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Council adopts native‑landscapes guidance, ends No Mow May enforcement pause
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Summary
The council adopted Policy Resolution 2026‑24 and accompanying interpretive guidance to implement the nuisance/landscape ordinance, allowing native landscapes under a visible‑stewardship standard and retiring the temporary No Mow May enforcement pause in favor of a year‑round framework.
The East Lansing City Council on April 7 adopted Policy Resolution 2026‑24 and a set of interpretive guidance documents to clarify enforcement and resident expectations under the city’s nuisance/landscape ordinance (ordinance 15‑58).
Cliff Walls of DPW environmental told council the guidance package includes a policy statement, a resident-facing FAQ, an enforcement guide for PACE, and a single‑page field reference to help staff make consistent on‑site determinations. The guidance is intended to recognize native plants and pollinator habitat while preventing true neglect by using a visible‑stewardship standard rather than requiring botanical expertise.
Council members praised the materials and asked staff to host outreach events, including a library Q&A and coordination with MSU extension experts to support residents who want to adopt native plantings. The motion to adopt retired the annual No Mow May enforcement pause and replaced it with a permanent year‑round compliance framework that emphasizes education, clear pictures/examples and consistent enforcement practice.

