On June 4, most voters in and around Billings, Missoula, Bozeman, Helena, and Butte will have an opportunity to revise the composition of an under-the-radar state commission that has an outsized influence on Montanaâs energy mix and residentsâ monthly power bills.
The Public Service Commission might have a modest public-awareness footprint due to the highly technical nature of its work, but the commission has recently made impactful decisions that are shaping the stateâs energy landscape, even as U.S. Congress and the administration of President Joe Biden have introduced far-reaching federal policies aimed at remaking energy production in the United States.
Such shifts in the state and federal energy landscape include a 24% increase in electricity rates approved by the PSC last year, Congressâ passage of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act, and the constitutional climate trial that brought a national spotlight to the stateâs energy policies.
The PSCâs formal mandate, per Montana law, is to âsupervise and regulate the operation of public utilities.â Such utilities include power, telecommunications, water and garbage-hauling companies, and the PSCâs job is to balance the financial health of those utilities with the interests of ratepayers, who donât have the option to shop around for alternative providers.
This year, voters will choose the occupants of three seats on the PSC, which has been monopolized by Republicans for nearly two decades. Five Republicans are running for two of the seats. The other seat is held by incumbent Republican commissioner Jennifer Fielder, who is running unopposed for a second four-year term.
Two Democratic candidates for the commission are unopposed in the June 4 Democratic primary.
DISTRICT 3
The seat thatâs drawn the most candidates represents southwestern and parts of central Montana. All of Butte and parts of Bozeman and Helena are incorporated into the District 3 seat, which is currently held by James Brown, an attorney who has served as the commissionâs president since he assumed his post in 2021. Brown, who ran unsuccessfully for the Montana Supreme Court in 2022, is foregoing a second term on the PSC to run for Montana auditor.
The District 3 candidate with the most political experience is Jeff Welborn, a Republican from Dillon who will term out of office in 2025 after spending the better part of two decades in the state Legislature. He says his tenure at the Capitol, which included stints on energy, transportation, natural resource, and budget committees, reflects his commitment to public service and familiarity with aspects of the PSCâs work.
âI understand the ingredients that go into energy production, from hydro to the thermal resources â gas and coal,â he told Montana Free Press in a recent interview. âI understand the role of the commission work and the challenges facing energy producers.â
Welborn, who owns a trailer dealership and is a professional auctioneer, said he will represent the interests of Montanaâs agricultural producers and small business owners. Protecting consumers against âunfair rate increasesâ is a central piece of his platform, as is his preference for an âall-of-the-aboveâ energy policy.
Welborn, 55 as of Election Day, describes himself as a âfree market guyâ who believes that electricity generation sources shouldnât be propped up with subsidies pulled from taxpayer pockets. He added that heâs intrigued by the nuclear plant under construction in Wyoming, and described electricity generated from hydrogen â a still-developing source thatâs regularly discussed by state legislators â as âclean and green as it gets.â
Asked about the appropriate relationship between the PSC and the monopolies it regulates, Welborn said itâs the commissionâs role to ensure consumer interests are given their due.
âNorthWestern Energy is a respected member of our business community in Montana. They provide an absolutely vital service to hundreds of thousands of Montanans â if not them, then who? There is nobody else,â Welborn said. âI donât think the commissionâs role is to put them or anybody else out of business, but to make them give the ratepayer a fair shake.â
Republican Rob Elwood, an IT professional and member of the Harlowton City Council, argues that while Welborn is a ânice guyâ and pleasant to talk to, he isnât a good fit for a regulatory agency that is, he says, âconfrontational by nature.â
âWe differ, I think, in our approach to the regulation piece of the job,â said Elwood, a former member of the Army National Guard who ran unsuccessfully for the commission as an independent in 2020. âThe PSC needs to be â âbad guysâ is not the right term. They need to be the regulatory entity. Itâs not a fun role, but that is the job of the PSC.â
Elwood, 64 as of Election Day, said heâs passionate about rail safety, and described the lack of cell phone coverage and internet access in parts of eastern Montana as a âtravesty.â
He said the commission has a duty to uphold the environmental protections enshrined in Montanaâs Constitution, an issue thatâs garnered increased public interest after 41 businesses and nonprofits petitioned the PSC to incorporate climate impacts in its regulation of utilities like NorthWestern Energy. (In April, the commission voted to extend public comment on that petition, which asks the PSC to incorporate a framework called âsocial costs of greenhouse gasesâ when evaluating the costs and benefits associated with different power sources.)
âIâm environmentally conscious, as are most people who live and work around the agricultural industry, but I approach it from a reasonable point of view,â Elwood said. Heâs also quick to point out that the âpersonal opinions of the commissionersâ shouldnât influence their work, as outlined in Montana law.
Elwood, who works remotely for Altera Digital Health, argues that technology is the answer to several issues that fall under the commissionâs purview, from railway safety to preparing the stateâs power grid for a growing number of electric vehicle drivers.
âWhat we have to do is use things like smart metering and rate adjustments based on time-of-day usage⊠to incentivize people with electric vehicles to charge in off-hours when they donât impact the grid so much,â said Elwood, who owns a Tesla Cybertruck. âI know this because I live it.â
Elwood also said he thinks geothermal energy deserves a closer look in Montana and wonders whether it could be a cost-competitive source of energy, given that the coal-powered plant in Colstrip is facing eye-popping upgrades to comply with emissions standards the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency adopted in April.
related
Public Service Commission approves NorthWestern Energy rate hike
After at least 20 commenters urged the Public Service Commission to deny an electricity and natural gas rate increase, commissioners approved a 28% surge in rates for residential consumers.
Should climate be in the PSCâs purview?
The Montana Public Service Commission has fielded comments from more than 80 people weighing in on a petition that asks the PSC to incorporate climate impacts into its regulatory oversight of monopoly utility companies. The commission is expected to issue a decision on the petition by the end of April.
Rounding out the list of Republican candidates for the District 3 seat is Suzzann Nordwick, a metallurgical engineer from Walkerville who is president of the Montana Federation of Republican Women. Nordwick, like Elwood, describes her lack of legislative experience as an asset for the role.
âI think Montanans should elect candidates who are well-rounded professional experts and not career politicians,â she told MTFP.
Nordwick said sheâs committed to developing Montana energy to protect in-state jobs and the âonly true Trump Republicanâ in the race. Campaign materials foreground Nordwickâs positions on social issues ranging from transgender teenagersâ use of puberty blockers to abortion and â[protecting] students from woke insanity in schools.â
Nordwick, 61 as of Election Day, argues that Welborn is a RINO, or Republican in Name Only, with a âcrappy voting record [on] personal freedoms.â (Asked to respond to that critique, Welborn said heâs âalways let my conscience be my guideâ and asked, âWhat votes are we looking at, and how do they relate to the work of the seat Iâm running for?â)
Nordwick, who pursued several unsuccessful bids for state legislative seats over the past decade, argues that her professional experience working with companies such as DuPont and the Sunshine Silver Mining and Refining Company gives her a leg up with the technical aspects of the commissionersâ job.
âIâm used to working in complex systems and analyzing each step,â she said. âWhatâs it adding, whatâs it costing and what is its benefit to the consumer?â
Asked to take a position on the climate rulemaking petition currently before the PSC, Nordwick hedged. She said sheâs followed the proceedings and found that good points were made on both sides, but said it would be inappropriate to take a public position given the commissionâs quasi-judicial role in the matter.
DISTRICT 2
The Republican primary in District 2, which includes much of south-central Montana, including most of Billings and Bozemanâs eastern reaches, is unique in that both candidates have formerly held the seat theyâre seeking. State Sen. Brad Molnar of Laurel served on the commission from 2005 to 2012; Kirk Bushman of Billings served on the commission from 2013 to 2016. Bushman narrowly lost re-election bids in 2016 and 2020, both times to Tony OâDonnell, who terms out of the seat at the end of this year.
Molnar, 74 as of Election Day, told MTFP he plans to leave the Senate in the midst of his second term regardless of the results of the PSC election because heâs frustrated that his colleagues in the Legislature âare still debating the same issues we were debating when I was in the House in the â90sâ and because heâs troubled by the âxenophobiaâ and shift in conservative thought heâs found there in recent years.
âThis is where my passion is and where I can do the most good,â Molnar said of the PSC. âIâm going to win the fights I can win in the battle that is the biggest battle in Montana that nobody recognizes.â