Gov. Brown won’t let Supreme Court stop her Carbon Tax

By Taxpayers Association of Oregon
OregonWatchdog.com

The United States Supreme Court decided this week that the Environmental Protection Agency exceeded its authority when it tried to limit emissions by passing laws that were not approved by Congress.

This is the exact same thing that Governor Brown did when she used her bureaucratic power to pass a law similar to the Carbon Tax that failed to pass the Legislature.   Brown’s plan ordered 13 state agencies to require all sorts of new regulations on gas, utilities and even what type of products could be installed in a new home — all of which would increase the cost of homes, utilities and gasoline.

That over-ride of the people’s elected Legislature is now involved in a lawsuit.

But Gov. Brown does not care.

Portland Tribune reports, “Oregon will press ahead with state efforts to curb greenhouse gases despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision disallowing a federal agency to do the same. …Gov. Kate Brown decried that decision. So did Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum”

Gov. Brown is pressing ahead with her Carbon Tax despite the Supreme Court’s direction of warning agencies not abuse their regulatory authority.

HERE WHAT WE PREVIOUSLY WROTE ON GOV. BROWN”S CARBON TAX:

Twice the Oregon legislature failed to pass a Carbon Tax in 2019 and 2020, so Governor Brown made a pledge to pass a version on her own by using her Executive Power of Governor.

Governor Brown enacted a Governor’s Executive Order requiring new Governor enacted regulations and tax based fees on emission companies.

• No public hearing was held.

• No vote of the people’s elected lawmakers was held.

•  No vote of the public was given or offered

The Oregonian stated that it, “would be the most far reaching use of the governor’s executive powers during her tenure.”

KEZI-TV News explains the latest draft of the Governor’s backdoor Carbon Tax plan;

“…set targets of a 45% reduction in emissions by 2035 and an 80% reduction by 2050, in keeping with the metrics outlined in Brown’s executive order, but the final version raises those targets to 50% by 2035 and 90% by 2050.The plan primarily impacts three types of businesses: liquid fuel suppliers, natural gas utilities and “stationary” emitters, meaning companies that produce significant emissions as a byproduct of their fabrication processes such as steel mills, cement makers and semiconductor manufacturers. DEQ’s report estimated that 61 large businesses — meaning companies with at least 50 employees — would be directly affected by the rules, either immediately or at some point in the next 30 years as the emission limit tightens. The report includes a list of 32 companies that could be impacted beginning immediately in 2022, including Northwest Natural Gas, several vehicle gas suppliers, the Ash Grove Cement Company and Intel’s Aloha and Ronler campuses. Rather than charging businesses for each metric ton of carbon emitted, DEQ would issue free “compliance instruments,” each of which would essentially be a permit to emit one metric ton of greenhouse gas. The annual number of available instruments will decrease over time, but companies can trade unused compliance instruments or bank them for future years.”

This process is undemocratic and will lead to higher energy prices, all without a vote of the people or the people’s elected Legislature.

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