skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Friday, May 10, 2024

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Louisiana teachers worry about state constitution changes. Ohio experts support a $15 minimum wage for 1 million people. An Illinois mother seeks passage of a medical aid-in-dying bill. And Mississippi advocates push for restored voting rights for people with felony convictions.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Biden says the U.S. won't arm Israel for a Rafah attack, drawing harsh criticism from Republicans. A judge denies former President Trump's request to modify a gag order. And new data outlines priorities for rural voters in ten battleground states.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Some small towns in North Dakota worry they'll go to pot if marijuana is legalized, school vouchers are becoming a litmus test for Republicans, and Bennington, Vermont implements an innovative substance abuse recovery program.

Maryland Legislators Push for Clean Energy Jobs Bill

play audio
Play

Wednesday, January 13, 2016   

ANNAPOLIS, Md. - As the General Assembly opened for the new year today, lawmakers and environmental groups called for passage of a bill they say would help the environment and create jobs.

The Clean Energy Jobs Act would increase the Clean Energy Standard to 25 percent of the state's needs over the next five years. Tiffany Hartung, senior coordinator at the Maryland Climate Coalition, said it also would invest $40 million in jobs and clean-energy business development.

"That will help train and prepare Marylanders for careers in clean energy and will also establish a clean-energy business-development fund," she said. "That fund will help minority- and women-owned businesses enter and grow the clean-energy economy."

Versions of the Clean Energy Jobs Act have been introduced in the past two legislative sessions, but Hartung said it has picked up significant support this year from key leadership in the General Assembly.

Hartung said the bill also would help the state meet requirements set by the federal Environmental Protection Agency for reducing carbon emissions from power plants.

"Increasing Maryland's Clean Energy Standard will help the state comply with the Clean Power Plan by moving a greater portion of the amount of electricity that Maryland consumes to clean energy," she said.

According to Hartung, the solar power industry in Maryland currently includes more than 170 companies employing about 3,000 people.

"So, increasing the Clean Energy Standard will continue to grow the amount of clean-energy jobs that Maryland has," she said, "and that's a good thing for the state."

She said the increased investment would support more than 1,000 jobs in the state's solar industry in each year of construction, and an additional 4,600 wind-power installation jobs in the region.

More information is online at marylandclimatecoalition.org.


get more stories like this via email

more stories
Research shows children in families of color, particularly Black and Latino families, have been more likely to experience gaps in health coverage. (Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

More than 300,000 children have been dropped from Medicaid and Peach Care for kids since the pandemic ended. A report from the Georgetown University …


Health and Wellness

play sound

A Chicago mom who lost her son to cancer in 2022 is using the occasion of Mother's Day to call on Illinois lawmakers to pass medical aid-in-dying legi…

Social Issues

play sound

Teachers in Louisiana are trying to stop an upcoming constitutional convention proposed by Gov. Jeff Landry. The governor, who has been in office for …


Around 43% of participating voters said that while they are personally against abortion, they do not believe government should be preventing someone from making that decision for themselves. (Adobe Stock)

play sound

Arizona's primary election will take place in July, and a new Rural Democracy Initiative poll shows that likely voters from rural areas of the state …

Social Issues

play sound

Ohio lawmakers are considering legislation that would raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour for most Ohio workers and create a refundable Ohio Earned…

About 10% of Mississippi residents have lost their voting rights because of past felony convictions. (Drazen/Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

Voting-rights advocates continue their push to restore these rights for formerly incarcerated Mississippians after lawmakers failed to act. House …

Social Issues

play sound

The Medicaid and Nevada Check Up programs had more than 13,000 fewer children enrolled last year than during the pandemic, according to new research …

play sound

Michigan boasts 11,000 inland lakes, more freshwater shoreline than any other state and tens of thousands of miles of rivers and streams but a new …

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021