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Energy Industry Generates Political Power with $11 Million in New York

Yesterday, as New York’s lawmakers began to scrutinize the failures that led to recent power outages in Western Queens and on Staten Island, Common Cause/NY released an analysis of the energy industry’s political spending.

Two weeks ago 100,000 Queens residents were plunged into a 10-day blackout. This week the New York City Council and the New York State Assembly are holding hearings on what went wrong. And today Mayor Bloomberg has already declared a heat emergency has New York City faces triple digit temperatures and the possibility of further large-scale blackouts.

Downloads, clips and more after the break...

But triple digit heat in the city is nothing compared to the 8 digits that the energy has shelled out in political spending in New York State. The energy industry has spent almost $11 million dollars on lobbying expenses and campaign contributions in New York State since 2003.

In turn, state oversight of energy companies and utilities has been shockingly lax. Our report also highlighted the fact that the Public Service Commission, the state agency that is supposed to ensure that companies are providing New Yorkers with affordable and reliable energy, is stacked with political cronies and energy industry insiders.

You learn more by checking out our press release, report and data sheets.

Our release was covered extensively by the statewide press and even appeared in papers across the nation and around the world.  Check out these stories in the New York Daily News, the Journal News and look for us in other publications in your area.


Tags: New York, Campaign Finance, Lobbying, the states (all tags)


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Centralized Energy Distribution Must Go!!!

We will never be free of the problems associated with overall consumption increases due to events such as heat waves until we free ourselves from the yoke of centralized power grids.

The roving blackouts of summers past, and the blackout that hit NYC and much of the Northeast a while back were both products of a system that was designed (albiet improved upon) over 75 years ago.

These days we are already concerned with our "dependance on foreign oil", or so our politicians say... so why not take that concern two steps further and kill 3 birds with 1 stone?

Personal or Commercial Building-wide photovoltaic systems (solar panels that generate electricity instead of heating water) have become cheaper, more widely available, and have even had some tax credits associated with them in recent years.

If you are sick of blackouts and have the money, or can take out a small loan, you can get your building enough photovoltaics to generate surplus energy in the sunny months of Summer, when most blackouts occur. You could then sell that energy back to the electric company for a profit, or use it for credits to obtain electricity from them in the darker winter months.

Whether you make money off of this endeavor or not, it would:

1) Protect you from summer blackouts on the hottest (almost by definition, sunny) days.

2) Reduce our dependance on foreign oil.

3) Reduce CO2 emissions, thus reducing your personal contribution to global climate change and overall pollution.

by jparis on Tue Aug 01, 2006 at 02:38:53 PM EST


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