Sunday, June 16, 2024

                                         The Post-Journal

    Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes?

LOCAL COMMENTARIES

JUN 15, 2024

ROLLAND KIDDER

There is a wonderful country song sung by George Jones which is about great country singers who have now passed or someday will. To give you a taste of it, here are four lines:

“Who’s gonna fill their shoes?

Who’s gonna stand that tall?

Who’s gonna play the Opry

And the Wabash cannonball?

The answer, of course, is that no one can likely fill their shoes. Country singers are one of a kind. However, there is a subtheme, I believe, in the song, and that is that transitions are coming for all of us, either in life or in death. We cannot stop them. The question then is: How do we prepare for them? Who’s gonna fill our shoes?

As to dying, the answer is pretty clear — you should have a will. Even if your estate is small, it is not fair to have your heirs squabble over matters you could have addressed in a will making your intentions known.

Probably, more important, is the making of proper transitions while you are alive. For example, if you are changing jobs — make it easy for yourself, your family, your employer, and fellow employees by planning ahead for it. The same goes for politics. If you hold an elective office, you should let people know in advance if you not going to run again — so that they have an opportunity to choose a successor.

However, I think the most important transition is for those who own businesses, because transitions there can affect the livelihood of many as well as impact family dynamics.

I knew a man who was the owner of a very successful family business employing hundreds of people. Yet, his “Achilles heel” became evident when he tried to pass the business down to his three children – none of whom were either interested in or capable of running the business. It ended up in bankruptcy.

On the other hand, I have another friend who had a family business with three children who wanted to be a part of it. He worked out a transition where all three children eventually had businesses of their own, including keeping the existing family business going. That is what you call good transition planning.

Sometimes there is no family transition possible, so other arrangements need to be made. In that regard, it was good to see in the newspaper recently where two local businesses were sold to employees, financed in part by assistance from our local Industrial Development Agency (IDA.) To me, that is exactly the kind of activity the IDA should be involved with – retaining local jobs by helping with a business transition.

So, the moral of the story is that whether we like it or believe it — transitions in life and death are coming, are inevitable and should be planned for. Enabling someone else to “wear those shoes” is important.

Yet, George Jones has a point — some country singers are so good that I don’t think their “shoes” will ever be filled. Certainly, for sure, there will never be another Johnny Cash… who, on one unforgettable day, before an audience of inmates, sang the “Folsom Prison Blues” at Folsom Prison.


Sunday, June 9, 2024

 

 

 

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    A Jury Judges A Former President

                                                                                        JUN 8, 2024

ROLLAND KIDDER

For the first time in our history, a 12-person jury of one’s peers unanimously found a former President guilty of a felony after applying the highest level of proof in our judicial system… “guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”

There are really two stories here — that of our judicial system and that of Donald Trump.

Trump’s story has been quite consistent — he has never done anything wrong, all of the court cases he is now a defendant in are “witch-hunts” perpetrated by Democrats, he is a victim of political intrigue against him, etc., etc.

What he doesn’t say is that all of the civil actions, indictments, and now a felony conviction are related, primarily, to one common thing — his own behavior.

I can think of no other politician in our history, President or former President, who has brought so much litigation upon himself.

These charges and convictions have all come from things that he did or tried to cover-up. Some are civil matters where large money damages were awarded to a woman he assaulted. Other actions deal with criminal charges associated with the way then President Trump treated classified documents, fired up a crowd to attack the Capitol, or in making phone calls to Georgia officials to try to change election results.

In all cases, the cause of his problems has been his own behavior. It wasn’t something foisted upon him, yet, he calls himself the “victim.”

The jury story coming out of last week’s conviction is, for me, a compelling one.

De Tocqueville, when he visited our country in the 1830s, was taken by the fact that in most frontier towns, the first public building constructed was a courthouse. One of the first things that Americans did in moving West, was to put up a building where citizens could litigate their differences and where the rule of law could be applied.

As to the criminal law, it is framed to favor the defendant whose freedom is at stake. In a criminal trial, the burden is upon the government to make its case, a unanimous decision is required for conviction, and the rules of evidence generally favor the defendant.

I remember also, when in law school, studying the manner in which the jury system was developed under British common law. A juror was described as a “man on the Clapham bus,” that is, an ordinary or reasonable person, not a person of power or prestige. It is such common people picked from a random pool of potential jurors who make up a jury. Serving as a juror, to those so chosen, is a civic obligation, and they take it seriously.

Twelve people from the “Clapham bus,” from various occupations, ethnic backgrounds, consisting of 7 men and 5 women found unanimously, beyond a “reasonable doubt,” that Donald Trump was guilty. After listening to 5 weeks of testimony, the verdict was returned within two days on all 34 counts.

That is good enough for me. The jury listened, evaluated and decided. That is the American way. Of course, how it plays out in the election is still an unknown.

Nevertheless, it was good to see that the rule of law applies to everyone in this country, including Presidents. However, it is sad that the country has to go through all of this. It is not an uplifting time in our history.


Saturday, June 1, 2024

 

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                                                   The Post-Journal


  Thirty Years With The National             World War II Memorial

LOCAL COMMENTARIES

JUN 1, 2024

ROLLAND KIDDER

 This past Memorial Day weekend in Washington, D.C., we commemorated the 20th year of the dedication of the National World War II Memorial. It was a special time. For me, it had all started in 1994, thirty years ago, when I had been first appointed by the President to the commission responsible for its creation and then became a member of the World War II Memorial Site and Design Committee.

There was one major “player” who wasn’t there that weekend, the chairman of that committee, Ambassador F. Haydn Williams, now deceased. Though he guided the design process, likely his greatest contribution was in finding, recommending and then working to have the site approved by the “powers that be” in Washington.

We had spent a rainy afternoon in January, 1995 visiting various proposed sites for the Memorial from a list which had been recommended by the Commission of Fine Arts of the United States (CFA.) At the end of that tour, we walked past the old Rainbow Pool, then in need of repair, at the end the Reflecting Pool. Willams stopped us there, a site that was not on that list, looked up at the Lincoln Memorial to the west, and the Washington Monument to the east and said: “This is where we should build the World War II Memorial. The Second World War was the most significant event for America in the Twentieth Century. It should be here, on the axis of the Mall, between Lincoln and Washington.”

It was the first I had heard of his vision for the site, and he never wavered from it. By July of that year, he had convinced the President of the CFA, J. Carter Brown, that the Rainbow Pool site should be considered. In September of that year, it was approved. In November, President Clinton, in a ceremony at the location, dedicated the site…and soon thereafter we commenced a national competition to select an architect to design the Memorial.

Ambassador Williams, during those days, spoke of the National Mall as “America’s Village Green.” In pursuing the approvals necessary to have this special site for the Memorial, he would say: “We are not looking to memorialize hubris or vainglory. We want to build something that will capture the American spirit of unity and common purpose at that time, and to also find a way to remember those who didn’t make it home, to bring them back to America’s Village Green.”

If he were alive today, Haydn Williams would be pleased with what the Memorial has become. Over 80 million have visited here since its dedication. It has become a place to gather and remember what a Nation can do when it is united in a just and common cause.

When you visit a World War II American Military Cemetery overseas, like the one at Normandy, you are overcome by a sense of common purpose and sacrifice. The thousands of marble crosses and stars of David that mark the graves are of the same size. One is not more important than the others. Generals are buried next to the lowliest Private. Rank doesn’t matter in those cemeteries.

You get the same sense of common purpose and sacrifice at the World War II Memorial . There are 56 granite pillars representing the states and territories of that time. Yet, the most populous state at the time, New York, has no larger pillar than American Samoa, probably the smallest territory. They all contributed, they were all working together. A huge, intertwined bronze rope visually connects and brings the pillars together.

The 4,000 stars on the freedom wall are separate and distinct, yet, they receive their power because they are together, each representing 100 of the 400,000 Americans who died in the war.

As you enter the Memorial from the granite arches on either north or south, positioned above you is a large, bronze victory laurel. The laurels are held there, not by rifles or bayonets, but by four sculpted American eagles with 12 ft. wingspans sitting atop beautiful bronze columns. They symbolize the American spirit from a united people that won that war.

If you haven’t as yet visited this special place, you should try to go. You will come home feeling more connected to your history and with a greater appreciation of what it means to be an American.

Monday, May 27, 2024

 

 

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                The Post-Journal

   Where Have All the Workers Gone?

                                                                                    MAY 25, 2024

ROLLAND KIDDER

Recently, in discussing our local economy, a person versed in that subject told me that “all businesses in the area are facing a declining labor force. They just can’t find people to hire.”

In asking around with a few business people that I know, this was confirmed. Then it struck me how now, in many places, you see signs that say “We Are Hiring!” It doesn’t seem to be just a problem for manufacturing — you see such signs in front of factories, fast-food outlets and also from those in the healthcare field.

Thus, it was with interest that I read an article in the Wall Street Journal a couple of weeks ago which had the headline: “Suddenly There Aren’t Enough Babies. The Whole World is Alarmed.” The sub-headline read: “Birth rates are falling fast across countries, with economic, social and political consequences.”

Statistics world-wide indicate that this is a growing problem almost everywhere. Statisticians estimate that the fertility rate (the average number of children that are born to a woman) needs to be 2.2 to just stay even with population growth. The United States now has a rate of 1.62…the “lowest on record.” The fertility rate in Japan is 1.26. Even China and India are falling behind.

There is no single answer as to why this is happening, but one researcher said that as economic conditions improve in a culture, people “have a preference for spending time building a career, on leisure, relationships outside the home, that are more likely to come in conflict with childbearing.”

That, to me, describes a bit of what is happening in our family. My kids mostly were married in their mid-twenties and soon thereafter started having children. However, most of our older grandchildren, who are either married or in solid relationships, may well not have kids until they are in their 30s. They are enjoying their lives and their careers.

What this all means, of course, is that school enrollments are declining. Fewer kids means fewer students. In checking state records on my old alma mater, Jamestown High School, the graduating senior class has dropped about 15% in enrollment over the past 20 years. At Southwestern it is down more like 30%.

That means not only that there are fewer kids going into college (think enrollment declines at JCC and SUNY Fredonia,) it also means that there are fewer of them available to fill the factory jobs and employment needs of our community.

There is really no easy answer to any of this except to keep working to be sure that there are good, well-paying jobs around so that future generations can fill them and keep our community here going.

Throughout my lifetime, Western New York has always struggled to maintain a strong labor force and job market. Yet, even on a national basis, since 2020, though jobs have grown by 3.8% the labor pool has only grown by 1.8% – so, what we have is really a national problem.

For a rural county, we still have a strong and diverse economy. Just think of the various companies and institutions that employ people here. But, right now, there are more job openings than there are people to fill them.


 

Sunday, April 28, 2024

 


            The Post-Journal  

The Cursed Reality Of Inflation

                                                                                    APR 27, 2024

ROLLAND KIDDER

 

A reader of this column sent me a letter asking my views on this subject. Though not an expert on inflation, I do have my opinions about it.

My father likely had a great influence on me in regard to this issue. He believed that inflation was the bane of all and an enemy especially of the prudent saver. “The money you save will depreciate in value,” he would say. He was especially suspect of life insurance that would pay out a designated dollar amount: “The dollars you put in won’t be as valuable as the dollars that are finally paid out to your heirs.”

He hated inflation and it was one of the reasons, I believe, that led him to begin, in a small way, investing in stocks. As a dairy farmer, everything he earned on the farm went back into the farm. However, if non-farm income was realized – like the proceeds of the sale of a parcel of land – he would, after much research, invest that in stocks as a way to try to offset the impact of inflation. (This was back in the days before mutual funds, IRA’s or the 401(k).

He would not invest in very small or untested companies. He would look at companies that had a track record, evaluate their earnings, their price/earnings ratios, their debt…before making his decisions. He called it “value” investing. He would check regularly through reading Barron’s or some other investment publication on whether or not these companies were continuing to follow a prudent business plan.

He couldn’t control the price of milk (which usually never kept up with inflation,) nor with the cost of farm machinery which always kept rising at least, if not faster than the rise in inflation. So, he did what he could with these stock investments to try and offset the deteriorating value of money – which to him defined inflation.

There are a lot of causes for inflation–federal deficit spending, increasing wage rates, the cost of food, housing, energy, etc. But, what my Dad finally came to conclude was that inflation, no matter the cause, was a curse that would always be around and was something he couldn’t control.

Fortunately, we live in a country where at least one major economic player continues to try to tamp down inflation – and that is the Federal Reserve Bank. Though its primary means of doing so is setting the cost of short-term money loaned to banks, this interest rate lever has worked over the years to dampen inflationary pressures. As a result, the United States, despite its bloated debt and deficit spending, continues to be a country where, at least, there is a target of trying to keep inflation at or below 3% per year.

We are the envy of some third world countries whose inflation rates can reach 50% or even 100% a year.

I remember taking my first economics course in college. My Dad, who only had one-semester of college before needing to return home to run the farm, would quiz me regularly about what I was learning. But, in truth, I think he knew more about economics and, especially, inflation than I did. He experienced it every day in running the dairy farm.

So, to the reader who sent me the letter, here is my answer: I am still not an expert at knowing or understanding all that there is to know about inflation. However, my Dad was right – it is a curse that will always be with us, and the only way we can offset it is by the old-fashioned way of trying to increase our income, reduce our expenses, and then invest prudently to try to offset its effects.

Rolland Kidder is a Stow resident and a former New York state Assembly member.

Sunday, April 7, 2024

 

Turning Swords Into Plowshares

These are words from the Old Testament–words of hope from a prophet that, at the end of time, “nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.”

Unfortunately, we haven’t gotten to that point, and mankind continues to find new ways to kill each other…of turning plowshares into swords.

It is sad, but true, that when new technologies have been developed, humans have found a way to turn them against each other. I would expect that back in the Bronze Age, spears were developed to hunt for meat or as protection against wild animals. However, it wasn’t long before they were being used in warfare between opposing tribes.

World War I is another example of how new technology was applied in war-making. Soon after the internal combustion engine was invented, nations found a way to mechanize warfare. By putting tracks and a gun on a steel reinforced platform, you could make a tank. Tanks were introduced to supplement the machine guns and artillery used in the trench lines and killing fields of eastern France during the conflict. (You will find cemeteries here with graves of thousands of Americans who died in that war.)

Perhaps the biggest “advance” in warfare at that time, was the introduction of the airplane. Balloons had been used during war, at least as far back as America’s Civil War. But, airplanes brought a whole new technology to fighting. Not only could planes fight each other, they could drop bombs from the sky behind the lines.

Recently, in Ukraine, we have seen the development of another new technology in fighting — drones. Drones, we thought, would be delivering packages to our homes. Now, they have been adapted for war. With a drone, you don’t need to endanger a pilot who could be shot down. Computers, GPS’s, and remote radio-control — guide drones that deliver bombs and destruction against the enemy.

This new, and somewhat strange way of fighting, will again change things in the world of warfare. It is apparent that ships are no longer safe. On several occasions, Ukrainian drones, both by air and sea, have sunk Russian warships. It now appears that Russia’s advantage in having a large Black Sea Fleet has been greatly compromised. Russia also has drones, many made in Iran, which have been used against Ukraine.

What does this mean for the future of warfare? Will an aircraft carrier carry drones instead of man-piloted aircraft? Will the aircraft carrier itself now become outmoded because of its vulnerability to drones? How do you defend against drones? Apparently, they can be shot down but also, many get through to their targets.

In the midst of this new development, old threats still prevail — especially, the threat of nuclear war. If there is one thing we know about human history, it has been a history of war.

All of this, to my mind, makes the work of our local native, Robert H. Jackson, even more relevant. At Nuremburg he led the way in establishing new definitions like “aggressive war” and “crimes against humanity.” In his words, as quoted in bronze at the Center carrying his name, an achievable goal should be to “root out of men’s thinking that all wars are legal,– [then] at last, we will have mobilized the forces of law on the side of peace.”

In the meantime, we need to keep yearning and hoping for those days promised by the prophet, when “swords will be turned into plowshares… and they shall learn war no more.”

Rolland Kidder is a Stow resident and a Vietnam War Navy veteran.


Sunday, February 18, 2024

 

                           The Post-Journal

 

               I Wish This Were 2025

                                                                                    FEB 17, 2024

ROLLAND KIDDER

 

I am tired of the political campaign already. I wish it were 2025, and that we were over with it.

Whether we like it or not, this year’s Presidential election is looking like it will be a rerun of 2020…and we have all been down that trail once before. The nation doesn’t need to go through it again.

The year is shaping up to be a rerun of incumbents. Joe Biden (81 years old) is an incumbent still serving his first term. Donald Trump (77 years old) is running as an incumbent still claiming the last election was stolen from him. You might call him an incumbent “once-removed.” Nevertheless, he is running as an incumbent and seems to have quashed most of his opposition, thus far, in the Republican primaries.

A columnist earlier this year called this an election that “no one wants or needs.” Yet, it looks like the election we are going to get.

I think what worries me most is that this rerun between Biden and Trump is likely to hold up anything of substance being accomplished in Washington. The former President seems to have now dashed (or trashed) hopes that a bi-partisan agreement on immigration will be accomplished this year.

Trump apparently thinks that he alone can single-handedly solve a problem which he was unable to fix in his first term… and doesn’t want anyone else to get credit for trying to help solve. If he is elected again, perhaps he will try to build a bigger and better wall along the Mexican border. Maybe a double or triple wall will do the job. We just don’t know.

He would obviously need the full-time help of the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard in the Gulf of Mexico and along the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. Refugees can come by boat as well as by foot, as we have experienced for many years off the coast of Florida. What we need is legislative action in Washington.

The whole year is also going to be consumed by what actions (or non-actions) are decided by the Supreme Court as to whether the Constitution prohibits someone who “egged on” efforts to overthrow a Presidential election can be prosecuted as a criminal or be prohibited by the Constitution from running for the job.

The political conversation is already swarming around who the candidates will be for Vice President. The odds are that Kamala Harris will stay on the ticket with Joe Biden.

Trump will keep us on “pins and needles” as to who his choice for VP will be…though I think you can write off any consideration of Nikki Haley or Mike Pence. There are plenty of “wannabes” who want the job…and my guess is that it will be someone who will take an absolute loyalty oath, and will agree to back Trump unreservedly on whatever he wants to do on anything without questioning it, including disrupting an electoral college vote.

The press will be deluging us all year with apocalyptic scenarios of how bad it will be. The headlines have already been written.

Sadly, for the country, it will again be a time of great division and not a time for finding common ground. That is not good for a democracy, ours included.


Sunday, January 7, 2024


                The Post-Journal

  The Problem Of Pomposity In Politics

                                                                        JAN 6, 2024

                                                ROLLAND KIDDER

When Bob Woodward, renowned reporter of the Watergate scandal, came to Chautauqua last summer, he was asked to comment on the many Presidents he had covered and what made or broke their Presidencies.

His reply was that the biggest problem such politicians face is “pomposity,” in other words “getting too big for their britches.” He not only attributed President Nixon’s downfall to this…but reflected that it was all too often a weakness or illness that affected those in high places. After a while, they can come to think that the rules don’t apply to them.

Perhaps the word “arrogance” also describes the problem, and I have often thought, that “lack of humility” might also be an apt description for the malady.

Just to remove ourselves from current politics, I have always thought that one of President Lincoln’s great gifts was his lack of pomposity. He knew where he had come from–the “sticks,” rural Illinois. He knew that timing and luck played a lot in his getting elected. He did not tout himself. He recognized the agony that the country was going through during the Civil War, and he “agonized” with those on both sides of the conflict.

Another President who came out of that same era, was Ulysses S. Grant. Grant had been mustered out of the Army after a rather mediocre career and was working in his father’s leather shop business in the small town of Galena, Illinois when the war broke out. Initially, he was not invited to rejoin the U.S. military…so volunteered instead for the Illinois militia. At war’s end, he had become the General responsible for all of the armies fighting for the Union. Yet, he never forgot his humble beginnings.

Grant was not an ego man. He didn’t “toot his own horn.” He just kept fighting and moving south. Lincoln saw this and brought him back to Washington. Near the end of the war, the two would meet at City Point, Virginia where Lincoln would go out to inspect the front lines. Then, at night, he and Grant would sit around a camp fire and discuss strategies to end the war.

When the Civil War ended, there was an epic surrender meeting between General Grant and General Lee at Appomattox Courthouse. Lee arrived in full uniform riding a pristine horse with his ceremonial sword attached to his waist. Grant arrived in a plain, soldier blue uniform wearing little, if any, rank insignia. He was disheveled and didn’t look like a conquering general, though one he was. He was courteous and deferential toward Lee. Had they been fighting on the same side, Grant would have been junior in rank to Lee.

Both knew the war was over. But, Grant didn’t rub it in. He showed humility. He didn’t tout himself or the victory.

Many years later, the same attributes would help propel Dwight D. Eisenhower to the top of the U.S. Army in Europe during World War II. Eisenhower had come from a small town in Kansas, and he never forgot it. His lack of pomposity was the perfect anecdote in working with the upper crust in Great Britain, men like Winston Churchill and General Bernard Montgomery. Though burdened with the great task of winning a war in Europe, Eisenhower had a sense of humility about himself and the job he faced.

Humility and the lack of pomposity are not easily learned…they are grounded in character. It is trait we need to look for in our leaders.

Saturday, December 23, 2023

                                                      The Post-Journal

Experiencing The Joys Of Winter

                                                                                    DEC 23, 2023

ROLLAND KIDDER 

The other day I peeked out the window and saw our grandson playing with the dogs in the snow. It was fun to watch!

He would throw the snow up in the air, they would chase it and their noses and faces were covered. It was an early snow and quite wet, so the snow stuck to the dogs like fleas. He didn’t know I was watching, which made the whole experience even better.

There is a lot about winter, at my age, that you don’t like. Go slower, put more salt down, buy some extra windshield fluid because you know that you are going to run out.

But, we can’t overlook the other side. It brings out a good side in people. The other day, on the way to buy the newspaper in the early morning, I saw that a car had slid off the road. The Sheriff’s Deputy was there with her caution lights blazing so that everyone was aware of the problem.

The person in the car was okay, she was standing at the edge of the road. Another car, a local woman going to work, stopped to help and got the stranded motorist home. No one hurt (except maybe the car in the ditch,) and a public safety official was fully involved–really a beautiful scene. An early winter scene in Chautauqua County.

Winter, of course, is a mixed bag. The woodlands and trees are incredible when clothed in snow. Yet, when on the way to Warren, Pa. for a doctor’s appointment in the middle of the same snow storm, I ruminated: “Why am I doing this?”

Yet, it is all a part of living here in the winter. The bad comes with the good.

Up here on the lake, we tend to measure time not as much by the clock, but by the wildlife on the water. The coots were coming by in droves recently and the ducks with them. The seagulls still left here have been swarming on the lake like bees around a hive. The tundra swans will be coming soon…just before the lake freezes over. Winter is not such a bad thing.

Age brings perspective, but that doesn’t mean that it brings more resilience. When you are my age, you need to be ready when the snow flies and prepare yourself for walking through the slush and snow. Where is the solid ground?

My kids tell me that most of what I write in these articles is read by old people like me. Be that as it may, even old people can appreciate winter. They just have to be more ready for it and plan ahead.

I remember, as a kid, when people put chains on their tires in order to drive in the winter. Thankfully, we don’t have to do that anymore. Yet, we have learned from those “old days,” and I am always sure that our four-wheel-drive family has good tread on their tires before the snow starts to fall.

There really isn’t much of a “tale” in this story except to return again to the change of seasons and the coming on of winter. It can be a beautiful thing or an awful thing…depending on how you look at it.

The good news is that if you are prepared and expecting it, it can be one of the favorite times of the year to live around here.


Sunday, November 19, 2023

 

Building Renewable Energy Costs Money          

NOV 18, 2023

ROLLAND KIDDER 

A lot of public money has gone into building renewable energy–wind and solar power. Without tax credits, grants and other financial incentives, a lot of it wouldn’t be built. Tax incentives for energy development have always been with us, including higher depreciation rates for oil and gas exploration.

Nevertheless, I don’t think anyone was ready for the recent announcement by Orsted A/S, the largest energy company in Denmark, that it was canceling its contract to build two huge offshore wind farms in New Jersey. It certainly was a surprise to New Jersey which had spent millions of public dollars preparing to receive the electricity once it reached shore.

Orsted basically said that it was going to lose too much money on the deal and so was backing out. All of the tax and financial incentives weren’t enough to make the project viable.

Other wind farm companies, including those involved with offshore Long Island here in New York State, have also been lobbying for more money to keep those projects alive. But where does such money come from? Yes, from you and me the ratepayer. Electricity bills have already been going up to upgrade the electric grid to accommodate more renewable energy and to provide capacity for the push to go all-electric on cars and buses.

Some are now “putting on the brakes,” and resistance is growing as to what all of this is going to cost.

The Public Service Commission recently said “No” to requests for more subsidies for offshore wind here in New York, and the Governor also put a “damper” on things when she vetoed a bill which would have allowed a transmission line connecting offshore power to the grid to cross a public park on Long Island. (What good is offshore energy if you can’t find a place to bring it onshore? Do you know anyone who wants a transmission line built next to them?)

A very significant energy controversy was decided recently by the public in a referendum that took place this past election day in the State of Maine. There 70% of voters rejected a proposal that all private electricity companies in the state be required to sell their assets to a new state-owned electric company which proponents said would advance more renewable power and also reduce electric rates and control costs.

What the voters of Maine may have considered before making this vote was the experience of the “deep thinkers” in New York State who 40 years ago abolished the privately owned electric utility on Long Island, and put those assets instead into a shell, state-sponsored, corporation called the Long Island Power Authority (LIPA.)

That whole fiasco has ended up costing Long Islanders billions of dollars, of which $4 billion of that debt is still carried on LIPA’s books as “restructuring bonds” attributed to the cost of dismantling and decommissioning the only then operating nuclear (non-fossil fuel) power plant on Long Island.

When you fly over the North Sea adjacent to Denmark and other European countries, you see hundreds of offshore windmills producing electricity, so you know that it can be done. Yet, it would appear that the European experience, including the cost of maintaining these machines in a harsh environment, has provided a learning curve – a part of that being that such projects cost big money and that has to be a part of the equation.

There is no doubt that we need more renewable energy in this country. There also is no doubt that the consuming public has to be willing to pay the bill to make it happen.