The Maryland Senate has just one day left to pass a bill that would deliver greater energy savings for Marylanders through the EmPOWER program — the state’s energy efficiency and weatherization program. The bill would build on the success of the EmPOWER program by ensuring lower energy bills for low-wealth Marylanders, as well as greater public health and climate benefits that coincide with improved energy efficiency.
Maryland’s EmPOWER program works by providing Maryland homeowners with energy audits and subsequent rebates for lighting, appliances, and weatherization. It also provides businesses with discounts and incentives for energy-efficient upgrades.
Residential and commercial energy use in Maryland account for 46.5 percent of the total amount of energy consumed in the state. By reducing the amount of energy Marylanders consume, efficiency improvements help customers pay less on their utility bills. Over the past 15 years, Maryland EmPOWER has saved residents over $4 billion on their energy bills and delivered lifetime energy savings worth $12.7 billion.
With these savings come reduced fossil fuel consumption and reduced greenhouse gas emissions, combating climate change and reducing the negative health impacts of fossil fuels. Maryland produces 42.9 percent of its electricity from natural gas, oil, or coal. Since 2008, the EmPOWER program has reduced greenhouse gas emissions by at least 9.6 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, equal to taking 2 million cars off the road for an entire year.
To date, however, the EmPOWER program has underdelivered for low-wealth Marylanders, which is why the state Senate needs to pass proposed legislation (HB 1035) to make sure that all Marylanders have the opportunity to choose more affordable all-electric heat pumps, induction stoves, and heat pump water heaters.
More specifically, HB 1035 (as amended) would:
If passed, the bill will help people choose healthier, more affordable home heating and cooking options, protect our climate, and take advantage of billions of dollars in new federal funds. Importantly, these features also make energy efficiency upgrades especially valuable as part of a broader strategy to achieve Maryland’s climate goals in a way that is just and equitable, particularly for structurally marginalized communities.
The Maryland House of Delegates passed the legislation on April 5. The Maryland Senate has until tomorrow, April 11, to pass HB 1035.
If you are a Maryland resident, you can call on your legislators HERE to support HB 1035.
Banner image by Geoffrey.landis at English Wikipedia, used under Creative Commons license CC BY 3.0.
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Federico Holm, Katlyn Schmitt | April 10, 2023
The Maryland Senate has just one day left to pass a bill that would deliver greater energy savings for Marylanders through the EmPOWER program — the state’s energy efficiency and weatherization program. The bill would build on the success of the EmPOWER program by ensuring lower energy bills for low-wealth Marylanders, as well as greater public health and climate benefits that coincide with improved energy efficiency.
Kimberly Shields | April 3, 2023
In a recent post, my colleague M. Isabelle Chaudry provided readers with an overview of some of the toxic chemical threats facing the Delaware River basin in the northeastern United States. In this post, I dig deeper into the modern history of flooding in a region that will be home to 9 million people by 2030 and how this poses a growing risk of toxic floodwaters for families and communities in Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, and New York.
Sidney A. Shapiro | March 30, 2023
The American public has lost faith in expertise. The reason why, as author and national security expert Tom Nichols points out in his 2017 book The Death of Expertise, includes the transformation of the news industry into a 24-hour entertainment machine, the number of “low-information voters,” political leaders who traffic in “alternative facts,” and, as Nichols puts it, a “Google-fueled, Wikipedia-based, blog-sodden collapse of any division between professionals and lay people, students and teachers, knowers and wonderers — in other words between those of any achievement in an area and those with none at all.” Bill Araiza offers another important insight in his book, Rebuilding Expertise: Increasing legal and political efforts to oversee agencies have resulted in the deterioration of civil service expertise and, with it, of public faith in government. On the front end, these efforts send a message that expertise can’t be trusted. On the back end, when the government stumbles in carrying out its functions, the message is that experts are not so expert after all. What is missed, as Liz Fisher and I contend in our book, Administrative Competence, is that law and politics can hold agencies accountable and still facilitate their capacity to do their job. Araiza’s last chapter ably discusses how this can be done.
James Goodwin | March 16, 2023
The regulatory policy world is often a sleepy one — I’m the first to admit that — but last week was a notable exception. In addition to a U.S. House Judiciary subcommittee hearing on regulations, the Biden administration’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) wrapped up efforts to solicit public input on its recommendations for broadening public input in the regulatory process.
Daniel Farber | March 16, 2023
EPA proposed new regulations last week to reduce the water pollution impacts of coal-fired power plants. As EPA regulations go, these count as fairly minor. They got a bit of news coverage in coal country and industry publications. But they will eliminate the discharge of thousands of tons of pollutants, including a lot of metals that pose health problems. The rulemaking illustrates the highly technical nature of regulations and the lawless nature of Trump’s EPA. It also gives some clues about where the Biden administration may be headed in the way it approaches regulatory decisions.
James Goodwin, Marcha Chaudry | March 15, 2023
The Delaware River Basin is a vital ecosystem that provides drinking water for millions of people and supports diverse wildlife, recreation, and agriculture in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey. Unfortunately, industrial activities in the basin contaminate the water with toxic pollutants, leading to a variety of negative impacts on human health and the environment and endangering industrial workers.
Marcha Chaudry | March 14, 2023
On average, women who work full-time earn 84 cents for every dollar that men earn. Addressing these barriers requires a multifaceted approach.
James Goodwin | March 13, 2023
The regulatory system is a vital part of our constitutional democracy; with smart reforms, it can empower the public and continue enforcing policies that make us all safer, healthier, and freer. That was the message that Member Scholars of the Center for Progressive Reform successfully conveyed during last Friday’s subcommittee hearing of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee.
Minor Sinclair | March 6, 2023
As the Center for Progressive Reform enters our third decade of advocating for progressive policy for the public good, our country is facing wholly unprecedented challenges: A suffering climate. Unimaginable inequality and inequities that dispossess the majority. A faltering democracy. The Center is extremely gratified to have three new Board members join us and lend their deep expertise and wide range of experiences as we tackle these challenges and more.