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The fate of Central Maine Power's controversial energy corridor through western Maine is now in the hands of the state's highest court.
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Maine's top environmental regulator on Tuesday evening suspended Central Maine Power's permit for its controversial transmission corridor through Maine's western woods.
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Gov. Janet Mills said she hopes the courts will quickly address whether Central Maine Power can continue construction on a transmission line through western Maine.
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CMP is vowing to challenge the constitutionality of the ballot question that CMP and its allies spent $63 million trying to defeat. Now, the focus shifts to imminent legal and regulatory challenges, which project opponents worry will buy CMP enough time to complete most of the construction.
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Maine voters delivered a decisive rebuke Tuesday to the state's largest utility, Central Maine Power, when they halted construction of its $1 billion transmission corridor through western Maine in a vote of 60% to 40%, as of early Wednesday morning.
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State regulators are calling a public hearing on whether they should pull the license they issued for Central Maine Power's transmission line through western Maine.
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A bipartisan group of state lawmakers is launching a ballot initiative that aims to curb foreign influence in Maine ballot campaigns.
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Joseph Purington is a Maine native who worked at CMP for almost three decades before taking on executive roles in New Hampshire at Eversource Energy in 2014.
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Maine’s top environmental regulator is initiating a 14-day process that could lead to the suspension of Central Maine Power Co.‘s environmental permit for its billion-dollar transmission corridor in western Maine.
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The Maine Department of Environmental Protection on Monday rejected a claim by four lawmakers that tree-cutting in a controversial hydropower corridor under construction by a Central Maine Power Co. affiliate violated permit requirements.