Extract from The Guardian
Debbie Dooley is a self-described ‘crusader’
for solar power in Florida, where she is up against major public
power utilities. But she has already won a similar battle in Georgia,
and she says her message is that of a true conservative.
Richard
Luscombe in West Palm Beach, Florida, and Tom
Pietrasik in Atlanta, Georgia, and Tallahassee, Florida
Monday 7 December 2015 00.00 AEDT
Debbie Dooley is a firebrand Republican and an
outspoken founding member of the Tea Party. But in a
fast-intensifying battle over the future of solar power in Florida,
she is not
on the side you might expect.
Along with a diverse grassroots citizens’
coalition including environmentalists and other left-leaning
activists, Dooley is taking on Big Energy
and its big-spending conservative backers in an intriguing fight that
puts her toe-to-toe with her onetime political allies.
She is at the spearhead of a campaign to place an
initiative before Florida voters next year that would give consumers
the freedom to choose to buy their solar energy from smaller private
companies and bypass the mega-bucks utilities.
“It’s Florida’s solar eclipse,” says
Dooley, who points to statistics she claims are proof that the
Sunshine State is trailing the nation in utilising its most plentiful
natural resource.
If the initiative is successful, Florida would no
longer be one of only four states that prohibits so-called
third-party power purchase agreements (PPA), which, in basic terms,
refer to a consumer allowing a company to install solar panels with
no upfront cost, then paying the company for electricity that the
panels generate.
As things stand, only those who can afford the
substantial initial outlay can power up from the sun, a situation
Dooley says is unacceptable. With Florida 14th in the country in
terms of installed solar capacity, only $63m was spent on new
installations statewide in 2014, according to the Solar Energy
Industries Association.
“Let’s remove the barriers, remove the
shackles that protect the monopolies and allow consumer choice and
freedom,” said Dooley, whose Green Tea coalition of environmentally
conscious conservatives is a key component of the Floridians
for Solar Choice amalgam.
Unsurprisingly, the big public power utilities
don’t like the message being pushed by the activists as they tour
the state attempting to collect the 683,000 signatures needed by
February to get the initiative on November’s ballot. So companies
including Florida Power and Light, Duke Energy, Tampa Electric and
Gulf Power are among the donors who have ploughed millions of dollars
into a rival group, Consumers for
Smart Solar, which is promoting its own initiative that would
enshrine in the state’s constitution their exclusive right to sell
solar power.
Their argument is that opening up the industry the
way the citizens’ coalition wants would lead to less regulation and
extra expense for traditional consumers in “subsidies” for the
solar industry.
As the duel has become more caustic in recent
months, so have the attacks from rightwingers on Dooley, who has
driven thousands of miles across Florida with her partner Jason to
speak at rallies, lunches and other engagements in support of a new
direction for solar power. Some have called her a fake conservative
and say she has betrayed her Republican roots. Others have branded
her eccentric and dismissed her travels as a solar-powered
clown show as she “shills” for the industry.
“I don’t worry about the attacks because I
understand the political reality, which is they’re afraid of you,”
Dooley told the Guardian after a recent speaking engagement before
the League of Women Voters of Palm Beach County.
“If you’re not being successful, they’re
going to ignore you, so I’m really getting under someone’s skin.
I have to laugh at that.”
Back in 2009, feeling that the Republican party
had “lost its way”, Dooley joined up with 21 like-minded
supporters to give the Tea
Party movement its first organised structure. “I was tired of
politics as usual, tired of big money controlling everything,” she
said, explaining why she became a director of the Tea Party Patriots.
Now, she says, she finds it ironic that much of
the criticism comes from rightwing groups who shared her beliefs,
including the Koch brothers-funded American
Legislative Exchange Council, but which take an opposite stance
on clean energy.
“True conservatives champion free-market choice,
not government-created monopolies that stifle competition.” she
said. “Trying to protect monopolies from competition is not free
market. You should be bound by your principles and develop your
position on issues based on your principles, not who your financial
donors are.”
The presence of Dooley, a pastor’s daughter from
Bogalusa, Louisiana, in the midst of the Florida battle could prove
to be a trump card, according to Stephen Smith, executive director of
the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
“Here in Florida, the political leadership is
conservative, so having a voice like Debbie’s and others on the
conservative side to be able to stand up for solar is very critical
to the success of running this ballot initiative,” he said.
Additionally, this is a conflict Dooley has fought
and won before. She says the arguments in Florida, and the tactics
employed, are similar to those that existed two years ago in Georgia,
another red state wrestling with the solar power issue. Despite heavy
opposition from the utilities there, and what she says was its $10m
“war chest” against the organisation, Dooley’s grassroots
coalition won the day, with a third-party solar bill clearing
the legislature this April.
“If you mentioned solar in Georgia, it was
always, ‘No way, no how,’ but we won that fight with people
power,” Dooley said. “We couldn’t match them in money, so we
built a coalition, we got free media, we got our message out there.
It was easier for us to get press coverage because people were amazed
you had these conservative groups, Tea Party groups, the Sierra Club,
elected officials, all joining forces to oppose this.
“We all had different messages, the different
groups, but we were working for the same goal. If we agree solar is
the way to go, we come together and ignore issues we may disagree on
while respecting the right of everyone to believe and advocate for
them. But come together and stay focused. There are many different
roads into Atlanta, where I live, and you make your choice depending
on which direction you’re coming from. What matters is that you end
up there.”
Debbie Dooley in Atlanta: ‘We won that fight
with people power.’ Photograph: Tom Pietrasik for the Guardian
Even as a little girl, Dooley refused to be put in
a box. When her grandfather bought her a dress-up cowgirl costume as
a Christmas gift when she was just seven, the self-confessed tomboy
complained loudly.
“I don’t want that. I don’t want be a
cowgirl. I want a cowboy outfit,” Dooley recalls shouting at her
relatives. “I was so upset, they took it right back and got me the
cowboy outfit. They’d assumed because I was a girl that was what I
wanted. But I was not afraid to challenge the norms.”
Dooley says her early years following her father’s
preachings in Louisiana, Tennessee and Florida helped to shape her
political leanings and turned her into the driven character she is
today at the age of 57.
“I learned at a very early age to speak up and
not be taken advantage of. I had no issue doing that,” she said.
“My daddy prepared me well: he was strong, not afraid to take a
step out, and I get a lot of my traits from him.
“I will do what’s right and damn the torpedoes
kind of thing. If you know a preacher’s kid, you know they can be
rebellious. People have preconceived notions about you and you fight
to show it’s not like that. You grow up tough, you grow up to be
independent.
“Any pastor will tell you, you can have 100 in
your congregation and only a portion of them will be happy at any one
time. You understand that not everyone will be happy; you just do
your best and stand for what’s right.”
Dooley, however, insists that taking a stand does
not always have to be a politically charged move. “I became a
crusader for solar and I’m appealing to conservatives, [but] I
believe being good stewards of the environment God gave us should not
be a partisan issue,” she says, pointing out that it was the
ultra-conservative president Ronald Reagan who championed the 1987
Montreal Protocol that phased out chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) from
aerosols to protect the ozone layer.
“I believe in clean energy. I’ve always cared
about clean air and a clean environment. I’ve always been like
that,” she said.
“I have a grandson, Aiden, who is seven. He’ll
know I fought for energy choice and freedom, he’ll know I fought
for a clean environment for him, so he wouldn’t have a polluted
world. I see it is my legacy to him.
“Unfortunately, the legacy of some of my fellow
Republicans is that they simply denied that we were damaging our
environment because they were greedy for economic reasons.”
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