Article Excerpt
The ongoing economic crisis has states scrambling for new sources of revenue
to fill the holes in their annual budgets. Spending cuts, while popular
in the abstract, are almost always unpopular among the constituents and
interests groups whose spending it is that is being cut. Many state
legislators are equally unwilling to propose tax increases, especially in recessionary times.
Nevertheless, state governments must have the money to run, leaving
governors and legislators the responsibility to find creative ways to
pay for things. Enter William Howell, speaker of Virginia's House of
Delegates, who is asking the Obama administration to open an area miles
off Virginia's coastline to oil and natural gas exploration by 2011.
U.S.
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar opposes new offshore exploration,
as do a number of so-called environmental groups—but they may find
their protestations eclipsed by economic and energy realities. The
Interior Department's Minerals Management Service estimates the area
Howell and other Virginia lawmakers ask be opened for exploration—some
50 miles out into the Atlantic—could contain 130 million barrels of oil
and 1.14 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
"Developing these [energy] resources would create thousands of new
jobs in our commonwealth, arriving at the right time to assist in
lifting our workers, families, and communities out of this economic
recession," Howell says.
If Howell is successful in his push to bring deepwater energy
exploration to the waters off Virginia, an idea that has the full
support of Virginia's Republican gubernatorial nominee Robert McDonnell
as well as the limited backing of Democratic nominee Creigh Deeds, look
for his efforts to be replicated in the other states on America's
Atlantic coast. There is just too much money at stake for them to
continue to say "No" to this idea whose time, apparently, has come.
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