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Reynolds vetoes bill restricting eminent domain for pipelines. Special session possible.
Reynolds vetoes bill restricting eminent domain for pipelines. Special session possible.

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Reynolds vetoes bill restricting eminent domain for pipelines. Special session possible.

Gov. Kim Reynolds has vetoed a bill aimed at curbing eminent domain use by carbon capture pipelines and other infrastructure projects, saying the legislation is written too broadly and could damage economic development in Iowa. The veto, one of only a handful this year, deals a blow to the dozens of Republican lawmakers who supported the bill and to landowners who have shown up at the Iowa Capitol for years to call for greater restrictions on eminent domain. In a veto message included with her rejection of House File 639, Reynolds said, "I've consistently said that if eminent domain is used, it must be rare, fair and a last resort." "But HF 639 isn't just about eminent domain," she said. "It goes much further — and in doing so, sets a troubling precedent that threatens Iowa's energy reliability, economy and reputation as a place where businesses can invest with confidence." Lawmakers reacted swiftly to Reynolds' veto, illustrating the deep divide among legislative Republicans over the issue. House Speaker Pat Grassley, R-New Hartford, released a statement saying he has asked all members of the Iowa Legislature to sign a petition to reconvene for a special session to override Reynolds' veto. Overriding a veto requires a two-thirds vote of both the Iowa House and Senate. "This veto is a major setback for Iowa," Grassley said. "It is a setback not only for landowners who have been fighting across Iowa, but for the work the House of Representatives has put in for four years to get legislation like HF 639 passed. We will not stop fighting and stand firm on our commitment until landowners in Iowa are protected against eminent domain for private gain." House Republican lawmakers have worked for years to pass legislation reining in eminent domain use, only to see their proposals fail to advance in the Senate. Finally, this year, the GOP-led Senate debated late into the night as 13 Republican senators joined with most Democrats to pass House File 639 over the objection of 21 of their Republican colleagues. Senate Majority Leader Jack Whitver, R-Grimes, said he supports Reynolds' veto. "Based on the votes on that bill in the Iowa Senate, a significant majority of our caucus supports a better policy to protect landowner rights," Whitver said. "I expect that majority of our caucus would not be interested in any attempt to override her veto." The veto is good news for Summit Carbon Solutions, which is proposing to build a $9 billion carbon capture pipeline that would span more than 2,500 miles across several states, including Iowa, and connect 57 ethanol plants and bury carbon dioxide from the plants deep underground. Bruce Rastetter, Summit's co-founder, is a prominent Republican Party donor. Rastetter has given Reynolds $175,000 since 2015 in donations and in-kind campaign contributions, according to reports filed with the Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board. The bill would have said hazardous liquid pipelines, including carbon capture pipelines, cannot receive eminent domain powers unless they qualify as common carriers, meaning they can prove they will sell the commodity to an unaffiliated buyer. It also would have required pipeline companies to carry more insurance for their projects, allows more people to intervene in Iowa Utilities Commission proceedings and requires commission members to be present at more meetings. "We can do better," Reynolds wrote in her veto message. "And I'm committed to working with the Legislature to strengthen landowner protections, modernize permitting and respect private property." In the meantime, Reynolds said she would direct the Iowa Utilities Commission to implement two of the bill's provisions: requiring all Iowa Utilities Commission members to be present at hearings on proposed public utility regulations, electric transmission lines and pipelines and at least one commissioner to be present at informational meetings held in counties along the project's route. Supporters of the bill, including landowners who are unwilling to sign agreements with Summit, say a private company should not be granted eminent domain powers for a private project that does not serve a public use. Rep. Steven Holt, R-Denison, one of the bill's main supporters in the Iowa House, said in a Facebook post that Reynolds "has chosen to ignore landowners, the vast majority of the Legislature, the Republican Party Platform and the Iowa Constitution." "I am profoundly disappointed over the governor's decision to veto HF 639," Holt wrote. "The Iowa Constitution is clear that the power of eminent domain can be used only for public use projects. The Republican Party of Iowa Platform strongly opposes eminent domain for economic development projects and the CO2 pipeline specifically." Opponents of the bill say pipelines like Summit's are necessary to open new markets for low-carbon ethanol that can be used for sustainable fuel for industries like aviation and shipping. The Republicans who opposed the law said they believe it will harm Iowa's economy and land the state in a lawsuit for interfering with a project that has already received approval from the state. Several of the bill's requirements apply to hazardous liquid pipelines, which include not just carbon pipelines, but pipelines that transport crude oil, refined petroleum products, liquefied petroleum gases, anhydrous ammonia, liquid fertilizers, alcohols and coal slurries. "That's a bill that's just going to facilitate activists," Senate President Amy Sinclair, R-Allerton, said June 5 on an episode of "Iowa Press" on Iowa PBS. "And there were so many problems with that and ultimately it will cost the state of Iowa money, both in economic impact as well as potential lawsuit, and I think we have to say those words out loud." Groups representing the ethanol industry issued a flood of statements thanking Reynolds for her veto. Monte Shaw, executive director of the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association, said the group is "deeply grateful" to Reynolds for her veto. 'This is a classic example of why our system of government has checks and balances," Shaw said in a statement. "Any thoughtful review of this bill would determine that it would lead to higher energy prices for Iowans, hamper future economic development, hold back job creation, and stifle new markets for Iowa farmers. IRFA thanks Gov. Reynolds for listening to Iowans, studying the actual legislation, and ignoring the rhetoric that was as inaccurate as it was loud." Jeff Broin, founder and CEO of POET, the world's largest ethanol producer, said the bill "unjustly singles out CO2 projects and sends a dangerous message that Iowa is closed for business." "Thank you, Gov. Reynolds, for your steadfast support of family farms and bioethanol producers," he said in a statement. "At a time when commodity prices are low, these CO2 investments will expand market access for Iowa corn, biofuels and bioproducts across the globe, increasing the value of every bushel of corn and every acre of Iowa cropland. This decision will bring benefits to Iowa farmers for generations to come." A range of Republican and Democratic lawmakers, political candidates and landowners criticized Reynolds' veto. "The governor has failed the state of Iowa," said Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton. "She has soiled her legacy permanently." Kaufmann, who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee responsible for tax policy, called Reynolds' action "unforgiveable" and said he would work to block her legislative agenda moving forward. "I vow from this moment on to not allow a single bill that she produces to move forward," he said. "I will work to kill every single piece of legislation that she initiates." David Pautsch, a Republican running against U.S. Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks in the 1st Congressional District, called it "a betrayal of the people." "The governor slow-walked this bill while lobbyists swarmed Terrace Hill," he said in a statement. "In the end, she sided with powerful pipeline interests over Iowa farmers. It's government-sanctioned theft — plain and simple." Senate Minority Leader Janice Weiner, D-Iowa City, said she was disappointed in Reynolds' veto, "but unfortunately I cannot say I'm surprised." "There is simply no amount of political posturing or legislative stonewalling that can deny the fact that Iowans' right to private property should never be infringed upon for private gain," Weiner said. House Minority Leader Brian Meyer, D-Des Moines, said "it's no surprise that Gov. Reynolds has once again sided with her political donors rather than Iowa landowners." "Iowa House Democrats and Republicans worked together to protect property rights," he said. "At the end of the day, there is only one group to blame for the failure of the eminent domain bill: Iowa Republican lawmakers." Mary Powell, a landowner in Shelby County, was one of several landowners to condemn Reynolds' action. 'Gov. Reynolds' veto of HF 639 let Iowans know that to her the Iowa motto was just empty words," Powell said in a statement. "Gov. Reynolds chose to support the millionaires and billionaires at the expense of Iowans and their property rights." If the bill had become law, it would have placed several requirements on hazardous liquid pipelines and the Iowa Utilities Commission. The bill's provisions said: Hazardous liquid pipelines could not receive eminent domain powers unless they qualify as common carriers, meaning they can prove they will sell the commodity to an unaffiliated buyer. Pipeline companies must prove that their project is insured sufficiently to cover any losses or injury from the pipeline construction and any discharge. The company would have to either buy insurance for affected landowners or reimburse them for increased insurance premiums due to the pipeline's presence. All Iowa Utilities Commission members must be present at hearings on proposed public utility regulations, electric transmission lines and pipelines and at least one commissioner must be present at informational meetings held in counties along the project's route. The Iowa Utilities Commission could not renew any permit granted to a liquefied carbon dioxide pipeline and no CO2 pipeline would be allowed to operate longer than 25 years. State lawmakers, city and county officials and 'any resident with a minimally plausible interest' would be allowed to intervene in Iowa Utilities Commission cases. The Iowa Utilities Commission could not file sanctions against intervenors unless the commission determines the intervenor was knowingly dishonest, committed a crime or caused injury to the commission. (This story has been updated to add new information.) Stephen Gruber-Miller covers the Iowa Statehouse and politics for the Register. He can be reached by email at sgrubermil@ or by phone at 515-284-8169. Follow him on X at @sgrubermiller. This article originally appeared on Des Moines Register: Kim Reynolds vetoes Iowa eminent domain, carbon capture pipeline bill

As gold prices surge, West Africa mine operators launch drones to detect wildcat miners
As gold prices surge, West Africa mine operators launch drones to detect wildcat miners

TimesLIVE

time5 days ago

  • TimesLIVE

As gold prices surge, West Africa mine operators launch drones to detect wildcat miners

As the afternoon sun beats down on Gold Fields' sprawling Tarkwa gold mine in southwestern Ghana, three men launch a drone into the clear sky, its cameras scanning the lush 210-square-kilometer tract for intruders. The drone spotted something unusual, and within 20 minutes a 15-person team including armed police arrived on the scene. They discovered abandoned clothing, freshly dug trenches, and rudimentary equipment amid pools of mercury and cyanide-contaminated water. The equipment was left behind by so-called wildcat miners, who operate on the outskirts of many of the continent's official mining ventures - putting at risk their own health, the environment and the official mine operator's profits. The team confiscated seven diesel-powered water pumps and a "chanfan" processing unit used to extract gold from riverbeds. The high-tech cat-and-mouse game is playing out with increasing frequency as record gold prices, now sitting above $3,300 (R59,639,18) per ounce, draw more unofficial activity - intensifying sometimes deadly confrontations between corporate concessions and artisanal miners in West Africa, according to dozens of mining executives and industry experts interviewed by Reuters. "Because of the vegetation cover, if you don't have eyes in the air, you won't know something destructive is happening," explains Edwin Asare, Gold Fields Tarkwa Mine's head of protection services. "It's like you first get eyes in the sky to help you put boots on the ground.' Almost 20 illicit miners have been killed in confrontations at major mining operations across the region since late 2024, including at Newmont and AngloGold Ashanti's sites in Ghana and Guinea and Nordgold's Bissa Mine in Burkina Faso. There have been no reports of official mine staff injured. In some cases, clashes at corporate mines caused production halts of up to a month, prompting companies to press governments for more military protection.

A legacy-defining moment for Gov. Kim Reynolds
A legacy-defining moment for Gov. Kim Reynolds

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

A legacy-defining moment for Gov. Kim Reynolds

Gov. Kim Reynolds talks to reporters May 17, 2022, after signing legislation dealing with biofuels at a farm near Prairie City. (Photo by Kathie Obradovich/Iowa Capital Dispatch) As she considers whether to sign legislation limiting the use of eminent domain for carbon pipelines, Gov. Kim Reynolds faces a decision that will forever define her legacy in the Iowa Republican Party: whether to uphold the constitutional rights and the property rights of Iowa landowners, or whether to put ethanol industry profits ahead of those rights. The party platform unequivocally supports landowner rights. The Iowa House and Senate, both controlled by Republicans, have passed bipartisan legislation that would protect those rights. This should not be a difficult choice. However, there are many special interest groups urging the governor to veto House File 639, claiming it would harm the ethanol industry and derail future economic development opportunities in the state. But if those claims were true, why do nearly 30% of Iowa's ethanol plants choose not to participate in this risky CO₂ pipeline venture? Why is Summit Carbon Solutions suing multiple Iowa counties over zoning ordinances, the very tools those counties use to guide and protect local economic growth? The self-serving arguments of the ethanol industry do not stand up to scrutiny. Privately owned carbon dioxide pipelines do not align with the constitutional definition of 'public use' necessary for eminent domain, and they do not justify using the government's 'takings' power to force private landowners to participate in a speculative business enterprise. Essentially, these special interests are asking the governor to pick economic winners and losers at the expense of constitutional rights. Importantly, HF 639 does not stop the pipeline project, nor does it prevent voluntary easements. In fact, Summit has already secured all necessary voluntary agreements in Minnesota and must now do the same in South Dakota to meet Iowa Utilities Commission conditions for construction here. Iowa landowners deserve the same rights as landowners in our neighboring states. If this project truly serves a vital economic need and garners legitimate support, it can move forward through the free market—without coercion, and without undermining the rights of landowners. I commend Gov. Reynolds for engaging a broad range of stakeholders in this conversation. Listening to the public and not just to special interests is essential for crafting sound public policy, but it does not change the dilemma facing the governor: constitutional rights vs. special interest profits. By signing HF 639, Gov. Reynolds would uphold constitutional rights, curb the misuse of eminent domain for private profit, demonstrate her commitment to the Republican Party's property rights platform, protect landowners from inadequate insurance coverage, and strengthen the public accountability of the Iowa Utilities Commission. It would ensure she is forever remembered as a champion of the Republican Party's commitment to constitutional rights and private property rights.

HDFC Flexi Cap Fund review: Mutual fund has improved consistency in outcome and risk profile in recent years
HDFC Flexi Cap Fund review: Mutual fund has improved consistency in outcome and risk profile in recent years

Time of India

time05-05-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

HDFC Flexi Cap Fund review: Mutual fund has improved consistency in outcome and risk profile in recent years

ET Wealth collaborates with Value Research to analyse top mutual funds. We examine the key fundamentals of HDFC Flexi Cap Fund , its portfolio and performance to help you make an informed investment decision. #Pahalgam Terrorist Attack India much better equipped to target cross-border terror since Balakot India conducts maiden flight-trials of stratospheric airship platform Pakistan shuts ports for Indian ships after New Delhi bans imports from Islamabad BASIC FACTS DATE OF LAUNCH 1 JAN 1995 CATEGORY EQUITY TYPE FLEXI CAP AUM* Rs.69,639 crore BENCHMARK NIFTY 500 TOTAL RETURN INDEX WHAT IT COSTS NAV** GROWTH OPTION Rs.1,920.94 IDCW Rs.76.15 MINIMUM INVESTMENT Rs.100 MINIMUM SIP AMOUNT Rs.100 EXPENSE RATIO# (%) 1.41 EXIT LOAD 1% for redemption within 365 days *AS ON 31 MAR 2025 **AS ON 30 APR 2025 #AS ON 31 MAR 2025 FUND MANAGER ROSHI JAIN 2 YEARS, 9 MONTHS Recent portfolio changes New entrants NCC , Oil And Natural Gas Corporation , Tata Consultancy Services (Feb) Complete exits ITC Hotels (Feb) NCC, Whirlpool Of India (Mar) Should You Buy This fund (previously HDFC Equity) has seen a notable shift in investment approach after a change in fund manager. Earlier managed with a distinct contrarian stance by veteran fund manager Prashant Jain, the new fund manager Roshi Jain focuses on quality stocks with strong growth visibility and a margin of safety in valuations. The fund's earlier approach historically lent a high degree of volatility in outcomes, with alternating bouts of sharp underperformance, followed by sharp upswings in return profile. In recent years, the fund has exhibited better consistency in outcomes, with a significantly improved risk profile. It has once again emerged as a worthy pick in its category.

Dubai inmates receive over Dh7.6 million in financial aid during 2024
Dubai inmates receive over Dh7.6 million in financial aid during 2024

Khaleej Times

time05-04-2025

  • Khaleej Times

Dubai inmates receive over Dh7.6 million in financial aid during 2024

As part of its ongoing commitment to support the wellbeing of inmates, Dubai Police announced that humanitarian aid worth Dh7.6 million was provided to male and female inmates in correctional facilities during 2024. The aid amounting to Dh7,639,626 aims to offer both social and moral support to the prisoners serving sentences. Major General Marwan Abdul Karim Julfar, director of the General Department of Punitive and Correctional Institutions, highlighted that the initiative aligns Dubai Police's broader reform and rehabilitation strategy. This approach focuses on helping inmates rebuild their lives, preparing them for reintegration into society, and promoting values of solidarity and social cohesion within the community. He also commended the vital contributions of civil society organisations, private sector partners, and individual philanthropists, who continuously support these efforts. Their generosity helps ease the burden on inmates, boosts morale, and encourages positive behavioural change. Captain Habib Hussein Mohammed Al Zarouni, head of the Humanitarian Care Department, elaborated on the range of assistance provided. The aid supports a variety of needs, including the settlement of rent debts, financial help for inmate release, support for families, payment of bail, medical assistance, travel expenses, education costs, and other humanitarian initiatives. In addition to financial support, Dubai Police continues to implement programs that enhance the quality of life within correctional facilities. These include educational and vocational training aimed at equipping inmates with the skills needed for employment after release. Such efforts are part of a comprehensive strategy to create a rehabilitative environment focused on both psychological well-being and practical readiness for life beyond prison.

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