Frontlines

Fortnightly Magazine - June 1 1995
This full article is only accessible by current license holders. Please login to view the full content.
Don't have a license yet? Click here to sign up for Public Utilities Fortnightly, and gain access to the entire Fortnightly article database online.

It was after seven o'clock in the evening (em nearly 12 hours since the DOE-NARUC Second National Electricity Forum had gotten underway up in Providence, RI (em when it all finally hit home. This time the regulators were serious. People were paying attention. Stay with me for a moment.

Two high-level staffers from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) were up at the podium, giving a class on the FERC's Electric Giga-NOPR (the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on open-access electric transmission and stranded investment, released on March 29). I and about 700 other conference attendees had been at it since early morning, grabbing an earful of numbing acronyms like PURPA and PUHCA.

There we were (em 700 eager students and two FERC professors, well into our second hour of NOPR college (em when up to the microphone stepped Elizabeth Anne Moler, Chair of the FERC, intent on ringing the school bell. After all, the NOPR was over 300 pages long; the hour was late; we were tired; she probably was too. So first she thanked us for our rapt attention, and then she pleaded with us to put it to bed for gosh sakes and go out to the hall where the bar was open and the hors d'oeuvres lay waiting (em both untouched for an hour.

Nothing like a good rulemaking to keep a body out of trouble. Or, as commissioner James Hoecker said of FERC's NOPR, "Belly up to the buzzsaw."

Dysfunctional

The FERC won't admit it, but it has started down the road to breaking up the investor-owned electric industry.

This full article is only accessible by current license holders. Please login to view the full content.
Don't have a license yet? Click here to sign up for Public Utilities Fortnightly, and gain access to the entire Fortnightly article database online.