Taking Power: Community Choice Energy and the Grassroots

Episode 3: John Hughes from IBEW Local 413 and 3CEnergy's Citizen Advisory Council

June 21, 2021 Season 1 Episode 3
Episode 3: John Hughes from IBEW Local 413 and 3CEnergy's Citizen Advisory Council
Taking Power: Community Choice Energy and the Grassroots
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Taking Power: Community Choice Energy and the Grassroots
Episode 3: John Hughes from IBEW Local 413 and 3CEnergy's Citizen Advisory Council
Jun 21, 2021 Season 1 Episode 3

Welcome to "Taking Power: Community Choice Energy and the Grassroots." I’m your host, Mariah Clegg. On each episode I bring you important conversations with community environmental advocates along the California’s Central Coast to talk about our region’s involvement with Community Choice Energy.  At heart, Community Choice Energy is about seizing crucial energy questions — where your energy comes from, what it’s made from, who builds the infrastructure, and much more — and bringing decisions closer to home.

Today, I am so pleased to introduce John Hughes, who serves on 3CEnery's Community Advisory Council (CAC) and has spent his career advocating for organized labor with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 413 and beyond. 

What is Community Choice Energy, and how does it work? CCEs shift decision-making power over energy purchases from investor-owned utilities like PG&E and Southern California Edison to locally-controlled public agencies called CCAs. For many advocates, CCAs are a way for local actors to take power over our energy system and manifest democratic change from the grassroots. More and more Californians are being served by CCAs like our very own Central Coast Community Energy (3CEnergy). On this show, you can learn what you need to know about the connection between energy and democracy on the Central Coast. 

I want to give a huge shout-out to the Sanderlings, a Santa Barbara local surf punk band that has generously allowed me to use their music for this podcast. The opening song is Lizards Mouth, written in appreciation of one of the Central Coast’s natural wonders. Artwork by @Starwall.

For more on the Just Transition for California,
check out Putting California on the High Road: A Jobs and Climate Action Plan for 2030.

Watch out for the next CAC meeting, August 4th at 4PM.
You can participate via Zoom through the site

Show Notes

Welcome to "Taking Power: Community Choice Energy and the Grassroots." I’m your host, Mariah Clegg. On each episode I bring you important conversations with community environmental advocates along the California’s Central Coast to talk about our region’s involvement with Community Choice Energy.  At heart, Community Choice Energy is about seizing crucial energy questions — where your energy comes from, what it’s made from, who builds the infrastructure, and much more — and bringing decisions closer to home.

Today, I am so pleased to introduce John Hughes, who serves on 3CEnery's Community Advisory Council (CAC) and has spent his career advocating for organized labor with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 413 and beyond. 

What is Community Choice Energy, and how does it work? CCEs shift decision-making power over energy purchases from investor-owned utilities like PG&E and Southern California Edison to locally-controlled public agencies called CCAs. For many advocates, CCAs are a way for local actors to take power over our energy system and manifest democratic change from the grassroots. More and more Californians are being served by CCAs like our very own Central Coast Community Energy (3CEnergy). On this show, you can learn what you need to know about the connection between energy and democracy on the Central Coast. 

I want to give a huge shout-out to the Sanderlings, a Santa Barbara local surf punk band that has generously allowed me to use their music for this podcast. The opening song is Lizards Mouth, written in appreciation of one of the Central Coast’s natural wonders. Artwork by @Starwall.

For more on the Just Transition for California,
check out Putting California on the High Road: A Jobs and Climate Action Plan for 2030.

Watch out for the next CAC meeting, August 4th at 4PM.
You can participate via Zoom through the site