Archives July 2019

Brennan Gilmore & Lynn Taylor: Charging toward energy reform in Virginia

ONE OF US was chief of staff for Tom Perriello and runs an environmental nonprofit. The other worked for the Koch brothers and facilitates a monthly meeting of Virginia conservative and libertarian activists. Needless to say, we do not exactly subscribe to the same political philosophies.

Here’s where we do agree: The energy sector in Virginia is broken.

An energy sector whose rules were written by monopoly utilities and their well-funded political allies has given us the 11th highest electricity bills in the nation when energy demand in Virginia is flat and energy itself is getting cheaper. It has kept businesses and families across the commonwealth from choosing their electricity provider. It has allowed Dominion Energy to run roughshod over property rights and plow ahead with a ratepayer-backed $7 billion gas pipeline without demonstrating any actual need for it. And it has stifled innovation and the deployment of cleaner, cheaper energy sources.

Virginia — including vast Dominion service territory in the Hampton Roads region — deserves better than this monopoly regulatory system designed to maximize profits for shareholders and greased by donations to politicians.

When faced with a problem this insidious, it is remarkable how quickly two opposing ideologies can find common ground.

The answer to this is simple: Give people a choice. Break up the monopolies, remove the barriers to competition, and remove the constraints preventing Virginia from leading the transition to a 21st century energy economy that is better for our bank accounts, our jobs and our environment.

No matter who they vote for, every Virginian should have the ability to choose their energy provider, just like they choose their car, phone provider, or grocery store. Currently, most Virginians who pay utility bills are stuck with one utility monopoly, and one with a track record of acting in bad faith to enrich shareholders on the backs of mostly unknowing ratepayers.

The core of our system’s rot is a skewed incentive system that allows utility profits to hinge on political gamesmanship rather than customer interest. A utility that both owns and operates the electrical grid has a conflict of interest that inhibits the development and deployment of the cost-effective energy resources of the future.

A utility earns a rate of return on infrastructure like wires and transformers, so it has a financial interest in huge infrastructure investments rather than resources owned or services provided by other entities — large-scale distributed energy storage systems, consumer-owned rooftop solar, or energy efficiency programs, for example — even though they are often cheaper.

Switching to a competitive market with performance-based rules and an independent grid operator will ensure energy providers only get rewarded for being the best on reliability, cost and customer satisfaction and that one monopoly’s special interests cannot hold customers captive.

Virginia’s potential to recharge our economy with 21st century energy is truly untapped. The Department of Energy ranks us a dismal 37th out of 50th for renewable energy production.

North Carolina has seven times as much installed solar as Virginia, and thousands of jobs in the fastest-growing energy sector along with it. On the other hand, Texas moved to a competitive market in the early 2000s and has since seen reduced energy bills, enhanced consumer choice and steady innovation. It is simple. When an energy market is competitive and monopolies are contained, the entire state benefits.

Luckily, this insidious problem is not beyond repair. Energy market reform may sound complex, but this issue is about Virginians paying their utility bills today and choosing the energy that will power their tomorrows. We want to build a statewide movement towards consumer choice and protection, a competitive and innovative economy, and a 21st century energy grid — and movements need people.

Candidates and legislators need to hear from their constituents and voters on this issue and demand that Virginia’s General Assembly advocate for hardworking people across the commonwealth paying their utility bills, not for utility giants whose political influence has allowed them to write the rules of a rigged game.

Take it from a political odd couple. When you take a chance to come together and reform something truly broken, it’s amazing what we can achieve.

Brennan Gilmore is executive director of Clean Virginia. Lynn Taylor is president and co-founder of the Virginia Institute for Public Policy. They are both members of the nonpartisan Virginia Energy Reform Coalition.

Virginia GOP Shoots Down Governor’s Gun Grab

Republican legislators were successful in ending the special legislative session without new restrictions on gun rights of Virginians.

This article posted July 11, 2019, was re-posted with permission from Liberty Nation.

Virginia Governor Ralph Northam instituted a special session of the state’s legislature Tuesday, July 9 for the stated purpose of enacting new gun control laws.  Gun rights supporters won the day as Republican lawmakers, who tenuously control both houses of the law-making body, were able to stop it in its tracks, suspending consideration of the bills until the regular session in the fall.

Some gun supporters openly carried at the rally outside the Capitol July 9th. Richmond Times-Dispatch photo.

Well over a dozen different bills were filed, offering a Vegas-sized buffet of anti-gun rights advocates’ wishes and wants.  A limited sample includes a “Red Flag” law that allows police to seize firearms with little to no due process, one gun a month purchase limits, and legislation that would allow counties and municipalities the right to enact their own gun control laws.  Legislators introduced several pro-gun rights bills, but this session was to be about restricting the rights of Virginians, not expanding them.

Special Session

Northam announced the emergency session in the wake of a Memorial Day massacre in Virginia Beach, where 12 people were murdered by a municipal employee on a rampage.  “If we can save one life because we acted now, it is worth it.”  The Virginia legislature starts sessions in January and finishes no later than 60 calendar days afterward, but there is a provision in the commonwealth’s constitution for the Governor to institute a new one:

“The Governor may convene a special session of the General Assembly when, in his opinion, the interest of the Commonwealth may require …”

Republicans hold a 51-48 majority in the House of Delegates and a 20-19 edge in the Senate, with one vacancy in each chamber.  That was enough to put a stop to the special session on party-line votes in both houses.  They referred the various pieces of legislation to appropriate committees.  Those bills will be voted on in the 2020 session if they are passed out of committee – which they are unlikely to since so many have already been voted down in committee this very year.  From January:

A Republican-led subcommittee in the Virginia House of Delegates voted down more than a dozen Democratic gun control bills Thursday, including a red-flag proposal endorsed by President Donald Trump’s school safety committee.

In a packed hearing room, Republicans on a House Militia, Police and Public Safety subcommittee used their 4-2 majority to methodically defeat the gun bills over the course of more than two hours.

Governor Northam became nationally known earlier this year when his medical school yearbook seemed to show him in blackface.  That, combined with the legislature’s recent consideration of often identical legislation, fueled criticism that politics was the prime motivator behind the session rather than public safety.  Virginia Institute for Public Policy president Lynn Taylor* called it a political move, noting that “not one of the proposed laws would have changed the outcome in Virginia Beach.”

 

State Senator Tommy Norment, R-James City County. AP file photo.

GOP Drama – Tempest In A Teapot

Senate Majority Leader Thomas K. Norment Jr. (R-James City) shocked his fellow Republicans by filing a bill just before the session that would ban guns in local government buildings in Virginia.

The Virginia Citizens Defense League**, a powerful gun rights advocacy group, sent out an email in the wee hours before the session, announcing “VA-ALERT: LEGISLATIVE ACTION ITEM: Senator Tommy Norment stabs gun owners in the back!”  Norment had introduced a bill that would treat all local government buildings like a courthouse, generally banning firearms for everyone but government officials.  That sentiment seemed to be completely reversed by the end of the day, when the group sent an email stating:

Senator Norment explained that the bill was incorrectly drafted due to a communication issue between himself and Legislative Services.  VCDL thanks Senator Norment for doing the right thing and striking that bad gun-bill from the docket!

Norment said Tuesday, “As currently drafted, the legislation represents neither my views nor my intention. I do not support – nor will I support – any measure that restricts the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens.”

*Ms. Taylor sits on the board of LibertyNation.com’s parent company.

**The author has been a member of VCDL.