Richard E. "Dick" Uihlein (born 1946) and Elizabeth "Liz" Uihlein (born 1945) are American business executives and billionaires who co-founded Uline, Inc., in 1980 as a distributor of shipping and packaging supplies, initially operating from their basement in Lake Forest, Illinois.[1][2] Starting with a single product, the H-101 carton, the couple identified an unmet market need and expanded Uline into a privately held company with over 9,000 employees across North American facilities, generating billions in annual revenue through direct-mail catalogs and online sales.[1][2] Richard serves as CEO, leveraging his background as an heir to the Schlitz Brewing Company fortune via his father Edgar Uihlein, while Elizabeth acts as president, contributing to the firm's operational growth and relocation of headquarters to Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin, in 2010.[3][4][5]
The Uihleins' business acumen has propelled their combined net worth to approximately $12 billion as of 2025, ranking them among the wealthiest self-made couples in the United States, with Uline's success fueled by e-commerce demand for packaging materials.[3][2] Beyond commerce, they have channeled their fortune into philanthropy via the Ed Uihlein Family Foundation, supporting civic organizations, arts, and education, though grants often align with conservative priorities such as free-market advocacy and traditional values.[6] Their most notable public role involves extensive political funding, having donated hundreds of millions to Republican candidates, super PACs, and causes since the 2010s, including top contributions in multiple election cycles to promote limited government and oppose regulatory expansions.[7][8] This activity has positioned them as influential figures in conservative politics, funding efforts on issues like election integrity and opposition to progressive ballot measures, amid scrutiny from outlets with left-leaning perspectives that frame such giving as undue influence.[9][10]
Biographies
Richard Uihlein
Richard Uihlein was born on August 27, 1945, in Lake Forest, Illinois, as the son of Edgar Uihlein, a prominent figure in the Schlitz brewing family, which traces its roots to August Uihlein, co-founder of the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company in the 19th century.[11][12] Despite his position as an heir to the family's substantial brewing fortune, Uihlein opted for an independent entrepreneurial trajectory, eschewing direct involvement in the inherited business to build his own enterprise from scratch.[10] This choice underscored a commitment to self-reliance, as he sought opportunities grounded in direct market observation rather than leveraging family assets for entry into established industries.[13]
Uihlein graduated from Stanford University in 1967 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history.[14] Following graduation, he gained practical experience in sales and distribution by working at General Binding Corporation, a manufacturer of office binding equipment, where he developed acumen in supply chain logistics and customer-facing operations.[14] These early roles honed his understanding of industrial supply needs, setting the stage for identifying unmet demands in niche markets without relying on familial connections.
Uihlein married Elizabeth Uihlein, and together they co-founded Uline, Inc., in 1980, starting operations from their basement after recognizing a gap in comprehensive catalog distribution for shipping and packaging supplies.[1] This venture reflected a pragmatic approach to addressing practical business deficiencies, beginning with a single product line of cartons and expanding based on direct customer feedback. As chief executive officer, Uihlein has overseen the company's strategic direction, integrating family members including sons Brian Uihlein, vice president of merchandising, and Freddy Uihlein, corporate planner, into key executive positions to maintain operational continuity and familial stewardship.[3][1]
Elizabeth Uihlein
Elizabeth Uihlein co-founded Uline, Inc., in 1980 alongside her husband, Richard Uihlein, launching the business from their basement in Illinois after identifying a gap in the market for readily available shipping supplies, beginning with a single product: the H-101 carton sizer.[1] As president and chief executive officer from the outset, she has directed the company's operational growth, transforming it into North America's largest distributor of shipping, packaging, and industrial supplies with expanded facilities across the continent.[1][2]
Uihlein's merchandising expertise and innate merchant instincts have been central to Uline's product strategy, emphasizing a deep affinity for sourcing and curating items that meet customer needs. She has credited her success to a profound "love of product," which informed the diversification of Uline's offerings beyond basic shipping essentials into categories such as retail fixtures, safety equipment, and material handling tools.[15][1] This approach fostered innovative catalog designs that prioritize utility and accessibility, reinforcing Uline's reputation for customer-focused efficiency.
In partnership with Richard, who serves as CEO, Uihlein has built a enduring family enterprise, integrating their four sons—Brian (vice president of merchandising), Steve (vice president), Duke (vice president), and Freddy (corporate planner)—into key leadership roles, which has ensured continuity and long-term stability.[1][16]
Business Activities
Uline: Origins and Growth
Uline was founded in 1980 by Elizabeth and Richard Uihlein as a distributor of shipping and packaging supplies, initially operating from a basement in Illinois after identifying an underserved market for reliable carton-sizing tools and related products.[1] The company's early model emphasized direct-mail catalogs to reach businesses, starting with a focus on small-to-medium enterprises needing affordable, in-stock shipping solutions before widespread e-commerce adoption.[17] This approach capitalized on pre-internet efficiencies, mailing detailed product listings that evolved into comprehensive catalogs exceeding 800 pages, stocking over 40,000 items such as boxes, tape, and protective materials.[13][18]
Key operational innovations included same-day shipping for in-stock orders placed by 6 p.m. and a commitment to maintaining inventory levels that supported rapid fulfillment, enabling Uline to serve customers without reliance on just-in-time manufacturing disruptions common in the sector.[19] Organic reinvestment of profits drove consistent double-digit annual growth for over five years through 2023, avoiding venture capital, debt overload, or public market pressures that often dilute founder control in comparable firms.[20] As a privately held entity, Uline preserved strategic autonomy, prioritizing customer-centric expansions like warehouse builds over short-term earnings mandates.[21]
By 2024, Uline had scaled to 13 distribution centers across North America, encompassing over 26 million square feet of warehouse space, including major facilities near Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and a 1.44 million-square-foot site in Kenosha, Wisconsin, which ranks among the largest single warehouses in the U.S.[1][22] This infrastructure supported an annual revenue of approximately $8 billion, while employing over 9,000 workers and sustaining job creation amid economic variability through targeted regional expansions.[21][23] Family involvement in operations has ensured continuity, with the founders' children contributing to leadership, aligning long-term incentives with organic scaling rather than external financing.[13]
Diversified Investments
Richard Uihlein has diversified investments beyond Uline through significant stakes in biotechnology, notably as the largest shareholder of Galectin Therapeutics Inc., holding approximately 16% of the company's outstanding shares as of August 2025.[24] In this capacity, he serves as Chairman of the Board, overseeing a firm focused on developing galectin-based therapeutics for chronic liver fibrosis and associated cancer, such as hepatocellular carcinoma.[25] This involvement underscores a commitment to ventures grounded in empirical biomedical research targeting galectin proteins' role in fibrotic scarring and tumor growth, rather than unproven speculative therapies.[26]
Uihlein's financial support for Galectin has included multiple infusions of capital via credit lines and convertible debt, reflecting a strategy of providing runway for clinical milestones amid biotech volatility. In September 2021, he committed $20 million in convertible notes to advance the company's lead candidate, belapectin, through Phase 3 trials for liver cirrhosis.[26] More recently, on July 9, 2025, he extended a new $10 million unsecured credit line, convertible into shares at $0.30 each, projected to fund operations through June 2026 pending FDA interactions on trial data.[27] Earlier extensions, such as in January 2019, further prolonged an existing facility, demonstrating sustained backing tied to tangible progress in fibrosis models over broader market hype.[28]
Public details on the Uihleins' broader portfolio remain limited due to the private structure of their holdings, with no comprehensive disclosures of allocations to real estate, equities, or other ventures beyond Uline's operational assets. This opacity aligns with a value-oriented approach prioritizing resilience against economic fluctuations, as evidenced by Uihlein's stated dedication to Galectin's long-term scientific validation rather than short-term valuations.[26] Such selectivity avoids overreliance on inflated sectors like certain technology equities, favoring investments with causal links to proven mechanisms, such as galectin's inhibition in preclinical and early human data for fibrosis reversal.[29]
Philanthropic Efforts
Elizabeth Uihlein's Focus Areas
Elizabeth Uihlein has directed significant philanthropic resources toward arts and cultural institutions that prioritize the preservation and presentation of historical and skill-intensive artistic traditions. Her involvement includes service on the board of the Milwaukee Art Museum, where efforts focus on collecting, conserving, and exhibiting works spanning classical to modern periods, with an emphasis on enduring aesthetic values.[30]
Targeted donations through family-affiliated foundations support museums housing realist and representational art, such as the C.M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Montana, which maintains a collection of over 300 paintings and sculptures by Charles Marion Russell depicting Western frontier life through detailed, technically proficient realism; the foundation granted $1,000 annually from 2016 to 2018.[31] Similarly, recurring contributions to the Kenosha Public Museum ($5,000 per year from 2014 to 2018 and in 2022) and Kenosha Civil War Museum ($5,000 annually over the same period) bolster exhibits of historical artifacts and paintings emphasizing narrative accuracy and craftsmanship over abstraction.[31] These gifts align with a broader pattern of funding for cultural preservation, including $250 annual support for the Captain Frederick Pabst Mansion, a restored 1892 Renaissance Revival structure exemplifying traditional architectural and decorative arts.[31]
In education, Uihlein's giving extends to programs rooted in classical curricula and merit-based advancement. The family foundation has provided $25,000 to $30,000 annually from 2014 to 2018 to Hillsdale College, an institution dedicated to a core liberal arts education drawing from Western classical traditions, including Great Books seminars and emphasis on moral character formation.[31] Additional grants, such as $50,000 in 2022 and varying amounts from 2015 to 2018 to Glenwood School for Boys & Girls, support residential programs fostering discipline, family-oriented values, and skill development for at-risk youth.[31] These initiatives reflect a commitment to educational models prioritizing objective achievement and enduring principles over contemporary pedagogical trends.
Richard Uihlein's Contributions
Richard Uihlein has channeled philanthropy primarily through the Ed Uihlein Family Foundation, which he controls, emphasizing support for organizations promoting free-market economics, limited government, and critiques of socialism and communism. Influenced by his upbringing as an heir to the Schlitz Brewing Company fortune, where his father instilled values of capitalism's virtues against socialism's dangers during family discussions, Uihlein has prioritized causes rooted in anti-authoritarian principles and resistance to regulatory overreach experienced by family businesses post-Prohibition.[10][32] The foundation has granted funds to entities like the Acton Institute, which advocates free-market policies grounded in classical liberal and Judeo-Christian thought, and Accuracy in Academia, aimed at countering perceived ideological biases in higher education by fostering factual historical analysis.[6]
A key focus of Uihlein's giving involves educational programs that teach foundational American principles, including constitutionalism and free institutions, to challenge progressive reinterpretations of history and economics. In 2014, he provided a lead gift to establish the Uihlein Opportunity Fund in partnership with the Jack Miller Center, enabling expanded curricula on America's Founding-era political and economic thought at institutions such as the University of Virginia, Columbia University, and the University of Pennsylvania.[33] This initiative has supported postdoctoral fellowships, new courses in republican values and market-oriented governance, and matching grants like a $2 million commitment to sustain UVA's Program on Constitutionalism and Democracy, prioritizing empirical understanding of limited government over expansive state interventions.[33][34]
Uihlein's support has extended to fiscal conservatives exemplifying risk-taking against establishment norms, as seen in a $350,000 foundation grant in January 2013 to initiatives associated with then-Rep. Steve Stockman (R-TX), known for uncompromising budget-cutting efforts despite subsequent legal controversies over fund usage.[35] Stockman's campaigns highlighted Uihlein's alignment with principled anti-spending advocacy, echoing his early involvement in the 1969 campaign of Rep. Phil Crane (R-IL), a staunch anti-communist who opposed globalist expansions of authority.[32] These efforts underscore Uihlein's commitment to philanthropy advancing causal realism in policy, favoring verifiable economic freedoms over ideologically driven collectivism.[6]
Joint Initiatives
The Ed Uihlein Family Foundation, named for Richard Uihlein's father and directed by the couple, channels joint giving toward educational entities that prioritize practical skills and independence, including independent schools like Beacon Academy and Chicago Hope Academy, which received annual grants of $5,000 to $100,000 from 2014 to 2022.[31] Support for Teach for America, with contributions reaching $175,000 in years like 2017 and 2018, funds teacher recruitment and training in low-income areas to enhance academic performance and long-term self-sufficiency.[31] These efforts extend to higher education, such as grants to Lake Forest College—home to a business school emphasizing entrepreneurship and management—with a $250,000 donation in 2018 alone, aiding programs that equip students for enterprise roles over welfare dependency.[31]
In Uline's operational hubs, joint initiatives bolster community infrastructure and youth development, including consistent funding for the Boys & Girls Club of Kenosha ($50,000–$100,000 yearly from 2014–2022) and Kenosha YMCA ($25,000 annually), organizations offering vocational workshops, leadership training, and after-school programs that build work ethic and skills for employment.[31] Uline's partnership with the City of Kenosha further exemplifies this, subsidizing a $6 million workforce housing initiative launched in the mid-2010s to construct affordable single-family homes and provide buyer incentives, stabilizing housing for local workers and tying donations to tangible economic outcomes like reduced turnover and sustained labor supply.[36]
This approach favors discreet, results-oriented philanthropy, evident in multimillion-dollar foundation disbursements yielding measurable gains in participant retention and skill acquisition, without emphasis on public acclaim or expansive social engineering.[37] Grants to entities like United Community Centers ($25,000–$50,000 in select years) reinforce local enterprise support, funding job readiness initiatives in Chicago-area neighborhoods proximate to Uline facilities.[31]
Political Engagement
Core Principles and Evolution
The political principles of Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein are grounded in advocacy for limited government and free-market capitalism, principles Richard Uihlein has explicitly linked to his conservative Republican identity and efforts to back aligned candidates.[38] Drawing from experiences building a shipping supplies business, they emphasize individualism and opposition to government interventions that stifle enterprise, including excessive regulations and union mandates, viewing such measures as barriers to innovation and economic freedom.[32][39] Their support for organizations promoting deregulation underscores a commitment to policies enabling private-sector growth over state-directed economies.[32]
Following the 2010 Citizens United decision, the Uihleins' engagement evolved from traditional Republican support toward anti-establishment conservatism, aligning with Tea Party movements that challenged bipartisan cronyism in Washington and state capitals.[38] This shift prioritized outsiders capable of disrupting entrenched interests, culminating in backing for figures like Donald Trump who promised to upend the status quo on trade, immigration, and fiscal policy.[40] Richard Uihlein's emphasis on fiscal restraint—advocating reduced spending and smaller government—complements Elizabeth's focus on cultural issues, such as defending Second Amendment rights, opposing marijuana legalization, and resisting expansions of transgender policies, which they see as erosions of traditional norms.[32][40]
United in countering left-leaning policies perceived as threats to both economic liberty and societal foundations, their contributions have aligned with outcomes like tax reforms and bureaucratic reductions during Republican-led administrations, providing empirical validation for their approach through measurable policy impacts rather than abstract ideology.[41][32] While Richard leans toward purist insurgents critiquing elite capture across parties, Elizabeth has shown pragmatic support for electable conservatives, yet both maintain a core realism favoring verifiable results over partisan loyalty.[41]
National-Level Support
Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein began directing substantial national-level funding toward conservative super PACs in the mid-2010s, prioritizing groups like Club for Growth Action that challenged Republican incumbents perceived as insufficiently committed to fiscal conservatism and limited government. Between 2014 and 2016, their contributions supported primary challenges against such incumbents, aligning with Club for Growth's strategy of targeting candidates who deviated from core economic principles, contributing to several high-profile defeats in congressional primaries.
By the 2018-2020 election cycles, the Uihleins shifted resources toward PACs aligned with President Trump's reelection priorities, including border security and deregulation efforts, amid an initial skepticism from Richard Uihlein toward Trump's 2016 candidacy that evolved into broader support for aligned causes. Their giving exceeded $20 million in this period to federal super PACs and committees backing Republican Senate and House candidates emphasizing these issues, with Elizabeth Uihlein serving on a 2016 Trump fundraising committee despite early reservations.[42][43]
In the 2022-2024 cycles, the Uihleins escalated contributions to over $100 million, targeting election integrity initiatives, Senate races aimed at flipping seats, and direct support for Trump's campaign, including $10 million combined to the Make America Great Again Inc. super PAC in 2024 and tens of millions to groups like Restoration PAC and Club for Growth Action. This funding backed efforts to audit voting processes and promote reforms addressing documented irregularities, such as those identified in post-2020 analyses of mail-in ballot vulnerabilities in battleground states, countering claims of unfounded extremism by focusing on empirical risks like non-citizen voting and chain-of-custody lapses.[44][45][10]
Cumulatively since 2010, their federal political contributions have surpassed $300 million, primarily to Republican-aligned entities, yielding measurable returns through policy advancements like tax cuts and regulatory rollbacks under unified conservative control, outperforming contemporaneous left-leaning donor efforts in achieving legislative shifts.[42][32]
State and Local Involvement
In the 2023 Wisconsin Supreme Court election, Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein provided significant financial support to conservative candidate Dan Kelly through direct campaign contributions and affiliated PACs, aiming to preserve a judicial majority favoring originalist interpretations over progressive activism.[46] Kelly's defeat by Janet Protasiewicz flipped the court's ideological balance, but the Uihleins' backing aligned with efforts to prioritize constitutional constraints on legislative overreach, including protections for property rights in zoning and regulatory matters.[47]
At the local level in Wisconsin, Elizabeth Uihlein advocated for property development in Manitowish Waters, including a 2016 proposed land swap with the Department of Natural Resources that would grant her 765 feet of Rest Lake frontage in exchange for inland parcels, facing opposition from residents concerned about public access and environmental impacts.[48] Similar pushback arose over her initiatives for anchoring a floating bog to enhance shoreline usability and constructing a 5.5-mile bike trail through state forest land, where delays stemmed from critiques of favoritism despite arguments for economic benefits like tourism growth.[49][50] These engagements underscored a commitment to practical land use permitting against localized resistance, fostering long-term community infrastructure over preservationist stasis. In Hayward, the Uihleins pursued ownership transfers for assets like the Spider Lake Dam in 2025, extending their pattern of asserting development rights in northern Wisconsin lakefront areas.[51]
In Illinois, the Uihleins contested municipal regulations impacting their Lake Forest-area properties, exemplified by their unsuccessful 2023 bid for exemption from Lake Bluff's ban on gas-powered leaf blowers, which they argued hindered efficient maintenance of their extensive estate while upholding aesthetic standards. The village board's unanimous denial highlighted tensions between individual property autonomy and collective noise ordinances, yet reflected broader advocacy for zoning policies enabling productive land use amid NIMBY-driven restrictions. Their state-level involvement bolstered Republican challengers to Democratic supermajorities, funding pro-business candidates to advance deregulation and growth-oriented reforms, though outcomes like the leaf blower loss illustrated challenges in overriding entrenched local progressivism.[52] Such contributions correlated with pushes for policies reducing barriers to commercial and residential expansion, prioritizing empirical economic gains over subjective community appeals.
Backing for Conservative Outlets
The Uihleins, through the Ed Uihlein Family Foundation presided over by Richard Uihlein, have provided substantial financial support to conservative media organizations that emphasize empirical scrutiny of government policies and cultural issues. In 2019, the foundation granted $400,000 to the FDRLST Media Foundation, the nonprofit arm supporting The Federalist, a publication known for critiquing regulatory overreach and identity-based policies through data and first-hand analysis. Similarly, $25,000 was donated that year to the Daily Caller News Foundation, which produces reporting on topics including federal spending excesses and institutional biases often overlooked by establishment outlets.[53][31]
Support has also extended to entities focused on documenting media imbalances and promoting evidence-based policy alternatives. The foundation contributed $275,000 to the Media Research Center in 2019, an organization that quantifies perceived left-leaning distortions in mainstream coverage of economic and social matters, thereby fostering outlets that prioritize factual accountability over narrative conformity. In the realm of environmental policy, grants totaling $354,000 from 2014 to 2018 went to the Heartland Institute, which publishes reports challenging alarmist climate projections with historical data and economic modeling, countering what proponents view as overstated consensus claims from academic and governmental sources.[54][31]
These contributions align with a broader strategy to bolster platforms amplifying market-oriented perspectives and skepticism toward expansive state interventions, enhancing discourse by introducing datasets and analyses that diverge from dominant institutional viewpoints. For instance, Real Clear Foundation received $350,000 in 2019, aiding aggregation of policy research that underscores fiscal realism and critiques identity-driven regulations. Such funding has been credited with sustaining independent voices amid criticisms of systemic progressive tilt in legacy media, though detractors from left-leaning watchdog groups label it as subsidizing partisan echo chambers.[53][54]
Controversies and Criticisms
Scrutiny Over Political Funding
Critics, including outlets like ProPublica and the Center for Responsive Politics, have accused Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein of exerting undue influence through a network of political action committees (PACs) and nonprofit groups, often labeling these as "dark money" operations that obscure donor intent and amplify conservative causes, particularly post-2020 election efforts.[10][9] Such scrutiny intensified after the Uihleins contributed tens of millions to super PACs supporting candidates skeptical of the 2020 results, with claims that these funds promoted "election denial" narratives amid documented procedural irregularities, such as extended deadlines for absentee ballots and chain-of-custody issues in states like Wisconsin and Georgia, where state audits and litigation confirmed lapses in verification processes.[55][56]
However, Uihlein donations to federal candidates, PACs, and independent expenditures are fully disclosed via mandatory Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings, enabling public tracking through databases like OpenSecrets, which reveal over $90 million in combined contributions during recent cycles—comparable to megadonors on the left, such as George Soros via Democracy PAC Action Fund or Michael Bloomberg through Everytown for Gun Safety, who similarly leverage super PACs and 501(c)(4) groups for issue advocacy without direct coordination.[42][44] This structure, enabled by post-Citizens United regulations, applies symmetrically across the political spectrum, with left-leaning sources like the Brennan Center disproportionately highlighting conservative examples while downplaying equivalents that fund progressive ballot measures or opposition research.[57] The Uihleins' support emphasized verifiable audit mechanisms and legal challenges grounded in state election statutes, rather than unsubstantiated overthrows, aligning with principles of electoral integrity amid empirical evidence of vulnerabilities like unmonitored drop boxes and signature mismatches reported in official state reviews.[58]
Instances of intra-family divergence further illustrate that Uihlein funding prioritizes candidate merit over unified bloc voting; in the 2023 Wisconsin Supreme Court race, heirs to the related Schlitz brewing fortune—including Uihlein relatives—split contributions, with some backing conservative Daniel Kelly and others supporting liberal Janet Protasiewicz, reflecting independent evaluations of judicial philosophy rather than coordinated dominance.[59][60] This pattern counters narratives of monolithic influence, as FEC data shows varied recipient support even within Republican primaries, driven by stances on fiscal conservatism and regulatory restraint rather than partisan lockstep.[61]
Workplace and Operational Disputes
In 2021, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Uline facilities drew complaints from employees over perceived inadequate safety measures, including reports of large gatherings without masks and insufficient protections. OSHA received filings citing these issues, while internal data showed infection rates surpassing local benchmarks, such as 19% among Illinois workers and up to 27% in California locations, compared to county-wide figures like 8.7% in Kenosha, Wisconsin.[62][63]
Uline responded by affirming implementation of policy adjustments for health and safety, such as enhanced cleaning and remote options where feasible, while prioritizing operational continuity as an essential supplier to sustain paychecks for its workforce.[64][63] This approach enabled the company to navigate surging e-commerce-driven demand for packaging materials without mass layoffs, outperforming sectors forced into prolonged shutdowns that resulted in widespread job losses.[65]
Uline maintains a non-unionized workforce, with the Uihleins providing financial backing to right-to-work initiatives, including $500,000 to Missouri's 2018 campaign, to promote laws exempting non-members from dues and emphasizing direct profit allocation to wages and efficiency over collective mandates.[66] Proponents of such policies, including Uline's model, cite operational flexibility enabling competitive pay scales, as evidenced by the company's warehouse wages of $25–$35 per hour, which support expansion without the administrative burdens of union negotiations.[67]
Employee reviews have criticized Uline's structured, high-discipline culture as fostering turnover through micromanagement and rigid attendance policies, particularly among younger workers.[68] Countervailing metrics, however, demonstrate retention exceeding industry norms, with warehouse turnover at 10–11%, corporate rates in single digits, and overall 85% retention even through the Great Resignation, correlating with sustained 5% annual growth and average employee tenure of six years via merit-driven incentives and bonuses.[69][65][70]
Conflicts in Local Development
In 2023, Richard and Elizabeth Uihlein encountered local regulatory resistance in Lake Bluff, Illinois, where they own a 22-acre estate. The couple sought a two-year exemption from a village ordinance, effective that year, prohibiting gas-powered leaf blowers from May 15 to September 30 to reduce noise and emissions; they argued battery-powered alternatives were ineffective for large-scale maintenance and excessively noisy themselves.[52][71] Village trustees unanimously denied the request on June 27, limiting exemptions to public properties like golf courses and schools during a transition period, emphasizing uniform enforcement over property-specific accommodations.[52]
In northern Wisconsin, the Uihleins have faced repeated shoreline and land-use disputes involving their lakefront holdings. In summer 2015, Elizabeth Uihlein received a citation from Vilas County for clear-cutting trees in violation of shoreline protection ordinances on property near Rest Lake, incurring a fine of over $700 and requiring restoration; county officials enforced the rules to preserve vegetative buffers against erosion and water quality degradation.[72] Similarly, Richard Uihlein was cited in 2012 for clearing 135 feet of shoreline frontage on Big Chippewa Flowage in Sawyer County, breaching comparable regulations.[73]
Further conflicts arose over development proposals, including a 2015 plan by Richard Uihlein to anchor a large floating bog on Big Chippewa Flowage, which required extensive anchoring to the lake bed and drew scrutiny from state regulators over potential ecological disruption to the flowage's wild rice habitat and navigation.[49] That year, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) agreed to sell 1.75 acres of prime Rest Lake frontage to Elizabeth Uihlein via land trade, but the Natural Resources Board tabled the deal amid public concerns about environmental impacts and the buyers' political donations to Governor Scott Walker.[74] A revised proposal emerged in 2016, though details on final resolution remain limited; these episodes highlight regulatory hurdles prioritizing habitat preservation over private modifications, with initial delays reflecting ad-hoc reviews rather than uniform standards.[75]
These incidents reflect a pattern of legal setbacks for the Uihleins in asserting property rights against localized environmental and zoning controls, including fines for ordinance breaches and stalled approvals, which underscore broader tensions between owner-driven alterations—often with argued minimal ecological footprint—and community-enforced buffers that can impede practical land use without proportionate evidence of harm.[72][52] While such regulations aim to mitigate cumulative development effects, outcomes vary by jurisdiction, favoring consistent rule application over discretionary vetoes that may entrench NIMBY opposition.