Dexter, Missouri · Friday, July 30, 2010
[Nameplate] Fair ~ 75°F  
High: 91°F ~
Print Email link Respond to editor Read comments (3)

AmerenUE customers to have forum for input on rate increase

Sunday, January 3, 2010
By Mike McCoy

Statesman Staff Writer

AmerenUE has proposed an 18 percent rate hike in electric rates. The Missouri Public Service Commission is holding a public comment hearing on Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2010 at the Dexter Armory on Highway 114 East in Dexter between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. for customers to comment or ask questions about the proposed increase.

AmerenUE filed a request with Missouri regulators last July to raise electric rates by 18 percent, which would be the utility's largest increase in at least two decades.

The proposed rate hike would increase the average household's bill by $180 a year, or $15 a month.

Nearly half of the request is primarily driven by investments made to continue system-wide reliability improvements for customers, increases in costs essential to generating and delivering electricity and higher financing costs, said Warner Baxter, AmerenUE president and chief executive officer. The remainder of the request (slightly more than half) is to cover higher fuel costs and lower revenues from sales outside UE's system, stated Baxter.

"Our customers have told us that reliability is their highest priority," Baxter continued, "We have listened and responded by making significant reliability improvements, largely through our Power On program, and those investments are working."

"While our current rates are among the lowest in the nation, we know that rising costs to meet customer expectations for reliability, as well as federal and state requirements for renewable energy and cleaner air, are going to continue to drive up energy costs," said Baxter. "Our current rates simply do not reflect the investments we have made and the costs we are incurring to deliver safe, reliable power to our customers."

The Missouri Public Service Commission will make the final decision by June 2010.

If approved by regulators, the rate hike would be AmerenUE's largest in at least 20 years. The utility did not raise rates from 1987 to 2007. Then the company had a two percent rate increase in 2007, and an eight percent rate hike in 2008. In January, Missouri regulators approved an electric rate increase of $162.6 million.

"Eighteen percent is a lot," said Lewis Mills Jr., Missouri's Public Counsel. "And they just got a rate increase last year and one the year before that."

The Fair Electricity Rate Action Fund (FERAF) announced Dec. 10 that it will be conducting a public relations effort to educate Missouri families about Ameren's 18 percent rate hike before the Missouri Public Service Commission (PSC).

FERAF is made up of the AARP, Missouri Industrial Energy Consumers (Anheuser-Busch, Boeing, Doe Run, Ford, General Motors, Noranda Aluminum, Monsanto and 12 other major St. Louis industrial companies), The Missouri Retailers Association (Schnuck's, Macy's, J.C. Penney and other commercial customers of AmerenUE ), Consumer Council of Missouri and The Midwest Energy Users Association (WalMart, Best Buy). That group has more recently filed a joint pleading with the Public Service Commission. The joint pleading came in response to a filing by Ameren for a "request for clarification respecting application of the Commission's statutes and standard of conduct rules." AmerenUE has suggested that it would serve the public interest for the PSC to provide guidance whether particular activities are permissible; such as whether parties may engage in a public relations or an advertising campaign designed to address matters in the rate case.

"FERAF's public relations effort will educate Missourians through every available means about the impact Ameren's 18 percent rate hike would have on Missouri's working families," said a press release from FERAF. "In the last eight years, Ameren has requested rate increases on Missouri electrical consumers of $1.4 billion and is requesting another 18 percent increase now, despite a Missouri unemployment rate of roughly 9 percent.

"As FERAF members, we respect the PSC and its process and want to make sure as many Missourians as possible know about Ameren's requested 18 percent rate hike," said Bob Quinn, executive director of the Missouri Association for Social Welfare, a FERAF member. "In order to ensure that, we'll be communicating with Missourians directly about the request before the PSC to raise their electricity rates by 18 percent."

"AmerenUE has historically engaged in major advertising campaigns to support each of the rate cases it has filed since 2002 (proposals totaling $1.4 billion in rate increases over this period)," said the press release, "It is curious that AmerenUE suddenly seeks a Missouri Public Service Commission ruling that a public information campaign is unlawful."

Interested citizens will have an opportunity to ask questions and gather information at the public meeting Jan. 5, 2010 at the Armory on Hwy. 144 E.

AmerenUE is the Missouri utility subsidiary of St. Louis-based Ameren Corp. (NYSE: AEE), which serves 2.4 million electric customers and 1 million natural gas customers in a 64,000-square-mile area of Missouri and Illinois.


Comments
Note: The nature of the Internet makes it impractical for our staff to review every comment. If you feel that a comment is offensive, please Login or Create an account first, and then you will be able to flag a comment as objectionable. Please also note that those who post comments on dailystatesman.com may do so using a screen name, which may or may not reflect a website user's actual name. Readers should be careful not to assign comments to real people who may have names similar to screen names. Refrain from obscenity in your comments, and to keep discussions civil, don't say anything in a way your grandmother would be ashamed to read.

These pinheads will raise our rates regardless of the feedback they get. Picture the Healthcare town hall outrage and 62% of the public wanting NOTHING done as opposed to passing the massive bill....The morons in power ignore the common man and do what they want to do anyway. Get ready....this on top of a Cap And Trade tax will raise the price tag MORE than 18% and the dumb masses won't even pay attention until it is too late.

-- Posted by shannonhoon on Sun, Jan 3, 2010, at 12:29 PM

Complain you want, the utilities always get their wishes, just go outside and SCREAM.

-- Posted by changedname on Mon, Jan 4, 2010, at 6:26 AM

Here's something for their forum: we need to break their monopoly.

If our local politicians really cared about us, they would be on TV and in the paper letting everyone know that we're under the thumb of a monopoly. They would make a big fuss and tell people that it's ridiculous for us to pay a 20% rate increase just so that the executives at Ameren can get even bigger bonuses.

The CEO of Ameren got a million dollar bonus last year. His total compensation was over 2 million. But that won't stop him from shutting off heat to the poor people who can't afford the 20% increase. What a villain.

-- Posted by thebackwardx on Wed, Jan 6, 2010, at 9:35 AM


Respond to this story

Posting a comment requires free registration. If you already have an account on this site, enter your username and password below. Otherwise, click here to register.

Username:

Password:  (Forgot your password?)

Your comments:
Please be respectful of others and try to stay on topic.