News, Culture and NPR for Central & Northern Michigan
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Michigan Attorney General settles on Schuette FOIA case

Department of the Attorney General

The state of Michigan has settled a lawsuit over the use of private emails by state officials to conduct government business.
The deal was announced Wednesday by Attorney General Dana Nessel and the group Progress Michigan.

Progress Michigan sued in 2016 after discovering then-Attorney General Bill Schuette and his aides using private accounts to communicate with each other about government business. The result was a protracted court battle between the liberal group and the Republican attorney general over whether that violated Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act.
Progress Michigan’s Lonnie Scott say this settlement resolves the case.
“It is now very clear that anyone trying to get around FOIA by using a personal email while conducting state business that that is not acceptable.”
Attorney General Nessel, a Democrat, says the state has revised its procedures to ensure emails about public business are preserved even when they come from private accounts.