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*** UPDATED x3 *** Pritzker energy bill coverage roundup

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* Tribune

Gov. J.B. Pritzker is supporting short-term subsidies for two threatened Illinois nuclear plants as part of a wide-ranging overhaul of energy policy his office says would put the state on a path to 100% clean power by 2050.

The proposal represents a balancing act for Pritzker, who is attempting to preserve high-paying union jobs at Exelon’s Byron and Dresden nuclear plants while also seeking accountability from a company whose subsidiary, Commonwealth Edison, has admitted to engaging in bribery in an effort to win support for legislation that included nuclear subsidies in 2016. […]

The governor’s plan draws in elements of a proposal from clean energy advocates that would offer no subsidies to Exelon, and one backed by a union coalition that would offer much more generous and long-lasting support for the four Exelon nuclear plants that aren’t already receiving subsidies from the 2016 law, including two Exelon hasn’t threatened to close.

“Our view is that this proposal pulls together the best of all the proposals that are currently out there into one comprehensive package, and we think it’s a good place to start final negotiations,” [Deputy Gov. Christian Mitchell] said.

* Crain’s

With the new legislation, the governor seeks to take some control over a legislative process that has seen separate coalitions propose jarringly different approaches to accomplishing the same goal. A union coalition has put forward legislation that arguably would raise utility bills even more, would provide a higher subsidy to Exelon and would preserve some of ComEd’s formula-rate system. A set of environmental groups, along with the Citizens Utility Board, has pushed the Clean Energy Jobs Act, which would have the state assume oversight of the wholesale power market in northern Illinois with the goal of incentivizing renewable power and disincentivizing fossil fuels. And a coalition of renewable power developers has endorsed legislation, which like Pritzker’s bill, would substantially increase ratepayer charges to finance more projects.

To this point, Springfield has struggled to make choices, with House committees endorsing the various bills on lopsided votes even when they were at cross purposes. […]

The bill includes many provisions aimed at shielding low-income households from those higher costs. Most prominent among them is a call for “tiered” electricity rates, in which those below 80 percent of the median income level for the area would pay less for power than everyone else. Those above that threshold, however, would pay higher rates to make up the difference for the utilities. […]

An unusual reform target in the governor’s bill is the Citizens Utility Board, for decades the most prominent consumer advocate in the state on utility issues. The measure would subject CUB to the Freedom of Information Act and would bar the organization from accepting grants from foundations seeded with utility money. CUB has been accused of being less critical of ComEd, the original source of some of that grant money in the past, than other utilities.

* Sun-Times

The Consumers and Climate First Act addresses ethics and consumer protections as well as renewable energy and clean power. It also seeks to address how the state plans to help those who lose their jobs as Illinois shifts away from non-renewable energy sources.

Pritzker’s bill would end formula rates, a practice of utility companies being able to “spend ratepayer money with little oversight, meaning ComEd and Ameren, will no longer be able to dramatically increase their profits by loading up the rate base with little cost control,” according to a summary of the bill.

The legislation would also expand the statement of economic interest that legislators must file to include any spouse or immediate family member who is employed by a public utility in Illinois and would make the Citizens Utility Board subject to requests under the Freedom of Information Act and prohibit that board from accepting funds from foundations affiliated with a public utility, according to the bill’s summary. […]

Pritzker’s legislation also seeks to help energy consumers and includes eliminating online payment fees for all utility bills and would eliminate the customer deposit requirement and late fees for low-income residential utility customers. Those with incomes that fall at or below 80% of their area median income would be able to receive tiered discount rates on their utility bills.

The legislation also looks ahead, seeking to put the state on a path toward 100% clean energy by 2050. It also entails a phasing out of coal by 2030 and natural gas by 2045, according to the summary. Along with that push, Pritzker’s legislation aims to increase the adoption of electric vehicles in the state to 1 million by 2030.

* WUIS

State Rep. Ann Williams (D-Chicago), the lead sponsor of the Clean Energy Jobs Act, says ethics reforms for powerful utility companies must be central to whatever lawmakers end up passing, and maintains that only her legislation has stringent enough language to root out corruption stemming from the companies’ relationships with Springfield.

But ComEd this week disagreed with Williams and her allies’ proposals that would include a measure of restitution for ratepayers and an outside monitor. The company’s senior vice president of regulatory and energy policy, Veronica Gomez, told a House panel Tuesday that it was “not appropriate to make a conclusion here that some additional punishment is due” to ComEd beyond the feds’ fine. […]

The union-backed Climate Jobs Illinois also introduced ethics language last week after several news outlets published stories on that issue getting pushed to the back burner. After Pritzker’s office briefed stakeholders on the governor’s plan Wednesday, Climate Jobs Illinois expressed dissatisfaction.

“We’re disappointed that this proposal does not more aggressively advocate for comprehensive labor standards so that new clean energy jobs provide a path to the middle class, especially for communities disproportionately impacted by the pandemic and climate change,” Climate Jobs Illinois Executive Director Joe Duffy said in a statement. “As we review this new language, we’re also concerned that it appears to overlook prioritizing solar on public schools while not doing enough to preserve the nuclear fleet, which is critical to hitting the state’s proposed emissions goals while saving tens of thousands of Illinois jobs.”

Lots more in all of those stories, so click the links. Also, click here for a brief fact sheet from the governor’s office. Subscribers have more details.

*** UPDATE 1 *** Press release…

Delivering on principles laid out last year by Gov. Pritzker and after months of working group meetings including lawmakers, advocates, and industry, the Consumers and Climate First Act was introduced in the General Assembly today by Senator Celina Villanueva and Representative Kam Buckner. The legislation provides a path for Illinois to help lead the nation’s transition to a clean energy economy. The bill serves as a starting point — a series of markers intended to help guide the energy negotiations underway in Springfield. A detailed overview of the legislation is attached.

“As we shape our economic recovery from COVID-19, it’s imperative that we do so with an eye to the future – and Illinoisans deserve a future full of good-paying jobs, clean energy, honest deals, and transparent rates, a future that guarantees clean air, clean water, affordable utilities, and serious consumer protections for all,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “The Consumers and Climate First Act, a product of months’ worth of working groups inclusive of all interests, allows Illinois to fulfill that obligation to our working families. Over the coming weeks, I look forward to working with members of the General Assembly to deliver an ethical framework for Illinois to lead the United States in the clean energy transition in the years to come.”

A culmination of months of energy working group meetings, the Consumers and Climate First Act brings together the best ideas from a diverse range of stakeholders and major energy proposals. It includes dozens of proposals across eight central principles:

Ethics and accountability: Holds utility companies accountable to ratepayers by doing away with formula rates, protecting ratepayer funds from being used for charitable contributions and requiring an annual Exelon audit and immediate ComEd investigation, among other measures.

Consumer protections: Increases affordability for low-income households by bolstering cost-saving programs and eliminating draconian fees and surcharges.

Renewable energy and labor standards: Puts the state on a path toward 100% clean energy by 2050. Doubles the state’s investment in renewable energy and supports union members working on wind and solar projects by requiring project labor agreements in utility-scale wind and solar projects and prevailing wage on large distributed generation and large community solar projects.

Clean power and air: Phases out coal by 2030 and natural gas by 2045 through a carbon price, which will direct revenue to impacted communities, and provides for measured, short-term state support for two nuclear plants.

Transportation electrification: Provides incentives for electric vehicles and statewide charging infrastructure buildout to support the adoption of 1 million EVs by 2030.

Just transition and workforce development: Supports displaced workers and leverages community-based organizations to ensure members of equity focused populations have dedicated and sustained support to enter and complete the career pipeline for clean energy and related sector jobs.

Equity in the clean energy economy: Rewards equitable investments in the renewable energy sector and requires annual diversity reports from utilities and renewable energy developers.

Energy efficiency: Supports decarbonization programs and allows for greater efficiencies in buildings.

“We need to take bold action to combat the climate crisis — and we need to do so equitably and deliver real environmental justice for our communities,” said Sen. Celina Villanueva, Senate sponsor of the legislation. “This set of proposals ushers in a clean energy economy in Illinois, which will create jobs in my district and across the state. It protects consumers, supports workers and holds utility companies accountable. I’m glad that Governor Pritzker has made this a priority of his administration as we get back to work in Springfield. Our planet cannot wait. Our people cannot wait.”

“We are careening towards a fatal cliff and nothing else that we do in the General Assembly will matter if we don’t very seriously get focused on sustainable, clean energy resources like wind, solar, and energy efficiency to combat global climate change,” said Rep. Kam Buckner, Chairperson of the Illinois House Black Caucus and House sponsor of the legislation. “The time to act by passing inclusive climate change and clean energy legislation is now and not a moment later. We have a real opportunity to protect consumers, our planet and create well-paying clean energy jobs for the communities who need it the most. It is important that we intensify commitments to addressing long-standing structural racism. The movements for racial justice and for environmental sustainability are inextricably linked and we have to create policies that mirror this moment. Our economic recovery is also reliant on holding utilities accountable and breaking down barriers that have prevented communities of color from sharing in the benefits of clean energy.”

“I commend the Governor for this comprehensive energy bill that prioritizes affordability while holding utilities accountable to the state and consumers,” said Attorney General Kwame Raoul. “The Governor’s proposal will help lower consumers’ monthly bills by getting rid of costly formula rates and gas surcharges and requiring ComEd and Ameren to return hundreds of millions of excess tax payments back to consumers on a more reasonable schedule. The measure will help vulnerable households stay connected to essential utility services by expanding LIHEAP eligibility and eliminating customer deposits and late fees for low-income consumers. The proposal also dedicates resources to environmental justice communities that have long endured the greatest harms from dirty power plants. I look forward to working with the Governor and the Legislature to craft additional energy policies that balance between affordability and clean energy goals while bolstering a strong and diverse workforce in the energy sector.”

“For the past decade, ComEd, Exelon and other utilities have unduly influenced Illinois energy policy. Today, we applaud Governor Pritzker for taking a stand against this undue influence and putting the interests of consumers and the climate first,” said Illinois PIRG Director Abe Scarr. “It’s time to end automatic rate hikes, gas utility bill surcharges and restore meaningful utility oversight. We call on the Illinois General Assembly to support these vital reforms.”

“Bold times call for bold action. JB Pritzker is the first governor in Illinois history to propose a serious, comprehensive plan to address climate change, put Illinois on a path to 100% clean energy, and eliminate dirty fossil fuels from our power grid,” said the Clean Jobs Coalition. “While our coalition believes further discussion is needed on many specific provisions of Governor Pritzker’s energy bill, it’s clear this proposal and the Clean Energy Jobs Act (CEJA) share many goals, especially on creating equitable jobs in every part of Illinois, holding utilities accountable, and creating a just transition for places where coal companies have said they will cut and run, leaving communities to deal with property tax shortfalls and loss of good paying jobs if we fail to act. We look forward to working with the Governor’s office, legislators, and stakeholders to pass a bill before May 31 that achieves those goals.”

“Governor Pritzker has set out a bold plan for climate action that holds utilities accountable and makes substantial, urgently-needed investments in our clean energy economy,” said J.C. Kibbey, Illinois Clean Energy Advocate, Natural Resources Defense Council. “We look forward to working with the Governor to make Illinois a national leader on climate change.”

“Over the past ten years, 100 percent renewable energy has gone from an aspirational dream to a serious commitment that seven states and over 140 cities have already made. If passed, the Consumers and Climate First Act would make Illinois the eighth state to commit to 100 percent clean or renewable electricity, and would protect Illinois’ climate and environment for future generations,” said Paloma Paez-Coombe, Environment Illinois Associate. “Bold, big picture goals must be paired with practical, short-term stepping stones, and we’re excited that this bill offers both. It’s time to move beyond the outdated and polluting energy sources harming our environment, and set our sights on Illinois’ clean, renewable future.”

“We applaud Governor Pritzker for fully embracing an equitable clean energy future for Illinois,” said Nakhia Crossley, central region director for the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA). “While there will be continued negotiations on critical aspects of the legislative language, Governor Pritzker’s commitment to saving consumers money while fully building out Illinois’ renewable energy sector with strong labor and equity standards is historic. We look forward to working with all stakeholders to finalize and pass legislation this session.”

“The road to tackling climate change demands tangible action like electrifying transportation in an accessible, equitable way,” said Anne Smart, Vice President of Public Policy at ChargePoint. “The Consumers and Climate First Act will put Illinois at the forefront of electrifying transportation by helping to deploy more charging stations across the state, protecting consumers and fostering a competitive marketplace. ChargePoint applauds Governor Pritzker for his leadership and we look forward to working with our Illinois stakeholders to cultivate an accessible, consumer-focused electric vehicle network across the state.”

“EVgo applauds Governor Pritzker for his leadership on transportation electrification. By focusing on complementary policies to scale both vehicle sales and charging infrastructure through tools such as rate design, make-ready programs, and rebates, with important attention to environmental justice communities and transportation equity, Illinois will be on a path to decarbonize the transportation sector,” said EVgo CEO Cathy Zoi.

“Today, Black and Brown families in Illinois are disproportionately impacted by disconnections of essential utility service and unaffordable utility rates — a problem that existed even before the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Donna Carpenter, a parent leader with Community Organizing and Family Issues (COFI) POWER-PAC IL. “COFI champions the governor’s decision to include important new protections for those who struggle to afford electric, gas and water utility service in his new energy bill that will make a difference in the lives of all Illinoisans who struggle to afford life essentials each month.”

*** UPDATE 2 *** Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition…

Today, the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition released the following statement about the Consumers and Climate First Act:

“Bold times call for bold action. JB Pritzker is the first governor in Illinois history to propose a serious, comprehensive plan to address climate change, put Illinois on a path to 100% clean energy, and eliminate dirty fossil fuels from our power grid.

“While our coalition believes further discussion is needed on many specific provisions of Governor Pritzker’s energy bill, it’s clear this proposal and the Clean Energy Jobs Act (CEJA) share many goals, especially on creating equitable jobs in every part of Illinois, holding utilities accountable, and creating a just transition for places where coal companies have said they will cut and run, leaving communities to deal with property tax shortfalls and loss of good paying jobs if we fail to act.

“We look forward to working with the Governor’s office, legislators, and stakeholders to pass a bill before May 31 that achieves those goals.”

*** UPDATE 3 *** Sierra Club Illinois Director Jack Darin…

“Crisis cannot be averted with half measures, and for the first time in Illinois history Governor Pritzker has put forward a proposal to confront the climate crisis with the ambition it demands by reducing emissions, creating clean energy jobs, and holding utilities accountable. It is refreshing to see state leaders commit to a vision of 100% clean energy that strives to put the needs of Illinoisians over those of corporate utilities.

“The Governor’s proposal shares many goals with the Clean Energy Jobs Act, including a commitment to build enough clean energy to supply all of our power needs by 2050. These bold actions on climate must also include bold commitments to racial and economic justice. As Illinois moves beyond coal and gas, our climate plan must prioritize emission reductions in communities most impacted by polluters and an equitable transition for those left in an economic lurch by fossil fuel companies.

“We are excited to work together with stakeholders and elected leaders to build a policy for Illinois that puts us boldly on a path towards climate justice.”

posted by Rich Miller
Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 4:11 am

Comments

  1. I think it is a real good entry into the debate. A little late, but better late than never. And then people upset about it (utilities, exelon, coal and gas companies, and some elements of labor), are not the people necessarily on the right side of history here.

    I am sure there is a lot lot more work to be done, but things are moving it seems.

    Comment by Ok Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 7:41 am

  2. Maybe we should just do away with private utilities. We’re talking about saving the species here and energy is a need for every person living in this state. Shareholder profits and dividends represent waste — it means that people who were paying rates were paying more than what it cost to produce that energy.

    The shareholders pocketing those dividends and the corporate officers making bank all represent outlays from a company that do not support the overall mission of saving our species by reducing the amount of carbon we pollute as quickly as possible. There is no traditional business model incentive for a company driven by short term profits to actually adopt infrastructure that would allow them to meet our energy needs without poisoning our environment.

    These crooks at Exelon shouldn’t be who we depend on to make the right decisions for the future of our state and our necessary transition away from fossil fuels. “Profit” from the production of energy must be exclusively redirected towards the development and maintenance of carbon neutral or negative energy generation.

    As long as there’s a privately own for profit power company showing up with a song and dance about how they failed to responsibly maintain their company’s assets and just can’t make money without public intervention, I don’t think we’ve gone far enough to address the situation.

    There should be no private utilities in Illinois. We’ve seen what they do.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 9:11 am

  3. ==it was “not appropriate to make a conclusion here that some additional punishment is due” to ComEd beyond the feds’ fine. […]==

    Right or wrong, there is a perception that the Trump DOJ Comed fine was just a slap on the wrist and not much of a deterrent.

    Comment by Claire Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 9:19 am

  4. I would love to see Illinois run a utility company. We can’t run veterans homes, state pensions, FOID . We run the SOS and a simple trailer plate is $118. Yup would love to see those electric rates.

    Comment by Blue Dog Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 10:01 am

  5. Candy, your comments reminds me of the words of the late Illinoisan (and Nobel Laureate) Milton Friedman: “There is one and only one social responsibility of business—to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud.”

    One might argue about who gets to set the “rules of the game” and whether ComEd, Ameren, etc. have acted “without deception or fraud.” Intelligent commenters here might disagree about the first question, though I suspect most wouldn’t about the second.

    FWIW, I grew up as a ComEd customer, shocked with how much my family paid for electricity that seemed to constantly go out in the summer. I moved decades ago to Springfield, which had a city-run power and water utility that hardly ever experienced a blackout and cost half as much as ComEd. However… when it came time to modernize some years back, the utility chose to build a state of the art - wait for it - coal fired power plant. So even non-profit entities do not always think in a long term way.

    Comment by Anonymous Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 10:38 am

  6. == The company’s senior vice president of regulatory and energy policy, Veronica Gomez, told a House panel Tuesday that it was “not appropriate to make a conclusion here that some additional punishment is due” to ComEd beyond the feds’ fine. […]==

    The fine was $200 million. The annual tax break that ComEd got under the 2017 federal corporate tax cut was over $250. Let that sink in. They’re saving more money in taxes *each year* than they were penalized for bribing officials to inflate their rates on an annual basis for the last 10 years.

    It is certainly appropriate to make the conclusion that at least some additional investigation into the amount of the ill-gotten profits of that illegal activity and see where it falls vis-a-vis the penalty.

    Comment by Notorious RBG Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 10:42 am

  7. mini or natrium nuclear reactors are where the future of generation of electricity is at.

    Build one or two and let Illinois lead with new tech and cheap electrons.

    If Illinois had the nations cheapest electricity along with the best transportation network (which we have) and access to massive water supplies (again we already have) - the state wouldn’t be losing Congressional seats.

    Comment by Cool Papa Bell Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 10:55 am

  8. While you are at just don’t just stop with energy, do away with the private sector completely and replace with communism, socialism, Marxism, Leninism or Stalinism we’ve seen what they do too

    Comment by Lucky Pierre Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 12:30 pm

  9. Illinois electricity from renewables and gas is very cheap - nuclear is expensive. that’s why exelon says it needs subsidies - they can’t compete on price. New nukes will never happen.

    Comment by illinoyed Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 12:49 pm

  10. Sorry, 10:38 was me. I agree with Cool Papa Bell; from what I’ve read about new-generation nuclear reactors, they might provide a reliable, green baseload to keep the lights on when the sun’s not shining and the wind’s not blowing. Old-school nuclear would too, and Illinois has lots of it, but it’s not too cost efficient.

    Yesterday, I checked in with a friend who works for the organization that runs the electric grid in our part of the country. He said that getting to an 80% green grid is feasible and not overly expensive. Here’s the study he referenced: https://www.nrel.gov/analysis/re-futures.html

    Shifting that last 20% to renewables is apparently disproportionately difficult and/or expensive.

    Comment by Dysfunction Junction Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 12:56 pm

  11. Will be interesting to see how CUB responds to the bill.

    Comment by Derek Smalls Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 1:03 pm

  12. The Gov wants NatGas phased out in 25 years. With electric cars and more AC use renewables aren’t going to cut it.

    Wind and solar are cheap for now given federal dollars that underwrite the cost of them. New nukes are coming - it would be nice for Illinois to lead on something.

    Comment by Cool Papa Bell Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 1:12 pm

  13. Comed should be forced to pay for new direct current transmission lines similar to the Rock Island clean line. They should route it along I-88 to the collar counties. That line should then be turned over to an independent non-profit agency that would bring cheap wind energy to the area. Comed spent a lot of ratepayer money to kill the original project because it would be in competition with the nukes.

    Comment by DuPage Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 1:22 pm

  14. Comrade Pierre - Today, you can buy a razor handle with one blade for $5. When you go to buy refill blades for that handle, they are 5 for $20.

    Would you be willing to pay a one-time cost of $30 for a razor handle if you knew you were going to get the blades for free in perpetuity? If so, what exactly is your argument against wind or solar (i.e. free fuel) power? Not all financial decisions have to be short term ones. Nothing communist about strategic thinking.

    Comment by Dysfunction Junction Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 1:41 pm

  15. “While you are at just don’t just stop with energy, do away with the private sector completely and replace with communism, socialism, Marxism, Leninism or Stalinism we’ve seen what they do too.”

    Total non-sequitur. The governor’s bill does nothing of the sort. Maybe your reflexive talking point machine is broken.

    Comment by Chicago Cynic Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 1:43 pm

  16. ==I would love to see Illinois run a utility company.==

    Maybe we can take Springfield’s CWLP and take it statewide? (Might have been a good idea 20 years ago but since then, not sure about that).

    Comment by EssentialStateEmployeeFromChatham Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 2:50 pm

  17. Better be a lot more critical about these newly proposed reactors than we have been about the ones we have before you go signing away the farm.
    In March 2021 Union of Concerned Scientists did a very critical review of the new generation of proposed reactors, and it was not at all flattering or reassuring. See it here:
    find the full report: www.ucsusa.org/advanced-isnt-always-better

    Guys like Bill Gates are in this for the money, not for merit badges and plenary indulgences. It’s the next energy scam, one that will waste our two most precious resources in the climate fight — time and money.

    Comment by Dave Kraft, NEIS Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 3:07 pm

  18. ==Maybe we can take Springfield’s CWLP and take it statewide?==

    Not sure I’d go that far, but one could do worse (for example, the entire ComEd customer base). CWLP is still way more reliable and probably still cheaper. As I recall, when CWLP wanted to start building a new coal-fired plant in 2006, the Sierra Club fought them tooth and nail to stop construction. Long story short, they came to an agreement that CWLP would buy a certain percentage of their total power from a nearby wind farm.

    Since then, the cost of wind MWh has gone down and coal MWh has risen dramatically. So Sierra Club may have done CWLP a big favor in the end. Anyone here have the numbers to prove or disprove this?

    Comment by Dysfunction Junction Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 3:12 pm

  19. All this love for nuclear power. Good luck trying to persuade the utilities and power producers to a build a new nuke plant, including the smaller, modular reactors. It won’t happen without a nationwide carbon tax and additional government subsidies for the industry.

    Comment by going nuclear Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 5:17 pm

  20. Last month, my electric bill reflected 64% of recurring cost. About 18% taxes. And he balance in consumption. I have solar in my man garage and it was frightfully expensive to install and maintain. We are always going to need either nuclear are fossil fuel electric generation as backup. These facilities must be maintained and the lines/grid kept up. The lie I see is the savings to consumers. In fact I predict otherwise.

    Comment by Blue Dog Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 5:20 pm

  21. The Union for Concerned Scientists are not serious people in my book.

    I appreciated the pushback on nuclear power - and do listen to all voices here. But I’d pick a better outlet than the UCS.

    Comment by Cool Papa Bell Thursday, Apr 29, 21 @ 6:17 pm

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