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.
Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids is not a designated wildland-urban interface community, but Michigan DNR burn permits and city outdoor burning rules still control vegetation fi...
Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids follows the International Fire Code as adopted by Michigan, capping residential propane storage and requiring outdoor placement away from igniti...
Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids has no municipal ordinance regulating residential lawn ornaments (statues, garden gnomes, pink flamingos, religious displays, flagpoles, decorat...
Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids has no ordinance specifically regulating residential inflatable holiday decorations (lawn inflatables, blow-up Santas, animated displays). Const...
Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids has no municipal ordinance setting a calendar window for displaying holiday lights, no rule prohibiting year-round residential lighting, and no ...
Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids does not have a dedicated 'outdoor kitchen' permit category. Permanent outdoor kitchens with structural elements (built-in grill enclosures, mas...
See how Grand Rapids's polystyrene foam rules rules stack up against other locations.
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