Maine voters block electricity consolidation plan after striking down ballot Question 3

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John Baril
FILE- Central Maine Power Co. lineman John Baril works to restore electricity March 15, 2023, in Lewiston, Maine. This fall Mainers are going to vote on whether to throw out the state’s two biggest private electric utilities. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File) Robert F. Bukaty/AP

Maine voters block electricity consolidation plan after striking down ballot Question 3

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Maine voters rejected a plan to consolidate two of the state’s largest electricity providers that may have cost taxpayers $13.5 billion during Tuesday’s referendum election.

Voters ultimately said “no” to Question 3, which would have established the Pine Tree Power Company, a consumer-owned utility, through a forced buyout of Central Maine Power and Versant Power, two private investor-owned utilities that provide around 97% of the state’s electricity.

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Our Power, the group advocating Question 3, put the cost of the takeover at $9.9 billion, but opponents to the question said the cost would be $13.5 billion.

Question 3 was unique in that it was tied to another referendum before voters, Question 1. Question 1 served to force a cap on the spending on Question 3’s consolidation plan. Question 1, which passed, now requires voter approval in a general election for certain state utility entities, municipal electric districts, and other consumer-owned utilities to incur a debt that exceeds $1 billion.

No Blank Checks and Maine Affordable Energy led the campaign for Question 1 and opposition to Question 3. The two groups collectively reported $39.9 million in contributions and $37.6 million in expenditures, according to Maine campaign finance records. On the other side, Our Power reported $1.2 million in contributions and $1.16 million in expenditures.

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Since 2021, there have been a series of attempts over the years to create a consumer-owned utility, but state legislators and Gov. Janet Mills (D-ME) have vetoed the initiative. Mills asked Maine residents to vote “no” on Question 3, stating that the creation of Pine Tree Power through a “hostile takeover” is a “gamble” on Maine’s future and the high-interest payments were the “last thing we need.”

“I strongly believe that Maine consumers deserve high quality, reliable and competent service. … [Question 3 is] a hostile take-over that will cost billions of dollars to Maine ratepayers and inject partisanship into the delivery of our power,” Mills said at the time to Bangor Daily News.

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