Tuesday, August 30, 2011

"DROPS OF JUPITER" train

Tell me?

Madpotter hit it right on the head. Were those people all at the fund raiser to promote Katie or were they there to defeat Hal?

Now, let's recap and count. Did Hal vote for an $85,000 assistant manager sight unseen? Strike 1. Trying to close a business next to his house? Strike 2. To be fair, he's had a bunch of foul tips thrown his way too. Compare Hal to others on council. He has a monthly meeting... usually with a guest. I have never heard of any Ward II resident not getting a response from him on an issue. He voted pretty much with council on most issues this past four years... except when he was given the one chance to vote against AMP-OHIO AMGS he voted against the city proceeding with the deal. Just two people... Flock and Werner...voted against the AMP contract.... if two more on council would have voted that way, the city of Painesville would be over $2,000,000.00 richer today. Something to think about. He also pushed the city not to except the Martricular Card and that turned into a harder battle then even I thought it would be.

Is it because of Hal's condescending, arrogant attitude? His constant pontification where he feels he must preach or lecture? One reason to re-elect him is he drives Hada, Gurley, and McMahon nuts at a council meeting.... and that does add some entertainment value to meetings (even though he drives me nuts sometimes too).

Maybe the backlash can be attributed to administrative elitism. Could it be because he only drives a school bus? He himself doesn't seem to embrace his profession. Is there an attitude of "Who is he to think he can sit on Painesville City Council ...just a lowly bus driver?".

Do I feel bad for Hal? A little. If you feel compelled to vote against him... do it for his job performance on council, not his personality.

Please don't interpret this post as a personal endorsment of Mr. Werner. I am only trying to understand the apparent administration backlash against him when he voted 99% their way.

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And now I'm off to Harvey Principal Martin's first community meeting. I'll post my take on it later today.

Monday, August 29, 2011

"ARE YOU TUFF ENOUGH" fabulous thunderbirds



My open letter sent to Painesville City Council and the Painesville School Board:


It has been brought to my attention that many people in the Painesville City school system and Painesville City administration have questioned the accuracy of the figures I presented at the Monday, August 15, 2011 council meeting. I listened to Mr. Grippi’s statement to the Board of Education and any numbers anyone in either administration would like to bring forward I will gladly take into consideration.

The bottom line is that we have a problem in our schools that has a direct and dramatic impact on the city and ignoring it or pretending it does not exist is outrageous. To those of you that have known about this situation and have remained quiet for so long, precisely who or what do you think you are protecting.

I have included a summary and chart with information compiled from the State of Ohio Department of Education to back my assertion that this situation has been deteriorating for at least three years.

Anything we try to do to enhance the quality of life in this community will fail if the schools cannot turn these results around. I cannot accept the excuse of the social or economic cultures these children come from. Civility and respect for one another, as well as adults, is not just the purview of children that come from wealth or a certain culture. We should expect more, not less.

Everyone in Harvey High, students and staff alike, must have a safe environment; one that is conducive to learning without constant interruptions.

Now I bring up the police resource officer. Who pays for him? If he is not paid through a grant or the school system then I can only surmise that he is being paid out of Painesville’s general fund. No harm, no foul? Some may not look at it that way. The city has grown with three new annexed communities; Cobblestone, Heisley Park and Liberty Greens, none of which has anything to do with Painesville City Schools and yet all are property taxpayers to Painesville City. How long before someone in one of these neighborhoods realizes that their tax dollars are being spent for something the local schools should be paying for? Yes, annexation has consequences. In addition, some of these consequences were not anticipated, as they should have been.

Please remember we will never make Painesville a great place to live by smoke and mirrors and ignoring facts.

Thank you,

Angelo Cimaglio










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School Board Meeting Update:

The outcome of the School board meeting held this morning at 7:30 am:

-A collective bargaining agreement between OAPSE Local #393, PCTA and the board was ratified and approved.

- This is the second year of a three-year contract and it appears that this year’s wages will be frozen.

-Step raises were not addressed.

-Discussion centered on how SB 5 will affect the school system in the future.




Friday, August 26, 2011

"RAINDROPS KEEP FALLING ON " b.j. thomas

I was among many others that attended Andy Flock's Town Hall Meeting Thursday night. The topic of the night was flooding in Painesville…..basements, patios back, and front yards.

Mr. Flock informed us that he invited the city engineer to attend the meeting but was refused because he didn't want to "get beat up by the residents" and Thursday after work, it was home to Rocky River. Seems like everyone goes home to so many other places.

At the council meeting, the City Manager mentioned we had 1.5 inches of rainfall in a short time. Yes, she is right.

My problem is that a house that has 6 inches of water in the basement is only 200 feet from a house that is bone dry.

At one time, I felt the north-end residents had won the lottery with the retention basin on the old Huntington property. Now at last night's meeting we hear about homes that never used to have water are now getting water. I believe the city failed to have this basin live up to what was expected.

Some residents have been told by council members that maybe they shouldn't have family rooms in their basements. O.K., does that mean we should not have washers, dryers, hot water heaters, furnaces, freezers, or air conditioners either? They all cost money to replace. Apparently, the only purpose of a basement is to act as a temporary retention pond for the storm water.

We are tired of city studies, B.S. and Beavers. When Mr. Flock meets with the city manager, and city engineer next Wednesday he needs some letters and emails from residents that the present status quo just isn't cutting it.

Email Andy at aflock@oh.rr.com

Or drop him a note this weekend to Councilman Flock 871 Hine Ave. Painesville, Ohio 44077. Anyone from Hayer, North, Cedarbrook, State, St. Meriden Ave. Let the City Manager know enough is enough.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

"DOWN ON MAIN STREET" bob seger

PAINESVILLE OPEN AIR MARKET ARTS,CRAFTS AND LOCALLY GROWN PRODUCE.

For the first time starting this Saturday August 27 from 11:00am to 5pm Painesville will host an open air market along Main St.
Each Saturday will be selling goods such as Arts and Crafts[jewelry, metal and wood sculptures, glassware,paintings and prints ect.]
As well as freshly grown local produce.
This is a great start and way to bring shopping and fun back to Downtown Painesville.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

"NOBODY KNOWS" raspberries

I guess nobody does. I kept reading, over and over, the Millstone article in today's News-Herald and for the life of me ...I really hate telling you I told you so.
Does anyone have a clue? The Queen, her Knights, the Rabbits, The Sharks, the Owl? Even the Bear?
We can all agree this nightmare has gone on long enough. Maybe Brother Murphy has the right idea. Lock everyone in a room and not let them out until a deal is struck!
The Queen doesn't want to compromise and the Bear won't concede. Along with the old story about a Bear's inhumanity to Rabbits that is getting pretty old.
Strange... in this article not a word from anyone in the Queen's administration that these facts as presented in the story just aren't true. Something might be amiss, HUH?
There should be a simple ending to this Nightmare of a Fairy Tale.... "They lived happily ever after." But as it stands now, no one is happy, not the Rabbits, the Queen, no one (well, maybe the sharks...they must have taken home a lot of honey jars). But unless the Bear can "Live Happily Ever After" ALSO, nobody will.

It's the one fact that just hasn't sunk in, while everyone is 'flooded' with ideas.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

'SMALL TOWN" john cougar melloncamp

Charterlady's comment was her way of telling us Katie Jenkins is not in Joe Hada's camp or will not vote the way he asks. I don't know. I have heard three candidates for council asked in private conversations whether they would or would not renew city manager McMahon's contract if elected. When any candidate comes knocking on your door, you should ask that question. Don't accept a "Well, I will have to look that over when I win my seat". Sorry candidates, that is a simple yes or no question. If you don't have an answer (either way), you have no business running for a council seat. 'NO, I believe the city needs to go in another direction' or 'YES, I believe she is doing a good job and I support her'.

Guess you could ask the same question of anyone running for school board. Thumbs down Dr. Hanlon, or thumbs up Dr. Hanlon.

Personally, I believe they should both be removed if, for no other reason than the way they kept the police calls at Harvey to themselves. In addition, yes, Mrs. DiNallo, Mr. Fodor, and even you Mr. Werner had an obligation to bring this crisis to council's attention.

All along, we have been told everything is fine. That many police calls is not fine in my book...not even close.

What really inspired me to write this post was SB5. I wonder if anyone had asked then-candidate Kasich, 'would you promote a bill that would take collective bargaining away from 350,000 state employees?' Something tells me the election would have had a different outcome.

We should ask all the candidates where they stand on the issues each one of us feels strongly about.

School starts Wednesday, August 24th... drive carefully.... You don't want to be in the way of a police car responding to Harvey!

One candidate has an e-mail address to contact him. I sent two questions [not hard ones] last Saturday. I'm still waiting for an answer.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

"BEAUTIFUL DAY" u2

I received this in my email earlier today. I can't tell you how happy I am that Harvey's administration is taking this step. First if you notice the times of the meeting are staggered between AM and PM this will make it more accessible for parents and people in the community to attend.
Right now I don't think this will be a dog and pony show, but as parents and residents we must impress upon this administration how important this is; not only for the students, but the educators and citizens of Painesville as well.
It will be important that both the administration and students understand how concerned people are for them to receive a quality education. Now, if the same four or five people show up at every meeting, it will mean that maybe we don't care as much as we say we do. We must get as many people to these meetings as possible... bring a friend.... bring a neighbor. If they tell you they don't have a reason to go... ask them what their house is worth right now?
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Kimberly J. Martin, Principal at Thomas W. Harvey High School, has established monthly community/parent meetings for each month this school year in order to increase communication between the school and the community about whatever issues the community might wish to address. The meeting schedule is also available on the school website. The meeting information is listed below.



Wednesday, August 31st 9:00-10:00 am

Cafeteria/Commons

Thursday, September 29th 5:00-6:00 pm

Main Office Conference Room

Wednesday, October 26th 9:00-10:00 am

Cafeteria/Commons

Tuesday, November 22nd, 5:00-6:00 pm

Main Office Conference Room



December – No Meeting Due to Break



Wednesday, January 25th 9:00-10:00 Cafeteria/Commons

Tuesday, February 28th 5:00-6:00 Main Office Conference Room

Wednesday, March 28th 9:00-10:00 Cafeteria/Commons

Tuesday, April 24th 5:00-6:00 Main Office Conference Room

Wednesday, May 30th 9:00-10:00 Cafeteria/Commons




If you have any questions please contact Principal Kimberly Martin at (440) 392-5110 or email
kimberly.martin@pcls.net.

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Also, on a related subject, it seems our Governor Kasich has blinked. Now he wants to sit down and talk about SB 5. It seems to me the time to debate this was about 200days ago when he slammed it through the legislature. Now, when polls show the measure failing by big numbers, he wants to talk?
This whole scenario reminds me of a WWII movie " A Bridge To Far". Sometimes if you want to reform things you take smaller steps. Did I see the merits in SB 5? Yes, and at the same time a city council, Mayor, or City Manager shouldn't be the sole arbitor of what their Police or Firefighters need. It's called collective bargaining for a reason.
With that I will remind people about what the Finance Director informed council Monday night. Expect the state cutting the city over $700,000 in a few years to the general fund budget. Almost 75% of the general budget goes for personnel.
School boards and education will also face the knife. I can only hope that all people involved use some common sense.

I guess the people of the fastest growing 'city' between Cleveland and Buffalo can do better? I'm sorta gonna miss that guy and his razzamataze.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

"COUNCIL MEETING 08/15/11

Just so we all know.... Monday, August 15, 2011 will be this month's Painesville City Council Meeting. Over nine items are on the agenda... from zoning issues to 2011budget adjustments.

Also, Tuesday August 16, 2011 at 6:30 p.m. at Morley Library will be the Painesville Oversight Committee's monthly meeting. Seems we have a host of items to consider: all candidates (council and school board) as well as any Painesville residents' concerns. Anyone with an issue should try to attend this meeting.
We need as much input from people as possible as well as people interested in joining with us to make Painesville a place we can all be proud to call home.

We should have a web site for the POC up and running by then. Also, I will report anything of interest that happens at the council meeting.

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Just so you know AMP-OHIO closed the deal with First Energy on the Fremont Gas Power Plant.
85 of the 129 AMP-OHIO members have signed on to the deal. AMP claims a $500 million dollar saving over the life of the contract.
Painesville council voted 6-0 against joining with councilman Fountain absent.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

"WHO WILL SAVE YOUR SOUL" jewel

The longer we contemplate what is going on at Harvey High, the more it seems the people whose taxes support this school have been hoodwinked.

Are we victims of an elaborate "cover up"? It seems impossible that our city manager (who is also the city’s safety director) had no knowledge of the amount of time her police department was spending at Harvey and never thought to mention it to council. It is just as mysterious that Dr. Hanlon did not inform the school board of the goings on at Harvey. I know after attending many council and school board meetings, the subject about poor discipline at Harvey has never been brought up.

We presently have two council people who, as recently as last year, worked for the school system in some capacity; Lori DiNallo, as a counselor at Harvey and James Fodor as Assistant Superintendent. Why haven't either one of them sounded an alarm? They were right on the front line. They can debate spending money for fire and police protection at Cobblestone but at the same time continue to ignore what is going on right under their respective noses.

Tell me, would you feel comfortable sending your children to this learning environment? As a teacher, would you feel safe there?

You wonder about your property values, you wonder why administrators such as Dr. Hanlon do not send their children to Painesville schools. I believe we have an answer. I also have been told that this is just the tip of the iceberg... God, I hope not.

I believe we will take the right step in November and elect school board members that will hold everyone to a much higher standard then we have now. I believe the school board elections will be just as important as the upcoming council election.

My thoughts are that the current council should ask for the resignation of City Manager Rita McMahon and the board of Education should ask for Dr. Hanlon's resignation by the next board meeting. We can no longer afford cover-ups and the poor administration these two have given Painesville.

At the same time, let’s get someone with some leadership skills to run Harvey. There has to be another Jack Britt out there somewhere.

Some of you may question my loyalty to the Painesville City Schools, considering the amount of time and love my father devoted to Harvey. I am thankful he did not live long enough to see the decay that has taken place at Harvey. Nice building, but an empty shell of what Harvey High School once stood for.

"As the Opportunity, so the Responsibility"…. It is more than words; it is a way to bring our schools back.

Monday, August 8, 2011

"THE RISING" bruce springsteen

I know I promised you a post on illegal immigration, but I attended Monday night's school board meeting where I was given more data on the state's assessment of Painesville City schools than I could possibly grasp. Some of the things I do remember:

We hit six of the 26 indicators this year...up four from last year.
Of the 26 indicators, we improved on 15 of them, we flat-lined on three of them and we dropped on eight of them.

Currently all the schools are in ‘Continuous Improvement’, with the exception of Elm Street Elementary, which is under ‘Academic Watch’. Graduation rates were up 10% to 75%......more on that later.

Right now, we have three appointed board members and two elected members. Mr. Bull explained that the four 'R's of the city schools will be ‘Rigor, Relevance, Relationships and Race’. In addition, we received a state grant to work toward safe and drug free schools ($50,000.00). Now just as a side note, since the schools decided to burn the parking lights long into the night, the air conditioning in the Hanlon Media Center didn't seem to be working. It was warm in there and then it got a whole lot hotter...

Ross Grippi who I have known pretty much all my life, a former coach, Harvey graduate, lifetime Painesville resident and retired Harvey teacher, got up and addressed the administration and the board. Mr. Grippi chastised the board, administration and the high school administration...and in the process answered many questions I have had. He brought out one startling fact: that from Aug 24, 2010 to June 10, 2011 the Painesville police department was called 348 times to the Harvey High School campus. Of those 348 times, over 210 were for serious charges such as assault on another student or an assault/threat to a teacher or other adult in the building. I believe he is correct when he tells us we have no control in the high school. He questioned the success or failure under the Dr. Hanlon administration and remarked that teachers were being blamed for failures that were out of their control and asked why does the board continue to stand behind this man and his poor results.

He also complained about the infamous 50% grading policy, where he presented as evidence a paper given to him by a student that said 'Oh, just give me my 50% and I won’t turn you in'. In addition, attendance records, skipping class, and tardiness pretty much goes on without any consequences. He mentioned teachers were getting poor evaluations for complaining about too many disciplinary issues. He also mentioned a math teacher who had, for the first time in Harvey's state testing history, managed to get her junior class to 88% passing the state test. The state average is 75%. The teacher was given a poor evaluation by the high school administration and her contract was not renewed. He demanded her position be reinstated, My thought: we finally got someone to do it right and we reward them by getting rid of them I thought were were to reward sucess?.

Mr. Grippi also remarked that the high school graduation numbers were fudged...although done legally it was unethical. He was cut short by Mr. Dillard (I know how that feels). Mr. Dillard interrupted Mr. Grippi to tell him his time was up, so we never did get to hear the rest of what he had planned to say. I have asked Ross to forward his remarks to me so that I could post it in its entirety here. Another thought: the wheels aren’t just spinning, they’re coming off. Can you imagine working in a place where the police show up 348 times a year...and it’s not a jail?

Oh, and welcome to your new position on the Board of Education, Mr. Tackett. good-luck!

Sunday, August 7, 2011

"STAND" r.e.m.

Well it didn't take long to get another response from someone running for City Council. Mr. Richard Tibbits candidate for the ward III council seat has left me a post. Again, anyone presently serving or running can have a post. I would like them to please be signed.
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Here is his counterpoint.

Paul, Ann McFeatters is correct when she wrote that ‘public officials have the responsibility to pay the bills, but also to plan for the future, safeguard the public assets and protect the environment.”

Out of the four items she mentioned, the only one that you managed to achieve was pay the bills; we will address that later in this letter. Are you really serious when you think your vote for AMP Ohio was planning for the future? I and others questioned this judgment at the very first council meeting when the contract was introduced. A coal burning plant; any reasonably aware individual knew that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was not in favor of building more coal burning power plants mainly because of the pollutants they caused. The EPA is trying to eliminate coal burning power plants, not build more. You were right about the technology; it dates back to before locomotives. I believe the only thing that matters to you guys is that it was cheap. After the EPA stepped in, your 1.5 billion dollar plant AMP Ohio wanted to build ended up spiraling to over 4.5 billion dollars. At that point it became so cost prohibitive, no one could afford it.

Now let’s talk about safeguarding the public assets. If you read the entire AMP Ohio proposal and contract, which I seriously doubt considering its length, you had to be aware that we were not just buying power. We would become part owners of this plant.

Well, Paul, that changes everything. Now you become responsible for part of their debts with no debt limits, no guaranties on rate, nothing that protects Painesville and its citizen interests at all. I’ve talked to three lawyers and none of them would have advised for Painesville to enter into that AMP Ohio contract. All three asked me who the City attorney was that reviewed that contract. A 2.7 million dollar loss! Whoops, safeguarding the public interest? I don’t think so.

Now let’s talk about protecting the environment. Just because this plant was supposed to be built 300 miles away in the Ohio Valley no less; a coal burning power plant!. Acid rain, carbon monoxide, sulphur emissions and tons of CO2 dumped in that valley. What were you protecting – Painesville’s air quality? It certainly wasn’t Ohio’s or the surrounding states. Oh, by the way, a 50 year contract; a contract that you voted for would obligate our grandchildren to pay off. Now, that’s a nice legacy for future generations.

Come on Paul, this was a money grab for cheap power with no concern for the ramifications. You voted blindly because this is what your City Manager and Council President wanted. You didn’t do your homework and you refused to listen to the people that were opposed to this deal.

Oh by the way, now that you all have gotten caught with your hands in the proverbial cookie jar, explain to the citizens where this this 10 million dollars in the electric fund came from, to cover the city manager and councils behind.

But overall a real nice letter Paul. Too bad you never said I’m sorry, I made a mistake and I take responsibility for my actions.

It’s not like I am some Johnny-come-lately. I have listened from the beginning and the negatives out weighed the positives from the get go. This is one of the many issues that provoked me to run for City Council. I truly believe we need new leadership and direction in Painesville.
Richard Tibbits
Ward 3 Candidate
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Richard has informed me he will be more then glad to answer any questions about this post at upcoming "Meet the Candates Nights" as well as calling him to discuss his position on AMP-OHIO I informed him that I believe having a debate on this blog. would not be a good idea. He agreed. So if you have questions to Mr. Tibbits, or Paul Hach address them personally.
Your comments on the subject will be posted.

To refresh yourself about Mr. Tibbits position on AMP-OHIO please go to the archives
October 3,2009 "WORKING IN A COAL MINE" where the video of his, along with others were addressed.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

"I AM - I SAID" neil diamond

Recently Ward IV Councilman Paul Hach sent me an e-mail spelling out his reasons for voting for the AMPGS Meigs County Power Plant. I asked Paul if I could post the letter he sent me on the blog. and with his permission, here is his statement. One contention Paul had was when the recession started and it was the cause for the failure of the plant. Paul believes the recession hit after the final vote was taken to go forward with the plant in February of 2008. Most economists believe the recession hit in November/December of 2007.
Here is his letter, if nothing else, I give Mr. Hach credit for standing up for his convictions.

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Why I voted for the AMP-Ohio Meigs County Power Plant Project

Ann McFeatters (News Herald, July 8, 2011) wrote that “Public officials have the responsibility to pay the bills but also to plan for the future, safeguard the public’s assets and protect the environment.”
My decision almost 4 yrs ago (10/15/07) to vote in favor of the contract with the AMP Meigs County Power Plant project was planning for the future. In Painesville, we are used to cheaper electricity than our neighbors – it’s one of the pluses of living in Painesville. Our electricity is cheaper because we generate most of it ourselves – we don’t have to buy all of it off the grid like our neighbors do and live with the fluctuating cost of commodity power since deregulation. (It’s a little like locking in a fixed rate on your 30yr mortgage vs. taking your chances with a variable rate mortgage.)
But our cheap electricity will not last forever. Our power plant is 123 yrs old. The plant is very well maintained but components are becoming obsolete. So knowing that our power plant will eventually not be able to supply the base power load of the city, we on City Council were faced with the decision to either buy electricity at a much higher cost off the grid – or buy into part ownership of a new, efficient power plant which would provide us with a stable source of power at a lower rate.
The new coal-fired plant was not risky – the technology is well known, the fuel source is consistent, and the costs of running a coal fired plant are well known – again, not risky. I don’t consider a 50 yr contract for a power plant risky either – our plant has been running for over 100 years. At the time the economy was growing steadily, the projected power needs of the city were growing, residential and commercial, so that in a few years we would not be able to supply all the base power that we need. In fact, to be able to attract new business to Painesville, being able to supply plenty of power at a reasonable cost is a necessity. Doing nothing was a bigger risk.
(Until other fuels and technologies are as cost effective as coal, we have to balance the need for steady power with the need to protect the environment. The new power plant would have been cleaner and more efficient than our plant now – so to me, that was a step in the right direction.)
3 ½ years ago, on 2/19/08, Council voted again whether to continue our support of the Meigs County project. At that time, although the projected costs of the project had increased, the rate for electricity produced from the new plant would still be much less than the off-the-grid price – so it still made financial sense to continue support of the new power plant project.
Then the recession hit. Commercial demand for power dropped - this caused the wholesale cost of electricity to drop too.
1 ½ years later, after the 2nd vote, in November 2009, the projected construction costs for the new plant rose 37%. That with the drop in wholesale power costs led AMP to cancel the project. With the slow economy, the difference between the cost of electricity from the new plant and the wholesale market dropped.
Our share of the development costs of the project will be paid for with money set aside especially for contingencies like this, it will not be paid for from cost increases in utility bills. The electric fund has about $10 million which will be used to pay our share of the project costs which will be around $2 million.
My responsibility to the people of Painesville is to maintain the quality of services as cost effectively as possible. So I stand by my votes – given the national economy at the time and all the information we had, I feel they were the right decisions to keep the cost of electricity in Painesville as low and steady as possible.
So in 2007 and early 2008, I did not predict the bursting of the housing bubble, the resulting recession, and the effect on construction and utilities costs that followed. But the economy will eventually recover, the demand for electricity will increase, and our power plant will not be able to keep up with the demand. We will have to buy wholesale electricity and watch our electric bills jump, and we will reminisce about when Painesville had cheap electricity.
Paul W. Hach II
Painesville City Council, Ward 4 July 2011

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UPDATED VERSION 2.0

Why I voted for the AMP-Ohio Meigs County Power Plant Project
Ann McFeatters (News Herald, July 8, 2011) wrote that “Public officials have the responsibility to pay the bills but also to plan for the future, safeguard the public’s assets and protect the environment.”
10/15/07: My decision almost 4 yrs ago to vote in favor of the contract with the AMP Meigs County Power Plant project was planning for the future. In Painesville, we are used to cheaper electricity than our neighbors – it’s one of the pluses of living in Painesville. Our electricity is cheaper because we generate most of it ourselves – we don’t have to buy all of it off the grid like our neighbors do and live with the fluctuating cost of commodity power since deregulation. (It’s a little like locking in a fixed rate on your 30yr mortgage vs. taking your chances with a variable rate mortgage.)
But our cheap electricity will not last forever. Our power plant is 123 yrs old. The plant is very well maintained but components are becoming obsolete. So knowing that our power plant will eventually not be able to supply the base power load of the city, we on City Council were faced with the decision to either buy electricity at a much higher cost off the grid – or buy into part ownership of a new, efficient power plant which would provide us with a stable source of power at a lower rate.
The new coal-fired plant was not risky – the technology is well known, the fuel source is consistent, and the costs of running a coal fired plant are well known – again, not risky. I don’t consider a 50 yr contract for a power plant risky either – our plant has been running for over 100 years. At the time, the economy was growing steadily, the projected power needs of the city were growing, residential and commercial, so that in a few years we would not be able to supply all the base power that we need. In fact, to be able to attract new business to Painesville, being able to supply plenty of power at a reasonable cost is a necessity. Doing nothing was a bigger risk.
(Until other fuels and technologies are as cost effective as coal, we have to balance the need for steady power with the need to protect the environment. The new power plant would have been cleaner and more efficient than our plant now – so to me, that was a step in the right direction.)
Take or Pay contracts are very common – in food commodities and especially the energy industry. There is no other way to finance huge capital projects that benefit many customers. Not many design and construction companies could finance a multiyear, multibillion dollar project all on their own. Take and Pay contracts are written to benefit both sides and to share the risks. There was nothing unusual in the Take or Pay clause in the project contract.
2/19/08: 3½ years ago Council voted again whether to continue our support of the Meigs County project. At that time, although the projected costs of the project had increased, the rate for electricity produced from the new plant would still be much less than the off-the-grid price – so it still made financial sense to continue support of the new power plant project.
Then the recession hit. Commercial demand for power dropped - this caused the wholesale cost of electricity to drop too.
12/08: It’s easy to say we knew in 2007 the recession had started in December of 2007 – but it’s just not accurate. Yes – in December of 2008 (10 months after the 2nd vote), the National Bureau of Economic Research said that we had been in a recession since December of 2007 – but it took a year of economic data to make it officially a recession rather than a shorter “downturn”. And yes - some industries felt it earlier than others. But others were not affected then - I know our business and my wife’s were still busy in 2007 and 2008.
11/09: 1½ years later, after the 2nd vote the projected construction costs for the new plant rose 37%. That with the drop in wholesale power costs led AMP members to cancel the project. With the slow economy, the difference between the cost of electricity from the new plant and the wholesale market dropped.
Our share of the development costs of the project will be paid for with money set aside especially for contingencies like this, it will not be paid for from cost increases in utility bills. The electric fund has a reserve fund which can be used to pay our share of the project costs which will be around $2 million. We don’t know what the final expense cost will be yet - AMP and we as one of its members are still fighting to recover some of the expenses.
My responsibility to the people of Painesville is to maintain the quality of services as cost effectively as possible. So I stand by my votes – given the national economy at the time and all the information we had, I feel they were the right decisions to keep the cost of electricity in Painesville as low and steady as possible.
In 2007 and early 2008, I did not predict the bursting of the housing bubble and the effect it would have on construction and utilities costs– unfortunately, no crystal ball was available. But the economy will eventually recover, the demand for electricity will increase, and our power plant will not be able to keep up with the demand. We will have to buy wholesale electricity and watch our electric bills jump, and we will reminisce about when Painesville had cheap electricity.
Paul W. Hach II
Painesville City Council, Ward 4 July/Aug 2011