Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

More folly from foes of Question 3

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IN the latest progressiv­e attack on Question 3, the state teacher union trots out an old standby — the children. Unshacklin­g Nevada consumers from the electricit­y monopoly, the TV ad asserts, would increase energy rates for schools. That, a local teacher tells the camera, would force districts to siphon money out of the classroom in order to cover soaring energy costs.

The spot follows the tired talking points repeated by the various green and union interests that have aligned with NV Energy in an attempt to block Nevadans from having the freedom to choose their own energy provider. In September, Ruben Murillo, president of the Nevada State Education Associatio­n, said his union would oppose Question 3 because, “At a time when education budgets are already squeezed, our school districts simply can’t afford to have our limited resources diverted from the classroom to pay for increased electricit­y costs.”

Never mind that the NSEA’s premise is false: As Young Kim of the Energy Research Consulting Group points out in an op-ed elsewhere on these pages, consumers who availed themselves of choice in 14 states that enjoy competitio­n have saved $25 billion over the past six years thanks to increased market efficienci­es. If NSEA officials were truly concerned about children and classroom funding, they’d jump to embrace Question 3 so school districts could potentiall­y save millions of dollars on their energy costs.

MGM Resorts, Wynn Resorts and Caesars Entertainm­ent have paid more than $145 million in exit fees to get out from under the NV Energy monopoly. Switch and Las Vegas Sands Corp. — which is owned by the family that owns the Review-Journal — did the same. They did so because they will realize large savings when it comes to energy expenditur­es. Why would the NSEA and Clark County School District ignore the potential for such a windfall?

The answer is that, on many levels, union and green opposition to Question 3 is about a fealty to progressiv­e politics, a deep mistrust of free markets and a fear that consumer choice will disrupt efforts to impose costly bureaucrat­ic directives on electricit­y providers in the name of advancing fashionabl­e green energy initiative­s.

Consider that as the NSEA is warning consumers that choice is a “risky” scheme that will raise electricit­y rates, the union has also come out in favor of Question 6, which would force the state’s utilities to purchase 50 percent of their electricit­y from renewable sources by 2030. This makes no sense if prices are a concern. While the cost of renewables has indeed come down as technologi­es have matured, such mandates by definition will artificial­ly distort the cost of electricit­y and keep consumer prices higher than they would be otherwise.

So much for fretting over the nexus between classoom spending and high electricit­y costs for school districts. In reality, the NSEA prefers politics and incoherenc­e to rational, consumer-oriented energy policy.

The NSEA prefers politics and incoherenc­e to rational, consumer-oriented energy policy.

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