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Project Greenprint

In her 2024 State of the State address, Gov. Whitmer laid out a bold vision for establishing Michigan as a place where every resident can “make it” — a place where people dream of planting their roots. For many of us, the most essential piece of “making it” means having a safe, affordable and healthy home to rest our head and house our families.

But for too many housing is unreliable, expensive and in some cases unsafe. So what can we do?

Every house has a blueprint—a guide for transforming a bunch of materials into a home. Well we have a Greenprint—a guide for transforming our housing to better serve Michiganders.

A multicultural family smiles for the camera on their front porch steps.
Part 1

The State of MI Housing

  • Michigan’s minimum wage, as of 2023, is $10.10/hour, but the wage needed to afford a two-bedroom apartment at fair market value is $18.55/hour. Over 60% of Michiganders make less than $20/hour, which means over half the state’s population is spending more than they can afford on housing costs.
  • Nearly 40% of Michigan’s residential housing units were built before 1960, which results in ongoing costs to rehabilitate, maintain and power our homes. A recent analysis showed that utility costs add about 25% to housing costs, which negatively impact our vulnerable populations the most.
  • As of 2019, Michigan’s buildings accounted for almost 18% of the state’s total greenhouse gas emissions, the third-highest-emitting sector after the power and transportation sectors. Most of these emissions are from using fossil fuels to heat and to cook with.
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(Left) MEC Communications Manager Beau Brockett sits aside (Right) Crain's Detroit Business reporter Nick Manes as they record a podcast

“Have a Haven?”

Michigan is a climate haven. But those ​coming to our pleasant peninsulas will find an ​unpleasant reality: ailing and expensive ​homes. Our podcast miniseries on housing ​kicks off by laying out this conundrum.

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Read

The not-so scenic route: A roadtrip of Michigan housing

You may have heard that we’re in a “housing crisis” here in Michigan. Join us for a mini tour of our state, making stops in Detroit, Petoskey, Saginaw and more as we uncover how that crisis looks in different communities.

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A row of bungalow houses reveal a blighted Saginaw home across the street

Real representation? ​That’s no (Saginaw) CAP

Saginaw’s history is a microcosm of the greater ​issues facing communities: misplaced ​governmental priorities, aging house stock and ​a sense of abandonment from industry. ​Saginaw CAP is bringing power to the people.

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Part II

The Greenprint

There are over 4.5 million homes in Michigan. They cause 18% of our Michigan’s greenhouse gas emissions. ​To truly do our part in the climate change fight, we must make all of them sustainable—and actually ​affordable to live in. It seems like a tall order to transform our housing stock so drastically. How do we do it?

(Left) MEC Communications Manager Beau Brockett sits aside (right) MEC Energy Policy Coordinator Carlee Knott as they record a podcast.

LISTEN

Up to code

In the second part of our green housing ​podcast miniseries, we talk solutions with ​Environmental Council climate expert Carlee ​Knott. Spoiler: With tenacity and tact, ​”greening” Michigan’s homes is achievable.

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Funding for Affordable, Healthy Homes

$100M

to create a whole-home retrofit fund that would provide flexible dollars to address health and safety issues, electrify homes and complement existing programs for energy efficiency and home repairs;

$30M

to support and expand energy efficiency and building electrification workforce development throughout Michigan; and

more $

to the Weatherization Assistance Program, saving on energy costs in the long run.

A large rock sits serenely near the Lake Huron shoreline. A few trees dot the shore on the right

Feature Stories: The Polluter Rulebook

In 2006—nearly two decades ago—15 simple words put a firm stop in future protections Michigan could enact to keep pollution out of our beloved waters: “The department shall not promulgate any additional rules under this part after December 31, 2006.” These words have prevented us from addressing increasing algal blooms, updating lists of toxic chemicals as they are discovered, and more. To give the state its power back, we must undo the laws that have made it somewhat toothless.

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