Mayor Casey Hoffman

Mayor Casey Hoffman 38th Mayor of Menominee. Proud Yooper. Mayor Casey C. Hoffman is the 38th Mayor of Menominee, Michigan. Hoffman is the only great-grandson of Roy D.

Elected at 34-years-old, Hoffman is the youngest Mayor in the City of Menominee’s history. He is a kindergarden substitute teacher, member of the First Presbyterian Church, and serves on the Board of Directors at the local Boys & Girls Club. Hoffman is the only son of librarian Cheryl Lynn (Cadieu) Hoffman and Attorney Wesley Warren Hoffman. Hoffman has one sister, Calli Cadieu Hoffman, who is a m

edical expert. Cadieu, who founded Cadieu Funeral Home in 1920, a small business that still operates in Menominee today. His family has lived in Menominee for over 130 years. Hoffman attended Interlochen Center for the Arts in his youth. He graduated with honors from Menominee High School in 2008 where he served as student body president. Hoffman worked as a bank teller on academic breaks while studying at Albion College. Hoffman graduated with honors from Albion College in 2012 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in business management and ethics. At Albion, Hoffman was an active member of the Gerald R. Ford Institute for Leadership in Public Policy and Service, Carl A. Gerstacker Institute for Business and Management, Prentiss M. Brown Honors Program, and was student body president. Hoffman served on the Albion College Board of Trustees from 2012 to 2014. Hoffman worked as a waiter and retail worker while taking night classes to earn his law degree from Marquette University Law School. In 2016, Hoffman received one of six full-ride scholarships to study at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism where he reported on the Chicago justice system. Hoffman earned his Juris Doctor from Marquette University Law School in 2019. Hoffman is currently enrolled online at the Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution at Pepperdine University's Caruso School of Law School. He is slated to graduate with a Masters of Laws (LL.M) degree in dispute resolution. Hoffman was elected Chairperson of the Menominee County Republican Party in 2023. Under Hoffman's leadership, during the 2024 election cycle, 100 percent of republican candidates defeated their democratic opponents in Menominee County.

05/25/2026
05/19/2026
(PHOTO: EagleHerald photographer and journalist Paul Williams captured the moment inside the Menominee City Council Cham...
05/19/2026

(PHOTO: EagleHerald photographer and journalist Paul Williams captured the moment inside the Menominee City Council Chambers when citizens politely raised their hands to signal opposition to Flock Cameras.)

MENOMINEE COUNCIL SAYS NO TO FLOCK CAMERAS

By: EagleHerald Editor Dan Kitkowski

MENOMINEE — The Menominee City Council listened to constituents Monday night and voted unanimously against Flock surveillance cameras.

The vote was 8-0 against an ordinance to regulate the use of automatic license plate reader systems in the city. A few minutes later, by an identical vote, the council terminated its contract with Flock Safety. …

When the meeting adjourned after nearly 3 1/2 hours the council received a loud applause and a standing ovation.

To read the full story, visit:

https://www.ehextra.com/news/menominee-council-says-no-to-flock-cameras/article_81fe9634-9a26-450b-b92c-daea82ef320a.html

05/19/2026

CITY COUNCIL VOTES DOWN FLOCK CAMERAS IN MENOMINEE

By: Journalist Daniel Howell of WLUC TV6 News

MENOMINEE, Mich. - License plate reader cameras stirred concern with some residents in Menominee County.
A motion to approve an ordinance to activate Flock Cameras in the city of Menominee failed unanimously 8 to 0 on Monday evening. In addition, the city council voted to unanimously cancel the contract with Flock.

Events took an unexpected turn earlier in the day when one of the cameras became activated without city council approval.

“We learned today, just hours before this meeting that one of our Flock cameras is on and is operating. We don’t know where the information is going. We don’t know how it got on. We know that it has been erected, it’s been plugged in and it has a light that is tracking license plates,” Menominee Mayor Casey Hoffman said.

A public affairs representative from Flock spoke before the council to answer questions and assured them that the use of information collected would be in their control. She also said the concerns over data hacking were unfounded.

“If you want to share with our competitors that’s up to you. But for us we do not share any of your data. That’s all up to you and your agency. We don’t sell your data either. We don’t do that with our competitors either. Even with our private sector customers too we don’t share any information with the public sector or our government customers. We don’t share any of their data either so all this information share, that’s up to the customer,” the representative said.

City of Menominee Chief of Police Justin Hoffer spoke to a packed house to address council members and the community regarding the camera activation.

“A demo was conducted, not through our police department, not that camera that is up. Again, that camera may have power. No data has ever been accessed, collected, or utilized by this department,” Hofer said.

Mayor Hoffman says the issue has unified Republicans who voice concerns over big government overreach, and Democrats who don’t want it implemented due to privacy violations.

“I personally think these cameras need to get the flock out of here. These cameras are a bad idea. I don’t know what my city council was thinking approving them in the first place. But there is a little hope in making sure these cameras don’t come to fruition,” Hoffman said.

TV6 attempted to speak with Flock’s representative at the meeting for an on-camera interview. The representative declined to comment.

Read the full story at: https://www.uppermichiganssource.com/2026/05/19/city-council-votes-down-flock-cameras-menominee-county/

05/18/2026

Flock Cameras in Menominee have been activated without city council approval.

In February 2026, the Menominee City Council approved a resolution authorizing a contract with Flock cameras under one clear condition: the cameras would not be turned on until the city council adopted a municipal ordinance establishing rules for oversight and accountability. No such ordinance has been enacted, yet the cameras have been turned on. I can further confirm that at least two Menominee City Council members have actively used Menominee’s Flock cameras for demonstration purposes to track their personal license plates.

Activating surveillance technology against the explicit direction of the Menominee City Council represents a serious breach of public trust and raises concerns about transparency, accountability, and adherence to the democratic process. The public deserves answers about how this occurred, who authorized the activation, and why the conditions established by the city council were disregarded.

Please join me tonight, Monday, May 18, 2026 at 6:00PM CST at Menominee City Hall to hold government accountable.

-Mayor Casey Hoffman

MENOMINEE MAYOR LAUNCHES MA*****NA LABELING PROGRAMBy Jim Paul, EagleHerald Journalist MENOMINEE — A Menominee high scho...
05/17/2026

MENOMINEE MAYOR LAUNCHES MA*****NA LABELING PROGRAM

By Jim Paul, EagleHerald Journalist

MENOMINEE — A Menominee high school student’s idea is about to start showing up on ma*****na packaging across the City of Menominee in a new effort to keep cannabis products out of the hands of children.

Menominee Mayor Casey Hoffman is rolling out a voluntary safe labels program that will provide free warning stickers for ma*****na containers at home, drawing inspiration from the familiar “Mr. Yuck” poison labels that became a fixture in American kitchens decades ago.

Hoffman credits the concept to Menominee school student Melanie Rodriguez, who first raised it during a 2024 meeting of the mayor’s youth council.

“The biggest thank you I have goes to Melanie Rodriguez,” Hoffman said. “Melanie was the first person to mention this idea to me at a meeting of the Mayor’s Youth Council in 2024 — and now that idea is making a positive change across the city.”

The program, run through the mayor’s office and funded by private donors, will begin distributing free labels starting June 1. Residents will be able to pick them up at the Menominee mayor’s office, the Menominee City Police Department, the Menominee County Sheriff’s Office and a growing list of participating dispensaries.
The stickers are designed to be bright, simple and hard to miss. They are intended for adults to place directly on ma*****na packaging and storage containers at home, especially edible products that look like candy or snacks.

“Through the program, adults are provided with free warning stickers that can be placed on ma*****na packaging and containers in the home,” Hoffman said. “They are bright and easy to recognize labels that are intended to serve as a visual warning to children and an additional reminder for adults to safely store cannabis products out of reach.”

Some labels carry the message “Warning: Not for Kids” while others simply say “Yuck,” a deliberate nod to the Mr. Yuck campaign of the 1970s and 1980s.

Hoffman said that the throwback is intentional, because today’s ma*****na edibles can be difficult to distinguish from ordinary treats.
“Just as the Mr. Yuck stickers helped deter children from potentially dangerous cleaning products, the safe labels program aims to create a recognizable warning symbol for ma*****na products in today’s households,” Hoffman said. “This is especially important because so many cannabis products can be easily mistaken for candy or food.”
He pointed to THC gummies as the clearest example of that risk.

“If you look at a THC gummy, it is indistinguishable from a piece of candy,” Hoffman said. “Putting a warning label on that packaging greatly reduces a child accidentally consuming that product.”

Each label also includes a poison control phone number and messages to deter children, Hoffman said, adding that organizers “did our homework” to make sure the warnings communicate their purpose clearly.

For now, the program is strictly voluntary. Hoffman said at least four dispensaries have already agreed to distribute the stickers by request and ultimately he hopes every shop in the city will keep a roll by the register and tuck labels into every bag.

Behind the scenes, however, the mayor has been pushing for a more permanent funding stream. He wants the city council to amend Menominee’s ma*****na ordinance to dedicate a share of cannabis tax revenue to prevention work, mirroring what he says other communities are already doing.

“The appropriate course of action is to amend Menominee’s ma*****na ordinance to include money allocated toward prevention programs — that is what every other city receiving cannabis tax dollars does — Menominee should do that also,” Hoffman said. “In the absence of that funding, I am picking up the mantle to help make sure we have prevention programs in place until the city council gets on board.”

Hoffman estimates the safe labels program will cost about $5,000 to $7,000 per year, most of it for printing. He compared that expense to an existing beautification project.
“It is not an expensive program. I estimate this will only cost about $5,000 to $7,000 a year, that is the cost of flowers on 1st Street every summer,” Hoffman said. “I think that money is well spent and I think investing in our kids is the right thing to do.”

Hoffman said community reaction so far has been positive, particularly among residents worried about youth access to ma*****na.

“Everyone has had a positive response and is appreciating that something is being done,” Hoffman said. “We all know that there is too much ma*****na in Menominee and not unlike alcohol, ma*****na tends to filter down to our high schoolers, our middle schoolers and yes, even our elementary schoolers. We need to more safely label these products so that our kids do not consume them accidentally.”

While he continues to lobby for city funding and broader prevention efforts, Hoffman said the labels are meant as a simple, practical step families can take right now.

He encourages residents to ask their local dispensaries, law enforcement agencies or the mayor’s office for free stickers once they become available.

Read the full story at: https://www.ehextra.com/news/menominee-mayor-launches-ma*****na-labeling-program/article_0093abf7-13c0-40bd-986d-71c82161f160.html

05/16/2026

I pledge to always keep government accountable — even when the truth is difficult to confront — because citizens deserve truth and transparency from their public institutions.

Thank you to the journalists at Delta Deep Dive podcast in Escanaba, Michigan for their first investigative report about Menominee City Hall and their commitment to informing the public.

Listen to the full podcast episode at: https://youtu.be/KoopbNKwJXw?si=0Pq0Nb32fPXF_z9r

Menominee resident launches donation-funded lawn care effortBy: Jim Paul, EagleHerald Journalist MENOMINEE — A Menominee...
05/13/2026

Menominee resident launches donation-funded lawn care effort

By: Jim Paul, EagleHerald Journalist

MENOMINEE — A Menominee man is turning his lifelong love of cutting grass into a community mission — literally — by mowing lawns for free for elderly, disabled and struggling residents across the Menominee-Marinette area.

Scott Bird, founder of Missions Mowing, said he moved back to the area to help his ailing mother and soon noticed how many properties were overgrown because their owners could not keep up.

“I just saw a need here and instead of talking about it, I decided to start moving my feet and do something about it… My services are free, I work totally off donations.” Missions Mowing is registered with the IRS and the State of Michigan as a charity-based business.

“These elderly people are used to getting tickets because they cannot cut their grass and cities write fines and such,” Bird said. “This is a big thing, it is a big weight off their shoulders.”

“The Mayor’s Office is proud to partner with Missions Mowing and Mr. Scott Bird to help address homes that need extra love and attention this summer,” Menominee Mayor Casey Hoffman said.

Hoffman added that if you require lawn care assistance to please leave your name and address with Sandy B. at City Hall at 906-863-2656 and a volunteer will be assigned to visit your yard.

“We have a moral obligation to leave Menominee better than we found it and I am grateful to citizens like Mr. Bird for making our community a more beautiful place,” Hoffman said. “I will be joining Mr. Bird, with my w**d wacker, to help clean up yards in Menominee this Summer,” says Hoffman. “Scott Bird has a servant’s heart and is a blessing to our city.”

To read the full story, visit: https://www.ehextra.com/news/menominee-resident-launches-donation-funded-lawn-care-effort/article_34624946-6426-4c57-abc1-b6468c19e2df.html

Today I went to church, spent time with my mom, and definitely ate one too many desserts.  From my family to yours, wish...
05/10/2026

Today I went to church, spent time with my mom, and definitely ate one too many desserts. From my family to yours, wishing you a happy Mother’s Day.

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