LANSING (AP) - The Michigan House voted unanimously Tuesday to curb the size of severance deals for state officials unless they limit the state's legal exposure and details are made public.
The move came after Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's administration faced scrutiny over $85,000 and $155,000 payouts made to her former health and unemployment directors.
Under legislation sent to the Senate, state employees would be limited to 12 weeks of severance pay unless the attorney general determines a higher payment "is necessary to serve the best interests of this state based on the risk of litigation and the need to minimize the expenditure of public funds." A separation contract would also, to the extent allowed by law, have to shield the state from a potential lawsuit.
Public officers - lawmakers, other elected state officials and appointees - could get no severance pay unless it would contain legal costs and bar a lawsuit.
Such agreements could not prohibit officers and employees from disclosing factual information about an alleged violation of law, the existence of the contract or the full text of the deal. Any agreement that pays six weeks or more of severance would be posted on the state or legislative websites within 28 days.
- Posted May 05, 2021
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
State House votes to limit state severance deals
headlines Macomb
- Macomb County judge honored
- Mount Clemens woman pleads no contest to charge stemming from threats sent to Mount Clemens mayor
- MDHHS seeks applications for Rural Health Transformation Program Workforce for Wellness Initiative
- Prosecutor warns of fake jail bond scam targeting families
- Governor welcomes new unemployment protections for survivors of domestic violence
headlines National
- Chemerinsky: Supreme Court leaves many Second Amendment issues unresolved
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- After emergencies mar bar exam, New York State Bar Association aims to add new procedures
- When you get blasted by your own canon
- Ex-lawyer seeks bar reinstatement after US House primary win
- Trump selects newly confirmed federal judge for open seat on 5th Circuit




