Municipal Enterprise
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& Best Practices
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MODELS & BEST PRACTICES
Austin
Energy (Austin, TX)
www.austinenergy.com
Austin Energy is the nation's 10th largest community-owned
electric utility. Owned by the city of Austin, Austin Energy serve
360,000 households and over 800,000 people (including some customers
outside Austin's city limits). In the past three decades,
the utility has provided $1.3 billion in profits to the community,
including $73 million in 2003. Austin Energy has supported the use
of renewable energy through its Green Choice power program, the
largest such effort in the nation for the past three years, according
to the U.S. Department of Energy.
*UPDATED* Cedar Falls Utilities
(Cedar Falls, IA)
www.cfu.net
Cedar Falls Utilities has been a leader among municipal utilities in the development of broadband, recently completing its first fiber-to-the-premise installation in 2006. It provides high-speed Internet service to its customers for $40 a month, maintains lower prices than surrounding utilities, and generated $1.4 million for Cedar Falls’ general fund in 2006. By the end of 2003, the number of high-speed Internet customers had reached 75% of the number of basic cable subscribers, enabling the utility to begin to retire debt taken on for the project ahead of schedule.
Cleveland Public Power (Cleveland, OH)
www.cpp.org
Founded in 1906, Cleveland Public Power is Ohio's largest
public power company and the 35th largest in the nation. In the
1970s, the city was almost forced to sell the company. In 1977,
then Mayoral candidate (now Congressman) Dennis Kucinich (D) ran
on a platform to stop the sale. Two years later, city residents
voted 2-to-1 against privatizing their municipal power system. In
1986 then-Mayor (now U.S. Senator) George Voinovich (R) introduced
legislation to enable the utility to expand its service system.
Today, Cleveland Public Power is one of the country's leading
public power companies, with power reliability rated at 99.99 percent.
Coquille Economic
Development Corporation (North Bend, OR)
www.cedco.net
CEDCO acts as the parent corporation for all Coquille Tribal businesses,
which range from hospitality and gaming to health care, agriculture
(Coquille Cranberries may be the world's largest producer
of organic cranberries) and a broadband telecommunications company
dedicated to providing rural communities with high-speed Internet
connectivity. Additionally, CEDCO acts as a business incubator for
developing Tribal businesses.
Denver
Convention Center Hotel Project (Denver, CO)
www.denverconventionhotel.com
The City of Denver decided to use public ownership as a strategy
to finance the development of a hotel to support its convention
center. Construction began in June 2003. The scheduled opening date
for the hotel is December 2005. The facility, when opened, will
be managed by the Hyatt Regency hotel chain.
East Bay Municipal
Utility District (Oakland, CA)
www.ebmud.com
The publicly owned EBMUD provides water services to over a million
customers in the East Bay. EBMUD has converted a full 90 percent
of its service cars were hybrid vehicles as part of the agency's
efforts to engage in environmentally responsible business practices.
Glasgow
Electric Power Board (Glasgow, KY)
www.glasgowepb.net
The Glasgow Electric Plant Board governs the municipally owned power
company in Glasgow, Kentucky. The service division provides consulting
services and viability studies to those communities interested in
starting a municipally owned utility, the acquisition of a privately
operated facility, or the diversification of existing services.
Houston
Convention Hotel (Houston, TX) www.houstonconventionctr.com/press_room/120303.html
The City of Houston entered into a public-private partnership with
the Hilton hotel chain to develop a new hotel, which opened in December
2003, to support its convention center. The city owns the hotel,
while the Hilton Hotels Corporation, the world's largest convention
hotel operator, manages the hotel.
Los Angeles Dept.
of Water and Power (Los Angeles, CA)
www.ladwp.com
LADWP is the country's largest public utility supplying water
and electricity to the city's 3.8 million residents. Each
year, it transfers at least seven percent of its electric gross
revenues and five percent of its water gross revenues to the Los
Angeles General Fund, helping finance city police and fire protection,
as well as recreational facilities.
Opinet (Bristol,
VA)
www.bvu-optinet.com
Optinet has been a leader among public utilities in the deployment
of fiber-to-the-home technology for broadband transmission. Through
its fiber network, the utility provides customers with local phone
service, long distance telephone, cable TV, high speed Internet
service, and advanced business voice and data transmission services.
Pike's
Place Market (Seattle, WA)
www.pikeplacemarket.org
Run by the Pike Place Market Development Authority, a non-profit
board established by the city in 1973 after a 1971 voter referendum
supporting the restoration of a public market, the market has proven
to be a model for the redevelopment of public markets across the
country.
Port Authority
of New York & New Jersey (New York, NY)
www.panynj.gov
With $2.7 billion in revenues in 2003, the Port Authority of New
York & New Jersey is the largest port authority in the country,
operating Newark, JFK and La Guardia airports as well as the owner
of the site of the former World Trade Center in lower Manhattan.
Since the 1980s, the Port Authority has been actively involved in
industrial redevelopment to retain manufacturing jobs. One such
effort is the Teleport, a telecommunications center in Staten Island.
Port
of Los Angeles (Los Angeles, CA)
www.portoflosangeles.org
The Port of Los Angles is the largest container port in the United
States and the fourth largest cruise passenger facility. In FY 2004,
total operating revenues exceeded $350 million with net income of
$90 million. The Port is also a major real estate developer. Long
term plans, for instance, call for the development of 400 acres
of Port property into a combination of parkland, commercial, retail,
and residential space along an eight-mile stretch of waterfront.
Port of Seattle
(Seattle, WA)
www.portseattle.org
The Port of Seattle operates a cruise port and container facilities,
also operates Seattle-Tacoma (Sea-Tac) airport. In 2003, operating
revenues were $321 million. It also leases commercial space, including
business conference facilities.
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