Tell him that polls show that there are a substantial number of Republicans who are in favor of renewable electricity (wind & solar power).
Tell the Governor that nobody is happy to write a check to the power company
The Governor (and his advisor Mark Shanahan) has been out front and leading a modest proposal to advance renewable energy and rate protection for consumers. He should dig in. We've got his back.
Ohio voters support renewable energy, poll finds
Saturday, October 13, 2007 - John Funk Plain Dealer Reporter
An overwhelming majority of Ohio voters of all political stripes strongly favors requiring the state's utilities to generate electricity with wind turbines and other renewable technologies, even it were to cost more.
"Eight in 10 Ohioans support setting a renewable energy standard," Erin Bowser, director of Environment Ohio, told a Senate Committee on Energy and Public Utilities this week.
She said a survey conducted for the environmental advocacy group also shows that about three-quarters of the 600 registered Ohio voters polled in mid- September agreed that building new coal-fired or nuclear power plants "ought to be a last resort."
The Senate committee is continuing hearings on Gov. Ted Strickland's comprehensive electric restructuring bill. The proposal includes a provision to require the state's utilities to generate 12½ percent of their power with wind turbines, solar panels and other renewable technologies by 2020. Environment Ohio wants the lawmakers to set a 20 percent standard.
...
Other findings include:
The support for renewable energy cut across political lines. For example, 71 percent of Republicans and 76 percent of Democrats said they would support a renewable standard.
Support for the standard was just as high in rural areas, 80 percent; small towns, 81 percent, as in large cities, 84 percent.
By a nine-to-one margin, those surveyed said their legislator's support of a renewable energy standard would be a positive in their vote decision.
More than 90 percent said they would be willing to pay more for green energy, with more than a third saying they would be willing to pay an extra $10 per month.
www.cleveland.com October 13, 2007
A spokesman for the Ohio Consumers' Counsel was on the radio yesterday morning and remarked that the Senators probably did not know what they were voting for. I don't have the vote tally, but I expect that First Energy and their plague of lobbyists influenced a few Democratic Senators.
We activists should call our representatives (in the Ohio House) and tell them that we want the renewable energy portfolio to be "restored" to the governor's original plan. We want the original price plan also.