HomeMy WebLinkAboutRICHARDS LAKE TO WAVERLY TRANSMISSION LINE - SPAR - 12-08 - CORRESPONDENCE - CORRESPONDENCE-HEARINGPurpose and Need
Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, Inc.
is proposing to construct a new 8-mile, 115-kilovolt transmis-
sion line to improve reliable electric service to the member -
consumers of Poudre Valley Rural Electric Association.
This line will provide the power delivery infrastructure
needed to increase reliability and capacity of the existing
transmission system.
Poudre Valley REA approached Tri-State, the co-op's power
supplier, about construction of the new line due to increased
electric loads in the area and because of reliability concerns
of the existing radial, 115-kilovolt line. Use and dependence
on the current line is reaching a critical level; to maintain
acceptable voltage levels and increased reliability, a looped
transmission system is necessary.
The new line would connect the Richard Lake Substation
located west of the Anheuser-Busch brewery plant and the
Waverly Substation near Douglas Lake on County Road 60.
While various alternative routes have been examined, it was
determined by Tri-State and Poudre Valley REA that this is
the best route with the least amount of impacts to area resi-
dents and businesses.
Benefits of the Proposed Project
The proposed project would.
■ boost load serving capacity to the area.
■ provide more dependable loop service.
■ upgrade the existing transmission system for Poudre
Valley REA.
Next Steps
It will be necessary for Tri-State to obtain permits for this
proposed project from the City of Fort Collins and Larimer
County. Before application, our primary objective is to work
closely with local landowners and businesses.
Tri-State's land rights consultants, Bensing & Associates,
will be contacting landowners along the proposed route to
provide information about the project and to request survey
permission. Once feasibility studies and permitting have
been completed, Tri-State will move forward with purchasing
easements for necessary rights -of -way.
The Cooperative Difference
Electric cooperatives are private, not -for profit utilities,
owned and governed by the members they serve. Electric
cooperatives bridge the vast expanse of rural America to
energize residences, farms, ranches, businesses and com-
munities that have organized cooperatively and accept the
responsibility for delivering safe, affordable and reliable
power.
Who is Tri-State?
Tri-State is a wholesale electric power supplier owned by
the 44 electric cooperatives that it serves. Tri-State gener-
ates and transports electricity to its member systems
throughout a 250,000 square -mile service territory across
Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico and Wyoming. Tri-State
was founded In 1952 and today supplies power for approx-
imately 1.4 million consumers in the four states.
Tri-State serves its member systems through a combina-
tion of owned baseload, intermediate and peaking power
plants that use coal and natural gas as their primary fuels,
supplemented by purchased power, federal hydroelectricity
allocations and renewable energy.
Your Local Electric Cooperative
Poudre V811ey Rural Electric Association
Fort Collins, Colo. -based Poudre Valley REA, Pi-State's
fourth largest member cooperative in terms of total meters
(35,000), is a consumer -owned electric utility serving por-
tions of Lorimer, Weld and Boulder counties. The co-op
employs 88 people and operates more than 3,800 miles of
line. In terms of revenue, just under half of the dollars it
receives for service is derived from residential consumers, -
larger commercial consumers comprise almost 40 percent
and small commercial accounts for about 8 percent. lfdgat-
lion loads and other services make up the remaining mem-
ber revenue.
Contact Information
Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association
Permitting and Land Rights Department
1100 W. 116th Ave., Westminster, Colo. 80234
Phone: 303.452.6111
For more information, visit www.t6state(it.org/transmission
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