Legislature(1993 - 1994)
01/26/1993 10:00 AM House O&G
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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
Number 336
CHAIRMAN GREEN advised that HB 80 which placed a limit on
the amount of acreage a certain entity might hold, would be
heard by the committee after receipt of a similar bill by
the governor.
CHAIRMAN GREEN talked about a bill currently in the House
State Affairs Committee that, in effect, charged a nickel a
barrel to build a fund, the 470 Fund, that would be useable
in case of an oil spill disaster. He was concerned that
this bill had a tendency to want to have more things funded
from that fund. His personal view was that if the fund was
justified to begin with then it should be accomplished and
not be continually syphoned off.
Number 365
REPRESENTATIVE OLBERG thought he had a major investigation
going with regard to where all the money in the 470 Fund
went, but found out that the Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC), published a book that said $47 million
had been skimmed off and what was done with it. If
necessary, he hoped to submit legislation to cap that fund
at $50 million and stop it from being a "DEC slush fund."
Number 373
CHAIRMAN GREEN believed the committee would be very helpful
in getting a cap on the 470 Fund. He stated the book
mentioned by Representative Olberg was an annual report
published by the DEC. He surmised the fund "runs $27 to $30
million a year of income at a nickel a barrel and you think
in a year and a half it would be full, but it has never got
there. In fact it is dangerously low, it is less than $20
million." He added, "something bad was going on."
Number 387
CHIP THOMA, an active participant in the legislative process
for about 22 years, gave an account of a McNeil Lehrer show
in which Charles DiBona of the American Petroleum Institute,
gave what he perceived as a very inappropriate view of the
way the industry was going to take on the new
administration.
MR. THOMA believed it was very evident from the comments
from Secretary Benson of the Treasury and the comments that
have been made by the new Clinton administration that there
would be an energy tax. He believed further that Mr.
DiBona's reticence to even entertain the idea of a tax, in
fact his unwillingness to consider such a tax, abounded ill
for the industry.
MR. THOMA surmised the administration had recognized that
our industries, homes, cars, and our whole way of using
petroleum based energy was totally inefficient and that we
wasted 50% of the energy we burned. Being in the insulation
business, he noted almost every house in the United States
was not properly insulated.
MR. THOMA stated that as long as the petroleum industry
continued their current way of making money and promoting
inefficiency things were not going to work and there would
be an energy tax on production, marketing, and consumers,
which would raise $150 billion a year to bring down the
deficit and be placed in environmental and conservation
programs throughout the country.
MR. THOMA added that a nickel a barrel was an example of the
type of tax that would be placed on the industry. He agreed
some of those monies had perhaps "gone out the door a little
bit too fast," but urged the committee to consider the trend
in the national administration.
Number 434
CHAIRMAN GREEN invited those in attendance to the next
committee meeting on Thursday, January 28, 1993.
ADJOURNMENT
CHAIRMAN GREEN then adjourned the meeting at 10:40 a.m.
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