Posted on 11/10/2010 9:49:32 AM PST by EBH
The Governor and State Legislature need to get rid of this one way or another. How about double the size of the board and filling it with their people?
Several midwestern states along with Ontario are part of some carbon reductions compact.
The Legislature turned this down twice. Gov. Richardson then initiated this effort by executive order and stacked the Board with environmentalist, it is my belief that the new Gov. who will take office on 1 Jan will eliminate the Board and reverse their decision.
Remember this the next time someone tries to argue that Bill Richardson is such a clever, smart guy.
In a totally unrelated story, NM unemployment has risen from 7.8% to 8.2% over the past year, as local businesses move out of state or choose to expand elsewhere.
NM Ping
The new incoming governor may have something to say about this.
Anyone catch what this is really about? Here’s a clue:
“The program is designed to contain costs to industry and consumers through several mechanisms, including the free allocation of pollution allowances to regulated sources;”
Ah, so government controlled (”regulated”) sources will get a pass, while private sector ones won’t. What a shock. NOT!
I feel like burning some tires!
In a related story:
“Texas is open for Business”.
If you wish to relocate your business, FreepMail me and we can get ‘r done.
Thanks for the PING!
It isn’t going to stand. It has no support except for Richardson and his environutters. Even the Lt. Gov (who lost her race for gov) was against it and the ABQ Journal has editorialized that it needs to be repealed.
Interestingly enough, testimony at the hearing was pretty much limited to the economic costs; the premise that the underlying science was flawed was not discussed to any great extent. As a scientist myself, that makes me furious that the official record does not contain lengthy testimony questioning the science.
Global Warming on Free Republic
Cedar Dave you should know better, we are talking environmental stuff here, science is not required only feeling.
Yeah, right. Bird-killing wind turbines on every mesa, solar panels on every vacant lot and lots of "clean energy" (read "government") jobs to make sure industry complies.
That pretty well sums up the "thinking" of most of those living north of Rio Rancho to the Colorado border.
Can’t NM do something positive? NM certainly has the sunshine to exploit solar power.
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