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Governor Janet Mills explains her opposition to a consumer-owned utility for Maine [Video]

Maine Governor Janet Mills is among the opponents of Question 3 on November’s statewide ballot the referendum that proposes creating a consumer-owned utility called Pine Tree Power through a forced buyout of Central Maine Power and Versant, which supply electricity to 97% of the state’s homes and businesses.Mills sat down with Maines Total Coverage in her cabinet room at the State House on Wednesday to explain her position the idea is too good to be true, too costly, and too risky.”It’s a huge gamble,” Mills said, with her primary worry the cost of the hostile takeover — billions of dollars in borrowed money.Mills said, “The exact figure, I don’t think anybody really knows, but that isn’t the question. Even if it’s only $9 billion, as some of the proponents say, that’s a lot of money — plus interest to pay it back. Were mortgaging the futures of our grandchildren now, if were talking about that kind of money.Mills warned lower electricity rates cannot be guaranteed, as utility policy is complex.”The question on the ballot is a one-liner, sounds very simple. The bill itself that people are asked to vote one is 35 pages of single-spaced small print law,” Mills said. There may be ways to do this kind of thing, but this isnt the way.In contrast to Mills, Lucy Hochshartner, Deputy Campaign Manager of Our Power, for Question 3, asserted in an interview ratepayers would see savings under a nonprofit they own.”It’s not about that initial cost, but about the way that we’re able to move from what is essentially a very high rent that we pay to CMP and Versant, their CEOs, their foreign shareholders, move instead to a low-cost mortgage,” Hochschartner said. Our Power predicts Pine Tree Power would save the average household $30 a month on its electricity bill, or $367 a year.Hochschartner said, We truly have some of the worst utilities in the nation with CMP and Versant. We have the most frequent outages. We have some of the worst customer satisfaction anywhere in the country, and they are not providing service at an affordable rate.On Wednesday, Question 3 received its first union endorsement — from the Maine State Nurses Association.Nurses gathered on Portlands Western Promenade, outside Maine Medical Center, told reporters they expect Pine Tree Power to be more reliable and affordable, which is necessary for the health and safety of Maine people.Amy Strum, an RN and the union steward at Maine Med, said more than 10% of CMP and Versant customers can’t afford their electricity bills, as 94,000 customers received disconnection notices this year.Strum said, “How are Mainers supposed to afford housing, food, healthcare, and medicine, when they can’t even afford to keep their lights on or their refrigerators running at home.”However, the local unions opposed to Question 3 include the AFL-CIO, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the Maine Building Trades Council, a construction union.Those naysaying unions believe members employed by Pine Tree Power could be reclassified as a public sector union and lose their right to strike.They do have that wrong, Hochschartner said. Workers will keep their jobs and keep their union status with Pine Tree Power.”With Question 3 calling for seven members of the 13-member Pine Tree Power board to be elected, Gov. Mills foresees more bureaucracy and partisanship.Mills said, Theres no guarantee theyll have any qualifications. No guarantee they’ll have any expertise whatsoever in utility law. No guarantee that they won’t be funded by oil and gas, nuclear, and fossil fuel companies, who have something at stake.”Mills also fears the change could slow Maine’s conversion from fossil fuels as an electricity source, particularly natural gas, to clean renewables. This bill does nothing about that nothing, Mills said. “This bill, I’m afraid, will derail that progress and set us back. This bill will invite years and years of controversy and litigation.”The governor said no state has gone with a statewide consumer-owned utility, and she doesn’t want Maine to be the first. Instead, she pointed to a law she signed two years ago that empowers Maines Public Utilities Commission to impose performance-based standards and auditing.Mills said, To me, thats the way to go make them more accountable, more responsible to the ratepayers.

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Biden to sign bipartisan law reforming organ transplant system [Video]

President Joe Biden is set to sign into law a new bill that the White House says will save lives for Americans in need of an organ transplant.Biden on Friday will sign a bipartisan piece of legislation that will reform the organ transplant system, the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, and waiting process as more than 100,000 people await a transplant. The bill passed the House and Senate on a bipartisan basis in July.”Everybody knows the system has been broken for years with heartbreaking consequences. Now with the president’s signature, we are taking significant steps to improve it,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Friday. The law, Jean-Pierre said, “will break up the current monopoly system harnessing competition to allow HHS (the Department of Health and Human Services) to contract with the best entities to provide a more efficient system for the people it serves.”It also eliminates the funding cap “to allow additional resources to modernize the system,” she said.The bill, she added, is expected to boost transparency and accountability for those in need of an organ transplant.The system has only ever been managed by the nonprofit United Network for Organ Sharing, which has drawn criticism for its handling of organs, long waitlists for transplants and the number of deaths among people waiting: about 6,000 per year. More than 100,000 people in the United States are now waiting for an organ transplant.A report released last year by the Senate Finance Committee found 70 deaths from 2010 to 2020 due to system failures within OPTN, as well as significant opportunities for improvement in how the nation manages organ transplants. “From the top down, the U.S. transplant network is not working, putting Americans’ lives at risk,” the report said.Part of Biden’s 2024 budget proposal sought increased funding for organ procurement and transplantation a total of $67 million and requests that Congress update decades-old rules around appropriations and contracts for organ transplants in order to increase competition.

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Founder of ELNC claims lawsuit is attempt to steal her “intellectual property” [Video]

Dr. Nkechy Ezeh was sued after board members at the early childhood education nonprofit she founded claimed she embezzled hundreds of thousands of dollars. She is now speaking out to refute the claims

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Xfinity by Comcast provides ‘Lift Zones’ to connect New Mexicans to free wifi [Video]

As one of the state’s largest providers, Comcast focuses on giving back to the community and has invested over $13.5 million to support New Mexico organizations and nonprofits. As part of Comcast’s efforts to support and uplift New Mexicans, the company has equipped over 50 locations in the state with WiFi-connected ‘Lift Zones.’