BENCO Electric Cooperative Link - Co
Transcription
BENCO Electric Cooperative Link - Co
Agricultural & Industrial Electric Tax Exemption A mailing is going out to all BENCO Electric members currently claiming the exemption. Please return the Certificate of Exemption to BENCO Electric by the deadline to continue receiving the exemption. Cooperative members who use electricity for agricultural or industrial production may be able to get a sales tax exemption. Industries that use electricity, natural gas, water, and/or steam to produce items that are ultimately sold at retail are exempt from sales tax if the utilities are used directly in the production process. This exemption does not include utilities used for space heating and lighting of the production area or office, administration, or other nonproduction areas. To claim the exemption, you must provide BENCO Electric with a completed Form ST-3, Certificate of Exemption, which can be picked up at the office. Production includes: • manufacturing • producing road building materials • farming • horticulture • processing agricultural products (vegetable • floriculture or animal) other than by restaurants or consumers • raising pets, fur bearing animals, and research • printing animals on a commercial basis • photography • farming deer, elk, ostriches, llamas, and horses • artwork (both fine art and commercial art) on a commercial basis • generating electricity PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID Mankato, MN 56001 Permit No. 47 P.O. Box 8 Mankato, MN 56002-0008 RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED Tom Uppman The following is a list of former BENCO Members whose capital credit checks were returned by the post office as undeliverable. Any information you can give us to help locate them would be greatly appreciated. Please contact Lori at 387-7963 or 1-888-792-3626. A Aresenio Abella, Mankato Julie K. Abrahamson, Gaylord James Adams, Mankato Terry Albrecht, Granada Barbara Allen, Port Washington WI Al Ambrose, Woodbury Howard W. Andersen, Harvard NV Dale & Deborah Anderson, Burnsville Dan & Darcia Anderson, West Concord Gregg Anderson, Mankato Wayne Anderson, Blue Earth Christopher Andresen, Silverdale WA Scott & Brenda Armbrust, Jackson MO November 2014 Rick Ashpole, Mankato James O. Augedahl, New Market B Karen Backman, Kasota Steven T. Bacon, Mankato David L. Bale, Rochester Cindy A. Barclay, Gaylord John C. Barrett, Brainerd Dena J. Bass, Janesville Michael Bauman, Moundsview Brian Beckel, Mankato Robin Becker, Mankato Lee Ann Beinke, Mankato Alan R. Bennett, Onalaska WI Jonathan Berg, Hudson WI Brent A. Bergeman, Mankato Anita E. Bergemann, Mankato Jon R. Bergemann, N. Mankato Dave Bloch, Wells Jason Block, LeCenter Patricia Bode, Mankato Waldemar Bode, Madison Lake Judith R. Bond, Mankato Suzanne M. Borchardt, Burnsville David A. Brandt, Eagle Lake James Brekke, St. James Dennis Breyer, N. Mankato Jill Britney, Grand Saline TX Deborah Buchanan, Blue Earth James A. Burger, N. Mankato Tim & Justine Burgess, Janesville David A. Butler, Mankato Dale Butson, Lake Crystal Michael Buxrude, Fargo ND C Dean Cafourek, N. Mankato Lisa K. Callahan, McFarland WI Susan K. Campbell, Mankato David L. Carlson, Bradenton FL Ronald Carpenter, LeSueur Bradley D. Chaffee, Delavan Karl C. Charron, Goodland KS Julie Chesney, Eagle Lake Timmothy Chirpich, Villa Park IL Greg J. Christenson, Rapid City SD Sherry A. Cole, Stanberry MO www.BENCO.coop Paul W. Covey Sr., N. Mankato Richard Coyle, N. Mankato Karen Crespo, St. Cloud Susan Crespo, The Woodlands TX Richard Crumb, Woodbury Olivia Cuellar, St. Peter Marion Current, Mapleton D Allen Dammann, N. Mankato Christy Danner, Fairmont Cindy Dauer, Eagle Lake Kirk W. Davis, Moose Lake Michael A. Davis, Mankato Ralph & Ana Davis, St. Paul John Davy, Cleveland Russell DeMars, Waseca M. Anna Dentinger, Lake Crystal Ellen Dinsmore, Mankato Matthew & Stephanie Dolan, N. Mankato James L. Dunn, Decatur IN Page 5 Steve Willett Bob Wilmers November 2014 Volume 28 No 10 What’s CTV and How Can I Get It? If you have any questions, please call our office at 387-7963 or 1-888-79BENCO. You can also stop by and pick up an application. Where, Oh Where? BENCO Electric Cooperative Link What’s Cookin’ in your Kitchen What’s Cookin’: Zuppa Tuscana From the Kitchen of: Amy Swanson Office Hours: Mon -Fri - 8:00 am - 4:30 pm 1 lb Italian sausage, mild or spicy 6 – 10 slices of bacon 1 medium onion, chopped 2 cloves garlic, finely minced 1 qt water 2 T chicken bouillon 6 medium potatoes, cut into 1/4” slices 2 cups kale, shredded Pinch red pepper (optional) 1/3 c heavy whipping cream (may add 2% milk to increase broth amount to your liking) In a large skillet, cook sausage over medium heat until done, 12–15 minutes, turning to brown all sides. If using sausage links, slice sausages into 1/2” slicesi first. Set aside. Drain fat. In the same skillet, cook bacon. Crumble and set aside. Reserve 1 T bacon fat. Add bacon fat and onions to large cooking pot. Cook until softened. Add garlic; cook for 1 minute. Add water, chicken bouillon and potatoes. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer until potatoes are tender. Add cooked sausage and crumbled bacon to pot. Add kale and red pepper flakes and simmer for 4 minutes. Stir in cream and heat through without boiling. Serve hot. November 2014 This newsletter is published monthly by BENCO Electric Cooperative, PO Box 8, Mankato, MN 56002-0008. www.BENCO.coop Phone: 387-7963 or 1-888-792-3626 Outages/After Hours: 387-7964 or 1-888-792-3626 Dave Sunderman - Member Services Manager Kathy Gerber - Editor Board of Directors: Duane Ehrich - President - District 8 Scott Johnson - Vice President - District 9 Harvey Hesse - Secretary - District 5 Harlan Lanz - Treasurer - District 2, Coop Network Dir Garfield Eckberg - District 1 Brad Leiding - District 3 - GRE Director John Wells - District 4 Blake Meshke - District 6 Gary Stenzel - District 7 Wade Hensel - General Manager John C. (Chuck) Peterson - Attorney Board Meetings: The last Thursday of each month - members are welcome to contact directors with items of interest or concerns in advance of the meetings. Page 6 You may be surprised to learn that CTV is a business brought to you by many partnerships. CTV is owned by four local cooperatives: BENCO Electric, Brown County REA, Federated REA and South Central Electric Association. These cooperatives have worked together for over 22 years to bring CTV to our area. The programming is brought to you by various metro broadcasters and, locally, DeGrood’s and others help bring the service into your home. The picture above shows some of the faces that are involved in this great service. Tom Uppman is CTV’s engineer. He helped find and install the equipment needed to take CTV from an analog system to the high-definition system you are watching today. Steve Willett, Degrood’s, has over 17 years of experience and will help you find the right equipment to bring you the best possible CTV signal you can get. Bob Wilmers is Vice President of Engineering at FOX9 KMSP, one of the many metro broadcasters that CTV works with. Dave Sunderman, CTV General Manager, works with bringing all the above mentioned groups and many other people together to get the best possible TV service to you, our CTV subscribers. Dave said, “It’s great to have such a strong partnership with FOX9, and we appreciate the support of all the metro broadcasters.” Steve has been working with CTV since 1997 and has seen many changes take place. Steve said, “The biggest change took place when CTV went from an analog signal to a digital one. CTV now offers the best signal you can get, even compared to satellite, which compresses their signal; CTV doesn’t compress theirs, so it’s a much better signal. Cable companies also went to needing a digital box on every TV, which definitely increased most customers’ bills since they have 4 – 6 TVs per home.” Steve averages about two new CTV installs per week. If you don’t have any equipment, it will cost around $350 – $450 to get set up. This includes an antenna, preamp, mounting and basic hardware. Tower installations will cost more. Call BENCO if you’ve been watching CTV and want to do your part in supporting this great service, or if you have questions on how you can get this great TV service for $7 per month at your home. 2.1 TPT 2.2 TPT MN 2.3 TPT Life 2.4 TPT WX 4.1 WCCO 4 5.1 KSTP 5.2 KSTC 5.3 MeTV 5.4 Antenna TV 5.6 ThisTV 5.7 LWN 9.1 KMSP 9.2 WFTC 29 9.3 Movies TV 9.4 Bounce TV 9.9 KMSP 11.4 KARE 11.5 KARE WX 12.1 KEYC 12.2 FOX 12.4 KEYC 12.5 FOX 23.1 WUCW 23 23.3 ZUUS 40.1* Fam Net 41.1 ION TV 41.2 QUBO 41.3 ION Life 41.4 SHOP 41.5 QVC 41.6 HSN Twin Cities PBS Minnesota Public TV Weather Minneapolis CBS Minneapolis ABC Independent Television Classics Television Classics MGM Movies Live Well Network Minneapolis FOX Minneapolis UPN Classic Movies African AME Broadcast Network Minneapolis FOX Twin Cities NBC 24-hour weather Mankato CBS Mankato FOX Mankato CBS Mankato FOX The CW Twin Cities Country Network Family Network TV shows & movies Kids’ programming Wellness shows Products for sale Home Shopping Home Shopping Network Spiritwood Station Starts Up New facility will be nearly twice as efficient as traditional coal-fueled power plants For decades, coal-fueled power plants have followed a traditional, tried-and-true design: coal is mined and then combusted to produce steam, which is used to generate electricity. When BENCO Electric’s wholesale power supplier, Great River Energy, planned Spiritwood Station, the cooperative discovered improvements at every step in the process. When the plant begins producing electricity for the regional grid this month, it will set a new standard for efficiency and environmental performance. “Spiritwood Station proves that consumers can recognize the economic benefits from coal-fueled electricity generation without sacrificing environmental performance or reliability,” said Great River Energy President and CEO David Saggau. “It also demonstrates that coal is fertile ground for innovation. The benefits we have seen in North Dakota can – and should – be replicated almost anywhere in the world.” Located near Jamestown, ND, Spiritwood Station is a combined heat and power plant. That simply means that, in addition to generating electricity, energy is used for other purposes. At Spiritwood Station, that energy – in the form of heat or “process steam” – will power an adjacent malting facility as well as an ethanol biorefinery scheduled to open in 2015. Like all combined heat and power plants, the success of Spiritwood Station depended on firmly established “steam hosts,” which are industrial facilities that use thermal energy from the power plant in place of natural gas or another fuel. The numbers don’t lie. Most conventional coal-fueled power plants are 30 to 35 percent efficient. Spiritwood Station will be approximately 60 percent efficient. President Barack Obama recognized the efficiency potential of combined heat and power in 2012 when he signed an Executive Order to expand its use, calling for the deployment of 40 additional gigawatts of capacity in the United States by 2020. Combined heat and power facilities benefit everyone involved. At Spiritwood, Great River Energy will collect revenue by selling steam to partners. Those businesses will, in turn, receive the energy they need to operate. The plant will also be an economical resource to supply electricity to BENCO Electric and Great River Energy’s 27 other member-owner cooperatives. Designed with steam in mind Great River Energy’s Coal Creek Station power plant near Underwood, ND, has developed combined heat and power attributes over time. A combination of process steam and waste heat fuels a nearby biorefinery, and waste heat is applied in the cooperative’s patented DryFiningTM process. With Spiritwood Station, Great River Energy had a plan for its process steam from day one. “Spiritwood Station is so much more than a power plant,” said Great River Energy Generation Vice President Rick Lancaster. “It is the centerpiece for industrial investment in the region, and a catalyst for the state and local economy.” Great River Energy has worked closely with the Jamestown Stutsman Development Corporation to leverage Spiritwood Station’s efficiencies by creating the Spiritwood Energy Park Association. The site can accommodate industrial facilities with its supply of energy and water, and access to rail. From the Board Spiritwood Station Starts Up Continued from page 2 Improving the fuel The innovative design of Spiritwood Station starts 200 miles west of the plant, where North Dakota lignite undergoes the aforementioned DryFining process. This technology uses waste heat from Coal Creek Station to dry lignite coal in order to raise its heating value, which boosts efficiency and reduces emissions. DryFine coal arrives at Spiritwood Station in covered railcars designed to prevent moisture from reentering the coal. The combination of DryFine coal and state-ofthe-art emission controls make Spiritwood Station one of the cleanest coal-based power plants in the world. “From the fuel used to the boiler design to the air quality control system, every element of this project has been crafted to be as efficient as possible,” Lancaster added. Patience pays off Although Spiritwood Station will begin producing electricity this month, construction of the plant was completed more than two years ago. At that time, the economic downturn had slowed demand for and reduced the market price of electricity, making it an inopportune time to bring a new power plant online. For similar reasons, few potential steam hosts sought to break ground on a new industrial operation. Great River Energy decided to delay the plant’s startup and commissioning until an additional steam host could be secured. “While we could have continued waiting for a new business to locate at Spiritwood, it became clear that there was significant membership value if we led the development,” said Great River Energy Business Development and Strategy Vice President Greg Ridderbusch. Great River Energy, with significant investor, county, municipal and state stakeholder participation, has since developed Dakota Spirit AgEnergy, a 65-milliongallon-per-year biorefinery that will produce ethanol, distillers grains and distillers corn oil. The facility achieved renewable fuels certification (RFS2) through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), affirming that Dakota Spirit AgEnergy will have lifecycle carbon intensity 20 percent lower than conventional motor fuels. The lower intensity is primarily due to the “over the fence” use of combined heat and power steam from Spiritwood Station. “By mid-2015, we will have the most modern power plant in the region, and it will be selling steam that facilitates the economic and environmental performance of Dakota Spirit AgEnergy,” Ridderbusch added. “That is a winning combination for Great River Energy and our member-owner cooperatives.” The start-up of Spiritwood Station will also help North Dakota comply with the EPA’s Clean Power Plan, which will require states to achieve reductions in carbon dioxide intensity at power plants within their borders. “This fact, above all else, illustrates the achievement that Spiritwood Station represents,” Saggau said. “By thinking differently about energy, we built a coal-fueled power plant so efficient that it will actually reduce emissions intensity in North Dakota.” Continued on page 3 November 2014 www.BENCO.coop Page 2 November 2014 www.BENCO.coop Minnesota Utilities Unite to Fight Phone Scams Tuesday, September 23, 2014 Duane Ehrich Presided The board reviewed and approved: • The minutes of the August 15 board meeting. • Capital Credits to estates totaling $5,125.52. Wade updated the board on the Alliant Acquisition. Wade reviewed the proposed statewide net metering policy. Wade reviewed the GRE solar project and local alternatives. Dave reported that Habitat for Humanity has interest in a REDLG loan for their new ReStore. The attorney reviewed recent legal work for the cooperative. Directors’ reports were as follows: Brad reported on the September GRE Board meeting. CTV directors reported plans for a Strategic Planning Session. Harlan reported on Cooperative Network. Directors attending the NRECA/CFC/ RESCO regional meetings reported on them. Directors attending the Washington, D.C. Legislative meeting reported on it. New Business: The board approved the net metering policy. PCA Update Actual PCA for October $0.0199 Estimated PCA for November $0.0195 Estimated PCA for December $0.0230 The Power Cost Adjustment (PCA) is due to changes in the monthly wholesale rate from our power supplier, Great River Energy (GRE). Page 3 For the first time, 13 Minnesota utilities are joining forces to fight back against scams. Reports of phone and email billing scams targeting Minnesota utility customers are increasing at an alarming rate, representing thousands of dollars lost by customer victims. In an effort to shut down scammers, the Minnesota utility coalition today launched “Slam the Scam,” an awareness campaign aimed at warning customers and preventing scams. The coalition is encouraging customers who think they are being targeted by a scammer to simply end the conversation – “slam” down the phone. Utility companies across the country are reporting an increase in scams aimed at customers. Some Minnesota utilities are experiencing an increase of more than 300 percent in customer scam attempts compared to 2013 figures. Scammers are targeting all classes of customers, but particularly small businesses such as restaurants. In most cases, a scammer calls during busy hours of operation and threatens to disconnect the customer’s utility service unless the customer makes a payment immediately. Scammers are using various tactics to con customers into providing payment. Posing as utility employees, scammers have been known to: • Tell intended victims their accounts are past due and threaten to disconnect their utility service if they do not make payments immediately. • Require victims to pay using a pre-paid debit card, such as a Green Dot card. • Manipulate caller ID to display a fake number, which may actually be your utility’s number. This is called “spoofing.” • Email customers phony utility bills that appear to be from an energy provider with an account number, amount due, due date and a link to make the payment. Protecting personal and financial customer data is a top priority for utilities, and they are working to provide solutions to protect the public from scams. Utilities want customers to know how to identify a scam. If they are behind on their bills, they will receive a written notice before service disconnection. Customers who have not received a disconnection notice in the mail should not engage anyone on the phone or by email demanding to take payment. Instead, customers should hang up and contact their respective utilities to verify account status and report the attempted scam. They are also encouraged to report the incident to local law enforcement. Utilities offer the following tips to avoid being victimized: • Never give out personal information or credit card numbers or wire money as a result of an unexpected or unsolicited call or email if you cannot validate the authenticity. • Be suspicious if the caller is insisting on the use of a pre-paid debit card or an immediate payment. Utilities provide many options for payment. • Know that your utility will contact customers first by U.S. mail about past due bills. You will be sent a disconnection notice in writing before your service is turned off. • If it just doesn’t feel right, “slam the scam” and end the conversation. • Your utility will welcome the call to verify your account status. Contact your utility using a number provided on a recent bill or the company’s website. The Better Business Bureau of Minnesota is closely tracking these types of scams and has provided an informative video to help protect the public. November 2014 www.BENCO.coop Page 4