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Damage Control

Continued from page 5

Published on July 08, 2004

And so Wegner saved an economic opportunity for Platte County from escaping across the river to Kansas. But after the deal went through, Great Plains appeared to change its mind about securing permits for a single plant in either Weston or Atchison. Now, it wanted permits for both. According to documents Great Plains later submitted to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, "When the permit application was submitted for Weston Bend, the Atchison site was an alternative. Now GPP is proceeding with simultaneous permitting of both sites. The two projects are NOT alternatives to each other." It seemed Wegner and the other commissioners had fought to keep the deal in Platte County for nothing.

Wegner says that what he's heard from Great Plains recently suggests that the new plant might be regulated after all.

"This is a whole new area for us, because we had always done our research on this being a merchant plant," he says. "Now, if it is being regulated, it's a whole new set of information we have to find and study and evaluate. Then again, we don't really have a say in it, because now it's between KCPL and the state of Missouri to decide [whether] to regulate it."

Any talk of PILOT funds is pointless, Wegner says, "simply because I understand now they're going for a regulated plant."

Wegner says he trusts the government's environmental regulations and KCPL's word that any new plants will be built using the most current technology. But had the Weston plant been proposed as a regulated one, Wegner admits, "it would have been a completely different ballgame." Nonetheless, he says, "We like to have electricity when we turn on the computer and when we go home at night."

Wegner also leans on the assumption that a new plant will create jobs for his county, as KCPL's Web site boasts, both in the construction phase and afterward, when skilled workers move to Platte County to operate the plant.

But Great Plains' December 2003 environmental assessment says, "No significant population increases would occur with construction of the proposed Weston Bend I power plant, as workers would either commute from outlying areas or temporarily relocate."

And in its environmental assessment, the company admits that, after it's built, the plant would require approximately 85 employees to operate. "It is also unlikely that a permanent population increase would be expected for long-term operation of the plant, given the available workforce in the communities surrounding the plant," the report states.

By the end of June, the benefits Great Plains first proposed, in order to get the county to help fund its plant, had evaporated.

Corporate spin No. 6
You want wind? So do we!

KCPL spokesman Tom Robinson wouldn't comment for this article, and the Pitch's requests for an interview with CEO Chesser were denied. However, Great Plains Energy has created a short film that explains how open and honest the company really is. It's now playing at a series of public forums.

One such forum was on June 17 at West Platte High School in Weston. The school's cafeteria had been transformed into what looked like a KCPL science fair. Booths displayed information, and KCPL employees were there to answer questions about their charts, pie graphs and maps. A shiny, white model of a windmill spun in a corner, where it was plugged into a wall outlet. One station touted KCPL's record for keeping electricity rates low. Another described the company's plans to control its emissions of mercury, nitrogen oxide and sulfur.

About 35 people came to this public forum, KCPL's first on this issue. More are scheduled for July 8 in Atchison and July 13 at the Discovery Center in Kansas City.

The forums demonstrate that Great Plains has been paying attention to issues raised by Concerned Citizens.

A little bit, anyway. "You probably can't impact the building of this one as much as you can future ones," Chris Giles, a senior director of regulatory and resource management, told Brown at the June 17 event.

The flurry of forums comes only after the company has spent three years avoiding the public while it sought permits to build coal-burning power plants.

In fact, if the Missouri Department of Natural Resources Air Pollution Control Program hadn't lost a Great Plains computer disk containing "air dispersion modeling" information, the company might have had a permit to build the Weston plant a year ago.

No public forums to address Great Plains' "comprehensive energy approach to future energy needs" were scheduled back then. Perhaps no such forums would have taken place without the fluke of a lost disk, the sharp eye of the Sierra Club and the loud mouth of Brown.

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