HUNT VALLEY - An information and feedback session on the Piedmont Reliability Project in Baltimore County hit a boiling point Tuesday night. About 40 minutes into a presentation by Public Service Enterprise Group (PSEG), residents in the audience began to push for the question-and-answer part of the session to begin. "This isn't kindergarten. These are our livelihoods. Let me ask a question," one woman said. In October, PSEG, who is in charge of the project, unveiled the proposed route . Taking into account some 5,300 public comments, PSEG stated it adjusted the alignment of the 70-mile, 500-000-watt transmission line through parts of Baltimore, Carroll, and Frederick counties. The company said the plan would help Maryland and other areas meet growing demands for electricity. "There's a couple of things driving that," said Jason Kalwa, Project Director for PSEG - Piedmont Reliability Project. "We have electrification whether it's due to electric vehicles or heat pumps for examples, heating homes with electricity and also data centers as well." Now, a new set of sessions this week will unfold in the three impacted counties to gather more feedback.
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