Steve Jobs fostered a new way of thinking

October 6, 2011-by John Blair, valleywatch.net editor

I really was saddened to hear about the death, at far too young an age, of Steve Jobs, the man who shares my desk everyday. His visionary innovations have made life better for all of us by thinking past the obvious and informing designs that remain the awe of his competitors.

I bought my first Mac in 1987. It was a MacPlus with a single megabyte of memory and so small that it was considered portable by one of my friends who carried his around with him wherever he went.

At that time, personal computing was just getting started and a competitive fight between Apple with the MacIntosh platform and IBM with their new partner Microsoft were fighting for supremacy long held by IBM. It turned out that IBM won that round and the Windows operating system seemed to prevail.

Jobs ended up losing his job as founder and CEO of Apple because his uncompromising, perfectionist manner. His ouster, lucky for Apple and the world, lasted just a few years while IBM and Microsoft gained huge market share.

[youtube id=”UF8uR6Z6KLc” w=”600″ h=”400″]

Jobs’ return to Apple was an epiphany moment in technological history.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Vectren’s latest rate increase request is absolutely arrogant in these hard times

September 23, 2011-by John Blair, valley watch.net editor

While I certainly applaud Vectren’s effort to increase efficiency in power production, especially since their “pulverized coal” plants are less than 35% efficient, but their arrogance in asking for a rate increase when they are already the highest anywhere in the region seems overwhelming.

With more than five of their staff enjoying incomes of more than a million dollars per year, and their active board members “earning” just under $100,000 each for attending meetings, for them to even ask for a rate increase to improve their efficiency is a slap in the face of their customers and the fact they operate as a monopoly which we are all forced to patronize, at least if we want to run our TVs and stay warm in the winter.

Sadly, they will likely receive the rate “relief” they desire since the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission is nothing more than a rubber stamp for the utilities. Sure they will hold hearings and the so called consumer counselor will weigh in saying the relief should be less but at the end of the process Vectren will get what they want and their customers will get screwed, regardless whether the rates are justified or not.

Democracy is not served well in Indiana by the cozy relationship the various utilities enjoy with the IURC and others in state government. Monopolies should be regulated and reigned in when it comes to confiscatory rates which Vectren clearly has achieved.

We all know of stories where people are forced to make decisions whether to heat their home or buy food and medicine with the outcome being their termination of service when they simply cannot pay Vectren’s exorbitant fees and rates.

Of course, if I was making $100,000 for doing nothing but attending a few meetings each year, I might be equally unconcerned about the plight of my neighbors who are having difficulty simply finding a job.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

LG&E to convert Cane Run power plant to burn cleaner natural gas

September 15, 2011-by James Bruggers in the Louisville Courier Journal

LG&E's Cane Run plant in operation since 1954 is about to be retired in Louisville. The plant has created nightmares for the people who have lived adjacent and new rules requiring clean up made the plant obsolete. The plant will be retired along with two others in the EON system in Kentucky. Photo © 2011 John Blair

Louisville Gas & Electric Co. intends to replace its 57-year-old coal-fired Cane Run Station in Louisville with a new plant next door powered with cleaner-burning natural gas by 2016.

The 640-megawatt natural gas unit would be built on the powerplant site along the Ohio River in southwest Jefferson County, where the company also has a large coal-burning waste landfill and ash pond, company officials announced on Thursday.

LG&E and its sister company, Kentucky Utilities, also announced that they are asking the Kentucky Public Service Commission to approve their purchase of the Bluegrass Generation Co.’s plant in Oldham County with it’s three natural gas turbines. That plant in Buckner began electricity production in 2002. Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Evansville to become home to wind blade manufacturer

September 13, 2011-by Arek Sarkissian in the Evansville Courier Press

Wind Turbine blades such as this will be manufactured in Evansville if all goes according to plans announced 9/13 by City officials and Global Blade Technology USA. Photo © 2011 John Blair

A windmill turbine producer will be the next company to move into the North Side factory formerly occupied by Whirlpool , Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel announced this morning.

Global Blade Technology USA will only take up about 45,000 square feet of space in the gargantuan facility that has since been renamed Park 41. It also will provide about 40 jobs, Weinzapfel said.

The announcement was a testament to the diligence, hard work and preparation the city applied to make the deal possible, Weinzapfel said during a news conference at the facility, which was attended by Gov. Mitch Daniels.

The former Whirlpool refrigerator manufacturing facility was purchased by the Kunkel Group in May. Kunkel Group Vice President Chuck Harper said GBT already has indicated interest in expanding its Evansville operation to 400 workers in the near future. In its initial phase, GBT will invest $3.5 million, but its next step could bring another $40 million, he said. Go to Original

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The President Sabotages Clean Air Protections, Part 1

September 5, 2011-by John Walke, Clean Air Director, Natural Resources Defense Council.

In the most outrageous environmental offense of the Obama administration, the president himself has intervened politically to block the Environmental Protection Agency from correcting an unprotective smog standard that the head of EPA recognizes to be scientifically and legally indefensible [pdf]. The president’s own rationale for interference defies the Clean Air Act and a unanimous Supreme Court decision, elevating unlawful considerations above public health, science and the law.

The president’s intervention is compounded by grievous legal and factual errors. The president sided with Big Oil and other polluters based on their claims about regulatory burden, notwithstanding that compliance with stronger smog standards would not have been required until 2016 anyway, and stronger safeguards will save the country money too.

Siding with an unprotective smog standard adopted by the Bush administration under equally politicized circumstances, the president has condemned EPA and his Department of Justice to defend that Bush standard in court against lawsuits by the American Lung Association, NRDC, and a dozen states, including the president’s own.After EPA Administrator Jackson has deemed that Bush standard to be “not legally defensible given the scientific evidence.” [pdf]

News coverage of the Friday Smog Massacre only scratched the surface of the deeper levels of capitulation, illegality and harmful consequences embodied in the president’s action. All to serve political interests above the health of the American people, compliance with the law, and respect for scientific integrity.

I will plumb those deeper levels in a series of posts starting with this one.

A Brief History of Lengthy Delay and Lawbreaking

Public health standards protecting all Americans against dangerous ground-level ozone or smog pollution were last set in accordance with sound science and the Clean Air Act in 1997. Then-EPA Administrator Carol Browner adopted a health standard of 0.08 parts per million. In all too familiar EPA preference for laxity, regardless of political party, that number was rounded up to 0.084 parts per million or 84 parts per billion (ppb). That 84 ppb level remains the permissible concentration of smog pollution today that federal and state officials across the country are enforcing.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Vectren wins approval for energy efficiency program from IURC

September 3, 2011 by Brian Nisperos at SolarMash.com. (Editor’s Note. Vectren has some of the highest electric rates of any Midwest utility. Some of the higher rates are justified by environmental controls placed upon plants that are now approaching a half century old. Some of the higher rates, however, seem attributed to nothing but stockholder profit at the expense of their customers.)

Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana received Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) approval yesterday to implement additional electric energy efficiency programs, known as Conservation Connection, for its customers in southwestern Indiana.

The expanded programs are the result of a collaborative effort between the utility and the Indiana Office of Utility Consumer Counselor (OUCC). The most notable additions, which will be implemented Oct. 1, are rebates toward the purchase of high-efficiency electric cooling and heating equipment that include:

– $300 toward a central air conditioner with a SEER rating of 16 or greater;

– $400 toward a heat pump with a SEER rating of 16 or greater; and

– $50 toward an electronically commutated motor for the air handling fan, which is a more energy efficient motor used in heating and cooling equipment. Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Valley Watch encourages schools to postpone tonight’s football games if air pollution for ozone and fine particles exceeds the health based standard

September 2, 2011-by John Blair. This is the text of a statement issued by Valley Watch last night regarding playing high school sports on air pollution alert days.

With the USEPA and locals making an air pollution alert for both ozone and fine particles, I would like to ask that someone attempt to get football games rescheduled if levels remain high at the time the games are to begin.

Fine particles are known to cause premature death to people that might not even know they have a problem and ozone is responsible for increase asthma an do the respiratory attacks, especially in people who are exerting themselves which they are required to do during high pressure high school football games.

Valley Watch understands that rescheduling games would be a tremendous inconvenience to all involved but a few years ago, several players collapsed during games that were played in high heat and in polluted air. The chance of even a single death occurring during a sports contest when it could have been avoided is a totally unnecessary risk that can be avoided if air quality is considered “unhealthy” for certain populations that unfortunately include high school athletes and performing marching band members.

If the prognosticators of air quality have determined that conditions are right for an alert, our kids’ safety requires that we exercise caution in the conduct of school athletic events. Practicing and especially playing a strenuous sport in fouled air is a sure fired recipe for disaster.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Obama caves to industry on setting health standard for ozone

September 2, 2011- The White House Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Ozone

Over the last two and half years, my administration, under the leadership of EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, has taken some of the strongest actions since the enactment of the Clean Air Act four decades ago to protect our environment and the health of our families from air pollution. From reducing mercury and other toxic air pollution from outdated power plants to doubling the fuel efficiency of our cars and trucks, the historic steps we’ve taken will save tens of thousands of lives each year, remove over a billion tons of pollution from our air, and produce hundreds of billions of dollars in benefits for the American people.

At the same time, I have continued to underscore the importance of reducing regulatory burdens and regulatory uncertainty, particularly as our economy continues to recover. With that in mind, and after careful consideration, I have requested that Administrator Jackson withdraw the draft

President Obama decided that health standards ozone should not get in the way of what he considered economic progress and directed EPA to drop their proposal to improve health protections for millions of America citizens in an apparent effort to cater to his political friends in industry. Photo © 2008 John Blair

National Ambient Air Quality Standards at this time. Work is already underway to update a 2006 review of the science that will result in the reconsideration of the ozone standard in 2013. Ultimately, I did not support asking state and local governments to begin implementing a new standard that will soon be reconsidered.

I want to be clear: my commitment and the commitment of my administration to protecting public health and the environment is unwavering. I will continue to stand with the hardworking men and women at the EPA as they strive every day to hold polluters accountable and protect our families from harmful pollution. And my administration will continue to vigorously oppose efforts to weaken EPA’s authority under the Clean Air Act or dismantle the progress we have made.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

CAC asks – Why does the IURC remain silent on the huge Duke/Progress Energy merger?

August 22, 2011-Press release from the Citizens Action Coalition of Indiana

Today, in a letter to Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission Chairman James Atterholt, the Citizens Action Coalition raised concerns with respect to the Commission’s apparent lack of engagement to date, at least publicly, in the proposed merger between Duke Energy and Progress Energy.  CAC also submitted a public information request seeking any communications regarding the proposed merger between and among officials of both Duke Energy and Progress Energy with the IURC and other State agencies.

“We find it difficult to understand why the Commission has not already begun a public investigation into the consequences of this proposed merger on the customers of Duke Energy Indiana,” stated Kerwin Olson, Interim Executive Director of CAC.  “Especially considering the recent behavior of Duke Energy not only with inappropriate communications with the Commission, but also with the gross mis-management of the problem plagued Edwardsport IGCC.”

Duke Energy and Progress Energy are positioned to become the nation’s largest electric utility later this year.  Shareholders of the two companies are scheduled to vote on the deal tomorrow, August 23, 2011.  The deal is worth an estimated $26 billion still requires approval from various State and Federal regulators as well as the company’s shareholders.

Mr. Olson continued: “While the IURC lacks the jurisdiction to review or approve the stock exchange effecting the merger itself, the Commission does have the authority to review the impact the proposed merger will have on Duke Energy Indiana’s retail electric customers.  In addition, Indiana Code does grant the IURC authority to review and approve all affiliate transactions and agreements required to implement the merger to ensure that those agreements are in fact in the public interest.” Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

New IURC Chair also had a really cozy relationship with Duke Energy execs according to emails

August 11, 2011-by John Russell in the Indianapolis Star 

James Atterholt, current chairman of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission, may be the latest casualty of the on-going and growing scandal regarding Duke Energy due to emails uncovered by the Indianapolis Star that show him to have questionable ethics behavior in dealing with Duke. This photo of Atterholt shows him at a hearing regarding Duke's most recent $500 million rate increase hearing on February 28 this year in Columbus. Photo © 2011 John Blair

Indiana’s top utility regulator sent a private email last year to a top executive at Duke Energy Corp., recommending “confidentially, just between you and me” that the utility hire his personal choice as president of its Indiana operations.

James Atterholt, chairman of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission, wrote that the hiring decision was “none of my business,” but he hoped the company would consider his candidate, then a lobbyist for Duke.

The Indianapolis Star obtained the email, along with scores of others to and from Atterholt, in an open-records request and from other public documents. In addition to lobbying Duke on a personnel matter, Atterholt:

Met privately for lunch and dinner with Duke executives, including James Rogers, the company’s chairman and chief executive, while the company had numerous issues pending before the commission.

Is characterized in an email by a Duke executive as giving his blessing to the company’s controversial hiring of the commission’s top lawyer and chief administrative law judge, Scott Storms.

Regularly sent warm notes to Duke executives, inviting them to call him “at any time” for help.

Atterholt’s actions raise new questions about the close relationship between Duke Energy and state regulators. At the time, the utility was seeking permission to have consumers foot the bill for nearly $1 billion in cost overruns at its massive new power plant in Edwardsport. Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

The EPA: the Tea Party’s next target House Republicans aim to defund the Environmental Protection Agency, rolling back 40 years’ progress on clean air and water

August 4, 2011-by Diane Roberts in the UK Guardian

You’d think Congress would be too busy wrecking the economy to attack the environment. Yet, in the midst of a packed schedule snapping at President Obama’s heels and lunging for each other’s throats,Republicans have found time to try and rip the heart out of the Environmental Protection Agency, killing 40 years of protections for water, air, endangered species, wildlife habitat and national parks.

Instead of taking direct shots at the environment – not even Tea Tendency zealots come out and say they’re pro-pollution – Republicans are going after the EPA. It’s a “job-killer”. America’s high unemployment rate is not the fault of the worldwide recession or the housing bubble or Wall Street hubris or two unfunded wars on top of George W Bush’s silly tax cuts for the rich, it’s those damned DC bunny-huggers.Representative Mike Simpson of Idaho insists, “overregulation from EPA is at the heart of our stalled economy”; his colleague, Rep Louie Gohmert of Texas, says, “Let EPA go the way of the dinosaurs that became fossil fuels.”

Congresswoman and presidential candidate Michele Bachmann doesn’t want to wait for extinction, she advocates abolishing the EPA as soon as God puts the Tea Party in charge. She blames it for a host of anti-free market evils, from what she sees as an attempt to outlaw incandescent light bulbs (she countered with the “Lightbulb Freedom of Choice Act of 2011”) to the “hoax” that is global climate change. Take no notice of what elitist scientists say, Bachmann knows better, assuring us that “CO2 is a natural byproduct of Nature.”

Kentucky 1st District Congressman, Ed Whitfield is one of the right wing champions of destroying the US EPA.

The bill funding EPA and the department of the interior (HR 2584, if you want to look it up) is a dirty bomb, meant to destroy any rule that slows down environmental degradation. The legislation is so loaded with industry-backed amendments and riders – 77 so far – that it reads like a polluters’ letter to Santa Claus. One provision would allow uranium mining right next to the Grand Canyon. Another would stop EPA from regulating pesticides, even if the pesticides kill endangered plants, birds, fish and other animals. EPA’s funding would be slashed by 34% over the next two years, but America’s oil and gas companies would be given an extra $55m on top of the $36bn in federal subsidies they already get. Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Valley Watch calls on Athletic Directors/Coaches to suspend practices during fine particle “alert”

August 2, 2011- by Valley Watch, Inc.

Valley Watch, a group whose purpose is to “protect the public health and environment of the lower Ohio River Valley” today is encouraging the region’s Athletic Directors and Coaches to suspend outdoor practices due to the high levels of fine particles that permeate the air today. Levels of fine particles have been in excess of the short-term health based standard since 8 Pm on August 1 and the Evansville Mayor’s Office has issued an alert for both ozone and fine particles through today.

Fine particles and heat are a dangerous combination for student athletes and at levels in excess of the standard can result in serious injury or even death for people who are required to exert themselves. Exposure to high levels of fine particles are known to cause serious illnesses like stroke, heart attack, asthma and other respiratory problems.

“We feel that all outdoor practices should be suspended during any period that either a fine particle or ozone alert has been officially declared,” said John Blair, president of Valley Watch. “There is huge evidence of negative health effects of air pollution on athletes of any age and the high levels we are experiencing today certainly warrant taking a cautious approach to exposing our kids to this pollution.”

According to the U.S. EPA:  Short-term exposures to particles (hours or days) can aggravate lung disease, causing asthma attacks and acute bronchitis, and may also increase susceptibility to respiratory infections. In people with heart disease, short-term exposures have been linked to heart attacks and arrhythmias. Healthy children and adults have not been reported to suffer serious effects from short-term exposures, although they may experience temporary minor irritation when particle levels are elevated.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

House Democrats Take Aim at GOP Environmental Voting Record

August 2, 2011-by Jean Chemnick in the New York Times

The Republican-led House has voted to “stop,” “block” or “undermine” efforts to protect the environment 110 times since taking over the majority in January, two senior Democrats said last week.

Henry Waxman, the ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, has long been an environmental champion.

Reps. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Edward Markey (D-Mass.), who sponsored a bill that passed the House in 2009 that would have established a cap-and-trade scheme for greenhouse gas emissions, said the current House has done more to scuttle environmental protections than any in history.

“The new Republican majority seems intent on restoring the robber-baron era where there were no controls on pollution from power plants, oil refineries and factories,” said Waxman, who serves as top Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee.

Natural Resources ranking member Markey, meanwhile, said the Republican agenda was a rifle “pointed right at the heart of America’s clean energy future.”

The lawmakers provided a chart of all votes the House has taken since January that they deem likely to have a harmful effect on the environment. Republicans have argued the environmental regulations they targeted are overly burdensome and hurt the economy and job creation.

Read more:

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

EPA refuses to even study the risk of using coal ash in many uses including drywall in homes-Scientists Told Agency Does Not Want Safety Concerns Raised about Coal Ash

August 1, 2011-by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility

A literal mountain of coal ash makes its permanent home near Sebree, KY. Photo © 2011 John Blair

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency prevents its scientists from examining health risks of coal combustion wastes being added to consumer, agricultural and commercial products even though the agency promotes these practices as safe, according to documents released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).  Despite a scathing Office of Inspector General (IG) report earlier this year taking the agency to task for failing to complete a single safety review on the 60 million tons of coal ash and other combustion wastes entering the U.S. marketplace each year, EPA  indicates that it has no intention of doing any risk assessments in the near future.
In a June 16, 2011 reply to the IG, EPA Assistant Administrator Mathy Stanislaus stated that while “protection of human health and the environment is a critical prerequisite to promoting the beneficial use of coal combustion residuals…we do not yet have a timeline for developing the evaluation process regarding the beneficial use” of coal wastes.  He indicated EPA will wait until it finalizes regulations governing coal ash (2013, at the earliest) before considering dangers of how coal ash is actually used.

“EPA just gave its IG the middle finger,” said PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting that most all of the safety information on coal ash in products comes from the industry.  “Thanks to EPA, Congress and the public have no idea which, if any, applications of coal ash are safe or environmentally benign.”

A recent study found that residents (center bottom) near the Louisville Gas and Electric's Cane Run plant had dangerous levels of toxins on their property that blew there from the coal ash pile that was across the street from where they live. Photo© 2010 John Blair

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Grasshoppers come in a variety of shapes and sizes

August 1, 2011-by John Blair, valleywatch.net editor

Grasshoppers are funny little things. They come in several varieties. some fly, some simply hop. some look like they are armored and others look kind of fragile.

Whatever their make up, they are usually gluttonous eaters, consuming the leaves of entire plants in a single day sometimes.

This red eyed grasshopper was seen on my porch on July 31 and was not shy like many of its counterparts until I had shot several pictures of it using a flash.

As summer dries up, there seems to be a n onslaught of grasshoppers which eat through flowers, shrubs and grass until they mate and die to wait for another year.

Photo © 2011 John Blair

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment