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Report for America is a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms to report on under-covered issues and communities.

Going Nuclear: Byron Fights To Save Its Power Plant

Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco
Byron smoke stacks.

At the end of August, Ashley McGarry heard the news that Exelon Generation planned to retire the Byron Generating Station, the nuclear power plant about 90 minutes west of Chicago. But it wasn't exactly "news" to McGarry; she’s from Byron, and for her it’s more of a headline that gets recycled every few years.

“For years and years and years, it's always, ‘Oh, the plant is going to close,’” McGarry said. “I mean, it seems like in more recent years, it's been more regularly stated that the plant is going to close, and then as soon as that announcement is made, another announcement comes out that they're having their best year ever.”

McGarry, a second grade teacher at Mary Morgan Elementary, is also the union president of the local teacher’s union, the Byron Education Association (BEA). She said she started getting the usual worried calls and thought to herself, “We've been here before, we've heard this before.” So the latest announcement barely even caught her attention.

But then there were more calls. And, soon, a worker at the power plant, one of McGarry’s former high school classmates, called her and said things were more serious. She said that, “within days, he was on the phone talking to me, and we were making plans.” It was a town-wide game of “telephone” and the plan soon turned to how to save the power plant.

The official announcement from Exelon promised to shutter not just the Byron nuclear power plant, but also another near Morris, Illinois which is just southwest of Chicago. Together, that would mean powering down four nuclear generation units that provide zero emission energy to some four millions homes and businesses across northern Illinois. Byron station would shut down by September of 2021, and Dresden would follow before the end of the year.

Although the facility is licensed to operate for two more decades, Exelon cited declining energy prices, current regulations and competition with fossil fuels as giving them no option but to retire the plants prematurely.

The announcement came on the heels of a federal investigation into a bribery scheme in which ComEd -- a subsidiary of Exelon -- exchanged jobs and contracts for legislative influence with the Illinois Speaker of the House, Mike Madigan. Earlier this summer, ComEd agreed to a deferred prosecution and paid a $200 million penalty.

Buster Barton, the superintendent of the Byron School District, called McGarry too. McGarry said that before any kind of doom and gloom set in, “There were already people coming at me with ‘We're gonna do this, and we're gonna do this and we're gonna do this.’ And I'm like, ‘Okay, there's a plan in place.’”

Credit Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco

Barton said before Exelon’s announcement went public, a representative from the company gave him a courtesy call to give him the heads up. Not long after the news hit, Barton and the school board and some other community stakeholders formed the Byron Station Response Committee. The group’s goal was to start mobilizing the Byron community around saving the plant and pushing legislators in Springfield to vote in favor of the power plant during the upcoming spring legislative session.

For Barton, it’s hard to overstate the kind of crater the power plant would leave behind in terms of lost tax dollars.

“Almost three quarters of $1,” Barton said. “So approximately 74% of our revenue comes from that plant.”

And he said that’s just for the school district, but that the 75% funding figure is more or less consistent with the rest of the local taxing districts too, which includes the fire department, the forest preserve district, and the library district.

An economic impact report recently released by Northern Illinois University reported that closing the power station would cost the region some 2,300 jobs and hundreds millions of dollars annually.

The report shows that the Byron Station's contribution to the Ogle County economy is estimated to be $338 million, nearly 17% of the gross domestic product. But the immediate blow would be a loss of 717 jobs at the plant, which translates to $97.5 million annual employee compensation. 

The study also shows that the effects of the closing wouldn’t just be limited to Ogle county. About 75% of the 717 employees of the plant live within Ogle, Winnebago and Lee counties.

For Barton, losing the power plant would also be a huge loss for clean energy in Illinois.

“That plant not only offers clean energy, in terms of not burning carbon," he said, "but it's also very, very, very reliable.” Barton said that the plant is online nearly 97% of the time.

McGarry agrees. She said that ‘sure’ maybe the district loses some local tax dollars but that in the long run the district will be OK -- they might just have to tighten up their belts. It’s the loss of nuclear energy that she thinks is the real shame.

“Getting rid of that plant will really increase our need for other types of resources that are carbon emitting, that are using our natural resources,” McGarry said. “And that's really, I think that's really the doom and gloom of it all.”

What’s more, in Illinois the State prioritizes funding for schools with the least percentage of local revenue and guarantees that they get at least the same amount of funding that they did the year before. And due to concern about the plant closing one day, The Byron School Board moved a lot of money around towards keeping a reserve.

So for McGarry, it’s the workers at the plant and everyone else that relies on it that she’s worried about.  

But she said that no matter what, people in Byron will be OK because this whole scenario has played in the back of their mind for years. 

“We’re the ultimate doomsday preppers," McGarry said. "They should make an HGTV show or Discovery Channel show about us.”

  • Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco is a 2020 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of the GroundTruth Project which is a national service program that places talented journalists in local newsrooms.