Avangrid Network, Inc. v. Secretary of State

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJune 29, 2020
DocketCUMcv-20-206
StatusUnpublished

This text of Avangrid Network, Inc. v. Secretary of State (Avangrid Network, Inc. v. Secretary of State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avangrid Network, Inc. v. Secretary of State, (Me. Super. Ct. 2020).

Opinion

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STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-20-206

AV AN GRID NETWORKS INC., et al.,

Plaintiffs V. ORDER

SECRETARY OF STATE, et al.,

Defendants

Before the court is an action by plaintiff Avangrid Networks Inc. to enjoin the Secretary of

State from placing a citizen initiative to reject the New England Clean Energy Connect

Transmission Project on the November 3, 2020 ballot.

Avangrid is joined in its effort to enjoin the initiative by plaintiff-intervenors Maine State

Chamber of Commerce (the "Chamber") and Industrial Energy Consumer Group (!ECG).

Plaintiffs argue that the initiative should be excluded from the ballot because it is not a valid

exercise of legislative authority and because, if enacted, it would violate the separation of powers

and the special legislation clauses of the Maine Constitution.

The remaining parties to this action, in addition to the Secretary, are defendant-intervenors

Nextera Energy Resources LLC, Mainers for Local Power, and nine Maine citizens. 1

The Secretary agrees with plaintiffs that the initiative is not a permissible exercise of

legislative power and would, if enacted, violate the separation of powers. The Secretary also

1 The nine citizens all state that they wish to vote for the citizen initiative at the November election. The same attorneys represent both the nine citizens and Mainers for Local Power (collectively referred to in this order as "MLP'). (

agrees that the issue of whether the initiative is a permissible exercise of legislative power is ripe

for adjudication. However, the Secretary opposes plaintiffs' request for injunctive relief excluding

the proposed initiative from the ballot.

Defendant-intervenors MLP and Nextera argue that, once the requisite signatures have

been obtained, the Maine Constitution requires that the initiative be submitted to the voters and

that plaintiffs' constitutional challenges to the proposed initiative legislation are not ripe for

judicial review. 2 If the court reaches the merits, MLP argues that all of the plaintiffs' challenges

to the validity of the proposed legislation should be rejected.

With the agreement of the parties, the hearing on Avangrid's motion for a preliminary

injunction was consolidated with the trial on the merits. The parties agree that the relevant facts

are those set forth below with respect to the project, the citizen initiative, and the prior proceedings

before the Public Utilities Commission and the Law Comi. Finally, the parties also agree that there

are no disputed factual issues and that all of the issues before the court are questions of law.

The availability of pre-election review and the issue of ripeness have been briefed by all

parties, and MLP has also filed a motion to dismiss on those issues. Since the court would dismiss

if pre-election review were not available or the issues were not ripe regardless of whether a motion

had been filed, it will not separately consider MLP's motion to dismiss.

2 In their briefs MLP and Nextera also argued in the alternative that plaintiffs' challenge is untimely because judicial review would not be completed within 100 days of the filing of the petitions. See Me. Const. Art. IV, Pt. 3 § 22. However, that deadline applies to a determination of the validity of the written petitions - not to the validity of the proposed initiative legislation. MLP and Nextera did not pursue their untimeliness defense at the oral argument held in this case on June 24, 2020.

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The Project

The New England Clean Energy Connect Transmission Project is a proposal to run a 145.3­

mile transmission line from the Maine-Quebec border in Beattie Township through western Maine

to a converter station in Lewiston in order to transmit 1,200 megawatts of hydroelectric power

from Quebec to Massachusetts. Avangrid is the parent company of Central Maine Power (CMP)

and the developer of the project.

The construction of the project is subject to approvals from a number of state and federal

agencies and municipal governments. The regulatory approval at issue in this proceeding is a

Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity issued by Maine's Public Utilities Commission

(PUC) and affirmed by the Law Court. Nextera Energy Resources, LLC v. Maine Public Utilities

Commission, 2020 ME 34. The Law Court's opinion recites that the proceedings before the PUC

took 19 months involving more than 20 intervenors, three public witness hearings, and six

evidentiary hearings. 2020 ME 34 ~~ 3, 6-7.

In its 100-page order issued May 3, 2019 in Docket No. 2017-00232 the PUC approved

CMP's petition for a certificate of public convenience and necessity, concluding that that the

Project met the statutory public need standard and that it was in the public interest. 2020 ME 34 ~

10. 3

Nextera, which had intervened in the PUC proceeding, appealed the PUC order to the Law

Court, which affirmed the PUC's decision on March 17, 2020. The Law Court held that the PUC

had reasonably interpreted the public need standard under 35-A M.R.S. § 3132 in granting the

certificate of public need. 2020 ME 34 ~ 22-27. It concluded that the PUC had followed the proper

3 The Commission also approved a stipulation reached by ce1tain of the patties requiring the project to

provide certain benefits to Maine ratepayers and to the State as a condition of approval. Id.; see 2020 ME 3418. A copy of the PUC order is annexed to Avangrid's complaint.

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procedure, that there was sufficient evidence in the record to support its findings, and that it had

reasonably interpreted the relevant statuto1y mandates in arriving at its decision to grant the

certificate of public convenience and necessity. Id ,i 43.

The Citizen Initiative

Subsequent to the PU C's approval of the project, opponents of the project commenced a

citizen initiative to overturn the PUC decision. The initiative proposed the adoption of a legislative

resolve directing the PUC to amend its May 3, 2019 order, to find instead that the project was not

in the public interest and that there was not a public need for the project, and to deny the requested

certificate of public convenience and necessity. The full text of the proposed resolve is as follows:

Sec. 1. Amend order. Resolved: That within 30 days of the effective date of this resolve and pursuant to its authority under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 35-A section 1321, the Public Utilities Commission shall amend "Order Granting Public Convenience and Necessity and Approving Stipulation," entered by the Public Utilities Commission on May 3, 2019 in Docket No. 2017-00232 for the New England Clean Energy Connect transmission project, refetTed to in this resolve as "the NECEC transmission project." The amended order must find that the construction and operation of the NECEC transmission project are not in the public interest and that there is not a public need for the NECEC transmission project. There not being a public need, the amended order must deny the request for a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the NECEC transmission project.

On February 3, 2020 proponents of the initiative filed petitions bearing 82,449 signatures.

The subsequent procedural history of the initiative is set forth in the Law Court's opinion in Reed

v. Secretary a/State, 2020 ME 57. On March 4, 2020, the Secretary invalidated 12,735 signatures

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