by pea-jay » Tue 24 May 2005, 04:44:23
Talk about moving the wrong direction...
As many of you know, I am the resident planner on the forum and a natural resource planner when offline. I have been working on various energy planning projects (mostly on my time) and slowly increasing knowledge at my workplace on energy matters. But ultimately this was to culminate in a public planning process whereby energy would be openly discussed. To that end I sought and got approval to speak on the matter in front of this Wednesday's commission meeting.
Well apparently, not any more.
My presentation and subject matter was more or less rejected by the long range planning director.
According to him, there is no energy crisis. Not now, not ever.
Here are some choice quotes from the director:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')“Yes, as long as there is money, there will be an energy supply”
and
“I don’t care what the laws of energy say. Energy is all around us and will always be. There is abundant energy out there (motioning toward the cornfields to the south)”
or try this (very common) arguement...
“Look, there are no energy issues, we will just use ethanol”
I summarized/transcribed pretty much the entire short conversation on my
blog
This was the worst conversation on energy I have ever had. Unlike others that responded with a blank stare or actively argued the
implications, the director actively challenged the
science.
I am going to try again tomorrow, but I am not sure if that will accomplish much. In any case, I believe that arguing this man may be futile. I am just unsure of my next steps. I could go over him to the agency head or even straight to one of the Supervisors (unofficially). If it works, it might get things shaken up and get discussion back on track.
If it does not, it will cook my goose.
If you care to, you can read the entire conversation
here
It's not like I am proposing any off the wall solutions here. In fact, I am not really proposing any. All I am trying to do is start the conversation in the right direction.
Unfortunately, that discussion may soon be off limits, at least professionally.