Page
lofi
John
Therriault
- IL AFL-CIO
Public
Comment
- Ameren’s
Petition
for
Variance
From:
“Beth
Spencer”
<BethS@ilafl-cio
.org>
To:
<therriajipcb.state.il.us>
Date:
12/22/2008
11:00 AM
L.’I
222008
Subject:
IL AFL-CIO
Public
Comment
-
Ameren’s Petition
for
Variance
STATS
OF,
CC:
“Michael
Carrigan”
<MichaelCi1afl-cio.org>
‘O1IUtion
CorJ1OIS
Oar
John:
Per our phone
conversation,
please find
attached
Public Comment
from
the Illinois
AFL-CIO,
the
IBEW and
the
UMWA
in support
of Ameren’s
Petition for
Variance.
Any
questions
please
feel tree
to contact me
or
Michael
T.
Carrigan,
president,
IL
AFL-CIO
at
217.544.4014.
Thank
you,
Beth
Spencer
Communications
Director
L AFL-CIO
Ph. 217.544.4014
Fx.
217.544.0225
bethsilafI-cio.org
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BEFORE
THE
ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
AMEREN
ENERGY
GENERATING
)
COMPANY,
AMERENENERGY
)
DEC
22
2gg
RESOURCES
GENERATING
COMPANY
)
AND
ELECTRIC
ENERGY,
INC.,
)
Pj
7
COflfroI
Board
Petitioners,
)
PCB
—
09-21
)
(Variance
—
Air)
v.
)
)
)
ILLINOIS
ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION
AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
)
TO:
John
Therriault,
Assistant
Clerk
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
James
R.
Thompson
Center
100
W.
Randolph,
Ste.
1
1-500
Chicago,
IL
60601-3218
Kathleen
Bassi
Renee
Cipriano
Amy
Antoniolli
SchiffHardin,
LLP
6600
Sears
Tower
233
South
Wacker
Drive
Chicago,
IL
60606
John
Kim
Kent
Mohr
Division
of
Legal
Counsel
ILEPA
1021
N.
Grand
Ave.
East
P.
0.
Box
19276
Springfield,
IL
62794-9276
Bradley
Halloran
Hearing
Officer
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
100W.
Randolph,
Ste.1
1-500
Chicago,
IL
60601-3218
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
that
the Illinois AFL-CIO,
International Brotherhood
of Electrical
Workers (IBEW)
and the United Mine Workers
of America
(UMWA) File Public Comment
(as follows)
Public Comment
of Michael T. Carrigan, president,
Illinois
AFL-CIO
In response to Ameren’s Petition
for Variance filed with
the Illinois Pollution Control Board,
we
wish to express our
support for approval of this variance.
It is our understanding
that the relief
Ameren requests
is very narrow and does not seek
to undo its environmental
commitments as
suggested by the public comments recently filed
by
certain environmental
groups.
The facts
are
that Ameren was the first
company to come forward
to reach an agreement with the
state to
reduce mercury emissions.
Ameren was actually one
of the chief architects of Illinois’
multi-
emission environmental
compliance strategy, working
closely with State officials.
In
addition,
the company’s strong
record of significant emissions reductions
indicates Ameren
is
as
committed
as ever to further reducing emissions
from its power plants.
This fall,
Ameren sought to move the timeframe for
installing new controls for two
reasons: (1)
regulatory uncertainty created
by the federal courts’ overturning
key federal regulations
and
(2)
the financial crisis gripping our nation.
Almost every industry
sector has been affected
by
this
crisis--the auto and banking industries
are only the most public examples.
Financial publications
have also pointed
to
the
serious problems utility companies face
because of their reliance
on
short-term financing
to
manage
their daily operations. Ameren has
stated in news releases,
financial documents and in its discussions
with the financial community
that the company has
had
great difficultly accessing capital markets
to support its operations
and refinance debt.
If granted, this variance would
allow Ameren to defer -- not
cancel --approximately
$500
million of
environmental capital expenditures,
giving the corporation breathing
room to manage through
this
crisis.
It is vital that members of the Board remember
that Ameren companies for more
than a century
have provided good jobs and stable employment
to thousands of Illinoisans.
Taxes paid by these
companies are critical to the support of schools,
emergency response organizations
and city
governments of dozens
of communities across the
state.
It
would be irresponsible for
the Board
to
ignore the realities of what is
occurring in the economy
and to push this stable company
into
financial distress.
Ameren has stated that it is not reneging
on its emissions reduction
agreement and, in fact, has
agreed to more stringent emission requirements
than the original regulation.
Over the next
decade, Ameren intends
to
install
seven to eight scrubbers
at its Illinois
plants---these
projects
will provide hundreds of
permanent and
contract
jobs
to unionized workers.
These are good
paying
jobs our state desperately
needs in
these
economically
trying times.