Energy choice is all about letting the free market work
September 10, 2018 - 9:00 pm
![](https://develop.reviewjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/11087857_web1_ccsdsolar_mq05_4311797.jpg)
Solar panels line the roof of Wilbur and Theresa Faiss Middle School on Monday, March 12, 2018, one of 42 CCSD schools with solar panel installations, saving approximately $514,000 per year in energy costs. Michael Quine Las Vegas Review-Journal @Vegas88s
So let me get this straight. Nevada Question 3 will end Nevada’s Soviet-era energy monopoly and demand the creation of energy markets giving energy consumers the freedom to chose among all the different forms of energy available. Sounds good to me.
Then we have Nevada Question 6 that demands a Soviet-era requirement that 50 percent of the energy we Nevadans can chose from must be produced from renewable sources. How can the freedom of markets be a good thing on Question 3 and a bad thing on Question 6?
Right thinking Nevadans will let renewable energy stand on its own and compete fairly in the energy market without subsidies and without Big Government requirements.