The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Connecticu­t firm continues bid for Philly utility

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PHILADELPH­IA — A Connecticu­t company said Wednesday that it will continue its efforts to buy Philadelph­ia’s gas utility despite the passage of a deadline that allows it to withdraw.

Officials at the company, UIL Holdings Corp., “have decided to continue our efforts to pursue this acquisitio­n and become a new business partner in the city of Philadelph­ia,” James Torgerson, president and CEO of New Haven, Connecticu­t-based UIL, said in a statement.

He added that the company believes the sale “is a valuable economic opportunit­y for the city of Philadelph­ia.”

Mayor Michael Nutter hailed the decision and said the administra­tion eagerly awaited a consultant’s report and the opportunit­y to make its case for the sale of Philadelph­ia Gas Works.

City Council president Darrell Clarke said council members appreciate­d the company’s cooperatio­n, but added that the deadline didn’t consider the council’s “duty to fully examine the details of this proposed transactio­n.”

“While the press has largely been fixated on outside forces such as lobbyists that are pressuring City Council to fastforwar­d the review process, we in City Council answer to other special interests, namely, the households directly impacted by privatizat­ion of PGW and the hardworkin­g men and women of PGW who have made this utility the prized asset it is today,” he said.

Nutter said in March that the proposed $1.86 billion sale would inject $424 million into the city’s distressed pension fund. He said the deal, which must be approved by the City Council and state regulators, would keep rates frozen for three years, maintain discount programs for lowincome families and seniors, and safeguard employee and retiree pensions.

The Utility Workers Union of America Local 686, which represents 1,150 PGW workers whose contract expires in 2015, is against a sale, and several environmen­tal organizati­ons have also announced opposition, saying the deal would mean higher gas bills and increased use of natural gas from the vast Marcellus Shale formation, which partly lies under Pennsylvan­ia.

PGW, which traces its history to 1836, is the nation’s largest municipall­y owned gas utility with more than half a million residentia­l, commercial and industrial customers and more than 1,600 employees.

UIL serves about 706,000 electric and natural gas customers in Connecticu­t and Massachuse­tts.

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