Michigan's auxiliary container preemption law, MCL 445.572b, also prevents local bans on polystyrene foam food containers.
Polystyrene foam clamshells, cups, and trays fall within the broad definition of auxiliary containers under MCL 445.572b. As a result, Michigan municipalities cannot adopt ordinances banning polystyrene foam food service ware or imposing fees on its use. Some Michigan cities have adopted voluntary phase-outs in city operations, which remain permissible because they do not regulate private commerce. State agencies may set their own procurement preferences without violating preemption.
Local polystyrene bans are unenforceable; voluntary government procurement policies remain lawful.
Flint, MI
Residential pool barriers in Flint follow the Michigan Residential Code 2015 Appendix AG105, which requires a barrier at least 48 inches high around any pool...
Flint, MI
Flint Sec. 17-4 does not list approved residential fence materials but regulates construction features. Commercial and industrial fences over six feet must b...
Flint, MI
Flint Sec. 17-4 does not require neighbor consent to build a fence. Boundary-line disputes between adjoining owners are resolved under Michigan's partition-f...
Flint, MI
Flint requires a Certificate of Zoning Compliance for fence construction. The Zoning Division reviews placement against Sec. 17-4 height and material rules a...
Flint, MI
Flint Code Sec. 17-4 caps fences in A, B, and C residential zoning at 6 feet behind the 50-foot front setback line and 5 feet (max 50% solid) within the fron...
Flint, MI
The City of Flint does not impose a numeric ceiling on the number of dogs, cats, or other companion animals per household in Chapter 9 of the Code. Limits ar...
See how Flint's polystyrene foam rules rules stack up against other locations.
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