I was back at the N.C. General Assembly again this week for another meeting of the N.C. House Water Resources Committee on Tuesday. The meeting was designed to give committee members an opportunity to ask questions about Senate Bill 967, a bill that would authorize North Carolina to take over Alcoa’s privately-owned hydroelectric business along the Yadkin River.
A couple of highlights worth sharing:
1. Faison Hicks, a lawyer with the N.C. Attorney General’s office who has been involved in Gov. Perdue’s push for a government takeover, acknowledged that it is impossible to know what a government takeover of the Yadkin Project would cost. Alcoa believes a takeover will cost North Carolina more than $500 million.
2. When pressed about why the legislature needed to pass Senate Bill 967 this year – without knowing the potential price tag associated with it – Mr. Hicks said it wasn’t necessary to pass this legislation for the state to continue its pursuit of a takeover. He said the state can continue its efforts at the federal level regardless of whether this bill is approved or not.
3. Richard Whisnant, a professor with the UNC School of Government who has extensively studied water issues in North Carolina, acknowledged that control of the water in the Yadkin River will still be subject to federal regulation even if North Carolina succeeds in taking over the Yadkin Project.
Committee members asked a lot of thoughtful and probing questions that underscore the complexity and uncertainty of a government takeover and the associated cost for North Carolina.
One member asked whether a takeover of the Yadkin Project would be a pilot project that could ultimately lead to a state takeover of other privately-owned hydro projects, such as those operated by Duke Energy and Progress Energy. “I don’t know,” Mr. Hicks said.
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