Showing posts with label Hermann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hermann. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

How is the City of Hermann like a chicken-killing dog?

Ed. Note: The following is an abridged version, with permission of No Standing News editor Robert W. Nash of Rolla, of an NSN editorial that appeared in November explaining how the class-action lawsuit, Arbor Investment v. City of Hermann came about and what impact a decision against the City or Hermann may have on all the unregulated municipalities in the state who have for decades indulged in inflating their utility rates so they can skim off the ‘profits’ to use for non utility purposes ranging from budget deficits to plain old political pork. This is NSN’s story….

How long are you going to let chicken-killing dogs stink up your place?   

Arbor Investment v. City of Hermann, the first of three class-action cases filed on this issue, will be argued before the Missouri Supreme Court in December and a decision is expected in spring of 2011. How the cases came about and how they will affect the three towns being sued is a fascinating story.  The decision, if it goes against the City of Hermann, could end decades of the corrupt “pump and skim” practice in hundreds of Missouri towns where utility rates are not controlled by the PSC. It would allow citizens to finally vote on utility rate increases as the Hancock Amendment intended. It could also touch off a tidal wave of municipal lawsuits. Which way it will go and whether all the rate payers who have been paying these “hidden taxes” all these years will benefit from a decision favorable to rate payers in this lawsuit, depends on several things. Read on…

What does the Hermann Hancock lawsuit mean?
The Attorney General and the State Auditor have filed amicus briefs to support the plaintiffs in a class action lawsuit Arbor Investment vs. City of Hermann which is now case # 91109 on the docket of the Missouri Supreme Court. Attorney General Koster said in his Oct. 28, 2010 press release that he was filing an amicus brief in the case for the plaintiffs because: “The law says Missouri taxpayers have the right to say when they want their taxes increased and increasing user fees for that purpose clearly is in breach of the law.”  State Auditor Montee said essentially the same thing but made a particular example of the recent Marceline audit and listed other cities where similar findings have been made.

If the City of Hermann loses, and I say the odds are they will, it means there will be a new “landmark” case from the Missouri Supreme Court telling all the unregulated towns that they must quit taking money from their utility funds to fill holes in the city budgets that they were too incompetent to balance. Some few will do it willingly but most we expect will have to have a gun held to their heads. Why do we say the odds are that the City of Hermann will lose? It’s unusual for the AG to take sides in one of these cases and unheard of for the State Auditor to join him. When two ambitious politicians, the Attorney General and the State Auditor both take sides on an issue it means they’re pretty sure who the winners and losers are going to be. 
Must reading-the primary sources: This link will take you to the SC’s docket page link with links to each of the most current briefs being presented to the Supreme Court. The brief by the Armstrong Teasdale firm on behalf of Arbor Investment et. al. is, in the editor’s opinion, very lucid and describes the issues well. The defense brief by the City of Hermann sounds sweaty and desperate. For laughs read the feeble amicus brief filed by MPUA - the mother ship of MJMEUC-MoPEP. Their argument is that the “utility customers consent to the city providing them utilities and are free to discontinue their use of the city’s services.” Oh sure they can, but only if they want to live without heat and light, and without bathing, cooking, flushing and all the other MONOPOLY city services. A typical MJMEUC opinion.

Deep down in their tiny lizard hearts these municipal lobby organizations MML and MPUA-MJMEUC) and their lawyers know that the jig’s up and sooner or later their clients are going to have to quit using their utility fees as “hidden taxes” and start submitting rate increases to the voters they just want it to be as ‘later’ as possible. In MJMEUC case, if their unregulated MoPEP members have to get the public’s consent to utility rate increases it would damage their credit rating. They’ve promised the holders of their over $2 Billion in revenue bonds that their credit strength is the (MoPEP) "participants' willingness and ability to increase rates and maintain financial metrics to support MJMEUC's debt."  They’ve got $2 Billion riding on this decision.

The City Audits that exposed the racket: No one knows how many towns are playing this skim game but it has been going on since WWII. My money says it’s not the dozen or so the auditor has uncovered but more likely there are well over a hundred or even two hundred corrupt unregulated towns in this state. In the last few years, petition audits by the State Auditor of the towns of Springfield, in 2007, Salem in 2010, Rolla in 1989 (their second state audit was 2009), Marceline in 2010 (also their second state audit), and Hermann in 2004, and, as the auditor points out in the above press releases, state petition audits of several other Missouri towns such as, Farmington, Lebanon, La Plata and others going back many years, have produced repeated condemnation from state auditors of both political parties for what they called “hidden taxation” or the practice of skimming inflated utility rates. But, like an addict loves his needle, city officials loved their secret pork machine so they flat refused to give it up even after the state auditor pulled their pants down in public. For the ethically feeble, continuing the crooked practice was easier and more rewarding than exercising the tough fiscal discipline often promised in their election campaigns.

The Lawsuits: This case started in 2006, when citizens in Hermann, Missouri represented by the firm of Armstrong Teasdale LLP, 7700 Forsyth Blvd., St. Louis, Missouri, filed a class action lawsuit against the city. In 2010, Armstrong Teasdale, finding the same conditions existed in other towns filed similar class action lawsuits on behalf of more clients in the towns of Marceline and Salem. Each lawsuit alleges basically the same violation of Sec. 22 of the Missouri Hancock Amendment to the Missouri Constitution. The three complaints charge that each of the three cities have over-charged their local utility citizen-customers by millions of dollars annually then skimmed off the ill-gotten utility ‘profits’ and used the cash to subsidize city deficits and/or fund other non-utility projects. James E. Mello of the Armstrong Teasdale firm is the lead attorney for all three suits. 

The Briefs: The oldest of the three lawsuits is the one against the City of Hermann, which was first filed in the Gasconade County Circuit Court in 2006. On Tuesday, September 21, 2010, this class action suit was accepted by the Missouri Supreme Court for transfer, which means it has been placed directly on the Supreme Court docket without the case going back to the Gasconade County circuit court on remand as the Missouri Court of Appeals ordered in their June 2010 decision. The link to the Hermann Application for Transfer is a summary of the case and contains the questions the Supreme Court is being asked to decide.  The class action suits against the cities of Salem and Marceline by citizens of those towns which raise the same questions were filed early in 2010 but have not yet been heard in their respective circuit courts. Marceline’s is the most entertaining read. The redundancy of the filings in three cities so far can be read as resolve on the part of the Armstrong Teasdale law firm to end this decades-long municipal corruption which is practiced in dozens if not hundreds of unregulated towns in this state - not just to stop the practice in the three towns being sued.

In addition to the allegation that the cities were inflating various utility fees and skimming off the excess ‘profit’ for non-utility purposes it is also alleged that they raised these utility rates without a vote of the citizens as required by the 1980 Hancock Amendment. Pumping up utility rates and skimming off the surplus for non utility uses is a popular and common practice among cities with home-owned and unregulated electric utility departments that are unprotected by the Missouri PSC. In the three lawsuits the “utilities” at issue are not just electric power but also water, sewer, natural gas, trash and communications. Although the most egregious violations are usually in electric utility rates - the greatest revenues naturally produce the greatest abuses - all utilities offered by a city for what is now called a “fee” have been abused and will be affected by this ruling.
Among the more bald-faced practitioners of this “pump ‘n skim,” scam, the utility rake-off is dumped into the general fund and spent as part of the general city budget. Among the more nervous it’s politely called “interdepartmental loans” which moves money from the lucrative utility fund to other funds (permitted by law temporarily) but the ‘loans’ are never repaid (not permitted by law). The excess utility ‘profits’ are never rebated to the utility customers and rate increases are never voted on by the public and there lies the heart of the legal question.

The Appellate “Toast” order. In their June 2010 ruling on the Hermann case the Eastern District Appellate Court gave the City of Hermann and the lower court this parting shot:
“In conclusion, we find the trial court erred in entering summary judgment in favor of the City because there is a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether and for what purpose the City increased utility fees in violation of the Hancock Amendment by setting charges at a level to increase the City’s general revenue and to subsidize general government expenditures rather than to compensate for the provision of services. Therefore, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and remanded.
If it is shown on remand that the object of the fees is to fund the City’s general revenue, then this constitutes a violation of the Hancock Amendment and deserves an appropriate remedy under the Hancock Amendment.” – 6-10 Mo. E. Dist. Court of Appeals, Arbor Investment Co…..
Translation: “You have one chance to prove that for decades you haven’t deliberately pumped up city utility fees and skimmed off the resulting ‘profits’ to benefit the city budget thereby using your monopoly captives as “hidden tax cash cows” and that said cow did, in fact, jump over the moon. If you can’t prove this, you’re toast.”
Of course the City of Hermann denies that they ever intentionally inflated utility rates so they could skim off the excess revenues for non-utility uses. They say it was just an accident which happened with uncanny regularity month after month, year after year, decade after decade. All the corrupt cities like Rolla who steal their utility funds this way tell the same lie. Any lingering question about the City of Hermann’s intent was blasted sky high at the 9/29/10 Hermann city council meeting when Hermann’s Alderman Penning blurted out, “We had an election in the 50s in this town to go into the electrical business to make money to run the city….It was done specifically to make money to run the city.” It’s fair to say that Alderman Penning doesn’t have a firm grip on the defense strategy in their case.
 
Marceline refuses rescue offer. Some of these towns are so thick they still don’t get it and Marceline leads this pack of Stupids. Not only are they soaking their citizens with the highest utility rate in the state (15¢ per kWh, but Rolla is closing in on the rail with 10.3¢ per kWh) but they’re also running their town almost entirely out of their utility fund which is municipal hari-kari if the Hermann decision and/or their own later class action lawsuit goes against them. How will they cut back their city budget by 62% in one year? 
The Marceline Malefactors have refused a settlement offer made by James Mello of Armstrong Teasdale, LLC on behalf of the three Marceline plaintiffs who are suing the city. As part of the settlement the plaintiffs would drop the lawsuit and Mello and the firm would arrange bridge financing and other financial assistance while the Marceline Malefactors figure out how to run a town without sucking the utilities dry and exploiting its citizens with the highest utility rates in the Midwest. The law firm would charge a substantial fee for this remedial class in city government but the reprobates in City Hall really can’t expect the law firm to provide the means of a massive bail-out and teach them how to govern for nothing. The firm’s fees for this service would be high but probably less than the cost of the inevitable court-ordered bankruptcy and the long-term economic damage such headlines would cause which is their almost certain fate right now. In exchange, the city would have to quit ripping-off its citizens but that, it seems, was too high a price to pay. (In the infamous Jefferson County Alabama Ch. 9 bankruptcy a federal judge appointed a lawyer to be the court-appointed receiver at $500 per hour but the judge cautioned him not to bill the county for more than 10 hours per day!) 

The stiff-necked Marceline city government flat refused the offer because to accept it and stop milking their citizens would be to publicly admit their guilt and they absolutely refuse to do that even though they’ve twice been caught by the state auditor with both hands and feet in the cookie jar. Instead, they asked citizens to volunteer to serve on a finance committee. Marcelanians may not be the brightest but they weren’t that stupid. There were no volunteers.
At the November 2nd Marceline city council meeting, Mayor Stuart, city manager Liz Cupp and the Council came up with their second most wonderfulist idea ever (the first being the idea to fund 62% of the whole city budget out of their 15-cent per kilowatt utility rate). They made plans to put a referendum on the April 2011 ballot asking the citizens of Marceline to vote on whether they would like to have the Council to continue to transfer money from the electrical fund and continue “business as usual!” The sheer idiocy of it takes your breath away doesn’t it? These people are afflicted with the same brain disease as Herman’s Alderman Penning. They actually think a local referendum will absolve them of compliance with what they fear will be the outcome of the Hermann case before the Missouri Supreme Court and subsequently their own case. 
These people are beyond saving. They’re like having a chicken-killing hound. He may be your favorite hunting dog but when he begins killing your chickens there are only two choices, cure him or shoot him. The only way to cure him is to take a chicken he’s killed and a stout piece of rope and tie that chicken on his back and leave it there until it rots and falls off and he stinks so bad the other dogs can’t stand him and he even looks ashamed and can’t stand himself. If that doesn’t cure him you just have to shoot him. The problem is you have to live with the stinking dog while you’re trying to cure him of killing your chickens. Marceline’s city government never was a good hunting dog to begin with. The dead rotting chicken has been stinking a long time and they’re still killing chickens. It’s time to just shoot them with a mass recall election.
What will it CO$T if Hermann, Marceline and Salem lose?
In each of the three lawsuits the plaintiffs are asking for “damages, declaratory judgment and injunctive relief.” If the Supreme Court finds the skimming practice to be an illegal “hidden tax,” that automatically makes it a violation of the Hancock law, so the plaintiffs ask that they be immediately stopped from doing it and they ask that the excessive utility charges which were transferred from one or more utility funds to other funds for up to six preceding years be refunded to their utility customers. Presumably, if the current utility rate is illegal it could be ordered rolled back to the last voted legal rate which may have been years ago or to 1980. That would require immediate action by the city to hold a public referendum to try to restore the kilowatt or water or trash rate to its current illegal level. All these “ifs” are up to the court. 

The plaintiffs in each city are asking the utility rebate to the rate payers from the alleged illegal transfers for the years 2005 to 2009 in Marceline which transfers would total $3,335,220. In Salem the total is $4,700,000, in Hermann the rebates would be a total of $5,255,052 because they were skimming from six different utility accounts. In addition to refunding some of their ill-gotten gains the cities may have to pay some or all of the legal fees and costs of the plaintiffs.

The Supreme Court can do all of the above or none or something else entirely but the very least that will happen if they find this practice has been illegal is that the city of Hermann (Salem and Marceline in their turn) will be ordered to cease this practice and the people will be relieved of a gross injustice and henceforth be able to vote on utility rate increases as they should have been doing since 1980. If that happens, the deceitful anti-Hancock cities will have sudden large holes in their budgets and will have to learn how to run their cities without a subsidy from the utility fund. Is that a bad thing? They would also have to learn how to make a convincing case to the voting public when they honestly need a rate increase. That’s accountability.

The budget shortfall in Hermann would be about 35% just for the annual utility skim which is bad enough but in Marceline over 62% of their annual city budget is skimmed from the utility fund. And here is the mother of all ironies – if they’re ordered to pay back the millions they’ve taken from inflating and skimming the utility accounts they’d have to do it WITHOUT being able to use the money from inflating and skimming their utility accounts!

What will happen to all other guilty unregulated towns?
If the Supreme Court’s decision goes against the city, any unregulated Missouri city guilty of the same practice that does not likewise voluntarily roll back utility rates and take other prudent remedial measures will be wide-open to an easy-to-win lawsuit by any local ratepayer and his $300-per-hour-plus-expenses lawyer. Unlike the remedial offer made to Marceline, other lawyers can just use the precedent, file a lawsuit, collect an out-of-court cash settlement with little or no judicial fuss and walk away leaving the city to continue to milk their electric cow. This can happen over and over and with a confidentially agreement to keep it all secret you’ll never know who city hall is paying off or for how much but you will be paying the settlements out of your utility bills.

The “Hermann decision” will not be self-enforcing
but more like a Do-It-Yourself-Kit
If the Supreme Court decision in Arbor vs. City of Hermann is that cities may not fund non utility activities out of their utility account and must get voter approval of appropriate fee increases, it doesn’t mean every city council in the state that is guilty of doing the same thing Hermann has been doing will automatically stop their illegal practices. Human nature being what it is – intractable - and city council’s being what they are – dense – many or maybe most will go right ahead and continue to do the same thing they have been doing for decades, victimizing their fellow citizens while making up whining excuses why their reason for doing it is different and justified unless they see chain gangs of city councilmen in perp walks on TV - which they won’t. 

So don’t sit back and wait for the hound dogs to stop killing your chickens because it won’t happen. There will be no thunderbolt to strike them dead for you - mores the pity. God only helps those who get off their fat asses and file class-action suits. What the Hermann case does mean is that local citizens may have a great new precedent or almost a do-it-yourself-kit with which to file their own class action suit and a fairly easy time winning it. “Attach lawyer A to the new Landmark Hermann Case B and insert nozzle into…”

If the past is a predictor of the future, and it usually is, citizens in all the little unregulated towns in Missouri who are paying gawd-awful utility prices had better be thinking about doing what the citizens in Hermann, Marceline and Salem have done which is calling up the lawyers at Armstrong Teasdale or some other law firm and offering to be one of the names on a class action lawsuit against their City of Really-High-Utility-Rates-With-No-Votes.  Initiating a class-action lawsuit shouldn’t cost the plaintiffs (that would be you) much except maybe for some filing fees and it’s the only way people (that would be you too) are ever going to get their utility, sewer and water rates down to something reasonable and competitive and have the privilege of voting on all future utility increases that qualify for a Hancock Amendment vote (also you).

The Hancock Amendment, or the power to vote on some utility rate increases is, for those rural cities who have been left naked without PSC protection for the last 71 years, our rather crude substitute for the Public Service Commission protection we have been entitled to but haven’t had since 1939. We pay state taxes so city people can have PSC protection but we don’t get PSC protection because we live in unregulated municipalities. So Hancock law solution is not perfect but it’s all we’ve got and for three decades they’ve even robbed us of that. 

Armstrong Teasdale is the law firm representing the plaintiffs in the Arbor Investment Co vs. City of Hermann. I say hire the cook with the most experience because beginners are going to have a long and expensive learning curve but shoot, pick any lawyer you like.   

The point is that State Auditors have been telling citizens for decades that City Hall was robbing us with “hidden taxes” but nobody knew how to make them stop it without paying a fortune for a private public service lawsuit and none of the local lawyers had the guts to sue them anyway. Even after state petition audits of local governments pulled down their panties they’ve continued to do it every day since. Now there are these guys at this big law firm who obviously know what they’re doing and have laid out the whole road map and it sure looks like they’re going to pull it off. The people in Hermann, Marceline and Salem who had the guts to stand up and sue over something that was so obviously corrupt are going for it because they’ve had enough of being victimized by their own elected city officials.

It’s probably the last chance you’ll ever have so the question is this, how long are you going to put up with letting these chicken-killing dogs hang around your yard stinking up the place?    

James E. Mello                                  Jeff McPherson
Phone:  314-621-5070                         Phone: 314-552-6610
Direct Phone: 314-342-4154
Fax:  314-621-5065 
 jmello@armstrongteasdale.com

Thursday, September 16, 2010

The not-so-final deal to cover Prairie State cost overruns

The September 15, 2010, Bond Buyer headline confidently declared “Final Prairie State Deal Looms” announcing that the nine municipal consortium owners – MJMEUC among them – will have to pony up another BILLION dollars to cover the cost overruns on this ill-fated coal-fired power plant. Calling this the “final deal” was just way too optimistic.

Don’t confuse this article about the additional debt necessary to cover the colossal cost overruns on the Prairie State plant which was exposed by the Chicago Tribune in July, with the Kansas City Star’s expose on September 8th, of the colossal cost overruns that will have to be covered on the Iatan 2 power plant, another of MJMEUC’s ill-advised high-risk investments.

These belated reports on the true costs of both Prairie State and Iatan 2 plants, and the accelerating cost of the megawatts both plants will eventually generate, should make for interesting discussion at the next MoPEP meeting when CEO Kincheloe and CFO Loethen try to explain to their members that finding their share of the Prairie State BILLION dollar cost overrun to add to the billions in debt they already have and doubling the cost of the power it produces is....no big deal?

MJMEUC owns 12.3% of PS and has already invested over $600 M in the project. Because they are owners the joint venture MJMEUC/MoPEP members will have to throw in about another $60 million to cover their share of the cost overruns at this stage of construction which is still less than 50% complete. There is no telling how astronomical the cost per megawatt will finally be when the last 50% of the plant is finished because from here on it’s all cost overruns!

At the next MoPEP meeting CEO Duncan Kincheloe will stumble through some admin-babble explanation to the utility managers, mayors and city administrators who are used to having smoke blown up their noses and have unquestioningly swallowed all the sunshine construction reports they have been getting for years from CEO Duncan Kincheloe and his Project Manager Vern Kincheloe. Will any of these gullible MoPEP members wonder if their MJMEUC/MoPEP investment in PS, which was supposed to produce $35 MW power, is still cost effective at $64.40 per MW?

How high does the price have to go before they realize they’ve been had - $75, $85, $100 per MW? Which of MJMEUC's other power investment gambles will be the next to report billions in cost overruns that the Kincheloe Family construction reports haven’t mentioned?

Finally someone - an IMPA official in this article - admitted what anyone with a grain of common sense (that automatically excludes everyone who voted for a MoPEP contract) knew, “For all participating agencies, the increased costs will ultimately mean higher electric rates for municipalities and other customers that buy their power from the agencies.”

The article quoted MJMEUC CFO Mike Loethen as saying MJMEUC/MoPEP plans to issue additional debt to cover its increased costs, although those numbers have not yet been finalized. “The immediate need for funds is not there yet, but we may enter the market before the end of the year to take advantage of the BAB program,” Loethen said.

The “immediate need is not there yet?” Which “immediate need” is Loethen talking about? The “immediate need” to borrow more millions to cover Prairie State cost overruns, the “immediate need” to borrow more millions to cover the Iatan 2 cost overruns or the “immediate need” to cover the cost overruns for the remainder of both the Prairie State and Iatan 2 construction?

Even leveraging the usual first lien on the utility revenues of their newest member, the City of Lebanon, and cashing the check for Lebanon's join-up fee of $550,000 won’t begin to cover the ante-up on these plants and even if it did there are all those lawsuits. There is the one by Kennett and Poplar Bluff against MJMEUC because Duncan allegedly stole their Plum Point transmission rights and gave them away to other members - that one may cost MJMEUC millions. Then there are the class action Hancock lawsuits against Hermann, Marceline and Salem that MJMEUC/MoPEP members haven’t been told about. If successful those will permanently cripple MJMEUC’s ability to squeeze unlimited rate increases out of their obtuse MoPEP captives. The bond rating agencies aren’t going to like that one at all.

MJMEUC's upside down pyramid of debt that teeters precariously on top of 35 little rural Missouri towns just gets bigger….and bigger….and bigger….

The Bond Buyer – Final Prairie State Deal Looms
Agencies Gear Up For Coal Plant Sale

By Caitlin Devitt and Yvette Shields Wednesday, September 15, 2010

CHICAGO — Public power agencies in Indiana and Ohio plan to return to the market this month with their final borrowings for the Prairie State coal-fired plant project that has risen in cost by more than $1 billion to $4.4 billion.

The nine power agencies that own a stake in the Prairie State Energy Campus will need to come up with more than $1 billion to cover rising construction costs associated with the project, one of the only new coal plants being built in the U.S. more…

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The cure for the MoPEP Mistake


The MoPEP mistake reveals serious flaws in Missouri’s power distribution system that must be corrected. There was a reason - but not a good one - why municipally-owned utilities have been exempt from PSC oversight regulation – the reason was politics. To our local politicians, who don’t have the skills to manage a budget or the stomach to face the voters to justify the fee increases they claim they need, the municipally-owned system with its ability to (theoretically) add a nearly unlimited local mark-up to the wholesale power cost is a sweet little money-maker. Local utility rates and revenues can and have been manipulated to provide the extra revenues city hall needed to cover up budget deficits and use for less savory but equally illegal purposes. Power costs and rates had been low and fairly stable for decades so few citizens noticed what their government was doing to them. In the 80’s, after the Hancock Amendment was passed, cities were prohibited from raising most local service fees without consent of the voters. Politicians would rather milk a mouse than ask voters to approve fee increases for trash collection or street work because such tax increase campaigns raise issues of mismanagement and political practices that politicians prefer not to stir up. With their other revenue generators cut off by Hancock, this covert source of money that could be raised under the guise of covering increased wholesale rates was a godsend. Finding more money to buy more things is what keeps politicians in office.

This covert system of taxation without representation worked so well for Marceline Missouri that over 60% of their city budget comes from their utility “profits.” Imagine the panic in Marceline’s city hall if the Hermann class action lawsuit prevails and the court confirms what the Missouri Auditor has said for years and what they also told Hermann in a 2003 petition audit: Rates for utility services should be set to cover the costs of producing and delivering services (including administrative costs), repaying bonds, and repairing and replacing infrastructure. These utility services should not generate profits to fund other services provided by the city. The existing utility rate structures have allowed the city to, in effect, levy additional taxes without a vote of the citizens.” The City of Hermann ignored the state auditor and their reward was that in 2006 some of their frustrated citizens filed a class action suit against them.

The State Auditor said the same thing to Springfield in a 2007 petition audit: “Rates for utility services should be set to cover the costs of producing and delivering services, and utility services should not generate profits to fund (through subsidization) other services provided by the city or other utility departments or provide the opportunity for CU to spend monies unnecessarily.” In 1998 the auditor said the same thing to Rolla but Rolla’s city council didn’t pay attention either. Their reward is that Rolla citizens petitioned for another state audit this time with special emphasis on their utility’s illegal practices. That audit should be done this fall.

Missouri’s unmonitored, unregulated, widely corrupted home-owned utility systems have long provided fertile ground for political abuses and many have taken full advantage of it. Kincheloe saw the weakness in these corrupt and inifficent systems and he exploited them by getting a first lien on all of our electric revenues to use as collateral for his investments in coal-fired plants. Ironically it was his exploitation and the cascade of fee increases he triggered in 2006 with his $1.2 billion in investments that focused more than one local spotlight on their utility fees; the MoPEP “wholesale” price, the size of the local markup and how that markup was being used for things other than providing power. Citizens in many of the 32 towns began to learn how they’ve been ‘had’ for decades even before MoPEP’s “economies of scale” jacked their wholesale and retail rates up by 45% or more.

Memphis Missouri has had a MoPEP contract since 2001. In a 2006 Memphis Democrat article the people of Memphis were very unhappy with the price increases they were getting from this gee-whiz MoPEP middleman who told them when they signed up that he was going to give them cheap electricity through “economies of scale.” The article in the Memphis Democrat said, Since 2001 when the city established its current rate schedule for electricity, Memphis has experienced a 71-percent increase in the wholesale cost of power. According to an independent report from the city’s engineering firm of Barnes, Henry, Meisenheimer & Gende, Inc., the city went from paying $700,000 to buy power to $1.2 million in 2006. It has baffled many of us how anyone could believe that “economies of scale” will result from adding MoPEP’s middleman markup and their “unlimited direct costs” to the wholesale price of what was your former electric supplier’s direct-to-you wholesale cost, but most of the MoPEP Kool-aid drinkers have missed the illogic in this “economies of scale” system. Duncan Kincheloe came to the Memphis meeting in an attempt to defend MoPEP’s outrageous rate increases but he just made the same lame excuses he's still making today. "It's not my fault' it's because of federal deregulation."

This is our tipping point. The world of energy is undergoing a vast and permanent change. The ‘old power’ system, that has had us trapped in a network of power lines and burning fossil fuels as our primary source of energy, is coming to an end much faster than anyone predicted. Someday our great, great grandchildren will laugh at the idea that we paid hundreds of dollars a month for power. Over the next decades, rapid changes and innovations in energy will help us reduce our oil gluttony and change forever the way we do everything. T. Boone Pickens, fossil fuel billionaire, got fed up waiting for leadership from the Washington political vacuum so he launched a personal initiative primarily in wind and solar power. T. Boone is no slouch when it comes to guessing futures in power – in fact, when and where he invests his money makes the market in power futures.

But Duncan Kincheloe - a slave to his own dirty coal investments – has us trapped in the old fossil fuel power system and he tells us to resign ourselves to paying the horrific “stable” high prices he will eventually charge us to pay off the China/India-inflated construction costs of the newest plants he has foolishly invested in. These late-to-the-table, belching coal-fired dinosaurs MoPEP has invested in will eventually be replaced by diverse, renewable and less lethal forms of power generation. If we allow ourselves to be trapped by MoPEP’s tired ideas and narrow thinking, our rural towns will not be able to take advantage of the new power sources and innovations that will significantly increase the appeal of living and working in rural America. We will not be able to offer businesses the lower cost of energy they will look for in the new economy. Who do we want to take our lead from, Duncan Kincheloe or T. Boone Pickens?

Rockport Missouri is already getting 124% of their power from the giant windmill farm in northwestern Missouri. Greensburg Kansas was devastated by a tornado in May 2007. The Greensburg City Council passed a resolution on May 19, 2008, that “all city building projects will be built to LEED Platinum level standards.” Think about that. They’re not just going to rebuild their town they’re going to do it to Platinum standards! Greensburg owned their own utility too but they are rebuilding ‘green’ with 100% renewables and a lot of wind and solar power in large and small scale applications. They aren’t doing this thing halfway. They set the highest standards for their rebuilding and as a result they have had millions of dollars worth of national publicity, have been featured in a TV special and will continue to be a spotlight community for the nation. If they can do this from a tornado stripped and devastated town, we should be able to do it from where we are. The Greensburg mayor said, “This makes us the first city in the United States to do this and it shows the world "how green we are." What more could you ask for to become an economic development magnet and market your town as having the highest quality and the lowest cost of living of any town in America? Greensburg is the Platinum standard we should be studying but first we have to get our of our MoPEP trap.

The Guardian newspaper in the U. K. reports that the European Union is planning to build solar thermal collectors in the Sahara to power all of the EU. At least they have a plan; all we have is T. Boone Pickens. Despite the lack of political will in Washington the public will not be denied and people, towns, schools and corporations are going ahead with conversions to wind and solar on their own at a phenomenal rate. The Highway Patrol Troop I Headquarters in Rolla has just put up a windmill. It won’t supply all their power needs but it’s a smart beginning. Columbia Missouri’s voters have mandated that their city government bid only power companies that get a certain percentage of their power from renewable sources. If other communities follow that trend, that type of pressure will give suppliers incentive to take a different road in investing and developing new power sources. The only countries still building coal-fired plants are the underdeveloped countries of China and India. Since their largely coal-fired smog has embarrassed them and fouled the Olympic Games, even China is beginning to rethink their carbon power policies but not Kincheloe - he just keeps buying stock in coal-fired power.

We either need to sell off our small town antique utility systems to the large commercial power suppliers - at which time we can legitimately charge them annual “franchise” fees for public access and the revenues can legitimately be spent as part of the general fund revenues - or we must demand our legislator’s pass new laws to put our local utility rate-setters under PSC regulation and stop them from illegally raising utility rates in violation of the Hancock Law to use as patronage payments and to cover up city budget mismanagement. Our local politicians have proven they can’t be trusted to run our city-owned utility departments fairly and ethically so it’s time to take their pork toys away and make them balance our budgets the old fashioned way – by living within their means…and ours. From now to November it’s prime political season. We must nail all the people running for state offices about the MoPEP situation and demand to know what they’re going to do for us. Which candidates are with the electric rate payers and which are with the MoPEP gang?

For a decade or two power demands will continue to be supplied in large part by the old technology but as new tech power takes over, as we learn to conserve and as we switch to more energy efficient mechanics, demand for ‘old economy’ power will decline. As their formerly captive customers fall away, the coal-fired dinosaurs will have to raise kilowatt prices ever higher to repay the billions in revenue bond debt it cost to build these belated generation plants that have capital costs many times higher than the older coal plants. The more they raise their prices the more affordable and desirable home solar, wind, biogas and geothermal alternatives become and the less willing communities will be to use coal sources. Detroit became fat and complacent because they dominated the market until they thought they were the auto market. “What was good for General Motors was good for America” they said. They believed they would dominate the world market forever. Now they can’t give away their gas-guzzling SUV’s.

We don’t want our well-loved small towns to become SUV’s in the coming Prius world.