Environmental law in Michigan has matured in several ways since the publication of the first edition and supplements of the Michigan Environmental Law Deskbook
in the 1990s. In many respects, the expansion of environmental law and
practice that we observed during the early 1990s, particularly
concerning investigation and remediation of contaminated sites, slowed
after 2000. In other respects, Michigan environmental law and policy has
broadened to address perceived economic and social (and perhaps global)
impacts of environmental regulation.
We saw the codification of Michigan environmental statutes into a
single chapter of the Michigan Compiled Laws, the Natural Resources and
Environmental Protection Act (NREPA), 1994 PA 451, MCL 324.101 et seq.
As a result of the codification, we now speak of Part 201 of NREPA
rather than Act 307, and we refer to Part 303 instead of the
Goemaere-Anderson Wetland Protection Act. This legislative codification
resulted directly from the Environmental Law Section's compilation of
environmental statutes published in 1992.
We saw Governor Engler in Executive Order 1995-18
split the former Department of Natural Resources into two departments,
the Department of Natural Resources to manage public lands and wildlife
and the Department of Environmental Quality to regulate pollution
emissions and issue permits for activities that affect the environment.
Governor Granholm reversed the split in January 2010, when she merged
the two departments into the Department of Natural Resources and
Environment in Executive Order 2009-45. Governor Snyder restored the split in Executive Order 2011-1. Reasonable minds can differ on the wisdom of each of these moves, but each became a fact of our law practice.
We saw significant amendment of the former Act 307, so that, in one
view, the present Part 201 contains a more rational liability scheme
tethered to the concept of causation, or, in another view, it relieves
some formerly liable parties from many of their obligations to remediate
contaminated sites.
We saw an initial focus on the cleanup of highly contaminated sites
under compulsion of judicial or administrative orders broadened to
include the remediation and redevelopment of less contaminated
"brownfield" sites, often financed by government incentives rather than
legal compulsion.
The second edition of the Deskbook reflects this maturation of
Michigan environmental law. Several chapters, such as brownfields,
takings, criminal, ADR, and climate change, have been added to reflect
current law and practice. Some chapters in the first edition have been
dropped because the subject areas are outside the core needs of most
readers. Other chapters have been divided or consolidated for clarity.
The Deskbook is now freely available, because the
Environmental Law Section takes seriously its mission to educate the
public. The second edition takes advantage of current technology by
being available primarily online. (Readers who wish to order—at cost—a
printed version should read the Reader's Guide.) To keep the text as
current as possible, chapter authors will include new cases,
legislation, administrative rules and other developments through
electronic updates.
Environmental law will continue to evolve. For instance, we have seen
several efforts in Michigan, as well as at federal and international
levels, to respond to the issue of climate change (discussed in Chapter
21). While we do not now know what these efforts will produce, the Deskbook will cover them, as well as other topics important to practitioners, with up-to-date and reliable analysis.
Jeffrey K. Haynes
March 2012