Friday, January 30, 2026

Cold weather threatens to take bite out of Healey’s energy savings bid

                                                                                                                                                                        

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LAWSUIT: Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell is suing nine towns for their refusal to comply with the MBTA Communities multifamily housing law, Jennifer Smith reports.

BUDGET: Gov. Maura Healey tries to navigate tricky health care spending decisions in her new budget proposal as costs balloon and federal help shrinks. Chris Lisinski has the details.

OPINION: There’s momentum building to tear down many of the state’s dams that are relics of a bygone era, writes Frederick Hewett, but the efforts are spawning a debate over which history to honor.

Frigid temperatures across Massachusetts this past week are bound to hit ratepayers in their wallets — and if the conditions persist, could limit how much savings Bay Staters feel from Gov. Maura Healey’s plan to cut utility bills this winter.

A brutally cold week in New England with temperatures plunging below zero across much of Massachusetts on Friday is driving up energy demand for natural gas and electricity as heating systems work harder and run longer to warm homes.

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Those dynamics are running headfirst into Gov. Maura Healey’s energy affordability push. Healey announced in her annual State of the Commonwealth speech last week that her administration will spend $180 million to cover the costs of 15 percent of ratepayers’ electric bills in February and March.

The utilities have also agreed to defer during those months an additional 10 percent of electric bills and 10 percent of gas bills for collection later. Liberty Gas, which will be giving its customers a 10 percent break without recouping that money, is the lone exception.

The costs of heating homes is a perennial issue this time of year in cold-weather regions like New England, so the savings offered during some of the most expensive months for energy are real. But if consistently below-average temperatures drag deeper into the winter, the average ratepayer might still wind up with comparatively higher bills as their heating systems use more energy to warm homes. Other charges, like the state’s energy efficiency program known as Mass Save, could also rise since they are based on a ratepayer’s energy use.

“This was a national cold snap, which has caused natural gas prices to spike across the nation, and this has pulled everyone’s prices up,” said Kyle Murray, Massachusetts state director for the Acadia Center. “It’s not just a Massachusetts-specific problem for these months. And as a result of that, we’re going to see really high bills, unfortunately, regardless of what the governor does. This relief is certainly welcome, but I think there’s just limited additional tools that they could tap into for additional relief.”

ICE STORM: Massachusetts officials are bracing for another possible immigration surge, but what could they actually do if a Minneapolis situation unfolds in the Bay State? Jennifer Smith breaks down the limits of state power and proposed legislation.

MBTA COMMUNITIES: The MBTA Communities housing law is beginning to produce “real but modest benefits,” according to a new analysis that puts the law’s impacts into the context of the region’s deep housing shortage. Sam Drysdale of the State House News Service has more.

THE T: Both the Red Line and commuter rail struggled mightily this week as the MBTA tried to rebound from a significant winter storm. (The Boston Globe – paywall)

CHALLENGE: A New Bedford native is running against US Rep. Bill Keating. (Cape Cod Times)

ICE: Healey announced plans to bar federal immigration officials from accessing state resources and prohibit them from entering hospital, schools, and hospitals. (WBUR)

RENT CONTROL: new campaign launched in an effort to defeat a statewide rent control ballot measure. (State House News Service – paywall)

CHIPS: Cape Cod Potato Chips is ending production in Massachusetts. (The Boston Globe – paywall)


ADDED FROM WBUR TODAY: 

Cape Cod Potato Chips will no longer be made on Cape, as Hyannis factory set to close


 
 
 
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Published by MassINC



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