Thanks Jeff. I really hope that he agrees. I would think Enron would surely
want to be represented and to make sure its viewpoints are aired, and I know
everyone else feels it is important to learn from this. I just learned that
John Fielder, SCE's Senior Vice President for Regulatory Policy and Affairs,
is confirmed as a panelist.

We are awaiting word from you on the sponsorship, and won't say anything
until you can tell us what.

Best,
Lee

-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff.Dasovich@enron.com [mailto:Jeff.Dasovich@enron.com]
Sent: Friday, October 06, 2000 10:10 AM
To: Lee S. Friedman
Cc: jdasovic@enron.com; tim.belden@enron.com
Subject: Re: Nov. 13 UC summit conference on electricity



Lee:  I'm not certain that it will be possible to get Skilling, but I'll
get back to you soon.  Also, I want to manage expectations a bit about the
possibility of having Enron stream the conference.  Just don't want us to
get ahead of ourselves.  I'd prefer that it not go out in any announcement
at this juncture.  Thanks a bunch.

Best,
Jeff



"Lee S. Friedman"
<lfried@uclink4.ber        To:     "Tim Belden"
<tim.belden@enron.com>, "Jeff Dasovich"
keley.edu>                 <jdasovic@enron.com>
cc:
10/04/2000 05:52 PM        Subject:     Nov. 13 UC
summit conference on electricity





Jeff and Tim,

Tim, I know Jeff knows all about the conference we are organizing and I
hope
you do as well.

Rob, I and the rest of the conference organizers are wondering if you could
help us find out if Jeff Skilling from Enron would be willing to be one of
our panelists? He has been an articulate critic of the current state of our
electricity markets, and we definitely would like the genco perspective
represented.

Naturally we are hoping to get a quick answer because our publicity about
the conference will be going out shortly.

A brief description of the conference is appended below. Please let me know
if you need any additional information.

Thanks very much for your help and advice.
Lee

The summer of San Diego has prompted the School, in collaboration with UC's
Energy Institute and Competition Policy Center, to sponsor a high-level
summit conference on electricity deregulation. The focus, and the audience,
will be national, but heavily informed and influenced by the California
crisis.  The conference will evaluate (1) the wisdom of deregulation and
(2)
how the pitfalls encountered so far can be avoided and remedied. The
University will facilitate an open, honest and reasoned exchange between
executive-level players from various perspectives: industry, regulators,
consumers, legislators, academics, and market and system operators.

The format entails two roundtable discussions with six speakers and a
moderator.  During the panel sessions, the speakers will engage in a
debate/dialogue on the current situation in electricity deregulation, where
we have come from, what the future holds, and what solutions lie on the
horizon. Each speaker will have uninterrupted time to speak, followed by
Q&A
and discussion.  We expect a live audience of about 200, including a large
press presence.  One sponsor has tentatively offered to provide internet
streaming video services.  We hope to have a balanced group of sponsors
ranging from the American Public Power Association to energy companies.

The speakers are being arranged at this time. We have commitments from:
Loretta Lynch (Chair, CPUC), and PJM CEO Phil Harris. We have a preliminary
acceptance from Steven Littlechild (England's former primary electricity
regulator) and Laura Tyson (former Chair, President's Council of Economic
Advisors and National Economic Council, currently Dean, Haas School of
Business). We have invited FERC Commissioner Curt Hebert, and U.S.
Representative Edward
Markey, executive-level managers from several energy companies and state
legislators. Former DOJ chief economist Carl Shapiro will be on one of the
panels, as will economist Severin Borenstein, Director of UCEI and
Professor
of Business and Public Policy. Michael Florio from The Utility Reform
Network (TURN) will be a consumer advocate on one of the panels. Lee
Friedman, economist and Professor of Public Policy, will briefly provide an
introduction to the panel discussions with his talk "Lighting the Stage:
The
Electricity of Deregulation."

A dinner for the panelists and organizers will be hosted at UC's Goldman
School of Public Policy following the conference proceedings. We have
reserved rooms for our speakers at Berkeley's landmark Claremont Hotel. We
can reimburse those speakers who request it for coach airfare expenses and
other ordinary local expenses.

Forfurther information, please contact:
Lee S. Friedman
Professor of Public Policy
Goldman School of Public Policy
University of California
2607 Hearst Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94720-7320
Ph:  (510) 642-7513
Fax: (510) 643-9657
email: lfried@uclink4.berkeley.edu