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Work of Senate climate panel unfairly maligned

Work of Senate climate panel unfairly maligned

Boston Globe11-03-2025
The editorial fails to cite this impact and instead points out the committee's oversight overlaps with the subjects being considered by the Joint Committees on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy and on Environment and Natural Resources. Yet how could we address climate change if we don't also consider how we use energy and our environment? These entangled and critical issues affect industries worth billions of dollars as well as our wallets, our health, and our future. The issues need to be examined from multiple viewpoints to find the wisest way forward.
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Let's not denigrate the committees performing critically important work.
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Audrey Schulman
Executive director
HEETlabs
Cambridge
Regarding the Globe's recent editorial on legislative committees: When it comes to tackling Massachusetts' biggest challenges, real leadership isn't about titles. It's about results. And the impact of my committee's work speaks for itself.
The Senate Committee on Climate Change and Global Warming plays a distinct and vital role, separate from House and joint committees. We focus on big-picture issues, convening experts and elevating policy solutions that might otherwise go unaddressed. The 11 public hearings I've held as chair brought together advocates, researchers, and legislators to tackle the state's most pressing climate challenges, shaping the policies that drive Massachusetts forward.
The results speak for themselves. Our hearings have led to laws now in effect, including mandates for emissions reductions in rideshare fleets, stronger grid resilience requirements for utilities, a prohibition on fossil fuel incentives in the current Mass Save plan, and a nation-leading law on reducing emissions from building materials.
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Most recently, the committee helped shape the 2024
And we're not stopping. Our April 1 public hearing will focus on federal climate funding and new developments in federal offshore wind and EV policy. Because leadership isn't just about passing laws — it's about staying ahead of the curve.
Those who dismiss the work of the Senate climate committee fail to see what's actually happening: collaborative, strategic leadership driving real change. My focus remains where it belongs: delivering results for the people of Massachusetts.
Senator Cynthia Stone Creem
Newton
The writer is the Senate majority leader and represents the Norfolk and Middlesex District.
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