Part 2: The Case for an MEU — Trust.

By Emily Neal, Councilperson At Large, Decorah

I’m having trouble trusting Alliant Energy. The information presented in their recent ads and posted on their website is the same misinformation from 2018 when they spent six figures dividing our community on false pretenses. They appear to be up to the same antics again. So egregious were their lies that the Iowa Utilities Board called them out for it in their preceding rate case, commenting, “There was further information with regard to timing of rate cases and expected rate increases that were known prior to the municipalization vote. IPL’s management decided not to share, incorporate or update its messaging with Decorah residents. The lack of transparency and misrepresentation in the Decorah municipalization vote is of significant concern to the board.”

All too well, I remember Alliant holding community meetings where they showed us a PowerPoint slide presentation that included a rate comparison between themselves and a potential MEU. They promised their rates would only rise a mere 6 percent over 10 years. Well, we all know that wasn’t true, as experienced by two double-digit rate hikes in just five years!

In addition to throwing out numbers without any basis, Alliant continues to peddle fear regarding the reliability of a MEU. Yet communities across Iowa that don’t rely on Alliant seem to manage to keep their lights on just fine. In fact, in most of the areas struck by the 2020 Derecho, including those served by Mid-American, local MEUs and Rural Electrical Cooperatives, were up and running faster than those served by Alliant Energy.

But we don’t have to look outside Decorah to see that reliability is not synonymous with Alliant Energy. Decorah residents and businesses served by MiEnergy, including those in the business park, like Toppling Goliath, experience affordable and reliable power every day. Reliability is essential to any utility, as it would be for a Decorah MEU. There is every reason to believe that a Decorah MEU would have equal or better reliability than Alliant. It would have to, or the Iowa Utilities Commission would not consider a service area change.

Let’s be clear: Alliant has a lot to lose if Decorah municipalizes. The company is out to protect its profits, plain and simple. I can’t blame them, as they are responsible for making money for their shareholders. If Decorah were to shed light on a better alternative, that’s not good for Alliant Energy. But, it might very well be good for Decorah.

By voting yes on March 4, we will have the legal standing needed to access the necessary information to know if an MEU can offer us the same or better reliability as Alliant Energy at a more affordable rate. All while keeping our energy dollars local and putting them to work for us in our community as we choose.

I trust the process for this to happen. Municipalization is a highly regulated and detailed process with plenty of opportunities for checks and balances. A yes vote on March 4 does not give the city a blank check to spend frivolously chasing a pipe dream, nor permission to switch your utility provider. It allows us to learn more and decide what we would like our next step to be. Any spending of excess capital that might be needed for the process would require another vote, and this time it would need a 60 percent majority.

The ultimate decision on who controls the service territory of Decorah is up to the Iowa Utilities Commission and only after a thoroughly vetted business plan has been created. And if, at that time, the commission thought a Decorah MEU would be the best option, then the revenue generated by the utility would be used to purchase the infrastructure, and no tax dollars would be used to buy out Alliant.

In addition to my trust in the process, I also trust my friends and neighbors. As electricity is a monopoly, I trust my community to know best how we want to invest in our energy dollars. I trust my colleagues on the council and our dedicated city employees, who work hard every day on behalf of all citizens of Decorah. We serve the people of Decorah; that is our only agenda. Every decision we make affects each of us and our families, along with all of our entire community. This is why I trust local decisions over those of an out-of-state, for-profit monopoly corporation.

 

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