CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“GREEN GROUPS SAY BROWN LIVING DOWN TO HIS NAME”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“GREEN GROUPS SAY BROWN LIVING DOWN TO HIS NAME”
From the day Republican President Donald
Trump won last fall’s election, Gov. Jerry Brown has worked to position himself
as the leader of the loyal opposition, saying time and again that he will fight
for the liberal agenda so popular in California, from same sex marriage to
climate change activism.
He’s especially vocal about preserving
the state’s ability to move on its own to improve air quality and reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases most scientists have found are a prime cause of
climate change and global warming.
So it was quite contrarian when 12 environmental
and public interest groups published a report the other day questioning Brown’s
green credentials, rating him as living down to his name: “Brown” on everything
from oil drilling to preventing toxic emissions and promoting an overcapacity
of fossil-fueled, greenhouse gas-spewing electric plants.
That last may have been the biggest
surprise, considering Brown’s frequent posturing as a champion of renewable
energy, especially power from wind and solar sources. Despite his frequent
words, the 12 groups say California now derives 60 percent of its power from
fossil fuels, mostly natural gas, while in 2012, just after Brown took office
for the second time, the state was getting just 53 percent of its electricity
from such “dirty” sources.
What’s more, the groups charged in
their 56-page report, Brown systematically encourages a glut of power plants
that sees consumers paying for about 20 percent more generating capacity than the
state will ever need in the foreseeable future.
The accusing groups include Consumer
Watchdog, Food & Water Watch, Physicians for Social Responsibility, and
Restore the Delta, among others. Restore the Delta has long opposed Brown’s
“twin tunnels” plan to bring Northern California river water around the
Sacramento-San Joaquin river delta, while Consumer Watchdog previously issued a
report accusing Brown of political corruption.
As with past reports like that, Brown
has said nothing about the claims against him, thus assuring they have gotten
little publicity. “Same drivel, different day,” press secretary Evan Westrup opined.
But the claims in the environmental
report appear every bit as solid as those in the previous corruption
allegations, the subject of an ongoing investigation by a state watchdog
agency.
Food and Water Watch is particularly
incensed about the apparent acquiescence of Brown appointees in plans of
Southern California Gas Co. to reopen its flawed Aliso Canyon gas storage field
in northern Los Angeles, even if it’s at somewhat lower levels of gas quantity
than SoCal Gas finds optimal.
The group noted that Brown’s sister,
Kathleen, the former state treasurer, draws a six-figure fee as a board member
of SoCal’s parent company, Sempra Energy, saying that makes his actions on
Aliso a conflict of interest.
The report also castigates Brown for
“nurturing (oil and gas) drilling and fracking,” repeating a contention that
early in his term he fired regulators who tried to delay hydraulic fracking for
gas and oil in Kern County until there were assurances that waste water from
those operations would not harm ground water supplies often used for crop
irrigation.
The report claimed Brown is living out
his 2012 statement that “The oil rigs are moving in Kern County…we want to use
our resources (including) the sun and all the other sources of power. It’s not
easy. There are going to be screwups, there are going to be bankruptcies, there’ll
be indictments and there’ll be deaths, but…nothing is going to stop us.” So
far, there have been no indictments, but former Brown-appointed members of the
state Public Utilities Commission have been under investigation since early
2015 by federal and state authorities.
The green groups noted that Democratic U.S. Sen.
Dianne Feinstein endorses a state legislative bill to keep Aliso Canyon closed
until the causes of the storage field’s months-long leak in 2015 and 2016 are
found and fixed. Brown is silent on that bill.
None of these claims has yet had any effect on
either Brown’s approval ratings or his policies. No one yet knows if the
contradictions cited between his posturing and his actions will affect his
legacy, his standing in state history or his prospects in a potential future run
for the Senate.
Which means all anyone can do is stay
tuned.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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