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Legislative activity remains minimal in Lansing, but MAC is monitoring several situations that loom for the end of 2024, members of the Podcast 83 team discussed in their newest episode.
On the revenue sharing front, MAC and its members are waiting on final calculations from the state Treasury Department to have final and firm fiscal 2025 investments.
“The way the budget ended up was that every county is going to get the same amount they got for this current fiscal year, plus an increase,” said Deena Bosworth. “Now the base is what you got in fiscal 2024, plus a $30 million increase …
“All of you who are out there thinking, ‘Well, what does that $30 million mean to my particular county?’ An estimate is on our website. … And I want to stress they are preliminary numbers. … As soon as the Michigan Department of Treasury can figure out what the taxable value is for 2024 for your particular county, they will go back and redo those numbers. We don't expect them to change very much. So, what we have on our website is pretty darn close …”
MAC also is hard at work on trial court funding via a new workgroup.
“The trial court funding extension was pushed back to Dec. 31, 2026,” noted Samantha Gibson. “The goal is, in the meantime, for the State Court Administrative Office and the Michigan Judicial Council to work on new recommendations for reform. Right now, there is a clerical workload study going on. … I and two of our board members, Melissa Daub and Ken Mitchell, serve on that group. We were tasked with coming up with a survey that's going out to local court staff clerks, traffic, criminal, probate, you name it. They'll be doing a workload study, filling out that survey. And then once those survey results are reported, then recommendations can move along in that process.”
Finally, new language is out from advocates who want to impose a statewide septic code.
“It's substantially different,” said Madeline Fata, in reference to the new language over previous drafts. “We are still taking a look at it, still trying to analyze what the practical implementation of it means … Hopefully, by the (Annual) Conference, we'll be able to speak to it a little better. So those of you attending the conference will be able to get a little more information.”
By DerekLegislative activity remains minimal in Lansing, but MAC is monitoring several situations that loom for the end of 2024, members of the Podcast 83 team discussed in their newest episode.
On the revenue sharing front, MAC and its members are waiting on final calculations from the state Treasury Department to have final and firm fiscal 2025 investments.
“The way the budget ended up was that every county is going to get the same amount they got for this current fiscal year, plus an increase,” said Deena Bosworth. “Now the base is what you got in fiscal 2024, plus a $30 million increase …
“All of you who are out there thinking, ‘Well, what does that $30 million mean to my particular county?’ An estimate is on our website. … And I want to stress they are preliminary numbers. … As soon as the Michigan Department of Treasury can figure out what the taxable value is for 2024 for your particular county, they will go back and redo those numbers. We don't expect them to change very much. So, what we have on our website is pretty darn close …”
MAC also is hard at work on trial court funding via a new workgroup.
“The trial court funding extension was pushed back to Dec. 31, 2026,” noted Samantha Gibson. “The goal is, in the meantime, for the State Court Administrative Office and the Michigan Judicial Council to work on new recommendations for reform. Right now, there is a clerical workload study going on. … I and two of our board members, Melissa Daub and Ken Mitchell, serve on that group. We were tasked with coming up with a survey that's going out to local court staff clerks, traffic, criminal, probate, you name it. They'll be doing a workload study, filling out that survey. And then once those survey results are reported, then recommendations can move along in that process.”
Finally, new language is out from advocates who want to impose a statewide septic code.
“It's substantially different,” said Madeline Fata, in reference to the new language over previous drafts. “We are still taking a look at it, still trying to analyze what the practical implementation of it means … Hopefully, by the (Annual) Conference, we'll be able to speak to it a little better. So those of you attending the conference will be able to get a little more information.”