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📷 Maine Senate President Troy Jackson, D-Allagash, speaks at a news conference on abortion-rights legislation at the State House in Augusta on Jan. 17, 2023. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty) |
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📅 Here's the timeframe for any ethics probe into a top Democrat. ◉ One of Maine's top political stories last week was a Republican lawmaker's ethics complaint against Senate President Troy Jackson, D-Allagash. It was based on an article in the conservative Maine Wire saying the top Democrat got a federal loan to buy an Augusta home to use as his primary residence while representing Aroostook County in the upper chamber. ◉ Jackson's office struck back at the story by saying he has always maintained his residence in Allagash and paid capital gains taxes on the Augusta home when he sold it. ◉ Even though Rep. John Andrews, R-Paris, made his complaint against Jackson public, the Maine Ethics Commission treats complaints as confidential until it has had time to gather information and present early findings to commissioners at a public meeting. The next one is not until Oct. 25, and the agency must still find that this issue is within their purview to move forward. 🖨️ A fact sheet on Maine's major 2023 referendum highlights big unknowns. ◉ Public Advocate William Harwood's office issued a fact sheet on Tuesday laying out its view of Question 3 on the November ballot, which would put Maine's two major electric utilities under the control of an elected board. Read the fact sheet. ◉ Harwood, a former energy lawyer who advised Gov. Janet Mills before she appointed him to his watchdog position, has not taken a position on the question. His analysis highlights a past finding that the transition may hike electric rates in the short term but lower them in the long term due to a lower cost of borrowing for the new public entity that would manage the grid. ◉ The real news, however, is that he takes inconclusive positions on many of the claims being made to support the referendum, including that the shift would improve reliability, customer service and help the state meet climate goals. ◉ "It is possible that [Pine Tree Power] would feel political pressure to keep rates as low as possible, which may negatively impact the reliability of its operations," Harwood's office said. |
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What we're reading 🌽 Here's what Maine can learn from Nebraska's consumer-owned utilities. 🫤 Maine's small towns are suddenly gripped by dysfunction. 🚻 Bangor has few public restrooms, a problem for the homeless community. 🩺 Rates on Maine's health insurance marketplace will rise 15 percent. 📓 Her 1970s diary has become a TikTok sensation. Here's your soundtrack. |
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