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	<title>Comments on: Husted Stalls Energy Bill- Hopes for More Campaign Cash</title>
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	<description>A Progressive Political Playground</description>
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		<title>By: Johnny Springfield</title>
		<link>http://www.plunderbund.com/2007/10/31/husted-stalls-energy-bill-hopes-for-more-campaign-cash/comment-page-1/#comment-79862</link>
		<dc:creator>Johnny Springfield</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Nov 2007 17:04:51 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>So what&#039;s new? Husted, parlaying his status as speaker and the control he and his minions can exercise over legislation, is running the same power play he&#039;s run for years: Drag out important legislation to give special interest groups -- in this case utilities and their hired guns -- enough time to write checks that will likely produce the kind of results they are paying for.

If Husted had a robust track record of going to bat for consumers over the selfish interests of big business and their shareholders -- remember, he made his bones at the Dayton Chamber of Commerce -- he might be given a modicum of pause. But his record in this regard is so flimsy as to be invisible.

In regards to Ohio&#039;s juggernaut energy bill, FirstEnergy has already gamed the system by removing its coal-fired power plants from the grasp of Ohio officials. And let&#039;s not think the Public Utilities Commission has the stones to hold them to account, otherwise they&#039;d have done so by now.

For a company like FirstEnergy that made more money in the first nine months of this year than all of last year -- a cool $1 billion -- the tens of thousands of dollars they&#039;ve already put in the lobbying pot is nothing but chump change.

When the Ohio Consumer&#039;s Counsel, the utility-funded law firm that represents Ohio&#039;s 4.5 million residential users, declares the bill up to their standards, Ohioans can feel satisfied that their interests -- not the narrow needs of big energy users or profiteering utility company shareholders -- have been met.

And if Gov. Strickland and his energy team don&#039;t step up to the plate and fight for what he said in his energy speech was important to families -- empowering them to assure the rate-setting process is fair and transparent -- he will give Ohioans reason to believe that the $25,000 big utilities companies gave him for his inaugural festivities bought more than a good time for him and his supporters.

Ohioans should expect Husted to do what he&#039;s doing. They expect more from their new governor.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So what&#8217;s new? Husted, parlaying his status as speaker and the control he and his minions can exercise over legislation, is running the same power play he&#8217;s run for years: Drag out important legislation to give special interest groups &#8212; in this case utilities and their hired guns &#8212; enough time to write checks that will likely produce the kind of results they are paying for.</p>
<p>If Husted had a robust track record of going to bat for consumers over the selfish interests of big business and their shareholders &#8212; remember, he made his bones at the Dayton Chamber of Commerce &#8212; he might be given a modicum of pause. But his record in this regard is so flimsy as to be invisible.</p>
<p>In regards to Ohio&#8217;s juggernaut energy bill, FirstEnergy has already gamed the system by removing its coal-fired power plants from the grasp of Ohio officials. And let&#8217;s not think the Public Utilities Commission has the stones to hold them to account, otherwise they&#8217;d have done so by now.</p>
<p>For a company like FirstEnergy that made more money in the first nine months of this year than all of last year &#8212; a cool $1 billion &#8212; the tens of thousands of dollars they&#8217;ve already put in the lobbying pot is nothing but chump change.</p>
<p>When the Ohio Consumer&#8217;s Counsel, the utility-funded law firm that represents Ohio&#8217;s 4.5 million residential users, declares the bill up to their standards, Ohioans can feel satisfied that their interests &#8212; not the narrow needs of big energy users or profiteering utility company shareholders &#8212; have been met.</p>
<p>And if Gov. Strickland and his energy team don&#8217;t step up to the plate and fight for what he said in his energy speech was important to families &#8212; empowering them to assure the rate-setting process is fair and transparent &#8212; he will give Ohioans reason to believe that the $25,000 big utilities companies gave him for his inaugural festivities bought more than a good time for him and his supporters.</p>
<p>Ohioans should expect Husted to do what he&#8217;s doing. They expect more from their new governor.</p>
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