Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 15, 2009
MEDIA CONTACT:
Tamara Hinton, 202.225.0184
tamara.hinton@mail.house.gov

 

Cap & Trade = Higher Costs for Rural America

Next week, members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce are expected to
consider The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009. Rep. Henry Waxman
(D-CA) and Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass) introduced the bill. A major component of
this legislation is cap and trade.

As a lifelong rancher, as a student of Agriculture economics, and as the Ranking Member
of the House Agriculture Committee, I have very serious concerns about cap and trade
and its impact on rural economies.

Cap and trade is nothing more than a national energy tax, and the effects will be farreaching
to businesses, consumers, and even more so to rural America. We are looking at
the most amazing tax increase of all times. If you like being cool in the summer, you’re
going to be affected. If you like being warm in the winter, you’re going to be affected. If
you want to go anywhere, you’re going to be affected. This is going to affect all of us.
Chairman Waxman understands that the best way to force you to change your business
habits, to change your lifestyle, is to tax you to the point where you have to change your
lifestyle.

Those who will be hit the hardest will be people living in rural areas. Unlike Chairman
Waxman’s Hollywood constituents, rural Americans have different lifestyles and
challenges. They must travel farther for routine errands—25 percent more miles than
urban households according to the most recent Federal Highway data. And, rural
households spend 58% more on fuel than urban residents as a percentage of their income.
Power providers in rural America face a unique challenge of providing affordable
electricity to larger, less densely populated areas. Rural Electric Cooperatives serve 40
million Americans averaging around seven consumers per mile, while other utilities
average 35 customers per mile.

Protecting the environment is a worthwhile effort and I am all for it. I helped craft the
greenest Farm Bill ever in 2002. It increased funding to incentivize voluntary
conservation programs by 80 percent. In 2008, I worked to improve and expand those
conservation programs. And, I helped draft a new energy title to encourage agriculture to
produce second generation bio-fuels.

But, I cannot support legislation that does nothing but levy taxes on rural America. If we
want a real solution to climate change then we should continue to focus on incentives,
innovation, and research and not on taxes and mandates.

 

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