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By Billy Kobin - Wednesday, July 16, 2025
This week you're getting a preview version of Maine Politics Insider, our exclusive daily politics newsletter for paid subscribers, because you have expressed interest in the BDN's coverage. Sign up for the newsletter here.
A Public Utilities Commission meeting was brief but interesting. More gubernatorial fundraising totals are here. Happy Wednesday. Let's get to it.
📷 Power utility lines are seen, Oct. 6, 2021, in Pownal, Maine.  (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

What I'm hearing


💡 Stranded costs come up for discussion again in Augusta.

◉ I'll keep this fairly brief and as simple as possible, as energy policy is usually not the easiest thing to follow. But the three-member Public Utilities Commission took up interesting things during one of its typically quick and efficient meetings Tuesday morning.

◉  The item I listened for relates to a stranded cost rate design case. The Industrial Energy Consumers' Group, which includes Maine paper companies, ski resorts and gas companies, ask the PUC to essentially to speed up on implementing a bill from Sen. Nicole Grohoski, D-Ellsworth, that the Legislature and Gov. Janet Mills approved nearly unanimously in June to end a rate discrepancy felt by utility customers in northern Maine.

◉ Solar projects that have been much the subject of much debate in the state can pass on "stranded costs" to Central Maine Power and Versant customers even if they do not subscribe to the community solar programs. In Aroostook County, residential, agricultural and business customers — such as french fry maker McCain Foods in Easton — have been facing higher bills. Tony Buxton, the Preti Flaherty lobbyist who represents the IECG, said it has been as much as a 150 percent higher net energy billing cost disparity between northern Maine residential customers and CMP's residential ratepayers.

◉ Amid all of that, the IECG group of allies that includes ski areas, potato producers and blueberry growers asked the PUC to more quickly implement the new law to basically redesign the rates and help lower NEB costs. But the law gives the commission until Oct. 1 to do that, and large generators such as CMP and dam owner Brookfield asked the PUC to stay on that schedule.

◉ PUC Chair Phil Bartlett and commissioners Carolyn Gilbert and Patrick Scully essentially decided Tuesday to do just that but still work "expeditiously," as Buxton described Bartlett as saying.

◉ The somewhat tough-to-follow rate design changes may not always look like much in terms of dollars and cents savings, but Buxton told me, "You gotta take 'em when you can get 'em."

◉ As we've seen each legislative session, the issue of energy costs and who is paying what will probably keep returning.

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📷 Planned Parenthood of Northern New England CEO Nicole Clegg speaks at a news conference where State House leaders outlined continuing efforts to protect access to abortion care, Jan. 17, 2023, in Augusta, Maine. (AP photo by Robert F. Bukaty)

News and notes


Maine's Planned Parenthood leader on Capitol Hill: The leader of Planned Parenthood's chapter that covers Maine is testifying on Capitol Hill this afternoon at the invitation of Democratic members of Congress. Planned Parenthood of Northern New England CEO Nicole Clegg is among numerous witnesses invited to speak during a 1 p.m. hearing regarding "Republican attacks on birth control access," per a news release.

It comes after Republicans and President Donald Trump signed off on his megabill that would halt Medicaid payments for non-abortion services the abortion provider offers, with a Planned Parenthood spokesperson calling it a "backdoor abortion ban." U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts, will have live streams of the hearing on his social media accounts.

Talbot Ross speaks at universal health care event: Speaking of Markey, he and other members were joined by Sen. Rachel Talbot Ross, D-Portland, and other state lawmakers in Washington on Tuesday to call for a "state-based universal health care" law that would allow states to apply for waivers if they can commit to providing coverage to 95 percent of their residents within five years. It does not face good prospects of passing a GOP-controlled Congress. Talbot Ross started speaking around 16 minutes into this video.

Collins votes to confirm Trump-appointed judge: The Senate voted along party lines Tuesday to appoint the first federal judge of Trump's second term, and Maine Democrats called out U.S. Sen. Susan Collins on it. Whitney Hermandorfer will serve on the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio and Michigan.

Maine Democratic Party spokesperson Tommy Garcia said Collins, who is up for reelection next year, "once again fell in line with her party" in supporting Hermandorfer, who defended Tennessee's abortion ban and other restrictions while working for the attorney general's office in the red state.

Reading list


⛴️ Fewer Canadians are coming to Maine on the CAT ferry so far this summer.

The flip side: Despite the lower ridership numbers for the ferry, and the lack of large cruise ship traffic, the number of tourists visiting Bar Harbor and Acadia National Park this year has not tapered off.

🏥 What's next for a reeling Northern Light?

👐 Maine's newest national monument is now open.

🏠 Homelessness in Maine dipped slightly in the past year.

🌎 From the Maine Morning Star: Here is how key climate and environmental proposals fared this past legislative session.

🚗 Drivers owe Bangor more than $10,000 in unpaid parking tickets.

🥾 Students built an addition to this historic nature trail in the County.

👩‍🍳 A chef from Belfast, Northern Ireland, is opening a spot in Belfast, Maine.

🏃 They're running. We're tracking them so you don't have to. See the tracker — featuring both declared candidates for governor and the prospective ones our sources are telling us about — here.

On the move


🌊 The Maine Maritime Museum in Bath is looking for an exhibit designer.

🚸 Passionate about mentoring young people? Trekkers in Rockland is hiring a program manager. 

⚖️ The state's Office of Professional and Occupational Regulation is seeking an attorney.
🕵️ We can't do this without you. We always need more sources to tell us what's going on in Augusta. Send intel and feedback on Maine Politics Insider to mshepherd@bangordailynews.com.
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