2013 EPC Priorities

2013 EPC Priorities

Further Protect Pregnant Women and Children from Toxic Chemicals

In its final version, the Healthy Kids bill would have protected families from the dangerous chemical bisphenol-A (BPA) in food packaging by requiring food manufacturers with more than a billion dollars in annual sales to label the chemical in their products. The bill passed soundly in the House and unanimously in the Senate, but was vetoed by Governor LePage. The Senate failed to override the veto and, disappointingly, refused even to debate the bill.
Failed

Open the St. Croix River to River Herring

Passage of LD 72 represented a big victory for healthy rivers this session by allowing alewives (also known as river herring) to run unimpeded up the St. Croix River to their historic spawning grounds. The river once supported more than 2.5 million alewives but the population crashed to less than a thousand when the fishways at two dams were closed by legislative decree in 1995. Alewives are a critical food source for many birds, fish, and mammals, and are the preferred spring bait for Maine lobster. The Marine Resources Committee voted unanimously in favor of the bill, setting the stage for easy passage in both the House and Senate. Governor LePage let the bill become law without his signature.
Passed

Protect Water Quality and Avoid Taxpayer Clean-up Costs from Metallic Mineral Mines

The Senate failed to pass LD 1302, a bill to improve water quality safeguards and taxpayer protections in Maine’s mining law, despite a sizable, bipartisan victory in the House. Moving forward, the LePage Administration’s Department of Environmental Protection will be drafting rules this summer that will govern future mining operations. The legislature will have final say over whether these proposed rules are adopted in January of 2014. After the bill failed, several of the sponsors of LD 1302 wrote a letter to the DEP requesting stronger water quality protections.
Failed

Increased Investment in Energy Efficiency

LD 1426 contributed much-needed resources for Maine’s energy efficiency programs. The bill was added to a larger omnibus energy package, LD 1559, which passed and successfully overcame Governor LePage’s veto. The omnibus bill, unfortunately, also contains provisions that could increase Maine’s dependence on natural gas from hydraulic fracturing.
Mixed

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