Tag: water

  • Millions of Ohioans facing home gas and electric rate hikes

    Millions of Ohioans facing home gas and electric rate hikes

    Duke’s parent company made $820 million in profit in the first quarter of 2022 after netting about $3.6 billion last year. It paid its shareholders $3.1 billion in dividends in 2021 and paid its CEO $16.4 million in salary.

    BY: JAKE ZUCKERMAN Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio utility companies have asked state regulators for permission to raise home gas, electric and water costs on more than 2.75 million Ohio customers.

    Those charges could be spread between customers of Columbia Gas, AES Ohio, Duke Energy, and Aqua Ohio. The utilities, all investor-owned, are collectively asking for another $400 million in annual charges.

    Any base rate increases require the approval of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, which is headed by five commissioners chosen by the governor for five-year terms. The PUCO’s staff review the companies’ requests and pose recommendations to the commissioners, who decide what the utilities can ultimately charge their customers.

    The utilities’ requests come in an inflationary period — consumer prices are up 8.6% over the year ending May 2022 and unleaded gas costs just below $5 per gallon. Last week, the head of the U.S. Federal Reserve said a recession is a possibility.

    “It is bad timing for utilities to be seeking rate increases at the PUCO, with consumers already hurting from soaring energy prices and inflation,” said Bruce Weston, executive director of the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel, a state agency that represents residential ratepayers in PUCO cases.

    “Ohio should lead with its heart and keep Ohioans connected to their utility services.”

    They also come at a turbulent time for the commission. Its former chairman resigned in 2020 after FBI agents were seen raiding his home. Last summer, the utility FirstEnergy Corp. alleged in court documents that it paid him a $4.3 million bribe for regulatory favors. He has denied wrongdoing and has not been charged. The U.S. Department of Justice twice subpoenaed the PUCO last year for records related to the case.

    Two commissioners previously worked for the companies they now regulate. Commissioner Dan Conway previously represented American Electric Power as an attorney in private practice. Commissioner Lawrence Friedeman has worked for IGS Energy, Vectren Energy Delivery of Ohio, Columbia Gas Services, and the Ohio Gas Association.

    Thus far, the PUCO staff has recommended granting slimmed-down versions of rate hike requests from Columbia Gas, Duke and Aqua Ohio. The AES case awaits a key ruling from a PUCO judge. None of the four has reached a final decision.

    A rate freeze would be very bad for customers. It would be damaging to the company’s credit ratings and make it difficult, if not impossible, for the company to provide reliable service.

    – AES Ohio attorney at a PUCO hearing last month

    Columbia Gas

    Columbia Gas asked the PUCO to allow a $221 million annual rate increase for its natural gas distribution service. This would take the form of a fixed fee increase, up from $16.75 per month to $46.31. According to analysis from the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel, that could increase to an $80 fixed cost per month in five years.

    PUCO staff identified some evidence of the company padding its costs in their report. When PUCO staff reviewed Columbia’s cost data provided by the utility to justify the hike, they found the company included $304,000 in costs for a workout facility and locker rooms at its downtown headquarters. The report also found an instance where the Columbia acquired five “thermal cameras” for COVID-19 temperature checks, each at a cost of $14,995. PUCO staff called the spending “significantly excessive” compared to a handheld thermometer.

    The PUCO staff recommended the commissioners approve a more modest base distribution revenue increase of between $35 million and $58 million per year. The OCC urged the PUCO to go even lower, proposing a $9.8 million increase.

    The proposed increase was the subject of a handful of sparsely attended public hearings last month. Evidentiary hearings start next month. They’ll be followed by a round of briefings before a final decision, according to a PUCO spokesman.

    NiSource, the utility’s parent company, made $431 million in profits in the first quarter of 2021. Last year, it paid its CEO $6.6 million, and paid its shareholders $345 million in dividends.

    Company spokesman Eric Hardgrove declined to answer specific questions about the gym or the thermometers.

    “Columbia is committed to our customers and the communities we proudly serve,” he said. “To continue to provide safe, affordable and reliable natural gas service, we must continue to invest in our system to upgrade aging infrastructure, just as investments are made in bridges, roads and other infrastructure in our cities, towns and communities. In addition, Columbia offers a wide variety of energy assistance, energy efficiency, payment plans, and PIPP to help customers afford their utility bills.”

    Duke Energy

    Duke Energy, which services 700,000 customers around Cincinnati, proposed raising both its electric rates and its gas rates. (It has comparatively few gas customers).

    On the electric side, the company requested a 10% base distribution revenue increase, which comes out to about $55 million per year.

    According to the OCC, this means a typical residential customer will see a monthly base distribution charge increase from about $37 to $49, costing roughly $144 per year.

    PUCO staff recommended a more modest increase of about .33% to 3%, or about $2 million and $15 million.

    On the gas side, Duke also filed a pre-application with the PUCO to raise its natural gas rates. However, this is in its early procedural stages and wouldn’t take effect until at least 2023.

    For electric costs, the PUCO is holding public hearings next month before an evidentiary hearing, which could take a week or so. Then comes a round of court filings and a commission decision. A PUCO spokesman guessed a decision could come mid-fall at the earliest.

    The utility’s parent company made $820 million in profit in the first quarter of 2022 after netting about $3.6 billion last year. It paid its shareholders $3.1 billion in dividends in 2021 and paid its CEO $16.4 million in salary.

    Company spokeswoman Sally Thelen said Duke is making smart investments to provide “safer and more reliable and secure” energy to customers while “diligently lowering operation and maintenance” costs. She said Duke is allowed to earn a fair return on its investments.

    “We know how vital electricity is to our customers, communities and region, and that energy is a significant monthly expense for our customers,” she said. “We also know that higher bills are never embraced. That’s why we continue to work hard to keep our costs down. We remain committed to helping our customers who may be experiencing financial hardship and struggling to pay their everyday expenses and energy bills. Duke Energy continues to support its customers, and connect them with available assistance and offer tools and programs – including flexible payment plans – to help manage their energy bills.”

    AES Ohio

    AES Ohio — formerly known as Dayton Power and Light, which serves 527,000 western Ohio customers — asked for a 49% base distribution revenue increase worth about $121 million per year.

    According to the OCC, this would raise an average customer’s bill by about $13.42 per month.

    The utility’s parent company, AES, has faltered compared to its peer companies, reporting a $409 million net loss in 2021, as it paid its CEO $14 million in salary. Addressing the PUCO, AES Ohio’s CEO testified to the company’s “very fragile” financial condition, according to the Dayton Daily News.

    In July 2021, the PUCO staff initially recommended a rate increase to boost AES’ base distribution revenues by at least $61 million. However, staff have since sided with arguments raised by the OCC and said the company’s 2009 agreement with the commission blocks the company from raising its rates.

    The question was put before a PUCO judge at a hearing last month. Jeff Sharkey, an attorney representing AES Ohio, made several arguments against the existence of a rate freeze, including that state law doesn’t give the PUCO the power to order one in the first place. He said the utility has already struggled with reliability. A failure to increase its revenue could harm its credit rating, which threatens the company’s service.

    “A rate freeze would be very bad for customers,” he said, according to a transcript of the hearing.

    “It would be damaging to the company’s credit ratings and make it difficult, if not impossible, for the company to provide reliable service.”

    The case awaits a final decision from the PUCO. Company spokeswoman Mary Ann Kabel defended the rate increase request, stating it covers the cost of grid investments.

    “Since our last distribution rate case in 2015, the updated distribution base rates would allow us to recover for investments required and are already completed as a result of the devastating 2019 Memorial Day tornadoes,” she said. “It also allows us to continue performing important activities, such as enhanced tree trimming to reduce the likelihood and length of outages. Over the years, AES Ohio has taken the necessary steps to keep rates reasonable through efficient distribution operations to meet the growing needs of our customers. Today and with the proposed increase we continue to have with the lowest distribution rates of the investor-owned electric utilities in Ohio.”

    Aqua Ohio

    Aqua Ohio, a subsidiary of Essential Utilities, provides treated water for about 150,000 Ohioans. It proposed to the PUCO a base distribution revenue increase of about $8.3 million (12%). Staff counter-proposed a $2.3 million to $4.1 million revenue increase.

    The application is still pending review.

    An unopposed settlement agreement was filed this month by all parties to the case. That settlement awaits approval from the commission. It calls for a rate hike, though less than the company originally requested. It also calls on the company to fund a $20,000 account annually via its shareholders as a bill-pay assistance program for low income customers, and to start disclosing the number of residential service disconnections per year.

    Aqua Ohio’s parent company, Essential Utilities, made nearly $200 million in profits last quarter and $432 million in profits in 2021. Spokesman Jeff La Rue defended the proposed rate increase.

    “Aqua has invested more than $147 million in water since our last rate case,” he said. “That investment is important to ensure safe and reliable services as well as regulatory and environmental compliance. Our rate case is an attempt to recover a portion of that investment.”

  • These organizations are on the ground in Ukraine and neighboring countries to help with shelter, food, water and additional aid

    These organizations are on the ground in Ukraine and neighboring countries to help with shelter, food, water and additional aid

    Ukrainian refugees in Hungary. From the 24th of February till the 1st of March 105.000 ukrainian refugees entered Hungary from the East. Source (info) https://infostart.hu/belfold/2022/03/01/hivatalos-napi-adatokat-kozolt-a-rendorseg-az-ukran-magyar-hataron-belepok-szamarol

    The Russian invasion has sparked a need for humanitarian aid. Food and supplies inside the country are becoming increasingly scarce.

    Below is the list of international organizations compiled by CNN that are on the ground in Ukraine and neighboring countries to help with shelter, food, water, and additional aid.

    Who Benefits?

    Your support will benefit these 34 organizations.

    Airlink

    Airlink is a nonprofit organization providing airlift of emergency supplies and relief workers for 130+ aid organizations responding to disasters and other humanitarian crises, including the COVID-19…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Americares

    Americares is a health-focused relief and development organization that saves lives and improves health for people affected by poverty or disaster. Each year, Americares reaches more than 90…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    CARE | Cooperative For Assistance And Relief Everywhere

    CARE is a leading humanitarian organization fighting global poverty. We place special focus on working alongside poor women because, equipped with the proper resources, women have the power to help…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Catholic Relief Services

    Catholic Relief Services was founded in 1943 by the Catholic Bishops of the United States to serve World War II survivors in Europe. Since then, we have expanded in size to reach more than 100…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Center For Disaster Philanthropy

    Center for Disaster Philanthropy helps donors make the best giving decisions to impact the full arc of the disaster cycle-preparedness, response and long-term recovery.READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Direct Relief

    Direct Relief is a humanitarian aid organization, active in all 50 states and 80 countries, with a mission to improve the health and lives of people affected by poverty or…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Doctors Without Borders

    We are Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). We help people worldwide where the need is greatest, delivering emergency medical aid to people affected by conflict, epidemics,…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Global Empowerment Mission

    Global Empowerment Mission is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization founded in 2011. Conceived in 1999 when Founder/Director Michael Capponi got his feet wet helping the victims of the Kosovo crisis….READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Global Giving Foundation

    GlobalGiving is the first and largest global crowdfunding community that connects nonprofits, donors, and companies in nearly every country around the world. We make it possible for nonprofits from…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Humanity & Inclusion

    We work alongside people with disabilities and vulnerable populations, taking action and bearing witness in order to respond to their essential needs, improve their living conditions and promote…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    ICRC | International Committee Of The Red Cross

    Our mission is to protect the lives and dignity of victims of armed conflict and other situations of violence and to provide them with assistance. We were established in 1863 and operate worldwide,…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    International Medical Corps

    International Medical Corps is a global, humanitarian, nonprofit organization dedicated to saving lives and relieving suffering through health care training and relief and development programs….READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    International Orthodox Christian Charities

    IOCC, in the spirit of Christ’s love, offers emergency relief and development programs to those in need worldwide, without discrimination, and strengthens the capacity of the Orthodox Church to so…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    International Relief Teams

    International Relief Teams is a nonprofit humanitarian organization dedicated to alleviating human suffering by providing health and other supportive services to victims of disaster, poverty and…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    International Rescue Committee

    The International Rescue Committee (IRC) responds to the world’s worst humanitarian crises and helps people to survive and rebuild their lives. At work in over 40 countries and 25 U.S. cities to…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    JDC | American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee Inc

    We work in nearly 70 countries to alleviate hunger and hardship, rescue Jews in danger, create lasting connections to Jewish life, and provide immediate relief for victims of natural and man-made…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Medical Teams International

    Medical Teams International provides medical and dental care, humanitarian aid, and holistic development programs to all people in need, regardless of religion, nationality, sex, or race. We respond…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Mercy Chefs

    Principally focused on providing disaster relief, our team regularly responds to national emergencies and natural disasters at home and abroad. In addition to emergency response, we make use of our…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Mercy Corps

    Mercy Corps is a global team of humanitarians working together on the front lines of today’s biggest crises to create a future of possibility, where everyone can prosper. Our mission: to alleviate…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Operation Blessing

    Operation Blessing International (OBI) is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) humanitarian organization dedicated to demonstrating God’s love by alleviating human need and suffering in the United States and around…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    OutRight Action International

    OutRight Action International, founded in 1990 as the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, is a leading international human rights organization dedicated to improving the lives of…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Project C.U.R.E.

    Project C.U.R.E.’s mission is to identify, solicit, collect, sort, and deliver medical supplies and services according to the imperative needs of the world. Each week Project C.U.R.E. delivers…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Project HOPE

    Our mission, as a global health and humanitarian relief organization, is to place power in the hands of health care workers to save lives across the globe. We are committed to transforming lives and…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Salvation Army National Corp

    “Doing The Most Good.” In these four words, our mission – to feed, to clothe, to comfort, to care. To rebuild broken homes and broken lives. By walking with the addicted, we can lead them to…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Save The Children

    Save the Children invests in childhood – every day, in times of crisis and for our future. In the United States and around the world, we give children a healthy start, the opportunity to learn and…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    ShelterBox

    ShelterBox USA is an international disaster relief charity whose mission is to deliver humanitarian relief in the form of life saving equipment that bring shelter, warmth and dignity to people…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    Team Rubicon

    Team Rubicon unites the skills and experiences of military veterans with first responders to rapidly deploy emergency response teams. Team Rubicon’s primary mission is providing disaster relief to…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    UNICEF USA

    We’re working to make the world better for children. The U.S. Fund for UNICEF supports UNICEF’s work, and other efforts in support of the world’s children, through fundraising, advocacy and…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    United Help Ukraine

    United Help Ukraine, Inc. is a charitable organization receiving and distributing donations, food and medical supplies to Ukrainian IDPs, people of Ukraine affected by Russia’s invasion into Eastern…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    United Way Worldwide

    United Way fights for the health, education, and financial stability of every person in every community. We all benefit when a child succeeds in school, when someone finds a job that will help them…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    USA for UNHCR

    USA for UNHCR helps to save, protect and rebuild the lives of millions of refugees and others forced to flee their homes due to violence and conflict. With help from donors and advocates, like you,…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    World Central Kitchen

    José Andrés founded World Central Kitchen after the devastating 2010 earthquake in Haiti with the belief that food can be an agent of change. We have expanded globally and have developed into a group…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

    World Food Program USA

    1 in 9 people on the planet will go to bed hungry tonight. But we can change that with your help. World Food Program USA (WFP USA) works to solve global hunger, building a world where everyone has…READ MORE  Donate to this Nonprofit

  • Food Truck Grab and Go 2020

    Food Truck Grab and Go 2020

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    Please join for the Food Truck Grab and Go!

    We’re changing it up a little in 2020!

    Looking to grab some great food from a local food truck? Join us this year as you “carryout” your food truck food and beverages!

    This family-friendly event is free to attend and includes:

    • Assortment of Food Trucks
    • Beverages for sale! We’ll be offering an assortment of beer, wine, water, soda.

    Saturday, September 19 from 4 until 9 PM

    gggg

    *Please note: Social Distancing must be practices at this event. All food is for grab and go, no congregating permitted. No seating or tables are provided for this event; per Hamilton County Department of Health, no food is permitted to be consumed while standing.

    All beverages will be purchased from one location at the event. No-contact payment is option available through our credit card processor. Beverages will be sealed (no draft beer available). Liquor license to be obtained through the State of Ohio. All alcohol sales will cease at 10pm.

    Attention Food Truck Vendors: we are no longer accepting applications for food trucks, as we are at capacity. Thank you for your interest!

  • Earthrise

    Earthrise

    Among environmentalists, John Muir is like a rock star!

    Columnist Stephen McClanahan is retired from P&G and now active in environmental advocacy, search/rescue and emergency medical/disaster response.

    Perhaps you’ve heard of John Muir.  If you haven’t, you should. He almost single-handedly convinced Teddy Roosevelt to establish the national parks system in the US. His explorations of and writings about helped establish some of our iconic wilderness areas we know and cherish today, including Yosemite, Sequoia, Mount Rainer, Petrified Forest, and the Grand Canyon to name a few. Among environmentalists, he’s like a rock star; he started the Sierra Club. But perhaps his greatest gift was teaching us how connected things in the natural world are to one another.  He’s quoted as saying: “When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe.”

    “When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe.” – John Muir

    I think that fundamental truth is a critical one to understand and internalize and celebrate and live by. You and I are completely and irrevocably rooted to the earth.  Always have been and we will die that way. Innumerable connections that are complex, intertwined, interdependent and beautiful. In “The Hidden Life of Trees”, author and forester Peter Wohlleben opens his wonderful little book with a story. He passed by the hollowed-out stump of an ancient tree that had fallen hundreds of years ago and when he took his knife and scraped away a bit of it, he found it was green. Green as in chlorophyll; green as in alive. And as you discover in the pages that follow, the roots of this ‘dead’ stump were being fed by the roots of neighboring trees. They were caring for each other because they were connected!

    They were caring for each other because they were connected!

    Here are a few of the more obvious connects we kind of rely on. Right now, at this very moment, you and I are breathing in air which contains just the right amount of oxygen, thanks solely to photosynthetic plants. As you recall from botany, these chlorophyll-containing creatures possess the amazing ability to capture energy from the sun and use it to power complex chemical reactions to make the sugars they need to live. Conveniently for us, in the process of doing this, they take up the carbon dioxide that you and I have exhaled and provide for us the oxygen we need to live. Not a bad deal.  Take away the oxygen and we won’t last long. We have unbreakable bond with the green side of things; plants need soil with nutrients, microorganisms, worms, leaf litter, water (from regular rains), sunshine to drive photosynthesis, a relatively narrow and controlled temperature range, and so on and so on. Because they need those things, we need those as well.  (Internalize this and you will never view an earthworm the same again!) As the expression goes, we live together, we die together. Connected.

    We have unbreakable bond with the green side of things.

    Everything we have ever consumed for dinner came solely and completely from the earth. 100% of it. Ergo, what’s in the best interests of fruits and grains and vegetables is in my best as well. No bees, no pollination, no food. No food, no life. Connected.  

    These connections extend all the way down to the very atoms that make our bodies. They too have been borrowed from the earth; before us, they existed in some other organism or inanimate object. After us, they will recycle into something else. Connected.

    Every spring, the herons come and fish in Stephen McClanahan’s backyard pond.

    We have a small pond in the backyard that some fish call home. Every spring, the herons come and feed. As I watch this act of nature unfold, I think. One minute, the creature exists as a fish; a few hours later, it is part of a magnificent bird. What will it become next? What was it before it was a fish? Connected.

    Success!

    One of my idiosyncrasies is an interest in words, where they come from, what they really mean. Look up synonyms of ‘connected’ and you find ‘linked, combined, akin, allied, joined, coherent, coupled, banded together’. The word ‘nexus’ (i.e., a joining, tie, link, binding) has a similar Latin root as connect. I think if we could put all these words together and hold them simultaneously in our brains, we might get a glimpse of the real oneness of nature upon which all life depends. And this isn’t just some metaphysical quip – this is the reality of all that is. If there’s one photo or image that drives this home for me more than any other, it is that of Earthrise, taken on Christmas eve, 1968 by astronaut William Anders when Apollo 8 was in lunar orbit. I cannot look at this without deep stirrings; our earth is home and we are firmly rooted in it. Connected.



  • LIS students put #TigerCare in action to raise more than $7,000 to build a well in South Sudan

    LIS students put #TigerCare in action to raise more than $7,000 to build a well in South Sudan

    Loveland Intermediate School students walked 1.2 miles carrying gallon jugs of water and raised more than $7,000 to combat the water crisis in Africa during a special lesson Friday, Oct. 20.

    A ‘Long Walk’ to learn empathy

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland Intermediate School (LIS) sixth grade students walking the sidewalks of Loveland neighborhoods with gallon jugs of water in tow; it was not your typical classroom experience Friday, Oct. 20 – but it was a learning opportunity now in its fourth year. Called “Walk for Water” the students read the book “A Long Walk to Water” by Linda Sue Park, which is based on a true story about the difficulty to obtain clean water in Africa. The 1.2 miles the students walk – again, gallon jugs of water in tow – is symbolic; they carry the water to represent the very real water crisis in Africa.

    “I continue this lesson each year because I think it is important to teach our students that there are many people in the world who struggle to survive each day and that we should always be grateful for what we have,” said LIS English Teacher Jennifer Kirby.

    “I continue this lesson each year because I think it is important to teach our students that there are many people in the world who struggle to survive each day and that we should always be grateful for what we have,” said LIS English Teacher Jennifer Kirby. “For most of us, our worst day does not even come close to comparing to what people in less fortunate areas of the world struggle with.” 

    In addition to the walk, students raised $7382.06 to help build a well in South Sudan, surpassing the goal of $6,000. Students also donated about 400 gallons of water to Matthew 25: Ministries.

    “Each year I continue to be amazed that our students take the main character, Salva’s, story to heart and go above and beyond the goal that we set,” said Kirby. “I hope that the take away for the students is that one person can make a difference. I hope they think of the children of the village where our well will be built and know that they have made the lives of those children and their families so much better.”



    Santa Land at RP Diamond – Meet Santa Claus

    RP Diamond Printing & Embroidery RP Diamond is the exclusive retailer of LOVELAND HIGH SCHOOL SPIRIT WEAR Welcome to  RP Diamond Printing & Embroidery located at 370 Loveland…