BPU board members react to idea of raising PILOT fee

At the Wednesday night Board of Public Utilities internet and phone meeting, board members reacted to the idea of raising the PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) fee on BPU bills.

None of the board members expressed support for the idea.

Board member Rose Mulvany Henry said Wednesday that at a recent Unified Government Commission special session on the budget, it was mentioned that the PILOT fee could be increased. The UG is working on its budget, looking at revenue sources and hasn’t yet made a final decision on it.

The PILOT is a fee, similar to a franchise fee, that the UG sets and places on BPU bills. The BPU members do not have a vote on it, according to the board. According to an attorney for the BPU, before a vote could be taken on that action by the UG, the charter ordinance requires a joint meeting between the UG and BPU and a discussion of it. The charter doesn’t call for a BPU vote on it.

Then the UG would have to draft a resolution and the UG Commission would vote on it, according to officials.

BPU General Manager Bill Johnson said a joint meeting of the UG and BPU is planned at 3 p.m. June 25, but there is no agenda for it yet.

“One of the biggest complaints we get from customers is the fees added onto the bills,” Jeff Bryant, BPU board member, said at the Wednesday meeting.

BPU board member Bob Milan Sr. noted that the UG doesn’t need a joint meeting to raise the trash collection fee on the BPU bills by 35 cents. The sewer charge placed by the UG on the BPU bills also doesn’t require BPU input.

While the UG Commission recently increased the maximum mill levy by 2 mills, the commission often sets it higher than the final figure they approve, according to the BPU’s attorney.

The UG hasn’t yet approved the final budget figure. The UG has been struggling with a loss of sales tax and gasoline tax revenues, and faces an estimated loss of $23 million in 2020 and $18 million in 2021.

Another UG fee on the BPU bill, the stormwater fee, also doesn’t require a BPU vote, according to Johnson.

Johnson said the BPU is talking with the UG about a bill redesign that would place the BPU charges on one page and the UG charges on another page.

Johnson said he would like to put a UG phone number next to the PILOT fee on the bills, as the BPU currently gets a lot of complaint calls about it.

Bryant suggested putting the phone numbers for the various UG departments on the bills next to the wastewater fee, the stormwater fee and the trash fee, as well, to help with customer service in the long run.

Board member Mary Gonzales recalled that in past years, they had been told there would be a PILOT fee reduction in the following year, but it never happened.

The charges on BPU bills could be going up at a time when customers are least able to afford it. Mulvany Henry urged people to call their elected officials if they have an opinion about the PILOT fee, as an increase would affect those who are struggling in the community.

The UG has proposed a slight, 35-cent increase in the trash collection fee. An increase in the stormwater fee has been discussed, also.

The BPU also was looking at an increase in water rates; it is on hold, but it could be started again. The BPU’s proposed water rate hearings are on hold, Johnson told Bob Milan Sr., who asked about it. That is something the BPU board members will have a vote on.

BPU officials said the water rate hearings are postponed until a date to be determined later. They will be able to pick it back up where they left off and not have to start the entire process again, according to officials.

They have not done a formal cost of service study or rate design for the electric rates yet, Johnson said.

The UG will receive some of the federal CARES Act funding for COVID-19 related expenses. The State Finance Council met earlier this week to make recommendations on the disbursements.

Johnson said the BPU and UG officials have met to identify expenses that could be funded under the CARES Act and through FEMA funding. Mayor David Alvey has met with the governor and senators to discuss if there will be any opportunity to redo the rules to allow local governments more flexibility in using the funds.

The BPU is taking other measures as well on its finances. The BPU on Wednesday night unanimously passed a resolution that would refinance existing bonds totaling about $201 million. It would result in an estimated savings of $16.2 million, officials said. The resolution will go to the UG Commission for approval.

It will lower the utility’s maximum annual debt service during 2021, 2022 and 2023, according to officials.

In addition, there will be a bond issue for $10 million of new funding included, to be used for the Rosedale substation project, including distribution, substation improvements and system improvements, according to officials.

BPU to meet Wednesday

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 17, in a Zoom meeting.

On the agenda for the meeting is a visitors’ time, a 2020 revenue bond resolution; a COVID-19 update; economic development update; electric supply update, general manager’s comments and board comments.

According to agenda information, the revenue bond resolution will ask the Unified Government to issue bonds for improvements for a maximum of about $10 million. According to the resolution, these projects include the Rosedale substations, the Barber substation and transmission system improvements.

In addition, the resolution will ask the UG to refinance existing utility revenue bonds totaling $222.2 million.

Agenda information is online at https://www.bpu.com/Portals/0/pdf/board-information-packet-6-17-20.pdf.

Because of the risk of COVID-19, the BPU board meeting will be conducted through telephone and the internet, according to officials.

The public may access the meeting through the telephone to listen in and if they have access to the Internet, they can also click on Zoom Meeting.

Toll Free Info: 1 (888) 475 4499
Meeting ID: 474 681 940

Join Zoom Meeting
https://zoom.us/j/474681940

Use Zoom
Meeting ID: 474 681 940

Members of the community who wish to speak to the Board must be logged in to the Zoom meeting via the internet using their browser or the Zoom application. Members of the public will be asked to raise their hand to signal they wish to address the board.

During the public comment section of the agenda, community members will be asked to provide their name and address and will then have 5 minutes to speak.

The zoom application is free and can be downloaded from zoom for the following platforms

PC – https://zoom.us/support/download

Mac – https://apps.apple.com/us/app/zoom-cloud-meetings/id546505307

Android – https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=us.zoom.videomeetings&hl=en

iOS – https://apps.apple.com/us/developer/zoom/id530594111

The public may also join from any web browser https://zoom.us/j/474681940

To raise your hand, click on the “Raise Hand” feature at the bottom of the application or window or press *9 if connected by phone only.

BPU offers community solar program for commercial customers

The Board of Public Utilities has opened its BPU Community Solar Farm to commercial utility customers.

The solar farm has nearly 4,000 photovoltaic solar panels.

Commercial customers now will be able to have access to solar energy through the BPU’s solar farm program, that makes it affordable and accessible to everyone, a spokesman stated.

Previously, the community solar farm program was available only to residential customers.

“We are pleased to now offer BPU commercial customers the option of utilizing renewable solar energy that is produced right here in Wyandotte County,” said Don Gray, general manager of BPU, in a news release. “The Community Solar Farm provides simple, affordable access to solar energy for the entire community, with participants benefiting from reduced costs on their electric bills and the knowledge that they are reducing their individual carbon footprint.”

The BPU scores high on the renewable energy scale, with 45 percent of its power generation from renewable energy sources including wind, hydropower, landfill gas and solar.

Each of the 3,780 individual solar panels in BPU’s 1,000 KW Community Solar Farm will eliminate 12 tons of CO2, according to the spokesman. That’s the equivalent of reducing single automobile emissions of 23,500 miles, planting 278 trees, or recycling 37 tons of waste versus placing it in a landfill.

Commercial BPU customers will be able to lease from one to 500 solar panels over a multi-year period depending on the size of that commercial customer, while receiving a credit of approximately $3.20 a month for each panel on their utility bill. An initial one-time lease fee of $470 applies throughout the 25-year life of the farm, with the user option of selling the individual panel back to BPU if a participant moves out of the service area.

For more information on this new program, go to www.bpu.com/solar, call 913-573-9997, or email BPU at [email protected].

The BPU also will hold a free solar seminar for Kansas City, Kansas, residents on Tuesday, April 16.

The seminar will take place at the West Wyandotte Public Library, 1737 N. 82nd St., Kansas City, Kansas. Two sessions will take place, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. and from 6 to 7:30 p.m. April 16.