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Committee asks Maine Connectivity Authority for more detail on several procurements and contribution reporting

House Energy, Utilities and Technology Committee · February 17, 2026

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Summary

The committee reviewed MCA/ConnectMaine filings and pressed MCA leadership for documentation on multiple procurement waivers, asked for clarification on why grants were reported as "contributions," and requested follow‑up on a $709,000 Outside Angle contract and MCA's contributions policy.

The House Energy, Utilities and Technology Committee on March 17 reviewed the Maine Connectivity Authority and ConnectMaine reports for FY2024–FY2025 and requested additional information before making a final determination on statutory compliance for contributions and some procurement approvals.

Analyst Lindsay Laxon noted MCA updated its procurement approval authorities: managers may approve expenses up to $25,000, directors and senior managers up to $100,000, and the president and the director of finance and operations up to $250,000; expenditures above $250,000 require full board or executive committee approval. MCA Director Andrew Butcher told the committee the changes reflect organizational growth and the need for a faster requisition process as MCA scaled to deploy federal broadband funds.

Members asked MCA to explain 8–11 listed procurements where competitive procurement was waived in FY2024 and FY2025. Butcher said several vendors were either extensions of prior competitively procured contracts (Tilson Technology, Lincoln Institute, Karshoft) or specialized services not well suited to open bidding (legal advice, specialized mapping and verification, ERP/CRM implementation). He described MCA’s rapid growth — "approximately $23,000,000 in 2024 and approximately $63,000,000 in 2025" — and said the largest contracts were oversighted through board or committee review.

Committee members raised two areas needing clarification before finalizing a finding. First, MCA’s filings list many grants and subrecipient awards in the contributions section; members asked why MCA reported grants and contracts under the statutory "contributions" heading and asked staff to point to the precise contribution policy text. Butcher said the reported items are primarily grants to regional partners and ISPs and that MCA would clarify where that activity sits in its financial policies.

Second, members asked about a $709,000 contract to Outside Angle (listed at $709,000 in the FY2025 packet and $304,350 in an earlier list). Butcher said he would verify the numbers and provide documentation; the committee asked for the procurement cover memo and evidence of required approvals. Senator Harrington and Representative Foster specifically urged MCA to provide explicit contribution policy language and to confirm whether sponsorships, membership dues or public‑advertising arrangements fall under the statute’s definition of "contribution."

The committee did not make a final determination for MCA/ConnectMaine; members asked staff to follow up with MCA and to reconvene on the contributions item and the flagged procurements.