Calls to Representatives needed NOW!!! With elections in November some may actually listen. Phyllis Mains
Jim Nussle 202-225-2911; Jim Leach 202-225-6576; Leonard Boswell 202-225-3806; Tom Latham 202-225-5476; Steve King 202-225-4428 ( my call to King's office resulted in an augment with the staffer who cited high gas prices --when I suggested alternatives like ethanol that would help Iowa she said "that would take too long" DUH like drilling in the Refuge would help immediately?
Another
bill seeks to open ANWR
FILIBUSTER: New proposal deals only with oil
drilling in the refuge.
By LIZ RUSKIN
Anchorage Daily News
Published:
May 23, 2006
Last Modified: May 23, 2006 at 02:27 AM
WASHINGTON --
The chairman of the House Resources Committee, Rep. Richard Pombo, has filed
another bill to accomplish what so many prior bills have failed to do: open the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling.
Recent strategies to
get an ANWR bill through a reluctant Senate have involved mixed marriages --
ANWR and the budget or ANWR and the defense bill. Pombo's latest proposal, on
the other hand, is a stand-alone bill dealing only with ANWR. That leaves it
wide open to filibuster in the Senate.
"There's always the chance that
Sen. (Ted) Stevens and other like-minded senators could get the three votes they
need to move forward and pass it with a filibuster-proof majority," said Brian
Kennedy, spokesman for Pombo, R-Calif.
The Republican-dominated House has
passed ANWR legislation repeatedly in the last five years, with the help of
about 30 Democrats. A majority of senators has also voted to drill in the
refuge, but Stevens and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, have fallen a few votes
short of the 60 they need to block a filibuster, a fatal procedural delay.
ANWR, drilling proponents note, could produce a million barrels of oil a
day. Environmentalists say the amount is insignificant when you consider that
the
Melinda Pierce, a
lobbyist for the Sierra Club, said she's not surprised to see the Republicans
trot out an ANWR bill just before Memorial Day weekend and the start of the
so-called summer driving season. It's an attempt to show that they are doing
something about high gas prices, she said.
"I think it's a bit of red
meat for their base," she said. Kennedy acknowledged the bill has a political
purpose. "It puts the House on record yet again and shows the American public
that yet again the Republican majority is trying to do something about energy
supply," he said.
The House is likely to debate the bill this week, maybe
Thursday.