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WASHINGTON - March 5 - Public Citizen today filed a motion with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requesting that the agency reject the latest in a string of requests by Enron Corp. for an exemption from regulation under the Public Utility Holding Company Act (PUHCA), a vital consumer protection act. Public Citizens motion demonstrates that Enron does not meet even the minimal "objective standards" for the PUHCA exemption it now seeks. PUHCA protects consumers from high electricity and natural gas rates by prohibiting multi-state public utility owners from speculating in non-utility businesses. Enron is considered a holding company under PUHCA because it owns Portland General Electric (PGE), an Oregon public utility that Enron acquired in 1997. The exemption Enron now seeks applies only to companies that "temporarily" acquire utilities as a result of foreclosure proceedings a category that does not cover Enrons acquisition of PGE. Documents Enron filed requesting an exemption from PUHCA indicate that the company is attempting to use its request as a bargaining chip to obtain SEC approval of a reorganization plan that includes the controversial proposed sale of PGE to a Texas investment company. The documents suggest that Enron will agree to "register" under PUHCA only if the SEC approves its plan. "The SEC cant let Enron get away with this kind of maneuver," said Lynn Hargis, an attorney with Public Citizens energy program. "To protect the ratepayers of Portland General Electric, the SEC should assert its clear authority under PUHCA first and consider whether to approve Enrons plan only after making it clear that Enron is not exempt from regulation." Public Citizen also has asked the SEC to find that Enrons PUHCA exemption application was not made in "good faith," since Enron clearly doesnt qualify for it. If the SEC so finds, Enrons ongoing noncompliance with PUHCA while its application is pending may be found to be unlawful. Enron formerly claimed other exemptions from PUHCA regulation, but the SEC determined in December that the exemptions it was then claiming were not available to Enron (a decision that led the company to file its claim for the inapplicable foreclosure exemption). In addition, in previous years the SEC staff issued a number of "no-action" letters that allowed Enron to engage in various utility activities, such as power marketing, without regulation under PUHCA. Though the SECs December ruling made clear that those letters did not reflect the commissions view, the effect of the past exemption claims and the no-action letters was to free Enron from effective regulation for many years. A recent analysis by Standard & Poors credit rating agency found that PUHCA should be more strongly enforced because it has protected utility credit ratings. The analysis was attached to Public Citizens motion. Despite the many benefits PUHCA provides to ratepayers, the act would be repealed under the energy bill pending before Congress. "Given what we know about the benefits of PUHCA regulation, it seems likely that the SECs past failure to enforce it against Enron contributed to the Enron debacle," Hargis said. Click here to read the motion. ###
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