J. Tierney: Some ideas for Gov. LePage

I thank Gov. Paul LePage for the State of the State address. He asked people to be outraged. Thanks, but let me try to be creative instead.

Could someone please help me understand why the Public Utilities Commission, after much deliberation, gave natural gas an average of $16 per month increase on users' bills when Maine has the 12th highest energy costs in the nation? The gas company supposedly has to replace old pipes in the ground that are not safe. Another way of handling that might have been to charge the suppliers a penalty every month for not replacing the pipes year-by-year during the past 50 years.

Why do our neighbors in New Hampshire have an average income of $13,000 more per year than people in Maine? It may have to do with leadership, since our work force is at least as good as theirs.

Why don’t we finance our own wind farm within three miles of shore? I would ask the PUC what that would cost per kilowatt hour. Why isn't that possibility being explored, as opposed to sending $1.386 billion to POB 11752 in Newark, N.J., each year for our electricity?

And health care financing is a cesspool into which Congress has been dumping since 1960. To put 65,000 more people at risk of no health coverage is not in the best interest of the state, and enables Congress to keep on trucking.

James Tierney, Auburn

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

veritas's picture
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Wonder why???

Jim Tierney wonders:

"Why do our neighbors in New Hampshire have an average income of $13,000 more per year than people in Maine? It may have to do with leadership, since our work force is at least as good as theirs."

No, Jim - it has to do with the fact that New Hampshire borders Massachusetts - a state with thousands of good paying jobs. They simply drive over the border and work there, as Mainers drive over the border to New Hampshire and buy booze there where it is taxed much less.

Check "The Tax Foundations' Report: "State and Local Tax Burdens: All Years, One State, 1977-2009"

It states "The goal is to focus not on the tax collec­tors but on the taxpayers. That is, we answer the question: What percentage of their income are the residents of this state paying in state and local taxes? We are not trying to answer the question: How much money have state and local governments collected?"

Here's a link - we can compare both Maine and New Hampshire for the last year which there is available data: 2009 Here we are able to see what citizens paid both to their home state and in out of state taxes for commuters.

http://taxfoundation.org/taxdata/show/335.html

For Maine, in 2009, $2,870 taxes per capita was paid in own state, while $963 per capita was paid to other states, for a total of $3,833 - with 25% of income being derived from out of state.

During the same year, New Hampshire Residents averaged $2,185 per capita in-state income, and $1,581 per capita paid to other states - this being a total of $3,765 - with 42% of their income being derived from out of state jobs - not hardly an insignificant factor!

And we also see the difference in taxes paid per capita between a Mainer and a resident of New Hampshire is only $68 per year - And New Hampshire residents are flocking like geese across the border for their jobs.

Woody's picture
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Mr. Tierney...

...seems to be back into politics all ready. He asks why New Hampshire residents make more than Maine residents when he knows many work in Boston, where pay is better, and live in New Hampshire, where cost of living is lower. He knows that, but panders to unknowing Maine folk by saying we're as good as they are. So Mr. Tierney is being political again, telling half-truths as politicians are wont to do. Actually, we're BETTER than they are. I won't go into the PUC, winds farms or health care financing but with the example all ready given, I'll leave you to judge what he's saying, and NOT saying, about those topics. GO Class of '65.

sweetfern's picture
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Politics

Jimmy, get back into politics. We need people with good ideas and the experience to carry them out. GO CLASS OF 65!

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