Before we dig deeper into the MoPEP scam that’s hurting your personal finances and your town, there’s a second big issue that affects electric power prices in our home-owned utility towns, it’s the common but very illegal and corrupt municipal practice of overcharging for utilities so the excess "profits" can be skimmed off to subsidize perpetual deficits in your city’s budgets and other local pork projects they don’t want to tell voters about.
For years, in the many petition audits resulting from petitions circulated in small towns for the state to audit their town for one irate reason or another, the state's auditors have denounced the practice of raising the kilowatt rate charged and then skimming utility “profits” off for political uses as a corrupt practice. The auditor quite rightly calls “hidden taxation.” It is “hidden taxation” and that’s exactly why it’s so popular with city council members, mayors and city administrators. The auditors hired by your city government to perform that token annual ritual known as the "independent city audit" turn a blind eye to this illegal practice because they want to get hired again next year so every year they committ fraud to give your town another "clean" audit even though they know quite well that if there was such a thing as a "clean" audit (and there isn't) yours certainly isn't one. This local audit is also known outside your town as a “sweetheart audit.” True, they are done by CPA’s but…well…let’s say the profit motive frequently overwhelms their professional ethics.
Prior to 1980, when our elected and appointed officials were short of cash they didn't look around for savings to pay for their little extras, rather they looked around for fees to raise. John Hancock, a rabid Republican from
The Rolla on-line newsletter No Standing News, calls the practice of raking off excess utility profits by to cover up city budget deficits, “Milking the Electric Cow.” These excessive rate charges either disappear via an “inter-fund transfer” from the electric department to the city’s general fund or, in Rolla’s case the money is passed out to crony organizations for things excused under that handy catch-all label, “economic development.” Rolla's lame excuse for this corrupt practice was to call this a "fee in lieu of franchise taxes" and -in an ordinance mind you - they explained that it was "in lieu of" the franchise tax the city would have gotten if their citizens hadn't paid off a $45 million G.O. bond issue to buy the utility department from it's previous private owners. In other words, the taxpayer’s punishment for paying off a huge bond issue to buy the utility company was to perpetually make them pay a phony franchise fee to the city!
That’s a much too diplomatic way of saying, “Skimming from artificially inflated utility rates to pass out pork to the city and the utility board’s cronies under the guise of “economic development” is a corrupt practice and all of you should be prosecuted and sent to jail.” Like the rural electric co-ops that rebate the excess revenues accruing from utility rates, cities that own their own utility departments and add a few cents markup to the wholesale rate should rebate any excess to their customers not use it to cover up reckless city spending, pass it secretly to pay for so-called “development projects" the voters didn't approve and don't know they're paying for. You will find a similar statement in the petition audits of Hermann 2003 and Farmington 2006 and other small towns with their own utility departments. As soon as Rolla's next petition audit is completed you will see the same statement in their second petition audit for the second time. That's our State Auditor for you, they are meticulous about documenting lawbreaking, but do nothing to stop it.
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