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By Michael Shepherd - July 19, 2023
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📷 Former state Sen. Tom Saviello, R-Wilton, celebrates with supporters of Question 1 after voters rejected Central Maine Power's proposed hydropower transmission corridor on Nov. 2, 2021, in Farmington. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

What we're watching today


A leading critic of Maine's biggest utility is now on its side of the public power campaign. In November 2021, former state Sen. Tom Saviello was celebrating at a Farmington beer garden after Maine voted to oppose the Central Maine Power Co. corridor. Now, he is being paid to work on its side of a referendum on Maine's electricity future.

Saviello, who lives in Wilton, was among the most visible corridor opponents during the yearslong political and legal struggle over the project, which was given new life by Maine's high court this summer but remains on hold. But he was hired for $5,000 per month by Versant Power's political group opposing a utility takeover, according to campaign finance disclosures filed this week.

As the corridor was winding through the courts, Saviello said he dove into the details of the takeover that has been years in the making and is being proposed by the political group Our Power, which wants Maine to buy out the infrastructure of the big utilities and put it under the control of an elected board. In the end, he said he decided there were too many risks involved.

That was before he was approached to work for Versant, he said. When asked if he felt like he was joining the dark side, Saviello said that he had to work hard to put aside his longstanding antipathy for CMP, though he thinks both utilities have improved their communication during recent supply rate hikes.

"I'm sure a lot of people will be surprised and some people may be disappointed. Some people might be saying, 'Well, it's about time he woke up.' Who knows?" he said. "I don't care. I only care [about] what I think is the right thing to do."

While Saviello most recently served in the Legislature as a Republican, he was a Democrat and an independent before that. Ahead of the 2022 campaign, he flirted with an independent gubernatorial run before seeing little room to work between Democratic Gov. Janet Mills and former Gov. Paul LePage, a Republican. He was a popular state senator, winning his seat by big margins.

His job will be to speak to community groups and local political parties on behalf of Versant Power, he said. He joins an army of public figures and lobbyists working for the utilities, including former Rep. Charlotte Warren, D-Hallowell, and former Maine Senate Majority Leader Andre Cushing, who were mentioned in a recent Portland Press Herald article on the issue.

They are part of a massive multi-front campaign between CMP and Versant that has spent more than $17.1 million against just $733,000 from Our Power. The anti-corridor campaign that Saviello helped lead was well-funded by CMP's rivals for market share in the region, and that isn't happening for supporters of the utility switch.

Saviello is just one person, and he is getting paid. But he has always been an astute observer of Maine's political winds. His move to join the utilities is a sign that opposition to the corridor may not equal support for the utility takeover with the campaign winding down to the last few months.
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News and notes

📷 Central Maine Power utility lines are seen in Pownal on Oct. 6, 2021. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

 

đź’° Here are the big spenders on Maine's referendums so far.

◉ Maine's 2023 election is shaping up to be a war between big spenders — for the most part. This is especially true on the opposing side of the public power campaign. The parent companies of CMP and Versant Power are the sole funders of political groups that spent $17.1 million as of June 30.

◉ On the other side, Our Power is doing small-dollar fundraising but has still gotten 41 percent of its money from just five big donors or groups. They are led by two climate philanthropy groups linked to billionaire GitHub founder Sam Preston-Warner at a combined total of $150,000 so far, plus Susan Bartovics of North Haven at more than $106,000.

â—‰ A "right-to-repair" referendum pitting repair shops supporting the question against the automotive industry is saw big-time funders on the yes side in the last reporting period. Dorman Products, an aftermarket parts company in Pennsylvania, donated $150,000 to back the question, while battery manufacturer Stryten Energy and oil and parts giant Valvoline gave $50,000 and $25,000, respectively.

🖊️ Today is a veto deadline for two closely watched bills.

â—‰ Gov. Janet Mills has until today to veto a ream of bills recently passed by the Democratic-led Legislature, but two stand out as progressive priorities that she has resisted in the past.

â—‰ One of them, which began as a referendum effort to bar foreign government-owned companies from spending in Maine referendums, is similar to a measure vetoed by the Democratic governor in 2021. The other would apply Maine's minimum wage to farmworkers, although Democrats made late changes to carve out overtime provisions in an attempt to win Mills' support.

â—‰ Sen. Rick Bennett, R-Oxford, a champion of the electioneering change, said Monday that he had no word on the fate of his bill. If Mills vetoes it today and that veto is sustained next week, it would go to the November ballot.
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What we're reading


đźš— Environmentalists want Maine to follow California in phasing out gas-powered vehicles.

🧠 Aroostook County has Maine's highest Alzheimer's rate.

💻 The rise of remote learning is hurting university distance centers.

🗝️ Bangor took a step toward a long-awaited landlord registry.

🚨 A police standoff in downtown Hallowell ended with the suspect killing himself.

📬 A Mainer got this 54-year-old postcard in the mail. Here's your soundtrack.
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