Cathy McMorris Rodgers is Eastern Washington’s chief advocate in Congress, serving as the representative for the state’s 5th Congressional District. Since first being elected to the House in 2004, she has earned the trust of her constituents and praise on Capitol Hill for her hard work, conservative principles, bipartisan outreach, and leadership to get results for Eastern Washington. Growing up on an orchard and fruit stand in Kettle Falls, working at her family’s small business, and later becoming a wife and working mom of three, Cathy has lived the American Dream. Now, she works every day to rebuild that dream for our children and grandchildren.
As Cathy said, “Reducing carbon emissions is a shared goal, however, I believe we must be realistic and we must be honest about the challenges that we face…We need an all-of-the-above strategy that provides consumer choice, ensures affordability, and maintains grid reliability and capacity.
“For some states, nuclear is the best option. For others, it’s wind, or solar, or natural gas. For others, it’s hydropower. I’m excited about the technological innovation and American ingenuity that enables us to develop a variety of new, cutting-edge ways of clean energy production.
“Eastern Washington is a leader in clean energy solutions. Hydropower built the Pacific Northwest. It built our economy and it continues to provide clean, renewable, reliable electricity… It accounts for 70 percent of the energy in Washington State, and as we all know, it is the largest source of renewable energy in the country. We could double our hydropower production in America without building a single new dam—simply by investing in technology.
“The fact though is from 2012 to 2015, our carbon emissions spiked 6.1% due, in part, to increasing fossil fuel-generated electricity. So, at a time when we have this shared goal, we should be embracing what makes sense in each region of the country, and for us, it’s hydropower. We shouldn’t be putting more costs and more mandates on hydropower. We should be actually moving forward with licensing reform here at the federal level.”