Maine Voters Reject Public Takeover Of Power Companies After Multi-Year Battle

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Chris D'Angelo is an environment reporter at HuffPost, based in Washington, D.C. He covers public lands, climate change, biodiversity and environmental policy. Prior to joining HuffPost, he wrote for daily newspapers in Hawaii.

Maine residents on Tuesday voted down a public takeover of the state's two largest utility companies.Maine residents on Tuesday voted down an initiative that would have replaced that state’s largest power companies with a nonprofit, consumer-owned utility, The Associated Press projected.

A “yes” vote was in favor of replacing investor-owned companies CMP and Versant with Pine Tree Power Company, a nonprofit, customer-owned utility. A “no” vote was for keeping the status quo.among utilities nationwide for customer satisfaction. CMP and Versant are subsidiaries of multinational energy corporations Avangrid and ENMAX, respectively, and account for 97% of Maine’s electricity distribution.

“The Pine Tree Power scheme to seize Maine’s electric grid by eminent domain would create a government-controlled utility—and we would all be on the hook for the cost,” Maine Affordable Energy, a coalition that opposed the takeover,on its website. “The debt that comes with taking over the utilities—an estimated $13.5 billion—is more than twice the entire state budget. It could put us at risk for higher taxes or cuts to critical services we rely on.

 

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