- AN ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF
- SAND DUNE MINING IN SOUTHWEST
- MICHIGAN'S SHORELAND AREAS
- Inland sand is available for industry and commercial uses
and is used in Michigan for manufacturing and other commercial
uses.
- Shoreland dune sand is not essential for use by manufacturing
companies. The largest industrial employer in the State of
Michigan is the auto industry. Ford Motor Co. has obtained all
of its sand for foundries and glass manufacturing from non-shoreland
sources for many years.
- Residential property owners can be expected to pay increasing
property taxes in perpetuity whereas sand dune mining is a depleting
asset business. Shoreland sand dune mining is a relatively
small business in the State of Michigan. Units of government
already collect much greater tax and fee revenues from individual
shoreline tax paying property owners than from sand dune mining.
- Sand dune mining operators are not reinvesting the profits
from their activities in desirable long term assets for the State
of Michigan and its residents. Available financial information
suggests that sand dune mining is not a business that adds special
value to the State of Michigan or provides long term growth of
jobs with stable employment potential available financial information
suggests that some sand dune mining operations are not owned
by State of Michigan enterprises and some are even controlled
by foreign corporations.
- Sand dune mining is not adding value for Michigan, its
residents or its taxpayers. The primary attraction for shoreline
sand dune mining is the ease with which the sand can be taken
from the sand dunes, loaded into trucks and taken away.
- The Lake Michigan shorelands have greater long term value
for the State of Michigan as a recreational, resort, tourism
or protected natural resource than as a source of sand for industry
or commercial uses.
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P.O. Box 581, Riverside, MI 49084
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