Strike Three For Kansas Coal?

Plans for new coal in Kansas are unraveling.
The latest? The Kansas House has failed to come up with a two-thirds majority to override Gov. Kathleen Sebelius’ vetoes of two new coal plants in Western Kansas.
In response, legislators have chosen to smear lipstick all over the legislative pig by layering it with economic development dollars for other parts of the state -- and calling it new. What nerve!
Here's how Kansas lawmaker Judy Morrison sees it:
"It's one of the worst bills I've ever seen. What they're trying to do is force everyone to vote for it. It's blackmail."
The "new" bill is expected to pass both chambers if it comes to a vote this week. Bets are Governor Sebelius kills it with another veto. That will take guts, again.
Good for the governor. Good for cleaner energy.
The Kansas coal saga started back in October when a state official rejected Sunflower Electric Power's permit to build the plants on account of climate change concerns. It was the first such rejection in America.
The Legislature rose up and passed a bill that would strip the state agency of its power to block new coal. Gov. Sebelius vetoed it -- twice.
Now it's looking like the coal plants won't happen, and they were never a good idea -- not when they'll put Kansas in a financial whole once federal climate legislation kicks in.
The Kansas coal drama has been getting boatloads of media coverage. As it should.
Now for the lesser-told story...
It’s about how Kansas -- and half of all the states in America, collectively -- are leading the charge to slow global warming.
They've been building the climate-fighting template for coming federal legislation by investing in advanced energy efficiencies and cleaner sources -- and saving state dollars too.
But they can't go it alone.
So at last month's Yale climate change conference, US governors gathered to demand a
first-ever federal-state partnership to hammer out a national price on carbon and national carbon reduction targets.
It ended with a resolution signed by 18 governors. Gov. Sebelius was one of them.
Comforting to know that America's top coal fighter is working to influence Washington lawmakers as they try to find a way out of the nation's energy pickle.
Source: The Witchita Eagle














Kansas politicians continue
Kansas politicians continue to disagree over two coal-burning plants planned for western Kansas. The state administration refused to grant the necessary permits. Now pro-coal legislators are trying to get a law passed to allow construction. Turns out the plants are being built in Kansas, but will send most of their power to Colorado.
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