Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 164 § 75C

Current through Chapters 1 to 249 and Chapters 253 to 255 of the 2024 Legislative Session
Section 164:75C - [Effective 3/1/2026] Right to exercise power of eminent domain

A natural gas pipeline company may petition the energy facilities siting board for the right to exercise the power of eminent domain under chapter 79. Such company shall file with the petition a general description of the pipeline and a map or plan thereof showing the rights of way, easements and other interests in land or other property proposed to be taken for such use, the towns through which the pipeline will pass, the public ways, railroads, railways, navigable streams and tide waters in the towns named in the petition that it will cross and the extent to which it will be located upon private land and upon, under or along public ways, lands and places. Upon the filing of such petition, the energy facilities siting board, after such notice as it may direct, shall provide notice to each municipality through which the pipeline is intended to pass and hold a public hearing in at least 1 of the towns through which the pipeline is intended to pass and may, by order, authorize the company to take by eminent domain under said chapter 79 such lands or such rights of way, easements or other interests in land or other property necessary for the construction, operation, maintenance, alteration and removal of the pipeline, compressor stations, appliances, appurtenances and other equipment along the route described in the order of the energy facilities siting board. The energy facilities siting board shall transmit a certified copy of its order to the company and the town clerk of each affected town. At any time before such hearing, the company may modify the whole or a part of the route of the pipeline, either of its own motion or at the insistence of the energy facilities siting board or otherwise and, in such case, shall file with the energy facilities siting board maps, plans and estimates showing such changes. If the energy facilities siting board dismisses the petition at any stage in the proceedings, no further action shall be taken thereon and the company may file a new petition not sooner than 1 year after the date of such dismissal.

When a taking under this section is effected, the company may forthwith, except as hereinafter provided, proceed to construct, install, maintain and operate thereon such pipeline. If the company shall not enter upon and construct such line upon the land so taken within 1 year thereafter, its right under such taking shall cease and terminate. No lands or rights of way or easements therein shall be taken by eminent domain under the provisions of this section in any public way, public place, park or reservation or within the location of any railroad, electric railroad or street railway company, except that such pipeline may be constructed under any public way or any way dedicated to the public use; provided, however, that the rights granted hereunder shall not affect the right or remedy to recover damages for an injury caused to persons or property by the acts of such company; provided further, that such company shall put all such streets, lanes and highways in as good repair as they were when opened by such company and the method of such construction and the plans and specifications therefor have been approved either generally or in any particular instance by the energy facilities siting board or, in the case of state highways, by the department of highways. A natural gas pipeline company may construct such lines under, over or across the location on private land of any railroad, electric railroad or street railway corporation subject to section 73. Rights of way, buildings, structures or lands to be used in the construction of such pipelines over or upon the lands referred to therein shall be governed by section 34A of chapter 132.

Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 164, § 164:75C

Amended by Acts 2024, c. 239,§ 76, eff. 3/1/2026.
This section is set out more than once due to postponed, multiple, or conflicting amendments.