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Kendall County Times

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Rezin: Energy bill will 'keep thousands of good-paying jobs in our state'

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Sen. Sue Rezin | Facebook

Sen. Sue Rezin | Facebook

The Illinois state Senate has pushed through legislation supporters argue stands to breathe new life into the state’s struggling energy industry.

“While I don’t agree with every aspect of this legislation, what I do support is the fact that this bill will preserve our nuclear fleet and keep thousands of good-paying jobs in our state,” state Sen. Sue Rezin (R-Morris) posted on Twitter. “Going into tonight, thousands of union workers wondered if they would lose their jobs and be forced to move from the communities that they call home. With the passage of Senate Bill 18, we take an important step in securing a better energy future for Illinois.”

With Exelon having set a Sept. 13 closure date for its Byron plant, Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) said the goal is to have the legislation on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk in a “matter of days.”

That won’t be easy given the House recently adjourned without setting a return date. Exelon has already initiated decommission plans at both its Byron and Dresden plants due to clean energy legislation being long-stalled in Springfield.

“To be clear, Byron will run out of fuel and will permanently shut down on September 13 unless legislation is enacted,” Paul Adams, Exelon’s spokesman, said in a statement. “We have been clear that we cannot refuel Byron on September 13 or Dresden in November absent policy changes.”

While Rezin conceded “this bill is far from perfect” and stressed the levels of compromise that went into making it happen, some Republicans like state Sen. Darren Bailey (R-Louisville) rejected it as bad for Illinois.

“Just when you think this legislative body couldn’t make it any harder for taxpayers and working families to stay in, and thrive in Illinois, someone writes another hyper-partisan, activist bill making it worse,” Bailey, who is seeking the GOP nomination for governor, told the Sun-Times. “It’s time that we stand up for working people instead of demanding that they continue to carry the load for (Democrats') woke, unrealistic agenda. What’s going to happen when inevitably we can’t meet our base-load energy demands? We will have to pay more to import dirtier energy from other states.”

Included in the bill that ultimately passed the Senate by a 39-16 vote is language calling for the creation of a statewide energy goal of 100 percent by 2050 and a renewable energy goal of 50 percent by 2040 and additional money for the Byron, Dresden and Braidwood plants for five years.

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