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Senate approves agricultural and forestry bond package after extended debate
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Summary
After hours of floor debate over timing and structure, the Senate passed an agriculture and forestry bond authorization and related program provisions as amended, sending the measure for concurrence with changes that reflect adopted Senate amendments.
The Maine Senate voted to advance a bond authorization intended to fund investments in agriculture and forestry after lengthy floor debate about timing, program design and urgency.
Senators across the aisle described the package as a way to deliver capital, low‑interest loans and grant funding to farmers, loggers and rural businesses. "When farms invest, it doesn't just change that farm," said Senator Stacy Brenner, who detailed how prior state grants helped local farms and argued the bond would fill an unmet financing gap.
Supporters pointed to record demand for programs such as soil‑health testing and noted prior uses of federal ARPA funds that left many applicants unfunded. "This will help companies reinvest for the future in the face of strong headwinds," Senator Jeff Timberlake said when describing logging equipment cost pressures.
Opponents raised concerns about delay and the choice of a bond rather than immediate appropriations. Senator Bradstreet said farmers need money "now," warning that inflation and timing make a bond less helpful to those who must act this season. Several senators asked whether direct appropriations or other funding mechanisms should be prioritized instead of a ballot bond.
Legislative amendments were offered and debated on the Senate floor. Senate Amendment B (S‑709) was adopted and later the bill passed to be engrossed as amended. A later supplemental action shows the Senate approved the bond authorization in nonconcurrence form and will send it back to the House with the Senate's changes.
The bill's passage in the Senate does not by itself enact the bond; under Article IX, Section 14 of the Maine Constitution, bond authorizations ultimately require voter approval and conforming steps between the chambers. The next procedural step is transmittal of the Senate's amended measure to the House for concurrence and final disposition.
Senators said the proposal aimed to fund programs such as a low‑interest equipment loan for loggers, an expansion of the Farmers Drought Resilience Program Fund, and additional grant support for processing, infrastructure and soil health work.
