Stanly County Board of Commissioners
Press Release
6/30/2008
Government Officials Respond Directly To Survey's Distortions
STANLY COUNTY, N.C., June 30 /PRNewswire/ -- In its latest attempt in its
struggle to secure renewal of a 50-year federal license for a monopoly on
hydroelectric power from the Yadkin River in Stanly County ("the Yadkin
Hydroelectric Project"), the multinational firm Alcoa has commissioned a poll
that it claims shows that "the voters of North Carolina strongly believe that
it is a very bad idea for the state government to take over the Alcoa
hydroelectric dams and power plant." According to Stanly County Board of
Commissioners, the survey actually distorts the debate by asking skewed
questions deliberately designed to favor Alcoa's position.
Alcoa commissioned the telephone poll of 500 likely N.C. voters from
McLaughlin and Associates of Alexandria, Va., which involved seven questions
on the Project, some prefaced by incomplete information. Stanly County
Commissioners question not only the content but also the timing of the release
-- it came out while members of the House and Senate Conference Committees
were debating a provision in next year's budget to create the Yadkin Study
Commission, even though the three-day survey had been completed on June 22.
Such a commission would merely examine the issues involved in the relicensing
over the next year while maintaining the status quo for the Project. Alcoa
was unsuccessful in trying to stop the formation of the study commission in
the Senate budget hearings.
The Stanly County Commissioners are on record as opposing Alcoa's
operation of the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project and have asked the state to
intervene in the matter, saying that the state's water rights for a public
resource such as the Yadkin River should take precedence over a private firm
such as Alcoa having an unlimited monopoly on it. Similar resolutions have
been signed by Davidson, Randolph, Iredell, Anson, Cabarrus and Union County
Boards of Commissioners, as well as the Centralina Council of Governments.
To help inform all North Carolinians of the facts at hand, the Stanly
County Commissioners have released specific points to respond directly to
Alcoa's "push poll." They are set out below.
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The questions presented wrong assumptions. The first question asked,
"Do you approve or disapprove of the state government using tax dollars to
take over a privately owned and operated business?" Not surprisingly, most
respondents disapproved. What this has to do with the study commission is
hard to figure out. All the budget provision empowers the commission to do is
study the issue and make recommendations to the General Assembly when it
re-convenes next year.
Further, if the State ever created a power authority, there would be no
state tax dollars used because the Yadkin Project annually generates profits
that far exceed its cost -- at least $10 million to $40 million annually for
Alcoa, which has not been forthcoming on how much revenue it generates from
selling hydroelectric power from its operations.
In fact, the survey mentions several different costs for the state, asking
people whether they agree it should cost N.C. taxpayers $25 million in one
question and "hundreds of millions" (their wording) in another. The poll did
not specify where those figures came from while trumpeting the (not
surprisingly) overwhelming opposition to them.
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The questioning was biased rather than neutral, violating a central
tenet in conducting a survey. Consider this phrasing after the interviewer
asks which of the following statements comes closer to your own point of view:
"(SOME/OTHER) people say the state taking over Alcoa's hydroelectric power
project is a violation of their property rights. Alcoa purchased the land and
built the dams, has operated and maintained them for 100 years, and should
have the right to continue operating the dams if it chooses to renew its
license." Compare it to the other one provided: "(SOME/OTHER) people say that
the river belongs to everyone and that the federal law provides a way for
ownership of the dams to be transferred to the state of North Carolina and it
should be owned and operated by the state government for the public interest."
The first statement is more loaded in its wording, and even worse, it is
incorrect. It does not specify who the "Some/other people" are who think
Alcoa's property rights are being violated, and indeed, few people other than
those connected to Alcoa have stated this position publicly. More troubling
is the implication that since Alcoa purchased the land and built the dams, it
automatically should retain rights to it. This opposes the concept set out by
the 1920 Federal Water Power Act still in effect today, which says that no
claims or titles in fee simple and in perpetuity could pass to private hands,
as ownership in "navigable waters" such as the Yadkin River is vested in the
United States. Instead, the government sets limits for licensing use of such
waters, which is what Alcoa faces with the Project.
Indeed, there is no violation of Alcoa's property rights, since Alcoa
agreed, in order to get its first exclusive 50-year license in 1958, that it
was not a violation of its property rights for the federal law to operate to
order a takeover of its license and property at the end of the 50 years. By
not defining those conditions, the first statement was inaccurate and
irrelevant, so the second choice becomes irrelevant because it cannot be
compared fairly to the first. This question alone should be discounted as an
impartial measure of support for Alcoa.
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The poll presents false arguments. Another question asked, "Do you
support or oppose the state of North Carolina getting into the power business
where the state would be responsible for owning, running and maintaining power
plants and competing with other utilities?" If the state took over the Yadkin
Hydroelectric Project, it would not be "competing with other utilities,"
because owning a hydroelectric project does not come with an electric
distribution service territory for retail customers.
But Alcoa does have one advantage in its present operation with the
Project -- it is exempt from oversight by the N.C. Utilities Commission and
thus does not have to follow their guidelines as do Progress Energy, Duke
Energy and other companies. Again, this was not disclosed in the polling.
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Alcoa framed questions as to what the state is doing, but not about its
own operations. One question started, "At present, the North Carolina state
government does not own, run or maintain any power plants." That is true. So
is this one: "At present, Alcoa does not own, run or maintain any businesses
in North Carolina outside the Yadkin Hydroelectric Plant." But that never
came up, nor did the fact that the firm is facing several lawsuits worldwide
and is considered ripe for a takeover by companies outside the United States,
according to several industry experts. The questions ignored these concerns
completely.
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The survey omitted crucial information about Alcoa's power should it
receive a relicensing. Alcoa's focus has been and most likely will continue
to be on making money from its operations over generating a clean and abundant
supply of water for drinking, recreation and other activities for Stanly and
neighboring counties. In an era where gas runs $4 a gallon and probably will
rise even more, Alcoa will receive a free source of power from the waters of
the Yadkin in order to generate hydroelectricity it can sell to the highest
bidder on the power grid. Alcoa also can sell the license to any third party
to take over the dam operations, including foreign-based companies, and it
would remain in effect for the 50-year period. These are all facts about what
powers the license grants to Alcoa, yet none were discussed when questions
were asked.
Reviewing this entire survey, it is obvious that Alcoa had self-serving
motives to create it and crafted the language carefully in its favor. The
results misrepresent the actual overwhelming and very reasonable opposition to
Alcoa's involvement in the Project. If the firm would work harder to improve
and resolve its current operations with the Project rather than spend
considerable effort on activities such as these, it would generate more
credibility and public support for them than this biased poll.
Patty Briguglio
919-233-6600
SOURCE Stanly County Board of Commissioners
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