Most of the people who are not involved in the power or
energy industries are not familiar with the Rural Utility Service.
The RUS, initially know as the REA or Rural Electrification Agency,
was created under the FDR administration in 1935 to encourage the
establishment of electrical power in rural areas.
At the time of the REA’s creation, while electricity was
widely used in cities, the United States was far behind Europe in
providing electricity for its less populated areas. As with any
business model, the revenue from sparsely populated areas did not
justify the major investment
involved and loans
were too short-term to allow for revenue streams to cover financing
at current interest rates. In order to provide power to these areas,
companies would have had to charge prices that people could not
afford or be willing to pay. The Constitution was also more strictly
followed at the time and the government was not allowed to meddle in
the affairs of private industry as much as it does today.
The RUS solved this problem by guarantying lower cost,
longer-term loans for individuals and companies in rural areas that
wanted to get into the power business. As a result, affordable rates
were enabled that would also create good business projections.
Co-ops and partnerships were formed and many investors,
farmers, and other businessmen were attracted to the rural energy
market. Ten years later, 40 percent of the country’s rural area had
power. Shortly after WWII, the REA expanded its program to the
telecommunications industry resulting in the vast communications
network that exists today. The people who built these things did not
ask for money from the government,. They asked for us to trust them
to pay their bills and they have.
This is one a few of FDR programs that worked and provided
for the long term prosperity of the country. The economic stimulus
and technological advancement that resulted from this are
immeasurable. Without a communications and energy infrastructure
covering the nation, we would most likely be considered a third
world country now. The absence of these things is what is holding
most developing nations back.
The RUS still serves the 1,700 independent telephone and
power companies that exist today. With RUS assistance, subscribers
in rural areas are able to have access to state of the art
communications and power services that would, otherwise, not be
available. Things like fiber optics, xDSL, and VOIP would not be as
widely used and many companies producing these products would not
exist. As a result of the existence of the RUS, the U.S. is leading
the world in wind and solar development with wind farms and solar
installations in over 40 states. Rural TelCos have been installing
broadband for their customers for over 12 years and areas where you
can't get DSL are few and far between and they only exist when
current technogy doesn't allow it. All of this has been done by
these rural companies while they have remained profitable and
maintained netwroks that are 99.9% reliable.
In fact, it has become so successful that the institutional
investors want in. Obama's broadband and green energy intiatives
will provide a path for this to happen. Billions of dollars will be
pumped in at our expense and investors will rush to get it. This
will create more bubbles to pop and combined with the federal
regulations that are sure to follow, these industries will be
drained dry of the capital that they need to succeed. Companies will
be forced to meet government timelines and install technology before
it is ready resulting in wasted money and a reduction in netwrok
reliability. When the bubbles pop, growth will diappear along with
it and the public will be made to believe that it is the fault of
these rural companies when the perpetrators will, once again, be the
government and the banks who will end up with more of our money and
most of the money belonging to the power and telephone companies. It
is contrary to the banks' existence for anyone to be successful and
have money but them. Once again, thousands of Americans will lose
their jobs. We not only don't need this federal government meddling,
it is, as usual, destructive.
Instead of more borrowing and spending, the RUS has yet to be
mentioned as a way to contribute to the solution of our current
energy and economic crisis, but it is enabling financing of the wise
investments, controlled by the business owners, instead of the
pillaging that results from artificially created bubbles. We only
have to once again trust these Americans who always pay their bills.
Phone companies and power companies don't have financial
problems
without government intervention.
This normal economic growth encourages and finances
technological advancement instead of destroying it and jobs that are
cerated are permanent. The rural areas that the RUS serves are
ideal for these implementations. Farmers welcome
the additional income from leases of small areas of their land for
wind turbines and have found the turbines to be non-intrusive
allowing them to farm and graze livestock right up to the base of
the towers. The additional income
that the farmers are receiving, in many cases, is being spent on new
farming equipment creating a stimulus of these industries.
Previously dying small communities have been revitalized and
are seeing population growth for the first time in decades. Jobs are
being created every day.
We don't need to spend taxpayer money in order to destroy
this.
There is no doubt that the RUS did and continues to offer a
major benefit to the country. This was one bureaucracy that served
its purpose well and Congress would be well served to pay it
additional attention. A single percentage point
off of the RUS’s guaranteed loans would have exponential benefits
and farmers might well be supplying most of this country’s power
soon as well as significantly reducing our dependence on foreign
oil.