Use Request to Speak to OPPOSE SB1175 and HB2248
Sign on to Request to speak: https://apps.azleg.gov/account/signon
Sign up for a Request to Speak account here: https://www.cebv.us/rts.html
In November, the Arizona Corporation Commission voted on a comprehensive set of new clean energy policies. If finalized, these rules will require Arizona utilities to deliver 100% carbon-free electricity by 2050 (with benchmarks along the way), invest in more energy efficiency and energy storage, and make utility planning processes more transparent. Our legislature, of course, sees this as a personal attack, so two bills are moving forward to ban the ACC from doing its job. (Called mirror legislation, which you may remember from the bill that became Prop 305, it involves two identical versions of a bill moving simultaneously in the House and Senate, in a process designed to fast-track legislation and limit public input.) And since our ACC was established in Article 15 of the Arizona Constitution, the bills may even be unconstitutional.
- Clean energy is good for Arizona. It keeps electricity costs lower, consistent, predictable and reliable over the long term. Being a solar leader gives us more energy independence and control.
- This is not the Legislature's job. Managing energy policy is one of many reasons why the ACC exists and why Arizona voters elect their utility regulators.
- This silences voters. The ACC rules have gone through nearly two years of development and vetting, If we wanted this done, we would have said so.
- This would make our state an outlier. APS, TEP and SRP all have introduced plans to significantly reduce carbon emissions, as have neighboring states like New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado.
Scheduled for House Natural Resources, Energy and Water Committee, Tuesday at 2 p.m.
(Weigh in on Request to Speak before or while it is still in committee.)
HB2248, sponsored by Gail Griffin (R-14), would prohibit the Arizona Corporation Commission from regulating the types of electric generation used by public service corporations, retroactive to June 2020. In other words, the entity that is supposed to regulate power companies in Arizona would be left unable to require clean energy standards. This comes in the wake of landmark new rules the ACC passed in November which require state-regulated utilities to get 100% of their power from carbon-free sources by 2050. Newly elected commissioner Anna Tovar described the bill on Twitter as an unconstitutional overreach that would force the ACC to abdicate its power to the legislature. See mirror bill SB1175, also moving this week. Scheduled for House Natural Resources, Energy and Water Committee, Tuesday. OPPOSE.
Senate Natural Resources, Energy and Water Committee Wednesday at 9 a.m.
(Weigh in on Request to Speak before Wednesday or while it is still in committee.)
SB1175, sponsored by Sine Kerr (R-13), would prohibit the Arizona Corporation Commission from regulating the types of electric generation used by public service corporations, retroactive to June 2020. In other words, the entity that is supposed to regulate power companies in Arizona would be unable to require clean energy standards. This comes in the wake of landmark new rules the ACC passed in November which require state-regulated utilities to get 100% of their power from carbon-free sources by 2050. Newly elected commissioner Anna Tovar described the bill on Twitter as an unconstitutional overreach that would force the ACC to abdicate its power to the legislature. See mirror bill HB2248, also moving this week. Scheduled for Senate Natural Resources, Energy and Water Committee, Wednesday. OPPOSE.
Wanna do more?
Then consider watching the committee hearings (House Tuesday at 2pm, Senate Wednesday at 9am). It's also not too late to testify remotely in the Senate. Here's how: RTS "no" on SB1175, click the "testify remotely" button, and email SenateNREW@azleg.gov by Tuesday at 9am for login instructions. 1. Use Request to Speak as usual; select "Yes - Remotely" under "Do you wish to speak?"
2. Send an email to the committee email address (listed here) at least 24 hours before committee hearing begins (not counting weekends and holidays)
3. You will receive an email with teleconference sign-in instructions.
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