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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: George Coyne who wrote (452415)9/4/2003 10:42:08 AM
From: American Spirit  Respond to of 769667
 
Image means a lot and Kerry got A+ TV coevrage this week.
Looked great. Tall, tanned, strong, grave but warm and friendly. The man has it all. especially because he's not a phony like Bush, but a guy who's actually earned his shot, including on the battlefield.



To: George Coyne who wrote (452415)9/4/2003 10:44:54 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
BUSH AND HIS BOYZ now under REAL scrutiny....funny how the prices fell SO fast once THIS started.....so much for real demand and supply.....it's the DEMAND OF GREED
U.S. to Probe Gasoline Prices
An Energy Department arm will investigate run-up that led to a record high last month.

By Jonathan Peterson and Richard Simon, Times Staff
Writers

WASHINGTON — Federal authorities will investigate
the gasoline price spikes that angered motorists across
the country, Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham told
Congress on Wednesday.

Last month's run-up in pump prices "struck me as being
unusually large ... and in need of greater explanation,"
Abraham said at a Capitol Hill hearing.

Abraham had been invited to testify on last month's
Northeast power blackout. Instead, he was peppered
with questions about the gasoline price hikes, reflecting
the widespread public frustration over the increases and
the potential political potency of the pocketbook issue.

" "What we'll look into ... is whether or not anybody
took advantage of the situation," said Deputy Energy
Secretary Kyle McSlarrow, who appeared with
Abraham.

The national average price for self-serve regular
gasoline hit an all-time high of $1.75 a gallon for the
week ended Aug. 25. In California, prices soared 36 cents a gallon in the two
weeks before Aug. 18 — the state's steepest 14-day increase since at least
1995.

Prices appear to be leveling off; they averaged $1.75 in the nation and $2.10 in
California for the week ended Monday. Experts say prices should start falling
with the end of the summer driving season, as they typically do with reduced
demand.

The Energy Information Administration, the statistical arm of the Energy
Department, will conduct the inquiry.

The study will compare "recent supply and demand factors affecting gasoline
prices, such as the Aug. 14 blackout, refinery production, seasonal demand,
crude oil and gasoline inventories, and infrastructure issues ... to determine if these
factors explain the recent price increases," the Energy Department said in a
statement.

American Petroleum Institute spokeswoman Susan Hahn noted that gas prices
had been exhaustively studied over the years. "Every single investigation has failed
to show any evidence of collusion or other anti-competitive activity by the
petroleum industry," she said.

Bob Slaughter, president of the National Petrochemical and Refiners Assn., said
price increases stem from "unforeseeable outages occurring during a period of
high demand and low inventories."

On July 30, a gasoline pipeline ruptured in Arizona, cutting off the flow of fuel to
Phoenix from Texas. That resulted in California refineries picking up the slack and
causing a further tightening of supplies.

Then, two weeks later, the blackout knocked out eight U.S. and Canadian oil
refineries.

Hahn also cited the cost of crude oil, noting the price was recently at $32 a
barrel, up from about $25 in April, because of political uncertainties in the Middle
East, Nigeria and Venezuela.

Even so, Republicans and Democrats expressed concern about high gas prices
during Wednesday's hearing before the House Energy and Commerce
Committee.

"I'm not an expert on these issues, but I know a little bit about human nature,"
Rep. James C. Greenwood (R-Pa.) told Abraham. "If you can ride the wave a
little bit longer ... you'll do it."

Michael Shames, executive director of the Utility Consumers' Action Network in
San Diego, said tight supplies of gasoline and what he termed as "paltry
regulation" by the Bush administration have "created this petri dish where the
environment is fertile for market manipulation."

"What happened in the East Coast and West Coast both need to be
investigated," he said Wednesday.

Previous state and federal investigations into gasoline pricing have typically failed
to prove unlawful gouging by companies, however. One reason is that the refining
business was changed by a wave of mergers in the 1990s. Some facilities closed,
and remaining refineries operate closer to full tilt than ever before, said Severin
Borenstein, director of the UC Energy Institute.

In such an environment, it is harder to compensate for legitimate supply
disruptions. As a result, prices rise. Ultimately, he said, the answer is more
suppliers.

The California attorney general's office has had an open investigation into gasoline
prices since late 1999.

"We have not found substantial evidence of unlawful conduct at this point, but
we're still looking," said Tom Dresslar, spokesman for Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer.
As for the federal probe, Dresslar added: "Welcome to the club."

In March, the California Energy Commission cited a range of factors pushing up
gas prices in the state, including the then-pending war with Iraq, an unusually
severe winter in the East and disruptions in supply from Venezuela. California's
standards for gasoline formulation make it harder for the state to quickly shift its
sources of gasoline in cases of disruption, experts frequently point out.

The commission said it had no evidence that firms were illegally raising the price
of gasoline.

At Wednesday's hearing, Abraham acknowledged the political potency of gas
price hikes.

Noting that "almost nothing" in the energy field captures his attention quicker than
rising prices, he quipped, "Whenever the price goes about $1.50, I read articles
that say it's my fault. Then when it goes back down, somehow the market is
working."

On the blackout, Abraham said a U.S.-Canadian task force hopes to complete
its investigation within weeks.

Late Wednesday, the House committee released a transcript of a conversation
between officials from an Ohio utility and the manager of the region's grid that a
committee spokesman said points to the confusion on the day of the blackout.

"Something strange is happening," a worker for the Midwest Independent System
Operator says to a representative of Akron, Ohio-based FirstEnergy Corp.,
some of whose power lines were among the first to fail.

Asked by the grid manager what was happening, a FirstEnergy representative
says: "We have no clue."



To: George Coyne who wrote (452415)9/4/2003 10:46:07 AM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Or, lean, worn out, and looking tired and lifeless.



To: George Coyne who wrote (452415)9/4/2003 11:06:51 AM
From: miraje  Respond to of 769667
 
Tall, lean, smiling and craggily handsome.

>>GAG!!<<

Be still, my beating heart. Ba-dum, ba-dum.... :-)