Michigan
Nessel Announces Deal To End Use Of Coal In Michigan
As a part of her advocacy for reasonably priced and secure vitality for residents throughout the state, Michigan Legal professional Basic Dana Nessel entered right into a proposed settlement settlement with Shoppers Vitality Firm in its built-in useful resource planning case (Case No. U-21090) earlier than the Michigan Public Service Fee (MPSC).The proposed settlement remains to be topic to closing approval by the MPSC.
If authorized, it is going to present important financial savings over the unique proposal and also will lead to Shoppers ending its use of coal by 2025, which is 15 years sooner than initially deliberate.
Shoppers Vitality filed its new built-in useful resource plan in June 2021. Its present plan was authorized in June 2019 and offered for finding out the closure of two of the remaining three coal crops the corporate owns. Nevertheless, this case proposes the early closure of all remaining coal crops and additional actions to lowering carbon emissions.
In response to Shoppers, it is going to be one of many first utilities within the nation to finish its use of coal.
Along with going coal-free, the settlement settlement gives for the constructing of almost 8,000 extra megawatts of photo voltaic vitality by 2040. If all the things goes as deliberate, Shoppers will generate 90% of its electrical energy utilizing clear vitality sources by 2040.
One other important time period of the settlement gives for the availability of direct monetary sources to ratepayers. On the urging of the Legal professional Basic, Shoppers Vitality agreed to donate $5 million this 12 months to a fund that helps low-income utility ratepayers, with the potential for $33 million in complete help in extra $2 million increments over a 14-year interval.
“Not solely is that this settlement a win for our surroundings, it’s additionally a win for Michigan ratepayers who’ve struggled to remain present on their payments,” Nessel stated. “This settlement was actually a collaborative effort from all concerned events and a logo of what we are able to obtain when stakeholders work collectively to create optimistic change.”
The Residents Utility Board of Michigan (CUB) was additionally concerned in negotiating the settlement. CUB is a nonpartisan Michigan non-profit devoted to creating utility prices extra reasonably priced for Michigan residents.
“CUB applauds the AG for hanging this settlement that may present $5 million of latest help for low-income residential prospects this 12 months and Shoppers will proceed to donate as much as $2 million a 12 months to this fund over the following 14 years,” CUB Government Director Amy Bandyk stated. “Importantly, these donations won’t be recovered by larger charges, however moderately donated by Shoppers Vitality. Residential charges have been hovering over the previous few years, so this help is an efficient step. We hope to proceed working with the AG to win much-needed reduction for ratepayers.”
The settlement settlement additionally gives the next:
- Institution of a regulatory asset for the undepreciated guide stability of the retiring coal crops which is able to earn a return equal to the Firm’s WACC with a 9.0% ROE and that amortizes the reg asset over a time period per their unique design lifetime of these models. And restoration of related decommissioning and ash disposal prices much less salvage worth might be included in a regulatory asset which the Firm might request to get well in future base charge proceedings topic to a reasonableness and prudency evaluate.
- Approval of the Acquisition of the New Covert Producing (pure fuel) Facility (however avoids the acquisition of extra fuel plant proposed by the Firm in its utility) and approval of Demand Response and Conservation Voltage Discount capital prices for restoration in charges in future Firm charge circumstances.
- Retirement of Karn Items 3 and 4 that are fuel peaking crops on or earlier than Could 31, 2031, until the regional system operator or different emergent points throughout the Firm’s era portfolio requires extended operation to keep up ample provide (i.e., system or firm reliability require continued operation).
- The Firm will conduct a one-time aggressive solicitation to offer the Firm with capability credit score in MISO Zone 7 beginning within the 2025 planning 12 months (together with acquisition of 700 Zonal Useful resource Credit).
- Sustaining an FCM which is mostly the identical because the at present authorized FCM for Shoppers Vitality.
- The Firm agrees to the extension of the annual aggressive bidding course of to accumulate supply-side sources and it’ll use commercially affordable efforts to keep up a 50/50 break up between new capability from Firm-Owned tasks and new capability from PPAs.
- Approval of the proposed battery deployment program.
“On behalf of our 150,000 members throughout Michigan, we’re proud to signal onto this historic settlement settlement with such a broad and numerous group of stakeholders,” Mike Berkowitz, Michigan Senior Past Coal Marketing campaign Consultant for the Sierra Membership, stated. “The Michigan Public Service Fee ought to approve this settlement so Shoppers Vitality can get to work shifting past coal by 2025, planning for employee transitions, and constructing out a exceptional quantity of fresh vitality. This can be a groundbreaking settlement that ensures Shoppers Vitality is assembly the urgency demanded by the local weather disaster whereas creating homegrown inexperienced jobs. West Michiganders can breathe simpler figuring out the J.H. Campbell coal plant will quickly cease polluting their air in addition to Pigeon Lake, a tributary to Lake Michigan.”
Michigan
Michigan defense pressures Milroe all day, Wolverines beat No. 11 Alabama 19-13 in ReliaQuest Bowl
TAMPA, Fla. — Michigan’s defense sacked Jalen Milroe five times and forced three turnovers by the Alabama quarterback to lead the Wolverines to a 19-13 victory over the 11th-ranked Crimson Tide in the ReliaQuest Bowl on Tuesday.
Dominic Zvada kicked four field goals and Davis Warren threw a first-half touchdown pass to Fredrick Moore for Michigan (8-5), which finished the season on three-game winning streak that included back-to-back upsets of rival Ohio State and Alabama.
Alabama’s season ended with a loss to Michigan for the second year in a row. The Wolverines and the Crimson Tide (9-4, No. 11 CFP) met in a College Football Playoff semifinal at last season’s Rose Bowl, with Michigan winning on the way to capturing the national championship.
Tuesday’s loss ended Alabama’s string of 16 consecutive seasons with double-digit wins.
Milroe shrugged off a disastrous first quarter that was played almost exclusively in Alabama territory during heavy rain that sent many in the crowd at Raymond James Stadium scurrying for cover. The Crimson Tide had a chance to win it in the closing minutes but turned the ball over on downs after driving to the Michigan 15.
Milroe lost two fumbles and threw an interception on three of Alabama’s first four drives. The fourth possession ended badly, too, with Milroe being sacked for an 11-yard loss at the Crimson Tide 44 on fourth-and-4.
Michigan, however, was able to turn the blunders into only 16 points — Warren’s TD pass to Moore and field goals of 45, 30 and 21 yards for a 16-0 lead.
Milroe cut into Alabama’s deficit with a 25-yard TD pass to Robbie Ouzts, then ran for 41 yards and threw to Germie Bernard for 40 on back-to-back plays to set up Graham Nicholson’s 24-yard field goal just before halftime.
Michigan defense made the narrow halftime lead stand until Zvada’s 37-yard field goal put the Wolverines up 19-10 midway through the fourth quarter. Alabama countered with Nicholson’s 51-yarder to make it a one score game again with 4:38 to go.
Milroe finished 16 of 32 passing for 192 yards, one TD and an interception.
Warren was 9 of 12 for 73 yards without an interception before limping off the field after being sacked early in the third quarter. Alex Orji finished up at quarterback for the Wolverines.
Takeaway
Michigan pressured Milroe all day long, and the Crimson Tide never fully recovered from the quarterback’s early mistakes.
Up Next
Michigan: Opens next season Aug. 30 at home vs. New Mexico following a highly anticipated battle for the starting quarterback job. The nation’s No. 1 high school recruit, Bryce Underwood, practiced with the Wolverines for the ReliaQuest Bowl and was on the sideline Tuesday as an early enrollee. The competition will also include Fresno State transfer Mikey Keene.
Alabama: The Crimson Tide opens its second season under DeBoer on the road Aug. 30 at Florida State. One question mark heading into the offseason is who will take the first snap at quarterback. Milroe hasn’t declared if he’ll enter the NFL draft or return to school.
Michigan
Here’s where things stand 4 years after the mid-Michigan floods
MIDLAND, MI – The year 2024 was a stalemate of sorts for the folks on the Four Lakes Task Force.
The entity in charge of restoring the dams destroyed in the 2020 mid-Michigan flood celebrated a handful of milestones but was unable to continue some plans due to a bevy of court cases delaying proceedings.
“This year we made significant progress in construction, but unfortunately by mid-year we lost momentum in our mission to restore the Four Lakes because the pending litigation over the lake level assessment rolls has impeded our ability to obtain financing,” Four Lakes Task Force Chair and President Dave Kepler wrote in a year-end statement.
“We know how disappointing it is to end the year with work suspended on three of the four dams and suspension looming on the fourth.”
The dams were formerly owned by Boyce Hydro, an insolvent company that lost them through condemnation after the May 2020 Edenville Dam collapse and flood that caused $200 million in property damage and forced 10,000 people to evacuate.
The organization began taking steps to acquire the former Boyce Hydro dams in 2018 after federal energy regulators revoked the Edenville Dam’s power generation license.
The Four Lakes Task Force received delegated taxing authority in 2019 after legal levels were established for Tittabawassee River impoundments Wixom, Sanford, Smallwood and Secord lakes.
The group was negotiating with former Boyce Hydro owner Lee Mueller to buy the damns and perform long-deferred upgrades when a May 2020 rainstorm overwhelmed the Edenville Dam, which collapsed and unleashed the combined waters of the Tittabawassee and Tobacco rivers in a 500-year flood that inundated downtown Midland.
The flood drained the Wixom and Sanford lake impoundments. The task force later acquired all four Boyce dams through bankruptcy for $1.5 million and has since been working to rebuild the damaged Edenville and Sanford dams, and upgrade spillways and embankments at Secord and Smallwood.
The Smallwood Dam auxiliary spillway construction was completed in March. Construction on the auxiliary spillway and chute at Secord Dam wrapped up in June. In July, the Edenville Dam embankment was completed.
But then work on the dams was halted due to ongoing legal challenges over whether residents living in a special assessment district should be required to help pay for the dam repairs.
On Dec. 11, the Four Lakes Task Force as well as the Heron Cove Association, the group representing residents living in the special assessment district, argued before a panel of the Michigan Court of Appeals in connection with the challenge. The following day, attorneys for Gladwin and Midland counties and the task force appeared in federal district court in Detroit requesting dismissal of two HCA lawsuits.
Neither court has issued a ruling.
“We have legal and contractual obligations to restore the lakes and the financial capacity and permits to do so,” Kepler wrote. “The FLTF board and staff are committed to getting the project restarted as soon as we can in 2025 to fulfill our mission of restoring the lakes so property owners can enjoy them long into the future.”
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Michigan
Deadline to apply for Michigan Reconnect is December 31
(WXYZ) — The deadline to apply for the Michigan Reconnect program is tomorrow night, December 31, at midnight.
The Reconnect program provides eligible students with a chance to work toward an associate degree or Pell-eligible skills certificate at in-district community colleges, tuition-free.
To be eligible, you just need to:
- Be at least 21 years of age.
- Apply and enroll in a community or tribal college no later than summer semester 2025.
- Complete the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid).
- Have lived in Michigan since July 1 of the previous calendar year.
- Have a high school diploma or equivalent or certificate of completion.
- Have not yet completed a college degree.
Click here for more information and to apply.
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