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Thread: House Narrowly Approves Bill To Help U.S. Refineries

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    House Narrowly Approves Bill To Help U.S. Refineries

    House narrowly approves bill to help US refineries

    http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N075245.htm

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    (Gold9472: "Cajoled" is another way of saying, "bribed", or "paid".)

    By Chris Baltimore
    07 Oct 2005 19:41:49 GMT

    WASHINGTON, Oct 7 (Reuters) - In a cliffhanger vote held open by Republican leaders until they won, the U.S. House of Representatives passed by two votes on Friday a bill clearing the way for U.S. oil refineries to expand.

    The legislation, written by Republican Joe Barton of Texas, barely won approval despite dropping a White House-backed provision that would have gutted clean air rules to help refineries and coal-powered utilities.

    In the first major House vote since Texan Tom DeLay was forced to step down as majority leader, Republicans won, 212-210, in a roll call that ran more than 40 minutes, far beyond the allotted five minutes.

    Democrats in the chamber chanted "shame, shame, shame" as the final tally was announced.

    When over two dozen Republicans initially voted no, DeLay, Barton, House Speaker Dennis Hastert and new Majority Leader Roy Blunt circled the chamber and cajoled the holdouts.

    The palm-sweating vote switched from "yes" to "no" several times, but Republican Rep. Mike Simpson, the speaker pro tempore, did not gavel the vote closed until it swung in the Republicans' favor.

    Several Democrats protested that the vote was being held open. "I am informed that every member of Congress who is in town has voted," Democratic whip Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland said at one point, when the tally was 210 yes, 214 no.

    House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi also complained, saying the proceedings were bringing "dishonor to the House."

    The bill aims to add 2 million barrels per day of capacity by offering abandoned military bases for refinery construction sites.

    It also speeds up permits by giving the Energy Department more authority over the process, and offer federal insurance to refiners in case new projects are delayed.

    The bill was prompted by hurricanes Rita and Katrina, which plowed through the heart of the U.S. energy producing region and shut offshore drilling rigs and refineries.

    Its most controversial item would have deleted a portion of the Clean Air Act known as "new source review" that requires costly new equipment to cut emissions when refineries and coal-fired power plants are expanded.

    However, Barton was forced to drop that proposal from the bill late on Thursday because of opposition from Democrats and moderate Republicans. Although the plan to dismantle new source review was a White House priority, the administration released a statement saying it still supported the legislation.

    "We look forward to working with Congress to improve the bill further as it moves forward in the legislative process," the White House said.

    No new U.S. refinery has been built since 1976 and dozens of plants have been closed despite rising fuel consumption.

    "We haven't built a new refinery in a generation. We need more," said Rep. Fred Upton, Michigan Republican.

    Democrats say refiners are loath to build new facilities amid record-high profits, while Republicans say permitting and environmental requirements keep them from expanding.

    Refiners are "making more money from refining less gasoline," said Rep. Rick Boucher, Virginia Democrat.

    Rep. Edward Markey, Massachusetts Democrat, said refiners have engaged in a "systematic conspiracy" to idle capacity, pointing to some 30 plants that were closed in recent years.

    Democrats were unsuccessful in pushing an alternate bill that would create spare refineries that the federal government could activate during gasoline shortages.

    The House Rules Committee blocked a bipartisan plan by Markey and Sherwood Boehlert of New York to require an 8-mile-per-gallon rise in vehicle mileage to curb gasoline demand.

    Consumer groups said the legislation would do little to help American households facing near-record fuel prices.

    "Its approach leaves the decision to increase refining capacity in the hands of an industry that has deliberately taken advantage of tight supplies in recent years," said Mark Cooper of the Consumer Federation of America.

    Other provisions in the bill include:
    • Expanding Northeast Heating Oil Reserve to 5 million barrels, from current 2 million barrels;
    • Limiting anti-pollution gasoline blends to six, from the current 17;
    • Requiring FTC to prepare a report on the price of gasoline and heating oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange;
    • Waives federal, state and local fuel additive requirements after a natural disaster that disrupts supplies;
    • Gives Federal Energy Regulatory Commission the power to monitor offshore gas gathering lines to prevent anti-competitive practices. LINKS: *TAKE A LOOK-Energy recovers from hurricanes [ID:N12489571] *FACTBOX-Congress drafts post-hurricane laws [ID:nN16469166] *Bush pushes for oil refinery construction [ID:nN04659311]
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  2. #2
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    Republifucks can't do anything honestly.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


  3. #3
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    And WHO do you think this bill benefits? The people? FUCK no.
    No One Knows Everything. Only Together May We Find The Truth JG


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