The Mount Clemens City Commission voted to introduce and give first reading to amendments to the City of Mount Clemens Registration and Inspection of Rental Dwellings and Rental Units Ordinance (16.200), setting a second reading and adoption for May 6.
City administration summarized the proposed changes: updated definitions; clarifying language that houses sold on land contract can be treated as rental units when the land contract is not recorded and a copy is not provided; a reduction in the time owners have to correct inspection deficiencies from 60 days to 30 days; certificates of compliance limited to a maximum two-year validity; and authority for the city to place unpaid rental-registration fees as a lien against the property rather than pursue district-court enforcement.
An administration speaker framed the amendments as strengthening inspection processes and improving protections for renters. A commissioner said the changes were a “win-win situation” for residents and people moving into rental properties.
Why it matters: the amendment tightens compliance timelines and enforcement tools, which the administration said will better protect tenants and raise housing standards in a city with substantial rental stock. The ordinance will return for a second reading and possible adoption on May 6; the commission took no final adoption vote at the first reading.
Next steps: second reading and adoption scheduled for the May 6 commission meeting; additional public notice and opportunity to comment will accompany that hearing.