Vermont state senators apparently aren't held to the same truthiness standards as Vermont Yankee employees.
"Several weeks ago, Vermont Senate President Peter Shumlin called a vote of the Vermont Senate on whether or not to give the Public Service Commission permission to issue a certificate of public good for the continued operation of Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station. One of the premises underlying the decision that the Senate made to refuse that permission was that there were other available sources of power that could replace the plant's output.
Presumably, before making that kind of decision, the senators would have received extensive staff briefings that supported their conclusion. Presumably, the senators would take the time required to understand the issues and make the best possible decision for the people that they represent. We all know that our representatives cannot be experts on all topics that might come before them, but most of us have at least some degree of trust that the representatives will take the time to listen to their staff briefs so that they can make a reasonably accurate decision based on the knowable facts.
The video above (see link) is a clear demonstration that Vermont Senator Peter Shumlin, at the very least, did not take the time to be reasonably well informed about energy before calling the vote in his legislative body. Despite repeated opportunities to "take a lookup" (that is the way that we answer in my profession if we are asked a question where we are not sure of the answer) Shumlin repeated that Germany gets 30% of its electricity from solar energy. When told that Wikipedia has a statistic of 1% with an eventual goal of 25% by 2050, he dismissed that as "that's Wikipedia" as if the answer was completely wrong."
http://theenergycollective.com/TheEnergyCollective/60965?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=The+Energy+Collective+%28all+posts%29