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Michigan Septic Tank Association | Spring 2026

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From the President

As winter continues in Michigan, I am impressed with the hard work and resilience that defines our industry. Cold temperatures, frozen ground, and challenging outdoor conditions don’t slow down the important work we do. Every day our members continue to protect public health, preserve our water resources, and serve communities across the state in a professional manner that illustrates the knowledge and experience we all have.

Increased awareness of the the Wastewater Industry, State Regulations, and growing development in rural and lakeside communities have put Onsite Wastewater and Septic Systems in the spotlight. We continue to be committed to ensuring that the voice of MSTA is heard at legislative and regulatory meetings across the state.

MSTA is doing our best to provide educational training opportunities to all our members at conferences like the MSTA Annual Conference in February, as well as our Spring and Fall Meetings which take place in April and October each year. The MSTA Annual conference was well attended with 195 total attendees and 33 exhibitors.

Thank you to our exhibitors, speakers, and members who took the time to join us this year. A special thank you goes out to our 8 sponsors which were Imperial industries, Advanced Pump and Equipment, Ashland Pump, Armal, Century Chemical, Elgen, Engcon, and Sludgehammer Group.

Lastly, I would like to thank the entire MSTA Board for helping out so much at our Annual Conference and with the meetings throughout the year. I hope spring finds you busy and profitable as we move into summer.

Saturday, October 17

National Vacuum Equipment, Traverse City Online registration coming in late summer 2027 MSTA Annual Conference

Tuesday, February 9 – Thursday, February 11

Soaring Eagle Casino & Resort, Mt. Pleasant Online registration for attendees and vendors coming early fall

2027 MSTA Spring Meeting

April – Date to be announced

Rick Throop
MSTA President

Meet your 2026 MSTA Board of Directors

President

Rick Throop

Woods-Utica Septic Service

Vice President

Jason Spangle

Esch Septic Service

Secretary

Dervin Witmer

Dig-It Excavating

Treasurer

Tom Schunk

County Wide Septic LLC

Directors

Ryan Carey

Sodergren Septic

Casey Fiedler

Michigan Well & Septic Inspections

Danielle Gerdes

Scott’s Excavating

Lynden Johncock

Williams and Bay Pumping Services

Brian Knoper

Kerkstra Portable Restroom Services

Nick Routley

Routley’s Inc.

Chris Sloan

Sloan’s Septic Tank Service

Thank you 2026 MSTA Annual Conference Exhibitors

10X Business Broker Mergers & Acquisitions

A Restroom Trailer Company (ART Company)

Advance Pump & Equipment

Alta Equipment Group

Ashland Pump

C. A. Cornerstone Verti block

Century Chemical Corporation

Eljen Corporation

General Agency Company/ EMC Insurance

Guardian Wastewater Services

Harbor Pipe and Supply

Imperial Industries Inc

Infiltrator Water Technologies

J&J Portable Sanitation Products, LLC

Jackel

Meters Inc.

Michigan Saves

National Vacuum Equipment

Norweco, Inc.

Omega Liquid Waste Solutions

PolyJohn

POLYLOK

Rivio llc

Roth North America

Sales Service Plus

Satellite Industries

Shafer Bros. Inc.

SludgeHammer Group Ltd.

Topcon Solutions Store

Vacuum Tank Sales

Valley Farms Supply/Milan Supply Co.

Watercore

Wieser Concrete Products, Inc.

Thank you to everyone who attended and supported MSTA’s 5th Annual Conference at Soaring Eagle Casino & Resort

The 2026 MSTA Annual Conference delivered three days of insight, and real-world expertise – bringing together septic professionals from across Michigan for one of the industry’s most dynamic gatherings yet.

This year’s program tackled the topics that matter most in today’s evolving landscape. Attendees explored emerging issues like PFAS and its impact on septic systems, gained practical strategies for optimizing tank performance, and dug into the science behind biomat and soil treatment systems. Business-focused presentations offered actionable takeaways on scaling operations without burnout, strengthening marketing efforts, and elevating the industry as a whole. From workforce discussions highlighting the value of military veterans to guidance on educating homeowners, the agenda balanced technical knowledge with forward-thinking business insight.

Beyond the sessions, the conference created space for meaningful connection. Roundtable discussions, networking events, Dirt Bags podcast, and the always-popular banquet and auction fostered collaboration, idea-sharing, and a stronger sense of community across the industry.

We thank our presenters, volunteers, attendees, sponsors and exhibitors – all of whom make the conference possible! Whether attendees came for continuing education, new ideas, or peer connections, the 2026 conference delivered on all fronts – and set the stage for even more growth ahead.

Mark your calendars now for the 6th Annual MSTA Conference, returning to Soaring Eagle Resort February 9–11, 2027.

Thank You Sponsors

MEET AND GREET SPONSOR

BANQUET SPONSORS

DIRT BAGS PODCAST SPONSORS

New Board Member Bio

Brian Knoper, Kerkstra Portable Restroom Services

Brian Knoper is the newest elected member of the MSTA Board of Directors. Brian is the owner of Kerkstra Portable Restroom Services, based in Hudsonville, Michigan. Previously, he was a mason for eight years and then during the 2008 financial crisis he got into financial services while returning to college. This opened an opportunity for him to open his own insurance agency which he had until 2020 when he sold to shift gears to the septic industry.

He purchased Kerkstra Portable Restroom Services in March 2020 – on the same day COVID-19 shutdowns began – quickly adapting to shifting demand and turning early uncertainty into opportunity through strategic pricing, expanded services, and operational efficiency.

With his background in financial services and insurance, Brian has driven significant growth by investing in technology, modernizing equipment, and building a strong company culture. Under his leadership, the company has expanded its fleet, increased inventory, and improved route efficiency, while strengthening its presence across construction, municipal, event, and agricultural markets.

Brian is also focused on innovation and diversification, including the launch of a bulk water delivery division to meet evolving regulatory and customer needs. Known for his hands-on leadership and willingness to embrace challenges, he continues to position the company for long-term growth across the region.

Brian is married with four children and has been in the industry for six years. He looks forward to getting more involved with MSTA and participating on the Board of Directors.

Get involved - join an MSTA Committee!

Looking to get more out of your MSTA membership? Serving on a committee is one of the best ways to stay connected, share your expertise, and help shape the future of Michigan’s septic industry. MSTA is looking to restart/refresh some of the MSTA Committees including Annual Conference, Spring/Fall Meeting, Legislative, Membership and more.

Committee participation offers valuable opportunities to:

• Build relationships with fellow professionals across the state

• Have a direct voice in MSTA programs, events, and priorities

• Stay informed on industry trends, challenges, and regulatory updates

• Develop leadership skills and give back to the industry

Whether you’re a long-time member or newer to MSTA, your perspective is valuable—and your involvement makes a difference.

If you’re interested in getting more involved, please scan the QR code to complete your interest form or visit the MSTA website to find the form under the Committee page in the “About” box. For more information, email executiveofficer@msta.biz

The People & Service You Love, Now With Everything Else You Need

PolyJohn has been a mainstay in the portable sanitation industry for decades and a major driving force in its growth through our innovative products, membership and support of the PSAI and other activities. Our company takes pride in manufacturing the most durable products on the market and backing them 100%. We also employ a team of industry experts who put our customers first and go above and beyond to help them in any way possible.

We aren’t a company that rests on our laurels and is satisfied with our past successes. Our team is constantly looking for ways to better serve our customers. That’s why we are excited to offer new and improved products, product categories not previously offered by PolyJohn and customer experience that’s better than ever!

Take The PJ portable toilet, for example. It was introduced last year and has been recently improved with major upgrades, including completely redesigned corner molds and side panel corners for maximum strength and durability.

But we provide much more than portable toilets. You can now turn to PolyJohn when you need vacuum toilet systems, luxury restroom trailers, hauling trailers, vacuum trucks, slide-in vacuum units, a huge assortment of chemicals and supplies and much more. The bottom line is, we’re on a mission to be your one-stop source for everything you need for your portable sanitation business.

To learn more about our product lines, visit us online at www.polyjohn.com or call 800.292.1305!

Anything Outdoors Contracting At Your Disposal Inc.

Champion Septic

Darkshore Armory LLC

DeJonghe Septic and Excavation

District Health Department #10

Dorr Environmental and septic llc

Enviro-Assist

Fresh Coast Septic

JB Rentals

Kovalak Family Septic and Excavating

Markos & Sons Sanitation LLC

Mt. Pleasant Septic

North Land Excavating LLC

Pit Stop of Michigan

Preferred-Portables LLC

Primrose Acres

Rental Equipment Logistics LLC

Smart Septic

SSM

Tri County Power Rodding

Vanderveen & Sawyer LLC

Wapokisko Plumbing LLC

Washtenaw Concrete & Excavating

WIN Home Inspection

Legislative Report by Bill Lievense Capitol Group Consultants LLC

Septic Code Legislation Re-Introduced

Senator Sam Singh has reintroduced his latest draft of a new septic code bill (SB 771) which combines two prior bill drafts into one bill. Previously, there was one bill for the septic code and a second bill creating a “technical advisory committee” to develop administrative rules for implementation of the code. MSTA representatives have attended multiple stakeholder meetings with the sponsor of last session’s septic code legislation. The latest draft contains most of our recommendations with only a few remaining issues. Prospects for the bill in a divided state legislature (Democrat controlled Senate and Republican controlled House) are unclear at this time. MSTA President Rick Throop, Tom Schunk and legislative counsel Bill Lievensae testified on the bill before the Senate Energy & Environment Committee on March 3rd. MSTA remains engaged to ensure our interests are represented in any legislation that may be considered now or in the future.

Governor Presents FY 27 Executive Budget Recommendation

Governor Gretchen Whitmer presented her FY 27 Executive Budget Recommendation to the Legislature on 2-11-26. The budget recommendation totals $88.1 billion, including a General Fund total of $13.6 billion and a School Aid Budget totaling $21.4 billion. The EGLE budget once again includes a proposal to increase solid waste tipping fees by $11M (total $80 million) million per year. There is also a proposed significant reduction in “Going Pro” training program funding.

House Fiscal Agency Projects General Fund Down $1B Next Two Years

The Consensus Revenue Estimating Conference report revised its downward projection for the current 2025/206 fiscal year by $779.4 million. For the upcoming FY 2026/2027 fiscal year the projection is downward by $1.1 billion. This will have a major impact on the proposed FY 2026/2027 budget.

Michigan Treasury Issues Bulletin On Relief For Corporate Taxpayers’ Estimated Payments In Light of Decoupling From Federal Income Tax

The Michigan Department of Treasury has issued a notice “Relief for 2025 Corporate Income Tax (CIT) Estimated Payments in Light of Public Law 119-21 and Decoupling Under Michigan PA 24.” The notice provides relief for CIT payers related to quarterly payment obligations in light of Michigan’s new law to decouple its income tax from the federal income tax.

Unemployment Insurance Agency Launching New System (MiUI) 2-23-26

The Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency has announced a new date for the launch of its new data system (MiUI) on Monday, February 23, 2026. The new system will replace the Michigan Web Account Manager (MiWAM). The UI system will be down from Wednesday February 18 through Sunday February 22 to make the changeover.

Bill To Waive Over Payment of Unemployment Insurance Benefits Clears Senate

The business community continues to be opposed to SB 700 which would prohibit the Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency (UIS) from collecting $2.7 billion in unemployment insurance benefits over payments caused by UIA clerical errors more than three years ago during COVID. The concern is that waiving collection of the overpayment puts employers at risk of having the federal government demand state repayment for their portion of the payments resulting in the UI fund dropping below the prescribed minimum balance and triggering a significant UI tax rate increase. The bill (SB 700 S-3) has passed the Senate but has dim prospects in the Republican controlled House.

House Speaker Matt Hall Announces Majoy Tax Overhaul Initiative

House Speaker Matt Hall announced a major tax overhaul initiative that would expand the sales tax to selected services generating $4.7 billion in revenue. The new revenue would be used to eliminate the personal property tax, eliminate the 6-mill state education tax, eliminate the real estate transfer tax and remove the “pop-up” property tax increase when a property is sold. An additional proposed benefit would be to relieve utilities from nearly $1 billion in personal property taxes which would then allow them to reduce electric rates. Local governments and schools would be held harmless through additional appropriations. Governor Whitmer has responded that she is open to discussions about the proposal but needs more detail to analyze the proposal. The prospects for getting such an ambitious proposal through Legislature during an election year are questionable. Also, there is little clarity about which services would be taxed and which would be exempt causing some anxiety in the business community.

Bill To Limit Scope of Consumer Protection Act Introduced

Rep. Bill Schuette has introduced legislation (HB 5725) to preserve the current state of the law exempting commercial businesses from being subject to certain actions under the Michigan Consumer Protection Act. This exemption was provided in 1999 and 2017 Michigan Supreme Court cases but is the subject of a new case (Nessel v. Eli Lilly) that could overturn the precedent.

Bills To Restrict/Regulate Data Centers Introduced.

After enacting laws to exempt data center equipment from state sales and tax use, sentiment on the centers has turned. A three-bill package (SB 761, SB 762, SB 763) would ban withdrawals of more than 2 million gallons of water for consumptive use, require reports on water and energy use and prohibit passing on infrastructure costs to rate payers. Additionally, HB 5396. HB 5397and HB 5398 would repeal the previously enacted sales, use tax and property tax exemptions.

Unmanned Aerial Vehicle “Drone” Regulation Package Reported From Committee

A bipartisan package of 14 bills (HB 5319, HB 5320, HB 5321, HB 5322, HB 5323, HB 5324, HB 5325, HB 5326, HB 5327, HB 5328, HB 5329, HB 5330, HB 5331, HB 5332) has been introduced to regulate the use of “unmanned aircraft systems” (aka “drones”) and prohibit their use over key facilities, critical infrastructure and more. It also provides for geo fencing around critical infrastructure and buildings as well as the destruction of drones operating in violation of the law. It would create statewide standards for how drones are purchased and restrict access across both public and private sectors. The package is referred to as the SHEILD program, short for Securing Homeland & Infrastructure with Emerging Laws for Drones. The bills have been reported out of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

House Republicans Introduce Permit Reform Bills

House Republicans have introduced three bills to provide for designated positions for permit issuance (HB 5498), provide a cause of action for permit denial (HB 5499) and require providing a basis for permit denial (HB 5500).

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PFAS Product Reporting & Ban Bill Package Introduced

On March 4, 2026 Senator Bayer introduced a package of bills (SB 816, SB 817, SB818) which, beginning January 1, 2028, would ban the sale of selected products containing Intentionally added PFAS unless a written notification is provided to the Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy (EGLE). Additionally, no selected product containing intentionally added PFAS shall be manufactured or sold beginning January 1, 2029, unless it contains a label stating it is “Made with PFAS chemicals.”

Micro Plastics Bill Package Clears Senate Committee

A package of microplastic bills (SB 503, SB 504, SB 505) were reported out of the Senate Natural Resources & Agriculture Committee on Tuesday, March 10th. The bills were reported with substitute (S-1) versions. SB 503 would prohibit the sale of products containing microbeads beginning January 1, 2028. SB 504 would require EGLE to establish water quality standards for microbeads in public water supplies. SB 505 would require EGLE to establish a statewide microplastics research and monitoring plan that assessed the occurrence and impact of microplastics on the plants, animals, waterways, and drinking sources of the State.

Bills Supporting Anaerobic Digesters/Land Spreading Of Digestate Clear House/Senate Action Expected In 2026

Legislation (HB 4257 and HB 4265) amending Michigan’s solid waste law to support the use of anerobic digestors for management of waste have been passed by the Michigan House of Representatives. Presently, an anaerobic digester means a facility that uses microorganisms to break down biodegradable material in the absence of oxygen, producing methane and an organic product. The legislation would instead provide that anaerobic digester means a facility used for anaerobic digestion. Anaerobic digestion would then be defined as the use of microorganisms in a controlled environment to break down biodegradable material in the absence of oxygen, producing biogas and another product. Anaerobic digester digestate, or simply, digestate, would mean the product, other than biogas, remaining after the anaerobic digestion is complete, whether or not any liquid portion and any solid portion have been separated. Finally, the bill would modify the definition of disposal area by specifying that a site at which anaerobic digester feedstock or digestate is managed in compliance with section 11568 of NREPA is not a disposal area (in accordance with provisions that would be added by House Bill 4265).

Governor Issues Executive Directive To Explore Clean Energy

Governor Whitmer announced she has signed an executive directive creating an initiative to explore “geologic hydrogen” as a usable clean fuel alternative.

Legislative Package To Roll Back 2023 Energy Law Clean/Renewable Energy Requirements (HB 5710 and HB 5711)

A package of bills HB 5710 and HB 5711) has been introduced in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives to roll back the clean and renewable energy mandates established in the 2023 energy law update. The bills will likely pass the House but will die in the Democrat-controlled Senate and would never be signed by the Governor.

Bill Introduced To Prohibit Filing Of Rate Case Earlier Than 3 Years

Legislation (SB 768) has been introduced to prohibit a utility from filing a new rate case earlier than 3 years after the utility’s last rate case.

Bills Introduced To Create Program For Distributed Generation, Storage & Aggregation

SB 731 and SB 732 would require the Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC) and its regulated electric utilities to develop programs in which the owners of distributed energy resources (DERs), or a party representing a group of DER owners (called aggregators), could provide distribution, transmission, and other grid services in return for compensation. This aggregation of independent energy resources could create a “virtual power plant

Clean Carbon Utilization & Storage Bills Clear Senate/Await House Action

A package of bills (SB394, SB 395, SB 396) to establish a regulatory mechanism for permitting and regulating the siting of carbon sequestration wells in Michigan and provide for delegation of authority from USEPA to Michigan for the program have passed the Senate. See summary of bills. A set of CCUS bills are currently in the drafting stage in the House. Speaker Hall has stated he wants to address changes to the 2023 energy law before taking up the CCUS bills.

Bills Would Add Carbon Capture Requirements

A package of bills (HB 5664, HB 5665, HB 5666, HB 5667, HB 5668,HB 5669) has been introduced by House Democrats to provide additional regulation, oversight and response training in regard to carbon capture projects and facilities.

Legislation Adds Battery Storage Facilities To List of Protected “Key Facilities”

HB 5465 would amend the current law to add battery storage facilities to the list of “key facilities” receiving enhanced protections and restrictions under current law. These facilities would also be protected from flyovers from drones under the new drone bill package. The bill has been reported out of the House Judiciary Committee to the House floor.

Attorney General And Environmental Group Renews Push Against Keeping Consumers Coal Plant Open

After the U.S. Department of Energy issued its fourth consecutive order to keep the Consumers Energy Campbell plant open for another several months, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and several environmental groups are continuing their efforts to challenge the order. The new order extends the plant’s operation through May 18, 2026. MPSC Grants DTE $242 Million Rate Increase

On February 19, 2026 the Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC) announced it has issued an order in the DTE electric rate case (U-21860). The utility had requested a rate increase of $574M.

DTE Announces Next Electric Rate Case

On February 24, 2026 DTE Energy announced its intention to file its next electric rate case on or before April 27, 2026. (U-22046)

DTE Announces Van Buren Data Center Plan:

On March 17th, DTE and Google announced plans for a new data center in Van Buren Township for which DTE will provide 2.7GW of electric generation. Proposed contracts between DTE and Google will be reviewed by the Michigan Public Service Commission (MPSC) in a formal “contested case” process. This contrasts with the expedited “ex parte” process used in the 1.4 GW Saline project which was quickly approved last December and subject to much public criticism for avoiding the full contested case process. DTE has filed for approval of special contracts under case U-22058 and for approval for amendments to Rate D11 in case U-22061

Consumers Energy Announces Plan For Upcoming Integrated Resource Plan

Consumers Energy announced it will be filing its updated Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) sometime in June, 2026. The utility plans to add two new natural gas plants and additional clean/renewable energy projects including solar, battery storage and wind.

Copyright 2023 Capitol Group Consultants LLC

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ADVANCED TREATMENT SYSTEMS

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COMMERCIAL TREATMENT APPLICATIONS & COMMUNITY TREATMENT APPLICATIONS

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Introduce your customers to simple septic financing

The Septic Replacement Loan Program

The Septic Replacement Loan Program , created in partnership with the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy and Michigan Saves, provides low-interest financing to Michigan homeowners for the replacement of failing or nearfailing septic systems and connections to municipal sewer.

Becoming a Michigan Saves authorized septic installation contractor is simple. Give your customers accessible financing to replace their septic systems and invest in the sustained comfort of their homes.

Expand your business by signing up today!

Learn more at michigansaves.org/septiccontractors

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MPSC Approves Consumes Energy Rate Increase of $226 Million

The MPSC announced it has issued a final order in the Consumers Energy electric rate case approving a $226M revenue increase. (U-21870)

EGLE Releases Updated MiEJScreen Tool

The Michigan Department of Great Lakes and Energy has announced it has released and updated version of its Environmental Justice online screening tool with enhanced features including a “near me” feature.

EGLE Announces New Industrial Decarbonization Initiatives Roadmap

The Michigan Department of Great Lakes and Energy has announced programs in support of industrial decarbonization including partnering with 5 Lakes Energy to create a roadmap outlining Michigan’s path to industrial decarbonization. The roadmap will lay out policy recommendations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions within Michigan industry while promoting economic growth and competitive manufacturing practices.

EGLE Releases 2025 State of the Great Lakes Report

The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes & Energy announced the release of the 2025 State of the Great Lakes Report.

POLITICAL NOTES:

Governor Delivers Final State of the State Address

On February 25, 2026 Governor Gretchen Whitmer delivered her final State of the State Address. The Governor outlined several initiatives for the coming year including literacy, housing and healthcare. .

Package of Bills Moving Primary Elections From August To May Clears Senate

A package of bills (SB 691-SB 698) has been introduced to change the date of Michigan primary elections from August to May to allow clerks more time between the primary election and the general election in November. The bills have passed the Senate and been referred to the House Committee On Election Integrity.

Groups Oppose Constitutional Convention Ballot Initiative

Several business and political groups have announced their strong opposition to a ballot proposal that would require the convening of a Constitutional Convention to allow changes to Michigan’s Constitution. The groups are opposing Proposal 2026-1 which could be on the November 2026 ballot if sufficient valid signatures are gathered. The group (Protect MI Constitution From Special Interests) includes the Michigan Democratic Party, Michigan Chamber, Michigan Education Association, AFL-CIO, League of Conservation Voters, League of Women Voters and others.

Group Forms To Focus On Data Center Developments In Michigan

Michigan for Responsible Data Centers is a new coalition created to provide accurate information surrounding the proliferation of proposed new data centers in Michigan. The group includes the Michigan Chamber of Commerce, various environmental consultants and major utility companies. See press release Minimum Wage/Ranked Choice Ballot Proposals Fail To Garner Signatures

A group (One Fair Wage) seeking to amend Michigan’s minimum wage law through a ballot initiative has announced it will fall short of the required signatures and will abandon its efforts to get the proposal on the November 2026 ballot. A proposal to allow for ranked choice voting in Michigan recently announced it was pausing its efforts to secure signatures as well.

Several

Ballot

Initiatives Still Likely For 2026 Election

Michigan voters are likely to see several initiatives on the 2026 ballot including:

• Proposal to ban political contributions from certain large companies (including major utilities) and those that hold or seek government contracts by Taking Back Our Power. (referendum language approved)

• Expanded bottle deposit bill

• Proposal to impose a 5% income tax surcharge on those earning $500,00+ ($1M per couple) to fund local education by Invest In MI Kids (referendum language approved)

• Proposal for 60% local tax approval/two-thirds vote for state tax increase more than 0.1%

Any Fragrance. Any Festival. Every Experience.

Michigan. delivers dependable odor control with fragrances to match every adventure.

From spring events to fall festivals and everything in between, portable restrooms face constant demand across Michigan.

Toi-De-Fresh™ gives service providers the flexibility to match the right fragrance with the right job, without sacrificing performance.

PO Box 138

Haslett, MI 48840

executiveofficer@msta.biz

www.msta.biz

MSTA Marketing Corner

Announcing our new MSTA Facebook Page and YouTube Channel

We now have an MSTA Facebook Page, Instagram Page and YouTube Channel. These social media platforms will be your access to industry resources and event information for MSTA Members and the public. See below how you can access and subscribe to these.

F Facebook Page: If you have a Facebook account, search Michigan Septic Trade Association and be sure to LIKE the page. We will be posting links and resources for our members and the public.

d Instagram Page: Search for Michigan Septic Trade Association and Click FOLLOW.

ù YouTube Channel: From the Facebook Page you can scroll through the posts to find where you can click on the link to subscribe to our YouTube Channel. You can also go to YouTube.com or your YouTube App and search Michigan Septic Trade Association. Highlights of the 2025 MSTA Annual Conference and speaker presentations are loaded to this channel.

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