Final Conference Report Climate Change Bill Senate #399
Vote Description
This was a vote on S.2995, An Act creating a next-generation roadmap for Massachusetts climate policy. This bill sets an arbitrary GHG emissions reduction goal of net-zero emissions by 2050 and sets incremental sublimits every five years to get there. It does this by mandating limits on carbon emissions by sector: electric power, transportation, commercial and industrial heating and cooling, residential heating and cooling, industrial processes, and natural gas distribution and service. These arbitrary limits will mean drastic and costly changes in certain sectors in order to stay under the limit, and leaves the power to make these changes in the hands of unelected bureaucrats. In addition, it sets new CA style energy efficiency standards on appliances and fixtures you are allowed to purchase and install in your house or business. It also allows for changes to the state building code, allowing towns to adopt their own net-zero energy stretch codes and changes the make-up of the state board of building regulations and standards (BBRS). It then calls on the BBRS to incorporate stretch energy code developed and adopted by the department of energy resources into the state building code. Essentially this bill allows for drastic regulatory oversight and increased costly burdens by unelected bureaucrats, on the people of MA for the foreseeable future.
Mass Fiscal Explanation
Mass Fiscal does not support this bill due to the lack of good government sensibility by handing over regulatory and taxing authority to unelected bureaucrats, as well as government overreach with costly and burdensome regulations on residents and small businesses. https://malegislature.gov/Bills/191/S2995
Mass Fiscal's Stance
Fiscal Responsibility Vote
Good Government Vote
Vote result on 01/04/2021
Yea
38
Nay
2
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Michael Barrett | Third Middlesex | 9% | ||
Joe Boncore | First Suffolk and Middlesex | 9% | ||
Michael Brady | 2nd Plymouth and Bristol | 9% | ||
William N. Brownsberger | Second Suffolk and Middlesex | 9% | ||
Harriette L. Chandler | First Worcester | 9% | ||
Sonia Chang-Diaz | Second Suffolk | 9% | ||
Nick Collins | Fourth Suffolk | 9% | ||
Jo Comeford | Hampshire, Franklin & Worcester | 9% | ||
Cynthia Stone Creem | First Middlesex and Norfolk | 9% | ||
Brendan P. Crighton | 3rd Essex | 9% | ||
Julian Cyr | Cape and Islands | 9% | ||
Sal N. DiDomenico | Middlesex and Suffolk | 9% | ||
Diana DiZoglio | 1st Essex | 25% | ||
James B. Eldridge | Middlesex and Worcester | 13% | ||
Ryan C. Fattman | Worcester and Norfolk | 97% | ||
Paul R Feeney | Bristol and Norfolk | 13% | ||
Barry R. Finegold | Second Essex and Middlesex | 9% | ||
Cindy Friedman | Fourth Middlesex | 9% | ||
Anne M. Gobi | Worcester, Hampden, Hampshire, and Middlesex | 25% | ||
Adam G. Hinds | Berkshire, Hampshire, Franklin and Hampden | 11% | ||
Patricia D. Jehlen | Second Middlesex | 9% | ||
John F. Keenan | Norfolk and Plymouth | 9% | ||
Edward Kennedy | 1st Middlesex | 9% | ||
Eric P. Lesser | First Hampden and Hampshire | 9% | ||
Jason M. Lewis | Fifth Middlesex | 9% | ||
Joan B. Lovely | Second Essex | 9% | ||
Mark C. Montigny | Second Bristol and Plymouth | 16% | ||
Michael O. Moore | Second Worcester | 22% | ||
Susan Moran | Plymouth and Barnstable | 0% | ||
Patrick O'Connor | Plymouth and Norfolk | 47% | ||
Marc R. Pacheco | First Plymouth and Bristol | 16% | ||
Becca Rausch | Norfolk, Bristol & Middlesex | 13% | ||
Michael J. Rodrigues | First Bristol and Plymouth | 9% | ||
Michael F. Rush | Norfolk and Suffolk | 9% | ||
Karen Spilka | Second Middlesex and Norfolk | 5% | ||
Bruce E. Tarr | First Essex and Middlesex | 59% | ||
Walter F. Timilty | Norfolk, Bristol and Plymouth | 16% | ||
Dean Tran | Worcester and Middlesex | 81% | ||
John Velis | 2nd Hampden and Hampshire | 27% | ||
James T. Welch | Hampden | 9% |