Energy Department offers $1.6 billion loan guarantee to upgrade transmission lines across Midwest

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By MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Energy said Thursday it has finalized a $1.6 billion loan guarantee to a subsidiary of one of the nation’s largest power companies to upgrade nearly 5,000 miles of transmission lines across five states, mostly in the Midwest, for largely fossil fuel-run energy.

AEP Transmission will upgrade power lines in Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma and West Virginia to enhance enhance grid reliability and capacity, the Energy Department said. The project is meant to help meet surging electricity demand from data centers and artificial intelligence.

Ohio-based American Electric Power, which owns AEP Transmission, is one of the nation’s largest utilities, serving 5.6 million customers in 11 states. It primarily produces electricity from coal, natural gas and nuclear power, along with renewable resources such as wind and hydroelectric power.

Thursday’s announcement deepens the Trump administration’s commitment to traditional, polluting energy sources even as it works to discourage the U.S. from clean energy use.

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Earlier this month, the administration cancelled $7.6 billion in grants that supported hundreds of clean energy projects in 16 states, all of which voted for Democrat Kamala Harris in last year’s presidential election. A total of 223 projects were terminated after a review determined they did not adequately advance the nation’s energy needs or were not economically viable, the Energy Department said.

The cancellations include up to $1.2 billion for California’s hydrogen hub aimed at developing clean-burning hydrogen fuels to power ships and heavy-duty trucks. A hydrogen project costing up to $1 billion in the Pacific Northwest also was cancelled.

The loan guarantee finalized Thursday is the first offered by the Trump administration under the recently renamed Energy Dominance Financing program created by the massive tax-and-spending law approved this summer by congressional Republicans and signed by President Donald Trump. Electric utilities that receive loans through the program must provide assurances to the government that financial benefits from the financing will be passed on to customers, the Energy Department said.

The project and others being considered will help ensure that Americans “will have access to affordable, reliable and secure energy for decades to come,” Energy Secretary Chris Wright said in a statement.

“The president has been clear: America must reverse course from the energy subtraction agenda of past administrations and strengthen our electrical grid,” Wright said, adding that modernizing the grid and expanding transmission capacity “will help position the United States to win the AI race and grow our manufacturing base.”

The upgrades supported by the federal financing will replace existing transmission lines in existing rights-of-way with new lines capable of carrying more energy, the power company said.

More than 2,000 miles of transmission lines in Ohio serving 1.5 million people will be replaced, along with more than 1,400 miles in Indiana and Michigan serving 600,000 customers, the company said. An additional 1,400 miles in Oklahoma, serving about 1.2 million people and 26 miles in West Virginia, serving 460,000 people, will be replaced.

The projects will create about 1,100 construction jobs, the company said.

The loan guarantee will save customers money and improve reliability while supporting economic growth in the five states, said Bill Fehrman, AEP’s chairman, president and chief executive officer. “The funds we will save through this program enable us to make additional investments to enhance service for our customers,” he added.

Wright, in a conference call with reporters, distinguished the AEP loan guarantee from a $4.9 billion federal loan guarantee the department cancelled in July. That money would have boosted the planned Grain Belt Express, a new high-voltage transmission line set to deliver solar and wind-generated electricity from the Midwest to eastern states.

The Energy Department said at the time it was “not critical for the federal government to have a role” in the first phase of the $11 billion project planned by Chicago-based Invenergy. The department also questioned whether the project could meet strict financial conditions required, a claim Wright repeated Thursday.

“Ultimately that is a commercial enterprise that needs private developers,” Wright said. The company has indicated the Grain Belt project will go forward.

Trump and Wright have repeatedly derided wind and solar energy as unreliable and opposed efforts to combat climate change by moving away from fossil fuels. Wright said the Grain Belt Express loan was among billions of dollars worth of commitments “rushed out the doors” in the waning days of former President Joe Biden’s administration.

Former WWE boss Vince McMahon allowed to enter pretrial program in reckless driving case

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STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) — Former WWE CEO Vince McMahon has been allowed to enter a pretrial program to resolve a reckless driving charge stemming from a crash this summer in Connecticut.

A state Superior Court judge ruled Thursday that McMahon could enter the program if he made a $1,000 charitable contribution and only drove if properly licensed and insured. If he does that, the reckless driving charge and another charge of following too closely will be dismissed in one year.

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McMahon was accused of causing a July 24 crash on the Merritt Parkway in Westport that wrecked his Bentley and damaged two other cars, state police said. No one was injured in the crash, and the other drivers did not object to McMahon’s application for the pretrial program.

The police report said McMahon was driving northbound on the parkway, also known as Route 15, when he rear-ended a BMW and crashed into wooden guardrail. A car traveling in the southbound lanes struck debris from the crash that flew over the guardrail.

McMahon did not speak during the brief hearing. His attorney, Mark Sherman, said afterward that “not every car accident is a crime. That’s what happened here, an accident.”

McMahon stepped down as WWE’s CEO in 2022 amid a company investigation into sexual misconduct allegations. He also resigned as executive chairman of the board of directors of TKO Group Holdings, the parent company of WWE, last year, a day after a former WWE employee filed a sexual abuse lawsuit against him. McMahon has denied the allegations. The lawsuit remains pending.

McMahon bought what was then the World Wrestling Federation in 1982 and transformed it from a regional wrestling company into a worldwide phenomenon. Besides running the company with his wife, Linda, who is now the U.S. education secretary, he also performed at WWE events as himself.

Woodbury Topgolf set to open at the end of the month

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Golfers get ready, Minnesota’s second-ever Topgolf, located in Woodbury, will open Thursday, Oct. 30, according to Topgolf.

The golf entertainment facility, located on Bielenberg Drive near Interstates 94 and 494, will feature 102 outdoor climate-controlled hitting bays on three levels, with lounge furniture or high-top tables for groups to interact with other players, according to Topgolf. It will also use Topgolf’s Toptracer technology, which traces the flight path, distance and metrics of golf balls.

“Here at Topgolf, we’ve made socializing a sport through a blend of technology and entertainment – and that’s just the game,” their website reads. “There’s no pressure to have a good golf swing or score a lot of points. It’s all about everyone having fun.”

Golf isn’t all the location offers: Football fans can also share in the excitement as the venue features a football game simulator, using golf clubs. The venue hopes to draw fans to watch games live while trying out food, drinks and entertainment opportunities, according to Topgolf.

Topgolf Woodbury will have a full-service bar and restaurant, more than 140 HDTVs, fire pits and music, according to the company.

Private event spaces and a rooftop terrace can also be rented out for celebrations and events, according to Topgolf.

According to Woodbury assistant community development director and city planner Eric Searles, the new golfing entertainment facility is anticipated to hire more than 300 people.

Other family-friendly and fun-focused venues are on the way near Topgolf Woodbury. Main Event, a new arcade and entertainment hub owned by Dave & Buster’s Entertainment, is set to open later this year. A new PGA Tour Superstore has opened about a mile and a half south of the new TopGolf and ParT Barn, a new restaurant and golf-simulator venue, is set to open later this year about two miles east in Lake Elmo.

To book a game or for more information on Woodbury Topgolf, visit topgolf.com/us/woodbury.

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Governor Signs Bill Banning NY Landlords From Setting Rents via Algorithms

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The legislation prohibits property owners or managers from using software that relies on private information to set rents, what lawmakers say amounts to price-fixing and artificially inflates the cost of housing.

A “for rent” sign in Brooklyn. (Photo by Jeanmarie Evelly)

Gov. Kathy Hochul will sign a slate of housing-related bills into law on Thursday, including legislation that bans landlords from using certain algorithm-based software to set rents—what critics say amounts to collusion and price-fixing—and another aimed at tackling racial bias in home appraisals.

The move makes New York one of the first states in the nation to target the use of rent-setting software, which Hochul first announced as a priority in her State of the State address earlier this year. This month, California passed a broader ban on algorithmic pricing, and a slew of cities have also prohibited the practice when it comes to housing costs.

The bill’s sponsors, Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal and State Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal, argued in a City and State op-ed in June that the use of real estate management software like RealPage—the target of a U.S. Department of Justice antitrust lawsuit under the Biden administration in 2024—allows landlords to access propriety information, like lease renewal rates, in order to inflate rents and maximize profits.

“If landlords were meeting in person to discuss their prices, make changes based on what they learned from each other, and agree on a set of prices that most benefits them, then we would call that what it is, price fixing, and it would be illegal under both federal and state law,” the lawmakers wrote at the time.

“With today’s [bill] signing, New York’s antitrust laws have been updated to reflect the deleterious impact that algorithms can have on tenants and the real estate market,” Rosenthal said in a statement Thursday.

Other legislation signed this week by the governor—who has until the end of the year to act on hundreds of bills the state legislature passed before its session ended in June—aims to combat discrimination in the home appraisals process.

A 2022 study from a sociologist at the University of Illinois Chicago, first reported on by Bloomberg CityLab, looked at nationwide housing data and found that “homes in white neighborhoods were appraised as worth $408,000 more, on average, than similar homes in
comparable communities of color.”

This practice exacerbates an already stark racial wealth gap, Gov. Hochul’s said in a press release Thursday. The newly signed bill, sponsored by State Sen. Brian Kavanagh and Bronx Assemblymember George Alvarez, makes it a violation of the state’s Human Rights Law to discriminate based on race, creed, sexual orientation and other factors when providing real estate appraisals.

Another bill Hochul signed onto Thursday will expand a 2019 law regarding security deposits to cover more tenants. The earlier change requires landlords to return a security deposit, or the reminder of the deposit after damages, within 14 days of a tenant moving out. The rule previously applied only to renters in market-rate apartments; it will now include those in rent-regulated units.

“With this legislation, we’re opening more doors to homeownership and strengthening protections for renters—because every New Yorker deserves the fair chance to build a better life in a home they can afford,” Hochul said in a statement about the bills.

To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

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