Community Commentary -- John Campbell
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It’s spring in the year 2000, and San Diego Gas & Electric prepares to
double rates to all of its customers due to increases in the company’s
cost of electricity. The legislature passes a bill to spread this
increase over several years, but does nothing to deal with the root of
the problem. Gov. Davis is silent.
It’s now August 2000, and the two largest suppliers of electric power
in the state ask Gov. Davis’ Public Utilities Commission for the right to
purchase long-term contracts to lock in lower electricity costs as rates
appear to be rising. The request is denied, and Gov. Davis is silent.
Later in August, Scott Baugh, leader of the Republicans in the State
Assembly, writes a letter to Gov. Davis asking him to call a special
session of the legislature to deal with the impending energy crisis
before it gets out of control. Again, Gov. Davis and the Democratic
leaders in the legislature are silent.
It’s September 2000, and the realization comes that California has not
constructed a single major power plant in the last 10 years. Demand for
electricity has risen by 31% in recent years due to population increases
and the growing technology economy, but the supply of that energy has
only increased by 2% in the same period. Texas, by comparison, under
then-Gov. George W. Bush, has constructed or permitted some 30 power
plants in the last four years, including 25% of all the renewable-source
environmental plants in the entire country. In the same four years,
California, its governor and its legislature do nothing.
Present day -- January 2001. The energy crisis deepens with rolling
blackouts, daily third stage alerts and a $400-million rate increase
using taxpayer dollars.
There can be no doubt that the severity of the current crisis can be
traced directly to months of inaction by Gov. Davis and the
Democrat-controlled legislature. Yes, the restructuring law passed in
1996 had its flaws. However, those flaws became apparent more than a year
ago, and our leaders did absolutely nothing. Let’s set that record
straight. Had they acted then, California would not be in a state of
emergency now. But they didn’t act, and now we are left to pick up the
pieces.
So what now? We must take bold and decisive action in three areas. We
must first act through short-term government intervention to stabilize
the current market. This is a step that would not have been necessary
just a few months back but is now a reality.
Second, we must begin immediately to eliminate bureaucratic red tape
and restrictions to building environmentally clean sources of electric
power. These include gas turbines, hydroelectric, wind, biomass and
cogeneration. An obvious first step is to immediately allow any existing
power plant (many of which are decades old) to refit itself to be more
efficient and less polluting without requiring an expensive and
time-consuming environmental report. Why would anybody want to slow down
the process of getting cleaner, more efficient power to Californians?
Third, we must take steps to move toward a truly open retail market
with customer choice. If the long distance telephone company you
regularly use pays too much to buy phone time and passes that price on to
you, you have the ability to go get another long distance company.
Unfortunately, if your power company does the same with your electricity,
you have little choice. In a free market, no one would be a slave to a
given power company. If Edison makes a bad deal on power, they will lose,
not you, because you will find your power from another company.
Only when there is a truly open market for electricity to businesses
and consumers, coupled with an unrestricted ability to add supply, will
the unseen hand of the market work for all of us. As it has with so many
products, those market forces will drive innovation and enterprise, lower
prices and better service.
Will Gov. Davis and the Democrats controlling the legislature have the
fortitude to do all this with celerity? Their actions of the past year do
not make us hopeful.
Their silence has not served Californians well. It’s time to speak and
time to act.
* JOHN CAMPBELL is a state assemblyman representing the 70th District,
which includes Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, in Orange County. He is a
member of the Assembly Special Committee on Energy Cost and Availability
and the Joint Oversight Committee on Energy.
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