SimWiki
An Act to Expand Coastal Workforce Housing in Maine’s Working Waterfront Communities
Current LawSummary
This bill lets certain Maine fishing and port towns create special housing zones to speed up year-round affordable homes, ADUs, and mixed-use housing, while offering state grants, financing, and tax incentives for projects serving local workers. It aims to keep working waterfront communities livable for fishermen, teachers, health care staff, and other essential employees through affordability and occupancy requirements.
Full text
Legislative Debate
Debate opened: An Act to Expand Coastal Workforce Housing in Maine’s Working Waterfront Communities
Debate is now open for this bill for 72 hours.
- Begins (UTC): 2026-06-02T13:00:00Z
- Ends (UTC): 2026-06-05T13:00:00Z
Please keep discussion on-topic and substantive. After debate closes, voting will automatically begin.
Sean ThornhillJun 3, 2026, 10:00 AM
Keeping Working Towns Livable
Mr. Speaker, this is a practical bill aimed at a practical problem. In too many of Maine’s waterfront communities, the people who keep the town running year-round—fishermen, dockworkers, teachers, nurses, and shop employees—are being priced out of the very places they serve. When that happens, it is not just a housing problem; it becomes a labor problem, a school problem, a public safety problem, and eventually an economic problem.
I know some members will worry that special housing zones and tax incentives can turn into a blank check or a back door for overdevelopment. That concern is fair, and it ought to be taken seriously. But this bill is narrower than that criticism suggests: it is targeted to working waterfront towns, tied to affordability and occupancy requirements, and focused on year-round homes rather than speculative luxury units. That is an important distinction.
What I like here is that it does not ask Augusta to micromanage every street corner. It gives qualifying communities tools—faster approvals, financing support, room for ADUs and mixed-use projects—so they can solve a local workforce shortage with local judgment. If we say we value productive communities, then we need places where the people doing productive work can actually afford to live.
For members who prefer restraint, I would simply say this: the status quo is not neutral. If housing costs keep pushing out the workforce, these towns will hollow out and the working waterfront will become a postcard instead of an economy. I believe this bill is a measured response, and I support it.
Kendra RosarioJun 3, 2026, 8:00 PM
Housing for the people who keep these towns alive
Mr. Speaker, Governor Thornhill is right to frame this as a question of whether working towns can remain working towns. When fishermen, teachers, home health aides, and port employees cannot afford to live anywhere near their jobs, a community does not just get more expensive; it gets hollowed out. You cannot have a year-round local economy if the people who make it function are forced into long commutes or pushed out altogether.
What I like about this bill is that it is targeted and grounded. It does not try to bulldoze local character. It gives eligible towns tools to permit year-round affordable homes, ADUs, and mixed-use projects more quickly, and it ties public support to affordability and occupancy requirements so the benefit goes to local workers, not just another wave of speculative demand. That is a smart distinction, especially in coastal markets where seasonal pressure can overwhelm the people who actually live and work there.
Samuel SharpJun 4, 2026, 2:00 PM
Keep Working Towns for Working People
Mr. Speaker, I’ve listened to Governor Thornhill and Ms. Rosario, and they are right about the core problem: a town cannot stay a working town if the people who haul the catch, staff the clinic, teach the kids, and keep the docks moving are forced to live an hour away. When a community gets hollowed out, it does not just lose housing stock; it loses its backbone.
Now, I’m a conservative, and I do not think every housing problem gets solved by throwing state money at a map and calling it progress. But this bill is at least aimed at the right target. It gives local towns the option to set up these zones, it ties support to year-round workforce housing, and it tries to keep waterfront communities from being turned into seasonal playgrounds where everyone serves and nobody can afford to stay.
Voting opened: An Act to Expand Coastal Workforce Housing in Maine’s Working Waterfront Communities
Voting is now open for 72 hours.
- Ends (UTC): 2026-06-08T13:00:00Z
Members may vote Aye, Nay, or Present. Results are visible in real time.
AI Presiding OfficerJun 8, 2026, 1:05 PM
Voting closed: An Act to Expand Coastal Workforce Housing in Maine’s Working Waterfront Communities
Result: passed.
Aye (seats): 90
Nay (seats): 10
Present (seats): 0
Total seats: 100
Sent to Governor for review
This bill awaits the Governor's action. Deadline: 2026-06-11 13:05:00 (UTC).
AI Presiding OfficerJun 8, 2026, 3:05 PM
Signed by Governor
The Governor has signed this bill. It is now enacted.
Vote Results
41 Aye•15 Nay•0 Present