388.1701(6), and 388.1701(10), requiring a
district to provide at least 1,098 hours and 180 days of pupil instruction, is
temporarily suspended so as to provide for the following additional exceptions
to the requirement to provide at least 1,098 hours and 180 days of pupil
instruction that must be counted as hours and days of pupil instruction:
(a) In
addition to counting as hours and days of pupil instruction under section
101(4) of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1701(4), the first six days or the
equivalent number of hours for which pupil instruction is not provided because
of conditions not within the control of school authorities, the Department
shall count up to 13 additional days or the equivalent number of hours for
which pupil instruction is not provided due to a closure of schools pursuant to
an executive order issued by the governor in response to the COVID‑19
state of emergency and/or state of disaster.
(b) Under
section 101(10) of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1701(10), a district also may
count an additional five days or the equivalent number of hours used for the
purpose of preparing to provide and providing instruction by alternative modes
of instruction pursuant to a Plan as days or an equivalent number of hours of
pupil instruction.
3. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 101(9) of the School Aid
Act, MCL 388.1701(9), is temporarily suspended so as to permit a district that
has a Department‑approved alternative education program or another
innovative program approved by the Department under MCL 388.1701(9) and that
does not use a 100% online model of delivery approved before the effective date
of this order to use the additional exceptions provided for in section I.B.2 of
this order in satisfying the number of days and hours of instruction required
under a waiver granted by the Department under section 101(9).
4. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 101(9) of the School Aid
Act, MCL 388.1701(9), is temporarily suspended so as to waive the minimum
number of hours and days of pupil instruction required under section 101(3) of
the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1701(3), for any district with a Plan approved
under section II of this order. A district with a Plan approved under section
II of this order will be considered to be operating a Department‑approved
alternative education program or another innovative program approved by the
Department for the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year only. A
district with a Plan approved under section II of this order is not subject to
forfeiture of money under section 101 of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1701.
If the district does not comply substantially with the terms of the Plan, the
amount of any forfeiture under MCL 388.1701 will be calculated based upon a
comparison of the number of hours and days of pupil instruction provided to the
minimum number of hours and days of pupil instruction required under MCL
388.1701(3), as affected by this order. A district with a Plan approved under
section II of this order is not required to report to the Center the pupils
enrolled in a Department‑approved alternative education program under MCL
388.1701(9).
C. A
school of excellence that is a cyber school, as defined in section 551 of the
Revised School Code (“School Code”), 1976 PA 451, as amended, MCL 380.551,
and is in compliance with section 553a of the School Code, MCL 380.553a, may
continue to educate pupils in a manner consistent with section I.A of this
order, and continues to be exempt from the requirements of subsections (3) and
(8) of section 101 of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1701(3) and (8).
D. If
before March 11, 2020, a district was providing nonessential elective courses
to nonpublic school and/or homeschool pupils at either a district, intermediate
district, or nonpublic school site pursuant to section 166b of the School Aid
Act, MCL 388.1766b, and is able to continue to offer the nonessential elective
courses through alternative modes of instruction, then the district may, to the
extent feasible, provide for such courses in its Plan and continue to offer the
nonessential elective courses to nonpublic school and/or homeschool pupils
through alternative modes of instruction for the remainder of the 2019‑2020
school year.
E. Nothing
in this order alters the inapplicability of subsections (3) and (8) of section
101 of the School Aid Act, MCL 380.1701(3) and (8), to eligible pupils enrolled
in a dropout recovery program that meets the requirements of section 23a of the
School Aid Act, MCL 388.1623a. As used in this section I.E, “eligible pupil”
means that term as defined in MCL 388.1623a.
F. The
approval of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (“Superintendent”) or the
Department is not required for a district to make use of a waiver provided for
under section I.B of this order.
G. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 6(7)(b) of the School Aid
Act, MCL 388.1606(7)(b), is temporarily suspended to eliminate the requirement
during the 2019‑2020 school year for a district or intermediate district
maintaining school during the entire school year to use the fourth Wednesday in
April as a pupil membership count day.
H. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 1284 and 1284a of the
School Code, MCL 380.1284 and 380.1284a, is temporarily suspended as necessary
to facilitate implementation of this section I.
I. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under 104b(4)(b) of the School Aid Act,
MCL 388.1704b(4)(b), is temporarily suspended as necessary to permit a district
to include each day that a pupil is deemed in attendance under this section I
or pursuant to a Plan under section II of this order as a day the pupil was in
attendance at school during the 2019‑2020 school year for purposes of MCL
388.1704b(4)(b).
II. Continuity
of Learning and COVID‑19 Response Plans
A. By
April 3, 2020, the Department, in collaboration with the Michigan Association
of Intermediate School Administrators and the Michigan Council of Charter
School Authorizers, shall develop and distribute a model template for a Plan
provided for in this section II.
B. A
Plan must include all of the following elements and be consistent with the
requirements of this order:
1. A
description of the methods a district will use to provide alternative modes of
instruction other than in‑person instruction and a summary of materials
each pupil and the pupil’s parents or guardians will need to meaningfully
access the alternative modes of instruction included in the Plan. If the Plan
relies on electronic instruction, the Plan must ensure to the extent feasible
that pupils have access to a connected device capable of accessing the
electronic instruction and must not penalize a pupil for the pupil’s inability
to fully participate.
2. A
description of the methods a district will use to keep pupils at the center of
educational activities, including outreach to continue building relationships
and maintain connections, and to help pupils feel safe and valued.
3. A
description of plans to deliver content in multiple ways so that all pupils can
access learning.
4. A
description of plans to manage and monitor learning by pupils.
5. A
budget outline estimating additional expenditures associated with the Plan and
sources of revenue to pay for those expenditures.
6. A
description of the manner in which district administrators, board members,
teachers, and any representatives of teachers collaborated in development of
the Plan.
7. A
description of methods the district will use to notify pupils and parents or
guardians of the Plan.
8. A
best estimate of the date on which the district will begin implementation of
the Plan, which must be no later than April 28, 2020.
9. Provide
for assistance, to the extent feasible, to pupils enrolled in any postsecondary
dual enrollment courses under the Postsecondary Enrollment Options Act, 1996 PA 160,
as amended, MCL 388.511 to 388.524, and the Career and Technical Preparation
Act, 2000 PA 258, as amended, MCL 388.1901 to 388.1913, in completing the
courses during the 2019‑2020 school year.
10. Provide
or arrange for continuation of food distribution to eligible pupils.
11. Continue
to pay school employees while redeploying staff to provide meaningful work in
the context of the Plan, subject to any applicable requirements of a collective
bargaining agreement.
12. Provide
for evaluation of participation in the Plan by pupils.
13. Provide
mental health supports to pupils affected by a state of emergency or state of
disaster prompted by COVID‑19.
14. Provide
for the district to support the efforts of the intermediate district in which
the district is located to mobilize disaster relief child care centers as
described in Executive Order 2020‑16 or any executive order that may
follow it.
C. A
Plan may provide for the adoption of a balanced calendar instructional program
for the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year and planning for the
adoption of a balanced calendar instructional program for the 2020‑2021
school year.
D. A
district may contract with one or more providers for implementation of a Plan.
E. If
a district lacks the capacity to implement a Plan on its own, a district may
partner with one or more other districts or intermediate districts. A district
may enter into one or more cooperative agreements under section 11a(4) of the
School Code, MCL 380.11a(4), to provide for implementation of a Plan.
F. For
a district that is not a public school academy, the district’s Plan must be
approved by the intermediate superintendent of the intermediate district in
which the district is located. For a district that is a public school academy,
the district’s Plan must be approved by the authorizing body of the public
school academy or the authorizing body’s designee for the purpose of
administering contracts with public school academies. For a public school
academy that by agreement provides public educational services for the
residents of a district that does not directly provide public educational
services to the residents on its own, the public school academy’s Plan must be
approved by the intermediate superintendent of the intermediate district in
which the public school academy is located. If an intermediate district
educates K‑12 students, the intermediate district may adopt a Plan for
those activities and implement the Plan once adopted. A school of excellence
that is a cyber school, as defined in section 551 of the School Code, MCL
380.551, and is in compliance with section 553a of the School Code, MCL
380.553a, may continue to educate pupils under its charter contract which will
be that school’s Plan.
G. An
intermediate district or an authorizing body shall approve a Plan submitted by
a district if the Plan complies with the requirements of this section II and if
the intermediate district or authorizing body believes the Plan represents a
good‑faith effort to provide adequate alternative modes of instruction
given the limitations resulting from the COVID‑19 pandemic and
accompanying response efforts. Intermediate districts and authorizing bodies
must allow for flexibility and presume that a Plan submitted by a district will
be implemented to the best of the district’s ability.
H. Intermediate
districts and authorizing bodies shall transmit copies of approved Plans to the
Superintendent and to the State Treasurer. If a district or intermediate
district maintains a public internet site, the district or intermediate
district shall post its approved Plan on the internet site.
I. An
intermediate district may enter into a cooperate agreement with one or more
other intermediate districts for the purpose of reviewing and approving Plans
under this order.
J. An
intermediate district or authorizing body that reviews and approves or
disapproves Plans on its own or with others pursuant to this section II will be
eligible for any additional funding appropriated to support these activities.
An intermediate district or authorizing body that does not review and approve
or disapprove Plans will not be eligible for any additional funding appropriated.
K. Intermediate
districts and authorizing bodies must be prepared to review and approve or
reject Plans beginning on April 8, 2020.
L. A
district with an approved Plan is eligible to receive continued payments from
the State School Aid Fund for the 2019‑2020 school year.
M. A
district that is not a public school academy may amend its Plan with the
approval of the intermediate superintendent of the intermediate district in
which the school district is located. A district that is a public school
academy may amend its Plan with the approval of its authorizing body or its
designee. For a public school academy that by agreement provides public
educational services for the residents of a district that does not directly
provide public educational services to the residents on its own, the public
school academy’s Plan may be amended with the approval of the intermediate
superintendent of the intermediate district in which the public school academy
is located.
N. Decisions
regarding the awarding of credit, the issuance of grades, and the use of pass
or fail designations will be made at the district level by districts with due
recognition of the impact of the COVID‑19 pandemic.
O. State‑approved
nonpublic schools and parents and guardians homeschooling students are
encouraged to do all of the following:
1. Offer
all students electronic, other remote, or home‑based instruction, to the
extent feasible, for the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year,
including course offerings provided by the Michigan Virtual School.
2. Coordinate
with districts providing nonessential elective courses under section 166b of
the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1766b, to any of their students for the remainder
of the 2019‑2020 school year.
3. Assist
eligible nonpublic school students to complete postsecondary dual enrollment
courses, to the extent feasible, under the Postsecondary Enrollment Options
Act, 1996 PA 160, as amended, MCL 388.511 to 388.524, and the Career and
Technical Preparation Act, 2000 PA 258, as amended, MCL 388.1901 to 388.1913.
4. Take
actions necessary to continue to receive any federal funding previously
allocated in a manner consistent with applicable federal law.
III. District
employees permitted in district buildings
A. Notwithstanding
the closure of school buildings under Executive Order 2020‑11 or any
executive order that may follow it, district employees or contractors necessary
to conduct minimum basic school operations consistent with a Plan, including
those employers or contractors necessary to facilitate alternative modes of
instruction, such as distributing materials and equipment, or performing other
necessary in‑person functions, are permitted to be physically present in
district buildings, as determined by district administrators. District
employees and contractors performing these functions are considered to be
performing necessary government activities for purposes of Executive Order 2020‑21
or any executive order that may follow it. Districts must adopt social
distancing practices and other mitigation measures to protect district
employees and contractors, including all of the following:
1. Restricting
the number of employees and contractors present in a district building to no
more than is strictly necessary to perform the activities authorized by this
section III.
2. Promoting
remote work to the fullest extent possible.
3. Keeping
employees and contractors in a district building at least six feet from one
another to the maximum extent possible.
4. Increasing
standards of district building cleaning and disinfection to limit employee and
contractor exposure to COVID‑19, as well as adopting protocols to clean
and disinfect in the event of a positive COVID‑19 case in a district
building.
5. Adopting
policies to prevent employees and contractors from entering the premises if
they display respiratory symptoms or have had contact with a person who is
known or suspected to have contracted COVID‑19.
6. Any
other social distancing practices and mitigation measures relating to COVID‑19
recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
B. A
district may permit parents and guardians of pupils to visit school property
for the purpose of obtaining materials and equipment pursuant to a Plan and
using the same social distancing and other mitigation measures required for
district employees and contractors under section III.A. Parents or guardians
leaving their homes or residences for this purpose are considered to be
obtaining necessary services or supplies for purposes of Executive Order 2020‑21
or any executive order that may follow it.
C. Any
child care workers at a child care located within a district building
(including workers at disaster relief child care centers), are permitted to be
physically present in district buildings, as determined by district administrators
and to the extent permitted by Executive Order 2020‑21 or any executive
order that may follow it.
IV. Assessments
A. Plans
are not required to address the following provisions of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act of 1965 (“ESEA”) that have been waived by the United
States Department of Education for the 2019‑2020 school year pursuant to
section 8401(b) of the ESEA, 20 USC 7861(b):
1. Assessment
requirements under section 1111(b)(2) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(b)(2).
2. Report
card provisions related to certain assessments and accountability in section
1111(h) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h) based on data from the 2019‑2020
school year, including all of the following:
(a) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(i) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(i) (accountability system
description).
(b) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(ii) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(ii) (assessment results).
(c) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(iii)(1) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(iii)(1) (other academic
indicator results).
(d) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(iv) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(iv) (English language
proficiency assessment results).
(e) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(v) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(v) (school quality or
student success indicator results).
(f) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(vi) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(vi) (progress toward
meeting long‑terms goals and measurements of interim progress).
(g) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(vii) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(vii) (percentage of
students assessed and not assessed).
(h) Section
1111(h)(1)(C)(xi) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C)(xi), (number and percentage
of students with the most significant cognitive disabilities taking an
alternate assessment).
(i) Section
1111(h)(2) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(2), with respect to all waived
requirements in section 1111(h)(1)(C) of ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(1)(C).
(j) Section
1111(h)(2)(C)(i) to (ii) of the ESEA, 20 USC 6311(h)(2)(C)(i) to (ii)
(information showing how students in a local educational agency (“LEA”) and
each school, respectively, achieved on the academic assessments compared to
students in Michigan and the LEA).
B. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1279g of the School Code,
MCL 380.1279g, and section 104b of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1704b, requiring
a district to administer during the 2019‑2020 school year the Michigan
Merit Examination to pupils in grade 11 and to pupils in grade 12 who did not
take the complete Michigan Merit Examination in grade 11, is temporarily
suspended for the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year. Pupils
currently in grade 11 will be administered the Scholastic Aptitude Test portion
of the Michigan Merit Examination during the school day in the fall of the 2020‑2021
school year as permitted by the College Board, with results from this test
being used for college entrance purposes but not for school accountability
purposes.
C. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 503(6)(a), 523(2)(a),
553(5)(a), and 1311e(5)(a) of the School Code, MCL 380.503(6)(a),
380.523(2)(a), 380.553(5)(a), and 380.1311e(5)(a), and under section 104c of
the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1704c, is temporarily suspended so as to suspend
for the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year the obligation of a
district to administer the state assessments described in those sections,
including the Michigan Student Test of Educational Progress (“M‑STEP”),
or an alternative to M‑STEP such as the MI‑ACCESS assessment, or
other assessment taken in conjunction with the M‑STEP, including the
Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test (“PSAT”) developed by the College Board.
Pupils otherwise scheduled to be administered the PSAT during the school day in
the 2019‑2020 school year will be administered the PSAT during the school
day in the fall of the 2020‑2021 school year as permitted by the College
Board.
D. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 41 of the School Aid Act,
MCL 388.1641, is temporarily suspended so as to suspend for the remainder of
the 2019‑2020 school year the obligation of a district to administer to
English language learners the English language proficiency assessment known as
the “WIDA ACCESS for English language learners” or the “WIDA Alternative
ACCESS.”
E. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1279g of the School Code,
MCL 380.1279g, is temporarily suspended so as to suspend for the remainder of
the 2019‑2020 school year the obligation of a district, imposed by the
Department or otherwise, to administer an assessment that assesses a pupil’s
ability to apply reading and mathematics skills in a manner that is intended to
allow employers to use the results in making employment decisions, including
the WorkKeys assessment.
F. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 104 of the School Aid Act,
MCL 388.1704, is temporarily suspended so as to suspend any requirement for a
district to administer the Maryland‑Ohio observational tool, which is
also referred to as the Kindergarten Readiness Assessment.
G. Pupils
enrolled in advanced placement courses and eligible to take examinations for
advanced placement courses administered by the College Board must be permitted
to take the examinations using the at‑home testing option provided by the
College Board. Districts shall facilitate, to the extent feasible, access to
information relating to advanced placement courses and course schedules
provided online by the College Board. For pupils without access to the internet
or a device necessary to access the internet, districts shall facilitate, to
the extent feasible, access to information regarding assistance provided by the
College Board in completing examination
requirements. Information relating to advanced placement courses and
examinations is available at: apstudents.collegeboard.org/coronavirus-updates.
H. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1249, 1249a, 1249b, and
1250(1) of the School Code, MCL 380.1249, 380.1249a, 380.1249b, and
380.1250(1), and under section 104 of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1704, is
temporarily suspended so as to waive any requirement for assessments or other
performance evaluations of teachers and district administrators during the 2019‑2020
school year.
I. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under subsections (3) and (4) of section
1250 of the School Code, MCL 380.1250(3) and (4), is temporarily suspended for
the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year.
V. Pupils
in grade 12
A. A
district shall implement a process to issue grades to pupils in grade 12, award
credits needed for graduation, provide for completion of the Michigan Merit
Curriculum, issue diplomas to pupils in grade 12, and reflect continued
learning by pupils in grade 12 pursuant to this order. When implementing this
section V.A, a district may, without limitation, use one or more of the
following options:
1. Award
credits and grades for courses taken based on coursework through March 11,
2020.
2. Provide
an optional final exam or other culminating activity to test pupil
understanding of the subject matter of a course to the extent practicable.
3. Implement
a process for pupils in grade 12 to be certified as eligible to graduate using
a prior learning assessment, a portfolio, or a resume approach.
4. Offer
an interdisciplinary culminating activity that encompasses essential standards
missed by pupils due to the closure of schools.
B. Districts
must provide a pupil in grade 12 who was failing a course as of March 11, 2020
an opportunity to the extent feasible to demonstrate learning in the subject
matter of the course and receive credit for the course, as determined by the
district.
C. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1166(2) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1166(2), is temporarily suspended for the remainder of the 2019‑2020
school year so as to suspend the restriction on a high school from issuing a
diploma to a pupil who has not completed a one‑semester course of study
of five periods per week in civics.
D. If
before March 11, 2020, a district was providing a nonessential elective course
to a nonpublic school pupil or homeschool pupil in grade 12 at either a
district, intermediate district, or nonpublic school site pursuant to section
166b of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1766b, and that course is required for the
pupil to graduate and receive a diploma, the district must, to the extent
feasible, continue to offer the nonessential elective course to the pupil
through alternative modes of instruction for the remainder of the 2019‑2020
school year.
VI. Special
education
A. Districts
shall strive in good faith and to the extent practicable, based upon existing
resources, technology, training, and curriculum, as well as the circumstances
presented by any state of emergency or state of disaster, to provide equal
access to alternative modes of instruction to students with disabilities for
the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year. This includes the provision
of auxiliary services under section 1296 of the School Code, MCL 380.1296.
B. While
the COVID‑19 state of emergency and/or state of disaster continues,
districts shall comply with guidance from the United States Department of
Education (“USDOE”), including its Office of Civil Rights and Office of Special
Education and Rehabilitative Services, and the Department concerning the
delivery of alternative modes of instruction to students with disabilities in
light of the impact of COVID‑19.
C. Districts
shall, to the extent practicable and necessary, make individualized
determinations whether and to what extent compensatory services may be needed
for pupils after the school closure period prompted by the COVID‑19 state
of emergency and/or state of disaster ends.
D. A
district or a nonpublic school that has been allocated federal funds for the
2019‑2020 school year for the purpose of providing special education
services shall not be penalized or required to repay the funds by this state
due to the inability to provide those services in person during the 2019‑2020
school year after March 11, 2020.
E. Within
five days of the effective date of this order, the Department and the
Department of Civil Rights are strongly encouraged to submit requests for
interpretation, guidance on implementation, flexibility, or waivers to USDOE
that would permit districts and nonpublic schools to do one or more of the
following during the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year:
1. Deliver
instruction to all pupils, including students with disabilities, without having
to reconvene or amend individualized education plans (“IEPs”) or Section 504
plans.
2. Deliver
direct and consultative related services such as therapies, including
occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech language pathologist, social
service worker, teacher consultant, and other special education services and
supports, without having to reconvene or amend IEPs or Section 504 plans.
3. Complete
IEPs and Section 504 plans online, either by telephone conference or video
conference, if the parents or guardians involved have access to the technology
and agree to the alternative means of participation. If a parent or guardian
elects not to participate in an otherwise due IEP online, a district should be
permitted to extend the deadline for completion of the IEP for up to 30 school
days after the school closure period prompted by the COVID‑19 state of
emergency and/or state of disaster ends.
4. Complete
annual or otherwise due IEPs online, either by telephone conference or video
conference, with those IEPs being considered timely if they are completed by
the end of the 2019‑2020 school year.
5. Consider
whether a pupil should be provided compensatory education for pupils after the
school closure period prompted by the COVID‑19 state of emergency and/or
state of disaster ends, based on applicable law and guidance, no later than the
first annual IEP meeting of the 2020‑2021 school year.
6. Consider
compensatory education for pupils who are more likely to qualify for
compensatory education through IEP amendments, with the authority to complete
those IEP amendments online, either by telephone conference, virtual meetings,
or other existing technology.
7. Other
requests the Department deems necessary to facilitate the delivery of
alternative modes of instruction with equal access.
F. This
order does not require that an IEP be amended.
VII. Temporary
suspension of certain requirements relating to the suspension of administrative
rules by the Superintendent
A. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1281(3) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1281(3), is temporarily suspended so as to suspend for the remainder of
the 2019‑2020 school year the requirement that a district, university
school, or intermediate district apply for a limited time waiver from a
Department rule interpreting or implementing a provision of the School Code and
so as permit the Superintendent to temporarily suspend a Department rule
interpreting or implementing a provision of the Code to facilitate the
implementation of this order or other orders or response efforts prompted by
the COVID‑19 state of emergency and/or state of disaster.
B. The
Superintendent may not grant a waiver from the duty to comply with a provision
of the School Code and may not grant a waiver from the duty to comply with
another state statute unless and to the extent that a waiver is specifically
allowed by that other state statute.
VIII. Temporary
suspension of certain certification and continuing learning requirements
A. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1531(2) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1531(2), is temporarily suspended so as to permit the Superintendent to
issue a temporary one‑year teaching certificate to an otherwise qualified
individual who is unable to take an appropriate subject area examination
required by MCL 380.1531(2) due to COVID‑19 or accompanying response
efforts.
B. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1531(3) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1531(3), is temporarily suspended so as to permit the Superintendent to
issue a temporary one‑year teaching certificate to an individual holding
a teaching certificate from another state or a teaching degree from an out‑of‑state
teacher preparation institution who applies for a Michigan teaching
certificate, is otherwise qualified, but is unable to take an appropriate
subject area examination required by MCL 380.1531(3) because the examination is
not offered due to COVID‑19 or accompanying response efforts.
C. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1531d of the School Code,
MCL 380.1531d, is temporarily suspended so as to permit the Superintendent to
temporarily waive the requirement that a person seeking a teaching certificate
successfully complete a course approved by the Department in first aid and
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and instruction approved by the Department in
foreign body airway obstruction management when the person is unable to
complete the course and/or the instruction because the course and/or the
instruction is not offered due to COVID‑19 or accompanying response
efforts.
D. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1531i(2)(c) of the School
Code, MCL 380.1531i(2)(c), is temporarily suspended so as to permit the
Superintendent to issue an interim teaching certificate to an otherwise
qualified individual who is unable to take an appropriate subject area
examination required by MCL 380.1531i(2)(c) because the examination is not
offered due to COVID‑19 or accompanying response efforts.
E. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under Rule 390.1130(6) and (7) of the
Michigan Administrative Code is temporarily suspended so as to permit the
Superintendent to extend the duration of a 1‑year temporary teacher
employment authorization by an additional year if the holder of the 1‑year
temporary teacher employment authorization is unable to complete the
requirements to obtain a Michigan teaching certificate because the requirements
cannot be satisfied due to COVID‑19 or accompanying response efforts.
F. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1526 of the School Code, MCL
380.1526, is temporarily suspended so as to waive for any teacher within his or
her third year of employment the requirement that the teacher receive at least
15 days of professional development within the teacher’s first three years of
employment if the requirement could not be completed due to COVID‑19 or
accompanying response efforts.
G. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1527(1) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1527(1), is temporarily suspended so as to waive the requirement for
the 2019‑2020 school year that a district or intermediate district
provide at least five days of teacher professional development each year.
H. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1233(6) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1233(6), is temporarily suspended so as to permit the Department to renew
an individual’s school counselor credential regardless of whether the
individual has completed at least 25 hours of professional development approved
by the Department under MCL 380.1233(8) covering counseling about the college
preparation and selection process and at least 25 hours of professional
development approved by the Department under MCL 380.1233(8) covering career
counseling.
IX. Implementation
A. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 21f of the School Aid Act,
MCL 388.1621f, is temporarily suspended so as to permit a district pursuant to
an approved Plan to enroll a pupil in more than 2 virtual courses, regardless
of whether the virtual course is published in a catalog of courses or a parent
or guardian approves, and so as to suspend any requirement to comply with
minimum requirements to count a pupil in membership established by the pupil
accounting manual.
B. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1278a(4) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1278a(4), is temporarily suspended so as to permit a district to
determine a pupil has completed a credit without using subject area content
expectations or guidelines developed by the Department.
C. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under section 1280f(5) of the School Code,
MCL 380.1280f(5), is temporarily suspended so as to relieve a district of the
obligations imposed by that provision for the remainder of the 2019‑2020
school year, including the obligation to retain a pupil in grade 3.
D. Strict
compliance with rules and procedures under sections 162 and 163 of the School
Aid Act, MCL 388.1762 and 388.1763, is temporarily suspended so as to prevent
the forfeiture of funds resulting from the implementation of this order.
E. To
mitigate the impact of COVID‑19 on educational outcomes, a district may
adopt year‑round school or a year‑round program for the 2020‑2021
school year or start the 2020‑2021 school year before the first Monday in
September. Strict compliance with rules and procedures under sections 1284a and
1284b of the School Code, MCL 380 1284a and 380.1284b, is temporarily suspended
so as to permit a district to adopt year‑round school, a year‑round
program, or an early start for the 2020‑2021 school year. Adoption of
measures provided in this section IX.E may be included by a district as part of
the district’s Plan.
F. Mandatory
closure of schools relating to COVID‑19 shall not affect an employer
contribution, employee contribution, or the accrual of service credit under the
Public School Employees Retirement Act of 1979, 1980 PA 300, as amended,
MCL 38.1301 to 38.1467.
G For
a district with a collective bargaining agreement, this order must be
implemented by the district in a manner consistent with the collective
bargaining agreement.
H. Before
the Department, the Superintendent, or the Department of Civil Rights seeks any
guidance, issues a waiver, seeks a waiver relating to this order, or suspends
an administrative rule pursuant to this order, the Superintendent or the
director of the Department of Civil Rights, as applicable, shall provide the
governor in writing with a copy of the request or waiver and information
relating to the request, waiver, or suspension, as required by section 8 of
article 5 of the Michigan Constitution of 1963.
I. To
ensure management of district and intermediate district affairs and property in
ways that will assist the response to the COVID‑19 state of emergency
and/or state of disaster, districts and intermediate districts are authorized
and encouraged to donate medical personal protective equipment and supplies to
healthcare providers and other necessary personnel engaged in response efforts
to COVID‑19.
J. This
order is effective immediately and continues through the end of the states of
emergency and disaster declared in Executive Order 2020‑33 or any other
state of emergency or disaster declared in response to COVID‑19 during
the remainder of the 2019‑2020 school year, with the exception of the
provisions of this order relating to scheduling for the 2020‑2021 school
year, which will continue into the 2020‑2021 school year for that
purpose.
X. Definitions
As used in this order:
A. “Alternative
modes of instruction” means modes of pupil instruction, other than in‑person
instruction, that may include, without limitation, partnerships with other
districts or intermediate districts or community colleges or institutions of higher education, use of vendors, use of
online learning, telephone communications, email, virtual instruction,
videos, slideshows, project‑based learning, use of instructional packets,
or a hybrid of multiple modes of learning that still promote recommended
practices for social distancing to mitigate the spread of COVID‑19.
B. “Center”
means the Center for Educational Performance and Information referenced in
section 94a of the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1694a.
C. “District”
means a school district established under the School Code or a public school
academy. District does not include an intermediate district, except for an
intermediate district that educates K‑12 students.
D. “Intermediate
district” means an intermediate school district established under part 7 of the
School Code, MCL 380.601 to 380.705b.
E. “Intermediate
superintendent” means the superintendent of an intermediate district.
F. “Membership”
means that term as defined in section 6(4) of the School Aid Act, MCL
388.1606(4).
G. “Michigan
Virtual School” means the Michigan Virtual School referenced in section 98 of
the School Aid Act, MCL 388.1698.
H. “Public
school academy” means that term as defined in section 5 of the School Code, MCL
380.5.
I. “Pupil”
means that term as defined in section 6(6) of the School Aid Act, MCL
388.1606(6).
J. “Superintendent
of Public Instruction” or “Superintendent” means the superintendent of public
instruction described in section 3 of article 8 of the Michigan Constitution of
1963.
Given under my hand and the Great Seal
of the State of Michigan.
Date: April 2, 2020
Time: 9:16 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 April 3, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑36
Protecting
workers who stay home, stay safe
when they or
their close contacts are sick
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 Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
In the three weeks that followed, the
virus spread across Michigan, bringing deaths in the hundreds, confirmed cases
in the thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. In response to the
widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed by the COVID‑19
pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020‑33 on April 1, 2020. 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.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the Emergency
Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To suppress the spread of COVID‑19,
protect this state’s critical health care resources from rapid depletion, and
prevent needless deaths, I issued Executive Order 2020‑21, ordering all
people in Michigan to stay home and stay safe. This order limited gatherings
and travel, and required all workers who are not necessary to sustain or
protect life to stay home. Slowing the aggressively persistent spread of this
destructive virus, however, requires more. Individuals permitted to go to work
under Executive Order 2020‑21 must stay home when they or their close
contacts are sick—and they must not be punished for doing so. Accordingly, it
is reasonable and necessary to provide certain protections against workplace
discrimination to such individuals, to ensure they can do what is now most
needed from them to protect the health and safety of this state and its
residents.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. It
is the public policy of this state that an employer shall not discharge,
discipline, or otherwise retaliate against an employee for staying home when he
or she is at particular risk of infecting others with COVID‑19. To
effectuate that policy:
(a) Employers
are prohibited from discharging, disciplining, or otherwise retaliating against
an employee described in sections 2 or 3 of this order for staying home from
work for the periods described in those sections.
(b) Employers
must treat such an employee as if he or she were taking medical leave under the
Paid Medical Leave Act, 2018 PA 338, as amended, MCL 408.961 et seq.
(1) To
the extent that the employee has no paid leave, the leave may be unpaid.
Employers are permitted, but not required, to debit any hours that an employee
described in sections 2 or 3 of this order stays home from work from the
employee’s accrued leave.
(2) The
length of such leave is not limited by the amount of leave that an employee has
accrued under MCL 408.963 and must extend, whether paid or unpaid, as long as
the employee remains away from work within the time periods described in
sections 2 or 3 of this order.
(c) Employers
are prohibited from discharging, disciplining, or retaliating against an
employee described in sections 2 or 3 of this order for failing to comply with
a requirement to document that the employee or the individual with whom the
employee has had close contact has one or more of the principal symptoms of
COVID‑19.
(d) Nothing
in this section shall be taken to prevent an employer from discharging or
disciplining an employee:
(1) Who
is allowed to return to work under sections 2 or 3 of this order but declines
to do so;
(2) With
the employee’s consent; or
(3) For
any other reason that is not unlawful.
(e) The
director of the Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity shall have
authority to enforce this order in the same manner and to the same extent as
the director enforces the Paid Medical Leave Act under section 7 of that act,
MCL 408.967. In addition, the director shall refer all credible complaints of
violations to the relevant licensing authority.
2. Subject
to the exceptions in section 5 of this order, it is the public policy of this
state that any and all individuals who test positive for COVID‑19 or who
display one or more of the principal symptoms of COVID‑19 should remain
in their home or place of residence, even if they are otherwise permitted to
leave under Executive Order 2020‑21 or any executive order that may
follow it, until:
(a) three
days have passed since their symptoms have resolved, and
(b) seven
days have passed since their symptoms first appeared or since they were swabbed
for the test that yielded the positive result.
This section will cease to apply to
anyone who, after showing symptoms, receives a negative COVID‑19 test.
3. Subject
to the exceptions in section 5 of this order, it is the public policy of this
state that any and all people who have had close contact with an individual who
tests positive for COVID‑19 or with an individual who displays one or
more of the principal symptoms of COVID‑19 should remain in their home or
place of residence, even if they are otherwise permitted to leave under
Executive Order 2020‑21 or any executive order that may follow it, until
either 14 days have passed since the last close contact with the sick or
symptomatic individual, or the symptomatic individual receives a negative COVID‑19
test.
This section does not apply to the
following classes of workers, provided that their employers’ rules governing
occupational health allow them to go to work:
(a) Health
care professionals.
(b) Workers
at a health care facility, as defined in section 7(d) of this order.
(c) First
responders (e.g., police officers, fire fighters, paramedics).
(d) Child
protective service employees.
(e) Workers
at child caring institutions, as defined in section 1 of Public Act 116 of
1973, MCL 722.111.
(f) Workers
at correctional facilities.
4. An
individual described in sections 2 or 3 of this order who returns to work prior
to the periods specified in sections 2 or 3, respectively, shall not be
entitled to the protections against discharge, discipline, or retaliation
provided under section 1 of this order.
5. It
is the public policy of this state that individuals described in sections 2 and
3 of this order should leave the home or place of residence only:
(a) To
the extent absolutely necessary to obtain food, medicine, medical care, or
supplies that are needed to sustain or protect life, where such food, medicine,
medical care, or supplies cannot be obtained via delivery. All food, medicine,
and supplies should be picked up at the curbside to the fullest extent
possible.
(b) To
engage in outdoor activity, including walking, hiking, running, cycling, or any
other recreational activity consistent with remaining at least six feet from
people from outside their household.
6. It
is the public policy of this state that if an individual described in sections
2 and 3 of this order leaves the home, he or she should wear some form of
covering over their nose and mouth, such as a homemade mask, scarf, bandana, or
handkerchief, but that supplies of N95 masks and surgical masks should
generally be reserved, for now, for health care professionals, first responders
(e.g., police officers, fire fighters, paramedics), and other critical workers.
7. For
purposes of this order:
(a) “The
principal symptoms of COVID‑19” are fever, atypical cough, or atypical
shortness of breath.
(b) “Employer”
means the same as it does in section 2(f) of the Paid Medical Leave Act, MCL
408.962(f), except that it shall also include employers with fewer than 50
employees.
(c) “Close
contact” means being within approximately six feet of an individual for a
prolonged period of time. Close contact can occur, for example, while caring
for, living with, visiting, or sharing a health care waiting room with an
individual.
(d) “Health
care facility” means the following facilities, including those which may
operate under shared or joint ownership:
(1) The
entities listed in section 20106(1) of the Public Health Code, 1978 PA 368,
as amended MCL 333.20106(1).
(2) State‑owned
hospitals and surgical centers.
(3) State‑operated
outpatient facilities.
(4) State‑operated
veterans facilities.
(5) Entities
used as surge capacity by any of the entities listed in subdivisions (1)‑(4)
of this subsection.
8. Nothing
in this order shall be taken to diminish or relax the restrictions on leaving
the home established in Executive Order 2020‑21 or any executive order
that may follow it.
9. Nothing
in this order shall be taken to create a private right of action against an
employer for failing to comply with section 1 of this order or against an
individual for acting contrary to the public policies of sections 2, 3, 5, or 6
of this order.
10. This
order is effective immediately and continues until the end of the declared
states of emergency and disaster.
Given under my hand and the Great Seal
of the State of Michigan.
Date: April 3, 2020
Time: 9:43 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 April 6, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑37
Temporary
restrictions on entry into health care facilities,
residential
care facilities, congregate care facilities, and juvenile justice facilities
Rescission of
Executive Order 2020‑7
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. The risk of severe illness and death from
COVID‑19 is higher in older adults and those with chronic health
conditions. And there is an increased risk of rapid spread of COVID‑19
among persons who are living in congregate settings, such as care facilities.
There is currently no approved vaccine or antiviral treatment for this disease.
On March 10, 2020, the Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
In the three weeks that followed, the
virus spread across Michigan, bringing deaths in the hundreds, confirmed cases
in the thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. In response to the
widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed by the COVID‑19
pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020‑33 on April 1, 2020. 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.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 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).
To mitigate the spread of COVID‑19
and to provide essential protections to vulnerable Michiganders and to this
state’s health care system and other critical infrastructure, it is reasonable
and necessary to impose limited and temporary restrictions on the entry of
individuals into health care facilities, residential care facilities,
congregate care facilities, and juvenile justice facilities.
Executive Order 2020‑7 imposed
such restrictions. This order clarifies those restrictions and extends their
duration, as they remain reasonable and necessary to protect the health and
safety of this state and its residents from the COVID‑19 pandemic. With
this order, Executive Order 2020‑7 is rescinded.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Effective
immediately and continuing through May 3, 2020 at 11:59 p.m., all health care facilities,
residential care facilities, congregate care facilities, and juvenile justice
facilities must prohibit from entering their facilities any visitors that: are
not necessary for the provision of medical care, the support of activities of
daily living, or the exercise of power of attorney or court‑appointed
guardianship for an individual under the facility’s care; are not a parent,
foster parent, or guardian of an individual who is 21 years of age or under and
who is under the facility’s care; are not visiting an individual under the
facility’s care that is in serious or critical condition or in hospice care;
and are not visiting under exigent circumstances or for the purpose of
performing official governmental functions.
2. Effective
immediately and continuing through May 3, 2020 at 11:59 p.m., all health care
facilities, residential care facilities, congregate care facilities, and
juvenile justice facilities must perform a health evaluation of all individuals
that are not under the care of the facility each time the individual seeks to
enter the facility, and must deny entry to those individuals who do not meet
the evaluation criteria. The evaluation criteria must include: symptoms of a
respiratory infection, such as fever, cough, or shortness of breath; and
contact in the last 14 days with someone with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‑19.
3. While
the restrictions of this order are in place, all health care facilities,
residential care facilities, congregate care facilities, and juvenile justice
facilities must make best efforts to facilitate visitations with individuals
under their care by phone or other electronic communication platforms to the
fullest extent possible, consistent with normal visitation policies.
4. For
purposes of this order, “residential care facilities” includes, but is not
limited to, homes for the aged, nursing homes, adult foster care facilities,
hospice facilities, substance abuse disorder residential facilities,
independent living facilities, and assisted living facilities.
5. Consistent
with MCL 10.33 and MCL 30.405(3), a willful violation of this order shall
constitute a misdemeanor.
6. Executive
Order 2020‑7 is rescinded.
Given under my hand and the Great Seal
of the State of Michigan.
Date: April 5, 2020
Time: 5:36 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 April 6, 2020, and read:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
No. 2020‑38
Temporary
extensions of certain FOIA deadlines to facilitate
COVID‑19
emergency response efforts
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 Michigan
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, MCL 30.401‑.421,
and the Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945, 1945 PA 302, as
amended, MCL 10.31‑.33.
In the three weeks that followed, the
virus spread across Michigan, bringing deaths in the hundreds, confirmed cases
in the thousands, and deep disruption to this state’s economy, homes, and
educational, civic, social, and religious institutions. In response to the
widespread and severe health, economic, and social harms posed by the COVID‑19
pandemic, I issued Executive Order 2020‑33 on April 1, 2020. 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.
The Emergency Management Act 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). Similarly, the
Emergency Powers of the Governor Act of 1945 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).
To mitigate the spread of COVID‑19,
protect the public health, and provide essential protections to vulnerable
Michiganders, it is crucial that all Michiganders limit in‑person contact
to the fullest extent possible. This includes practicing social distancing and
restricting in‑person work and interaction to only that which is strictly
necessary. At the same time, and as memorialized by Michigan’s Freedom of
Information Act (“FOIA”), 1976 PA 442, as amended, MCL 15.231 et seq., it remains the public policy of
this state—and a priority of my administration—that Michiganders have access to
“full and complete information regarding the affairs of government and the
official acts of those who represent them as public officials and public
employees,” so that they “may fully participate in the democratic process.” MCL
15.231(2). To balance this core priority with the steep and urgent demands
posed by the COVID‑19 pandemic, it is reasonable and necessary to provide
limited and temporary extensions of certain FOIA deadlines, so that
Michiganders may remain informed and involved in their government during this
unprecedented crisis without unduly compromising the health and safety of this
state and its residents.
Acting under the Michigan Constitution
of 1963 and Michigan law, I order the following:
1. Strict
compliance with the required response periods set forth under sections 5(2),
10(2), and 10a(2) of the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 1976 PA 442,
as amended, MCL 15.235(2), 15.240(2), and 15.240a(2), is temporarily suspended,
as follows:
(a) A
public body must respond in writing to a request or an appeal received at its
physical office via mail, hand delivery, or facsimile within 10 business days
after actual receipt of the request or appeal. For purposes of this order,
actual receipt of a request or appeal occurs when an employee of the public
body physically opens the envelope containing the request or physically takes
the faxed request from the fax machine. Nothing in this order requires an
employee to report to the office to open mail or check the fax machine if the
employee would not otherwise be permitted to report to the office in person and
required to perform those tasks.
(b) If
COVID‑19 or any accompanying response efforts, including but not limited to
compliance with any emergency order or mitigation recommendations related to
COVID‑19, interferes with the timely grant or denial of a request or the
timely reversal or upholding of a denial on appeal, a public body may issue a
notice under section 5(2)(d), 10(2)(d), or 10a(2)(d) of the FOIA, MCL
15.235(2)(d), 15.240(2)(d), or 15.240a(2)(d), as applicable, extending the
period of time in which to respond for as long as the public body deems
necessary but no longer than until the expiration of this order or any order
that follows from it.
2. Strict
compliance with the requirements relating to in‑person efforts in
connection with a public records request set forth under sections 3 and 4 of
the FOIA, MCL 15.233 and 15.234, is temporarily suspended, as follows:
(a) If
a public records request requires in‑person efforts, such as an in‑person
search, inspection, examination, preparation, or production of public records,
by the requestor or the public body, a public body may defer that portion of
the request until the expiration of this order or any order that follows from
it.
(b) If
a public body defers a portion of a public records request pursuant to section
2(a) of this order, it must explain this deferral and its reason in the public
body’s response to the requestor under section 5(2) or 10(2) of the FOIA, MCL
15.235(2) and 15.240(2), as applicable.
(c) If
a public body defers a portion of a public records request pursuant to section
2(a) of this order, the requestor may inform the public body in writing that
the requestor is amending its request to exclude the deferred portion of the
request so that the public body may more promptly process the request. The
public body must notify the requestor of its ability to amend its request in
the response required under section 2(b) of this order.
3. It
is the public policy of this state that, during the COVID‑19 states of
emergency and disaster, public bodies continue to respond to requests for
public records as expeditiously as possible and, to the extent practicable, by
using electronic means.
4. The
provisions of this order apply notwithstanding any contrary policy adopted by a
public body.
5. For
purposes of this order, the terms “public body” and “public record” mean those
terms as defined under section 2 of the FOIA, MCL 15.232.
6. This
order is effective immediately and continues through June 4, 2020 at 11:59 p.m.
Given under my hand and the Great Seal
of the State of Michigan.
Date: April 5, 2020
Time: 8:47 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 April 1, 2020, and read:
April 1, 2020
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 new 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.
Scarcely three
weeks later, the virus has spread across Michigan. To date, our state has 9,334
confirmed cases of COVID‑19 and 337 people have died of the disease. Many
thousands more are infected but have not been tested. Hospitals in Oakland,
Macomb, Wayne, and Washtenaw counties are reporting that they are full or
nearly full to capacity. Ventilators and personal protective equipment are in
short supply and high demand. Michigan needs more medical personnel than are
currently available to care for COVID‑19 patients. Dormitories and a
convention center are being converted to temporary field hospitals.
Since I
declared this emergency, my administration has taken aggressive measures to
fight the spread of the virus and mitigate its impacts, including temporarily
closing schools, restricting the operation of places of public accommodation,
allowing medical professionals to practice to the full extent of their training
regardless of licensure, limiting gatherings and travel, and requiring workers
who are not necessary to sustain or protect life to stay home. But this
pandemic is still in its infancy, and there remains much more to be done to
stave off the sweeping and severe health, economic, and social harms it poses
to all Michiganders throughout our state.
For that
reason, I have issued today Executive Order 2020‑33, an expanded
declaration of emergency and disaster across the State of Michigan, to reflect
the current conditions and needs of our state. To meet the steep, varied, and
ongoing demands created by the COVID‑19 pandemic, my administration must
continue to use the full range of tools available to protect the health,
safety, and welfare of our state and its residents. I welcome your and your
colleagues’ continued partnership in fighting this pandemic. In that vein, and
in shared recognition of what this fight will require from us, I request a
concurrent resolution extending the state of emergency and disaster declared in
EO 2020‑33 by 70 days from the date of the resolution.
While I have
multiple independent powers to address the challenges we now face, the powers
invoked by Executive Order 2020‑33 under the Emergency Management Act,
1976 PA 390, as amended, MCL 30.403 et
seq., provide important protections to the people of Michigan, and they
should remain a part our state’s ongoing efforts to combat this pandemic
throughout the full course of that fight. As to the individual emergency orders
I have issued, including Executive Order 2020‑21 (Stay Home, Stay Safe),
these measures expire at the time stated in each order, unless otherwise
continued.
Thank you for
your leadership during this unprecedented and harrowing moment in our state’s
history.
Sincerely,
Gretchen
Whitmer
Governor
The message
was referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
The
following message from the Governor was received and read:
April 3, 2020
I respectfully submit to the Senate the following appointments to office
pursuant to Public Act 154 of 1974, MCL 408.1046:
Board of Health and Safety
Compliance and Appeals
Mr. D. Lynn Coleman of 8562 S. McClelland Road, Ashley, Michigan 48806,
county of Gratiot, reappointed to represent labor in the construction industry,
for a term commencing April 3, 2020 and expiring March 18, 2024.
Ms. Kristin Domanski of 5880 Cowell Road, Brighton, Michigan 48116,
county of Livingston, succeeding Craig Chunchick whose term has expired,
appointed to represent management in the health field, for a term commencing
April 3, 2020 and expiring March 18, 2024.
Respectfully,
Gretchen
Whitmer
Governor
The appointments were referred to the Committee on Advice and Consent.
Senator LaSata entered the Senate Chamber.
By unanimous consent the Senate proceeded to the order of
Resolutions
Senator Bizon entered the Senate Chamber.
Senator Shirkey offered the following concurrent resolution:
Senate
Concurrent Resolution No. 24.
A
concurrent resolution to approve an extension to the state of emergency and
state of disaster declared across the State of Michigan to address the COVID‑19
pandemic.
Whereas,
Under the Emergency Management Act, PA 390 of 1976, the Governor may
declare a state of disaster and a state of emergency for the reasons specified
therein; and
Whereas,
A state of disaster or state of emergency declared under the Emergency
Management Act continues until the governor finds that the threat or danger has
passed, the disaster or emergency has been dealt with to the extent that
disaster or emergency conditions no longer exist, or until the declared state
of disaster or emergency has been in effect for 28 days; and
Whereas,
After 28 days, the governor shall issue an executive order or proclamation
declaring the state of disaster or emergency terminated, unless a request by
the governor for an extension of the state of disaster or emergency for a
specific number of days is approved by resolution of both houses of the
legislature; and
Whereas,
On March 10, 2020, Governor Whitmer issued Executive Order 2020‑4 declaring
a state of emergency across the State of Michigan to address the COVID‑19
pandemic; and
Whereas,
On April 1, 2020, Governor Whitmer issued Executive Order 2020‑33 to
replace Executive Order 2020‑4 and expand that initial March 10,
2020 declaration to include a state of disaster related to the COVID‑19
pandemic; and
Whereas,
The same day, Governor Whitmer requested that the Legislature pass a concurrent
resolution extending the state of emergency and state of disaster in Michigan;
and
Whereas,
On March 29, 2020, the federal government extended nationwide social distancing
guidelines through April 30, 2020 to combat the spread of the COVID‑19
pandemic; and
Whereas,
Due to the ongoing COVID‑19 pandemic, the state of emergency and state of
disaster must be extended to protect the health and safety of Michigan’s
citizens; now, therefore, be it
Resolved
by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That we approve an
extension of the state of emergency and state of disaster declared by Governor
Whitmer in Executive Order 2020‑4 and Executive Order 2020‑33
through April 30, 2020, which is 23 days from the date of this concurrent
resolution; and be it further
Resolved,
That copies of this resolution be transmitted to the Governor.
Senator MacGregor moved that the rule be
suspended.
The motion prevailed, a majority of the
members serving voting therefor.
The question being on the
adoption of the concurrent resolution,
Senator
Ananich offered the following amendments:
1. Amend page 2, line 26, after “through”
by striking “April 30” and inserting “June 16”.
2. Amend page 2, line 27 after “is”
by striking “23” and inserting “70”.
The amendments were not adopted.
The question being on the adoption of the concurrent resolution,
The concurrent resolution was adopted.
The motion prevailed.
Senator MacGregor moved that the Senate adjourn.
The motion prevailed, the time being 10:13
a.m.
In pursuance of the order previously made, the
President, Lieutenant Governor Gilchrist, declared the Senate adjourned until
Thursday, April 16, 2020, at 10:00 a.m.
MARGARET
O’BRIEN
Secretary
of the Senate