It's almost like a vague memory now, but not too many days ago I was in Texas. The purpose of my visit was to celebrate the marriage of my sister's oldest child. We packed a lot of celebrating into a few days.
You can't celebrate the whole time, though. Some of the time you spend driving and flying to and fro, Texas being a large expanse of a state. The course of our travels took us past oil rigs and the headquarters of Halliburton and ConocoPhillips and their friends. You could just about smell the money oozing out of the buildings. While the economy is swan-diving everywhere else, it's hopping in Houston. Times are good in the oil business, no question about that.
Flash forward to the Vermont Statehouse today and a group of senators decried those oil profits, asking the state attorney general to investigate the companies for price gouging.
Down the hall, Gov. Jim Douglas urged Congress to close the "Enron Loophole," (named for that shamed, deposed and demised former Houston company) that exempts oil price speculation from government regulation. Congressman Peter Welch is a sponsor of legislation to do that, but it has not found its way through the system.
The senators suggested without many specifics that the prices we're seeing at the pumps are unfair. After all, who among you is going to suggest that you should be paying more? But can anyone prove price-gouging? Oil companies are at least partly raking in the dough because people in China and other emerging nations are using their product like never before, with no let-up in sight.
Douglas wasn't ready to say that oil company profits were unfair, but both he and Senate Majority Leader John Campbell veered into talking about how perhaps the price of this product that is so vital should be regulated.
On the one hand it looks like an insurmountable challenge for local politicians to do anything about the price of oil. On the other, you figure the cry for change has to come from somewhere. You can't help but feel that Congress and everybody else is flailing at the problem.
- Terri Hallenbeck