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The Devil is in the Details
You've heard the old saying, "The devil
is in the details." Well, just imagine all the little
demons lurking in the densely packed pages of proposed legislation
changing the way Texas consumers to choose their power suppliers.
The motivation for restructuring the electric
industry is coming primarily from big industrial users of
electricity, investor-owed utilities (IOU's) and independent
power producers. They expect to make a lot of money in a restructured
market, and already they're running expensive ads touting
the benefits the average consumer will experience in a competitive
market.
Proponents of competition say that retail
deregulation should result in lower prices, more options for
customers and help attract new companies to Texas. However,
the state's 83 electric cooperatives, which represent some
three million member-consumers, are skeptical about the proposed
benefits of restructuring.
As a matter of fact, we do not believe it
will benefit typical residential consumers in California and
other states that have taken the restructuring lead as they
have not experienced the benefits that proponents of deregulation
so ardently promised. What's more, Texas already has some
of the lowest electric rates in the United States, and our
reliability is superior to the national standard, so we don't
see the need for a rush to deregulate.
We're also concerned about the trend we've
seen in other industries that have deregulated, where a few
industry giants gobble up the smaller companies or existing
companies merge, until only a handful of companies remain
in business. Customers are left with a choice in name only.
Despite our reservations, we're willing to accept any industry
restructuring plan that meets certain basic conditions. As
the one segment of the electric utility industry that represents
those on the buying side of the meter, co-ops will be speaking
up for the fair treatment of all customers, access to affordable
electric service for everyone and electric system safety and
reliability. In Austin and in Washington, where restructuring
legislation also has been introduced, those bedrock considerations
should be the primary goal of any restructuring scheme. They
shouldn't be mere afterthoughts to legislation designed to
favor certain large users.
As a century looms dead ahead, it's only
natural that Texas lawmakers will have their eyes focused
on the future. We want those lawmakers to know that electric
co-ops in the Lone Star State have their own vision for the
future as well. We see flexible power providers responsive
to their member-consumers, not to corporate boards and anonymous
investors. We see groups coming together to "cooperate,"
not only to provide electric power and other services to their
members, but to bring new opportunity to their communities.
It's the co-op way. It's worked throughout much of the 20th
century; it will work in
the 21st century.
By Mike Williams, President and CEO, Texas
Electric Cooperatives
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