Union workers rally behind Climate Union Jobs proposal
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[May 29, 2021]
By GRACE BARBIC and JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Hundreds of union workers
joined a bipartisan group of lawmakers Friday in front of the Illinois
Capitol in support of the state’s nuclear power industry.
The rally came with just four days remaining in the legislative session
and amid a complicated backdrop for the state’s nuclear power industry,
which proponents say creates about 28,000 jobs statewide.
Illinois has six nuclear stations which supply more than half of the
state’s carbon-free energy. All of them are owned and operated by Exelon
Corporation, the parent company of scandal-ridden utility giant
Commonwealth Edison.
Last year, ComEd entered a deferred prosecution agreement with federal
authorities in which they admitted to attempts to “influence and reward
Public Official A,” who was identified as former House Speaker Michael
Madigan, for that person’s favorable action on legislation. Madigan has
not been charged, but several other former ComEd officials have been
indicted.
Madigan’s former chief of staff was indicted Wednesday on charges that
he lied under oath and obstructed justice, and he pleaded not guilty
Friday, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.
The rally on behalf of nuclear energy came two days after nearly 50
Democratic legislators, identifying as the Illinois Legislative Green
Caucus, sent a letter to leadership concerning their demands in a
compromise energy overhaul package still pending release.
“We will not support a bill which is simply a handout for utilities and
does not prioritize climate and equity – we must be forward thinking and
lead with these issues. Our constituents and communities will support
nothing less,” the caucus members wrote in the letter.
One of the major questions left to be decided as lawmakers look to draft
a compromise energy plan before May 31 adjournment is what level of
subsidy Exelon will receive for at least two nuclear plants – one in
Byron, one in Dresden – that it has threatened to close without
legislative action.
Supporters of the Climate Union Jobs Act, the union-backed energy
proposal being considered in energy negotiations with the governor’s
working group, touted nuclear energy’s reliability as a carbon-free
resource.
“If we lose (the energy negotiation) it'll be 35 years until we're able
to replace that (nuclear) energy with renewable resources like solar and
wind. Losing is not an option. Winning means we save 30,000 jobs and
billions of dollars in economic development,” said Democratic Sen.
Michael Hastings, of Tinley Park, chief sponsor of CUJA.
Hastings is also chairman of the Senate Energy and Public Utilities
Committee. He was joined at the rally by Republican Sen. Sue Rezin, of
Morris, Chicago Democrat Rep. Marcus Evans Jr. and House Republican
Leader Jim Durkin, of Western Springs.
Republican Rep. David Welter, of Morris, and Republican Sen. Neil
Anderson, of Rock Island, also spoke at the rally.
The 2016 Future Energy Jobs Act, approved by the General Assembly and
tied by federal prosecutors to ComEd’s admitted bribery scheme, allows
Exelon to rack up $2.3 billion in subsidies which were funded by
electricity customers to maintain two of its nuclear plants. That
equaled more than $230 million per year for 10 years.
The governor’s plan offered about $70 million in subsidies each year for
the next five years to the Byron and Dresden plants. Negotiations on a
final amount continue.
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Hundreds of union workers joined a bipartisan group
of lawmakers in front of the Illinois Capitol Friday in support of
the state’s nuclear power industry. (Capitol News Illinois photo by
Grace Barbic)
CUJA advocates, such as Kent Bugg, president of the
Fair Assessment Information Resource Committee, or FAIRCOM, said
nuclear plant closures would have a devastating immediate impact on
communities. Bugg is also the superintendent of Coal City School
District 1.
“If the Dresden station closes in November of this year, the Coal
City school district loses 60 percent of its property tax revenue
overnight,” Bugg said. “If that happens, there's two choices,
drastically increase the tax burden on our residents or slash our
educational programming and slash emergency services to a fraction
of what they were before.”
Advocates said the Climate Union Jobs Act will also reset standard
ratemaking procedures, subjecting proposed rate hikes to greater
regulatory scrutiny, similar to a measure proposed in the Clean
Energy Jobs Act.
“But it will hold people accountable,” Hastings said at the rally
without naming any companies. “It'll hold those people that cast a
dark cloud over our state that caused this whole problem. This bill
would have been passed a long time ago if it wasn't for them, and
we're gonna hold them to the highest ethical standards that we can.”
CUJA backers touted a refund mechanism which would “protect
consumers from paying inflated costs for nuclear plants receiving
subsidies.”
The Climate Jobs Illinois coalition said state leaders still haven't
found a way to “sufficiently” fund the nuclear plants that provide
“clean energy,” which is why they suggest a 10-year bridge contract
provision.
“If the market prices increase (providing higher payment for power
generated), the bill includes a mechanism that would dynamically
respond, lowering the credit value offered to the nuclear plants to
protect consumers from paying more than necessary to operate them,”
according to a news release.
Durkin said at the rally that the “entire Republican Caucus” is
standing to ensure the nuclear fleet will continue to operate in
Illinois.
“Republicans are 100 percent committed in the House of
Representatives to finding a solution to this problem, one that is
fair to everyone, not only you (workers) but also consumers, also
everyone who relies upon good clean energy in the state of
Illinois,” Durkin said.
Should an energy proposal pass, it would likely contain provisions
from several bills before the General Assembly.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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