Enron Mail

From:james.steffes@enron.com
To:david.delainey@enron.com, john.lavorato@enron.com, kevin.presto@enron.com,tim.belden@enron.com, janet.dietrich@enron.com, christopher.calger@enron.com
Subject:Fwd: Bush Nominates Hebert for Energy
Cc:richard.shapiro@enron.com
Bcc:richard.shapiro@enron.com
Date:Tue, 23 Jan 2001 02:10:00 -0800 (PST)

FYI. Hebert is a strong opponent of price caps but not sure how hard he is
willing to push on RTO formation and additional transmission open access.

Jim

----- Forwarded by James D Steffes/NA/Enron on 01/23/2001 10:08 AM -----

"Ronald Carroll" <rcarroll@bracepatt.com<
01/22/2001 05:56 PM

To: <rreilley@coral-energy.com<, <acomnes@enron.com<, <dfulton@enron.com<,
<jdasovic@enron.com<, <jhartso@enron.com<, <jsteffe@enron.com<,
<linda.robertson@enron.com<, <mary.hain@enron.com<, <smara@enron.com<,
<snovose@enron.com<, <seabron.adamson@frontier-economics.com<,
<gackerman@wptf.org<
cc:
Subject: Fwd: Bush Nominates Hebert for Energy


----- Message from "Tracey Bradley" <tbradley@bracepatt.com< on Mon, 22 Jan
2001 17:38:37 -0600 -----
To: "Carol Bashara" <cbashara@bracepatt.com<, "Cindy Engelbrecht"
<cengelbrecht@bracepatt.com<, "Debbie Rowe"
<drowe@bracepatt.com<,<gfoote@bracepatt.com<, <jjava@bracepatt.com<, "Karen
Bishop" <kbishop@bracepatt.com<, <mhenry@bracepatt.com<, "Minh-tu Nguyen"
<NGUYM@bracepatt.com<, "Nancy Pickover" <npickover@bracepatt.com<,
<pricketts@bracepatt.com<, <rrich@bracepatt.com<, <rryan@bracepatt.com<,
<tbradley@bracepatt.com<
cc: "Andrea Settanni" <asettanni@bracepatt.com<, "Charles Ingebretson"
<cingebretson@bracepatt.com<, "Charles Shoneman" <cshoneman@bracepatt.com<,
"Deanna King" <dking@bracepatt.com<, "Jeffrey Watkiss"
<dwatkiss@bracepatt.com<, "Gene Godley" <ggodley@bracepatt.com<, "Kimberly
Curry" <kcurry@bracepatt.com<, "Michael Pate" <mpate@bracepatt.com<, "Paul
Fox" <pfox@bracepatt.com<, "Ronald Carroll" <rcarroll@bracepatt.com<
Subject: Bush Nominates Hebert for Energy
Bush Nominates Hebert for Energy
( January 22, 2001 )


WASHINGTON, Jan 22, 2001 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- President Bush named Curt
Hebert, who has argued against federal involvement in the California
electricity crisis, as chairman of the agency that regulates wholesale power
markets.

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer announced the selection as senior
administration officials, including Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham, met at
the White House to discuss the California power situation.

Hebert, the former state utility regulator in Mississippi, is the only
Republican on the current five-member Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
which he will head. Bush shortly is expected to name two new members.

Despite California's problems, Hebert gave a strong endorsement Monday
of electricity deregulation and letting market forces determine prices and
electricity supplies.

As FERC chairman, he said in a statement, "I will do my utmost to see
that competition is encouraged, that it is fair, that consumers have a
genuine choice, and that the public interest is safeguarded."

Total competition in the electricity industry "is part of the solution
rather than part of the problem" now faced in California, he said. Retail
prices there in many cases remain regulated.

A close friend of Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., Hebert
has argued forcefully in recent weeks against FERC imposing price controls on
wholesale electricity sales into California.

When FERC in mid-December took modest steps to help California cope
with its surging electricity prices, Hebert agreed with the measures, but
said he would rather have favored eliminating all price controls.

In an interview last week, Bush also expressed his opposition to
imposing price controls - in the form of FERC-mandated price caps on
wholesale power - on the California market, saying they would be
counterproductive.

California Gov. Gray Davis and the state's cash-strapped utilities have
urged FERC to intervene in the wholesale market, arguing that power
generating companies were price gouging. FERC has so far rejected the plea.

Hebert was described by power industry officials as a free-market
advocate when it comes to the electricity industry and has favored leaving
decisions on electricity deregulation to states instead of the federal
government.

Hebert replaces William Massey, a Democrat, who was elevated to the
chairmanship by President Clinton on Jan. 19, after James Hoecker, another
Clinton appointee, unexpectedly resigned.

Hebert, 38, a former Mississippi state legislator and member of the
state Public Service Commission, joined FERC in November, 1997. His current
term expires in 2004.

He comes from Pascagoula, Miss., as does Lott.

With Hoecker's resignation there remain two vacancies on the
commission, which has been at the center of both the natural gas and
electricity industry's shift to deregulation in recent years.

It was FERC that issued rules that opened the nation's electric power
grid to competition in the mid-1990s, prompting many states - led by efforts
in California - to embrace electricity industry deregulation amid promises it
would lead to lower consumer prices because of competition. In most cases,
deregulation has not led to substantial savings for consumers.

In California, where the effort has been acknowledged as a failure,
power prices have soared amid shortages that have produced rolling blackouts
in recent days and threatened two of the state's major investor-owned
utilities with bankruptcy.



By H. JOSEF HEBERT Associated Press Writer