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By Kyle Prast
Wednesday, Sep 10 2008, 11:35 AM
Have you noticed that the mood of the country has changed regarding energy?
Last year, THE solution was all about growing our own energy by using ethanol. The emphasis was on reducing our carbon footprint and dependence on foreign oil, regardless of the cost.
But rising food prices and the fact that ethanol was a boondoggle (using as much energy as it supplied) caused ethanol's reign to slip from political popularity.
Then came Newt with his Drill Here.Drill Now.Pay Less. campaign. While I am surprised that he never did get those 3 million petition signers, he certainly started the conversation that we must start producing more oil domestically.
It was a conversation the President and House Republicans were willing to listen to. Nancy Pelosi and the House Democrats, however, were not. In fact, she shut down the House for 5 weeks!
During that 5 weeks off, around 130 House Republicans kept the heat on the discussion in the House. See YouTube
Also during the summer, the polls started showing that 67% of Americans favored domestic drilling.
John McCain responded to that fact by embracing offshore drilling. Certainly his picking Palin indicates he is looking at domestic oil and increasing natural gas. The Republican ticket has an "All of the above" approach. (Oil, clean coal, natural gas, tidal, hydro, hydrogen, geo-thermal, nuclear, wind, solar, etc.)
Barack Obama wouldn't go that far, but did promote getting off foreign oil dependence by increasing clean coal, natural gas, and safe nuclear as additions to the usual wind, solar, etc.
But while all this new domestic energy posturing was going on, Pelosi and the House Democrats were not available until this week. On Monday:
"House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said Monday morning
that the newest Democratic energy bill will be brought to the floor
under normal rules and will be subject to a vote on a Republican
alternative that is likely to call for even more drilling than
Democrats are prepared to swallow.
So finally, she and the House Democrats are willing to allow a vote on drilling!
"Pelosi miscalculated in her heavy-handed tactics before the recess.
She attempted to push through her own plan under suspension of the
rules, a tactic she decried in 2006, which kept Republicans from
offering an alternative. When it failed, she adjourned Congress,
hoping to put off the debate until after the conventions … and her book
tour.
"Instead of regrouping, the Democrats found themselves routed by an
angry electorate and motivated Republicans. The House Oil Party kept
the issue in the media eye, at least to an extent, but high gas prices
kept it on the minds of voters while Democrats took their summer
vacation. It was as poor a political calculation seen in recent years,
and the sudden shift in generic Congressional ballots and in party
identification has been the result.
"Pelosi and Harry Reid may have finally figured out that they could
lose this election on energy policy. Will this be enough to stanch the
bleeding? (My emphasis)
This vote would have never happened without public pressure. We tend to forget that fact. But don't jump for joy just yet.
The next hurdle will be, what kind of energy bill gets passed? Will it be a real energy bill that truly increases drilling opportunities and new energy sources? Or will it be just all show and no go? as a token attempt by Democrat Congressmen and Senators up for reelection to appear sympathetic to energy prices?
But House Republicans called the Democrats' proposals "gimmicks," and
instead have insisted on a stand-alone vote on oil drilling.
"Speaker Pelosi's so-called 'energy' bill will do nothing to help
our energy crisis," said Rep. Michele Bachmann, Minnesota Republican.
"It will multiply red tape and make it almost impossible to lower
already skyrocketing oil costs." (My emphasis)
Stay tuned!
Please, comment content should relate to the subject of the post.
Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin, Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, Jul 1 2008, 01:49 PM
When I think of oil spills, my mind goes immediately to the Exxon Valdez. Remember that one? In my mind's eye I can still see volunteers trying to wash off animals and rocks with toothbrushes and Dawn detergent. 1989 Exxon Valdez ran aground on a reef off of Alaska, it was a case of drunk driving! Valdez, Alaska: Today, years after the Oil Spill cleanup, efforts on some heavily oiled
beaches have been reinstated, and with the help of Mother Nature, the
Sound will recover more each year. Prince William Sound today
flourishes with marine life, waterfowl, bottom fish, and salmon runs. Visit
Valdez and see gorgeous Prince William Sound for yourself!
Before the Valdez, there was the 1978 Tanker Amoco Cadiz that tanker split in two off coast of France. These images stick with us and make people wary of increasing offshore drilling. But if we continue the moratorium on offshore drilling, will we be immune to oil spill disasters? NO. The Valdez and Cadiz spills were not the result of offshore drilling rigs gone bad, they were the result of oil tanker accidents. Whether we drill here on land or offshore, we are still importing oil from across the oceans. We are still vulnerable to oil tanker crashes and accidents.
Last month President Bush urged our Congress to Lift the Offshore Drilling Ban. (My emphasis throughout page) The President, admitted his proposals "will take years to have their full impact" but he said that rather
than it being an excuse for delay, "it's a reason to move swiftly" and
called on Congress to change the lift the moratorium by the July 4
recess. ...
The offshore drilling moratoria have
been in effect since 1981 in more than 80 percent of the country's
Outer Continental Shelf. It was instituted to protect tourism and
lessen the chance of oil spills reaching popular beaches. If you noticed, the Exxon Valdez disaster occurred in 1989, 8 years after the drilling moratorium of 1981. The ban did nothing to protect Alaska against the Valdez' oil spill. The good news after hurricanes Katrina and Rita was at least there were no major oil spills due to off shore drilling. Louisiana's Governor Bobby Jindal recently stated in a Fox News piece on offshore drilling that, “You know, that’s one of the great unwritten success stories, after Katrina and Rita, these awful storms, no major spills.” According to a Heritage Foundation piece, June 30, 2008, More Lies From the Center for American Progress, The Center for American Progress tried to paint a picture that it was the offshore drilling that caused oil spills. The CAP linked to a Minerals Management Service study that reported, "113 oil platforms were 'totally destroyed' --a total of 124 offshore spills." That sounds bad, but read more from the MMS:
Offshore environmental impacts as a result of hurricane events in the [Gulf of Mexico Regional Office] have typically been minor
due to the downhole safety valves at wells and operating practices
conducted by the oil and gas industry with respect to platforms and
pipelines in advance of approaching hurricanes… While cleanup was
required, the volume of oil spilled and impacts to shore from offshore
infrastructure were categorized as minor.
The Heritage Foundation article then states, "CAP then goes on to blatantly conflate onshore and offshore oils spills. They (CAP) write:
In fact, oil seeped onshore into southeast Louisiana, which saw 44 onshore and offshore oil spills. The EPA called the spills “worse than the worst-case scenario.” Even oil industry representatives admitted: “nature can always topple you.”
If you click the first link, southeast Louisiana, it takes you to a MSNBC article, 44 oils spills found in southeast Louisiana. In that article you find:
The Coast Guard estimates more than 7 million gallons of oil were
spilled from industrial plants, storage depots and other facilities
around southeast Louisiana.
And from the last link, nature can always topple you, the Houston Chronicle article states: “Hurricane Katrina’s floodwaters unleashed 1 million gallons of oil
from one of the massive storage tanks at Murphy Oil’s nearby refinery.”
The Heritage Foundation concluded, "These are all onshore oil industry activities. To cite them as evidence
of the danger of offshore oil drilling is blatantly dishonest. The Center for American Progress owes Gov. Jindal an apology."
One thing I found in the Houston Chronicle that people rarely verbalize: oil companies don't want spills either!
"We don't like to spill oil. Oil that spills is of no value," said Larry Wall, a spokesman for the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association.
Oils spills = $ loss to the oil companies! It is in their best interest to prevent storm damage and oil spills too. Continuing to restrict US oil companies from drilling offshore cannot guarantee we have no more oil spills on our shores. We already have our own oil companies drilling offshore, Mexican companies drilling close by, oil tankers approaching our coastlines to deposit their oil, and our own land based refinery and industry storage tanks. Any one of these entities could cause an oil spill disaster...given the right circumstances. Maintaining the drilling moratorium removes just one piece from that list of possible offenders. It alone will not prevent future oil spills. Remember the Exxon Valdez? Click here to sign the DRILL HERE. DRILL NOW. PAY LESS. domestic drilling petition and see the latest links to related oil news (updated every day). Drill Here is now over the 1.24 million mark. The goal is 3 million signatures by the Democratic and Republican Conventions. Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin , Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Wednesday, Jun 18 2008, 10:30 AM
Today is your last chance to weigh in on the Governor's Global Warming Task Force. If you want to give the task force your 2 cents on ethanol, global warming, lifting alternative energy mandates or any other environmental issue the State of Wisconsin will be spending your money on and impacting your freedom to choose, email them now! (You can bet that all the corn farmers, ethanol manufacturers and those who lean Green will be flooding the task force with their point of view.)
The deadline for submitting comments on the Strawman Proposal has been
extended to 4:00 p.m. on Thursday, June 19, 2008. Comments can be
emailed to* DNRGLOBALWARMTFCOMMENTS@WISCONSIN.GOV *The email address I had before did not work, this one should be correct. Sorry. Hat Tip, Vicki McKenna. She talked about this at 10:25. FYI: Neighborhood Information Meeting tonight for Fire Station #3 move Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin , Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, Jun 10 2008, 12:02 PM
Just in case you missed this from the weekend news, the Sunday Journal reported in its Congress Following the Vote column, GLOBAL WARMING FILIBUSTER Voting 48-36, the Senate on Friday failed to reach 60 votes needed to end a Republican filibuster against an updated version of global warming bill. Democratic leaders then pulled the bill from the floor, perhaps for the remainder of the year. A yes vote was to advance the bill. McCain and Obama did not vote.
No surprise here, Feingold and Kohl voted YES to advance the bill. (So much for their sentiment that they will keep my thoughts in mind as the global warming debate moves forward.) We are off the hook for right now. I would bet Senate offices were bombarded with negative calls and emails on cap-and-trade. I would also bet that this bill will return either in its entirety or in bits and pieces like the amnesty bills have returned. They are hoping for a time when we aren't paying attention! Past Post: Cap-and-Trade? Maybe it should be called Cap-and-RAID!
More reading: George Will's Cap-And-Trade: A Devious Tax Plan Good chart of key players and terms explained at end: Senate taking up key climate-change bill The Heritage Foundation's Morning Bell: Carbon Capping in Bizarro World Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin , Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, Jun 3 2008, 01:04 PM
Last night I heard Senator Inhofe (R-Oklahoma) on the Mark Levin Show. They were discussing S. 2191, the Senate "Lieberman/Warner Global Warming Bill and the disastrous effect this would have not on just the country as a whole, but the individual." (My emphasis throughout post.) Wall Street Journal referred to Cap-and-Trade as Cap and Spend
As the Senate opens debate on its mammoth carbon regulation program
this week, the phrase of the hour is "cap and trade." This sounds
innocuous enough. But anyone who looks at the legislative details will
quickly see that a better description is cap and spend. This is easily
the largest income redistribution scheme since the income tax.
The Washington Post said, Just Call It "Cap-and-Tax" "...One of the bad ways [to control greenhouse gas] is cap-and-trade. Unfortunately, it's the darling of environmental groups and their political allies. The
chief political virtue of cap-and-trade -- a complex scheme to reduce
greenhouse gases -- is its complexity. This allows its environmental
supporters to shape public perceptions in essentially deceptive ways.
Cap-and-trade would act as a tax, but it's not described as a tax. It
would regulate economic activity, but it's promoted as a "free market"
mechanism. Finally, it would trigger a tidal wave of
influence-peddling, as lobbyists scrambled to exploit the system for
different industries and localities. This would undermine whatever
abstract advantages the system has. ...Call this "environmental pork," and it would just be a start. The
program's potential to confer subsidies and preferential treatment
would stimulate a lobbying frenzy. Think of today's farm programs --
and multiply by 10.
After listening to Senator Inhofe, I think we could also refer to it as Cap-and-Raid! If it passes, it will raid every worker in America's wallet! Senator Inhofe said, Senator Barbara Boxer insists this is not a tax bill. But if you have looked into the bill itself and at the linked articles, it is difficult to understand how this could not be considered a tax bill. Inhofe then quickly listed some points to ponder. He mentioned the Wall Street Journal referring to it as the most extensive reorganization since the 1930s. He called it worse than the Kyoto Treaty for the economy. Cap-and-Trade will need 45 more Big Government Bureaucracies to enforce the standards. Using Boxer's figures, Inhofe pointed out that Cap-and-Trade would collect $6.7 Trillion dollars from industry (those costs will be passed onto us!). The maximum rebate to customers is $2.5 Trillion dollars. Do the math: That means $4.2 Trillion goes where? That sounds like a tax to me! He went on to remind us that the Democrats have killed every domestic drilling bill. The US relies on coal for 53% of all of its electricity production. Cap-and-Trade will tax coal fired electricity production. Consider that China "cranks out a new coal electric plant" every 3 days (?). (I think he said 3 days, which fits with this - certainly between India and China it would be true.) Manufacturing jobs will go where there is (cheap) energy/power, Inhofe said. This is also what Congressman Sensenbrenner talked about at his Town Hall Meeting when he called Cap-and-Trade "Catastrophic for Wisconsin". I would add that manufacturing jobs will also go where environmental regulations are more lax. Senator Inhofe suggested people take a look at Liberman-Warner Opposition Resource Center; Impacts of Costly Climate Bill Exposed It is chock full of quotes, links and articles.
The Senate is debating this bill this week. While some say the bill will not pass, as you know, once the foot is in the door, the issue will not go away. Considering all 3 Presidential candidates support the concept of Global Warming, I would just say, the bill probably won't pass...yet. Our Senators' response to my emails: Not much hope of a NO vote here--unless they feel the heat from constituents. This is important! Please contact them both: Senator Kohl (Phone: (414) 297-4451, (202) 224-5653) and Senator Feingold (Office
of Senator Russ Feingold | 202/224-5323) and let them know what you think about this bill.
More reading: George Will's Cap-And-Trade: A Devious Tax Plan Good chart of key players and terms explained at end: Senate taking up key climate-change bill The Heritage Foundation's Morning Bell: Carbon Capping in Bizarro World Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Mark Levin , Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Tuesday, May 27 2008, 04:52 PM
It is watering restriction season for Waukesha County, but in Brookfield, lawn watering, pool filling, and car washing* is restricted whether you are on a private well or municipal water every day of the year. Somehow I was under the assumption that if one had a private well they were exempt from the watering restrictions. Many people on municipal water kept their private wells for watering and car washing purposes. I also thought there was a season to water restrictions. Not so. All Brookfield residents are under the restrictions all of the time: (My emphasis)
Sprinkling lawns, gardens, shrubs, trees, and other vegetation, washing
vehicles or structures and filling swimming pools are restricted to
certain days. Sprinkling is restricted to before 9 a.m. and after 6
p.m. by properties with even-numbered addresses on even-numbered days,
and by properties with odd-numbered addresses on odd-numbered days. The
regulations apply all year.
Now I don't have a problem with the concept of conserving water. We don't sprinkle our lawn as a rule, and washing a car is not a weekly occurrence. Brown lawns do survive. Even during the drought of 1988, when it did not rain all summer, I think we only broke down and sprinkled a few times. In fact, most gardeners know that if you sprinkle often but not long, the root systems tend to grow horizontally instead of down. Watering less frequently, but longer, will result in stronger plants. (Exception: tomatoes need more frequent watering I think.) If the roots are established deeply, more than likely it will rain in a 2 week period and then watering isn't necessary. Early morning watering is better than mid day or evening too. Newly established lawns, plants/shrubs, and trees do need more care and they are exempt from restrictions. And "A watering can, container or hose may be used at any time to water
gardens, trees or shrubs if the device is used manually and not left
unattended." The problem I have with restrictions is for one, the day system. Yes, it is simple. I am just thinking that maybe, just maybe I get the troops to finally wash the vinyl siding on my house only to realize the day is wrong! That is just a little annoyance. The bigger picture is that Brookfield (and other cities outside of the Lake Michigan watershed) approve heavy water using development like restaurants or car washes left and right, but then tells me, who washes a car maybe 4 times a year I am restricted! (Car washes that use recycled water are exempt from the restriction, but they still use more than a homeowner!) The article said that fines would be given for violators. In Brookfield the fine is $350. In Waukesha for example, "We wanted to nudge people to realize that we are serious about
protecting the (water) resource," said Nancy Quirk of the Waukesha Water
Utility. I don't mind protecting water resources. Plentiful, good quality well water is a problem in Brookfield. But if municipalities were really serious about protecting water resources, would they be approving more and more heavy water users like restaurants, hotels, and car washes? Will water concerns at all determine what VK puts in at his Ruby Farms development? Approving them and then cracking down on residents to "save water" seems a little 2 faced to me. *UPDATE: City clarifies sprinkling policy, New rule aims to cut down lawn watering Director of Public Works "Grisa said the ordinance does not apply to certain expectations, including hand washing of residential vehicles, residential uses such as children running through sprinklers and had watering of plants with a watering can or hose. He said that residents using water for those purposes should exercise common sense and not keep water running when it's not being used."
Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Thursday, May 8 2008, 10:39 AM
Marie Antoinette's "Let them eat cake" is quoted a lot these days in regard to ethanol and rising food prices. There are many interpretations as to what she meant by it--some debate whether she said it at all. The most interesting explanation I ever heard came from a UWM theater department teacher. She said that "cake" was the term for a gasket made from dough strips used to seal oven doors. When the baking was finished, the very over-baked, virtually inedible dough gaskets were scraped off and discarded. The poor would dig these out of the garbage and attempt to eat them. In other words, the bakers used food for a purpose other than human or animal consumption, and the insensitive Marie said the starving could always eat the gaskets.
I think that explanation fits in rather well with today's food for fuel fiasco. But I am adding to the travesty of diverting food into ethanol production, the misuse and abuse of water used for producing biofuel. Hence my version of Marie's statement, Let them eat and drink ethanol! People are waking up to the fact that ethanol is not the answer to energy independence. Even Former President Clinton, at a campaign stop for his wife in
Pennsylvania, said, "Corn is the single most
inefficient way to produce ethanol because it uses a lot of energy and
because it drives up the price of food." Some people are aware that food-to-fuel mandates have increased demand on water resources. Corn in particular requires irrigation in most areas. We noted this on our last few trips out west--hundreds of acres of corn fields all being irrigated. Water is becoming a rare resource in some areas. (If you live west of the sub-continental divide on Sunnyslope Road, you have probably been paying attention to water rights issues.) But what most people don't realize is that ethanol production causes water pollution too--both in the growing of corn and in the production of ethanol itself--regardless of the plant source. Corn is a nitrogen needy plant and is very soil depleting. (Remember how the Native Americans taught the Pilgrims to put a fish in each hill of corn?) Well today's farmers rely heavily on nitrogen rich fertilizers. The Washington Post stated, "Increased agricultural production also means increased fertilizer use. The National Academy of Sciences reported
last month that meeting the congressional food-to-fuel mandate by 2022
would lead to a 10 to 19 percent increase in the size of the Gulf of Mexico's "dead zone" -- an area so polluted by fertilizer runoff that no aquatic life can survive there." Polluting farmland runoff is not the worst of it. Ethanol factories also exude an alarming amount of polluted water. I have heard it described as a glycerin type effluent that causes fish die off. Water Use and Pollution Syrup, batches of bad ethanol, and sewage are dumped
into streams, threatening fish and plants with chloride, copper and
other wastes which deprive waters of oxygen when they decompose. A
state inspector in Iowa reported that a creek next to the ethanol plant
in Sioux Center was milky and smelled like sewage.
Water Supply Can't Meet Thirst For New Industry ...Nowhere is the growing clash between
economic development and water conservation more evident than in the
push to build ethanol plants that typically guzzle 3½ to 6 gallons of
water for every gallon of fuel produced. Minnesota's 15 ethanol plants
together consume about 2 billion gallons of water per year.
Drunk on Ethanol MTBE pollutes ground and surface water, but so does ethanol.
With each gallon of ethanol you get 12 gallons of sewagelike effluent
produced by the fermentation/distillation process. So, let's see... biofuel production causes local and world wide food prices to rise, food shortages, water shortages due to irrigation, pollution from fertilizer runoff, and pollution to waterways from ethanol production. (Don't forget air pollution from burning ethanol.) And most politicians are still chanting the ethanol mantra in order to save the planet from supposed CO2 pollution? (Explanation: The corn grower / ethanol lobby is very influential.) Let's hope these increasingly anti-ethanol articles and news stories about world food shortages and pollution will embarrass our Federal and State legislators into voting against or better yet repealing global warming and ethanol mandates. Otherwise, I am afraid we won't have much choice but to eat and drink ethanol! Riots, instability spread as food prices skyrocket
Ethanol's Failed Promise Let Them Eat Cake
The World's Growing Food-Price CrisisHunger fuels food riots in Haiti Go, Jim and Jeff, Go! Repeal Those Ethanol Mandates (links to legislators included) Links: Don't forget, Free Pass To Movie Preview of "The Enemy God" Saturday at 3pm
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Vicki Mckenna
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By Kyle Prast
Monday, Apr 28 2008, 10:02 PM
Congressman Sensenbrenner brought up Senate bill S. 2191, the Lieberman/Warner "America's Climate Security Act of 2007" at his Town Hall meeting Sunday. He described it as a "disaster for Wisconsin."
Information on S. 2191 from Congressman Sensenbrenner's website: “S. 2191 proposes
a nationwide cap-and-trade program for the emissions of greenhouse
gases, like carbon dioxide, an important component of the manufacturing
industry. By setting a limit and capping carbon dioxide emissions by
businesses, the Lieberman/Warner bill would thrust a highly regulatory
regime on our nation’s economy, making electricity more expensive for
businesses and consumers. In Wisconsin, which relies heavily on the
use of coal for electricity, this bill would have a catastrophic effect
as we would be especially hard hit.
“This point is underscored in a study
commissioned by the National Association of Manufacturers to assess the
potential impacts of S. 2191 on Wisconsin’s economy…and the results are
scary.
The Congressman discussed that study at the meeting and on Charlie Sykes show. The predictions were "scary."
“According to the
study, electricity rates in Wisconsin could increase by as much as 163%
in 2030 - nearly tripling today’s costs - and gas prices could increase
by as much as 176% in 2030, again, almost tripling today’s cost of
natural gas.
Not only will we be paying more for utilities, a figure of a 145% increase in gasoline prices was also given on Charlie Sykes show Monday, April 28, Ready for $10 a gallon gas? Of course, these additional costs to businesses will be passed onto consumers. The Director of the Congressional Budget Office testified, "Under a cap-and-trade program, firms would not ultimately
bear most of the costs of the allowances but instead would pass them
along to their customers in the form of higher prices."
So not only do we get to pay for higher energy costs for our own use, but we will pay more for every item and service produced in Wisconsin too. Who would ever want to live in Wisconsin or locate their business here if that is the case? The National Association of Manufacturers report estimated that by 2030, 74,000 jobs would leave Wisconsin and a whopping 4 million jobs would leave our nation, because businesses naturally seek the cheapest and easiest place to manufacture their products. What exactly is a cap-and-trade and why does it have such a negative impact on Wisconsin? Cap-and-trade is another term for Carbon Credit (or indulgences). Congress or bureaucrats set a cap or maximum on greenhouse gases that can be emitted by a company--be it a corporation or a utility company. Companies that do not comply with the standard must then have to purchase carbon offsets from companies that do comply. It is like a type of stock market that deals in these special credits. According to Congressman Sensenbrenner, since Wisconsin gets 2/3 of its electrical power from coal fired plants, but Illinois obtains 60% of its electric power from clean nuclear power plants that emit 0 CO2, we will have to purchase these carbon offsets from Illinois just to keep producing our needed electricity! Illinois in effect gets their energy costs subsidized by Wisconsin residents. Wisconsin ends up paying 176% more for our electricity. OUCH! (At present, only 20% of Wisconsin electric comes from nuclear plants.)
Think no one in their right mind would agree to a system like this? Think again. Europe has been doing this for nearly 3 years now. Europe's greenhouse gases continue to rise as do their electricity rates. It has done nothing to lower emissions according to a publication from Sensenbrenner's office. I believe Australia just signed on to a system of carbon credits too. Since businesses will just relocate to third world countries to manufacture their goods, these carbon credits will do nothing to lower CO2 emissions worldwide. The pollution will just move to the far east. The increase in costs due to cap-and-trade fees are estimated at $1,300 a year / household for Wisconsinites. Please contact Senators Kohl (Phone: (414) 297-4451, (202) 224-5653) and Feingold (Office
of Senator Russ Feingold | 202/224-5323) and let them know what you think about this bill. Representative Zipperer informed the Town Hall meeting atendees that the Wisconsin Assembly recently passed legislation that lifted the moratorium on nuclear power plants last session. The Senate however did not. He said they would try again next time. Contact your state representative and senator about the moratorium. State Representative Leah Vukmir, Republican, 14th District Rep.Vukmir@legis.wisconsin.gov 608-266-9180
Representative Rich Zipperer, Republican, 98th District Rep.Zipperer@legis.wisconsin.gov 608-266-5120
State Senator Jim Sullivan, Democrat, 5th District Sen.Sullivan@legis.wisconsin.gov 608-266-2512, 866-817-6061
State Senator Theodore Kanavas, Republican, 33rd District Sen.Kanavas@legis.wisconsin.gov 608-266-9174, 800-863-8883
Congressman Sensenbrenner's contact info:Email Telephone: (262) 784-1111, (202) 225-5101 Links: Upcoming events in Brookfield 4th Annual Weed Out, May 3rd, Mary Knoll Park
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Vicki Mckenna
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