| One side fits all 
 The records made public Monday, under order of two federal judges, were
 heavily edited (in fact, some were blank), and the Energy Department is still
 withholding 2,600 documents totaling 15,000 pages. It's fair to surmise that
 the most embarrassing records are still under wraps -- among them those
 dealing with meetings between Mr. Cheney and Enron CEO Kenneth Lay.
 
 Louisville Courier Journal
 March 27, 2002
 
 PRESIDENT Bush recently defended meetings between his administration's
 energy task force and energy companies. "If you're developing an energy
 plan, one place to start is to listen to people who know something about the
 business," he said. "We also listened to environmental groups."
 
 Well, not exactly.
 
 The first release of documents and e-mail messages related to the task force
 headed by  Vice President Dick Cheney -- including 11,000 pages from the
 Energy Department -- indicate that the gathering of facts and the weighing of
 perspectives were astonishingly one-sided.
 
 In the most deplorable example,  <b<Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham met
 with 36 representatives of business interests between Feb. 14 and April 26 of
 last year, but held not a single session with environmental or consumer
 groups.
 
 That explains a lot -- both why the Bush energy plan turned out the way it
 did, and why the administration is so resistant to releasing full records of its
 study.
 
 The administration's energy proposals, which were issued last May, focused
 almost entirely on increasing production of fossil fuels and virtually ignored
 conservation. The plan proposed relaxing regulations and granting subsidies
 for the coal and nuclear industries, drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic
 National Wildlife Refuge and building between 1,300 and 1,900 power plants
 during the next 20 years.
 
 The House passed a bill in August that incorporated most of these ideas. The
 Senate is to take up its own version, which is weighted more toward
 conservation, after the Easter recess. It is imperative that the Senate adopt a
 more balanced approach that protects environmental and consumer
 interests.
 
 The records made public Monday, under order of two federal judges, were
 heavily edited (in fact, some were blank), and the Energy Department is still
 withholding 2,600 documents totaling 15,000 pages. It's fair to surmise that
 the most embarrassing records are still under wraps -- among them those
 dealing with meetings between Mr. Cheney and Enron CEO Kenneth Lay.
 
 Sunshine is looked upon with disfavor by administration officials, perhaps
 because it suggests to them only an unprofitable, non-fossil energy source.
 But Congress and public interest groups should press the fight for release of
 all the energy task forces records until the full story is brought to light.
 
 
 
 courier-journal.com
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