Tuesday, December 06, 2011
 
sponsored by

Council agrees on BlueStar; alternate energy provider question on March ballot

Send a link to a friend

[December 06, 2011]  At last week's committee of the whole meeting of the Lincoln City Council, aldermen asked that Aaron Rasty of BlueStar Energy and Mike Ellis, formerly of MidAmerican Energy, be invited to this week's meeting to field questions and clarify some issues the council was concerned about. 

Monday evening, Mayor Keith Snyder said that neither man was available to attend this week's meeting. However, Michael Maniscalco, executive director of the Lincoln & Logan County Development Partnership, and partnership board member Steve Smith were in attendance on behalf of BlueStar Energy. 

Last fall at the Illinois Municipal League conference in Chicago, some of the city aldermen had the opportunity to meet and talk with BlueStar at a booth the company had set up for the conference. 

Later, BlueStar was invited to Logan County to meet with various officials throughout the county. 

The development partnership brought BlueStar to a city council meeting several weeks ago, and the firm's representative George Voorhees explained electric aggregation and the benefits it could have for Lincoln residents. 

Later Rasty attended a meeting with the council and also discussed the benefits and outlined the process of establishing a referendum to allow electric aggregation. 

During the course of these meetings, there has been some confusion as to what BlueStar's role is in the process of electric aggregation for the city of Lincoln. 

Part of this confusion comes from the fact BlueStar serves not only as consultants, but also as independent energy providers. 

Up until Monday night, it wasn't clear whether or not BlueStar would be consulting plus bidding for the electric business inside city limits. One point Smith drove home was that BlueStar, as the city of Lincoln's consultant, will not be bidding on the city's electric needs. 

Smith said that as consultants, the first order of business for BlueStar will be to educate the public and get a referendum passed saying voters are interested in electric aggregation. 

After the referendum passes, if it does, their role would then be to act as the agent for the city, seeking bids on electricity from a wide variety of providers. According to Smith, approximately 17 to 19 will be contacted for the bid process. 

BlueStar would also be the ones to discuss with the city what type of program or programs they would want to offer to citizens. 

Snyder said he has had conversations about this with Rasty and has seen samples of contracts from providers. He noted some contracts include incentives such as senior discounts. 

Snyder said in his conversations with Rasty, he had asked some of the questions the council had voiced last week. 

One big question that had come up last week was if customers aren't happy, whom their contract is with and whom they complain to. Rasty told Snyder that BlueStar would always be the ones customers should come to with their issues. 

Smith also talked about the safety net for residents in the aggregate programs. He said it first had to be voter-approved for the city to move forward at all. In addition, if and when it is approved, if the rates from the other providers end up being higher than Ameren, the whole thing can be dropped. In addition, for the residents, they have the ability to "opt out" of the city's chosen program, and in addition, they can go in search of their own provider, and they won't necessarily be locked back into Ameren. 

For the most part, the aldermen were not concerned with the act of electric aggregation.  They felt they understood the process and were comfortable that the city should go forward with it. 

Their primary concern was whether or not they were making a mistake going with the first and thus far only consultant firm that has approached them. 

Aldermen David Wilmert asked why the council would not want to look at other consultants. 

[to top of second column]

Smith said there were a variety of reasons. With the exception of Good Energy out of the state of New York, most of the consulting firms out there are simply one-man operations with no staff behind them.   

BlueStar is also local, with offices located in Peoria. 

In addition, the firm played a large role in getting state laws passed that would allow for aggregation. 

BlueStar Energy is being endorsed by the development partnership and has already gained consulting contracts with the villages of Atlanta, Emden and Middletown, and a vote was taking place in Mount Pulaski Monday night. 

Alderman Tom O'Donohue commented that BlueStar had come before the council three times because the development partnership brought them to the city. He wanted to know what the partnership's process for choosing BlueStar had been. 

Maniscalco said they had done their due diligence in selecting BlueStar. The partnership had looked at the fact the firm had been invested in writing the laws regarding electric aggregation, had published articles on the subject and is local. 

O'Donohue then wondered why the partnership's due diligence had not been relayed to the city. It was then brought up there had been a meeting of several officials, countywide, and that Alderwoman Kathy Horn had been in attendance. 

Smith commented, "We did reach out to invite the council." 

Alderman Buzz Busby asked how BlueStar would make money working for the city. The answer was the firm would collect their fees basically from the supplier the city ends up signing with. 

Busby is also one who has been very concerned about the rates in the contract. Once he learned that BlueStar would not be bidding on the actual electricity, he became more comfortable with the decision to hire them as consultants. 

When the council voted to hire BlueStar two weeks ago, it was with conditions. The contract presented to the city had no length of service in it. The motion was made "subject to" the contract term being of an agreeable length of time. 

Since that vote, city attorney Bill Bates had contacted BlueStar about this, and they had said the contract could take effect immediately and be written to end with the first expiration date of the contract with the chosen supplier. 

Smith said this would still be something that couldn't be decided immediately. He said different companies would offer different service terms and attach their best prices to them. He said, for example, one company might offer their best price on a one-year contract, while another would offer their best price on a three-year contact. 

Bates also told the council that on this week's agenda is a motion to go forward with the referendum by passing an ordinance to that effect. He told the council he would not advise passing that ordinance until they were certain of a consultant. He noted promotion of the referendum and the process of seeking bids and selecting a provider were things the aldermen and city officials had neither the time nor the knowledge to do on their own, and a consultant really was needed to carry this out. 

In the end the council agreed they were ready to stick with BlueStar as their consultant, and later in the evening they approved by unanimous vote the ordinance needed for the referendum. 

The referendum will be on the March ballot, and an alternate energy provider may be offered to Lincoln constituents this coming summer. 

[By NILA SMITH]

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching and Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law and Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health and Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor