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SB 879

SS/SB 879 - The act creates and modifies provisions relating to electric utilities. POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS (Section 67.5360) The act provides that the governing body of any political subdivision shall not approve a plan relating to the development of the political subdivision with a developer whose more than half of the solar panels or the solar panel components are manufactured or sourced by an individual or government identified as a foreign adversary. TAXATION OF SOLAR ENERGY PROJECTS (Sections 137.100, 137.124, 153.030, & 153.034) The act repeals a provision exempting solar energy systems not held for resale from taxation. (Section 137.100) Beginning January 1, 2027, for purposes of assessing all real property, excluding land, or tangible personal property associated with a project that uses solar energy directly to generate electricity and that was built or constructed to sell power, the tax liability actually owed shall be equal to specific amounts, as described in the act, as annually adjusted for inflation. These provisions shall not be construed to affect any existing enhanced enterprise zone agreements or similar tax abatement agreements with state or local officials entered into prior to August 28, 2026. After August 28, 2026, solar energy projects shall not be permissible under enterprise zones or similar tax abatements. Beginning January 1, 2027, for purposes of assessing land that is associated with a solar energy project, the land shall be assessed as commercial property. (Section 137.124) Beginning January 1, 2027, for any public utility that has a solar energy project, such solar energy project shall be assessed using certain methodology for real and personal property as described in the act. (Section 153.030) The real and tangible personal property associated with a project which uses solar energy shall include certain solar equipment as described in the act. (Section 153.034) These provisions are similar to SB 892 (2024), HB 2651 (2024), SB 549 (2023), SB 1014 (2022) and HB 1997 (2022), and provisions in SB 213 (2025), a provision in HCS#2/HBs 440 & 1160 (2025). THE CONSTRUCTION OF SOLAR FARMS REGULATED BY THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION (Section 393.2040) The act provides that these provisions shall apply only to a solar farm that is owned or operated by an electrical corporation under the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission. These provisions shall not apply to solar farms owned or operated by not-for-profit electrical corporations. Prior to the construction of a solar farm in the state, the Commission shall require that each electrical corporation shall submit a certificate of convenience and necessity ("CCN") application to the Commission with a construction plan for the solar farm. The construction plan requirements are described in the act, including boundary requirements between the solar farm and private or public properties, landscaping requirements, noise requirements, sign requirements, and fencing requirements. An applicant shall maintain a solar farm until decommissioning, as described in the act. An owner or operator shall decommission and remove the solar farm when the solar farm is at the end of its useful life, as described in the act. The Commission shall require that, prior to the construction of a solar farm, an owner or operator of the solar farm shall submit to the Commission a preliminary decommissioning plan. Requirements of the plan are described in the act. At least one year prior to the cessation of operation of a solar farm or in the case of a solar farm ceasing operation due to an unexpected event, as described in the act, the owner or operator shall submit a final decommissioning plan, as described in the act. Requirements for the disposition of solar panels are described in the act. An electrical corporation intending to make a material amendment after it has obtained a CCN for the construction of a solar farm shall submit a new application to amend the CCN. The Commission shall require any applicant who is issued a CCN for the construction of a solar farm to obtain liability insurance in an amount sufficient to cover reasonable expected damages which may arise from the construction of the solar farm. An applicant applying for a CCN under the act shall be required to pay a fee as described in the act. For purposes of enforcing compliance with the construction requirements under the act, all owners or operators of solar farms in the state shall be subject to the procedures before the Commission. For any violation, complaints may be submitted to the Commission pursuant to the provisions of current law. On or before January 1, 2027, the Commission shall provide a report about the specifics of solar farms in the state, as described in the act. Beginning August 28, 2026, a solar farm for which certain economic incentive agreements are not in place shall not be eligible for any economic incentives or any tax exemptions. These provisions have an emergency clause. CONDEMNATION OF PROPERTY (Section 523.010) Under the act, the authority of any electrical corporation to condemn property shall not extend to the construction of any structure or facility that uses wind or solar energy to generate or manufacture electricity. The authority of any electrical corporation to condemn property shall extend to acquisition of rights needed to construct, operate, and maintain certain electrical infrastructure, described in the act, needed to collect and deliver solar or wind energy to the distribution or transmission grid. This provision is identical to SB 199 (2025), a provision in SB 214 (2025), SB 1262 (2024), to a provision in SB 805 (2024), a provision in HB 1449 (2024), a provision in SCS/HCS/HB 1746 (2024), provisions in HB 1052 (2023) and substantially similar to a provision in HB 221 (2025), a provision in HCS#2/HBs 440 & 1160 (2025), HB 475 (2025), a provision in SB 139 (2025), HB 1750 (2024), and SB 577 (2023). THE CONSTRUCTION OF SOLAR FARMS REGULATED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES (Section 640.1050) The act provides that these provisions shall apply only to a solar farm that is not owned or operated by an electrical corporation under the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission and on which the construction has not commenced as of December 31, 2026. The Department of Natural Resources shall require an application with a construction plan for a permit for the construction of a solar farm to be obtained from the Department prior to the construction of the solar farm. The construction plan requirements are described in the act, including boundary requirements between the solar farm and private or public properties, landscaping requirements, noise requirements, sign requirements, and fencing requirements. An applicant shall maintain a solar farm until decommissioning, as described in the act. An owner or operator shall decommission and remove the solar farm when the solar farm is at the end of its useful life, as described in the act. Prior to the construction of a solar farm, an owner or operator of the solar farm shall submit a preliminary decommissioning plan to the Department. Requirements of the decommissioning plan are described in the act. At least one year prior to the cessation of operation of a solar farm or in the case of a solar farm ceasing operation due to an unexpected event, as described in the act, the owner or operator shall submit a final decommissioning plan, as described in the act. Requirements for the disposition of solar panels are described in the act. Within 90 days of receiving an application for the construction of a solar farm, the Department shall hold a public hearing before issuing a permit. The Department shall provide notice at least 14 days prior to the public hearing. At the public hearing, an applicant and the Department shall provide certain information in writing, as described in the act. No later than 90 days after the public hearing, the Department shall issue a permit, issue a permit limiting the boundaries of the proposed solar farm, or deny the permit. An applicant that intends to make a material amendment after the permit is issued by the Department shall submit a new application for the permit to the Department. The Department shall require any applicant who is issued a permit for the construction of a solar farm to obtain liability insurance in an amount sufficient to cover reasonable expected damages which may arise from the construction of the solar farm. If an owner or operator of a solar farm that is not an electrical corporation under the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission sells or transfers the solar farm to an entity that is an electrical corporation, the transferee shall certify in writing to the Department that the transferee shall comply with the construction requirements of a solar farm regulated by the Commission. An applicant applying for a permit shall be required to pay a fee as described in the act. On or before January 1, 2027, the Commission shall provide a report about the specifics of solar farms in the state, as described in the act. Beginning August 28, 2026, a solar farm for which certain economic incentive agreements are not in place, shall not be eligible for any economic incentives or any tax exemptions. These provisions have an emergency clause. JULIA SHEVELEVA

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Travis Fitzwater

SB 879 expands dual enrollment to include private and home-schooled students, prohibiting public colleges from charging them tuition and extending grant eligibility.

Bill Placed on Informal Calendar
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Bill Summary · SB 879

Summary — SB 879: Institutions of Higher Education — Dually Enrolled Students — Alterations

Status: Hearing scheduled 3/07 at 9:00 a.m.
Introduced: January 22, 2025
Sponsor(s): Senators Carozza, Corderman, Gallion, Simonaire (et al.)
Effective date in bill text: July 1, 2025

Purpose

SB 879 expands the legal definition of “dually enrolled student” to include students enrolled in nonpublic (private) secondary schools and students receiving home instruction. The change makes those students eligible for existing state supports for dually enrolled students and limits institutional tuition charges for them.

Key provisions

  • Definition change: “Dually enrolled student” is redefined to include a student simultaneously enrolled in:
    • an institution of higher education in Maryland; and
    • a public OR nonpublic secondary school in Maryland, OR a home school in Maryland.
  • Tuition prohibition: A public institution of higher education may not charge tuition to any dually enrolled student (now explicitly including nonpublic and home school students).
  • Local payment obligation (public school students): County boards must pay 75% of the tuition cost charged by a public institution for dually enrolled students who are enrolled in the county’s public schools (existing requirement that continues to apply to public-school students).
    • The bill clarifies that where an agreement predates July 1, 2020, in which institutions charge less than 75%, the county board remains bound by that agreement.
    • Agreements between a public, private, or home school and a public institution may be evaluated and modified every two years.
  • Grants and eligibility: Nonpublic and home school students are made eligible to apply for:
    • Part‑time Grant Program (under §18‑1401) — for undergraduates taking 3–11 semester hours or dually enrolled students; and
    • Early College Access Grant Program (under §18‑14A‑01) — financial assistance targeted to dually enrolled students.
  • Administrative provisions: Grant allocations continue to be administered by the Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC); institutions receiving state funds must provide annual audits of fund use.

Who is affected

  • Nonpublic (private) secondary school students and home‑schooled students seeking dual enrollment with Maryland higher education institutions (newly eligible).
  • Public four‑year institutions, Baltimore City Community College, and local community colleges (potential revenue impacts from tuition prohibition).
  • County boards of education (existing 75% tuition payment rule applies to public-school students; possible ambiguity about responsibility for private/home-schooled students).
  • Maryland Higher Education Commission (administration of expanded eligibility and audits).

Fiscal and operational impact

  • State: Expanding eligibility does not itself require new spending, but awarding grants to additional students would require additional appropriation. MHEC must allocate funds based on enrollment and need; institutions may use up to 10% of Part‑time Grant allocations for dually enrolled students (per existing statute).
  • Higher education revenue: Public institution and community college tuition revenues may decrease because more students are protected from being charged tuition.
  • Local school systems: Local community college revenues may decrease. It is unclear under current law whether a local school board is required to pay tuition costs for nonpublic or home‑schooled dually enrolled students; if so, local expenditures could increase. The fiscal note indicates the bill may impose a mandate on a unit of local government.
  • Uncertainty: Net fiscal effect depends on (a) how many nonpublic/home students take up dual enrollment, (b) whether local boards assume tuition payment responsibility for those students, and (c) future appropriations to MHEC for expanded grant awardees.

Implementation & next steps

  • If enacted as written, the bill’s provisions take effect July 1, 2025.
  • MHEC and affected institutions will need to update eligibility, award guidelines, audit procedures, and any application materials to reflect expanded eligibility. Local boards and institutions should review or renegotiate existing dual‑enrollment agreements (the bill permits a biennial review).

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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