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We Need a Siting Reform Process That Isn’t Buried in the Past

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Chair Barrett and Members of the Senate Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities, and the Environment:

My name is Jonathan Cohn, and I am the Policy Director of Progressive Massachusetts, a statewide grassroots advocacy group committed to fighting for an equitable, just, democratic, and sustainable Commonwealth.

We urge you to give a favorable report to S.2113/H.3187: An Act Relative to Energy Facilities Siting Reform to Address Environmental Justice, Climate, and Public Health (DiDomenico/ Madaro).

Our state has strong climate goals, but goals are only as good as the plans to meet them. If we want to meet our emissions targets, then we need to be accelerating the transition to renewable energy and building the sustainable, distributed grid that can make that a reality.

Our current energy facility siting system is an obstacle to achieving these goals. Utility companies like Eversource and National Grid exploit our outdated siting system to maximize their profits at the expense of communities and ratepayers. They build expensive, heavy-polluting facilities based on fuels that need to be left in the ground, and against the will of environmental justice communities.

We need a process that works smoothly and one that engages communities before projects get started. Engaging community at the start in an intentional way lowers costs and produces better outcomes for all, as does providing early attention to the climate and public health impacts of a siting decision.

That’s where the Siting Improvement bill comes in. It updates the Siting Board to incorporate public health and climate into approval criteria and adds seats for a representative of environmental justice populations and an Indigenous representative. Moreover, it recognizes that effective process starts early by requiring upfront community engagement and analysis, and it prohibits projects that increase pollution in already overburdened communities.

We need to be scaling up our deployment of renewable energy, and we need a siting reform process that works to achieve that, rather than one that keeps us buried in the past.

We additionally urge a favorable report for S.2150/H.3225: An Act to Encourage Solar Development on Buildings and Disturbed Land (Mark /Sabadosa – Garballey). This bill would incentivize new community solar projects in the built and disturbed environment, allowing more renters to access the benefits of solar and helping us; the bill is a win-win proposal that helps us accelerate clean energy, reduce pressure on natural lands, and create economic opportunities.

Sincerely,

Jonathan Cohn

Policy Director

Progressive Massachusetts

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