My Mission
Given the fact that the American political divisions in 2018 are almost unbearable, I have chosen to avoid hot button issues like gun control, abortion, gender, woman rights, extreme Climate Change, or economic justice. As in the last 20 years, I will continue to concentrate on the major themes of broadband, energy, energy efficiency, clean energy, utilities, regulations, regulators, technological innovation, economic development, practical environmentalism, the Internet of Things, emission reductions, capital formation, shale oil, pipelines, socio-economics, fossil fuels, human health including inner and outer air pollution, sanitation, reliable electricity, adequate clean water, and community development in emerging countries and continents.
In other words, I see my role as a conduit of information with my allies, one of the spokesmen for the human benefits derived from the shale revolution and a columnist for the environmental importance of economic development.
Published In
“I see my role as a conduit of information with my allies, one of the spokesmen for the human benefits derived from the shale revolution and a columnist for the environmental importance of economic development.”
-Steve
About Stephen
For the last 5 years, starting in 2011, Stephen Heins has been an analyst and consultant for a Wall Street firm. Also, he has been a practical environmentalist, who advocates good energy policy, economic development and sound environmentalism. From 2001-2009, Heins was Vice President of Corporate Communication for Orion Energy Systems, a publicly-traded leader in innovating energy and lighting systems based in Plymouth, Wis.
Currently, Heins promotes economic development, energy efficiency, emission reductions and broadband deployment at local, state and national levels. He has published more than 90 articles and op-ed pieces on these issues. Over the last 16 years, Heins has published op-ed pieces on energy management, Broadband, the utility industry and environmental issues for leading newspapers, energy and trade magazines including Forbes, Energy Central, Spark Fortnightly, Marcellus Drilling News, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Capital Times, Wisconsin State Journal, Milwaukee Business Journal, Wisconsin Corporate Report, Marketplace Magazine, the San Diego Union Tribune, Engineering Times, Energy and Power Management, Energy Pulse and Electricity Today.
Going by the title, “The Word Merchant,” he has written Op-Eds critical of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), including its controversial Clean Power Plan and Clean Water Act. Heins believes that the resources, finances and innovation of the private sector is vastly superior to federal mandates and regulatory silo thinking.
Since December 2014, Heins’ published policy-oriented writings also address topics including the coming convergence of energy, technology and broadband, Cooperative Federalism, the U.S. electrical grid, state utility commissions, fracking and the natural gas revolution in U.S.
Heins is passionate about the major role “clean energy,’ in the broad sense of the word, can play in solving electrical power generation problems while helping companies reduce their carbon footprint. To that end, he has been a member of the National Association of Manufacturers, US Chamber of Commerce, Wisconsin Manufacturing and Commerce, Chicago Climate Exchange, Midwest Energy Efficiency Alliance, Alliance to Save Energy, American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy, the Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce Association, and U.S.Green Building Council.
Prior to joining Orion Energy Systems, Heins was director of marketing for NorthNet, an Internet Service Provider based in Oshkosh, Wis. Heins also was marketing director for Trautman-Kramer, a Wall Street investment firm specializing in municipal bond underwriting and brokerage. His early career took him into the restaurant business managing a chain of thirteen restaurants.
Heins studied American poetry at Columbia University in New York City and he also attended the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, where he studied business and economic coursework. He currently resides in Sheboygan, Wis.
