.
Feedback

Gov. O’Malley Takes a Third Swing at Wind Energy

By JESSICA WILDE and LUCAS HIGH Capital News Service

Gov. Martin O’Malley took his third shot at sparking the state’s wind energy industry by introducing legislation Tuesday that would provide $1.5 billion in taxpayer subsidies toward the construction of a wind power farm 10 miles off the coast of Ocean City.

While last year’s bill, which is virtually identical to the current bill, garnered the necessary votes in the House, it failed to make it out of the Senate due to concerns about the added cost to consumers.

This time around, O’Malley is confident in his bid to “make Maryland the epicenter for offshore wind power in the Atlantic."

The new bill has 24 cosponsors in the Senate and 58 in the House, and Sen. Thomas “Mac” Middleton, D- Charles, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, assured the governor the wind bill would have the votes from his committee this time around.

Like the Ravens, we can see the finish line in sight, said Thomas Hucker, D-Montgomery, comparing the wind energy bill to Baltimore’s Super Bowl-bound football team.

To finance the wind farm, Maryland taxpayers will see up to $1.50 per month added to their utility bills.

Delegate Aisha Braveboy, D-Prince George’s, called the legislation a “pocketbook issue” for Marylanders because of the utility bill increases. But she stressed that developing a renewable wind energy industry in the state would provide opportunities to regain some of the manufacturing jobs lost during the decline of the Baltimore region’s steel mills.        

The bill would create 850 temporary jobs during the construction of the farm, and maintaining the facility would add another 160 permanent positions to Maryland’s economy, O’Malley said.

Not only would the wind bill bring jobs and economic growth to the state, it would also provide a source of renewable energy, O’Malley said.

“Climate change is a problem for this generation and an even bigger problem for the next generation,” O’Malley said.

“Seventy-two percent of Marylanders favor investments in offshore wind energy,” O’Malley said, citing a recent poll by the research firm OpinionWorks.

Sen. Ronald Young, D-Frederick, questioned whether the poll took into account the complexity of the actual cost to Maryland, at a Senate Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee hearing Tuesday.

“I like the idea of wind,” Young said. “I just don’t like the idea of the cost for the benefit.”

Sen. Joan Carter Conway, D-Baltimore, the chair of the committee, said few Marylanders would actually benefit from the wind farms.

“Many people don’t like to pay for things that don’t benefit them,” Conway said. “All of us will pay, but all of us won’t benefit from it.”

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Westminster Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Kym Byrnes (Editor) June 10, 2013 at 05:14 pm
Congratulations graduates! May you be as successful in the next part of your journey as you were atRead More St. John School.
Artemus Gordon April 9, 2013 at 02:39 am
I don't live in your district and I am not a member of your party. I have watched you during yourRead More meetings with the commissioners and you handle things very well. You have a balance of private and public sector experience which is a necessary background to have to guide the county. It will be nice to have a competent person with your qualifications to run against someone who is totally unqualified but never had any opposition in the last election. Now she will have to attend the voter forums and explin her views and positions. Let the chips fall where they may. The emperor will have no clothes.
romeo valianti April 12, 2013 at 11:26 pm
Wow, this is great news. Hopefully, 1 down and 4 to go!! Make sure Frazier shows up at theRead More political forums this time. She chose to miss every one last time, so she did not have to answer questions on her positions and her horrible record the first time around in 1998-2002. She will try to do that again to get re-elected.
Bonnie Grady April 13, 2013 at 01:19 am
If Frazier runs for reelection in 2014, I hope someone will have the nerve to ask her pointblank, onRead More camera, about her relationship to Roscoe Bartlett. Folks who've been around Carroll County for a while know the answer: there is no relation. She just tacked that on when she decided to run the first time. It may be her maiden name - or not - but she has never bothered to answer the question. She just let folks assume there is a connection, and lots of folks fell for it.