Next time a cabinet minister confidently outlines the government鈥檚 vision of the future, keep sa国际传媒鈥檚 electricity policies in mind.
Based on developments there in the last six months, those firmly pronounced policies could last only as long as the minister does. Former energy minister Rich Coleman laid down any number of directions on that front during two years on the job, and left the impression they were all official sa国际传媒 Liberal doctrine, now and for all time.
Then Bill Bennett was sworn into the portfolio last June. He must be getting dizzy from all the abrupt about-faces he has ordered in the last six months.
Since being sworn in following the election, he has up-ended a batch of electricity policies. sa国际传媒 Liberal power policies are now only faintly recognizable from the versions that Coleman and others used to preach.
The government has done a screeching 180-degree turn on several fronts. They鈥檒l say it鈥檚 about adapting to changed circumstances. But nothing particularly dramatic has changed in the power situation faced by the government over the last few years. They鈥檝e just put a new person in charge, and he has changed the ministry鈥檚 direction on at least a half-dozen major issues.
When Bennett was sworn in, it was his second stint in the energy portfolio. He did several months in 2010, but ran afoul of former premier Gordon Campbell, resulting in a spectacular flameout after his firing/resignation.
He was rehabilitated after Premier Christy Clark took over and now holds one of the most important jobs in cabinet. Clark seems to give ministers a lot of leeway to follow their own instincts, and Bennett is using every bit of it.
His predecessor insisted for two years that smart meters were non-negotiable. Everybody had to have one for the smart grid to work, despite the fact several thousand customers had worked themselves into a state about supposed side-effects.
Coleman muttered about government plans to 鈥渞e-educate鈥 them.
After a few weeks on the job, Bennett decided to drop the hard line. He introduced some opt-outs, so the meters are no longer mandatory. People can get their meters read manually, if they want to pay more. Any plans for re-education camps were presumably dropped.
Coleman and a long line of energy ministers before him insisted sa国际传媒 would go to the mat to recover money owed by California utilities for sa国际传媒 power supplied at premium prices during a 2000 crisis.
Legal battles over that crisis raged through the U.S. court and tribunal systems for years, and sa国际传媒 stuck to its guns, racking up a fortune in legal bills.
Two months into the job, after sa国际传媒 lost a skirmish in the war, Bennett capitulated. He gave up the fight, and sa国际传媒 ate a $750-million loss.
But those were just warm-ups for the reversals he pulled two weeks ago, when he laid out electricity prices.
For years, governments of all stripes have dinged sa国际传媒 Hydro for a few hundred million dollars a year as a required 鈥渄ividend.鈥 It has been part of the bottom line for years.
Under Bennett鈥檚 plan, that contribution is going to disappear over time. It will drop sharply in 2020 and disappear in 2021.
Governments over the years have also made bypassing the sa国际传媒 Utilities Commission standard procedure.
But Bennett plans to turn rate-setting back over to the BCUC three years from now. The agency will undergo a core review as well, to 鈥渋ncrease the effectiveness and efficiency鈥 of the outfit. You don鈥檛 hear energy ministers talk about increasing BCUC effectiveness very often.
Previous cabinet ministers spent hours defending Hydro deferral accounts after the auditor general rapped them for shunting costs far into the future.
But Bennett wants to start paying those accounts down in 2015. One more will be created to spread costs around, but it will have a defined paydown plan.
All this and more is now government policy. It鈥檚 going to last 10 years. Or until the next person takes over the post.