FirstEnergy Mobile Maintenance

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Created on Sunday, 22 May 2011 Written by Jim DePoe

05/18 14:28 FirstEnergy to Locate Mobile Maintenance Group in Western Pennsylvania

Highly skilled jobs will be based in Westmoreland County

AKRON, Ohio, May 18, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- FirstEnergy (NYSE: FE) today announced plans to locate a power plant maintenance team in Western Pennsylvania.

The Mobile Maintenance Group will support the safe, reliable and efficient operation of FirstEnergy's electric generating plants. The group's 39 maintenance and outage support employees will be based in Rostraver Township, Pa., which demonstrates FirstEnergy's commitment to maintain jobs in Westmoreland County following its recent merger with Allegheny Energy.

"The Mobile Maintenance group will allow us to dispatch skilled, experienced employees wherever and whenever they are needed," said George Farah, vice president, Fossil Engineering and Construction. "From installing motors to assisting with plant outages, the new group will bring a fleet approach to our maintenance work and support the reliable operation of our generating plants."

A best practice identified by the FirstEnergy-Allegheny Energy employee merger integration teams, the mobile workforce will lower costs and provide operational flexibility. Scheduled for completion in the third quarter, the Rostraver facility will consist of office and warehouse space as well as an area to repair equipment.

FirstEnergy is a diversified energy company dedicated to safety, reliability and operational excellence. Its ten electric distribution companies comprise the nation's largest investor-owned electric system. Its diverse generating fleet features non-emitting nuclear, scrubbed baseload coal, natural gas, and pumped- storage hydro and other renewables, and has a total generating capacity of over 23,000 megawatts.

Expansion OK'd for storing spent nuclear fuel at Beaver plant

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Created on Saturday, 30 April 2011 Written by Administrator

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved a major expansion of spent nuclear fuel storage capacity at FirstEnergy's Beaver Valley Unit 2 nuclear reactor in Shippingport, Beaver County.

The NRC action, announced Friday afternoon, allows the Akron, Ohio-based electric company to "rerack" its existing storage pool and install new higher density racks that will allow for underwater storage of up to 1,690 spent fuel assemblies or "bundles," an increase from the current capacity of 1,088.

That storage pool, which measures 53 feet long by 29 feet wide and 38 feet deep, contains 945 spent fuel bundles now.

Spent nuclear fuel has been accumulating at power plants for more than 50 years and is stored at all of the 103 nuclear power plants in the United States, including Beaver Valley, Three Mile Island and three others in Pennsylvania. Expansion of Beaver Valley Unit 1 spent fuel capacity was approved and completed in the early 1990s.

"(Nuclear power) plants all over the country are doing this," said Todd Schneider, a FirstEnergy spokesman. "It's a stop-gap measure that's necessary because there's no centralized national storage facility."

Mr. Schneider said the storage expansion requested by the company in April 2009 will provide up to 11 years of additional wet storage capacity for Unit 2. Work on removing the old rack and installing a new one will begin later this year or early next year and take several months to complete, he said.

In issuing the amendment, the NRC stated that "There is reasonable assurance. ... that the activities authorized by this amendment can be conducted without endangering the health and safety of the public. ..."

Neal Sheehan, an NRC spokesman, said the commission's three-year review of the company's spent fuel storage expansion request was not unusually lengthy but did include a number of highly technical issues related to how the higher density storage racks will affect the storage pools and the steel and concrete walls around it.

"Spent fuel is getting a great deal of attention because of what happened in Japan," Mr. Sheehan said. "But there's not a great deal of controversy about this one."

Mr. Schneider said spent fuel storage at the Japanese reactors was located above the reactors, which caused some problems.

"Ours are located at ground level in concrete and steel-lined pools in a completely different area of the plant," he said.

A nuclear fuel rod is as big around as a pencil and 14 feet long. Each fuel assembly or "bundle" contains 264 rods and each of the two Beaver Valley reactor cores contain 157 assemblies.

FirstEnergy replaces or "changes out" about one-third of the assemblies in each core every 18 months during refueling and the spent fuel bundles are placed in the pool where they are submerged under 23 feet of water.

The Beaver Valley Power Station Units 1 and 2, located along the Ohio River, 22 miles northwest of Pittsburgh, produce more than 1,800 megawatts of electric power. The two reactors at Beaver Valley power station went online in 1976 and 1987.



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11120/1143142-54.stm#ixzz1L0ICgh9B

UCC

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Created on Sunday, 27 January 2008 Written by Administrator

IBEW Forms Utility Council UCC-2

Local 29 along with eleven other Local Unions and System Council U-3 have become part of the newly created Utility Coordinating Council, UCC-2. International President Ed Hill authorized this new council as a method to coordinate information between the various IBEW Local Unions when dealing with FirstEnergy.

Greg Wolfe, Business Representative of Local 459 was elected as Chairman of the council and Mike Gabner, Business Manager of Local 777 was elected Secretary-Treasurer. The council represents approximately 4600 IBEW members that are FirstEnergy employees.

Earlier in 2003 the council delegates hand billed the FirstEnergy Stockholders meeting and then raised issues concerning worker's treatment to Company C.E.O. Pete Burg at that meeting.

The highest paid utilities company CEOs

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Created on Sunday, 29 June 2008 Written by Administrator
Friday June 27, 3:46 pm ET
Dominion Resources CEO tops list of highest-paid chiefs in the utilities sector in 2007

 

NEW YORK (AP) -- Thomas F. Farrell, II, the chief executive of Dominion Resources Inc., topped the list of the most highly paid chief executives in the utilities sector.

AP examined 2007 CEO pay data from the 410 companies in the S&P 500 that filed compensation disclosures with federal regulators in the first six months of this year. The following are the top earners at companies in the utilities sector.

1. Thomas F. Farrell, II, of Dominion Resources Inc.: $13.3 million

2. Mayo A. Shattuck, III, of Constellation Energy Group: $12.8 million

3. Anthony J. Alexander of FirstEnergy Corp.: $12.3 million

The AP's formula includes salary, perks, bonuses, above-market interest on pay set aside for later, and company estimates for the value of stock options and stock awards on the day they were granted.

 

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