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3.08.2013

Re: Ameren asks for more of your money while profits and executive compensation soar

Ratepayer Bill of Rights

FERAF's 2011 Ratepayer Bill of Rights focuses on pro-consumer initiatives in three broad areas:

1.   Improving the rate-making process
2.   Strengthening the consumers' role in that rate-making process
3.   Preventing utilities from levying automatic rate increases on Missourians through surcharges

Improving the Ratemaking Process

The current rate-making process has ensured that Missouri has some of the lowest utility rates in the Midwest. FERAF is committed to strengthening that process by ensuring that ratepayers do not pay the high costs generated when utility companies seek rate increases, strengthening the voice of consumer advocates, and opposing utility company attempts shorten the amount of time allowed to consider rate increase requests, thereby allowing utility companies to raise rates more frequently.

1.Shareholders, not ratepayers, should pay for the cost of seeking rate hikes.[+]

Did you know that right now you pay the cost for the very lawyers and consultants who go before government regulators seeking to raise your utility rates? That's right, utility companies spend millions every year in an effort to raise your rates, and you pay the tab. And because you are paying the tab, the utilities have no incentive to keep those costs low. FERAF believes utility company shareholders should bear the cost of efforts to raise rates, not the consumers who have to pay those higher rates. FERAF supports legislation that would impose the cost of seeking rate increases on the shareholders who benefit from them, not the consumers who have to pay them.

2.Utilities should be required to share rate increase information when filing a rate increase request.[+]

Utility companies often point to cost increases when requesting a rate increase.  To have an effective voice in the rate process, consumers must have access to data regarding the cost increases utilities claim are causing the need for rate hikes. Without this data, regulators and consumers are in the dark about whether the increase is actually needed.

Missouri statutes should strengthen the rate process by requiring utilities to be more transparent. Utilities should be statutorily required to provide consumers and regulators a full package of data supporting any rate increase request, including workpapers, schedules and financial models. If they fail to provide this information at the time of the rate increase filing, they should be required to go back to the drawing board, withdraw their rate case and file a new case and restart the clock. Moreover, utilities should be penalized if they fail to respond to reasonable information requests. FERAF supports legislation requiring utilities to provide regulators and consumers full transparency at the time a rate increase request is filed.

3.Utilities should be prevented from requesting rate increases more frequently.[+]

The utility companies will be back in the next legislative session with a proposal to allow them to raise utility rates more frequently. They support legislation to shorten the rate case period, which reduces the amount of time that consumer advocates have to present evidence against a rate increase, makes it more difficult for the PSC to review all relevant factors, and in effect, allows utility companies to raise rates more easily and more frequently. FERAF opposes proposals to shorten the rate case process.

Strengthening Consumers' Voices in the Ratemaking Process

The Office of the Public Counsel (OPC) serves as the only official voice of consumers in utility rate issues. The OPC represents consumers in rate case proceedings before the Public Service Commission (PSC). FERAF believes that strengthening the OPC strengthens the power of consumers and helps keep utility rates fair and affordable.

4.Missouri's consumer advocate for utility issues should receive steady funding.[+]

The PSC Staff and the OPC have had their resources slashed making it impossible to effectively audit the ever-increasing number of utility rate requests. Missouri statutes must be strengthened to ensure the PSC regulatory staff and the OPC have adequate resources to scrutinize utility rate hike filings. Efforts to block the utility watchdogs through budget cuts must be reversed so utility rate cases can be effectively scrutinized and challenged.

Transparency of utility rates requires that Missouri statutes provide fool-proof mechanisms to ensure the OPC and PSC Staff are fully funded and have adequate employees to deal with the constant barrage of Missouri utility rate increase filings. FERAF supports increased funding for the OPC and PSC staffs.

5.The Office of Public Counsel needs long-term, stable funding to protect consumers.[+]

One way to ensure that Missouri's utility consumers have a strong voice is to ensure that the OPC has the resources and staff it needs to properly represent the interests of consumers. In these tough budget times, too often utility company lobbyists are successful in weakening consumer power by convincing the Missouri legislature to cut funding for the OPC.

FERAF believes that the OPC should be funded the same way the PSC is funded – through utility rates.  Assessment funding guarantees a steady revenue source for the OPC outside of the politically charged budget process. Additionally, only those consumers who benefit from the actions of the OPC pay the assessment. FERAF supports strengthening the OPC by passing legislation creating an assessment funding mechanism for the OPC.

6.The OPC should have the ability to seek refunds for Missouri consumers when a court finds utility rates to be unfair.[+]

Currently, when the OPC appeals a PSC rate decision and requests a court to overturn a rate case decision, the OPC must post a bond in order to seek a refund of funds the utility has already collected from consumers. However, the OPC currently doesn't have the ability or revenue to post a bond. In effect, the OPC cannot seek refunds for consumers even when rate decisions are overturned by the court. FERAF supports eliminating the bond requirement in order to allow the OPC to seek refunds for Missouri consumers when a court finds an increased rate is unlawful.

Preventing Automatic Rate Increases through Surcharges

FERAF is fighting to repeal unfair surcharges on your electric bill.  A surcharge is a way for Missouri's public utilities to automatically increase utility rates on Missouri consumers outside of the normal ratemaking process.  Surcharges are a form of single issue ratemaking.  FERAF opposes single-issue ratemaking, which leads to automatic rate increases for exactly these reasons.  Surcharges reduce the incentive for utility companies to reduce costs and operate efficiently.

7.Utility companies should not be allowed to pass on the cost of complying with environmental regulations to consumers without going through the rate case process.[+]

The ECRM allows utility companies to pass on costs of complying with environmental regulations directly to consumers, outside of the normal rate case process. No one knows how much this could raise consumer rates. FERAF believes that the costs of complying with environmental regulations should be considered along with all others as part of the rate case process, and not as a surcharge. FERAF supports repealing the Environmental Cost Recovery Mechanism.

8.Utility companies should not be allowed to forgo the normal rate-making process to charge consumers for increased fuel charges.[+]

As fuel charges have increased on Ameren, as on all of us, Ameren has raised electrical rates via a fuel adjustment surcharge. Often, Ameren has imposed these fuel surcharges even when their revenues are increasing. The result is that, while all Missourians struggle with increased fuel charges, only Ameren is able to pass those increased costs on to hard working families. Increased fuel costs should be considered by the PSC as part of a comprehensive review of a utility's finances, not as a stand-alone cost. FERAF supports repealing the Fuel Adjustment Clause.

9.Utility companies should not be allowed to pass on infrastructure costs to consumers without going through the rate case process.[+]

Electricity companies are seeking a new surcharge that would allow them to pass along the cost of new infrastructure investments – such as poles and lines – directly to consumers. FERAF believes these costs should be considered as part of the normal rate-making process. FERAF strongly opposes the creation of an Infrastructure System Replacement surcharge.

10.Utility companies should not be allowed to charge ratepayers more for using less energy.[+]

The utility companies are actually seeking a surcharge to allow them to offset lost revenue that results when consumers use less energy. In other words, they charge you more when you use less. FERAF believes that when you use less energy, your utility bill should reflect that.  FERAF opposes the "Save More, Pay More" surcharge.

11.Utility consumers should not be charged for the bad debt of others.[+]

Gas companies will probably be back again trying to create a surcharge that would allow them to charge you immediately when other people don't pay their utility bills. Even worse, they wouldn't even have to justify these rate increases to the Public Service Commission before they go into effect. If this new practice were to become law, what motivation would the gas companies have to track down customers skipping out on their bills when they could just shift that debt to other customers? FERAF opposes the Bad Debt Surcharge.

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Fair Energy Rate Action Fund | HELP US KEEP YOUR ENERGY RATES DOWN
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Dear Scotts,
 
Can you believe it? In 2012, Ameren Missouri profited around $70 million more from electric customers than regulators authorized. On top of that, Ameren's CEO received $6.2 million in compensation in 2012, a 9% increase from 2011. This was the same year that Ameren raised your rates AGAIN, up 43% since 2007 costing customers a total of $2.8 billion by the end of the year.
 
In 2012, the Missouri Public Service Commission authorized Ameren to collect a generous 10.2% profit margin but financial data shows that the company actually received around an 11.48% profit from Missouri customers for the year. In addition, Ameren Corp.'s chairman, president and CEO received a 9% increase in total compensation in 2012, totaling $6.2 million.
 
Ameren continues to raise rates and attempts to add surcharges to your bill, all the while making more profits off of your money than ever and paying their executives more than ever. Ameren is currently pushing legislation in Missouri that would allow it and other investor-owned utilities to add a new and expensive surcharge on Missourians' electric bills. Learn more about this bill and urge your legislator to vote no on this egregious overreach.
 
Sincerely,
 
The FERAF Team
Fair Energy Rate Action Fund  PO Box 1153  Jefferson City, MO 65102
Paid for by the Fair Energy Rate Action Fund.
www.fairenergyrates.org

<a href="http://www.fairelectricityrates.org/petition"><img src="http://www.fairelectricityrates.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/banner3.jpg" alt="Fair Electricity Rate Action Fund"></a>



Re: Ameren asks for more of your money while profits and executive compensation soar

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Dear St Louis Renewable Energy Readers,
Can you believe it? In 2012, Ameren Missouri profited around $70 million more from electric customers than regulators authorized. On top of that, Ameren's CEO received $6.2 million in compensation in 2012, a 9% increase from 2011. This was the same year that Ameren raised your rates AGAIN, up 43% since 2007 costing customers a total of $2.8 billion by the end of the year.
In 2012, the Missouri Public Service Commission authorized Ameren to collect a generous 10.2% profit margin but financial data shows that the company actually received around an 11.48% profit from Missouri customers for the year. In addition, Ameren Corp.'s chairman, president and CEO received a 9% increase in total compensation in 2012, totaling $6.2 million.
Ameren continues to raise rates and attempts to add surcharges to your bill, all the while making more profits off of your money than ever and paying their executives more than ever. Ameren is currently pushing legislation in Missouri that would allow it and other investor-owned utilities to add a new and expensive surcharge on Missourians' electric bills. Learn more about this bill and urge your legislator to vote no on this egregious overreach.
Sincerely,
”FairThe FERAF Team
Fair Energy Rate Action Fund  PO Box 1153  Jefferson City, MO 65102
Paid for by the Fair Energy Rate Action Fund.
www.fairenergyrates.org



3.06.2013

StLouis-Help us keep rad waste out of the floodplain




 antinuclear
Our monthly giving program allows us to spend less time fundraising and more time  promoting efficiency first and the reduction of dirty, dangerous and expensive power. 


Earth Share of Missouri

Better Business Bureau Seal

Cancer mapping on Facebook

A 1988 graduate of McClure High School, Jenell W. started the Coldwater Creek Just the Facts Facebook page to begin mapping incidences of rare illnesses from her classmates after her sister found that incidence rates for certain health conditions in the small population was a statistical impossibility.

Coldwater Creek is one of the sites being addressed under the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers FUSRAP (Formerly Utilized Site Remedial Action Program) because of radioactive contamination. The other St. Louis FUSRAP sites include the downtown Mallinckrodt plant (now Covidien), the Lambert Airport Site, and the Latty Ave. site in Hazelwood.

Jenell is now mapping the cancers among the population of people who lived along Coldwater Creek. Sadly, the government has no mechanism to conduct such a cancer cluster study because impacts from radiation exposures are often seen two decades later, after children have grown up, moved away & had their own children.

Cancer data is recorded in areas where people live - not where they used to live.

Jenell's use of Facebook and her high school yearbook to investigate a dispersed population is unique. More than 700 cancers have been recorded to date; as well as problems with conception, immune system disorders, and three cases of conjoined twins. 






  

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MCE New Logo 2012

In this Letter
Cancer mapping
Urgent Action in the Floodplain
Special Thank you
Legislative Update

For over a decade the Missouri Coalition for the Environment has worked to bring attention to the health and environmental threats of radioactive wastes in the Missouri River floodplain. Now an underground landfill fire has all eyes on the Westlake Landfill Superfund Site. We need your help to keep the pressure on until the radioactive wastes are removed.


URGENT ACTION NEEDED!
Westlake Landfill Superfund Site - Radioactive Since 1973


By now, you may have seen the local and national news coverage of the Westlake Landfill. MCE is the only public interest organization consistently pressing for removal of the radioactive wastes. We need your help to:
  1. Mobilize and empower community member to keep the responsible parties accountable for contaminating our community;
  2. Facilitate quick analysis of the technical data generated around this complex issue; and
  3. Broaden our reach to public officials & the press.



While the radioactive wastes at the Westlake Landfill Superfund Site in Bridgeton have been languishing under U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) inaction, a subsurface fire has been smoldering in an adjacent landfill for over two years, unbeknownst to the people living closest to it. Now the fire is within 1,200 feet of the radioactive material.


Your support for MCE has enabled us to take the lead on monitoring this volatile situation and to speak up for removal of the wastes at the Westlake Landfill. This community needs our help more than ever. And we need yours. Our actions so far have included:

  • Opposing the EPA decision to leave the radioactive wastes in the floodplain in 2008, leading to the EPA's current reconsideration.
  • Collaborating with unions & other advocacy groups to turn out 350 people to the last EPA meeting on the Westlake Landfill.
  • Demanding, with success, that the Dept. of Natural Resources (DNR) and the St. Louis Co. Dept. of Health conduct air testing after residents reported headaches and illnesses in pets & children.
  • Requesting full disclosure of the state's testing protocols and data, and ongoing site monitoring. 


A very spcial thank you....

to Kay Drey, whose hard work and generous support has made MCE a leading force against dirty, dangerous and expensive nuclear power.




DIRTY - DANGEROUS - EXPENSIVE

Because St. Louis still bears the burden of the very first radioactive waste created in the atomic age and there is no solution to the problem of radioactive wastes anywhere, we have doggedly opposed nuclear power as an expensive, dangerous, dirty and false energy option. The nuclear industry is pushing for the new regulations to be expedited at the cost of science and safety, but MCE, by joining a nationwide effort to establish "high-level" nuclear waste storage policy at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), is pushing back. Your financial support allows MCE to engage on issues at the state level that impact national policy like long term radioactive waste storage.

ENERGY ISSUES IN THE 2013 GENERAL ASSEMBLY
        
         MCE defended our voter approved ban on Construction Work In Progress (CWIP) during the 2009, 2011, and 2012 state legislative sessions. Our state's ban on CWIP charges has helped keep electricity rates low and stopped monopoly utilities from charging customers in advance for the promise of nuclear power in the future.
            The risk of financing a nuclear reactor doesn't change when shifted to utility customers; it only changes the risk takers. The nuclear financing scheme is to socialize risk while privatizing profits.

Upcoming Legislative Issues

Against - Senate Bill 207 is a work-around of Missouri's ban on CWIP that will force captive customers to pay for a new nuclear reactorwith up to a 10% increase on electric bills.

Support - Senate Bill 277, sponsored by Sen. Jason Holsman, would establish an Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard, requiring energy efficiency investments from Missouri's energy providers. Energy efficiency is the cheapest, cleanest, and safest form of meeting our energy demand. Missouri ranks 44/50 states by the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy.

Against - House Bill 44 would count 100-year-old hydroelectric dams as new renewable energy instead of spurring new clean energy jobs and investments as Prop. C intended.



to support our efforts to remove radioactive wastes from the floodplain and reduce dirty, dangerous and expensive nuclear power in Missouri.  100% of your contribution goes to fighting these issues in Missouri.



 
However you choose to give, we are grateful for your
contributions and support!



Sincerely, 
Heathersignature
Heather B. Navarro
Executive Director

 Ed signature
Ed Smith
Safe Energy Director




Missouri Coalition for the Environment | 6267 Delmar Blvd., Ste. 2E | St. Louis | MO | 63130

3.04.2013

Ameren UE -Dirty Coal Money-Influencing StLouis Elections




Would the $4,609,271.00 Previously Donated $ be better spent
for the Infrastructure Improvements instead of the Proposed Electrical Rate Increases?



Noteworthy Contributor Years Company or PAC Contributions Subsidiary Contributions Employee Contributions Grand Total
*AMEREN
Electric Utilities
2004-2012
$4,225,462
$265,388
$118,422
$4,609,271


As the national health-care reform debate rages on in Washington, D.C., lawmakers in many states are offering complementary — or counter — proposals. Similar efforts are occurring around energy and climate-change policy, and other policies, at both the state and national levels.

A groundbreaking collaboration by the National Institute on Money in State Politics and the Center for Responsive Politics created this unique view of the top 10,000 donors to political campaigns at both the state and national level—information that exists nowhere else. State political campaign money includes donations to political parties and ballot measure committees, as well as to candidates for elected office.

Top donors consist of companies, labor organizations, and special interest groups. Totals include money given by employees, subsidiaries, and/or locals affiliated with the donor.

Of the $5,784,749,560 in itemized contributions that was given to state-level state and federal federal political campaigns during the 2007 and 2008 election cycles, $22,709,783 (0.4%) came from the 7 (of the top 10,000 1,000 100 ) state and federal contributors that matched your search of(Electric Utilities) (in Missouri).

In Missouri statewide political campaigns, $105,568,078 was given in itemized contributions.7 of the top 10,000 national contributors donated within Missouri, to the tune of $227,815(0.2%).
Results: 1-7 of 7

Rank Contributor
Industry
Missouri Total State-level Total Federal Total Combined Total
113
Electric Utilities
$39,000
$1,754,409
$1,789,600
$3,544,009
416
Electric Utilities
$66,140
$962,417
$205,725
$1,168,142
2045
Electric Utilities
$46,000
$171,516
$77,865
$249,381
2932
Electric Utilities
$63,000
$146,291
$26,633
$172,924
4662
Electric Utilities
$13,675
$102,290
$3,200
$105,490

Lobbyist Clients Results

Lobbyist Client Years # of States Lobbied in Lobbyists
AMEREN
Electric Utilities
2003-2012
2
257
Uncoded
2011
1
4
Electric Utilities
2009
1
1
Electric Utilities
2008
1
4
Electric Utilities
2008
1
1
Electric Utilities
2008
1
3
Uncoded
2008
1
2
Electric Utilities
2008
1
1
Electric Utilities
2003-2007
1
24
Electric Utilities
2008
1
2
Uncoded
2008
1
7
Uncoded
2008
1
1
Uncoded
2008
1
1
Uncoded
2008
1
1



Contributor Year Records Total
2004
144
$104,975
2006
56
$101,095
2008
211
$233,593
2010
240
$185,605
2011
7
$66,000
2012
356
$547,839


Home  Missouri 2012  Data Sources

Overview :Candidates Contributors ,Ballot Measures ,Party Committees ,Lobbyists, Lobbyist Clients,Independent Spenders ,Data Sources

Summary of Data Sources

The Institute currently receives its Missouri data from the Missouri Ethics Commission. The Institute obtains scanned images from the Web and supplements those by obtaining the paper reports filed by candidates who do not report electronically.

After the Institute receives the contribution information and puts it into a database, staff members verify that all candidates are represented in the database and that their political party affiliations and their win/loss statuses are correct. Researchers then standardize the contributor names and assign political donors an economic interest code, based either on the occupation and employer information contained on the disclosure reports or on information found through a variety of research resources. These codes are closely modeled on the Federal Securities and Exchange Commission system.

This unique database can be searched for multi-state and national trends, allowing ordinary citizens and professional researchers to "follow the money" behind key issues and from key contributors across state lines.

Links to More Resources

Missouri Ethics Commission
State-by-State Contribution Limits
Web Sites of State Governments and Legislatures
Contributions to Federal Candidates



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