Power Play Issue 3

Power Play Issue 3: NWE’s Markup Schemes and Assorted Nefarious Acts 

(Total estimated read time ~12 min. 20 sec. – Scroll to the bottom for the TL;DR version)

Last month catch up

In our last issue of Power Play, you heard the tragic story of Montana energy deregulation leading to the bankruptcy of Montana Power, the sale of Montana-financed power plants, and the rise of NorthWestern Energy (NWE). We introduced a lot of terms and players, so if you need a recap, check out this handy glossary that we will keep updated with each new issue. 

NWE tries to curry favorable public opinion with announcements and mailers exclaiming how sustainable it is, how ambitious its plans are, and how well it is serving Montanans. However, NWE’s past actions reveal its true intentions. And so begins a non-exhaustive laundry list of NWE’s assorted nefarious acts. In this issue, we will investigate NWE’s dirty relationship with fossil fuels and why it just won’t cut this toxic energy source out of all our lives.  


Marking up its assets (Est. read time ~3.5 min.)

Colstrip is an Eastern Montana coal mining town turned power generation mecca that has produced a huge amount of energy for Montana, Oregon, Washington, and the open energy market. Colstrip is in the top 25 most polluting facilities in the US but its days as a coal-fired power plant town are numbered. Washington and Oregon utility companies are phasing out coal power in order to comply with state-level emission reduction goals by 2025 and 2030, respectively. Climate change aside (not that we ever endorse putting climate change aside because it should be a massive driving force for all decisions made this century), energy from Colstrip is already the most expensive power in NWE’s portfolio. In 2017, the Montana Consumer Counsel reported the consumer price of power from Colstrip Unit 4 was more than twice the price of Montana wind power!

Everyone but NWE is jumping ship, so why would our energy monopoly hold onto this costly asset? Well, when NWE bought its share of Colstrip Unit 4 in 2007 from Pennsylvania Power and Light (PP&L) it paid $187 million. NWE then asked the PSC to charge consumers enough to recuperate the costs from buying the plant, but claimed it was worth over $407 million!!! The PSC agreed that NWE could recoup its costs, and Montanans were put on a payment plan that assumes Colstrip will operate until at least 2042. Montanans are still paying this “debt” off with a high-interest rate. As of last year, we owed $272.4 million – which is more than NWE bought it for! NWE needs to keep Colstrip open to milk these remaining millions from Montanans. 

This cash cow tactic worked so well with Colstrip, NWE couldn’t resist pulling it again when it bought 11 hydroelectric plants from PP&L. You might remember that massive $900 million price tag for the dams from our last issue. Well, that included an additional $247 million value that was supposed to account for a future where there is a cost for burning fossil fuels. Presumably, the dams were worth more because they do not use carbon to generate electricity. 

Once again, the PSC granted NWE permission to pass this cost off to consumers. Rather than adjusting the price to consumers when/if fees for burning fossil fuels occurred, NWE tacked it on from the start, marking up the value of its new asset. The problem is, for the past eight years, there has been no cost for burning fossil fuels! Shout out to 350 Montana, who is suing the state over this “pre-approval law,” which lets NWE pass costs off in advance – before the actual costs are realized. A judge recently ruled in 350 Montana’s favor that pre-approval violates Montana’s constitution. However, this ruling is likely to be appealed by NWE.


Attempted bailouts for bad management (Est. read time ~1 min.)

NWE sees these plants as money-making devices rather than critical infrastructure for Montana. The monopoly has repeatedly cut corners and failed to invest in needed updates, resulting in unreliable operation and increased costs. Colstrip Unit 4 went offline for several months in 2018 for maintenance required to meet air pollution standards and NWE had to purchase power from other companies to make up the difference. It appealed to the PSC that the cost of this purchased power should be passed off to consumers. Thankfully, the PSC declined, saying that “NorthWestern’s supervision of the Colstrip plant was imprudent and that a reasonable utility in NorthWestern’s position would have taken more proactive steps to ensure compliance with emissions standards.” For once, the PSC represented us ratepayers and held NWE accountable for its exploitative business model.  


Changing the rules (Est. read time ~2.6 min.)

There are already tons of ways NWE attempts, and succeeds, in screwing over us ratepayers. Currently, regulation from the PSC and state law does delay and limit some of what it can do. Every legislative session, NWE lobbyists attempt to weaken or remove these protections entirely. 

NWE hates that the PSC can prevent it from passing costs off to ratepayers. Last legislative session, NWE supported a bill that would have given it a blank check for continued investment in the outdated Colstrip power plant while driving up energy bills for Montana households. It also tried to weaken the Montana Consumer Counsel – the entity that represents ratepayers in PSC proceedings. Fortunately, these efforts failed. But it did get two bills through that rewrite the terms of its private contract between the owners of Colstrip to be more favorable for NWE. 

NorthWestern is afraid of potential competition from renewable energy and in the last legislative session it worked to price out rooftop solarhijack bills that would have expanded the solar industry, and limit existing renewable energy requirements. Tragically, that last effort succeeded. A two punch effort first eliminated our renewable energy standardand then canceled NWE’s $2.5 million debt to low income and tribal energy assistance programs for not complying with the renewable energy standard. Additionally, another bill NWE lobbied for makes the sale of renewable energy to NWE more difficult and prohibits the PSC from considering avoided environmental externalities and carbon emissions when setting rates for renewable energy purchases.

In summary, NWE attempted to, and in many cases succeeded in, changing laws to benefit its profit margins and evade its responsibility to Montanans. The makeup of the state legislature has big impacts on climate justice in Montana and the November 2022 elections will set the stage for another session – so you better f*cking vote!

Wanting to learn more about the tragedy that was the last legislative session? This wrap-up issue of What the Helena and MEIC’s June, 2021 issue of Down To Earth are great resources! 


Manipulating the data (Est. read time ~2 min.)

When NWE can’t change the rules, it manipulates the data to make it look like the best financial option for its shareholders is also the best option for Montanans. NWE is required to periodically create a public plan describing how it will provide power in a manner that balances ratepayers’ interest in affordable energy and NWE’s ability to cover its costs while making a modest profit. The 2019 procurement plan identified a more than $1 billion investment in new methane gas plants and keeping Colstrip online for 20 more years as the least cost option while recommending no new wind or solar energy investments. 

sored an additional study to rework the math without a thumb on the scales for fossil fuels. They found that while moving towards renewable energy generation would be a large initial investment, it would ultimately save over $30 billion economy-wide compared to keeping coal online!

When NWE can’t manipulate the data, it leaves it out entirely – leaving us wondering what reality it thinks we live in? Recently, NWE released a net zero energy by 2050 commitment. Not only is 2050 much too late, but the commitment does not include clear benchmarks to measure progress. To avoid catastrophic warming, we must retire fossil fuel based energy plants, build no new fossil fuel infrastructure, and set goals of 100% clean electricity by 2030. Under NWE’s plan, we will be building NEW methane gas plants and will keep Colstrip, our dirtiest resource, online until 2043!


TL;DR 

NWE has a strong interest in keeping dirty energy online and investing in expensive energy when cheaper and cleaner options are available. It acknowledges climate change when it can make NWE money and downplays climate change when it hurts the corporation’s bottom line. When things don’t go well for NWE, it attempts to have ratepayers bail it out or changes the rules entirely. NWE knows that its continued shenanigans are dependent on ratepayers and the PSC looking the other way, so it fudges the numbers to avoid scrutiny. 

So what about the PSC you ask? Isn’t its sole purpose to protect us from greedy monopolies? Yes, yes, that is its job, but it is a bit too busy being embroiled in scandal to pay close attention to NorthWestern Energy. Check out our next issue of Power Play for a PSC Gossip Column – we will dig into the juicy details and envision policy changes that would create a PSC that works for Montana.  

Do you have a vision for what it would look and feel like to have transparent, sustainable, and equitable utility services in Montana? We are collecting visions from our members to include in a future issue of Power Play. Share your vision today!

Written and compiled by Emma Bode (Bozeman Field Manager), Stuart Rinehart (Bozeman Intern, Fall 2021), and Miles Cevallos (Bozeman Intern, Fall 2021)

Action Alert

The MT Department of Health and Human Services just made it impossible for transgender Montanans to change the sex marker on their birth certificate.

They made this change with no public input.

HOW’D WE GET HERE?

In 2021, the Montana legislature passed SB280, a bill that required transgender Montanans to present proof of a gender affirming surgery in court in order to change the sex designation on their birth certificate. This bill unnecessarily changed a rule from 2017 that was more accessible and less invasive.

Last month, the court placed a preliminary injunction on SB280, which means that law could not be enforced. Rather than reverting to the 2017 rule, DPHHS is now denying transgender Montanans the ability to update their birth certificates at all. This decision defies court orders, bypasses public input, and directly targets a marginalized group of Montanans who simply want to live their lives as themselves without fear of harm. 

So what can you do about it? 

  1. Write an email to Adam Meier, Director of DPHHS, at adam.meier@mt.gov. Tell him to repeal this emergency rule, abide by the court’s decision, and allow transgender people to update their birth certificates. 
  2. Tell all your cisgender friends to show TF up. Issues like this— laws and rules that target a small, marginalized segment of the population— often fly under the radar because folks don’t feel directly impacted by them. At its heart, though, this is about privacy, autonomy, and governmental checks and balances, which affect all Montanans. We cannot leave trans people to fight this battle alone. 
  3. Take care of the trans people in your life. Numerous studies have shown that news like this takes a toll on the mental health of transgender folks, especially youth. Check in with the trans people you love. Remind them that their lives, joy, and rights matter to you, and that you will fight for them (and then do just that!). 

To transgender people in and from Montana: We are with you. We wish we didn’t live under a system that can take away our rights so quickly and senselessly, and we will not stop fighting for a world where you can live free of harm. If you’d like to be in community with other trans folks right now, we invite you to join us virtually on Tuesday, May 31 from 6-7PM to share space, talk about (or not talk about) this ruling, and celebrate each other. You can RSVP at the link below:

May Newsletter

1. Join us for our Transcendent Joy 2.0 Launch Party on June 3rd! 

2. Help us ‘Get Out the Vote‘ before the June 7th Primary!

3. Join us for Rockstar Hall of Fame on June 16th!


What’s happening at Forward Montana?

Transcendent Joy 2.0 Launch Party

Join us on June 3rd at 3:30PM at the Missoula Public Library for an all-ages Pride celebration and release party for Transcendent Joy vol 2, featuring readings from zine artists, a collaborative art project, and a whole lot of queer joy! RSVP and check out the first issue here.

Primary Elections

Primary elections in Montana take place on Tuesday, June 7th! Head to our Voter Hub to learn more.

Want to help us make calls to voters and ‘Get Out the Vote’? Head to this link to view the available shifts and to sign up to volunteer!

Board of Directors Elections

Are you excited about Forward Montana’s mission? Do you want to empower young Montanans to be a part of politics? Then you sound like a great fit for Forward Montana’s Board of Directors

We are looking for dedicated Montanans of any age to serve on our Board. Our Board of Directors is made up of, and elected by, Forward Montana members each year. Head to this link to learn more and apply today!


A note from Kiersten Iwai

Dear Meghan, 

#ICYMI: We brought back our bus days!

To kick-off primary election season, our team traveled across the state to host four congressional forums in the Western District, and one in the Eastern District. It was a whirlwind week filled with heartfelt moments, like a hug between Republican candidate Mitch Heuer and Democratic candidate Monica Tranel. Despite stark differences in approaches to policy solutions, all candidates respected each other for showing up for voters.

As the week went on, candidates began to speak more about what united them versus what divided them. One thing they all agreed on? Montanans deserve a representative who will stand up for them in Congress.

Attendees also connected with candidates at the forums, discussing important topics centered on the future of this state we all call home

These forums gave me a lot of hope for the future of our democracy and state. They demonstrated what politics can and should be: voter-centric, policy-focused, accessible, and when tensions run high, we break to share a laugh.

If you’re having a bit of FOMO about missing the forums, check out our website for the recordings, Twitter threads, and articles about the week.   

-Kiersten Iwai


Join us on June 16th at 6:30PM at Conflux Brewing, Missoula, MT

For the first time since 2019, Forward Montana is bringing back Rockstar Hall of Fame, where we celebrate our community and partners and honor Montanans who have worked tirelessly to make our state a better place.

2022 also marks the 18th year of Forward Montana, so we’re throwing it back to our early days and partying like it’s 2004 with an aughts themed celebration. Get your tickets at the link below!


We are looking for our next Senior Organizing Manager and Program Director! Head to the link below to view the job descriptions and find out how to apply today. Know someone that might be a good candidate? Pass along the link today to help us expand our search! 

MT Supreme Court Elections

Jim Brown

Jim Brown has served as the chair of the Public Service Commission since 2020 and prior to that served as a private attorney. In 2013, he represented American Tradition Partnership, a group who was found to have broken campaign finance laws. He is endorsed by Gov. Greg Gianforte, Attorney General Austin Knudsen, and Senator Steve Daines. 

Website: www.jamesbrownformontana.com

Ingrid Gustafson

Ingrid Gustafson is a life-long public servant with a demonstrated commitment to our communities with her involvement in starting 13th Judicial District’s Felony Drug Court and a pilot program to support child welfare through family reunification. She was appointed by Governor Judy Martz to District Court in 2004 and has served on the Montana Supreme Court since 2017.

Website: www.gustafsonformontana.com

Mike McMahon 

Mike McMahon was elected as a Helena District Court Judge in 2016 handling criminal and civil cases. He also works in family court ruling on adult treatment cases. Prior to serving as a Judge, McMahon was a private attorney practicing in Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota.

Website: https://electjudgemcmahon.com

Source: https://missoulacurrent.com/government/2022/03/five-candidates-in-the-race-for-two-montana-supreme-court-seats/

Rockstar Hall of Fame

For the first time since 2019, Forward Montana will host our premiere event of the year, Rockstar Hall of Fame, where we celebrate our community and partners and honor Montanans who have worked tirelessly to make our communities a better place. 


2022 also marks the 18th year of Forward Montana, so we’re throwing it back to our early days and partying like it’s 2004 with an aughts themed celebration.


The details:

June 16, 2022 | 6:30 PM

Conflux Brewing and Taproom*

210 N Pattee Street, Missoula 

*there are two large outdoor spaces at the venue

Interested in sponsoring the event? Contact Margo Ensz, Development Director, for more details and benefits. 


Buy your ticket today

P.S. Want 50% off your individual ticket price? Become a ROCKSTAR Monthly Member to receive your special registration link.


2022 honorees

Climate Champion

Andrew ValaInis (he/him)

Community Campaigner

Zuri Moreno (they/them)

Democracy Defender

Rylee Sommers-Flanagan (she/her)

Democracy Defender

Raph Graybill (he/him)

Emerging Elected

Christopher Coburn (HE/HIM)

LGBTQ+ Advocacy LeadeR

Mija (they/them/two spirit)

Lifetime of Service

Mike Cooney (he/him)

Neighborhood Advocate

Heather Grenier (she/her)

Student Supporter

Wendy Jeschke (she/her)

Ultimate rockstar

Rachel Huff-Doria (she/her)

Congressional Candidate Primary Roadshow

From May 3rd – May 8th, 2022, Forward Montana went on the road. We started in MT01 (the new western district) and stopped in Butte, Missoula, Kalispell, and Bozeman before heading to MT02 (the eastern district) for a finale in Billings.

We invited all the candidates running in the congressional race (Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians, and Independents). Candidates were asked a series of hard-hitting long form and rapid response questions. These questions centered the most pressing issues facing Montanans today: climate change, affordable housing, voting rights and LGBTQ+ equality.

Each event was video recorded, as well as live tweeted. View the information below to see the live stream recordings and the Twitter feed.


CANDIDATE FORUM LIVESTREAMS

Butte

The live streamed event from Butte can be accessed from the link to the right.

Missoula

The live streamed event from Missoula can be accessed from the link to the right.

Kalispell

The live streamed event from Kalispell can be accessed from the link to the right.

Bozeman

The live streamed event from Bozeman can be accessed from the link to the right.

Billings

The live streamed event from Billings can be accessed from the link to the right.


Twitter feed

Check out the link to the right for Forward Montana’s Twitter coverage of the events.


Read more about the forums

Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Read Alex Miller’s news coverage of the Bozeman Candidate forum.

Congressional candidates to appear at back-to-back events Friday

Missoula Current

Read Laura Lundquist’s news coverage of the Missoula Candidate Forum.

Western district congressional candidates discuss climate, abortion, housing in Missoula

Montana StANDARD

View Meagan Thompson’s photo coverage of the Butte Candidate Forum.

Western District Congressional Candidate Forum in Butte.


What’s next?

Help us get out the vote! Over the next month, Forward Montana is is phone banking and registering voters to make sure voters are prepared and ready to cast their ballot on June 7th. We need your help to get out the vote. Head to the link below to view the available shifts and to sign up to volunteer! 

Program Director Job description

Program Director, Forward Montana & Forward Montana Foundation 

Because you believe in a Montana that believes in you. 

Forward Montana (FMT) is seeking a full-time Program Director to strategize, manage, and lead a growing statewide program to success across our leadership development, voter registration, voter mobilization, and issue campaigns. 

The ideal candidate is someone who can balance organizational vision, political urgency, and organizational capacity. You’ll excel in this role if you have all-star time management skills and the ability to support a breadth of collaborative projects. 

Who We Are

Forward Montana (FMT) and Forward Montana Foundation (FMF) are dedicated to engaging and mobilizing young Montanans to help shape their democracy to improve their lives and the lives of fellow Montanans. We put young people on the front lines of civic engagement statewide, basing our efforts out of Bozeman, Missoula, Billings, and the greater Flathead area. 

What You’ll Do

The Program Director reports to the Executive Director, sits on the organization’s coordinating team (our version of a senior leadership team), and is responsible for the following:

  • Work with the Executive Director and Program Team to create and execute an annual program plan and budget that aligns with the organization’s mission, vision, and goals
  • Directly manage, support, and grow Forward Montana’s program team with an eye towards the team’s professional development and overall own professional development and program success.
  • Develop and execute collaborative processes for goal-setting.
  • Evaluate the success and effectiveness of programs and make adjustments as necessary.
  • With the support of the Senior Organizing Manager, lead and support our regional Field Managers in every stage of implementation of programs that accomplish our strategic vision and mission
  • Work with the rest of the Program Team to inform advocacy and legislative strategies
  • With the support of the Executive Director, steward our political strategy and staff the Forward Montana Political Committee coordinating organizational capacity with board vision and priorities
  • Work with the Senior Organizing Manager and Executive Director to develop c3 and c4 field strategies and target audiences, and implement them through creative field and Get Out the Vote tactics. VAN will be your best friend!
  • Build strong relationships with state and national partners and represent Forward Montana in relevant coalitions
  • Work with the Executive Director to strategize and participate in strengthening organizational visibility through coalitions, speaking engagements, and other external opportunities
  • Support the Development Director and Executive Director in securing funding for specific programs including individual donors and institutional funders 
  • Empower the statewide Forward Montana program crew to be the most badass they can be! 

Must-Haves | Here’s what we’re looking for in a candidate: 

  • Experience in and enthusiasm for political strategy and its connection to civic & electoral power building:
    • You set a high bar and meet it, because you think three (or 30) steps ahead to anticipate hurdles and can come up with pragmatic solutions on the fly 
    • You are comfortable with developing and implementing political field plans from start to finish. You have experience creating phone banks and cutting turf in VAN and pulling up lists.
    • You can evaluate new opportunities while thinking about Forward Montana’s strategic mission.
    • You have some familiarity with c3 and c4 organizations
  • Experience in building strong collaborative relationships:
    • You’re excited to build relationships with a national coalition partner one minute and talk to a local stakeholder the next.
    • You understand that partnerships are everything and are constantly seeking out new opportunities for Forward Montana to engage with new audiences and communities.
  • Demonstrated ability to manage and empower a diverse team of peers at varying levels of experience to achieve necessary metrics, and quantitative and qualitative outcomes:
    • You have a track record of supporting teams to accomplish ambitious goals and getting results even when there are obstacles.
    • You’re excited about processes and systems within a team – you can run an effective meeting, give 100% to your individual check-ins with the people you manage, and can run an event planning process on a tight timeline.
    • You have experience hiring and/or managing a diverse team of folks and have experience developing systems to ensure they feel heard.
    • You understand how to hold folks accountable to setting and reaching ambitious goals with creativity and flexibility.
  • Actively Anti-Racist:
    • You are committed to actively contributing to a more equitable and inclusive FMT by facilitating conversations around diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice with the program team and our broader organization.
    • You’re committed to amplifying young voices to advocate for a more progressive, just Montana.
    • You recognize how your own identities show up in the work and welcome, reflect on, and act on feedback while continuously learning about race, ability, and other lines of difference. 

We understand that the right candidate may have experience in different areas. If you don’t meet all the requirements above but have an interest in learning, we encourage you to apply. 

If you were the Program Director right now, you would be:

  • Facilitating planning conversations for our upcoming regional candidate forums – ensuring your team has the tools they need to execute a badass candidate education event
  • Supporting a program team staffer during your 1:1 weekly check-in
  • Representing FMT in a national coalition and talking about the impact of our voter registration work on the Montana landscape
  • Developing the agenda and purpose for an upcoming planning conversation for our statewide get out the vote (GOTV) campaigns – you’re compiling data from past years, coming up with recommendations, and figuring out how you’ll track goals this year
  • Creating relevant documents for an upcoming election to ensure your team has the materials they need to talk to voters – you’re calling election officials, local partners and organizations, diving deep into the Secretary of State website, and becoming an election expert 

What Else You Should Know

Forward Montana is an equal opportunity employer and we value having staff who come from communities that are most impacted by our issues and work. We especially encourage people of color, LGBTQ2S+ people, women, and people with disabilities to apply.

  • Logistics
    • This position is full-time (40 hours/week) and is based in Montana. There are opportunities for a relocation stipend. Preferred location is Bozeman, but we are flexible
    • You must be comfortable working unconventional hours occasionally — including nights and weekends
    • You must have the ability to travel 1-3x/month (a valid driver’s license is required)
    • You’re comfortable conducting field work in all weather conditions
    • This position includes both in-person and virtual components based on public health guidance around COVID-19
    • You must be comfortable being managed and building relationships with our statewide team remotely

The salary for this position ranges from $55,000 – $63,000. Forward Montana also offers the following benefits:

  • Health insurance
  • Retirement plan with a 3% match
  • Technology reimbursement
  • Professional development funds
  • Generous paid time off, including paid family and medical leave

How to Apply

Please send a resume and one-page cover letter stating your interest in the position, why you think you’d be the right fit for Program Director at Forward Montana, and what skillsets you’d be excited to grow & develop in this position. 

Please send application materials to hiring@forwardmontana.org.

Applications will be accepted until the position is filled; however, preference will be given to applications who submit materials by May 20th so that we can start interviews by May 23rd. Preferred start date for this position is July 25 (or earlier)

April Newsletter

1. Join us the first week of May for Congressional Candidate Forums in your community! 

2. Welcome Mandy (she/her) to the Forward Montana team! 

3. Join the team this summer as a Community Organizing Fellow! 

What’s happening at Forward Montana?

Congressional Candidate forum roadshow

Join us in a community near you the first week of May to hear from Congressional Candidates running in the June primary and get a chance to ask your burning questions! Forward Montana is going on the road and stopping in Butte, Missoula, Kalispell, Bozeman, and Billings! Check out the communities and dates below and head to the link to RSVP for your spot. 

Western District (MT 02)

Butte

Join us in Butte on May 3rd at The Covellite Theater at 6:00PM

Missoula

Join us in Missoula on May 4th at Imagine Nation Brewing at 6:00PM

Kalispell

Join us in Kalispell on May 5th at Northwest Montana History Museum at 6:00PM 

Bozeman

Join us in Bozeman on May 6th at The Rialto Theater at 5:30PM

Eastern District (MT 01)

Billings

Join us in Billings on May 8th at Arthouse Cinema and Pub at 6:00PM


Opportunities to get involved

Register Voters

The primary elections are coming up and that means we need your help registering voters! Check out all the available voter registration shifts happening in your area by heading to the link here!

Community Organizing Fellowships

Join the team this summer as a Community Organizing Fellow and learn how to build power with and alongside your peers and work together to make lasting change in your communities while building your own unique set of skills. Head to the link here to learn more and apply today!


A note from Kiersten Iwai

#ICYMI, BIG things happened about a week ago for voter registration in Montana. Remember last summer when Forward Montana Foundation, Montana Youth Action, and MontPIRG challenged three bills from the 2021 state legislative session that burdens Montanans’ right to cast a ballot? Well, the judge granted our request for a preliminary injunction on our voting rights case! This means that, while the lawsuit will continue to proceed, until a final ruling is made Senate Bill 169House Bill 506, and House Bill 176 are no longer in effect! 

These three bills seek to change voter identification requirements limiting the use of student ID, prohibiting ballot distribution to individuals who will, but do not yet, meet age and residency-based voter registration criteria, and eliminating election day registration, effectively making it more difficult for younger people to register to vote in Montana. 
 
To learn more, check out this article.

Welcome to our new Flathead Field Manager

Help us welcome Mandy (she/her) to the Forward Montana team! Mandy is joining us as the Flathead Field Manager. Mandy loves all the outdoor Montana things and has an eclectic set of interests from weightlifting, drawing, writing poetry, noticing clouds, and spending time with her three kids. Once upon a time Mandy was a sculptor in Philadelphia who fell in love with working with youth as an outreach teaching artist. In a non-linear move she started an organic vegetable farm in Kalispell in 2013. Art, food, nourishment, and systematic change are all dear to her heart and all have in common that caring for each other comes in wildly different forms and is her life work. 


Support Forward Montana Foundation during Montana’s Giving Day!

Montana’s annual giving days are right around the corner! Forward Montana Foundation is taking part in 24 hours of giving during Give Big Gallatin ValleyMissoula Givesand Yellowstone Valley Gives. 

Mark your calendars for May 5th – May 6th and keep an eye out for updates as we approach Montana’s philanthropic holiday! Click the logos below to view our donation pages and mark your calendars for 24 hours of giving in each of these communities!


Earth Day 2022

This Friday is Earth Day! Did you know that Earth Day began in the 1970s, rooted in action and protest against corporate pollution and threats to public health? Earth Day is about more than individual action – it’s about coming together to protect our communities and hold corporate polluters accountable.

Join us in celebrating Earth Day by calling out the corporations polluting our communities. Check out this great resource of all things climate justice and advocacy this month to celebrate Earth Day!

Power Play

Power Play Issue Two: Montana Power, NWE, and the Deregulation Disaster

(Total estimated read time ~6.5 minutes)

Last month catch up (Est. read time < 1 min.) 

In the last issue of Power Play, we learned WTF the Public Service Commission (PSC) is and why we depend on it to regulate Montana’s utility monopolies. We introduced a lot of terms and players, so if you need a recap, check out this handy glossary that we will keep up to date with each new issue. Next we’ll examine the other side of the equation – the utilities. You all likely know of NorthWestern Energy (NWE), since two thirds of us are lining the pockets of its corporate leadership with our monthly energy bills, but NWE wasn’t always our state’s main power supplier. Before NorthWestern, there was Pennsylvania Power and Light (PP&L), and before PP&L was the Montana Power Company. Buckle up y’all, because this story is one tragic roller coaster. 


Before NorthWestern Energy (Est. read time ~2 min.)

The Montana Power Company formed in the early 1900’s, around the same time as the PSC. Montana Power was a big time monopoly. It owned coal, oil, and gas reserves and the means of power generation through coal power plants and hydroelectric dams. It owned the transmission lines needed to carry huge amounts of power across the state, and it even owned the smaller distribution system that delivers electricity to homes and businesses. From the initial energy generation to your home’s light switches, Montana Power owned every step of the process.  

In exchange for subjecting itself to the firm regulation of the PSC, Montana Power was allowed to make around a 10% return on investment (meaning that it earned back an extra 10 cents for every dollar it spent to provide its customers with electricity and gas). Over the course of nearly a century, Montana Power became a highly stable Fortune 500 company that supplied Montana with some of the nation’s cheapest electricity.

But everything changed in the late 90s when federal legislation initiated a wave of utility deregulation in states across the nation. Deregulation was spurred by a sentiment that monopolies had little incentive to run efficiently when costs were always covered  — dismissing that the PSC was created for the explicit purpose of ensuring monopolies satisfy ratepayer interests – like efficiency and affordability. A free market capitalism narrative promised that competition would bring down prices, but as we learned in the last issue of Power Play, unrestricted competition requires that there be no barriers to entering the market. Building massive power plants and erecting the transmission and distribution lines to get that power to paying customers is a pretty damn big barrier. Especially in a state like Montana where there aren’t a ton of customers to incentivize new companies to compete. Unfortunately, the promise of lower energy prices was a corporate thirst trap that Montana’s leaders just couldn’t resist. 


Deregulation (Est. read time ~2 min.)

In 1997, out-of-state energy interests, Montana’s biggest industrial energy users, then Governor Marc Racicot, and even Montana Power advocated for deregulation. Following the lead of states like California and Texas, the Montana Legislature passed a bill based on model legislation written by the conservative-leaning American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Thanks in part to ALEC’s model legislation, around 24 states in total passed some form of electricity deregulation during this time. If you’ve heard that name recently, it was likely related to bills passed in Montana’s 2021 legislative session attacking free speech, trans rights, and protest rights.

Montana only deregulated the production of power, not the transmission and distribution lines – meaning that the market would set the price of power, but the PSC would still regulate the cost of delivery. After deregulation became law, Montana Power sold its gas, oil, and coal claims to several Canadian companies, its power plants to Pennsylvania Power and Light, and its whole transmission and distribution system to what would become NorthWestern Energy. The assets that Montanans had spent years paying for through our utility bills were sold to the highest bidder. 

Top Montana Power executives and Goldman Sachs, Montana Power’s financial advisor, pocketed millions on these sales. Marc Ricicot got paid by those same pro-deregulation, out-of-state energy interests to lobby for deregulation in other states. Montana Power transformed into TouchAmerica, a telecommunications company, and massively invested in telecommunication infrastructure at the peak of the dot-com bubble. Top executives made out big time all across the board, but it didn’t turn out well for the average Montana family and business. Almost immediately, telecommunications crashed and Touch America filed for bankruptcy. When Montana’s last Fortune 500 company collapsed, thousands of people were laid off, workers lost their pensions, and many Montana families would never recover. 

To make matters worse, energy prices skyrocketed in 2001. Before deregulation, industrial energy costs in Montana were around $10 per megawatt hour. After deregulation, Montana energy generators were no longer required to sell within the state, so they sold their cheap energy to the highest bidder. Energy for many Montana industrial customers increased up to 20 fold, reaching $2,000 per megawatt hour at its height. Some companies paid over $1 million for power in a single day. As reported by CBS, “refineries, lumber mills, and the last working copper mine in Butte was forced to suspend operations because they couldn’t afford their electricity bills.”


Price hikes and re-regulation (Est. read time ~2 min.)

A clause in Montana’s deregulation bill protected residential and small commercial customers from these initial electricity price spikes, but when the price caps were lifted in 2002, all customers experienced substantial price hikes. All this, and that hypothetical competition, expected to bring energy prices down, never came to Montana. 

It wasn’t until 2007 that Montana finally re-regulated its energy. This allowed NWE, who at that time was just a transmission and distribution company, to start owning the means of electricity production. NWE went on a rate-payer financed shopping spree over the next decade. It bought gas wells, wind energy, a share of Colstrip, built gas fired power plants, and in 2014, spent $900 million to buy back the 11 hydroelectric dams from PP&L.Ratepayers paid for the original construction of many of these dams when Montana Power owned them. Then during the 15 years we bought power from PP&L, we helped PP&L recoup their debts from the dams. Now we are paying off NWE’s debt for the very same assets. In effect, we’ve paid for these dams three times! 

So yeah, this shit is messed up. At every turn it was us, the ratepayers, that suffered from a grand experiment based on faulty logic. Before deregulation, Montana experienced some of the nation’s cheapest electricity. Today Montana energy prices are higher than every one of its neighbors, except South Dakota, where NWE is based. 

That’s the past of the PSC and NWE. With this foundation, we can roll into the more immediate present. In the next issue of Power Play, we will investigate NWE’s dirty relationship with fossil fuels and why they just won’t cut this toxic energy source out of all our lives.  

Looking to learn more about deregulation? While writing this issue of Power Play, we relied heavily on this gritty PBS documentary and this comprehensive, yet surprisingly readable report by Public Sector Consultants, a nonpartisan policy research group.

Written and compiled by Emma Bode (Bozeman Field Manager), Stuart Rinehart (Bozeman Intern, Fall 2021), and Miles Cevallos (Bozeman Intern, Fall 2021)