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Environmentalists praise assembly session

Lawmakers pass flush fee, stormwater fee, septic curbs, arsenic ban
April 10, 2012|By Timothy B. Wheeler, The Baltimore Sun

While others found much to criticize about this year’s General Assembly, environmental activists hailed it Tuesday as the most significant in decades for advancing long-running efforts to restore the Chesapeake Bay.

In a year when lawmakers balked at raising taxes or fees for other purposes, they approved the doubling of a “flush fee” for fixing up Maryland’s sewage treatment plants and ordered the state’s largest communities to levy fees on their property owners to fix polluted runoff from city and suburban streets and parking lots.

Legislators also finally approved long-debated curbs on growth using septic tanks, which officials have warned for years could undermine bay cleanup efforts if not curtailed.

More here.

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>Legislators graded by environment, business groups

>Matthew Bieniek
The Cumberland Times-News Tue Jul 05, 2011, 11:45 PM EDT

Cumberland — CUMBERLAND — While the children of Allegany County have long since forgotten their report cards in the joys of summer, local legislators are only now beginning to receive some of their grades for the 2011 General Assembly Session.

A pro-business group, Maryland Business for Responsive Government, and an environmentalist group, the Maryland League of Conservation Voters, released their report cards recently. Most local legislators had strong scores from the business group and scores in the 50 percent range from the environmental group.

Delegate Wendell Beitzel said it’s important to consider the source of the scorecards and the votes chosen as part of the scoring process.

“On the environmental side, there are a lot of issues related to the Chesapeake Bay. Much of that legislation is very detrimental to our end of the state,” Beitzel said.

The conservation organization, which only graded four votes, gave Beitzel a 50 percent score for 2011. He has a 44 percent lifetime score from the league. The higher the percentage, the more often you agreed with the conservation league’s position on the issues.

Legislation the league wanted passed was a law to expand electrical vehicle charging stations and another law that would have held up Marcellus Shale drilling while studies were performed on the environmental impact of drilling.

“I normally run about 50 percent,” said Beitzel, about environmental group scorecards. Beitzel said that not only has he worked in the environmental field, but when he was a county commissioner, Garrett County made its first significant progress in improving air quality in the county.

“You pretty much have to be an avid environmentalist to obtain a high score,” Beitzel said. They pick out pet legislation (to make up the scorecard).”

Delegate Kevin Kelly agreed. He said he didn’t pay much attention to the scorecards and voted for what is right for the people of his district and Western Maryland.

He said the League of Conservation voters opposes Marcellus Shale drilling, and is opposed to the coal industry and would shut down the local paper mill, if they could.

Kelly received a 50 percent rating for 2011 from the conservation organization as well, along with a 40 percent lifetime rating. Delegate LeRoy Myers received a 25 percent rating for 2011 and a 21 percent lifetime rating. Sen. George Edwards received a 50 percent rating for 2011 and has a 32 percent lifetime rating.

Kelly said he’s been endorsed by the Chamber of Commerce and business organizations over the years, as well as labor groups.

“Business creates jobs, but I have a great deal of empathy for the working people,” Kelly said. “I’ve always taken the position that I’m a moderate,” Kelly said

Maryland Business for Responsive Government describes itself on its website as “a statewide, nonpartisan, political research and education organization that works to improve Maryland’s business climate.” It’s co-chairman are former Gov. Marvin Mandel and former Republican gubernatorial candidate Ellen Sauerbrey.

The business group gave most local legislators much higher scores than the conservation group. Edwards received a 100 percent vote for 2011. He was graded for 14 Senate votes. House members were graded for 16 votes. Beitzel received an 82 percent score for 2011 and a cumulative score of 78 percent. Kelly received a 55 percent score for 2011 and a cumulative score fo 65 percent. Myers received a 100 percent score for 2011 and a cumulative score of 85 percent for his votes over the years.

Among the legislation graded by the business group was legislation that would have limited the use of credit checks in employment applications. The business group wanted a vote against the bill.

Beitzel wasn’t surprised his score on the business side was higher.

“I tend to strongly support free enterprise,” Beitzel said. The report cards can be misleading, Beitzel said.

“I do think that they’re mostly special interest groups,” Beitzel said. They look at four or six out of thousands of votes over the years, he said. “Every one of them brings their slant,” said Kelly.

The website of Maryland Business for Responsive Government is http://www.mbrg. org/.

The website of the Maryland League of Conservation Voters is http://www.mdlcv.org/.

The Maryland State Education Association has also released a scorecard at http://www.marylandeducators.org/detail.aspx?id=2753.

Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@times-news.com

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Environmental groups sue to block wind farm

By: The Associated Press 12/23/10 9:19 AM
The Associated Press
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FILE: Giant wind turbines are powered by strong prevailing winds near Palm Springs, California. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images) Some conservationists have filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block the startup of Maryland’s first industrial wind farm because it allegedly threatens federally protected Indiana bats.

The complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt seeks to stop Baltimore-based Constellation Energy Group Inc. from beginning operation of its 28 turbines on Backbone Mountain in Garrett County unless the company first obtains an “incidental take permit” from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for any Indiana bats that might be hit or injured by the spinning blades.

Constellation spokesman Kevin Thornton said the company has consulted with federal wildlife officials and is in the process of applying for the permit. He said a study is under way to determine what harm the turbines might do to the endangered bats, and Constellation hopes to have federal approval by spring.

A similar lawsuit brought in the same Greenbelt court last year forced developers of a West Virginia wind project to reduce the number of planned turbines after the judge ruled that Indiana bats hibernating in the area almost certainly would be harmed by the blades. The West Virginia developer also agreed not to operate the turbines at night or at times of year when the bats would be flying until it obtained federal permits.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/nation/2010/12/conservation-groups-sue-block-md-wind-farm#ixzz19VfaRV7d

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