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Subject:LA Times -- Dem leadership to Sue FERC Over Price Cap -- Hertzberg
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Date:Tue, 22 May 2001 02:47:00 -0700 (PDT)

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Tuesday, May 22, 2001

Legislators Set to Sue Federal Energy Agency
Power: Lawmakers try a new idea: a lawsuit arguing that blackouts pose
danger to people, law enforcement and even water supply.


By DAN MORAIN, Times Staff Writer

SACRAMENTO--Legislative Democrats today will sue federal energy
regulators, charging that their inaction threatens elderly people in nursing
homes, children in day care centers, law enforcement and its ability to fight
crime, and the state's drinking water supplies.
Rather than focus on record wholesale energy costs, the lawsuit takes a
new tack, homing in on the threat to health and safety posed by California's
energy crisis and the blackouts likely this summer.
A draft of the suit seeks to force the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission to set "just and reasonable" wholesale power rates as a way of
ending the crisis before blackouts occur. The action is being filed by
veteran trial attorney Joe Cotchett on behalf of Senate President Pro Tem
John Burton (D-San Francisco), Assembly Speaker Bob Hertzberg (D-Sherman
Oaks), and the city of Oakland.
"A crisis of unprecedented dimensions is already taking shape in
California," the draft says. "The public health, safety and welfare of the
state's 34 million residents is in jeopardy due to the tragic consequences of
rolling blackouts and punitive prices."

Suit Says Blackouts Pose Threats
Until now, most California officials, including Gov. Gray Davis, have
been urging that the regulatory commission cap wholesale power prices as a
way of limiting costs to the state, which has spent more than $6 billion
buying electricity since January.
In the lawsuit, Cotchett will be arguing that while higher bills will
stretch the budgets of people on fixed incomes, frail elderly people "are
left to wonder if their oxygen tanks, drip IVs, dialysis machines and
electricity-powered therapeutic beds will respond when they are needed."
"Rolling blackouts represent more than just an annoyance for the men,
women and children with disabilities," the suit says. "They represent an
imminent threat to life, health and independence."
Cotchett said the suit will be filed in the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals in San Francisco, bypassing the federal trial court. Cotchett said
the circuit court has direct jurisdiction over FERC.
Joining Cotchett will be Clark Kelso, a professor at McGeorge Law School
in Sacramento who briefly was insurance commissioner last year after Chuck
Quackenbush resigned. Kelso said he initially was skeptical that lawmakers
had legal standing to sue. But after Cotchett spoke with him, Kelso said he
became convinced the suit had merit.
"Let's face it," said Kelso, a Republican, "this is the single most
important issue that the state faces for the next six months."

Watching the Water Supply
The suit cites warnings from governmental agencies about the
implications of blackouts, including one the state Department of Health
Services issued earlier this month to public water agencies statewide. The
warning contains a sample notice that local water authorities should give to
consumers.
"If the water looks cloudy or dirty," the warning says, "you should not
drink it." The warning suggests that if people are concerned about water
quality, they can boil it or add "eight drops of household bleach to one
gallon of water, and let it sit for 30 minutes."
Most water agencies have back-up generators. But the suit says that "if
an agency's water treatment facilities are hit by a power outage, a two-hour
blackout can result in two-day interruptions in providing safe drinking water
because of time needed to bring equipment back online and flush potentially
contaminated water from the system."

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times


Sue Mara
Enron Corp.
Tel: (415) 782-7802
Fax:(415) 782-7854