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News Archive 2003 New group to be
alternative to Indian Point opponents
By Jenny Weil
Nucleonics Week
November 20, 2003
A newly formed coalition of business and community leaders
and labor organizations plans to tell a side of the Indian
Point story not presented by antinuclear activists and spread
the message that the plant is safe and a reliable source of
electricity for the New York metropolitan region.
About 17 individuals and groups joined as founding members
of a coalition calling itself the New York Affordable Reliable
Electricity Alliance (AREA). The group was officially launched
Nov. 5 with seed money provided by Indian Point owner/operator
Entergy Nuclear.
Entergy Nuclear spokesman Jim Steets declined to say how
much money the company provided but said it was ''not a huge
amount'' and that the funding mostly covered administrative
and startup costs. The hope is that the organization participants
will make donations or seek other sources of funding to become
self-sustaining, said those close to the group.
Although the advocacy group's first project is to shore up
support for Indian Point, it has a wider agenda to raise awareness
about consumers' electrical needs and the supply and distribution
system. Part of the motivation for the group's debut was the
Aug. 14 blackout in parts of the U.S. and Canada, it said.
AREA says the ''economic prosperity of the region will depend
on how effectively energy issues are addressed.''
The primary spokesperson for AREA will be Jerry Kremer, former
chairman of the New York State Assembly's Ways & Means
Committee. Kremer will be counsel to AREA's advisory board.
Speaking at the first gathering of AREA members last week
was former New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani, now CEO of Giuliani
Partners, which was hired by Entergy as advisers on Indian
Point emergency planning and security issues. Neither Giuliani
nor his consulting company is listed as a New York AREA member.
Those named as participating members are: African American
Environmentalist Association; Aquarius Services Corp.; Associated
Builders & Owners; Boilermakers Local 5; Building Trade
Employers Association; Construction Industry Council of Westchester
and Hudson Valley Inc.; Matt Cordero, director of the Center
of Management Analysis at C.W. Post University; Energy Association
of New York State; former New York City Councilman Walter
McCaffrey; General Contractors Assoc.; William Havens, professor
emeritus at Columbia University; Independent Power Producers
of New York; International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
Local 1049; KeySpan Energy; Local 1-2, Utility Workers of
America, AFL-CIO; Long Island Power Authority; New York Building
Congress; New York City Central Labor Council; New York City
Partnership; and the Business Council of New York State.
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