Skip to content
Donate
Get News  Join Us
Ann Arbor for Public Power

Ann Arbor for Public Power

100% renewable energy by 2030, on our terms!

Instagram YouTube Facebook
Account
  • Events
  • News
  • Why Public Power?
  • FAQ
  • Store
  • About Us
  • Volunteer
  • Contact
Ann Arbor for Public Power
Ann Arbor for Public Power
100% renewable energy by 2030, on our terms!
Donate
Get News  Join Us

Ann Arbor for Public Power Calls for Objective and Timely Phase 2 Study

Ann Arbor, MI, July 18, 2024 — Ann Arbor, Michigan, July 18, 2024.  At the urging of Ann Arbor for Public Power (A2P2) and its supporters, the Ann Arbor City Council recently approved up to $1 million for a second study to determine the feasibility of local public ownership of DTE Energy’s antiquated grid. The study will determine the value of DTE Electric’s local assets, and calculate future rates under city ownership. The results should give the public a solid basis to decide the question: Should Ann Arbor replace DTE with a municipal electric utility?

“We’re grateful for the city funding, and we believe that an objective and properly designed Phase 2 study will show that public ownership of DTE’s local grid is technically and economically feasible,” says A2P2 Executive Director Brian Geiringer. “Regardless, any taxpayer-funded study should ask the right questions and avoid errors. The public deserves a clear and fair outcome, delivered as soon as possible without compromising results.”

A2P2 strongly disagrees with city staff on one key point. A2P2 believes that the study should arrive at a single, thoroughly researched and legally defensible valuation of DTE’s assets, rather than a range of costs as staff has proposed. Such a precise valuation is standard practice for Phase 2. Ultimately, a Circuit Court judge will set a dollar figure, informed by a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) panel. But the city, using expert contract engineers and a specialized outside legal team, can determine a reasonably accurate valuation in advance. That is critical for helping the public decide whether it’s worth starting an acquisition process that DTE will strongly oppose. 

Such a valuation will also enable the city’s lawyers to confidently move forward with the condemnation of DTE’s assets, as state law allows, should Ann Arbor decide to take that important step. “We owe it to the public to thoroughly research and deliver a valuation,” says Geiringer. “We shouldn’t give up on that goal before we even start. That plays right into DTE’s hands.”

The public also deserves an objective study. A2P2 employed an outside expert to document multiple errors in Phase 1 involving improper application of the FERC ‘stranded cost’ rule. These cumulative errors greatly inflated the high-end valuation of DTE’s assets. The city has not acknowledged these errors, and the same ones, or others, may compromise the Phase 2 results. “The city needs to conduct Phase 2 in good faith,” says Geiringer. “We hope our elected officials take these concerns to heart.” 

The study also should begin soon, starting with the Request for Proposals (RFP). For the Phase 1 study, seventeen months elapsed from RFP to report release, and another five months for city staff to deliver recommendations. “The city needs to move quickly,” says Geiringer. “2026 is an election year, and the Phase 2 study will provide critical information to the public. What’s at stake is a clean, reliable, and democratic energy future for Ann Arbor.”

Ann Arbor for Public Power, a nonprofit grassroots citizen group, has been leading the municipalization effort since 2020. For more information, go to https://annarborpublicpower.org

Ann Arbor for Public Power (A2P2) is a coalition of citizens from local organizations who are dedicated to a clean and publicly owned energy future for Ann Arbor.

###

Brian Geiringer
Executive Director – Ann Arbor for Public Power
734-330-3795
brian.geiringer@gmail.com

Greg Woodring
President – Ann Arbor for Public Power
231-288-7228
woodringg95@gmail.com

Instagram YouTube Facebook
  • Activity
  • People
  • Groups

© 2025 Ann Arbor for Public Power

Report

There was a problem reporting this post.

Harassment or bullying behavior
Contains mature or sensitive content
Contains misleading or false information
Contains abusive or derogatory content
Contains spam, fake content or potential malware

Block Member?

Please confirm you want to block this member.

You will no longer be able to:

  • See blocked member's posts
  • Mention this member in posts
  • Invite this member to groups
  • Message this member
  • Add this member as a connection

Please note: This action will also remove this member from your connections and send a report to the site admin. Please allow a few minutes for this process to complete.

Report

You have already reported this .
  • Events
  • News
  • Why Public Power?
  • FAQ
  • Store
  • About Us
  • Volunteer
  • Contact
Search