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H 3446

Use of state park facilities

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Tommy Pope and 1 co-sponsor

The bill increases municipal oversight of gas work by requiring detailed project info, prompt notice, and formal municipal review of repair plans to protect streets and trees.

Referred to Committee on Medical, Military, Public and Municipal Affairs
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Bill Summary · H 3446

Summary: H.3446 — An Act relative to municipal voices in gas utility work

Purpose and core intent

H.3446 seeks to increase municipal oversight and coordination with gas utilities when work is conducted on public streets and other public ways. The bill would expand the information municipalities can request, require prompt notification of planned gas work to affected communities, and strengthen protections for street infrastructure and trees. It also formalizes a process for municipalities to comment on gas plan submissions and for the Department to enforce compliance.

Key provisions

1) Amendments to Chapter 164, Section 70 (municipal consent and restoration)
- Gas companies may dig up and open streets only with written consent of the city/town. The consent does not waive liability for damages.
- Streets must be restored to “as good repair” as before, with failure to do so potentially constituting a nuisance.
- Expanded definition of damage, including:
- Damage to trees on public property if gas leaks reach the critical root zone (defined as 1 foot radius per inch of tree diameter, at 4.5 feet above ground).
- Damage arising from construction during repair or replacement of gas infrastructure.
- Condition of consent: municipalities may require detailed information within 30 days of request, including:
- Project scope by street segment; age/condition of pipelines; material, pressure, leaks, causes, and status; cost/timeframe for repairs/replacements; whether capacity will change; risks/hazards; and any other information needed to inform consent.
- If a gas company fails to provide requested information, the municipality can petition the Department to compel disclosure and obtain an order.
- Municipal authority to regulate street openings continues, provided it is consistent with Commonwealth law.

2) New subsection to Section 145 (planning transparency and review)
- Within 3 days of a gas company submitting a repair/replacement/improvement/retirement plan to the Department, the plan must also be sent to the affected municipality.
- The municipality has up to 90 days to submit comments/questions; the gas company must respond within 15 days.
- After the Department approves the plan, the company must send the approval to the municipality within 3 days.
- If a non-emergency project plan was not submitted for municipal review, the Department may determine the project costs not reasonably incurred.

Affected parties

  • Gas utility companies operating in Massachusetts
  • Municipalities (cities and towns) within the service territory
  • Massachusetts Department (the relevant regulatory or permitting department)
  • Property owners and public works departments, due to restoration and tree-protection provisions

Procedural and timeline notes

  • Introduced: February 27, 2025
  • Hearing: scheduled (initially) June 4, 2025
  • Status update: Reporting date extended to December 3, 2025
  • Related bill: HD 2831 (replaces)

Potential impacts

  • Greater municipal input on where and how gas work is performed
  • Enhanced transparency and planning coordination between gas companies and municipalities
  • Stronger protections for public infrastructure and trees
  • Possible increase in administrative requirements for gas projects and potential cost considerations if plans are reviewed by municipalities
  • Enforcement mechanism through the Department to compel information disclosure

Legislative status and next steps

  • Referred to the House Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy on February 27, 2025
  • In the legislative calendar with a reporting date extension in place; further committee actions and potential amendments expected.

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

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