A change of neighbors
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Danette Goulet
It has loomed on the Huntington Beach coastline for some 50 years.
The hulking monstrosity that is the power plant at Newland Street and
Pacific Coast Highway has always been an eyesore, but it has not always
been controversial, its owners not always considered public enemy No. 1.
So what made Southern California Edison a “good neighbor” and AES
supposedly such a “bad neighbor”?
While residents and city officials may not have been thrilled about
the plant, it was an accepted evil under Edison, they said.
“[Southern California Edison] only operated two units so you lived
with it,” said City Councilman Ralph Bauer. “Our relation was fairly
benign because it was there a long time.”
Then in 1997 Edison decided to get out of the business of making power
and sold the plant to AES.
“Here comes AES, headquartered in Virginia, a very large international
company,” Bauer said. “They were not as well known to us and when you
come to small-town USA, we expect some pleasantness and the neighborly
things. They still don’t have a [public relations] person. A large
corporation comes to a small town and doesn’t know what being a good
neighbor is all about.”
Edison, on the other hand, was a local company with an excellent
public relations department, Bauer said.
AES plant manager Ed Blackford contends that it is an unfair
comparison.
“Edison provided stable jobs for generations -- they built that
reputation over decades,” he said. “Clearly AES has only been here three
and a half years, so I think it’s unfair for anyone to expect us to have
the same persona.”
In the many years that Edison ran the plant, it was well known in the
community for its good deeds.
“Edison, they have the park along Magnolia -- that was a nice little
thing and Edison still maintains that,” said John Scott, president of the
Southeast Huntington Beach Neighborhood Assn. “They did the animal-care
center and donated money to operate and landscape it -- that certainly is
something that the neighborhood benefits by.”
“I can’t think of anything but pollution we’ve gotten from [AES] so
far,” he added.
The reason for that, Blackford said, is that AES does not advertise
its good deeds. It does not contribute to organizations and causes for
the recognition but it has been active, he said.
“We’ve participated in the effort to redo the pool at Huntington High
School,” Blackford said. “We contributed toward resurfacing tennis courts
at Edison High School and we’ve participated to lesser degree by
sponsoring work important to our employees here.”
It is common practice for AES to sponsor teams coached by employees,
he pointed out.
AES also supports the animal-care center and will include the adjacent
property in the beautification of the plant, Blackford added.
But homeowners say there is more than just philanthropy to being a
good neighbor.
“I suppose a good neighbor, here on the street, are people that work
well together and watch out for each other,” Scott said. “AES, it’s an
international corporation and they are looking out for themselves.”
While Scott said he does not blame AES for watching its bottom line,
he does have issues with the company’s use of the peaker unit and the
decision to refurbish the old units rather than replace them with new
units.
“It’s old, it’s inefficient, it pollutes the air, but AES has fought
all along to keep it on line,” Scott said. “The new units coming online
[the third and fourth generators] are late 1950s technology that I think
the I read were 39% efficient.”
Blackford flat out denies claims that the refurbished units will cause
more pollution than new equipment would.
“Those arguments are all bogus and continue to be purported by the
media,” he said. “The truth is these units environmentally will be as
clean as anything in the state. With the environmental controls being
installed on these, emissions will be as low or lower than on any being
built in the state. This has become a cry and its just not accurate.”
It’s easier to be a good neighbor in good times, officials added.
When Southern California Edison operated the plant there wasn’t a need
to bring extra generators online.
“We had become accustomed to the plant with two units,” said City
Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff. “I think that when AES came into the
community we had high expectations because they had met with leaders and
indicated that they would make dramatic changes.”
Those changes, the beautification and upgrades, were things Edison
held off on with plans to drop in the lap of whoever took over the plant,
Blackford said.
They were also agreed to in 1997 when AES took over.
The plans to make the plant more aesthetically pleasing, which are
still in the works, had to take a back seat to upgrades once the energy
crisis began.
And that’s come as quite a surprise to city leaders and residents.
“There was no indication that they would power up two more units,”
Dettloff said. “We did not see things happening and suddenly we were in a
power crisis, so instead of seeing beautification we were seeing the
operation increasing and the potential for more pollution.”
With the agreements reached last week that allow AES to go ahead with
plans to power up the refurbished third and fourth units, keeping the
peaker unit for dire emergencies until it is shut down altogether in
2002, the company is moving forward with beautification talks.
“Now ask people who work at the sight,” Blackford said. “They are as
happy or happier than before because we do things a bit differently.”
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