Maine was one of the last states in the U.S. to adopt a
statewide building code for homes when the state legislature
voted in 2008 to implement the 2009 International Building Code
(IBC), the International Residential Code (IRC), and the
International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), effective in
mid-summer of 2010 in towns that already have a building code,
and in mid-2012 for towns with no code already in effect (see
“
New Energy Code Comes to Maine But Old Ways Die Hard
Coastal Connection 6152010 See also
Maine 2009 IECC
Effective for Locales with Adopted Building
Codes,” Building Codes Assistance Project.)
But if legislator
Lance
Harvell Lance Harvell of Farmington has his way, Maine
could be the first state in the nation to repeal its statewide
building code altogether. Harvell wants to roll back the law
creating the new code, and his bill, known as "An Act To Repeal
the Maine Uniform Building and Energy Code" (LD 43), does not
reinstate any other code in its place. Text of the repeal bill
is posted on the Maine legislature’s
web site
The legislature’s Joint Committee on Labor,
Commerce, Research and Economic Development scheduled hearings
on the measure on April 7. The Kennebec Journal has this story
on the hearings
(“
Bill would repeal uniform statewide building
code,” by Susan M. Cover).
It’s unclear how much traction Harvell can gain for
his proposal, even given Maine’s current
anti-government mood: a random telephone poll of Maine voters
by polling group Critical Insights, paid for by the Natural
Resources Council of Maine, found that 90% of Democrats and 69%
of Republicans favored keeping the current building code
(“
New Poll Shows Maine Voters Oppose Environmental
Rollbacks”).
And some builders are joining energy-efficiency groups in
opposition to the code rollback. According to the Portland
Press-Herald, builders, contractors, and engineers got together
at the State House in Augusta to demonstrate against the
proposal
(“
Builders protest attempts to undo uniform code).
“Speakers provided copies of a letter to LePage signed
by some of Maine’s leading building trade
associations, representing over 1,500 member
businesses,” the paper reported.