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Rep. Bristow and Citizens Utility Board Host Clinic

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Two weeks from today State Representative Monica Bristow (D-Alton) and the Citizens Utility Board will co-host a utility bill clinic for residents.

The clinic will be focused on educating and assisting residents in cutting costs on their energy bills as well as valuable information on scams, helping you find the best utility rates and more.

Bristow tells the Big Z the CUB exists solely to help you.

click play for Bristow’s commentso

The free clinic will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Monday, March 23nd at the Roxana Public Library located at 200 N. Central Avenue in Roxana. Registration is required. To register contact the CUB at 1-800-669-5556 ext. 111 or email events@citizensutilityboard.org

 

(Copyright WBGZ Radio / http://www.AltonDailyNews.com)

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March 9, 2020 at 05:00AM

CUB, Bristow to host utility bill clinic in Godfrey

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The consumer watchdog group Citizens Utility Board and state Rep. Monica Bristow will host a clinic to help Godfrey residents potentially save hundreds of dollars a year on their utility bills. Attendees are encouraged to bring copies of their gas, electric and phone bills for free one-on-one consultations with CUB’s experts.

CUB’s utility bill clinic is:

11 a.m.-1 p.m. Friday, February 14

Godfrey Village Hall

6810 Godfrey Road, Godfrey

Co-hosted by state Rep. Monica Bristow

Registration is required. To register, contact CUB at 1-800-669-5556 or email events@citizensutilityboard.org using the subject line "Godfrey 2/14.”

CUB will give consumers information on:

How to spot unnecessary charges on natural gas, electric and phone bills.

Energy efficiency programs and rebates that can help people cut their utility bills.

Programs like Peak Time Rewards and Power Smart Pricing that can save consumers money.

How to avoid scams from alternative electric suppliers.

“Our free utility bill clinics are open to anyone interested in saving their hard-earned money and shaving unnecessary spending off their utility bills,” CUB Executive Director David Kolata said.

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via AdVantageNEWS.com

January 31, 2020 at 05:25PM

State rep, Habitat for Humanity host utility bill clinic

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State Rep. Lance Yednock, D-Ottawa, and Habitat for Humanity of La Salle, Bureau and Putnam Counties are hosting the Citizen Utility Board’s utility bill clinic 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 9, at Trinity Lutheran Church, 717 Chambers St., Ottawa.

Bring copies of gas, electric and phone bills for a free one-on-one bill analysisby a Citizen Utility Board expert. Learn how to avoid scams, be energy efficient and understand utility policy.

RSVPs are required. Call the Citizen Utility Board at 312-263-4282, ext. 111, or email events@citizensutilityboard.org with the subject line "Ottawa 1/9."

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via | The Times

January 8, 2020 at 06:48AM

Clean Energy Jobs Act heads into smoke-filled veto session

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Legislators, activists say it smooths transition from fossil fuels to solar, wind

The Midwest Generation Power Plant: “The question isn’t if the Waukegan coal plant will close, but when,” says state Rep. Rita Mayfield. (Flickr/Cheepshot)

The Midwest Generation Power Plant: “The question isn’t if the Waukegan coal plant will close, but when,” says state Rep. Rita Mayfield. (Flickr/Cheepshot)

By Ted Cox

Prospects are cloudy for the Clean Energy Jobs Act as it heads toward the General Assembly’s fall veto session next week.

Legislators and activists held a teleconference call Wednesday to urge passage of “the only energy legislation that comprehensively tries to act on the climate, but also give real support to Illinois energy workers and the communities that depend on them,” in the words of state Sen. Scott Bennett of Champaign, one of the lead sponsors.

Gov. Pritzker has been iffy about the bill’s immediate prospects, however, saying earlier this month, “I don’t know that we’ll be able to get to it during the veto session.”

“It is not lost on us that it has not been scheduled for a committee vote,” said Tracy Fox, of the Central Illinois Healthy Community Alliance and Illinois People’s Action. “I find it very disappointing, as does the coalition, that the veto session may pass without action on CEJA.”

Fox said, “There is a true urgency” to pass the bill, given that Vistra Energy has already announced plans to close coal power plants in Peoria, Canton, Havana, Hennepin, and Coffeen, while Peabody is pulling out of a mining complex in Saline County, which she called “one of the most depressed areas in southern Illinois.”

Bennett said that, without a “proactive” transition program, “the cost and impact of these closures fall on Illinois families and taxpayers.” He added that the purpose of CEJA is to “try to make sure that polluting energy corporations are the ones responsible for supporting this transition” from fossil fuels to clean energy sources like wind and solar.

Under CEJA, he said, fossil-fuel companies closing up shop would have to clear several hurdles. “They have to support local communities,” Bennett said. “They have to replace the lost tax revenue. And they have to bring in new investments” in the form of businesses creating new jobs to replace the old ones lost.

Bennett said it would make Illinois “a national leader in climate action,” adding, “It also revitalizes the economy while providing 100 percent clean energy.”

Renner Barsella, of the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign, said CEJA “establishes a robust climate and economic transition plan that specifically helps workers and communities adapt and forge resilient, economic futures.” He added that, in the past, “systematic problems have created too few opportunities in growing industries like wind and solar for new workforce development from impacted communities and populations previously undertapped by the energy industry.”

Bennett pointed to coal ash in the Vermillion River as a primary reason CEJA is necessary. Pritzker signed a bill into law this summer dealing with coal ash, but CEJA would build on the bipartisan Future Energy Jobs Act enacted under the Rauner administration to take a more comprehensive approach to retraining workers in new fields and providing relief to communities as they make the transition.

State Rep. Rita Mayfield of Waukegan said she wanted the new law in place to deal with the inevitable closure of the Midwest Generation Power Plant in her community. “This plant has been operating for decades without a permit,” she said. “The question isn’t if the Waukegan coal plant will close, but when.

“We need to ensure that Waukegan isn’t left with an environmental mess on our hands,” she added. “Lands need to be reusable after the plant closes.

“It is absolutely essential that we have a transitional plan for energy and this coal plant that’s in my district,” Mayfield said. “We don’t want the taxpayers to have to pay for the cleanup.

“They’re polluting our air. They’re polluting our water. We need them to close, and we need a transition plan in place.”

IMG_8248.jpg

“They’re polluting our air. They’re polluting our water. We need them to close, and we need a transition plan in place.”

State Rep. Rita Mayfield (One Illinois/Ted Cox)

Juliana Pino of the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization said solutions under CEJA would be “localized and community-driven,” as in training programs moving people into clean-energy jobs in wind, solar, electric cars and trucks, and general energy efficiency. “As we know, these industries are burgeoning,” she added.

A $20 million program on energy entrepreneurship and a contractor incubator would help generate new businesses and potentially move workers into their own clean-energy companies.

Fox said it would also create a Displaced Worker Bill of Rights, including demands for advanced notice of impending plant closures beyond the relatively short times the Vistra Energy communities have been given to confront life after the plants close. She said a $22.5 million part of the bill, on energy-empowerment zones and tax credits, would grant tax breaks to companies that hire displaced energy workers, while attracting clean-energy companies to those enterprise zones.

The bill, including a $210 million Energy Community Reinvestment Act, would be paid for in part through additional taxes on coal and gas power plants.

“We don’t just throw money at the problem,” Fox said. “We ensure that there are jobs at the end of the pipeline.”

Mayfield echoed the notes on urgency. “I think it is imperative that the Clean Energy Jobs Act gets called during the veto session,” she said. “We cannot hold this bill up while ComEd and Exelon work out their legal troubles. That is just not fair to the citizens of Illinois.”

Mayfield added that it was not the higher vote threshold required during the veto session that was snagging the bill. “I’ve talked with several of my colleagues,” she said. “I can confidently say that we have the votes in the House to pass the bill.”

Fox pointed to the Illinois Youth Climate Strike student protesters who’ve adopted CEJA as a key issue. “We saw the passion of our youth and their concern about their future with the climate strikes,” she said, “and we know the climate can’t wait.”

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October 23, 2019 at 05:47PM

Advocates Say Clean Energy Jobs Act Can’t Wait Until Next Year

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Four Central Illinois coal plants and a southern Illinois coal mine are slated to close by year’s end.

Environmental advocates say the Clean Energy Jobs Act would create new programs to help workers and communities impacted by the coal facility closures. And they say movement on the legislation is needed now. 

Gov. J.B. Pritzker said earlier this month he does not expect action on the legislation during this year’s veto session. 

But State Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan) says that is unacceptable. 

“We cannot hold this bill up while ComEd and Exelon work out their legal troubles. That is not fair to the citizens of the state of Illinois," she said. 

The energy companies are involved in a wide-ranging federal corruption probe.

Mayfield said it’s only a matter of time before the coal plant in her hometown shuts down, and she doesn’t want residents left on the hook with the economic repercussions. 

When asked if Pritzker had qualms about the bill or if she thought it needed more support before it’s called up in committee, Mayfield said she confidently believes it could pass the House based on her conversations with other lawmakers.

Tracy Fox is with the Central Illinois Healthy Community Alliance. 

“I find it very disappointing, as does the coalition, that veto session may pass without action given the urgency," Fox said. 

Fox, a Peoria native, said the Clean Energy Jobs Act is needed to create a smoother transition as Illinois moves away from fossil fuels towards cleaner energy like wind and solar. More than 200 people will lose their jobs if the four coal plants close this year. 

Vistra Energy has announced it intends to close the coal-burning power plants in Canton, Havana, Hennepin and Coffeen by year’s end, pending regulatory approval.

A separate deal currently awaiting a federal judge’s approval would also close the E.D. Edwards power plant south of Bartonville by the end of 2022, greatly reducing Illinois’ overall fleet of coal plants. 

Peabody Energy recently announced it intends to shutter a coal mine in Saline County by the end of 2019. 

Pritzker has said that while he’s supportive of cleaner energy efforts, he wants to eye legislation with a broader lens than what the Clean Energy Jobs Act is proposing. 

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October 23, 2019 at 02:04PM

Representative Rita Mayfield (60th) on the closure of Medline in Waukegan: The Illinois EPA has failed to protect human life

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Representative Rita Mayfield (60th-Waukegan) joins John Williams to explain the legislation that will require plants like Sterigenics to be voted into a community. Her own bill, HB3888 requires hospitals to phase out the use of ethylene oxide to sterilize materials.

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Feeds,News,Region: Chicago,City: Chicago

via WGN Radio – 720 AM https://wgnradio.com

October 8, 2019 at 03:46PM

Lawmakers, environmental groups: An urgent need to pass Clean Energy Jobs Act

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ST. CHARLES – State Rep. Karina Villa believes that clean energy is not only good for the environment, it is also good for the economy.

Together with the League of Women Voters – Central Kane County, the Sierra Club Valley of the Fox Group and the Illinois Environmental Council, Villa, D-West Chicago, on Sept. 23 hosted a town hall meeting at the St. Charles Public Library on the proposed Clean Energy Jobs Act.

"Here in the state of Illinois, we have been a great champion for the environment," Villa said.

Villa, who recently received a 100 percent pro-environment rating by the Illinois Environmental Council, supports the proposed legislation, which has such goals as moving Illinois to 100% renewable energy by 2050 and cutting carbon from the power sector by 2030.

The act envisions building more than 40 million solar panels and 2,500 wind turbines across Illinois by 2030, generating more than $30 billion in new infrastructure in the state in the process. It also would create clean energy empowerment zones to support communities along with workers who are economically impacted by the decline of fossil-fuel generation.

"There’s [more than] 123,000 clean energy jobs in Illinois today," said J.C. Kibbey, an Illinois clean energy advocate for the Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. "The number one and number two fastest growing jobs in the country right now are solar panel installer and wind turbine technician. And if we ramp up our renewable energy here in Illinois – 45 percent by 2030 and 100 percent by 2050 – that means those jobs are going to be coming here. These are good paying jobs."

Mavis Bates, chairperson for the Sierra Club’s Valley of the Fox chapter, noted that Illinois "has already made a lot of progress towards our clean energy future." She said the Clean Energy Jobs Act would build upon the efforts of the Future Energy Jobs Act, which was passed in 2016.

"It has made Illinois a leader in the country for renewable energy and energy planning," Bates said.

Area resident Tracey McFadden said he attended the meeting because he is very concerned about climate change.

"I’m looking to what actions can I take to help out in the efforts to do something about it," he said. "We’ve got to do something about this."

He believes the state needs to adopt the Clean Energy Jobs Act.

"This bill is taking actual action," McFadden said. "It’s a blueprint for action. That’s where we need to go. There’s a lot of talk, but we need to have action."

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Politics,Region: W Suburbs

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September 24, 2019 at 11:43AM

Rep. Maurice West, CUB to host clean energy discussion

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Wednesday

Sep 4, 2019 at 5:03 PM

ROCKFORD — State Rep. Maurice West and the Citizens Utility Board will co-host a discussion about clean energy from 6 to 7 p.m. Sept. 17 at Javon Bea Hospital-Rockton, 2400 N. Rockton Ave.

Attendees will learn about money-saving energy efficiency programs that can cut their utility bills and new state legislation, the Clean Energy Jobs Act.

For information: jjones@citizensutilityboard.org.

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Region: Northern,Feeds,Region: Rockford,Local,City: Rockford

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September 4, 2019 at 05:17PM

Rep. Maurice West, CUB to host clean energy discussion

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Wednesday

Sep 4, 2019 at 5:03 PM

ROCKFORD — State Rep. Maurice West and the Citizens Utility Board will co-host a discussion about clean energy from 6 to 7 p.m. Sept. 17 at Javon Bea Hospital-Rockton, 2400 N. Rockton Ave.

Attendees will learn about money-saving energy efficiency programs that can cut their utility bills and new state legislation, the Clean Energy Jobs Act.

For information: jjones@citizensutilityboard.org.

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Region: Northern,Feeds,Region: Rockford,Local,City: Rockford

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September 4, 2019 at 05:17PM

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