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🌿 Landscaping Rules/Weed Ordinances

Weed Ordinances: Grand Rapids vs Wyoming

How do weed ordinances rules compare between Grand Rapids, MI and Wyoming, MI?

Grand Rapids, MI

Kent County

No data available yet for Grand Rapids.

Wyoming, MI

Kent County

Some Restrictions

Weed control in the City of Wyoming, Michigan operates under Chapter 82 (Trees and Weeds) of the Wyoming Code of Ordinances and the Michigan Noxious Weeds Act (1941 PA 359, MCL 247.61 to 247.72), which authorizes cities to appoint a commissioner of noxious weeds and recover abatement costs as a lien. The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development maintains the state's prohibited and restricted weed list. Pesticide application by anyone other than a residential homeowner on their own property requires certification under the Michigan Pesticide Control Act (Part 83 of NREPA, MCL 324.8301 et seq.).

View full Wyoming rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactGrand RapidsWyoming
Local Authority-Wyoming Code Ch. 82 (Trees and Weeds)
State Statute-MI Noxious Weeds Act (MCL 247.61-72)
State Weed List-MDARD Prohibited and Restricted Weeds
Pesticide Certification-Part 83 NREPA (MCL 324.8301+)
Cost Recovery-Lien against land (MCL 247.66)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Grand Rapids FAQ

No FAQs available.

Wyoming FAQ

What counts as a noxious weed in Wyoming, MI?

Under MCL 247.62, statutory noxious weeds in Michigan include Canada thistle, dodders, mustards, wild carrot, bindweed, perennial sow thistle, hoary alyssum, ragweed, poison ivy, poison sumac, and other weeds designated as noxious by the commissioner of agriculture. The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development publishes the prohibited and restricted weed list at https://www.michigan.gov.

Who pays if Wyoming has to abate my weeds?

Under the Michigan Noxious Weeds Act (MCL 247.65 to 247.66), expenses incurred by the commissioner of noxious weeds in destroying noxious weeds are paid by the owner of the land, and the City has a lien against the land for the amount of that expense. The lien is collected in the same manner as a tax assessment.

Can I spray for weeds myself in Wyoming, MI?

On your own residential property you may apply general-use pesticides following label directions. Commercial application or restricted-use pesticides require certification under the Michigan Pesticide Control Act (Part 83 of NREPA, MCL 324.8301 et seq.), administered by the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development. Lawn-care contractors operating in Wyoming must be MDARD-certified.

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