Michigan local government leaders report lingering impacts from COVID-19 pandemic, improvements overall from the start of the crisis | Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
 
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Michigan local government leaders report lingering impacts from COVID-19 pandemic, improvements overall from the start of the crisis

October 27, 2021

Local leaders from across the state have reported lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new report, and worsening outlooks for how much longer some of those impacts will last. While the numbers of local communities reporting on the full range of impacts from the pandemic — public health, the economy, residents’ welfare, and public service delivery, among others — are significant, they show improving conditions amid uncertainty. 

The Spring 2021 Michigan Public Policy Survey reached 1,364 leaders of counties, municipalities, and townships.  

30% of Michigan local leaders say their local communities are still suffering significant or crisis-level impacts overall, a figure sharply down from the previous year's survey, which had shown that number as 67%. 

The biggest concerns for the leaders center on the economy, specifically on their local economy (39%) and residents’ welfare (34%), and overall, 36% of local leaders expect negative economic impacts to last at least another full year, up from 27% who felt that way last year.

Meanwhile as of spring 2021 only 40% of local leaders say their jurisdictions are getting the public health resources they need from the state or federal government to address the pandemic (up from 26% and 35% last year, respectively) and just 34% say they are getting the financial resources needed from the state or federal government (up from 22% and 21%, last year).

The Center for Local, State, and Urban Policy (CLOSUP) at the University of Michigan Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy conducts the MPPS every spring, and usually focuses first on the fiscal health of local jurisdictions.

“The pandemic has taken a terrible toll on communities across Michigan. We see the continuing effects particularly in the largest population areas in the southeast as well as in communities across the Upper Peninsula. After more than a year, there remains uncertainty about how and when they will emerge from the economic and health challenges they have faced,” said Tom Ivacko, executive director of CLOSUP.

Debra Horner, the MPPS project manager, noted, “The survey shows us that local governments have made adjustments throughout the crisis. They want better coordinated efforts from the state and Federal governments, but they also have found creative ways to adjust to the circumstances, including new ways of providing local services.”

The current report concludes: “Despite all the challenges and lingering negative impacts of the pandemic, some local leaders identified positive lessons their jurisdictions have learned that they plan to incorporate into their government operations in the future, particularly ones related to technology, such as remote work and service provision, and resident engagement through virtual meetings and social media.”

Launched in the wake of the Great Recession in 2009 by CLOSUP, the MPPS is conducted in partnership with the Michigan Association of Counties, Michigan Municipal League, and Michigan Townships Association.

The entire report can be viewed here.

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