Clallam PUD commissioner candidates debate county’s energy future

Purser and Hays spar over PUD’s direction

Will Purser.

Will Purser.

PORT ANGELES — The future of Clallam County’s power generation was the subject of debate Tuesday morning during a forum between candidates for a commissioner seat on the public utility district.

In a tense but cordial exchange, incumbent Will Purser and challenger Ken Hays sparred over the Clallam PUD’s record where Purser has served since 2001.

Hays was deeply critical of Purser’s tenure at the PUD, and said commissioners haven’t been active enough about diversifying the county’s energy generation, remaining too dependent on hydropower.

“My opponent has become institutionalized in his thinking,” Hays said. “It’s time to bring our county into the 21st century.”

Hays — an architect who served on the Sequim City Council beginning in 2008, and as mayor from 2010-2014 — said the PUD is in need of a change of direction.

The PUD hasn’t been proactive enough about pursuing additional energy generation projects that will be needed to meet an ever-growing demand for electricity, Hays said.

“Hydro combined with other resources like advanced nuclear fission, electro-fuels, advanced biofuels, wind, solar, pump storage and other new innovations that are yet to emerge are all going to be required to meet the demand,” Hays said.

Asked about efforts to remove dams on the Lower Snake River, Hays said the PUD should protect the hydro-electric system as part of a larger energy portfolio.

“The Lower Snake River dams, I don’t know what to think, they’ve been mired in controversy since before they were built,” Hays said. “What I know from BPA’s own website is, it costs $275 million a year to operate and mitigate those four dams, and all of that power is sold surplus, but it only generates $200 million in revenue; you tell me what I should think.”

A 2015 study commissioned by BPA puts the annual cost of the dams at $227 annually, with a yearly increase of 4.5 percent.

Purser said his time on the commission had consistently delivered reliable services at affordable rates and expanded into new technologies such as broadband.

“Since I’ve been on the commission for an extended period, I’ve overseen many changes in the utility,” Purser said.

“We’ve always considered those changes with deliberate forethought,” Purser said.

“Natural resource and energy issues are very complex, and that’s compounded by concern about climate change and constant mandates coming out of Olympia and Washington to deal with that, so I think experience is very important as far as this office.”

Hays was also critical of the PUD’s relationship with the Bonneville Power Association (BPA), which supplies most of the district’s power supply.

“My opponent is all in on signing whatever contract they put forward that binds all 29 PUDs in this state alone,” Hays said. “One size does not fit all.”

“It’s a contract that constricts and restricts our ability to thrive in this county,” he added.

The BPA is a federal agency overseen by the U.S. Department of Energy that controls a series of hydroelectric dams in the Pacific Northwest and provides most of the power for the state of Washington, as well as communities in California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Wyoming.

Clallam PUD doesn’t negotiate directly with BPA, Purser said, but through a group called the Public Power Council, which represents dozens of consumer-owned utilities in Washington, Idaho, Montana and Oregon.

“There’s no direct negotiation between Clallam PUD and the Department of Energy,” Purser said. “That’s done through these other organizations, and we influence that by participating in the public power community.”

Hays said he wasn’t suggesting cutting ties with BPA, but maintained that the agency was financially unstable and sought to maintain its dominance in the energy market by charging high transmission rates for independent producers.

“BPA struggles to have revenues match expenses, its bottom line, they’ve been in trouble and they’ve openly admitted it for decades,” Hays said. “I do not believe the tiered-rate methodology is to the customer’s benefit, I think it’s to BPA’s benefit to help lock people into contracts so that they can remain solvent.”

Purser said that because BPA had sold increased energy to California at a higher rate, the agency had additional financial reserves triggering a distribution clause. Utility customers of BPA will receive a combined $250 million, Purser said, $200 million of which will go to debt reduction, $50 million to fish and wildlife mitigation.

“What that means for Clallam PUD is zero rate increase for the next two years plus a half-a-percent decrease,” Purser said.

Hays welcomed the rebate but maintained that the PUD was too reliant on hydroelectric power.

________

Reporter Peter Segall can be reached at psegall@soundpublishing.com.

Ken Hays.

Ken Hays.

More in News

Chuck Hancock of Tacoma raises a glass to toast the launching of his boat, Diana Lee, named after his wife, which was built by the students of the Northwest School of Wooden Boat Building in Port Hadlock. The boat is a 24-foot one-off design by designer Jonathan Madison of Lummi Island and was trailered in and launched from the travel lift at Point Hudson Marina on Friday morning. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Boat launched

Chuck Hancock of Tacoma raises a glass to toast the launching of… Continue reading

Potential solution coming to fix Hoh Road

Commissioner: Past sources not an option

Legislative conversations focus on federal changes

State-level housing bills also top priority

Quillayute Valley School District maintenance and facilities manager Bill Henderson, left, and Superintendent Diana Reaume check out the site on campus where new softball and baseball fields will be constructed. The $3 million project is scheduled to open sometime in 2026. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Forks baseball, softball teams to get new fields

State grant to help fund $3 million project

Structure fire destroys four-car garage

A structure fire resulted in total loss of a… Continue reading

Part of a crowd of nearly 200 people gathers in front of the Clallam County Courthouse in Port Angeles on Saturday for International Women’s Day. The gathering was one of numerous events around the world honoring women and their contributions to global society. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Women’s day

Part of a crowd of nearly 200 people gathers in front of… Continue reading

Workers from Jefferson Transit repaint the bus stop parking area at the corner of Madison and Jefferson streets in Port Townsend on Friday. The yellow paint was purchased from a local hardware store. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
A fresh coat

Workers from Jefferson Transit repaint the bus stop parking area at the… Continue reading

Child, 5, dies in fire; 1-year-old flown to Seattle

Fire agencies respond to blaze on Gasman Road

Residents expressed concerns on Feb. 27 to Sequim’s hearing examiner that improvements should be made to West Brownfield Road before any developments go in nearby. City staff said they’re negotiating with a developer to pay some of the costs to realign and repair the road so it’s safer and has better drainage. The funds would be refunded if they’re not used by the city within five years. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Examiner to rule on two projects

Neighbors seek improvements before one moves forward

A volunteer helps at the Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge detect and trap European green crab. The refuge seeks more volunteers for various shifts from April to September or October by emailing Volunteer Coordinator Leshell Michaluk-Bergan at leshell@dungenessrivercenter.org. (Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe)
Jamestown Tribe seeks volunteers for green crab detection

Invasive species continues to be found across Peninsula waterways

A new parking lot for Sequim city staff is slated to be finished sometime this summer. City council members agreed to a contract with Hoch Construction of Port Angeles to build the lot. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim contracts to build new parking lot

Spots to be open to public on weekends

Participants in the Sequim Sunshine Festival Sun Fun Color Run take off from the starting line on Saturday at the Albert Haller Play Fields near Carrie Blake Park. The two-day festival featured numerous activities, food, music and a drone show on Saturday night. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
And they’re off

Participants in the Sequim Sunshine Festival Sun Fun Color Run take off… Continue reading