Quite a story today at @readfrontier.bsky.social by Garrett Yalch.
Quite a story today at @readfrontier.bsky.social by Garrett Yalch.
More excellent reporting from @readfrontier.bsky.social and @propublica.org on what happens when the public, legislators, and regulators grapple with the legacy of historic oil and gas pollution and toxic wastewater, the amount of which only grows by the day.
Tammy's story isn't an isolated incident. Check out the first story in this series, which investigates oilfield wastewater blowouts across the state of Oklahoma @readfrontier.bsky.social + @propublica.org
www.propublica.org/article/okla...
State regulators discovered strong signs of oil pollution, including high levels of salt and toxic metals, in one familyβs drinking water. But for two years, they repeatedly delayed basic tests to find the culprit β then closed the case.
Oklahoma officials found signs of oil&gas pollution in Tammy Boarman's drinking water, which left sores in her mouth and corroded appliances. In the end, the state closed her case, with basic questions left unanswered @readfrontier.bsky.social+@propublica.org
www.readfrontier.org/stories/salt...
βWe are convinced that some of you are either inept at your job, just do not care, or you are protecting the operators,β she wrote in a Sept. 27, 2024, email to a half dozen agency employees.
More great work from @nickbowlin.bsky.social
The familyβs water was undrinkable: It corroded taps. It withered plants. Their ice maker expelled clumps of salt.
Why?
For 2 yrs, Oklahoma oil regulators delayed basic tests that could help them find out.
Read @nickbowlin.bsky.social latest for @propublica.org + @readfrontier.bsky.social!
Truly shocking story. Salty, Oily Drinking Water Left Sores in Their Mouths. Oklahoma Refused to Find Out Why. by partner @nickbowlin.bsky.social @readfrontier.bsky.social
βWhen you have a market that is unregulated, difficult to assess and evolves very quickly, that is a calling card for nefarious agents to step in and make money.β
How Intoxicating Hemp Seeped Into the First Recreational Marijuana Market in the Country w/ @denvergazette.com
"When utilities earn substantial profits, one might expect customers to see some relief in their monthly bills. But as a result of the ownership model of the utilities that serve most Americans, this is rarely what happens."
Treat your customers like captives, expect them to leave when they can.
that's kind of you, thanks, lucy
happy to oblige, thanks, Isaac
But to your point β much to scrutinize here, and I think we can reasonably differ in how we weigh the many problems at hand
The system is riddled with problems. ROE isn't the only one. But it deserves far more scrutiny IMO, especially given all the evidence that excessively high ROEs are costing ratepayers quite a lot of money. Those high valuations, in practice, haven't had that sanguine downstream effect on consumers
"Monopoly utilities are supposed to have their profits tightly regulated to protect ratepayers. Yet their stock prices are surging in ways that are totally unmoored from the expectation for a regulated monopoly," write @ddayen.bsky.social and James Baratta: prospect.org/2025/12/18/w... ππ‘
βYouβre not targeting a criminal; youβre targeting a mom of four.β
Hereβs how ICE detained and deported a Tulsa single motherβtailing her after she dropped her kids off at schoolβand how the Tulsa County Sheriffβs Office made it possible.
thepickup.com/ice-separate...
New investors are absolutely getting screwed, I agree. I wish I'd had the space to address that in the piece. But to my mind, it's all connected. Capitalization of excess returns into share prices is part of the overall wealth transfer from customers to shareholders, who can then sell at a premium
I see what you're saying but the inflated market values are one function of the overall regime of excess ROEs, right? Shares are trading double the book value because investors capitalize the excess returns.
Power bills are sky-high, and data centers are to blame, right? Well, yes, but there's something else, upstream of the AI boom: a utility sector beholden to financial interests, resulting in massive corporate profits. I looked into this dynamic for @harpers.bsky.social
harpers.org/archive/2026...
reminiscent of
This story from @nickbowlin.bsky.social does as good a job as any journalism I've read of explaining how utilities have largely captured their regulators, and why that dynamic is driving skyrocketing utility bills. harpers.org/archive/2026...
The problem for Trump is that the US government doesn't drill for oil and Big Oil generally doesn't think its worth investing in Venezuela right now: www.politico.com/news/2025/12...
lol this explains so much
NEW: One of the most significant accomplishments of the Trump Admin: Decimating the US's humanitarian aid.
We went to S. Sudan to see the effects.
Rubio says no one has died from the cuts.
Spoiler: That's not true.
@annamaria.bsky.social & Brett Murphy:
www.propublica.org/article/usai...
Read about it here!
www.nybooks.com/online/2025/...
A wave of big data centers is triggering a scramble for new electricity generation. OG&E and PSO are pushing to charge ratepayers more as they race to keep up.
We've got 2 great stories today in our series about drivers of the affordability crisis.
First up by James Baratta: Electricity rates are set by public utility commissions. But that process has become captured, with corporate utilities pushing through rate hikes and extracting profits.
An Oklahoma expert investigating toxic gas and oil wastewater brine migration and βsurgesβ of waste injected at high pressure quit after 3 years when regulators refused to act. Now heβs speaking out.
@nickbowlin.bsky.social @readfrontier.bsky.social: bit.ly/4oh7KMc
@buckeyeenviro.bsky.social
This is so bleak dude
New story from me and our summer intern Katie about how the state opted out of regulating bitcoin mines, leaving counties and municipalities to deal with them on their own: thepickup.com/data-centers...