Oakland County has no hurricane-specific debris-management ordinance because the region experiences no hurricanes. Post-storm cleanup (severe thunderstorms, tornadoes, ice storms) is handled through standard municipal solid-waste contracts (curbside brush and bulky-item pickup), county emergency operations through Oakland County Homeland Security, and state disaster declarations under MCL 30.401 et seq. (Emergency Management Act).
Hurricane debris management programs (FEMA Public Assistance debris monitoring, hurricane right-of-way clearance, vegetative debris reduction sites) are pre-planned in coastal jurisdictions under FEMA Pub. 325. Oakland County, MI, faces no hurricane risk; its high-wind and ice-storm debris is managed reactively through (1) municipal solid-waste contractors providing curbside brush, limb, and bulky-item pickup under city ordinances (each Oakland County community sets its own collection schedule); (2) Oakland County Homeland Security and Emergency Management coordinating multi-jurisdictional response when a state of emergency is declared under MCL 30.403; (3) state and federal disaster assistance pathways available after a Presidential disaster declaration. Open burning of storm debris is regulated by state law (Michigan DNR open-burning regulations under Part 515 of NREPA, MCL 324.51501 et seq.) and may be restricted seasonally or by local ordinance. Construction and demolition debris generated by storm-damaged structures must go to licensed Type II or Type III landfills per Michigan Part 115 of NREPA (MCL 324.11501 et seq.).
Open dumping or illegal disposal of storm debris violates Michigan Part 115 of NREPA (MCL 324.11521), with civil fines and remediation orders. Open burning without authorization can violate Michigan DNR rules and local ordinances. Curbside placement outside contracted pickup windows may incur municipal solid-waste citations under city ordinances.
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