Wisconsin Breaking News
Electricity Rates to be Lower than Utility Sought 11/19
Power Line Incentive Urged, Property Owners Should be Paid for Use of
Land 9/19
Electricity Rates to be Lower than
Utility Sought
(November 19) Customers of Wisconsin Power & Light will see a
much smaller increase in their electricity bills come January than the Madison-based
utility sought earlier this year.
Wisconsin Power & Light sought to increase its electricity
rates by $81 million, or 10.8%, but the state Public Service Commission voted last week to
increase those rates by $12.5 million, or 1.5%.
Natural gas rates were lowered by 1%, as opposed to the 2.6%
increase sought by the utility. Wisconsin Power & Light officials had known that the
rate increase would be lowered somewhat because the price of natural gas -- which
influences the cost of electricity the utility buys -- has come down considerably since
the utility filed its application in March, spokesman Chris Schoenherr said.
For a typical residential customer, the increase would add 88
cents to a monthly electric bill of $58.35. Customers' natural gas bills would be lowered
by 7 cents, to $67.68 per month. But those prices don't take into account the impact that
natural gas prices could have on heating bills this winter, Schoenherr said.
The commission is expected to finalize its rate decision within a
month.
Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Power Line Incentive Urged, Property Owners Should for Use of Land
(September 19) On September 16, an official with the utility that
builds and runs the state's transmission lines said more incentives are needed to
encourage property owners to host power lines in their backyards. During a
legislative hearing, American Transmission Co. called on the state to establish incentives
that would pay property owners whose land is used to host power lines.
The proposal came less than a week after the Pewaukee-based
utility unveiled a $2.8 billion transmission construction plan over the next 10 years to
beef up Wisconsin's constrained electricity network and add more lines to connect the
state with the rest of the eastern United States power grid. A 1999 state law authorized
payments to communities that host power lines. "We support an extension of that
concept to landowners affected by transmission lines," said Jeff Rauh of American
Transmission.
The ATC proposal was one of dozens floated in testimony at a
joint hearing of the state Assembly and Senate energy and utility committees. The
committees will sponsor proposals that they hope the Legislature will enact into law
before the end of the year, said state Sen. Robert Cowles (R-Green Bay).
But American Transmission's proposal to create incentives for
landowners drew criticism from Mike Stuart of Wisconsin Public Power Inc., a coalition of
municipal utilities. Wisconsin's energy rates have already risen in recent years, well
before the wave of construction envisioned by both American Transmission and We Energies,
the state's largest utility.
Given those increases -- plus incentives already provided to
communities -- Wisconsin needs to be cost-conscious, Stuart said. Payments to landowners
should be capped at the property's fair market value, he said.
The legislative hearings were convened as the state evaluates
responses to its own electricity reliability problems in the wake of the Aug. 14 blackout.
Wisconsin is home to the second-most constrained transmission
line in the nation, running from Eau Claire to the Twin Cities, and the state has only
four high-voltage power lines connecting it with other states.
The American Transmission plan would build a $420 million high-
voltage power line from Wausau to Duluth, as well as a number of other major lines. By the
end of the decade, the number of interstate power lines would rise to seven from four,
Rauh said.
Nino Amato, executive director of the Wisconsin Industrial Energy
Group, described the blackout as "a wake-up call for Wisconsin."
As Wisconsin works to beef up its reliability, however, it needs
to keep the costs to residents in mind, he said. The state enjoyed the lowest rates in a
1997 comparison with rates in seven other Midwestern states, but Wisconsin's residential
rates are now ranked fifth, and its commercial and industrial rates are ranked fourth, he
said.
"We've lost our competitive edge, so cost is a factor,"
he said.
Amato also urged that the Legislature restore funding for energy
efficiency programs, which were cut by more than one-third when the state Legislature
adopted its biennial budget this summer.
Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
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