Enron Mail

From:steven.kean@enron.com
To:mary.clark@enron.com
Subject:Re: Trains - Light rail
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Mon, 31 Dec 1979 16:00:00 -0800 (PST)

Mary- Ken has been asked by Mayor Brown to chair the fundraising effort to
get voter approval on a light rail referendum in Houston. My guess is that
he will decline given the other demands on his schedule, but I don't know
that for sure. I think our respnse




Mary Clark@ENRON
04/13/99 02:21 PM
To: Steven J Kean/HOU/EES@EES, Joe Allen/Corp/Enron@Enron
cc: Mark Palmer/Corp/Enron@Enron
Subject: Trains - Light rail

Steve/Joe:

Mark suggested that I contact you to provide a response to this employee's
question (see below) to Ken and Jeff about trains and light rail. Please
draft a response and send it to me. I will format it and send it to Ken and
Jeff for their review. Thanks.

Mary Clark
---------------------- Forwarded by Mary Clark/Corp/Enron on 04/13/99 02:13
PM ---------------------------

Office Chairman
04/12/99 02:55 PM


To: Mary Clark/Corp/Enron@Enron, Sherri Reinartz/Corp/Enron@Enron
cc:
Subject: Trains - Light rail

A question to the Office of the Chairman.

Rosie
---------------------- Forwarded by Office Chairman/Corp/Enron on 04/12/99
02:53 PM ---------------------------


Office of the Chairman@ENRON_DEVELOPMENT
04/12/99 07:25 AM
To: Office Chairman@ENRON_DEVELOPMENT
cc:
Subject:

Office of the Chairman:

While traveling within Germany recently, I noticed that electric powered
trains are popular and also provide a safe, reliable, affordable and
comfortable means of transportation to the public.

This brought to mind a question to ask you:

Is Enron taking any action to promote development and implementation of
electric trains or light rail in the USA and/or abroad, either through the
Political Action Committee, Lobbying or through the efforts of the Business
Development Offices?

I do believe that the commuters would benefit from having access to electric
trains that provide safe, clean and comfortable transport. Enron could
potentially benefit by supplying the power for these trains within the USA
(and abroad as well).

Just think if the city of Houston offered light rail as an option for
commuting to and from work, as well as commuting to other locations - both
interstate and intrastate. A person could take a train to Galveston, Austin,
or elsewhere and arrive in short time with the high speed rail available.
With the new Ballpark downtown and the revitalization of the downtown area,
it would seem that a legitimate method of public transportation is the
element that is missing from the Houston city model. Buses that run on diesel
are clearly not the solution for mass transit.

Regards,
Dave Hubbard
Cuiaba, Brasil
011-55-65-612-2102