Boston Herald

Dems refile climate bill after Baker veto

- BY ERIN TIERNAN

Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday made good on their promise to forge ahead with wide-ranging climate legislatio­n, refiling an identical bill to one vetoed by Gov. Charlie Baker last week.

Lawmakers sent an eleventhho­ur compromise version of the 57-page bill to Baker’s desk earlier this month just two days before the formal session ended, leaving them with no mechanism to override the governor’s decision.

“Months of work was exhaustive­ly studied by members of the conference committee, and the result was a bill that rejects the false choice between economic growth and addressing climate change. We must combat climate change while also maintainin­g a thriving economy and expanding the housing stock that will ensure future, sustainabl­e growth. The legislatio­n sent to the Governor showed how it can be done,” Senate President Karen Spilka and House Speaker Ronald Mariano said in a joint statement.

Baker last week said he “reluctantl­y” vetoed the bill over concerns its implementa­tion of stringent new building codes would cripple housing constructi­on.

The bill, dubbed the Next Generation Roadmap, would require the state to become carbon neutral by 2050 and establishe­s some of the strictest benchmarks in the nation.

On face value, the plan largely aligns with policies laid out by Baker’s own administra­tion, but pushback from the constructi­on industry on the aspect of net-zero building codes was enough to derail the legislatio­n. In a letter to legislator­s, Baker also pushed back on an incrementa­l benchmark that would have required the state to cut emissions drasticall­y by 2030.

Climate advocates have widely supported the bill.

Stacy Thompson of the Liveable Streets Alliance this week told the Herald the Baker administra­tion has a “disconnect where the rubber meets the proverbial road.”

“When the time comes for action, they put up roadblocks,” she said.

“Massachuse­tts legislator­s raised the bar on efforts to tackle the climate crisis and fast track the transition to a more equitable and sustainabl­e economy. Given the severity of the crisis, it is critical that we get this legislatio­n across the finish line,” said Alli Gold Roberts, director of state policy at the sustainabi­lity nonprofit Ceres.

Spilka and Mariano both highlighte­d a sense of “urgency” but outlined no specific timeline for taking up the bill.

 ?? NiCOLAuS CzARnECki / HERALD STAff fiLE ?? SHOWDOWN LOOMS: Gov. Charlie Baker speaks at a briefing at the State House on Jan. 13.
NiCOLAuS CzARnECki / HERALD STAff fiLE SHOWDOWN LOOMS: Gov. Charlie Baker speaks at a briefing at the State House on Jan. 13.

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