Mass. environmental group seek swifter action on high energy bills
On Tuesday they sent a letter to Governor Maura Healey and Secretary Rebecca Tepper with the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs. The letter included the steps they believe will save people more money now.
'It's not fast enough to help with energy burden,' said Vick Mohanka with the Sierra Club Massachusetts.
As soaring bills have busted many budgets this winter, the Sierra Club MA and other environmental justice groups sent a letter to the state Tuesday with 7 seven action items to reduce those costs and reliance on fossil fuels.
Item one, reduce spending on infrastructure under the gas safety enhancement plan.
'It's 100% on our bills and we're paying more profits on this than other states,' said Mohanka
Mohanka says while the Massachusetts grid is old and some safety enhancements are necessary, consumers today shouldn't fund decades of future service.
The letter also asks for an end to ratepayer-funded gas line extensions. The groups claim, 'Massachusetts gas customers were charged $160 million to hook up additional buildings to the gas system, an average cost of nearly $10,000 per new customer for infrastructure that only serves those customers.'
And it says in hidden in distribution charges. '…gas companies are charging ratepayers for their lobbying, advertising, and other expenses…'
'Almost 6 billion dollars we're gonna save, money back to you,' said Governor Maura Healey on March 10th in Lowell during an event to unveil her administration's energy affordability agenda.
It includes a $50 credit on April energy bills, automatic enrollment in discount plans based on income, and a $500 million dollar cut to the Mass Save program which rebates drive energy efficiency.
'I did a few weeks ago ask that we take a look at that, in this moment that we're in the high prices and volatility and that's why we saw some savings come off of Mass Save,' Healey said during the event.
'The Mass Save rate goes toward reducing our energy consumption and reliance on gas the distribution rate is where the profits are for the utility companies,' says Mohanka.
The Governor's team is drafting an energy affordability bill for this session. Her office provided the following statement to Boston 25 News:
'Energy costs are too high in Massachusetts and Governor Healey is focused on bringing them down. Governor Healey has already taken action to lower people's bills by $220 million in March and April, and her plan would save nearly $6 billion for electric and gas customers over the next five years. She also agrees that more needs to be done. Governor Healey will be filing legislation in the coming weeks to lower costs further, and she appreciates everyone's ideas and advocacy on this important issue.'
spokesperson for Governor Healey's office
This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information becomes available.
Download the FREE Boston 25 News app for breaking news alerts.
Follow Boston 25 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch Boston 25 News NOW
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
2 days ago
- Boston Globe
Rising unemployment darkens jobless benefits fund forecast
That's an earlier dropoff than in a Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Officials continue to project taxes on businesses used to fund unemployment benefits will increase every year until 2028, when they will reach the highest possible level. In addition to rate adjustments, the state can borrow money to replenish the unemployment fund and keep benefits paid. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Massachusetts took out federal advances, then issued bonds to spread repayment costs over multiple years. Advertisement The new report forecasts that Massachusetts will pay hundreds of millions of dollars more in unemployment benefits across 2026, 2027, and 2028 than previously estimated. Its calculations are built on an assumption that unemployment will hover around 4.5 percent in the next five years, up from the roughly 3.7 percent rate baked into the prior quarterly report. Advertisement Tufts University Center for State Policy Analysis executive director Evan Horowitz criticized prior state projections as relying on an overly optimistic unemployment forecast. He said Monday that he's 'glad we've finally acknowledged the obvious reality that unemployment isn't going to be low forever.' 'Now lawmakers need to face the equally obvious fact that our system is broken,' he said. 'In a few years, we're likely to see an unholy mix of high headline tax rates and even higher benefit costs, leading to large and persistent shortfalls. That's bad.' Employers pay different amounts based on how many of their former workers collect unemployment benefits and how much they have set aside to cover unemployment costs. Right now, those contributions are assessed at what the state calls 'Schedule D,' the middlemost rung. An employer can expect to pay between $124.50 and $1,897.50 per employee per year under Schedule D, according to Many business groups have been pushing the Legislature to overhaul the unemployment system, arguing that the state offers some of the most generous benefits in the country and that the costs on employers hamstring competitiveness. In January, the Healey administration pledged to convene business, labor, and other leaders and chart a path toward major reforms. The talks have not yet produced any major changes to eligibility or benefit levels. Advertisement The administration has made other changes to overhaul UI technology and pilot extended call center hours, promoting those as making the system more efficient for users. Jay Ash, a former housing and economic development secretary to former governor Charlie Baker who now leads the Massachusetts Competitive Partnership, warned last week that the state's 'UI system is broken.' 'We consistently rank at or near the bottom on cost, and it is just another reason that MA has an anti-competitive reputation,' he wrote in a LinkedIn post. 'The Administration and the Legislature are pledging to examine the system closely — here's hoping they do so and make reforms that make it easier to afford to hire our residents.' Ash pointed to CNBC's latest In addition to benefits, businesses are also paying an additional charge to pay back pandemic-era borrowing the state undertook to replenish the trust fund. The employer-funded account will be on the hook for an additional $203 million per year to repay the federal government for a Baker administration accounting error that used federal funding to pay benefits the state should have covered. The first payment is due by Dec. 1 under A coalition of influential organizations called the Massachusetts Opportunity Alliance Advertisement Lawmakers have in the past intervened to freeze looming unemployment tax rate increases. They tend to take up economic development-related legislation in the second year of the two-year cycle, when all 200 legislative seats are up for reelection. Healey plans to seek reelection in 2026, and has so far drawn two Republican challengers.


Boston Globe
6 days ago
- Boston Globe
Healey proposes $2.45 billion spending bill that would decouple Mass. from RFK Jr.'s CDC on vaccine guidelines
The proposal Healey outlined would also deposit $125 million into the state's stabilization fund and use $150 million in income surtax revenue to fund K-12 school aid increases required under the multi-year funding reform law known as the Student Opportunity Act. Advertisement The bill would also create an Economic Resiliency and Federal Response Fund built on capital gains tax revenues collected in the fiscal year that ended June 30 'to ensure that the state remains fiscally resilient against the negative impacts of federal budgetary and policy decisions,' according to Healey's office. 'With this legislation, we are controlling spending and ensuring that our state budget remains responsible, while also strengthening our ability to weather economic unpredictability coming from Washington,' Healey said in a statement. Healey's proposal would delay the state's deadline to achieve a certain amount of offshore wind power from 2027 to 2029 'due to uncertainty surrounding federal permitting and tax credits.' The bill would also remove a requirement that a solicitation for more wind energy be conducted every 24 months. Advertisement Another outside section The new proposal also would set Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2026 as the statewide primary election day. In 2026, Labor Day falls on Monday, Sept. 7. The bill would set millions aside for a reserve for costs accrued by sheriffs, reproductive health providers at risk of losing federal funding, and costs associated with hosting the 2026 FIFA Men's World Cup. Governors typically file a so-called closeout budget every year to enable the state comptroller to complete an annual financial report that's due by Oct. 31. Lawmakers routinely continue their deliberations on the spending bill into the fall, preventing the comptroller from meeting that deadline.


Boston Globe
11-08-2025
- Boston Globe
Healey calls Suffolk sheriff's arrest ‘serious,' but declines to say if he should resign. ‘I need to know more.'
Tompkins, In their indictment released Friday, prosecutors did not name the cannabis company he allegedly leaned on, but a person familiar with the matter said it is Ascend Mass, part of Ascend Cannabis, a multistate retailer. Advertisement In Massachusetts, cannabis companies applying for annual licenses need to show how their business will have a 'positive impact.' For Ascend, the answer ran through Tompkins, with whom they This partnership gave Tompkins leverage, according to prosecutors, who said without it, company officials feared they would not have their license renewed to operate a shop in downtown Boston. Advertisement The answer to whether Tompkins can be removed may lie in a The Supreme Judicial Court Tompkins, who turned 68 on Monday, did not respond to a request for comment, nor did officials from the Suffolk County Sheriff's department. Aides to Campbell also did not respond to a Globe inquiry. Healey on Monday declined to say if she was considering petitioning for Tompkins to be removed. 'These are serious allegations, but until I have more information, I'm not going to comment further,' she told reporters. Healey, like many other Democrats ranging from Senator Elizabeth Warren to Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, has been a Tompkins supporter. She endorsed him against a Democratic challenger in 2022, when she was attorney general and running for governor, calling him a 'strong partner in the push for a more equitable criminal justice system.' In 2017, they Advertisement Tompkins was appointed by Healey's predecessor, Charlie Baker, to chair the Roxbury Community College board of trustees. A spokesperson for the college on Friday declined to comment on Tompkins' arrest. Any elected official sentenced to state or federal prison time is deemed to have vacated their seat, according to state law. And if the six-year term isn't up, the governor can appoint an interim replacement to a vacant seat and call a special election in the next even year. Tompkins, once Patrick tapped then-Suffolk County Sheriff Andrea Cabral to be the state's secretary for public safety. Cabral once ran Ascend's local operations, and was Tompkins' former mentor and close friend. Tompkins once called Cabral 'my best friend on the planet' in a podcast episode they appeared on together in 2021. But Cabral is not the Ascend official who was allegedly extorted, a person with knowledge of the case told the Globe. Tompkins was released Friday on $200,000 bail after making an initial appearance in Florida. He is required to return to Massachusetts and report to federal court in Boston by Friday, and be arraigned at a later date. Sean Cotter and Danny McDonald of the Globe staff contributed to this report. Matt Stout can be reached at