Executive Orders

By George Hathaway, Perry Bullard, and Karen Willard

Last month we reviewed legislative resolutions and discussed comments that we obtained in a survey of readers' impressions of the way resolutions are written.

This month we will review readers' impressions of Governor's Executive Orders. These orders are written by the Governor's legal counsel. They are directions that the Governor makes to specific agencies within the administration. The format for executive orders has not changed in the last 100 years. It has always contained much legalese. (See Figure 1.) We are told that it is this way on purpose, because Michigan governors have never been confident that their orders carried as much weight as statutes, administrative rules, or case opinions. Supposedly, if the orders are filled with impressive-looking legalese, then the orders will seem more important and will have a better chance of being followed. But this is what critics of legal writing have always charged-that lawyers write legalese on purpose to make their writing look more complicated and impressive.

To see how readers feel about the way executive orders are written, we first determined:

Seven of the ten said they could understand the order, but only after they had read it several times. Eight of the ten said the order was written in an unsatisfactory way. All ten preferred the version without legalese. Some of the comments were:

Conclusion

Governor's Executive Orders contain some of the worst legalese written in Michigan. The format for these orders has not changed, regardless of whether the person holding the office was Democrat, Republican, liberal, or conservative. It's time to change the format of these orders. The orders should use the same clear, direct, plain English format (but without the hereby) used by Presidential Executive Orders (Figure 3).


All three co-authors are members of the Plain English Committee of the State Bar of Michigan. George Hathaway is a Senior Real Estate Attorney at the Detroit Edison Company. Perry Bullard is a former Michigan state representative and state senator. Karen Willard is a member of the Michigan House of Representatives (82nd district).