Davis energy plan doesn’t go ‘far enough’
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT-MESA -- It’s just not good enough.
In simple terms, that’s the local response to the cures for
California’s ongoing energy crisis Gov. Gray Davis outlined in a speech
Thursday.
When you set aside long-term solutions such as additional power
plants, electricity rate increases of up to 34.5% won’t avoid rolling
blackouts, said Richard Luehrs, the president and chief executive officer
of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce.
And blackouts worry business owners the most, he said. The way things
stand, power will certainly go off in May and June since additional
energy supplies won’t become available until later in the summer.
“This isn’t going to cover it,” he said. “The governor hasn’t gone far
enough.”
State legislators agreed that blackouts represented a bigger threat to
the area’s businesses than higher electricity prices.
“I’ve had business owners tell me, ‘Rather than blackouts, I’d
operated my business four days a week,”’ said Assemblyman John Campbell
(R-Irvine), adding that the uncertainty of sudden outages had people
worried the most.
“From what I’m hearing in this district, people are saying, ‘Let’s get
some certainty,”’ he said.
Besides, he added, Friday’s decision by Pacific Gas & Electric
officials to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy showed that Davis’ proposal
to help ailing utility companies get back in good financial shape had
immediately failed.
“[Davis] almost has to go right back to the drawing board,” Campbell
said. “I think it continues to show his inability to get trust from the
people involved in this problem.”
In his speech, Davis proposed to give state money to utility companies
to keep them from going bankrupt. But the offer would come with some
strings, including an agreement to sell power to the state at a low cost
for the next 10 years. The companies would also have to agree to selling
California’s power grid to the state and abandon lawsuits that seek to
double consumer electricity rates.
“It’s looking bleak,” said Ed Fawcett, the president and chief
executive officer of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. “We’re getting
political statements rather than solutions . . . I don’t think [Davis]
added anything yesterday. He’s just trying to give the appearance that
he’s got things under control when he’s not had control from the outset.”
The governor’s plan would also exclude more than half of all consumers
from price hikes and set up a tier system, where cost for electricity
would increase for big power users.
“Here’s the point: The more you use, the more you pay,” Davis said in
his speech.
“If you believed [Davis,] the little guy wasn’t going to be impacted,”
said John Burkhard, the president of the Mesa North Community Assn.
But to solve the overall problem will take more than that, he
stressed.
“There’s no easy answer,” Burkhard said, adding that he’d been working
hard to reduce his own energy consumption. “Either you have the money to
pay the electric bill or put solar cells on the roofs and tell the
electric company to stick it or move out of California. What else is
there?”
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