Enron Mail

From:jeff.dasovich@enron.com
To:skean@enron.com, richard.shapiro@enron.com, james.steffes@enron.com,susan.mara@enron.com, harry.kingerski@enron.com, leslie.lawner@enron.com, michael.tribolet@enron.com, kristin.walsh@enron.com, karen.denne@enron.com, mpalmer@enron.com, janel.guerre
Subject:California Update--0717.01
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Tue, 17 Jul 2001 12:31:00 -0700 (PDT)

What people know:

Hertzberg (et al's) bill (82XX)was heard in an "informational" hearing today
and still sits in the Assembly Energy Committee. It will be heard again
tomorrow (perhaps beginning at 10 AM) , at which time parties will have a
chance to support/oppose and ask for amendments. Most, including us, oppose
unless significantly amended.
The Wright (D) -Richman (R) bill (83XX)was heard in an "informational"
hearing today and still sits in the Assembly Energy Committee. It will be
heard again tomorrow, at which time parties will have a chance to
support/oppose and ask for amendments. From our perspective, this is the
best bill out there yet, though it still has serious problems---it isn't
available electronically yet, but should be tomorrow, and I'll distribute
then. The chances of the joint D-R bill being successful are slim, however,
since it's up against the Speakers competing bill. There is talk that the
Speaker will try to negotiate with Wright/Richman tonight and include any
agreement in his bill (82XX).
The original version of the Governor's MOU bill sits in the Senate. Most
believe that Burton will put it up for a vote this week and it will fail.
The Senate's version of the MOU (Sher-Peace-Kuehl) (78XX)came out today. It
will likely be heard in the committee tomorrow or the next day. Notably, it
kills Direct Access completely and makes Edison shareholders responsible for
that portion of Edison's debt owed to suppliers. In short, a very bad bill.
Burton's 18XX, which would de-link the bond issuance (to pay back the General
Fund) from the DWR contracts is likely to pass the Senate tomorrow or the
next day. Many--including Enron--support the bill (though we are supporting
it behind the scenes).

What people don't know:
Whether there's the time or the will in the Assembly and Senate to achieve by
Friday a single, comprehensive bill that can be sent to the governor for his
signature.
Whether the Legislature would postpone its month-long recess if the
Legislature hasn't finished a bill by Friday (most folks think they will not
postpone).
Whether it's true that, irrespective of the energy issue, the Legislature
will fail to get the budget completed by Friday and therefore have to
postpone their recess anyway, in which case they might continue to work on
the energy legislation at the same time.

Odds-makers still say it's better than 50-50 that the Legislature does not
get the Edison bills done by Friday and leaves on on its 30-day vacation.

Best,
Jeff

Sacramento is one goofy place.