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Consumer Watchdog

Energy

$ 1 BILLION HANDOUT?

$ 1 BILLION HANDOUT?

<h3>STATE WILL BUY POWER, PASS IT ON</h3><p class="source">The Daily News of Los Angeles</p> <p>Gov. Gray Davis and the state Legislature moved Thursday to increase their commitment to nearly $ 1 billion in taxpayer money to buy electricity without any clear plan to get paid back</p>
State may buy more electricity

State may buy more electricity

<h3>Legislature approves spending $400 million over 12 days to prevent blackouts.</h3><p class="source">The Orange County Register</p> <p>Taxpayers risk losing as much as $400 million in an emergency plan passed by the Legislature on Thursday that allows the state to dip into its general fund to buy electricity for the next 12 days to prevent further blackouts.</p>
State auditor threatens to subpoena PUC

State auditor threatens to subpoena PUC

<p class="source">Sacramento Bee</p> <p>The state auditor last week threatened to issue subpoenas forcing the California Public Utilities Commission to cooperate with an investigation into the state's embattled power market.</p>
ROLLING BLACKOUTS PUSH ENERGY CRISIS FROM THREAT TO REALITY

ROLLING BLACKOUTS PUSH ENERGY CRISIS FROM THREAT TO REALITY

<h3>SYSTEM OPERATORS PULL PLUG ON CUSTOMERS FROM BAKERSFIELD TO EUREKA. DAVIS DECLARES AN EMERGENCY, CLEARING WAY FOR STATE TO PURCHASE POWER.</h3><p class="source">Los Angeles Times</p> <p>Rolling blackouts dimmed sizable portions of Northern and Central California on Wednesday, shutting businesses and tangling traffic</p>
California Lays Victim to Rolling Waves of Cynicism

California Lays Victim to Rolling Waves of Cynicism

<p class="source">San Jose Mercury News</p> <p>Cynicism is rolling across California these days along with the blackouts and big utility bills. Most Californians don't doubt they're in the midst of a real energy crisis. But many contend that electricity shortages are simply the work of power companie</p>
Power politics

Power politics

<h3>California Democrats are trying to buy electricity to sell to state utilities, but Republicans and energy companies are crying foul.</h3><p class="source">Salon.com</p> <p>During his State of the State address last week, California Gov. Gray Davis said he did not want to point fingers or assign blame for the state's ever-worsening electricity shortage.</p>
Edison defaults on debt payments

Edison defaults on debt payments

<h3>The decision moves the utility closer to bankruptcy. Some analysts see the move as a bargaining ploy.</h3><p class="source">The Orange County Register</p> <p>California's power crisis lurched into troubling new terrain Tuesday when Southern California Edison, the utility that serves most of Orange County, defaulted on more than half a billion dollars in debt</p>
EDISON IN DEFAULT; ASSEMBLY PASSES PLAN TO BUY POWER

EDISON IN DEFAULT; ASSEMBLY PASSES PLAN TO BUY POWER

<h3>'TIME HAS SIMPLY RUN OUT,' COMPANY SAYS AS IT ANNOUNCES IT WON'T MAKE $600 MILLION IN PAYMENTS. DETAILS OF STATE PURCHASE CONTRACTS REMAIN UNCERTAIN.</h3><p class="source">Los Angeles Times</p> <p>Southern California Edison edged closer to insolvency Tuesday by declaring that it would not make nearly $ 600 million in electricity and bond payments</p>
California moves to keep utilities supplying power

California moves to keep utilities supplying power

<h3>Near bankruptcy: Legislature proposes law to buy power on utilities' behalf</h3><p class="source">National Post</p> <p>California lawmakers began rushing an emergency bill through the legislature assembly last night aimed at keeping the lights on in the largest state in the United States.</p>
Calif. Acts to Keep Utilities Solvent

Calif. Acts to Keep Utilities Solvent

<h3>Assembly Passes Emergency Bill to Make State an Electricity Middleman</h3><p class="source">The Washington Post</p> <p>Reeling from the nation's most serious energy crisis, California's Assembly late tonight passed emergency legislation to keep the state's two biggest utility companies solvent</p>