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WTF?!?!  Leslie Glustrom has been denied intervention status by the Colorado Public Utilities Commission!  Shades of what happened to me in Big Stone, and almost in the CapX 2020 Certificate of Need! She made her Petition/Motion to Intervene, and Xcel objected and the PUC booted her out.  (I’m searching for the Order).

The story gives a pretty careful description of what happened, what’s missing is information on all the good work Leslie has done over the years, contributing to the record, helping come up with a better result, and now this…

Here’s Leslie at Nancy’s wedding a few years back:

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Boulder energy watchdog kicked out of Xcel dockets at PUC

Sat September 17, 2011 9:18 PM  | about: XEL

NEWS PROVIDED BY:
McClatchy

Sept. 17–Boulder resident and longtime Xcel Energy (XEL) watchdog Leslie Glustrom has been banned from “intervening” in two cases at the Public Utilities Commission that involve the electric company, a move she says paves the way for eliminating individual participation in utility regulation across the board.

“What’s happening is that the last vestige of the public is being extinguished from the, quote-unquote, Public Utilities Commission,” she said.

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Last week, Lesie Glustrom, a cohort via “No New Coal Plants,” was featured in a big spread in her home state:

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The last word is action


by Nathan Rice – High Country News

Name: Leslie Glustrom
Age: 55
Vocation: Mother of two, founding member of the nonprofit group Clean Energy Action
Past Jobs: Biochemist, science teacher, science writer
Favorite activity on her half-day weekends: “Being in the woods alone, talking to the trees.”
Favorite sport: Ice hockey
Thoughts on coal: “I’m a climate change activist who is worried that we don’t have enough coal. That’s an ironic place to be.”

Few people get excited about public utility meetings. But at the Tri-State Rural Electric Co-op in Westminster, Colo., on a spring night, Leslie Glustrom is squirming in her seat. Eager to address the Tri-State executives, she scribbles notes about obscure energy data, her brown hair short above broad shoulders.

“Tri-State is sitting on top of world-class wind and solar resources,” Glustrom says. The co-op powers rural electric utilities in Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming and Nebraska — “the Saudi Arabia of wind and solar,” she says, gesturing emphatically. Glustrom, a clean energy advocate, believes it’s Tri-State’s duty to exploit those resources.

In the circular boardroom, about 40 advocates and industry representatives in business attire mingle under fluorescent lights, munching donuts and drinking coffee. Glustrom offers firm handshakes but abstains from refreshments. “I want to maintain my independence,” she explains. Tri-State’s managers sit behind a row of microphones, lending a diplomatic air to the co-op’s first attempt at officially inviting the public to comment on its planning process.
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