SUFFOLK CLOSEUP
By Karl Grossman
“This Legislative Commission on the Future of LIPA is tremendous and is the first step in establishing true public power for Long Islanders,” said State Senator Jim Gaughran of Northport about the inclusion in the new state budget of creation of a commission that will perform a study that could lead to the Long Island Power Authority becoming a full public utility.
“For-profit billion-dollar companies running the electric grid guarantee Long Islanders two things: the highest electrical bills in the nation and unreliable service,” said Gaughran, the prime sponsor of the measure establishing the commission.
“Nothing short of a triumph for Long Islanders,” declared State Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele, Jr. of Sag Harbor, the prime sponsor of the measure in the Assembly.
The budget for the state’s 2022-2023 fiscal year, approved two weeks ago by the state legislature and promptly signed by Governor Kathy Hochul, establishes an eight-member panel that would perform the study that could lead to LIPA being “municipalized.”
Its members will be appointed by the legislative leaders of both parties in both the State Assembly and State Senate. Guiding and assisting the commission will be an advisory committee of area “stakeholders”—a wide variety including representatives of business, labor, local governments, environmental groups, Native American tribes, educators and those involved in social justice issues.
The commission’s work can “serve as a path toward fully realizing what LIPA should have always been: a public power authority responsible to the customers it serves,” said Thiele.
“For more than 25 years, ratepayers have been routinely failed by a third-party management model” that LIPA has used—hiring private utilities to run the Long Island electric grid. This “historic” move, said Thiele, “gives motion to the actions necessary to implement a municipalized model that’s transparent and accountable.”
Governor Hochul’s working with Thiele, an Independent and previously a Republican, and Gaughran, a Democrat, in creation of the commission and its study mission was a far contrast from the behavior of her predecessor as governor, Andrew Cuomo.
It was Cuomo who foisted a New Jersey-based utility, PSEG, onto Long Island as the most recent company running the Long Island electric grid for LIPA. It replaced National Grid which Cuomo decried for its performance during Superstorm Sandy in 2012.
There will be opposition no doubt involving PSEG to what could now happen.
The utility from Newark has prized its expansion onto Long Island.
The original vision decades ago by those who crusaded for founding LIPA was for it to operate the Long Island electric grid—and also to run democratically with members of its board elected by Long Islanders. A model was the Sacramento Municipal Utility District which then and now operates the electric grid in a large chunk of California and has an elected board. But Andrew Cuomo’s father, former Governor Mario Cuomo, cancelled having elections for LIPA board members, and his successor, George Pataki, formalized elimination of elections and instead appointments mostly by the governor and also legislative leaders.
The Legislative Commission that will be set up will now consider “the method of governance” of LIPA. A return to the concept of democratic governance could be proposed.
It will also consider “improved transparency, accountability and public liability” and how there could be “improved reliability of the system.” National Grid’s terrible Superstorm Sandy performance was followed in 2020 by PSEG’s miserable performance in Superstorm Isaiah when 646,000 outages occurred. The panel will consider “improved storm response.”
And, it will, among other things, look at “increased reliance on renewable energy sources to produce electricity.” PSEG has been claiming in what a recent article by Mark Harrington in Newsday noted as $1.1 million “on self-promotion” since December that it’s “working on a cleaner more sustainable future.” But PSEG is, in fact, a big nuclear utility. It operates the Salem and Hope Creek nuclear power plants in New Jersey and is part-owner of the Peach Bottom nuclear plant in Pennsylvania.
Another original vision for LIPA was for it to have a commitment to safe, renewable, green energy. That came in the wake of the now defunct Long Island Lighting Company seeking to build seven to eleven nuclear power plants on Long Island. Shoreham was the first to be completed but was shut down and decommissioned as a nuclear facility in the face of public and governmental opposition and formation of LIPA to replace LILCO.
Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books.