By Jim Spencer
SpencerSpeaks.com
Buck McVeigh has a bumper sticker that he uses in the presentations he makes as administrator of
After 28 years working for the state, McVeigh has seen plenty of booms and busts. But he’s still not sure if he and his fellow Wyomingites get it.
One thing is certain. Their addiction to the wealth provided by the natural gas and other fuel sources buried in their soil is complete. Five sources of energy-related revenue now provide 66 cents of every dollar
Money from gas, oil and coal has provided hundreds of millions of dollars to build or improve schools in the past few years. It has provided high school graduates with passing grades and decent ACT scores scholarships worth $1,600 to $3,200 a year to the
But the gamble remains.
Lately, the state is on a hot streak that its cash-strapped neighbors cannot afford to ignore. In 1997,
The reason why is as clear as the oil and gas severance tax receipts Don Likwartz reads from a list in his office at the Wyoming Oil and Gas Commission. In 1997-1998,
McVeigh sums up the blessing and curse of those numbers bluntly.
“We’re very much exposed to disaster if there is a downturn in the energy sector,” he said.
At the same time,
“You can make 50 to 60 grand driving a water truck in the gas fields with or without a high school diploma, if you can pass a drug test,” McVeigh said.
Once again, this blessing is mixed.
“These jobs are drawing people away from high school and college,” McVeigh said. “And they’re drawing from the retail sector.”
This is not good news in a place that has in the past seen its energy-driven revenue stream dry up from 90 percent to 40 percent in a few years.
The spend-it-while-you-got-it mentality ignores the need for other kinds of sustaining industries. The most important recent turn in
That, said McVeigh, is the path to economic stability.
Planning and discipline are key. These days, McVeigh worries that his state is spending without regard to the rainy days it has seen in past energy cycles.
“Elected officials think this one is different,” McVeigh said.
It is to the extent that it is demand-driven.
It is not to the extent that the supply of natural gas, oil and coal is finite. This is the truth that
As those deposits disappear, so does your financial future.
Copyright 2007 by Jim Spencer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.




8 users commented in " Keeping Energy’s Golden Goose from Becoming a Golden Noose: Part One "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackJim,
I didn’t know money from fossil
fuels “bought” passing grades and
literacy. You’re always pushing the
sophistry, the party line.
As I always relate, I
attended a dirt poor Catholic school
we had NOTHING but old text books
blackboards, chalk and nuns who
taught their fannies off. God bless
them. I was an average student and when
I went to PUBLIC school in 9th grade
they moved me ahead a grade. They
were amazed! Pathetic. But keep on
with your propaganda. WE NEED THE
MONEY! ALWAYS MORE! YOU CAN NEVER
THROW ENOUGH MONEY AT PUBLIC EDUCATION!
Jim,
That’s a nice story. Did you have a point?
Dennis,
I think that Jim’s point was the boom and bust cycle of a state’s reliance on energy revenues. People squander their futures by foregoing college to make a good living and then have nowhere to go when the cycle (as it inevitably will) ends. Although, I disagree with Jim’s need to always felch more taxes from anything that moves, these columns are very informative.
The “I walked uphill both ways to school with no shoes on my feet in a foot of driven snow”, although may be how you liked it, is not how I want my son and future child to go to school. Not that I like wasteful spending either.
How much of Wyoming’s severance tax windfall comes from the fact that Wyoming now is the No. 1 state in the production coal? Wyoming coal is so low in sulfur that it is used in older generating stations in a blend with high sulfur Appalachian and Illinois Basin coal to meet Clean Air Act standards. That makes it very popular with the electric utility industry. Typical of most writings, the word “coal” does not even appear in Jim’s story
It sounds like Wyoming, with the scholarships, is hoping to encourage kids to prepare for the Bust after the Boom is over. But I imagine the educated will leave the state. They could sure have Cheney back though.
They need to attract non-fossil fuel related business for the Bust. Let’s see, they sure are loaded with wind power east of the mountains…
Are those $50,000 plus truck-driving jobs some of those jobs “Americans won’t do?” Unlikely.
I love the idea of no personal income tax. It would make retirement ever so much easier.
But Colorado will never dispense of its personal income tax, so maybe they shouldn’t tear up the state for fossil fuels either.
My gosh, Dennis I knew the schools were bad but I didn’t realzie how bad.
Durf,
It’s a two part story, that means you aren’t at the end of the story, you are only in the middle.
Noidea,
I just like to dispell the myth perpetuated
by the tax and spenders that money can
somehow buy literacy. California spends
twice as much per K-12 student and they
are fornicating in the hall ways.
Education relies on a basic curriculum,
teachers with authority to keep order (not
attorneys ) and parents who take an active
role in the educational process. Without
those elements and students who are MADE
to do the work, education doesn’t happen
regardless of it’s price. That’s a fact.
As for forgoing college to make money,
the wealthiest classmates I have from
high school never attended college, they
went to TRADE SCHOOL and then started
their own businesses. They can actually
DO SOMETHING as opposed to academics who
polish their degrees but often have no
practical skills or abilities and end up
getting downsized. I know a LOT of them.
I would advise kids
thinking about spending a quarter million
on a fancy university degree to consider
going to trade school. The trades, for the
most part, while less snooty, are recession
proof. When you’re electricity or furnace
goes out you call a tradesman and they
ain’t cheap! The Democrats solution to
EVERYTHING is either throw more money at
it or tax it. How’s it go? If it moves
tax it, if it stalls regulate it, if it
stops subsidize it. Like that. It’s all
about separating us from our money.
We have a renewable resource right here on Spencer speaks.. Dennis is long winded enough to keep the Western U.S. energy needs fulfilled for a century.
Just giving you a hard time, Dennis..
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