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  • 28 Feb 2014 8:45 AM | Deleted user

    State of Maine Converts Capitol Complex to Natural Gas

    AUGUSTA – Today the Bureau of General Services, a part of the Department of Administrative and Financial Services (DAFS), announced that they have completed the conversion of the Capitol complex heating system to burn natural gas.

    “We are pleased to have brought the Statehouse, the Cross Office Building and the Cultural Building all online with natural gas,” said DAFS Commissioner H. Sawin Millett, Jr. “The conversion of state-owned facilities has been a major initiative of this administration and will save the taxpayers of Maine at least $708,000 in FY 2015 alone.”

    The Capitol complex is the second state-owned facility to convert to natural gas this month, joining the Department of Health and Human Services headquarters located at 221 State Street in Augusta. The East Campus (former AMHI) powerhouse and Riverview Psychiatric facilities are scheduled to come online with natural gas in early March. Those conversions will complete phase one of the State’s high-use Augusta area facilities.

    “Under the LePage Administration, Maine has moved forward ambitiously with common-sense energy initiatives that reduce total costs for households and businesses alike” said Patrick Woodcock, Director of the Governor’s Energy Office. “The conversion of state office facilities in the Augusta area has been a catalyst for natural gas expansion in the Kennebec River Valley that will save millions in heating costs for homes and employers. We must build on this conversion and move to continue to reduce energy costs across the State of Maine with modern and affordable heating options.”

    Last fall the State awarded the natural gas distribution services for 30 state-owned facilities in the Augusta area. Maine Natural Gas received 19 awards for distribution services, including the four high-use facilities currently being converted. Summit Natural Gas was awarded 11 facilities. Separate contracts were also awarded for boiler conversions and natural gas supply. DAFS expects to have all facilities online with natural gas prior to the next heating season.

     

  • 28 Feb 2014 8:44 AM | Deleted user

    healthy community coalition launches worksite award program

     

    Work Healthy! is a free program that helps businesses promote health and qualifies them to receive awards.

     

    FARMINGTON - The Healthy Community Coalition (HCC) of Greater Franklin County would like to introduce you to Work Healthy!, a free program that businesses and organizations can win awards and media recognition for having and promoting healthy worksite policies and practices. Take steps to make your workplace healthier and you may qualify to win a treadmill!

     

    The HCC Workplace Award recognizes businesses and organizations in Greater Franklin County that have placed a high priority on promoting good health for their employees. By supporting tobacco-free lifestyles, encouraging physical activity, and/or promoting healthy eating, businesses and organizations may realize the benefits of a healthier workforce including reduced absenteeism, reduced disability costs, reduced health care costs, and improved productivity.

     

    Participation is easy, engages staff, and has many benefits. You may already qualify if your organization has a written tobacco–free and substance abuse policy, offers healthy food choices, or promotes health and wellness in a variety of ways. Healthy Community Coalition staff can provide sample policies and technical assistance to help you qualify for an award.

     

    For more information on Work Healthy! and how it can benefit your business, contact Heather Fellman at (207) 779-2934 or hfellman@fchn.org.

     

    Healthy Community Coalition (HCC) is an affiliate of Franklin Community Health Network with a mission to measurably improve the health and well-being of all people in Franklin County and neighboring towns using a coordinated approach of education, health promotion and outreach.

  • 28 Feb 2014 8:43 AM | Deleted user

    Prescription Drug Lock Box now available for Franklin County Residents

     

    Do you have unused prescription medications? Do you know how to get rid of them properly and safely? Healthy Community Coalition (HCC) is pleased to announce a safe, effective and sustainable way to dispose of unwanted or expired household prescription, over-the-counter, and other unused medicines.

    Through support from Wal-Mart, HCC purchased a prescription drug lock box to be secured at the Farmington Police Department. The police department, located at 116 Franklin Avenue in Farmington, can now collect unwanted or expired household medicines and prescription medications with a new Prescription Drug Lock Box during regular business hours, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. As part of a community drug collection process, this unit will provide a safe and easy way for Franklin County residents to dispose of their unwanted medications year-round.

     

    In addition, on April 26 the Farmington Police Department will take part in National Drug Take Back Day. All local police departments will be participating in the drug collection.

     

    “4.6% of 9th graders and 6.3% of 12th graders in the Western District have reported to have taken a prescription drug without a doctor’s prescription in the past 30 days,” stated Nicole Ditata, HCC’s Healthy Maine Partnership director. “There are serious health risks related to the abuse of prescription drugs and can even result in death if mixed with other substances. If the community actively disposes of prescription drugs when they are no longer needed or have expired, it can help reduce the amount of teen use that may occur.”

     

    Ditata convenes a local Substance Abuse Prevention Task Force that works to educate and help provide assistance to the community about how to properly dispose of medications. She noted parents can help prevent prescription drug abuse by youth in their home by incorporating the following tips: monitor the quantities and control the access of your prescription medications; be a good role model; properly conceal and dispose; and set clear rules about not sharing your or other’s medicines.

     

    For more information about how to properly dispose of unwanted medications, how the Prescription Drug Lock Box works, or other questions contact Christine Bruen at 779-2927 or cbruen@fchn.org.

     

  • 28 Feb 2014 8:42 AM | Deleted user

    Statement of Governor on U.S. Department of Labor Review  

    Report confirms real concerns with unemployment system appeals process

    AUGUSTA – Governor Paul R. LePage released the following statement with regard to the U.S. Department of Labor’s review of the unemployment appeals process in the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation, part of the Maine Department of Labor, and the Unemployment Insurance Commission (UIC), which is an independent state agency appointed by and reporting to the governor:

    “The results of the review are no surprise,” said Governor Paul R. LePage. “The USDOL confirmed that there are legitimate concerns about the appeals hearings, which echoes the findings in the Blue Ribbon Commission I appointed. The review found that Maine's appeals system has not been consistent in applying the law.

    “It is also no surprise that the Obama Administration’s Department of Labor is speculating my administration somehow tried to influence the hearings process,” said the Governor. “This issue has been politically motivated from the start, starting with Democratic activists in Maine and reaching all the way to the White House. The USDOL review found no evidence of wrong-doing, but uses conjecture and supposition to come to a conclusion that has no basis in fact. The focus of my administration is to ensure the appeals process is fair and consistent for both Maine employees and employers.”

  • 28 Feb 2014 8:41 AM | Deleted user

    SBA to Provide Low-Interest Loans to Businesses Affected by December Ice Storm 

    AUGUSTA – Governor Paul R. LePage has been informed that the Small Business Administration has issued an Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) declaration for the State of Maine, which will be used to address business losses suffered during December’s ice storm. 

    “We’re thankful for the prompt response by the SBA,” Governor LePage said. “For those businesses that lost significant revenue during the Christmas season, this will be a resource for low-interest loans to supplement their cash flow.”

    The SBA declaration is specifically issued for Androscoggin, Cumberland, Hancock, Kennebec and Waldo Counties. However, because SBA programs also cover contiguous counties, the disaster loans will also be available in Franklin, Knox, Lincoln, Oxford, Penobscot, Sagadahoc, Somerset, Washington and York Counties.

    The Governor said information will be forthcoming from the SBA shortly on how businesses and nonprofit organizations affected by the ice storm can apply for a low-interest loan. 

    The Governor’s request to the SBA was made on Friday, February 21. A decision on a request for FEMA disaster assistance, also made on the February 21, is likely to take several weeks.

    Those seeking a loan application should go to: www.sba.gov/disaster

  • 26 Feb 2014 9:28 AM | Deleted user

    Most Vulnerable Will Keep Paying the Price for Medicaid Expansion

    Difficult decisions must be made in Augusta.  Tough choices are needed to ensure that state government can live within its means and that we can support and care for those who need us most.

    Hello, this is Maine Department of Health and Human Services Commissioner Mary Mayhew.

    Currently the Legislature is debating whether to add another 100,000 people to MaineCare, the state’s tax-payer funded healthcare program, at a cost of more than $800 million over the next ten years.

    At the same time, there are thousands of elderly and disabled on waitlists for services to help support them in their homes and in their communities.  

    Most of us know someone in this situation.  It’s an 80 year old mother who is struggling to care for her 50 year old son with Down syndrome.    She needs help today and is worried who will care for her son when she is no longer around.  

    It’s the parents of an autistic child who should be celebrating the accomplishment of their child graduating high school. But instead, they are panicked because their child is being placed on an adult waitlist for critical support services.   Their child cannot be home alone.  

    Maine is one of the oldest states in the country and the demands for services will only be increasing in the years to come.   Everyone is worried about how best to care for an elderly parent, grandmother, aunt, or uncle.  

    These are real people – the elderly and developmentally disabled – and far too many of them are waiting for services.    The state needs more than $45 million to cover the services for these individuals.    

    There are tough decisions that must be made in Augusta.   We just finished paying off a $750 million debt owed to Maine hospitals because of the unbudgeted costs of the last expansion.   We cannot repeat history and expect a different outcome. 

    Democrats say that adding 100,000 people to Medicaid is somehow free, but we all know better.  Medicaid has grown by more than $1 billion over the last ten years because of previous expansions and the reality of healthcare cost increases.  It is nonsensical to believe that after years of financial crisis in Medicaid that the answer today is to add another 100,000 people to the program.    Don’t be fooled by efforts to combine expansion with a fancy legislative proposal to manage care in Medicaid.  The miraculous savings being advertised are not real and are only thinly veiled efforts to get support for a massive expansion of Medicaid.

    We do not live in a world of unlimited resources.

    If the state expands Medicaid our elderly and disabled will wait longer for services.  That is a price we cannot afford to pay.

    Efforts to contain spending in the Medicaid program should be focused on meeting the needs of our most vulnerable and addressing other critical needs in state government like pay for state employees whose salaries have been frozen for years, investments in career centers to help people find jobs, or really funding education or helping to preserve important industries in Maine like lobstering, natural resources, and farming. 

    Government cannot be all things to all people and we must put our most vulnerable citizens’ needs first and ensure that state government is effectively prioritizing our limited resources in the best interests of the future of this state.

    Thank you.

  • 25 Feb 2014 10:41 AM | Deleted user

    Maine Agencies Cannibalized by Welfare Spending

    Medicaid will cost Maine $2.2 billion over next two yearsundefinedeven without expansion

    AUGUSTA – As liberals continue to push for a massive expansion of welfare, Governor Paul R. LePage is reminding Mainers how Medicaid spending is already crowding out revenue for all other state agencies. (For details, click link above: "Medicaid Consumes General Fund.")

    Medicaid expansion threatens programs, positions and services in all state departments. During the past three years, state government has eliminated and reduced funding in every state agency to pay for welfare costs. As Medicaid spending continues to consume the General Fund, there is less and less revenue for education, law enforcement, economic development and programs to protect our natural resources.

    “Because Maine already expanded welfare a decade ago, Medicaid is now cannibalizing funding from all other state agencies,” said Governor LePage. “That means the state cannot fully pay its 55 percent share of local education costs. It cannot hire more Maine State Troopers or repair National Guard facilities. The state cannot adequately promote fishing and hunting programs or conduct research on our fisheries. It cannot expand job-training opportunities or properly fund programs for environmental emergencies. Everything the State of Maine does is adversely impacted by Medicaid spending. Now liberals want to expand welfare again.”

    In the 13 years since Maine expanded welfare, Medicaid enrollment has more than doubled, and its cost has grown by $1.3 billion. Medicaid now takes 25 percent of all General Fund revenue. Even without welfare expansion, more than $2 billion will be spent on Maine’s Medicaid program over the next two years, totaling more than 35 percent of the General Fund.

    If liberals succeed in expanding welfare again, Medicaid is expected to devour 45 percent of General Fund revenue.

    Reduced federal money has forced Maine to spend a larger share of the General Fund on welfare. In fact, the drop in the Federal Matching Fund Rate (FMAP) declined from 74.73 percent in 2010 to 61.55 percent in 2014, which created $210 million in additional state expenses.  

    The State of Maine Medicaid Expansion Feasibility Study estimates expansion will cost the State $807 million over 10 years.

    “We simply cannot keep throwing money at an inadequate welfare program. The state is not meeting the health care needs of vulnerable Mainers, and adding more people to the welfare rolls will only exacerbate the problem,” Governor LePage said. “Expanding welfare a decade did not increase access or improve the quality of care, nor did it help uninsured Mainers. Now it is threatening all of the other programs and services Mainers expect from their state government.”

    The Governor vetoed last session two Democratic-led Medicaid Expansion bills, citing the financial burden expanding would place on Maine taxpayers.

    “Our state is facing a fiscal crisis, and we need to examine our spending practices, evaluate the delivery of services and gain control of our welfare system,” said Governor LePage. “Maine’s economic security and future is at stake, and we must make hard choices. My challenge as Governor and our challenge as a state is to find ways to help Maine families prosper, improve the business climate, foster better educational opportunities while still protecting those most in need with limited resources. We cannot do that while Medicaid is consuming an inordinate amount of our finite financial resources.”

     

  • 19 Feb 2014 3:41 PM | Deleted user

    USA Today: Governor LePage’s tax cuts are working for low-income Mainers

    Portland’s “rich” pay higher share of taxes; low-income families pay no income tax

    AUGUSTA –A report in USA Today that compares tax burdens nationwide confirms that Governor Paul R. LePage’s income tax cut has worked to reduce the tax burden on Maine’s low-income families. See story here.

    The Governor passed the largest tax cut Maine history, reducing the income tax rate from 8.5% to 7.95%. Two-thirds of Maine taxpayers benefited from income tax relief, and 70,000 low-income Mainers no longer pay income tax.

    “Maine liberals falsely label this historic tax relief as ‘tax cuts for the rich’,” Governor LePage said. “But, as this report points out, the rich in Portlandundefinedthe liberals’ flagship cityundefinedpay more than their fair share, while low-income Mainers have enjoyed tax relief because of our income tax cut."

    The story, “Top 10 Cities with the Highest Tax Rates,” which was posted on Monday, Feb. 17, states:

    Taxes in Portland are actually quite favorable to lower-income residents. A family of three earning $25,000 had no income tax burden and paid just $568 in the state sales taxes.

    At the other end of the spectrum, however, wealthier families faced especially high tax burdens. A hypothetical family earning $150,000 spent $22,463, or 15%, of their income on state and local taxes.

    In 2011, Governor Paul LePage lowered the state's' highest income tax rate and eliminated state income taxes for many low-income Mainers.

    The story is based on a report released by the Office of Revenue Analysis of the government of the District of Columbia. The report reviewed the property, sales, auto and income taxes for families at various income levels in the largest city within each state. The story notes that the property tax burden is high in Portland, a city where local budgets are controlled by liberals.

  • 19 Feb 2014 3:40 PM | Deleted user

    Governor LePage Recognizes Military Veterans Now Serving as Legislators and Staff

    AUGUSTA – Governor Paul R. LePage, Brigadier General James D. Campbell, The Adjutant General, and Peter Ogden, director of Maine Veterans Services, today recognized legislators and staff who served honorably during four conflicts.

    The members recognized served during the Korean, Vietnam, Cold War and Persian Gulf Wars. The award ceremony was a part of the “Honoring a Veteran” program, which has previously recognized thousands of Maine veterans who served from World War II to Afghanistan.

    The State of Maine established the program to recognize a veteran’s honorable service during a wartime era with wartime certificate or in peacetime with a general service certificate.

    “I want to thank these veterans for their continued service to their country and state,” the Governor said. “One of my favorite things to do as Governor is to thank veterans for their service and let them know that the Maine citizens are grateful for their sacrifice. Maine is proud that 140,000 veterans call this state home.”

    The Governor and General Campbell delivered remarks and handed out certificates to 20 of the veterans who were able to attend the service.

    We must honor all who serve. And we must teach our young people the value of freedom,” said Governor LePage. “We are a free people because of the bravery and dedicated service our military members give to our great nation. Not only do they sacrifice much, but their families do as well.”

    During the ceremony, the Governor also recognized the uniformed military members present. “Maine continues to have a large number of military members serving,” Governor LePage said. “I salute them for their dedication to duty and our country.”

    Veterans who were recognized include:

    Thomas R.W. Longstaff

    Madonna M. Soctomah

    Bernard L.A. Ayotte

    Joseph E. Brooks

    Brigadier General James D. Campbell

    Richard H. Campbell

    H. David Cotta

    Paul T. Davis Sr.

    Peter Doak

    Larry C. Dunphy

    Paul E. Gilbert

    Roger A. Jackson

    Peter B. Johnson

    Dennis  L. Keschel

    Michel A. Lajoie

    Paul D. McGowan

    Stephen W. Moriarty

    John E. Morris

    Edward "Ted" W. Potter

    Charles R. Priest

    Robert J. Saucier

    Thomas B. Saviello

    John C. Schneck

    Charles K. Theriault

    Raymond A. Wallace

    Windol C. Weaver

    Rodney L. Whittemore

    Tom J. Winsor

    Stephen J. Wood

    Chandler E. Woodcock

    Edward M. Youngblood

    Henry John Bear

    James A. Cyr

    Michael G. Devin

    Brian M. Duprey

    Kenneth W. Fredette

    Lance E. Harvell

    David D. Johnson

    Jonathan L. Kinney

    John  L. Tuttle Jr.

    Jarrod S. Crockett

    Corey S. Wilson

  • 19 Feb 2014 10:57 AM | Deleted user

    Medicaid Spending is Consuming the General Fund

    Medicaid spending from Maine’s last expansion of welfare is already crowding out revenue for all other state agencies. Now liberals want to expand welfare again. This will be disastrous for state government.

     Hello, this is Governor Paul LePage.

    Liberals say that expanding Medicaid is free. They say the federal government will foot the bill. They don’t tell you it would cost Maine taxpayers millions of dollars. On top of that, DHHS would have to hire 90 to 100 new employees to administer the 100,000 people that will join Maine’s welfare rolls.

    Folks, nothing is free. The federal government will not pay for all these new state employees. It will not pay for all other administrative costs. This will impact every agency in state government.

    We’ve been down this road before. Maine already expanded welfare. Medicaid enrollment more than doubled. Its cost has grown by 1.3 billion dollars. It racked up a welfare debt of 750 million dollars to our hospitals.

    Reduced federal money has forced Maine to spend an additional 210 million dollars between 2010 and 2014.

    Medicaid now consumes 25 percent of all General Fund revenue. If liberals succeed in expanding welfare again, Medicaid will devour 45 percent of the General Fund.

    State government has already eliminated or reduced funding for education, law enforcement, economic development and protection of our natural resources. Quite simply, Medicaid is cannibalizing revenue from all other state agencies.

    That means the state cannot fully pay its 55 percent share of local education costs. It cannot hire more Maine State Troopers or repair National Guard facilities. The state cannot adequately promote fishing and hunting programs or conduct scientific marine research on Maine’s fisheries.

    The state cannot expand job-training opportunities or properly fund programs for environmental emergencies. Everything the State of Maine does is adversely impacted by Medicaid spending. Now liberals want to expand welfare again.

    Expanding welfare a decade did not increase access or improve the quality of care. It did not help uninsured Mainers. Thousands of elderly and disabled are still on waiting lists.

    We must help Maine families prosper, improve the business climate and protect our most vulnerable Mainers. We cannot do that while Medicaid is eating up our limited financial resources.

    I ask you: “What is different this time around?”

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