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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) โ€” Ed Day said his main job as president of Mississippi Power Co. was to successfully complete the companyโ€™s Kemper County power plant.

Now, more than $1 billion in cost overruns at the coal-fired plant have claimed his job, and parent Southern Co. has sent in a top executive to try to salvage the mess.

Day abruptly resigned Monday as president of Mississippi Power. His replacement, effective immediately, is Ed Holland.

Until Monday, Holland had been the Atlanta-based parent companyโ€™s top lawyer. He also led an internal inquiry into the April announcement that Kemper was an additional $540 million over budget. Along the way, Holland found that Day failed to respond to requests from a Mississippi Public Service Commission lawyer about when company executives knew about a previous $376 million overrun that was announced in May 2012.

Holland told commission lawyer Shawn Shurden last week that Day had failed to respond.

โ€œIn a subsequent management meeting, Ed Day directed or definitely inferred that the documents should not be given to the commission, and these documents were never given to the commission,โ€ said Northern District Commissioner Brandon Presley, a Democrat who has opposed the plant.

Holland denies Day tried to defy regulators.

โ€œThere was no intentional withholding of information,โ€ Holland said. He said executives decided to communicate the information in a meeting, but failed to follow through. โ€œWe made a mistake of not delivering in a timely fashion,โ€ he said.

Holland said Day wasnโ€™t forced to resign, but said โ€œthe pressuresโ€ of Kemper and Mississippi Powerโ€™s other operations probably motivated the decision.

Holland said Mississippi Powerโ€™s vice president of generation, Tommy Anderson, also resigned recently and was not fired.

Mississippi Power, with 186,000 customers in 23 counties from Meridian to the Gulf Coast, often seems an afterthought for massive Southern Co. But now thereโ€™s a chance that the woes of the companyโ€™s smallest outpost will damage the utilityโ€™s relationships with regulators elsewhere.

Southern Co. announced last month that what it calls Plant Ratcliffe was another $540 million over budget, bringing the total cost of the plant, mine and pipelines to $4.3 billion. The company said shareholders would absorb the latest overrun and that the parent company would give money to Mississippi Power over time to make up for the loss. Mississippi ratepayers will have to pay for $2.4 billion of the plantโ€™s price, plus pay for up to another $1 billion in bonds that Mississippi Power wonโ€™t make a profit on.

The overrun was announced weeks after commissioners voted 2-1 to approve a 15 percent rate increase to start paying off the plantโ€™s debt even before it begins operations. That would be followed by a 3 percent increase in 2014. Mississippi Power has said itโ€™s likely in 2014 to seek an additional increase of at least 4 percent over 20 years to pay off the bonds.

Holland said Southern Co. still believes that Kemperโ€™s first-of-its kind technology, which would gasify soft lignite coal mined next door and extract carbon dioxide and other chemicals, is a good idea.

โ€œWe still believe that over time and in the long term, the plant will pay off,โ€ Holland said.

Any time Southern Co. CEO Tom Fanning talks about his companyโ€™s advantages, he brings up the utility giantโ€™s โ€œconstructive regulatory environmentโ€ with utility commissions in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Florida. Recent events have wiped out that relationship in Mississippi.

โ€œAt this point in time, Mississippi Power has no credibility with me,โ€ said Southern District Commissioner Leonard Bentz.

Southern Co. canโ€™t afford to lose trust, though, if itโ€™s going to escape its troubles in Mississippi, overcome critics of its profit margins in Alabama and smooth over cost overruns at the $14 billion pair of nuclear reactors its building at Plant Vogtle near Augusta, Ga.

Georgia Power announced in February it will exceed its budget to build the Vogtle reactors. The utility has asked Georgia regulators to raise its share of the construction budget by $737 million to roughly $6.85 billion โ€” and there could be additional costs.

Since Southern Co. shareholders were forced to absorb cost overruns in Mississippi, regulators may ask that they do the same in Georgia.

โ€œItโ€™s pressure on the Georgia Public Service Commission to look out for ratepayers like the commission has done for Mississippi ratepayers,โ€ said Robert Baker, a former Georgia commissioner.

One test of whether that regulatory relationship still exists will come on Kemper. This summer, Mississippi Power will ask the PSC to declare that its spending at the plant has been prudent. With questions still circulating about whether the company concealed overruns when it was seeking key PSC approvals, questions could arise about whether the company should have known at some point that it was throwing good money after bad.

โ€œWas there a point that stopping would have made sense?โ€ Presley said. โ€œI donโ€™t know the answer to that. I think weโ€™ll find out in the hearings.โ€

Bentz continues to support Kemper, saying itโ€™s too risky for Mississippi Power to become overly reliant on natural gas as a fuel source. Still, he continues to say he will take a hard line in prudency reviews.

โ€œWe expect them to build the plant for $2.4 billion,โ€ he said. โ€œI have not wavered from that. I do not expect to waver from that.โ€


Associated Press writer Ray Henry contributed to this report from Atlanta.

Correction: The headline on an earlier version of this story stated that Mississippi Power CEO Ed Day had been fired. Day, in fact, retired abruptly. The Jackson Free Press apologizes for the error.

MFP Solutions Lab logo

The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippiโ€™s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.

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