Maine: Michaud

March 31, 2009 - 09:01 pm
NEWS FEED: Bangor Daily News

Delegation wants trucks off local streets

AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine’s elected officials are continuing their campaigns for a federal exemption that would allow heavy tractor-trailers to use Interstate 95 rather than have to drive on back roads and through downtown areas.

Maine’s congressional delegation has been battling unsuccessfully for years to convince their colleagues in Washington, D.C., to allow trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to stay on I-95 north of Augusta. Currently, trucks weighing more than 80,000 pounds must switch to local roads after leaving the Maine Turnpike, which is exempt.

In his latest attempt at an exemption, Rep. Mike Michaud, D-Maine, introduced a bill that would give states the authority to set weight limits in the interstate system in order to make them consistent with surrounding states.

March 18, 2009 - 01:21 pm
NEWS FEED: Turn Maine Blue

Rep. Michaud vows to oppose proposed VA change

I have never served in the military, and only have limited knowledge of how the VA medical system works. For example, I didn't realize that currently when a vet is treated at a VA hospital for something not related to her or his time in the service, the VA bills that person's 3rd party insurance company. And at first blush, this seems like a reasonable method.

The Obama administration is proposing that this billing system be extended to all treatment that a vet receives, and this troubles Rep. Mike Michaud, and he notes in this letter to Eric Shinseki, Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs:

Dear Secretary Shinseki,

With the release of the Administration's first budget request, a new policy proposal has been introduced as a means of collecting revenue for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) through billing of veterans' third-party insurance for the care and treatment of a disability or illness incurred as a result of honorable military service.

March 18, 2009 - 09:42 am
NEWS FEED: Bangor Daily News

Hospitals to receive $373.7M from state

AUGUSTA, Maine — Jobs will be saved, others created and Maine hospitals will be able to expand some facilities as a result of the state sending the first of two payments that will total $373.7 million for past-due bills owed them by the state.

Gov. John Baldacci signed a financial order Tuesday in the Hall of Flags at the State House to applause from lawmakers and hospital officials that will make $163 million in state and federal funds available within weeks to hospitals as a result of the stimulus package.

“This is a good day,” he said in an interview. “This fulfills a promise made to the hospitals to pay them what is owed and help save jobs and create jobs.

March 2, 2009 - 08:31 pm
NEWS FEED: Bangor Daily News

New U.S. attorney mulled

BANGOR, Maine — U.S. Reps. Mike Michaud and Chellie Pingree have announced the formation of a five-member committee that will assist and advise them on their recommendation to President Obama on the appointment of the next U.S. attorney in Maine.

Michaud and Pingree are looking for the committee to complete its work by the end of March, according to a joint press release issued Friday.

The members of the advisory committee, all lawyers, are: Leigh Stephens McCarthy of Bangor; Donald Zillman, president of the University of Maine at Presque Isle; Jeff Thaler of Portland; and Virginia Davis and Walter McKee, both of Augusta.

February 27, 2009 - 10:29 pm
NEWS FEED: MainePolitics.net

Michaud Goes International

Congressman Mike Michaud is getting some press both at home and abroad for his letter to Obama on how to change America's trade policies. Here's an article in Portuguese from a Brazilian TV Network (which is, interestingly, the most-viewed network in the Western Hemisphere).

Michaud's quote run through Google Translator:

"The correction of our mistakes of the past in trade policy and globalization and the search for a new path can help our nation to confront the major economic challenges," said Congressman Mike Michaud, one of the founders of the Working Group on Trade of the House of Representatives.

The Spanish version of the article has been published by dozens of media outlets throughout South and Central America.

February 25, 2009 - 12:00 am
NEWS FEED: Bangor Daily News

Maine delegation lauds president’s ambitious goals

WASHINGTON — During a speech in which Republican senators often remained seated while Democrats applauded, Maine Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe stood up when President Obama referred to the passage of a $787 billion stimulus package. They and Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Penn., were the only GOP senators to vote for the bill when it passed the Senate.

After the president’s speech Tuesday night, Snowe released a statement lauding Obama’s “aggressive and ambitious agenda,” saying bipartisan cooperation will prove even more important now given the challenges facing the nation.

Snowe singled out Obama’s plan to reform the American health care system, the details of which the president said he would outline as soon as next week, as a good idea to address a “mounting crisis” affecting more than 47 million uninsured Americans.

February 15, 2009 - 08:30 pm
NEWS FEED: Bangor Daily News

Delegation gets behind stimulus bill

AUGUSTA, Maine — All four members of Maine’s congressional delegation voted for the $787.2 billion stimulus package, but all say it is not enough to solve the nation’s economic crisis and a lot of work remains.

“This fiscal stimulus cannot stand on its own,” Sen. Olympia Snowe said in an interview. “It really needs to go hand in glove with lending. We have got to get the credit markets going.”

Snowe, a Republican, said that during the final stimulus package negotiations last week she had stressed to other senators that the measure was just one part of what is needed to get the nation’s economy going again.

February 11, 2009 - 10:00 pm
NEWS FEED: Turn Maine Blue

TPM: Collins stripped whistleblower provision from the stimulus bill

There are more than a few items in the stimulus bill agreed to by the House and Senate this afternoon that really do not have much to do with job creation or the economy.

But with any bill this size, or large public outlays of any kind, the need for oversight is paramount. And so it seems very odd that Sen. Susan Collins would have worked to - well, read the report from TPM yourself:

The House stimulus bill contained a provision designed to protect federal whistleblowers. Currently, those protections are shockingly weak. According to the Project On Government Oversight, whistleblowers who are fired or demoted can file a complaint with a government board -- but over the last eight years, that board has ruled in favor of whistleblowers only twice in 55 cases.