Press Releases & Statements
View Archives
Radio & Audio Files
- Americans for Prosperity supports legislation that bolsters energy infrastructure through private investment, not taxpayer dollars. Click here to hear more.
Mar. 13, 2009
- The Kansas Labor Department says the unemployment rate is 6.4 percent statewide and more than 14 percent in Wyandotte County. Learn why labor organizations in the Kansas City-area support a comprehensive energy bill.
Mar. 13, 2009
- The Kansas Labor Department suggests the number of Kansans without a job has increased 33 percent to nearly 100,000 in the last year alone. Learn why the labor organizations in Topeka support a comprehensive energy bill.
Mar. 13, 2009
- The latest from the Kansas Labor Department reports there are nearly 19,000 Kansans in the Wichita area without a job and most predict that number to climb even higher. Learn why the labor organizations in the central Kansas support a comprehensive energy bill.
Mar. 13, 2009
- The Kansas Chamber says unemployment among Kansans in the Kansas City area has nearly doubled to eight percent. Learn why the Chamber supports comprehensive energy legislations.
Mar. 13, 2009
- The Kansas Chamber supports a comprehensive energy bill that will fuel the state's economy by using domestic fuel resources, promoting energy efficiency, and creating new jobs. Click to hear more
Mar. 13, 2009
- With nearly 100,000 out of work statewide, the Kansas Chamber backs an energy bill that will meet our growing energy needs while putting thousands back to work. Click to hear more
Mar. 13, 2009
Television & Video Files
Print Advertising Files
View Archives
Industry-Related News
- Big Stone II addresses electricity needs
The
Fergus Falls Daily Journal (MN)
The only way to ensure reasonable prices and protect consumers from huge
price runups is to make sure that we have enough generation capacity to meet
our needs, as well as a robust transmission system that minimizes constraints
and bottlenecks that distort prices.
- New Source Research
Wall
Street Journal
If Democrats want to legislate an emissions cap it will be hideously
expensive, as electricity prices rise in states like Pennsylvania and Ohio that
rely on coal. It also risks blackouts, as the U.S. is already approaching the
limits of current electric capacity because the greens have made it nearly
impossible to build new plants.
- Consider coal as a gift this holiday season
Tucson
Citizen
With the challenges facing our economy and energy infrastructure, coal
should be looked upon as a special gift providing affordable and domestic
energy.
- Nuclear and Coal: The energy 'Dream Team' for
years to come
Seeking
Alpha
Coal delivers 50% of U.S. electricity needs, and nuclear power brings
another 20% to the table.
- New poll data reveals 70 percent public
approval for coal-fueled electricity
Market
Watch
New poll data released shows overwhelming support and optimism for the
use of coal to produce electricity in the United States.
- Still hope for Holcomb coal plant
The
Garden City Telegram
Supporters of the planned expansion of the Sunflower Electric Power
Corp. facility at Holcomb must continue to wait for the project to move
forward. That's the bad news. The good news is that, even in the face of
adversity, there's no plan to pull the plug on the project.
- Coal must be significant part of realistic
U.S. energy policy
Times
West Virginian
The United States must look at its energy future realistically, and that
includes taking advantage of one of its most abundant resources and one in
which West Virginia is rich — coal.