States face a defining choice between energy freedom and government control, while property owners nationwide discover their easements may have been leveraged for corporate loans without their knowledge.
Daniel Turner of Power the Future explained how the Biden administration’s green subsidies hooked states on federal money, creating a dependency that Ohio’s legislature now struggles to escape. With those funds drying up under the Trump administration, lawmakers face pressure to codify renewable energy mandates into state law rather than returning to free-market principles.
Turner urged Ohio to resist the temptation of government control over energy markets.
“Take the hard road of free markets, of giving energy companies and utilities freedom to do what is best for their constituents, what is the most reliable, what is the most affordable.”
He criticized the Export-Import Bank for using American taxpayer dollars to fund a French company building a natural gas pipeline in Mozambique, noting the irony of financing competitors to American energy producers. Turner also observed that Earth Day 2025 passed with little fanfare, suggesting the climate movement has lost cultural momentum as other political causes take precedence.
Sixth-generation farmer Trent Loos revealed a disturbing discovery: developers are using signed easements as collateral to secure bank loans, often without landowners’ knowledge or consent. In Kansas, one property owner found that a transmission line company had leveraged half a billion dollars in easements across two counties.
“How do you sign something for perpetuity for a little bit of money today, knowing that they could sell that to anybody they want to?”
Loos warned that easement contracts typically include clauses allowing developers to transfer rights to any buyer, potentially including foreign entities with interests adverse to American landowners.
Loos reported encouraging news from South Dakota, where the Public Utilities Board voted 2-1 to deny Summit Carbon Solutions an extension on their CO2 pipeline project, leaving the company without permission to build beyond 2025.
However, he expressed concern that the Trump administration’s Earth Day statement supporting carbon capture technology could lead to federalized CO2 pipelines, potentially overriding state-level protections against eminent domain for such projects.
Paula Sarlls, president of the USMC Memorial Foundation and a Marine veteran, announced the second annual golf tournament at the Ridge at Castle Pines on May 15th. The event features hole-in-one prizes including a Chevy Colorado truck, with proceeds supporting the memorial’s expansion.
Sarlls explained the memorial’s inclusive mission of honoring all who serve.
“When the memorial was dedicated, it was dedicated to honor Marines and remember all who serve.”
She promoted the pathways of service bricks as meaningful Mother’s Day and Father’s Day gifts honoring veterans from all military branches.
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