Closed shannonmcharg closed 1 year ago
Still in draft. Will be determining sources for talking about the hot topic of money next.
Pros/Cons and Who Cares are left remaining. I'll hit those up later tonight.
@shannonmcharg Can you take a look at this? I'm about to pop over to Question 1 and read through it.
@inomyabcs Looks good. I made a few edits and will start moving it into the build.
@inomyabcs Ready to review in the build. https://deploy-preview-328--awesome-lamarr-6d076d.netlify.app/november%202023%20election/q3_pinetreepower/
Question title
Consumer-owned Utility
Description (will display on homepage)
This measure would create a consumer-owned utility.
The gist
This citizen initiative would require the investor-owned utilities, mainly Central Maine Power and Versant Power, to sell their distribution and transmission facilities to a new consumer-owned company. The consumer-owned company would be known as the Pine Tree Power Company and would be managed by an executive board composed of 7 elected representatives and 6 expert members.
An additional related ballot question, Question 1, could add a layer of complexity to a successful Yes vote by requiring future ballot questions for any issuance of debt that is more than $1 billion. You may want to consider your choice for both questions together.
Ballot question (exact text of the question)
Do you want to create a new power company governed by an elected board to acquire and operate existing for-profit electricity transmission and distribution facilities in Maine?[^1]
Yes means
I am in favor of the creation of a consumer owned electric utility that would replace Central Maine Power and Versant Power.
No means
I don't want Central Maine Power and Versant Power to be replaced with a consumer owned electric utility.
Tell me more
From the official ballot summary[^3]:
This bill is citizen-initiated with the purpose to replace Maine's two investor-owned electricity transmission and distribution utilities, Central Maine Power and Versant Power. The new company, Pine Tree Power Company, is specified with 8 purposes:
Other than the purchase of all of the utility infrastructure at prices to be negotiated between Pine Tree Power and the two investor utilities, Pine Tree Power will be obligated to contract with one or more private-sector operators. The operators would be responsible for the day-to-day operation of the transmission grid, maintenance, billing, and customer service. This contract is performance-based and not capitally funded. Additionally, Pine Tree Power would be required to offer to hire all qualified, nonexempt employees of Central Maine Power and Versant Power. The only employees exempted from hire would be members of each utility's executive board.
The Public Utilities Commission would remain responsible for oversight of Pine Tree Power and must approve of the initial 5-year plan to meet affordability, reliability, decarbonization, and connectivity goals.
This question is a citizen's initiative, which is a way for Mainers to propose new laws. In order to become a valid initiative, a petition supporting the initiative must collect over 60,000 signatures.
Follow the money
The official fiscal impact statement does not speak to estimated costs of purchasing the assets of Central Maine Power or Versant Power[^3]. However, from the official filings as publicly traded companies, the relevant power utility plants of Central Maine Power are $4.2 billion[^5] and Versant Power are potentially $1.2 billion[^6][^7]. The Portland Press Herald reports that supporters cite a cost of $5 to $6 billion and opponents $13 billion[^4]. Any purchasing costs will be authorized through the issuance of bonds and operations costs are funded through the utility rates.
The official fiscal impact statement discusses costs related to the Public Utilities Commission oversight at $1.25 million for the first year and $2.25 million in subsequent years (this may be passed on to consumers through rate increases).
Any litigation arising from the purchasing of assets may also be passed on to consumers.
Costs related to the Maine Clean Election program for any candidates applying to the 13-person governing board are estimated to be $335,450 and $273,750 for the first two fiscal years after implementation. Revenue from candidate contributions are estimated at $13,900 and $9,900 for the first two fiscal years. The lower pace of elections regarding board members will drop clean election costs to $110,764 or $166,145 depending on 2 or 3 member election cycles.
Pros
The primary arguments for this referendum are:
Cons
The primary arguments against this referendum are:
Who cares
Public comment
During the public comment period, no comments were submitted in support or opposition of question 3.
General Support
General Opposition
Campaign Financing
Ballotpedia reports that there are three Political Action Committees (PACs) registered for this ballot measure[^2]. Two are in opposition and one is in support.
Support PACs
Opposition PACs
Further reading
Full text
Ballotpedia article
Portland Press Herald Article
Office of the Public Advocate Report
References
Image
Use image from this question: https://www.maineballot.org/november%202021%20election/q1_electrictransmissionline/
Tags
Citizen's Initiative, Electricity
Election date
Nov 7, 2023