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By Michael Shepherd - June 7, 2023
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📷 Sen. Brad Farrin, R-Norridgewock, watches a vote tally as a member of the House at the State House in Augusta on May 2, 2018 (BDN photo by Troy R. Bennett)
Good morning from Augusta. The Legislature is in Wednesday after a late Tuesday. Here are the House and Senate calendars, plus a committee agenda highlighted by work on key energy and social bills.

What we're watching today


It will be hard for lawmakers to solve a transportation funding problem in weeks. The last few weeks of the 2023 legislative session got more complicated on Tuesday, when Republicans injected the long-term issue of funding for roads and bridges into a more immediate debate about funding that system.

The Maine Legislature needs to make a deal on the Highway Fund budget, which is funded largely by the gas tax and remains separate from the overall state budget, by July 1. While Democrats bypassed Republicans to pass a state budget earlier this year, getting a transportation budget in place by month's end requires a consensus deal.

That is why Republicans have leverage. They also have long had some ideas on this subject. While Democrats who run the Maine Legislature have largely favored gas tax increases but never moved them forward, Republicans largely want to transfer money from the state budget to the transportation side.

Gov. Janet Mills is doing that in her latest spending proposal, which sets aside $400 million in hope of drawing down $1 billion in federal money for transportation. On Tuesday, Republicans said lawmakers should eschew a one-time move and find up to $400 million that could be sent to roads and bridges every year and in an ongoing fashion.

Republicans, led by Sen. Brad Farrin of Norridgewock, note that there has been some bipartisan buy-in on this kind of an idea. One bill that would send $200 million from vehicle sales and use taxes to the highway budget got a unanimous vote from the Legislature's tax committee, for example.

On the committee, Democrats argued against making long-term changes quickly, with Transportation Commissioner Bruce Van Note arguing for Mills' mostly status-quo transportation budget by saying he recognizes that state departments cannot always get full funding from the Legislature. Despite more federal funding being available, his department is still managing $265 million annually in unmet needs across the transportation system.

Making a deal on this topic has been elusive for lawmakers. Mills assembled a task force in 2019 that tried to make a deal on raising gas taxes and figuring out budget transfers, but the work broke down the following year. Solving this problem has been hard over years, and it will be even harder in days.
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News and notes

📷 Workers frame a solar array under construction on outer Broadway in Bangor on June 8, 2022. (BDN photo by Linda Coan O'Kresik)

 

☀️ Lawmakers must choose between rival bills on embattled solar policies.

◉ The Legislature's energy committee is coming to the end of its work on Maine's community solar policies. They have been assailed by Public Advocate William Harwood, who warned earlier this year of steep rate increases and prompted heavy backlash from the solar industry as a result.

◉ Two major bills on these policies are under consideration. The one that is likeliest to pass comes from Sen. Mark Lawrence, D-Eliot, the chair of the energy panel, that would continue the Democratic-led Legislature's trend of paring the program back modestly to balance reining in costs while not alienating the industry. Republicans want to end the subsidies under a proposal from Rep. Steven Foster, R-Dexter.

◉ The Republican prescription goes further than Harwood has called for, but it remains in line with their general position on solar subsidies all along. The deal that emerges will be important for ratepayers.

🔴 Absentees bring another rough sign for Democrats in a Tuesday election.

◉ Democrats had only a 9.5-percentage point edge on Republicans in absentee ballots requested so far in Tuesday's race for an open Republican-leaning House of Representatives district based in Waldoboro, according to data from the secretary of state's office.

◉ It's normal for Democrats to vote absentee at higher rates than Republicans, but Democrats have historically needed bigger advantages to win in closely divided areas like this one. Their voters had requested 275 absentee ballot to Republicans' 219 in the race between former Rep. Abden Simmons, R-Waldoboro, and former Rep. Wendy Pieh, D-Bremen. It means Democrats are set for only a small advantage going into Election Day.

◉ Simmons is also benefiting from raising $10,000 more than Pieh and having a major edge in support from his party. He looks to be the favorite entering the election, which would flip a seat that went to Democrats in 2022.
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What we're reading


🏳️ The Maine House narrowly voted Tuesday to restore the original state flag.

🏠 Bangor is expected to see vacant properties drop thanks to new fees.

📌 A surprising Maine city may get one of the nation's biggest home price jumps.

💰 Regulators approved a rate hike for Central Maine Power Co. customers.

⚓ A Brooksville marina owner said the town forced his business to close. Here's your soundtrack.
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