Message-ID: <19473779.1075844213815.JavaMail.evans@thyme> Date: Thu, 31 May 2001 04:02:00 -0700 (PDT) From: scott.bolton@enron.com To: linda.robertson@enron.com, stephen.burns@enron.com, allison.navin@enron.com, sue.nord@enron.com, paul.kaufman@enron.com, susan.landwehr@enron.com, richard.shapiro@enron.com, kelly.kimberly@enron.com, christopher.long@enron.com Subject: SST Conference Notes Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-From: Scott Bolton X-To: Linda Robertson, Stephen D Burns, Allison Navin, Sue Nord, Paul Kaufman, Susan M Landwehr, Richard Shapiro, Kelly Kimberly, Christopher Long X-cc: X-bcc: X-Folder: \Richard_Shapiro_June2001\Notes Folders\All documents X-Origin: SHAPIRO-R X-FileName: rshapiro.nsf Just a quick overview of observations/conversations from the South Sound Technology Conference in Tacoma yesterday. The conference was a regional gathering on Puget Sound area leaders, telecom/tech, and educators. Notable participants were Rep. Adam Smith, Sen. Cantwell, and Gov. Locke. Rep. Norm Dicks' office was there but he was on a defense trip to Europe. Statements from Maria Cantwell: She hoped the change in the Senate will change the direction of the Bush Energy plan and she endorsed the Feinstein/Smith price cap legislation as much needed relief for the Northwest. She described her support for competition in the telecom industry. (while not specific, it was a reference to Tauzin/Dingell which she didn't seem supportive of). She endorsed S.88, the Sen. Rockefeller bill to create tax incentives for broadband deployment. I didn't get any time with Sen. Cantwell, but I did spend some time with Stacy Baird, her LD and her Chief of Staff (whose name escapes me at the moment). I followed up with Stacy on our conversation last week in DC and he told me that he was interested in EBS' thoughts on telecom issues going forward after Tauzin/Dingell fades. Statements from Gov. Locke: Gov. Locke wanted the state to do a better job reaching out to area businesses and encouraged more public/private parnerships. He gave the example of too many streets being ripped up for fiber and that the state should provide more leadership in managing infrastructure development. The energy situation will be a critical factor in tech growth in WA. He stated that some high-tech companies are threatening to leave Silicon Valley because of the energy crises and that WA may find itself in a similar position. Unfortunately I didn't get an opportunity to speak with Locke after his remarks. Statements from Rep. Adam Smith He pretty much echoed Locke's concern that energy supply and prices may cause the region to lose jobs. He supported Tauzin/Dingell stating that he didn't think most people understood the "seriousness" of broadband infrastructure issues. He seemed to believe that the RBOCs are the only hope for immediate DSL roll-out. I spoke with Rep. Smith for about 10 minutes, mostly about telecom competition. He mentioned that he had spoken to "Enron's DC people" about energy, but I was unable to ascertain if it was a positive dialogue or not. On telecom competition he had much the same perspective as Rep. Boucher last week (RBOCs need to invest in new facilities free of competitors), but recognized the point that the RBOCs should not be rewarded for years of foot-dragging after the Telecom Act. I also made a good contact w/ Rep. Dicks' district director who wants to follow up on telecom infrastructure/trading issues. MEDIA: I was approached by to reprters, TV and print, to discuss energy, Gov. Davis, and his meeting w/ Pres. Bush. I declined and directed them to Karen Denne.l Takeaways: The conference was a good opportunity to get our message out - I was able to talk about the benefits of bandwidth trading AND the need to open the cable monopoly, I made some good contacts with Qwest, Terrabeam (laser last-mile company), and the WA Software Alliance (Lew McMurran, their director of public affairs mentioned he knew and worked with Paul Kaufman). Energy is a HUGE issue in the tech community and it was never far from the discussion. I was asked on the panel, "If Enron is advocating a new commodity structure for telecom like it did for electricity, can we expect CA-like problems in the future?" I think I answered it well, but I think we will find it tougher to separate out businesses/messages in the future. Let me know if you have any questions. Thanks, Scott