Michigan cities lose millions to pollution tax breaks with no oversight,
little say
[March 21, 2026] By
JENA BROOKER/BridgeDetroit
Michigan companies receive hundreds of millions of dollars in tax breaks
each year meant to incentivize pollution control.
But the cities footing the bill often don’t know how much money they’re
losing to these equipment tax breaks, they aren’t required to report it
to taxpayers and they have little say in whether the exemptions are
granted. They also don’t know how much pollution is being controlled.
Sterling Heights ranks sixth among Michigan municipalities for property
taxes lost to the Air Pollution Control Exemption law in the last
decade, according to a BridgeDetroit review of records. All of the
exemptions went to automaker Stellantis to control its pollution at the
Sterling Heights Assembly Plant.
Sterling Heights representatives said they didn’t know how much the
exemption was costing the city in lost taxes, but that it was probably
less than half a percent of the city’s overall operating budget,
explaining it would take a while to calculate the cost of the
exemptions, something they had never done before. City officials also
didn’t know how much pollution was being controlled as a result of the
law.
A BridgeDetroit review of the state’s online records found that Sterling
Heights has lost an estimated $23 million in property taxes in the last
decade from the exemptions. A family of four in Sterling Heights would
pay an additional estimated $7,000 in taxes over 10 years to make up for
the cost of the exemptions.
The plant generates a lot of economic activity for the city between the
jobs created and the remaining taxes that Stellantis pays, officials
said.
“The economic impact that the plant brings to Sterling Heights is
significant, to say the least,” said Melanie D. Davis, community
relations director for the city.
In 2023, the city passed a resolution celebrating the 40-year
anniversary of the company’s presence in Sterling Heights, where City
Manager Mark Vanderpool highlighted a $235 million investment at the
plant as a sign of Stellantis’ “commitment to the Sterling Heights
community.” The investment was made to support the development of
electric vehicles, including the Ram 1500 pickup. In September Stellanis
axed the pickup citing slow demand. Stellantis representatives declined
to share the number of jobs SHAP provides. In 2023, during the United
Auto Workers strike, 6,800 members walked off the job at the plant,
demanding higher wages.

The Air Pollution Control Exemption Act allows the State Tax Commission
to provide incentives for companies that add pollution control equipment
to their operations. These property and sales tax exemptions last
indefinitely and cost local governments an estimated $200 million
annually statewide. Small municipalities with the lowest budgets are
impacted the most. In some cases, the value of the tax incentives is
more than double the annual tax revenue for the entire municipality.
Two-thirds of the municipalities that issued exemptions in the last
decade had a population of less than 20,000 people. Despite the impact
of the exemptions, there’s no legal requirement for municipalities to
track or publicly report these losses, unlike other tax abatements that
are typically disclosed in annual financial statements.
“There is no statutory authorization for such reporting,” said Ron Leix,
spokesperson for the Michigan Department of Treasury.
BridgeDetroit reviewed Michigan Department of Treasury online records,
Tax Expenditure reports, and Air Quality Division inspection reports
from the last decade. The analysis revealed that the state has granted
333 pollution exemptions, which cost local governments around $1.2
billion in lost property taxes. The five municipalities that exempted
the most in the last decade per resident were: River Rouge ($1,542.79),
Hampton ($4,753.21), Frenchtown ($5,001.53), Monroe ($17,082.63), and
Port Sheldon ($22,935.62).
BridgeDetroit reached out to all five municipalities.
Hampton Township declined to comment. Port Sheldon said it is not
involved in the approval process and did not respond to additional
requests for comment. In Monroe, some city officials say they’d welcome
more data and involvement in the process but trust state officials with
oversight. Frenchtown and River Rouge did not respond to a request for
comment.
Detroit officials similarly seemed unconcerned, calling the exemption a
“trivial” amount. Still, the number Detroit has exempted in the last
decade is more than a new $45 million, 150-unit affordable housing
development between E. Jefferson and the Detroit River.
Jacob Whiton, a former researcher with Good Jobs First, evaluated that
nearly all local governments across Michigan do not report the value of
the Air Pollution Control Exemption in their financial statements.
“The exemption is quite unique in this regard: Despite the fact that it
comes at the expense of revenue for cities and school districts and
counties, companies never have to actually go before the elected
officials of these local governments to get approval for the exemption,”
said Whiton. “It’s important to change that so that people can really
weigh those monetary costs in terms of the impact on public services
against what they potentially stand to benefit from new investment in
these industries.”
Jody Egen, director of communications for Monroe, said the city would
welcome being included.

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In this March 14, 2014, file photo, an assembly line worker
builds a 2015 Chrysler 200 automobile at the Sterling Heights
Assembly Plant in Sterling Heights, Mich. Fiat (AP Photo/Paul Sancya,
File)
 “As with any matter involving impact
on the local community, the City of Monroe would prefer that matters
with local fiscal impact include an element of local review and
input; however, the state Legislature structured this exemption
without such provisions,” Egen wrote by email. She noted that air
quality violations are handled by the state, and not the city.
Two companies have claimed exemptions in Monroe in the last decade:
DTE and Gerdau Special Steel.
“Without further information, it is our understanding that state or
federal agencies are the appropriate authorities to address and
enforce any such matters,” Egen added. “DTE and Gerdau have been,
and remain, valued community partners, major employers and
significant contributors to Monroe’s economy. We trust that both
companies continue to operate in full compliance with all applicable
laws and regulations and will take any steps necessary to maintain
that compliance in the future.”
DTE Energy and Gerdau Special Steel have violated air quality laws
more than 20 times in the last decade, according to EGLE’s online
records. But in the history of the law, an exemption has never been
revoked due to noncompliance, state officials say.
Neither Monroe nor Sterling Heights has independently evaluated
whether the exemption has led to any measurable pollution reduction,
nor has the state.
Regardless, Alexis Richards, Sterling Heights planner, said there’s
a public health cost of more pollution.
“So even while we may be losing out on taxable dollars, there’s
definitely a benefit to reducing pollution,” said Richards,
commending businesses for investing in cleaner technologies.
A representative from the Michigan Department of Environment, Great
Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) confirmed that in many cases, companies are
getting exemptions for pollution controls they are already legally
required to install.
“The likelihood of a facility installing air pollution control
equipment that’s not required by permit or regulation is much less
than it would have been when this program was enacted (in 1965),”
said Chris Ethridge, assistant director at EGLE’s Air Quality
Division. “It’s a very old program.”
Stellantis, while operating as Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, had at
least one violation in Sterling Heights in the last decade. In 2021,
the plant was cited for emitting more pollution per hour more than
permitted. But the track record for exempted Stellantis facilities
elsewhere in Michigan isn’t as great – Stellantis has received
approximately 47 certificates for its facilities across the state in
the last decade, and they have received 19 violations from EGLE.
Across the state, exempted facilities violated air quality laws
dozens of times in the last decade.
Jenn Fiedler of the Michigan Townships Association, a not-for-profit
corporation advocating with Michigan’s township governments, said
she hasn’t received inquiries from local townships about its impact.
The question of whether the exemption is driving investment — or
subsidizing business as usual — remains largely unanswered.

“The idea that this is necessary, and we’d be sort of endangering
the region’s ability to compete effectively for investment without
it …,” said Whiton. “It’s both such a small amount of money that it
doesn’t matter, but if it’s such a small amount of money, are we
really meant to believe that Stellantis or FCA — which has been
operating in Southeast Michigan for decades — was not going to
invest … if the exemption didn’t exist?”
Jodi Tinson, spokesperson for Stellantis, did not respond to a
request for comment on the exemption’s influence on the facility’s
location. Stellantis reported nearly $6 billion in profits in 2024.
The earliest exemption still in effect in the last decade for
Stellantis was granted in 1982.
Mike Johnston, executive vice president of government affairs and
workforce development for the Michigan Manufacturers Association,
said he would guess that most EGLE permit holders utilize the
exemption. He is a strong advocate for keeping the exemption for
economic development.
“It would be adding costs on Michigan products that are not added on
in cost in our competitor states, making us by definition
uncompetitive,” said Johnston, of the organization that represents
1,800 manufacturers across the state. “And doing it in an irrational
way, penalizing Michigan companies for installing pollution control
equipment, sometimes voluntarily and sometimes by state and federal
mandate.”
In October Stellantis announced a $13 billion investment over the
next four years to grow business in the United States, with $230
million of that spending forecast to be in Michigan.
“If it’s an economic development motivation … then we should have a
real conversation about whether that’s something we want to be
subsidizing,” said Whiton.
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