WeVote

Bill

Bill

SB 950

SB 950 - This act modifies several provisions relating to taxation. INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX For all tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2027, this act reduces the top rate of tax by 0.17%. Such reduction in the top rate of tax shall only occur if one or more institutions is subject to the tax on the endowments of higher education institutions imposed under this act. (Section 143.011) HIGHER EDUCATION ENDOWMENT TAX For all tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2027, this act imposes a tax on the endowments of qualifying institutions of higher education at a rate of 1.9% of the aggregate fair market value of the assets of such endowments. The tax shall apply to the endowments, as defined in the act, of higher education institutions that 1) are affiliated with, or provide medical faculty to, any abortion facility, 2) offer specific medical residencies or fellowships that offer training in performing or inducing abortions, or 3) support in any manner any abortion facility where abortions are performed or induced when not necessary to save the life of the mother. Any institution that becomes a qualifying institution of higher education on or after January 1, 2027, shall remain subject to the tax imposed by the act regardless of whether such institution no longer meets the definition of qualifying institution of higher education as defined in the act. All revenues generated by the endowment tax shall be deposited in the General Revenue Fund. (Section 146.200) This act is identical to HB 3444 (2026), SB 27 (2025), SB 1143 (2024), HB 2114 (2024), SB 290 (2023), SB 892 (2022), HB 1874 (2022), SB 451 (2021), and HB 302 (2021), and is substantially similar to HB 1332 (2023), SCS/SB 574 (2020), and SCS/SB 188 (2019). JOSH NORBERG

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Mike Moon

Authorizes new natural gas generation in Maryland until 50% of energy comes from renewables (incl. nuclear); after that, MEA coordinates a phase-down as renewables rise.

Second Read and Referred S General Laws Committee
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 950

SB 950 — Natural Gas Generating Facilities — Authorization (Maryland, 2025)

Status & Key Dates
- Bill number: SB 950
- Introduced: January 28, 2025
- Committee: Education, Energy, and the Environment (hearing scheduled 3/06 at 1:00 p.m.)
- Effective date (if enacted): October 1, 2025
- Companion/related bill: HB 1217 (Delegate Buckel, et al.)
- DLS Fiscal Note published (first reader)

Purpose / Intent
- To explicitly authorize the construction, permitting, and operation of natural gas–fired electricity generating facilities in Maryland until the State meets a specified clean-energy threshold (50% of the State’s energy needs met from renewable energy resources, including nuclear energy).
- To require a coordinated phase-down of natural gas generation once that 50% threshold is achieved.

Major Provisions
- Adds a new section (Art. — Public Utilities §7‑218) that:
- Authorizes natural gas generating facilities to be constructed, permitted, and operated in Maryland notwithstanding other law, until the State reaches 50% of its energy needs from renewable resources (including nuclear).
- Requires any person constructing such a facility to obtain either:
- A Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCN) under §7‑207, or
- Commission approval under §7‑207.1.
- Directs the Maryland Energy Administration (MEA), once the 50% threshold is met, to work with owners/operators of natural gas generators to decrease energy production from natural gas “at the same rate” that energy from renewables (including nuclear) increases.

Fiscal and Administrative Impact
- Department of Legislative Services estimates a one‑time increase in MEA special fund expenditures of up to $150,000 for consultant support (as early as FY 2026) to assist MEA in preparing to coordinate the phase‑down.
- Otherwise, the bill is not expected to materially affect State or local finances or operations. Small business impacts are minimal per the fiscal note.

Key Uncertainties and Context
- Measurement/timing uncertainty: DLS notes it is unclear when the 50% threshold would be reached because Maryland imports a substantial share of its electricity. In‑state nuclear + renewable generation was about 29% of electricity used in Maryland in 2022 after adjusting for imports, though in‑state generation composition can differ from electricity consumed in‑state.
- Interaction with existing law: The PSC retains authority over CPCNs and will still evaluate GHG impacts and consistency with climate commitments during CPCN review. The bill’s “notwithstanding” language may alter how other statutory restrictions are applied to new gas projects.
- Overlaps with Maryland climate policy (e.g., Climate Solutions Now Act, RGGI) — the bill could affect emissions trajectories and planning, depending on the pace of renewable and nuclear deployment.

Who is affected
- Natural gas power plant developers and owners/operators, the Public Service Commission (regulatory reviews), MEA (implementation/coordinating role), electricity markets, and potentially emissions/regulatory programs and ratepayers depending on deployment and retirement choices.

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

Sign in to ask a question.