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Ameren Missouri customers would have to pay an average of $12 more a month for electricity if state regulators approve a proposed rate hike.
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St. Louis County and St. Charles County residents would pay more for water service under a proposed rate increase by the Missouri American Water company.
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St. Louis-based gas utility Spire is expanding programs that help customers with past due bills and those with medical emergencies pay their bills. The company’s additional efforts to help some customers come as it raises rates about $3 a month for the average customer.
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The North Omaha Station, a coal burning power plant, was supposed to stop burning coal next year. But its owner wants an extension to keep burning coal for three more years.
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Spire officials say another rate hike is needed to cover the cost of employee salaries, after state regulators revised long-standing policies last year.
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Almost all Illinois residents have access to basic internet speeds, but it’s expensive and too slow. Will federal money help?
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The pipeline is operating under a temporary certificate that expires Dec. 13.
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The rate increase would boost Ameren Missouri's yearly revenue by $300 million and help finance clean energy projects. But advocates argue that rate increases will put struggling families at risk of utility disconnection and homelessness.
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Invenergy has bought 45% of the land it needs to run the electric transmission line across northern Missouri.
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The pandemic triggered a major housing crisis, resulting in millions of renters and unhoused people across the country becoming at risk for being evicted or displaced. Meanwhile, those living in apartments with mold or pests have been stuck with environmental conditions that exacerbate asthma and COVID-19. Locally, tenants and housing advocates are pushing back by advocating for eviction moratoriums, holding landlords accountable, and working to create a tenants bill of rights. In this episode, we hear from the three working members of State Street Tenants Resistance about what motivates them to advocate for a tenants bill of rights, and the Community Empowerment Organizer of a local community development corporation will explain how to hold problem landlords accountable and what’s at stake when large companies and the state need to be held accountable, too.