Consumers Council calls for legislators to reject HB 124 and SB 50.

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

The following op-ed, by our chair Joan Bray,  appeared in the Columbia Tribune.

Why should State legislators reject House Bill 124 and Senate Bill 50?

         The bills, which are identical, would repeal a fundamental consumer protection by allowing Ameren Missouri and other electric monopolies to recover from customers the cost of an “early site permit” to build a second nuclear power plant.  The result of the legislation would be higher rates for families and businesses – at a time when everyone is struggling to recover from the recession.

            Current law forbids a utility for charging its customers for a new plant until the plant is producing energy.

            In 1976, the public put that law on the ballot through the initiative petition process.  The voters passed it overwhelmingly, by a nearly 2 to 1 ratio.

      The Consumers Council of Missouri opposes Ameren’s effort to change the law.   We have engaged in the debate in the Capitol because:

            1.         The Legislature should not overturn the will of the voters.

            2.         Ameren ultimately wants to shift the risk for building a nuclear plant away from its stockholders to its customers.  This is just the first step. 

                        Ameren is a private corporation that has a monopoly on providing energy within its service area.  It operates under state regulations that allow it a generous profit of 10.1 percent, even in this recession. 

                        But the financial world is signaling that nuclear plants are extremely risky because of outrageous cost overruns.  In discussing financing a nuclear plant through the private credit market, Tom Voss, president and CEO of Ameren Corp., told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: “We just couldn’t do it.  The risk would be too great.  We don’t think people would lend us the money.  We don’t think our board of directors would approve it.  And we don’t think our stockholders would think it’s prudent.

                        If Ameren has decided that the numbers don’t work for its shareholders to invest in the plant, why is it okay to foist that risk upon the rest of us?  Why should customers bear the burden of costs that could spiral out of control? 

                        Ameren’s customers should pay attention to what is taking place in Florida.  In December 2006 Florida Power & Light Co. introduced a plan to build a nuclear power plant that would cost $6 billion and begin operating in 2016.  As of May 2010 the cost was projected at $22.5 billion and the operational start date moved back to 2021.  It is hard to know if the project will ever be completed, but huge prepayment costs are being charged on customers’ bills.

            3.         Ameren is asking its customers to reimburse it $40 million for money it has already spent.  It made the decision to spend the money for the permit with no assurance it could change the law and charge its customers for the expenditure. Contrary to proponents’ claims, HB 124 and SB 50 would not produce any jobs.  Ameren would only be reimbursed for money it has already spent on the permit.

            4.         Ameren’s customers are already weighed down with rate increases.  Within the past two years, the company has been granted $577 million in rate increases.  It is now back before the Public Service Commission seeking $263 million more.  That means the average residential customer has seen her annual bill increase around $200 – or 26 percent – and is facing 11 percent more if Ameren gets its way this year.  Another rate increase to reimburse the company for the permit application would be just piling on.

            5.         The pending legislation would weaken the utility’s incentive to keep costs down.  Experience shows that when investor-owned utilities are allowed to charge for power plants before completion, cost overruns are much more likely.  When utility investors must risk their own money, like any other business owners, pencils are sharpened and efficiencies are greater.

                        The current law was in effect when the first nuclear power plant was built.  As a result, consumers were saved from having to pay approximately $400 million in cost overruns. 

            Missouri consumers have enjoyed relatively low energy costs in years past.  That is because our state had a well-regulated industry due to its laws and the work of the regulator, the Public Service Commission.  But that dynamic has changed in recent years through the utilities’ success in getting laws passed to diminish the PSC’s oversight and allow guaranteed rate increases through a variety of surcharges.

            This session the Legislature must stand up to Ameren and its fellow utilities and, using the voice of the people, utter a resounding “No!” to HB 124 and SB 50.

Joan Bray, Chair Consumers Council of Missouri

Consumers Council Elects New Officers

Saturday, November 20th, 2010

 

Consumers Council Elects New Officers

            October 17, 2010 – St. Louis, MO – The Consumers Council of Missouri  has elected new officers for 2011.

                        President,  Senator Joan Bray, who is term limited and will retire from the Missouri Legislature in January: Vice Presidents, Joyce Armstrong, former Executive Director of the ACLU and Jackie Hutchinson, Director of Energy Programs at the Human Development Corporation; Secretary/Treasurer, Bruce Sommer, retired Director of America’s Center and former St. Louis Alderman.          

Board members elected to a one year term are:  Mike Dandino, Wayne Goode, Treina Lind, Renee Marver, and Joan Suarez.

Consumers Council Supports Credit Cardholders’ Bill of Rights

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

    The House of Representatives recently passed the Credit Cardholders’ Bill of Rights.  This land mark legislation is now in the Senate.  Consumers Council of Missouri has signed on as a supporter of the Dodd/Shelby substitute to the bill which will curb some of the most arbitrary, abusive and unfair credit card lending practices that trap consumers in a vicious cycle of debt.

The bill prohibits:

*  Applying unfair interest rate hikes retroactively to balances incurred under old rates;

* Assessing hidden and unjustified interest charges on balances already paid off;

* Piling on the debt that consumers owe by requiring them to pay off balances with lower interest rates before those with higher rates;

* Charging late fees even though consumers mail their payments seven days in advance of the due date; and

* Charging excessive upfront fees to subprime cards targeted at consumers with blemished credit histories.

Nuclear Plant Bill Worrisome for Consumers

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Missouri’s energy debate is about to go nuclear.

A state lawmaker filed a bill in the Legislature on Thursday that sets the stage for a battle between utility interests who want to build a new nuclear plant and consumer groups that are leery of the costs.

The action comes the day after AmerenUE chief executive Tom Voss visited key decision makers in the Capitol to lobby for the bill.  Click here to read the entire St. Louis Post-Dispatch article which includes quotes from John Coffman, our lobbyist.

In Memory of Consumers Council Founder Alberta Slavin

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, Michael Sorkin10/28/2008
Alberta Slavin, who founded the consumer movement in Missouri 40 years ago with a group of housewives angry over grocery prices, died Monday (Oct. 27, 2008) at St. Louis University Hospital after a lengthy illness. She was 78 and a longtime Clayton resident.
Her Housewives Elect Lower Prices (HELP) group gained national prominence in 1967 targeting supermarkets over high prices in inner city neighborhoods. She then formed the Utility Consumers Council of Missouri after the phone company cut off her service because she wasn’t using a company-approved telephone.Gov. Joe Teasdale named her in 1977 to the Missouri Public Service Commission, calling her the first consumer advocate to head it.For nearly seven years in the 1980s, she was the “On Your Side” reporter at KMOV-TV.

In 2001, Attorney General Jay Nixon named her to the board of directors of the new Missouri Health Foundation and she became its president. Today, the foundation has more than $1 billion on hand to help Missourians improve their health.

In 2006, Mrs. Slavin again became concerned at what she considered the lack of consumer influence to counter utilities and their allies in Jefferson City. She formed the Consumers Council of Missouri, a budding statewide group that speaks for consumers. Today, the group is fighting an effort by AmerenUE to reverse a state law preventing electric companies from charging customers for power plants before they become operational.

Missouri voters approved the law in 1976 and Mrs. Slavin and her first consumers council led the fight.Mrs. Slavin remained president of the newly reconstituted group until her death. “She was Ms. Consumer in Missouri for decades,” said Sen. Joan Bray, D-University City.  Please click here to read the entire article.

Consumers Council hosts annual meeting

Friday, November 30th, 2007

‘It’s not a fair fight,’ former utilities regulator says

Excerpt from the St. Louis Post-Distpach 

By Michael D. Sorkin

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 

To hear Steve Gaw tell it, consumers have little influence these days in the halls of government.  Legislators, even the good ones, don’t understand the arcane issues in regulating big electric, natural gas, telephone and water companies.  For the full story, click here.

Join Consumers Council, says consumer advocate

Friday, November 16th, 2007

excerpt from an article by . . .
By Michael D. Sorkin
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Where can consumers turn for help?

There’s the Office of the Missouri Public Counsel, a small state agency which represents consumers and has been flexing its muscles lately. And there’s the Consumers Council of Missouri, a tiny group with big ambitions.

Membership in the consumers council costs $10 a year. The group’s second annual meeting is at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 28, at the Brentwood Community Center, 2505 South Brentwood Boulevard in Brentwood. Guest speaker is Steve Gaw, former speaker of the Missouri House and until recently, a commissioner on the Public Service Commission.

For the full article, click here.