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Bill

S 8114

Relates to the siting of new electric transmission lines

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Jeremy Cooney

S 8114 would regulate the siting and permitting of new electric transmission lines, shaping review timelines, approvals, and public engagement for utilities and communities.

REFERRED TO ENERGY AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS
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Bill Summary · S 8114

Summary of S. 8114 — Relates to the siting of new electric transmission lines

Overview
- Bill Number: S 8114
- Title: Relates to the siting of new electric transmission lines
- Status: Referred to Energy and Telecommunications
- Introduced: May 15, 2025
- Sponsor: Jeremy Cooney (primary)

What this bill is about
- Based on the title and the metadata provided, S 8114 aims to address the siting (location and permitting) of new electric transmission lines. The exact statutory text is not included in the information provided, so specific provisions, standards, and processes are not yet known.

Purpose and potential scope
- The bill is likely intended to govern how and where new transmission lines are planned, reviewed, and approved within the state. Typical areas such legislation covers include siting criteria, permitting timetables, environmental review requirements, and coordination among state agencies, local governments, utilities, and stakeholders. The precise scope (e.g., whether it expands or restricts state authority, modifies environmental review standards, or changes public engagement requirements) cannot be confirmed without the bill’s text.

Key provisions (as of available information)
- Not specified in the provided text. The following are common components in siting-related bills and are possible subjects of S 8114, but should be verified against the actual bill:
- Siting criteria and approval standards for proposed transmission lines
- Permitting timelines and milestones
- Requirements for public input and community engagement
- Environmental review processes and coordination with relevant agencies
- Coordination with regional transmission organizations or independent system operators
- Considerations about local land use, rights-of-way, and potential environmental or socio-economic impacts
- Provisions affecting timelines, appeals, or scope of review

Potential impact
- If enacted, the bill could affect:
- Utilities and developers by altering permitting processes, timelines, or siting criteria
- State and local agencies in terms of review workload and coordination requirements
- Local communities and landowners through public engagement procedures and siting decisions
- Overall timing and cost of new transmission projects, with implications for grid reliability and future energy infrastructure

Affected parties
- Electric utilities and transmission developers
- State agencies and regulatory bodies
- Local governments and planning authorities
- Landowners and affected communities
- Environmental and advocacy groups
- Consumers and businesses relying on grid reliability

Procedural notes and next steps
- Current status shows the bill has been referred to the Energy and Telecommunications committee with a May 15, 2025 introduction date (listed twice in the actions provided).
- To understand the exact provisions, timeline, and potential impacts, review the official bill text and any committee amendments once available. Check for hearings, fiscal notes, and sponsor statements for additional context.

If you’d like, I can tailor this summary further once the bill’s text or committee memos are released.

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

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