Thursday, February 25, 2021

Texas Republicans Responsible for Blackouts

Let’s start with the facts, nearly all of the power shortage last week was due to natural gas and nuclear plants being shut down due to frozen gauges, values and other equipment. Gov. Abbott lied to the public when he blamed green energy. In fact your neighbors who had power when you didn’t probably had solar panels on their roofs, that’s green energy. Texans died of hypothermia in their homes needlessly last week because they had no way to heat their homes for too long and nowhere to go to stay warm. In reality had the Green New Deal proposal been in effect years ago far fewer people would have suffered because part of the proposal includes insulating old homes and more of us would have rooftop solar panels to provide at least some power for heating.

Now you ask, how could this happen? Power generating and gas pipeline companies in Texas are lightly regulated and aren’t required to takes steps necessary to keep their equipment running in extreme conditions. Their management chose not to use equipment that tolerates single digit temperatures or provide insulated and heated coverings that would have kept the equipment operational. Were it not that the product these companies provide are relied on by every Texan every day such behavior would be reasonable as it’s been a decade since the last time Texas suffered such weather. If they produced cars, clothing, appliances, or toys and shut down for a week no one would suffer. Instead these companies are part of the public utility infrastructure that is necessary and expected to provide their product all day every day regardless of conditions.

Decades ago the Texas legislature at the behest of management and the wealthy investors in power generation and pipeline companies deregulated the energy market. The legislature also cut ties to interstate power sources in order to avoid federal regulation of these public utilities. They did both in order to make the business more profitable. No consideration was given to the effect on reliability. The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) is responsible for transferring power from suppliers to users but it wouldn’t surprise George Orwell the regardless of its name ERCOT doesn’t actually do anything about reliability. In fact last November ERCOT fired the organization they had previously contracted with to check on the status of power providers and didn’t bother to replace it.

Statewide blackouts have happened twice in the last 32 years, in 1989 and 2011, in both cases federal investigators found a long list of things utility and pipeline operators should have been doing and suggested that the state take action to force them to do so. As Texas Republicans generally do when regulation is brought up they ignored the recommendations and took little action. Once again the people of Texas have suffered and Republicans don’t care. Former governor Rick Perry is quoted as saying “Texans would be without electricity for longer than three days to keep the federal government out of their business.” Ted Cruz fled Texas to Cancun, Mexico with his family during the freeze.

Some of my neighbors claim we shouldn’t politicize a crisis, I say a crisis like the freeze of 2021 is political to begin with. If our legislators are holding power and pipeline companies accountable the we must hold our legislators accountable, that starts with state representative John Kuempel, state senator Donna Campbell, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Gov. Greg Abbott. They are all part of the problem and we need to replace them with people who will be part of the solution.

 Published in the Seguin Gazette - February 24, 2021

Published in the Boerne Star - February 25, 2021

Thursday, February 11, 2021

Election Legislation Preview

 Just months after traveling to Pennsylvania to help the Trump campaign challenge the results of the 2020 election State Rep. Briscoe Cain was named chair of the Texas House Elections Committee. That appointment doesn’t give me a lot of confidence that we’ll see real improvement in our election laws. Nevertheless there are plenty of good bills that if passed would make it easier for eligible voters to register and vote. There may be others filed later in the session and it often happens that the text of a bill is added to another so even though the original bill isn’t passed its goal is achieved. The following are bills I found using the Texas Legislature Online website’s Bill Search function. Using that site you can lookup any of these that catch your attention and read the full text of the bill yourself as well as find new additions, amendments, or bill status as the session goes on. You can even create an account and arrange to get emails when a bill is assigned to a committee, gets a hearing, is amended or passed out of committee, or will be voted on in the House or Senate.

HB 110 would add to the existing list of acceptable proof of identification any official mail addressed to the person by name from a governmental entity or a copy of a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or other government document that shows the name and address of the voter

HB 160 and SB 246 would add any identification card issued by a public institution of higher education located in this state that contains the person 's photograph, full legal name, and is either unexpired or expired no earlier than four years before the date of presentation.

HB 230 would greatly expand the types of documents that would be acceptable voter identification to include documents if they show the name and address of the voter including a copy of a current utility bill; a bank or credit union statement; a government check; a certified copy of a domestic birth certificate among others.

HB 1366 allows voter registration card as sufficient ID for voting, removes requirement for photo ID to vote even without registration card and allows substitution of utility bill or birth certificate etc.

HB 142 / HB 519 / HB 712 / HB 856 would all change state law to all same day voter registration so that new voters could register to vote on the same day they cast their ballots.

HB 161 / HB 595 / SB 107 would restore voting rights to felons once they are released from incarceration.

HB 583 / HB 802 / HB 1232 / SB 95 / SB 303 would allow voting by mail by any qualified voter.

HB 844 / HB 1385 would expressly legalize mail ballot drop off sites as designated by the county early voting clerk.

HB 1036 would create limits on campaign contributions for state office such as $7,000 for each candidate for governor; $5,500 for each candidate for a statewide office other than governor; $4,000 for each candidate for the senate; and $2,700 for each candidate for the house of representatives. Political Action Committees would be limited to $30,000 per year for each candidate or officeholder.

HB 1425 / SB 130 would have Texas join the National Popular Vote Compact which would mean that Texas’ presidential electors would cast their ballots for whoever won the national popular vote regardless of the result in Texas. Think President Al Gore in 2000, and President Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Published in the Seguin Gazette - February 10, 2021

Thursday, February 4, 2021

Cong. González on the Wrong Side

In just three weeks into President Joe Biden’s term our congressman, Vicente González, has already found cause to vocally disagree with him and González is wrong. President Biden has issued an executive order to pause on leasing federal lands for oil and gas extraction while the federal government reviews the process and contracts. González and three other Texas Democrats, Henry Cuellar of Laredo, Lizzie Pannill Fletcher of Houston, and Marc Veasey of Fort Worth wrote a letter demanding the order be rescinded.

The federal government charges a 12.5% royalty on oil and gas produced on federal lands which is about half of what the state of Texas and other states charge on state owned lands or what private landowners typically get on their leases. That 12.5% leaves little to nothing for the federal treasury once the cost of cleanup and damage to roads is covered. Earning a competitive royalty rate alone is a good reason for the federal government to review oil and gas leasing on its lands as they’re currently leaving a lot of money on the table and enriching the already wealthy shareholders while leaving the rest of us to clean up the mess. It’s also important to know that most of the federal land currently leased isn’t in production so pausing further leasing won’t stop new drilling even a little bit.

Less than 2% of Texas is owned by the federal government and of that about three quarters is held by the Department of Defense or the National Park Services. There is no federal land not held by the Dept. of Defense or National Park Service that I could find in Congressional District 15 which Cong. González represents so it’s not like local jobs are at stake. In point of fact his constituents who own mineral rights in the Eagle Ford Shale in a few counties in the district should actually benefit from the pause in federal leases by their lands and the oil and gas produced thereon becoming more valuable; especially if the federal government raises the royalty percentage to the market rate.

The real reason that Pres. Biden has but a hold on leasing federal land for oil and gas development is that he understands that global climate change is an existential threat to our way of life and possibly our species. The world has less than 30 years to get carbon emissions under control before the climate is irrevocably wrecked. If we don’t collectively get our act together and stop spewing CO2 and methane into the atmosphere faster than trees and plants can absorb the CO2 our children and grandchildren will find that much of the world will be uninhabitable by the end of the century. There will be drought, the likes of which hasn’t been seen since the Dust Bowl in the 1930’s. The drought will cause crop failure and famine world-wide leading to mass migration and war over resources.

All four Texas Democrats who signed onto the demand to rescind the pause in leasing have two things in common: districts with substantial oil and gas businesses and the number one industry making campaign donations to them was oil and gas. It seems pretty clear who Cong. González is listening to and it isn’t his constituents since Pres. Biden’s climate change initiatives have been well received by the general public.

It is a national security imperative that we avoid a climate change caused disaster and our congressman is too worried about appeasing a handful of rich campaign donors. Call his Washington D.C. office at 202-225-2531 and let him know what you think.

 Published in the Seguin Gazette - February 3, 2021