WISCONSIN POWER & LIGHT CO
U-1, 2000-08-15
ELECTRIC & OTHER SERVICES COMBINED
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                           (As filed August 15, 2000)

                                                                File No. 70-
                                                                            ----
                                  UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------

                                    FORM U-1
                           APPLICATION OR DECLARATION
                                    UNDER THE
                   PUBLIC UTILITY HOLDING COMPANY ACT OF 1935
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------

                        Wisconsin Power and Light Company
                   South Beloit Water, Gas & Electric Company
                           222 West Washington Avenue
                            Madison, Wisconsin 53703

                        American Transmission Company LLC
                             c/o ATC Management Inc.
                      c/o Wisconsin Electric Power Company
                             231 W. Michigan Street
                           Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203

                               ATC Management Inc.
                      c/o Wisconsin Electric Power Company
                             231 W. Michigan Street
                           Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203

                  (Names of companies filing this statement and
                    addresses of principal executive offices)
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------

                           ALLIANT ENERGY CORPORATION
                 (Name of top registered holding company parent)
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------

                   Edward M. Gleason, Vice President-Treasurer
                             and Corporate Secretary
                           Alliant Energy Corporation
                           222 West Washington Avenue
                            Madison, Wisconsin 53703
                     (Name and address of agent for service)
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------

     The Commission is requested to send copies of all notices, orders and
     communications in connection with this Application/Declaration to:

     Barbara J. Swan, General Counsel        William T. Baker, Jr., Esq.
     Alliant Energy Corporation              Thelen Reid & Priest LLP
     222 West Washington Avenue              40 West 57th Street
     Madison, Wisconsin 53703                New York, New York 10019

                         John E. Ebright, Vice President, Chief
                         Financial Officer and Treasurer
                         ATC Management Inc.
                         c/o Wisconsin Electric Power Company
                         231 W. Michigan Street
                         Milwaukee, Wisconsin  53203


<PAGE>


ITEM 1.   DESCRIPTION OF PROPOSED TRANSACTION.
          -----------------------------------

INTRODUCTION

          A.   Alliant Energy Corporation ("Alliant Energy") is a registered
holding company under the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, as amended
(the "Act"). 1  Its public-utility subsidiaries are Wisconsin Power and Light
Company ("WPL"), South Beloit Water, Gas & Electric Company ("South Beloit"),
Interstate Power Company, and IES Utilities Inc. The principal executive offices
of Alliant Energy, WPL and South Beloit are located at 222 West Washington
Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53703. American Transmission Company LLC (the
"Transco"), which is described in further detail below, is a Wisconsin limited
liability company which was formed on June 12, 2000 with Wisconsin Electric
Power Company ("WEPCO"), a subsidiary of Wisconsin Energy Corporation ("WEC"),
Wisconsin Public Power Inc. ("WPPI") and ATC Management Inc., a Wisconsin
corporation formed on June 12, 2000 (the "Corporate Manager", and together with
WPL, South Beloit and the Transco, "Applicants"), as its initial members. The
principal executive officers of the Transco and the Corporate Manager are
currently located at 231 W. Michigan Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203. The
Commission, in HCAR No. 27206 (Aug. 2, 2000), authorized, among other things,


------------------------
1    See WPL Holdings, Inc., et al., Holding Co. Act Release No. 26856 (Apr.
14, 1998).


<PAGE>


WPL to become a member of the Transco and to acquire shares of the Corporate
Manager.

          B.   WPL is engaged principally in the generation, purchase,
distribution and sale of electric power in 35 counties in a 16,000 square-mile
area in southern and central Wisconsin. As of December 31, 1999, WPL provides
retail electric service to approximately 407,000 customers in 599 cities,
villages and towns, and wholesale service to 24 municipal utilities, three rural
electric cooperatives, the Wisconsin Public Power Incorporated System, which
provides retail electric service to nine communities in the WPL service area,
and one privately owned utility.

          C.   WPL is subject to regulation as a public utility as to retail
electric, gas and water rates, service rules, issuance of securities,
construction of new facilities, transactions with affiliates and various other
matters by the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin (the "Wisconsin
Commission"). It is also subject to regulation by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission ("FERC"). The Nuclear Regulatory Commission ("NRC") regulates WPL in
connection with its ownership interest in the Kewaunee Nuclear Power Plant.

          D.   South Beloit is a wholly-owned subsidiary of WPL that supplies
retail electric and gas services to customers in the cities of South Beloit and
Rockton, Illinois, and the adjacent rural areas. South Beloit is subject to


                                       2
<PAGE>


regulation by the Illinois Commerce Commission (the "Illinois Commission"). As
of December 31, 1999, South Beloit serves approximately 8,000 electric
customers. The service territory of South Beloit is located in Illinois and is
adjacent to the service territory of WPL in Wisconsin. The electric distribution
systems of WPL and South Beloit are interconnected at many points along the
Wisconsin-Illinois state line. The electric operations of WPL and South Beloit
are integrated and all of WPL's generating units are centrally dispatched by
Alliant Energy Corporate Services, Inc., the service company affiliate of WPL
and South Beloit. 2

          E.   WPL owns and operates a transmission system comprising 107 miles
of 345 kV transmission facilities, 758 miles of 138 kV transmission facilities,
1,908 miles of 69 kV transmission facilities and associated substations and real
property interests (the "WPL Transmission Assets"). South Beloit owns and
operates a transmission system comprising less than one mile of 345 kV
transmission facilities, 10 miles of 69 kV transmission facilities, one
substation and associated real property interests (the "South Beloit
Transmission Assets").


------------------------
2    South Beloit has no generating units.


                                       3
<PAGE>


          F.   At and for the twelve months ended June 30, 2000, Alliant
Energy's consolidated assets, operating revenue and net income (all in
thousands) were $6,597,078, $2,358,409 and $177,890, respectively. At and for
the twelve months ended June 30, 2000, WPL's consolidated assets, operating
revenue and earnings available for common stock (all in thousands) were
$1,779,049, $795,096 and $67,448, respectively. At and for the twelve months
ended June 30, 2000, South Beloit's assets, operating revenue and net income
(all in thousands) were $21,494, $16,794 and $1,959, respectively.

          G.   Applicants request authorization for (i) WPL to transfer,
directly or indirectly, ownership and control over the WPL Transmission Assets
to the Transco; (ii) South Beloit to transfer, directly or indirectly, ownership
and control over the South Beloit Transmission Assets to the Transco; (iii) WPL
and South Beloit to receive, directly or indirectly, in exchange for such
transfer, member units of the Transco; (iv) WPL to purchase approximately 2,563
Class A shares of the Corporate Manager; 3  (v) WPL to purchase one Class B


------------------------
3    The final percentage ownership interests, as well as the definitive
number of Transco member units and Corporate Manager Class A shares to be
acquired, will depend upon the actual participants in the Transco and the
Contribution Value (as defined below) of the transmission assets transferred to
the Transco by such participants.


                                       4
<PAGE>


share of the Corporate Manager; 4  (vi) the Transco's issuance of member units
in exchange for either transmission assets (in the case of all other
transmission-owning Member Utilities (as defined below)) or cash (in the case of
WPPI and any other transmission-dependent Member Utilities) and (vii) the
Corporate Manager's issuance of its Class A and Class B shares in exchange for
cash payments. Because of limitations imposed by the WPL indenture, WPL proposes
to effect the transfer of the WPL Transmission Assets to the Transco, with
instructions to the Transco to issue member units to a newly created limited
liability company ("NewCo") to be wholly owned by WPL. Therefore, WPL also
requests authorization to form NewCo and to acquire all of NewCo's membership
interests in exchange for one or more cash payments to NewCo. Upon issuance of
the Transco's member units to NewCo, NewCo will pay to the trustee under WPL's
indenture, on behalf of WPL, cash in an amount approximately equal to WPL's
corresponding cash payment to NewCo for NewCo's member units. WPL and South
Beloit also seek Commission authority to transfer to the Transco, from time to
time, up to $10,000,000 of transmission assets which are currently under


------------------------
4    WPL will pay a purchase price for these Class A and Class B Corporate
Manager shares of $10 per share.


                                       5
<PAGE>


construction, in exchange for additional Transco member units to be issued to
NewCo or South Beloit, as the case may be.

          H.   Commission authorization through June 30, 2004 is also sought for
external financing as follows: (i) short-term debt financing by the Transco in
the form of, among other things, borrowings under a revolving credit agreement,
issuance of commercial paper or other forms of short-term financing; (ii)
long-term debt financing by the Transco in the form of debentures or other forms
of long-term debt financing; and (iii) equity financing in the form of common or
preferred stock of the Corporate Manager, other equity securities or additional
interests in the Transco. The amount of the Transco's short-term and long term
debt outstanding at any time will not exceed, in the aggregate, $400 million.

TRANSCO LEGISLATION

          I.   In 1999, the state of Wisconsin enacted legislation which
facilitates the formation of the Transco as a for-profit, single-purpose
transmission company. 5  The Transco will charge a single system-wide average
network rate to be phased in over five years in accordance with the Transco
Legislation, and a single system-wide average point-to-point rate for "through


------------------------
5    1999 Wisconsin Act 9, Sections 2335tr to 2335uh (Assembly Amendment to
Assembly Subcommittee Amendment 1 to 1999 Assembly Bill 133) (the "Transco
Legislation").


                                       6
<PAGE>


and out" service, under an open access transmission tariff filed with the FERC
on July 31, 2000. Key benefits of the Transco include the elimination of rate
"pancaking" among the Transco members' multiple transmission systems; one-stop
shopping for transmission and wholesale distribution service over multiple
transmission systems; the reduction of operational barriers within the Transco
service area; and the transfer of ownership of the transmission assets from
vertically integrated utilities that will further functional unbundling. These
benefits are in keeping with the goals of the Transco Legislation and FERC
policies. The Transco Legislation, among other things, encourages public utility
affiliates of Wisconsin holding companies, including WPL, to transfer ownership
of their transmission assets to the Transco by beneficially adjusting the
calculation of an existing limit on the amount of unregulated (or non-utility)
investments the holding company system can make, after the transfer of assets to
the Transco. 6  The Transco will be managed by the Corporate Manager. All


------------------------
6    Section 196.485(5) of the Wisconsin Statutes. This investment cap applies
to any holding company system that owns a Wisconsin public utility. Generally,
Wisconsin law limits the amount of assets that all non-utility affiliates in a
holding company system may own to an amount equal to 25% of the assets owned by
all of the electric utility affiliates within that system. Section
196.795(6m)(b) of the Wisconsin Statutes. The Transco Legislation permits an
electric utility within a holding company system to exclude certain energy
related "eligible assets" (as defined in the Wisconsin Utility Holding Company
Act) from the calculation of non-utility assets that count towards the 25% asset
cap if, among other things, each electric utility within a holding company
system that owns transmission assets in Wisconsin transfers all of those
transmission assets to the Transco before January 1, 2001 and each electric
utility within that holding company system petitions, by June 30, 2000, the
Wisconsin Commission and the FERC for authority to transfer operational control
of all of its transmission facilities in Wisconsin and the surrounding states to
the Midwest independent system operator. For purposes of the Transco
Legislation, the term "eligible assets" includes assets of a non-utility
affiliate used to, among other things, generate or transmit gas, oil,
electricity or steam energy; provide energy management services; provide
energy-related customer services; recover, produce energy from, or process waste
materials; provide telecommunication services; provide environmental engineering
services; and manufacture or sell products that filter, pump or process water or
other fluids. All such assets in the Alliant Energy System will thus not count
towards the investment cap if, among other things, WPL participates in the
Transco in accordance with the Transco Legislation.


                                       7
<PAGE>


Transco participants will ultimately own direct or indirect interests in the
Transco and the Manager in proportion to the value of the transmission assets or
cash each participant contributes to the Transco. Transmission-dependent
utilities, as defined by the Transco Legislation, that participate in the
Transco will purchase their interests for cash and will obtain ownership shares
in proportion to their 1999 Wisconsin load ratio shares. Tax exempt
transmission-dependent entities that participate in the Transco, such as WPPI, 7

------------------------
7    WPPI is a municipal electric company owned by 30 Wisconsin municipalities
that operate electric utilities. These utilities supply electric power to more
than 100,000 customers in Wisconsin and purchase all of their electric
requirements from WPPI. WPPI was created pursuant to Wisconsin legislation and
is a non-profit, political division of the state. Section 66.073 of the
Wisconsin Statutes.


                                       8
<PAGE>


will purchase their interests for cash at a price that will keep the other
participants whole, as explained below. 8

          J.   The Transco Legislation obligates the Transco to construct,
operate, maintain and expand its transmission facilities to provide adequate,
reliable transmission services for a single, system-wide rate for the use of its
system under an open access transmission tariff (the "Transco OATT") that has
been filed with the FERC. The Transco Legislation directs that the Transco
support robust competition in energy markets, extend no favoritism to any
participant and meet the transmission needs of all participants. Under the
provisions of the Transco Legislation, the Transco will transfer the operational
control of its transmission facilities to the Midwest Independent System
Operator, Inc. (the "Midwest ISO") when the Midwest ISO becomes operational. It
is presently expected that this transfer will occur on or about November 1,
2001.

          K.   It is expected that the participants in the Transco and the
Corporate Manager will include, in addition to WPL and South Beloit, WEPCO,
Edison Sault Electric Company ("ESE") (a WEC subsidiary with operations solely
in Michigan's Upper Peninsula that is subject to regulation by the Michigan


------------------------
8    Alternatively, the Transco participants may agree on special allocations
of certain tax elements, rather than adjust the purchase price to be paid by
such tax exempt entities.


                                       9
<PAGE>


Public Service Commission), WPPI, Wisconsin Public Service Corp. ("WPS"), and
Madison Gas & Electric Company ("MGE"). 9  All utilities participating in the
Transco are referred to herein as "Member Utilities". Other entities, both
within and outside of Wisconsin, may, in the future, decide to become members of
the Transco. The Member Utilities intend to contribute their transmission assets
to the Transco on or about January 1, 2001 (the "Operations Date"). 10  The
transmission systems of the Member Utilities are interconnected at various
points and essentially all operate as part of the same reliability and planning
council -- the Mid-America Interconnected Network, Inc. ("MAIN"). 11  MAIN
promotes coordinated planning, construction, operation, maintenance and use of


------------------------
9    The Corporate Manager will also initially own a less than 1% interest in
the Transco.

10   The Transco Legislation currently contemplates that the transfer of the
transmission assets will occur by the Operations Date. Indeed, the Transco
Legislation requires WPL to commit to transfer its transmission assets to the
Transco by January 1, 2001 in order for Alliant Energy to obtain relief from the
Wisconsin non-utility asset cap applicable to Wisconsin public utility holding
companies described in note 6 above. Moreover, it is not clear how a failure to
effect such transfer by the Operations Date would impact Alliant Energy's
position with respect to such asset cap calculation. Accordingly, the Member
Utilities are proceeding under the assumption that Transco operation will begin
on the Operations Date and are therefore making all of the requisite FERC
filings to have the Transco OATT effective as of such date.

11   ESE is part of the East Central Area Reliability (ECAR), but is expected
to become part of MAIN by January 1, 2001.


                                       10
<PAGE>


generation and transmission facilities by its members. The Member Utilities'
transmission systems were also planned and built on a coordinated basis pursuant
to the Wisconsin "advance planning" law in effect from 1975 until 1997. For a
map detailing the interconnection of the transmission systems of the Member
Utilities, see Exhibit E hereto.

TRANSCO OPERATIONS AND ORGANIZATION

          L.   The Transco will have the exclusive duty to provide transmission
service in geographic areas formerly served by the Transco members. The Transco
will not, however, have that duty in areas where control of transmission
facilities has been directly transferred to the Midwest ISO. Wisconsin law
prohibits the Transco from directly serving retail customers and from bypassing
distribution systems.

          M.   It is expected that the transmission-owning Member Utilities and
the Transco will enter into one or more agreements ("O&M Agreements") pursuant
to which the Member Utilities will provide the Transco with "reasonable and cost
effective operations and maintenance services" for at least the first three
years after the Operations Date in accordance with the Transco Legislation. 12
The Member Utilities and the Transco will also enter into a one or more services


------------------------
12   Section 196.485 (3m)(a)1.b. of the Wisconsin Statutes.


                                       11
<PAGE>


agreements ("Services Agreements") pursuant to which the Member Utilities will
provide the Transco with certain services not covered by the O&M Agreements.
Additionally, the Member Utilities and the Transco will enter into a System
Operating Agreement ("System Operating Agreement") pursuant to which the Transco
will provide, among other things, ancillary services and control area operations
at FERC-approved rates. Finally, the Transco will operate certain of Alliant
Energy's transmission facilities outside of Wisconsin that are not being
transferred to the Transco. It is expected that such operations will be governed
by an agency agreement ("Agency Agreement"). Any services provided or received
by WPL, South Beloit or any other Alliant Energy affiliate pursuant to the
foregoing agreements will be provided "at cost" in accordance with Rules 90 and
91 under the Act, unless otherwise authorized or directed by appropriate
governmental or regulatory authority. 13

          N.   In accordance with the Transco Legislation, all
transmission-owning Member Utilities will transfer all transmission assets to


------------------------
13   The definitive terms of certain of the above-referenced agreements are
still being developed. Provision may be made for certain services between the
Transco and affiliates of Alliant Energy, including WPL and South Beloit, to be
rendered at market rates, without regard to cost. The Commission is respectfully
requested to reserve jurisdiction with respect to any request for an exemption
from Section 13(b) of the Act, pending completion of the record.


                                       12
<PAGE>


the Transco on the Operations Date. For purposes of establishing relative
shares, the transmission assets will be valued at their Contribution Value,
defined as original cost less accumulated deprecation, as adjusted on a
dollar-for-dollar basis for deferred taxes, excess deferred taxes and deferred
investment tax credits. The resulting shares will then be adjusted based on
various factors and the level of participation by transmission-dependent
utilities which may acquire member units in the Transco for cash based upon
their 1999 Wisconsin load share ratios. It is expected that WPL's and South
Beloit's Contribution Values at December 31, 2000 will be $126,784,000 and
$590,000, respectively, and their aggregate initial interest in the Transco will
approximate 26%. This ownership percentage may fluctuate based on various
factors, including the number of participants in the Transco.

          O.   WPPI, and any other transmission-dependent tax-exempt entity that
participates in the Transco, will also be members of the Transco, but will not
be contributing transmission assets. Because the participation of tax exempt
entities like WPPI will reduce the transmission revenue otherwise received by
the Transco, 14  such entities will purchase their interests for a price that is


------------------------
14   Based on FERC precedent with respect to natural gas pipelines, the
revenue requirement reflected in the Transco's FERC petition includes provision
for income taxes payable by its members with respect to Transco income. The
participation of any tax exempt entity in the Transco will reduce that revenue
requirement and therefore each tax-exempt Transco member must make contributions
to the Transco to make up for the diminished return of the other members.
Alternatively, the Transco participants may agree on special allocations of
certain tax elements, rather than adjust the purchase price to be paid by such
tax exempt entities.


                                       13
<PAGE>


designed to keep the other participants whole. It is anticipated that funds
received from WPPI and any other tax-exempt Transco member will be used to fund
outlays necessary to pay start-up costs and construction work-in-progress or be
used as cash working capital. The tax-exempt purchase price will be recalculated
annually such that all tax-exempt participants will be required to make
additional cash contributions (or receive a refund of any "over contributed"
funds) to insure that the return otherwise payable to the other
transmission-contributing participants is not diminished because of the tax
exempt entities' participation.

          P.   The Corporate Manager will manage the Transco, and will employ
all personnel necessary to operate the Transco. All costs and expenses of the
Corporate Manager will be treated as Transco expenses. The Transco members will
enter into an agreement (the "Operating Agreement") which will govern the
activities of the Transco.

          Q.   In accordance with the Transco's Operating Agreement, the Member
Utilities will not be permitted to sell their interests in the Transco for a
period of three years following the Operations Date, except for transfers to


                                       14
<PAGE>


another Member Utility or an affiliate of the transferring Member Utility. 15
After the three year period expires, any Transco interest may be freely
transferred, subject to any applicable legal constraints. The Member Utilities
may exchange all or a portion of their Transco member units for shares in the
Corporate Manager on a one-for-one basis at any time after the three years or,
if earlier, one year after an initial public offering by the Corporate Manager.

          R.   No Member Utility will be obligated to make any additional
capital contributions to the Transco or the Corporate Manager; however, there
may be optional contributions if a majority of the Corporate Manager's directors
determine that such additional capital is appropriate. The Operating Agreement
will establish a target dividend rate of 80% of the Transco's earnings, subject
to adjustment.

          S.   Member Utilities will also purchase shares of the Corporate
Manager, for cash, in proportion to their percentage interests in the Transco.
It is expected that WPL will pay $10 per share for an approximate 26% interest
in the Corporate Manager. The Corporate Manager will have two classes of stock:


------------------------
15   The Operating Agreement defines an "affiliate" of the Member Utility as
any company within the same holding company system as defined in
ss.195.795(1)(i) of the Wisconsin Statutes.


                                       15
<PAGE>


Class A and Class B. WPL will receive approximately 26%, or 2,563 shares, of the
nonvoting Class A shares. Additionally, each Member Utility, including WPL, will
receive one Class B voting share. 16  Each holder of a Class B share will be
entitled to appoint one of the Corporate Manager's directors. All Class B shares
will convert into Class A shares on the earlier of (i) the ownership by the
Corporate Manager of more than 50% of the Transco interests or (ii) the tenth
anniversary of the Operations Date, unless the Corporate Manager's Board of
Directors elects to override the conversion. Class A shares will become voting
shares upon the conversion of Class B shares to Class A shares or after the
Corporate Manager commences a public offering of its stock. Following the public
offering, the Class A shareholders will have the right to elect a majority of
the Board of Directors and the Class B shareholders will elect a minority of the
directors, but each owner of a Class B share will continue to have the right to
appoint one of the Corporate Manager's directors.

TRANSFERRED PROPERTIES

          T.   WPL and South Beloit propose to transfer their ownership and
control of their respective Transmission Assets to the Transco. The Transco will
acquire from WPL and South Beloit transmission facilities that operate at


------------------------
16   Neither South Beloit nor ESE will receive shares in the Corporate
Manager.


                                       16
<PAGE>


voltages of 345 kV, 138 kV and 69 kV. The WPL Transmission Assets and South
Beloit Transmission Assets proposed to be transferred include: o Transmission
lines (including towers, poles and conductors) and transmission substations;

          o    Transformers providing transformation within the bulk
     transmission system and between the bulk and area transmission systems;

          o    Lines providing connections to generation sources and step-up
     (plant) substations;

          o    Radial taps from the transmission system up to, but not
     including, the facilities that establish the final connection to
     distribution facilities or retail customers;

          o    Substations that provide primarily a transmission function;

          o    Voltage control devices and power flow control devices directly
     connected to the transmission system; and

          o    WPL's systems operation center located in Stoughton, Wisconsin.

          It is expected that, as of December 31, 2000, the original cost of the
WPL Transmission Assets and the South Beloit Transmission Assets will be
approximately $298,965,000 and $974,000, respectively. The net book value
(original cost less accumulated depreciation) of the WPL Transmission Assets and
the South Beloit Transmission Assets at December 31, 2000 is expected to be
approximately $163,321,000 and $699,000, respectively.


                                       17
<PAGE>


          U.   The facilities WPL and South Beloit will transfer to the Transco
do not include distribution facilities used to provide retail service or
generation facilities. Distribution facilities include all facilities with
voltages below 50 kV, including the final circuit connection to substations
providing transformation or connection to any retail customer regardless of
voltage level.

          V.   WPL currently provides FERC jurisdictional transmission service
to certain customers over distribution facilities operated at voltages of less
than 50 kV. The Transco will continue the provision of such service as WPL's
agent. Consequently, transmission customers that use WPL's distribution system
will, in the future, be able to secure from the Transco all necessary
transmission services over WPL's current transmission and distribution system.

          W.   The Transco will be under a statutory mandate to transfer
operational control of its jurisdictional facilities to the Midwest ISO. Prior
to the transfer, the Transco will have operational control of the transmission
system contributed by Wisconsin utilities; provide ancillary services; operate
an Open Access Same-Time Information System ("OASIS") in conformance with FERC
Order No. 889; and administer the Transco OATT. The Transco also will be
responsible for the maintenance of the transmission facilities under its
ownership and control and will assume responsibility for transmission system


                                       18
<PAGE>


planning. After the transfer to the Midwest ISO, the Transco will make changes
to its OATT to accommodate operational differences between the Transco and the
Midwest ISO open access transmission tariff.

          X.   WPL and South Beloit will each enter into a bill of sale, deeds,
easement assignments and other documentation with the Transco governing the
conveyance of their respective transmission assets. The transmission assets
transferred to the Transco will include WPL's rights and interest in any
contracts under the Alliant Energy Open Access Transmission Tariff ("Alliant
Energy OATT").

          Y.   In addition to the assets from WPL and South Beloit, it is
expected that the Transco will also acquire transmission assets from MGE, WEPCO,
WPS and ESE. For a description of these assets, including original cost, net
book value and Contribution Value, see Exhibit I hereto. The Transco is also
expected to acquire the incidental transmission facilities of
transmission-dependent utilities, such as WPPI's member municipal utilities. The
Transco will assign a nominal value of $10 to each unit of membership interest
initially issued in exchange for transmission assets.

          Z.   The Transco will offer ancillary services under the Transco's
OATT. Because the Transco will own no generating facilities, it will purchase
ancillary services from third parties and resell them under its OATT. The


                                       19
<PAGE>


Transco expects to enter into agreements to purchase must run and ancillary
services from generators in the control areas of WEPCO, WPL, WPS and MGE. The
Transco will contract for must-run operations and ancillary services with the
generators located in its control area and connected to its transmission system.
In accordance with Wisconsin law, the Transco will not, however, engage in the
purchase and sale of energy other than to obtain necessary ancillary services
required by its customers.

          AA.  Upon receipt of necessary regulatory approvals, the Transco will
begin providing open access transmission service under its OATT to those
existing open access customers currently served by WPL under the existing
Alliant Energy OATT and to any other eligible customer requesting transmission
service from the Transco. WPL and South Beloit will become transmission
customers of the Transco under its transmission tariff. Where WPL is responsible
for providing transmission service under agreements or tariffs predating FERC
Order No. 888 ("grandfathered agreements"), the Transco will make its
transmission system available under the Transco OATT in order to provide
transmission service to customers under the grandfathered agreements.


                                       20
<PAGE>


FINANCING

          BB.  The Transco will initially obtain funds externally through
short-term debt financing under a Credit Agreement between the Transco and Bank
One, N.A., as Agent ("Credit Facility"). 17  The Transco now seeks to increase
the authorized principal amount of borrowings under the Credit Facility to $125
million. To provide financing for general corporate purposes, including working
capital requirements, and to fund construction spending to undertake large scale
capital improvements to the Wisconsin transmission system necessary to maintain
reliability, the Transco proposes to issue from time to time, through June 30,
2004, short-term debt consisting of borrowings under the Credit Facility, the
issuance of commercial paper or other forms of short-term financing. The
maturity of such debt will not exceed one year. The Transco seeks authority to
amend the Credit Facility without further Commission authorization provided that
the maturity date does not extend beyond June 30, 2004, and the aggregate
principal amount of authorized borrowings does not exceed $125 million.


------------------------
17   The Commission has previously authorized borrowings of up to $30 million
under the Credit Facility. The initial Credit Facility will, however, provide
for only $25 million of borrowings. In connection therewith, Alliant Energy has
authority to deliver a guaranty agreement to the lenders under the Credit
Facility relating to up to $30 million of borrowings by the Transco under the
Credit Facility. See HCAR No. 27206 (Aug. 2, 2000).


                                       21
<PAGE>


          CC.  The Transco will sell commercial paper, from time to time, in
established domestic or European commercial paper markets to dealers at the
prevailing discount rate per annum, or at the prevailing coupon rate per annum,
at the date of issuance. It is expected that the dealers acquiring commercial
paper from the Transco will re-offer such paper at a discount to corporate,
institutional and, with respect to European commercial paper, to individual
investors.

          DD.  Back-up bank lines of credit for 100% of the outstanding amount
of commercial paper are generally required by credit rating agencies. The Credit
Facility will back-up the Transco's commercial paper program, thus negating the
need for additional lines of credit.

          EE.  The Transco also proposes to issue from time to time, through
June 30, 2004, long-term debt consisting of debentures, which may be in the form
of medium-term notes, convertible debt, subordinated debt, bank borrowings,
other debt securities or other forms of long-term financing. Any long-term debt
security would have a maturity ranging from one to 50 years. Debentures and
medium-term notes would be issued under an indenture. The amount of short-term
and long-term debt outstanding at any time, including debt under the Credit
Facility, will not exceed, in the aggregate, $400 million.


                                       22
<PAGE>


          FF.  Any short-term or long-term debt security or credit facility
would have such designation, aggregate principal amount, interest rate(s) or
methods of determining the same (subject to paragraph HH below), terms of
payment of interest, collateral, redemption provisions, non-refunding
provisions, sinking fund terms, conversion or put terms and other terms and
conditions as the Transco and the Corporate Manager may determine at the time of
issuance.

          GG.  The Transco and the Corporate Manager propose to issue from time
to time equity securities consisting of common or preferred stock of the
Corporate Manager, other equity securities or additional interests in the
Transco. The Transco and the Corporate Manager request authority to issue such
equity securities until such time as neither the Transco nor the Corporate
Manager is a "subsidiary company" of Alliant Energy, as defined in Section
2(a)(8) of the Act.

          HH.  Such securities may be issued and sold pursuant to standard
underwriting agreements. Public distribution may be effected through private
negotiations with underwriters, dealers or agents, or through competitive
bidding among underwriters. In addition, such securities may be issued and sold
through private placements or other non-public offerings to one or more persons.
All such debt instruments and stock sales will be at rates or prices and under
conditions negotiated, or based upon, or otherwise determined by, competitive


                                       23
<PAGE>


capital markets. In no event, however, will the effective cost of money on
short-term debt exceed 300 basis points over the London Interbank Offered Rate
for maturities of one year or less in effect at the time. The interest rate on
long-term debt will not exceed 500 basis points over the yield-to-maturity of a
U.S. Treasury security having a remaining term approximately equal to the
average life of such debt.

          II.  The Transco also requests authorization to enter into interest
rate hedging transactions with respect to existing indebtedness ("Interest Rate
Hedges"), subject to certain limitations and restrictions, in order to reduce or
manage interest rate cost. Interest Rate Hedges would only be entered into with
counterparties ("Approved Counterparties") whose senior debt ratings, or the
senior debt ratings of the parent companies of the counterparties, as published
by Standard and Poor's Ratings Group, are equal to or greater than BBB, or an
equivalent rating from Moody's Investors Service, Fitch, or Duff and Phelps.

          Interest Rate Hedges will involve the use of financial instruments
commonly used in today's capital markets, such as interest rate swaps, caps,
collars, floors, and structured notes (i.e., a debt instrument in which the
principal and/or interest payments are indirectly linked to the value of an


                                       24
<PAGE>


underlying asset or index), or transactions involving the purchase or sale,
including short sales, of U.S. Treasury obligations. The transactions would be
for fixed periods and stated notional amounts. Fees, commissions and other
amounts payable to the counterparty or exchange (excluding, however, the swap or
option payments) in connection with an Interest Rate Hedge will not exceed those
generally obtainable in competitive markets for parties of comparable credit
quality.

          In addition, the Transco requests authorization to enter into interest
rate hedging transactions with respect to anticipated debt offerings (the
"Anticipatory Hedges"), subject to certain limitations and restrictions. Such
Anticipatory Hedges would only be entered into with Approved Counterparties, and
would be utilized to fix and/or limit the interest rate risk associated with any
new issuance through (i) a forward sale of exchange-traded U.S. Treasury futures
contracts, U.S. Treasury obligations and/or a forward swap (each a "Forward
Sale"), (ii) the purchase of put options on U.S. Treasury obligations (a "Put
Options Purchase"), (iii) a Put Options Purchase in combination with the sale of
call options on U.S. Treasury obligations (a "Zero Cost Collar"), (iv)
transactions involving the purchase or sale, including short sales, of U.S.
Treasury obligations, or (v) some combination of a Forward Sale, Put Options
Purchase, Zero Cost Collar and/or other derivative or cash transactions,


                                       25
<PAGE>


including, but not limited to structured notes, caps and collars, appropriate
for the Anticipatory Hedges.

          Anticipatory Hedges may be executed on-exchange ("On-Exchange Trades")
with brokers through the opening of futures and/or options positions traded on
the Chicago Board of Trade ("CBOT"), the opening of over-the-counter positions
with one or more counterparties ("Off-Exchange Trades"), or a combination of
On-Exchange Trades and Off-Exchange Trades. The Transco will determine the
optimal structure of each Anticipatory Hedge transaction at the time of
execution. The Transco may decide to lock in interest rates and/or limit its
exposure to interest rate increases. All open positions under Anticipatory
Hedges will be closed on or prior to the date of the new issuance and the
Transco will not, at any time, take possession or make delivery of the
underlying U.S. Treasury Securities.

          The Applicants will comply with existing and future financial
disclosure requirements of the Financial Accounting Standards Board associated
with hedging transactions. 18


------------------------
18   The proposed terms and conditions of the Interest Rate Hedges and
Anticipatory Hedges are substantially the same as the Commission has approved in
other cases. See New Century Energies, Inc., et al., Holding Co. Act Release No.
27000 (April 7, 1999); and SCANA Corporation., et al., Holding Co. Act Release
No. 27137 (February 14, 2000).


                                       26
<PAGE>


ITEM 2.   FEES, COMMISSIONS AND EXPENSES.
          ------------------------------

          The fees, commissions and expenses incurred or to be incurred in
connection with the transactions proposed herein will be filed by amendment.

ITEM 3.   APPLICABLE STATUTORY PROVISIONS.
          -------------------------------

          Sections 6(a), 7, 9(a), 10, 11, 12 and 13 of the Act and Rules 43, 44,
54, 90 and 91 thereunder apply to the proposed transactions.

          When the transmission assets of the Member Utilities are transferred
from the Member Utilities to the Transco, the Transco, and the Corporate
Manager, by virtue of its ownership interest in, and management of, the Transco,
will each become an "electric utility company" as defined in Section 2(a)(3) of
the Act as well as a "public utility company" as defined in Section 2(a)(5) of
the Act. Because Alliant Energy will be indirectly acquiring the securities of
the Transco and the Corporate Manager, and because the Transco, which may be a
subsidiary of a registered holding company, will be acquiring utility assets
from the Member Utilities, the transactions contemplated herein will be subject
to Section 9(a) of the Act. Thus, Applicants believe that the proposed
transactions cannot proceed without the Commission's approval pursuant to
Section 10 of the Act. The relevant statutory standards to be satisfied are set
forth in Sections 10(b), 10(c) and 10 (f) of the Act.


                                       27
<PAGE>


A.        SECTION 10(b)

          Section 10(b) of the Act provides that, if the requirements of Section
10(f) are satisfied, the Commission shall approve an acquisition under Section
9(a) unless the Commission finds that:

               (1) such acquisition will tend towards interlocking relations or
          the concentration of control of public-utility companies, of a kind or
          to an extent detrimental to the public interest or the interest of
          investors or consumers;

               (2) in case of the acquisition of securities or utility assets,
          the consideration, including all fees, commissions, and other
          remuneration, to whomsoever paid, to be given, directly or indirectly,
          in connection with such acquisition is not reasonable or does not bear
          a fair relation to the sums invested in or the earning capacity of the
          utility assets to be acquired or the utility assets underlying the
          securities to be acquired; or

               (3) such acquisition will unduly complicate the capital structure
          of the holding company system of the applicant or will be detrimental
          to the public interest or the interest of investors or consumers or
          the proper functioning of such holding company system.

          1.   Section 10(b)(1). The proposed transactions will not tend towards
interlocking relations or the concentration of control of public utility
companies, of a kind or to an extent detrimental to the public interest or the
interest of investors or consumers.

          The Corporate Manager will initially have a ten member Board of
Directors. While five directors will be appointed by the Member Utilities, four
directors will be independent, as mandated by the Transco Legislation. The
remaining director will be the chief executive officer of the Corporate Manager.


                                       28
<PAGE>


The employees of the Transco and the Corporate Manager will not be employees of
any of the Member Utilities. Therefore, any interlocking relations will be
minimal, at most.

          Similarly, the proposed transactions will not tend toward any
"concentration of control of public-utility companies" that is detrimental to
the public interest, consumers or investors. The end result of the formation of
the Transco will not be the concentration of control over the Wisconsin
transmission system, but rather the dilution of control. There will be at least
five Member Utilities with input, through the Corporate Manager, over decisions
as to the management and operation of the Transco's transmission assets. One of
these Member Utilities -- WPPI -- currently has no such input. Indeed, the
creation of the Transco will encourage competition, rather than concentrate
control.

          2.   Section 10(b)(2) - (a) Fairness of Consideration. Section
10(b)(2) of the Act requires the Commission to determine whether the
consideration in connection with a proposed acquisition of securities is
reasonable and whether it bears a fair relation to the investment in and the
earning capacity of the utility assets underlying the securities being acquired.
All transmission assets that will be transferred to the Transco will be valued


                                       29
<PAGE>


based on the same methodology. This methodology is generally mandated by the
Transco Legislation and the specifics have been arrived at as the result of
arms-length negotiations among all of the Member Utilities, subject to the
review and approval of the Wisconsin Commission. Applicants further believe that
such consideration bears a fair relation to the investment in and the earning
capacity of the transmission assets to be transferred because it is based on the
Contribution Value of those assets. Because the Transco's rates will also be
subject to FERC approval, it can be expected that those rates (which will
largely also be based on the same Contribution Value) will permit the Transco to
earn a fair return on them as well. This being the case, all Member Utilities,
including WPL and South Beloit, can expect to earn a fair return on their
investment.

          (b)  Reasonableness of Fees. An estimate of the fees and expenses to
be paid in connection with the proposed transactions is set forth in Item 2
hereof. The estimated amounts to be paid are fees required to be paid to
governmental bodies, fees for necessary professional services, and other
expenses incurred or to be incurred in connection with carrying out the proposed
transactions. Applicants believe that such fees and expenses are reasonable and


                                       30
<PAGE>


customary for a transaction of this kind, and that the standards of Section
10(b)(2) are thus satisfied.

          3.   Section 10(b)(3) - Capital Structure. Section 10(b)(3) requires
that the Commission determine whether the proposed transactions will unduly
complicate Alliant Energy's capital structure or will be detrimental to the
public interest, the interests of investors or consumers or the proper
functioning of Alliant Energy's system. The corporate capital structure of
Alliant Energy after the consummation of the proposed transactions will not be
unduly complicated.

          The ownership structure of the Corporate Manager and the Transco has
been designed to simplify management of the Transco and to facilitate public
investment in the Transco enterprise through a public offering of stock in the
Corporate Manager, such stock being more attractive to investors than would be
the equivalent LLC interests in the Transco. Although such structure introduces
an additional corporate layer into the Alliant Energy system, the Transco and
the Corporate Manager will, as a practical matter, function as one entity. The
Corporate Manager has been introduced simply to make public investment in the
Transco enterprise more "investor-friendly". 19


------------------------
19   Upon transfer of its transmission assets to the Transco, and its
acquisition of ownership interests in the Transco and the Corporate Manager, WPL
will file an exemption statement on Form U-3A-2 pursuant to Rule 2 under the
Act. The Corporate Manager's ownership interests in the Transco may also
increase over time so as to render it a "holding company". In such event, it is
anticipated that the Corporate Manager will take appropriate regulatory action
which might include seeking an exemption under Section 3 of the Act, even though
it may no longer be a "subsidiary company" of Alliant Energy at that time.


                                       31
<PAGE>


          In any event, as set forth more fully in this Application/Declaration,
the proposed formation of the new transmission company is expected to result in
benefits to the public and to consumers and investors of the Alliant Energy
holding-company system.

B.        SECTION 10(c)

               Section 10(c) of the Act provides that:

               Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b), the Commission
          shall not approve:

                    (1) an acquisition of securities or utility assets, or of
               any other interest, which is unlawful under the provisions of
               Section 8 or is detrimental to the carrying out of the provisions
               of Section 11; or

                    (2) the acquisition of securities or utility assets of a
               public utility or holding company unless the Commission finds
               that such acquisition will serve the public interest by tending
               towards the economical and efficient development of an integrated
               public utility system . . . .

          1.   Section 10(c)(1). Consistent with the standards set forth in
Section 10(c)(1) of the Act, the proposed acquisition of securities will not be


                                       32
<PAGE>


unlawful under the provisions of Section 8 of the Act, or detrimental to the
carrying out of the provisions of Section 11 of the Act.

          Section 8 prohibits a registered holding company or any of its
subsidiaries from acquiring, owning interests in or operating both a gas utility
company and an electric utility company serving substantially the same area if
prohibited by state law, and is thus not applicable to the transactions
contemplated herein.

          Section 11(a) of the Act requires the Commission to examine the
corporate structure of registered holding companies to ensure, among other
things, that unnecessary complexities are eliminated and voting powers are
fairly and equitably distributed. As discussed above, the Transco/Corporate
Manager ownership structure has been designed to facilitate public investment in
the Transco enterprise and is therefore not unnecessarily complex. Moreover,
voting powers have been fairly allocated among the Transco participants.
Accordingly, the proposed transactions meet the standards of Section 11(a) of
the Act.

          2.   Section 10(c)(2). As the following discussion will demonstrate,
the proposed transactions will serve the public interest by tending towards the


                                       33
<PAGE>


economical and efficient development of an integrated public utility system, as
required by Section 10(c)(2) of the Act.

          (a)  Efficiencies and Economies. As described more fully above, the
proposed transactions tend towards the following efficiencies and economies: (i)
greater corporate and organizational separation of transmission from generation;
and (ii) by tying together control, planning, maintenance and financial
responsibilities for the Member Utilities' transmission facilities into a single
company having an independent, streamlined and cost-efficient operation,
synergies will be created that result in better service in the region and
non-discriminatory access for all transmission users will be assured.

          (b)  Integrated Public Utility System. As applied to electric utility
companies, the term "integrated public utility system" is defined in Section
2(a)(29)(A) of the Act as:

          a system consisting of one or more units of generating plants and/or
          transmission lines and/or distributing facilities, whose utility
          assets, whether owned by one or more electric utility companies, are
          physically interconnected or capable of physical interconnection and
          which under normal conditions may be economically operated as a single
          interconnected and coordinated system confined in its operation to a
          single area or region, in one or more states, not so large as to
          impair (considering the state of the art and the area or region
          affected) the advantages of localized management, efficient operation,
          and the effectiveness of regulation.


                                       34
<PAGE>


          The Commission has previously taken notice of developments that have
occurred in the gas and electric industries in recent years, and has interpreted
the Act and analyzed proposed transactions in light of these changed and
changing circumstances. See, e.g., American Electric Power Co., HCAR No. 27186
                                   ---------------------------
(Jun. 14, 2000) ("AEP Order"); New Century Energies, Inc., HCAR No. 26748 (Aug.
                  ---------    --------------------------
1, 1997) (approving transactions relating to combination of a Colorado gas and
electric utility company and intrastate exempt holding company and a New Mexico
electric utility company), citing Hearing on Regulation of Public Utility
Holding Companies Before Subcomm. on Telecommunications and Finance and Subcomm.
on Energy and Power of the House of Representatives Comm. on Commerce, 104th
Cong., 1st Sess. (Aug. 4, 1995) (testimony of Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC). See
also Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 186-87 (1991) ("an agency is not required
     ----------------
to" establish rules of conduct to last forever, "but rather must be given ample
latitude to "adapt [its] rules and policies to the demands of changing
circumstances.") (citations omitted); Shawmut Assn. v. SEC, 146 F.2d 791, 796-97
                                      --------------------
(1st Cir. 1945) (an agency "is expected to treat experience not as a jailer but
as a teacher").

          On the basis of the statutory definition above, the Commission has
established four standards that must be met before the Commission will find that
an integrated public utility system will result from a proposed transaction:


                                       35
<PAGE>


               (1) the utility assets of the system are physically
          interconnected or capable of physical interconnection;

               (2) the utility assets, under normal conditions, may be
          economically operated as a single interconnected and coordinated
          system;

               (3) the system must be confined in its operations to a single
          area or region; and

               (4) the system must not be so large as to impair (considering the
          state of the art and the area or region affected) the advantages of
          localized management, efficient operation, and the effectiveness of
          regulation.

Environmental Action, Inc. v. SEC, 895 F.2d 1255, 1263 (9th Cir. 1990), quoting
---------------------------------
In re Electric Energy, Inc., 38 S.E.C. 658, 668 (1958).
---------------------------

          The proposed transactions satisfy all four of these requirements. In
examining proposed transactions to determine whether the integration
requirements have been satisfied, the Commission has "interpreted the Act and
analyzed transactions in the light of . . . changed and changing circumstances."
AEP Order. Applicants believe that the Transco Legislation, as well as the
recent FERC Order No. 2000, both of which strongly encourage transmission
company formation, constitute such changing circumstances which the Commission
should consider when evaluating the proposed transactions.


                                       36
<PAGE>


          PHYSICAL INTERCONNECTION. In view of the above, the facts presented
clearly support a finding that the utility assets of the Transco will be
"physically interconnected or capable of physical interconnection" within the
meaning of Section 2(a)(29)(A) of the Act once the transactions contemplated
herein are completed. Indeed, as discussed in paragraph K of Item 1, the utility
assets to be owned by the Transco are already physically interconnected.

          SINGLE INTERCONNECTED AND COORDINATED SYSTEM. Section 2(a)(29)(A) of
the Act requires that the utility assets, under normal circumstances, may be
"economically operated as a single interconnected and coordinated system." The
Commission has interpreted this language to refer to the physical operation of
utility assets as a system in which, among other things, the generation and/or
flow of current within the system may be centrally controlled and allocated as
need or economy directs. See UNITIL Corp., HCAR No. 25524 (Apr. 24, 1992). As
                             ------------
discussed above, the transmission assets that will be transferred to the Transco
will be operated in a manner that satisfies the standard of economic and
coordinated operations in Section 2(a)(29)(A) of the Act. Moreover, the proposed
transactions are expected to result in greater coordination and more efficient


                                       37
<PAGE>


allocation of the provision of transmission services within the area served by
the Transco.

          SINGLE AREA OR REGION. The "single integrated system" of the Transco
will initially be the central and eastern portions of the State of Wisconsin and
small adjacent areas of the Michigan Upper Peninsula and Illinois. Through the
membership of additional transmission-owning utilities, the Transco's system may
grow to include other parts of Wisconsin and portions of other Midwestern
states.

          LOCALIZED MANAGEMENT, EFFICIENT OPERATION AND EFFECTIVE REGULATION.
The creation of the Transco will not impair localized management, efficient
operation or effective regulation by reason of its size. Moreover, the
Commission's past decisions on "localized management" show that the proposed
transactions fully preserve the advantages of localized management. In such
cases, the Commission has evaluated localized management in terms of: (i)
responsiveness to local needs, see American Electric Power Co., HCAR No. 20633
                                   ---------------------------
(July 21, 1978)(advantages of localized management evaluated in terms of whether
an enlarged system could be "responsive to local needs"); General Public
                                                          --------------
Utilities Corp., 37 S.E.C. 28, 36 (1956)(localized management evaluated in terms
---------------
of "local problems and matters involving relations with consumers"); (ii)


                                       38
<PAGE>


whether management and directors were drawn from local utilities, see Centerior
                                                                      ---------
Energy Corp., HCAR No. 24073 (April 29, 1986)(advantages of localized management
------------
would not be compromised by the affiliation of two electric utilities under
a new holding company because the new holding company's "management [would
be] drawn from the present management" of the two utilities); (iii) the
preservation of corporate identities, see Northeast Utilities, HCAR No. 25221
                                          -------------------
(December 21, 1990) (utilities "will be maintained as separate New Hampshire
corporations . . . [t]herefore the advantages of localized management will be
preserved"); Columbia Gas System, Inc., HCAR No. 24599 (March 15, 1988)(benefits
             -------------------------
of local management maintained where the utility to be added would be a separate
subsidiary); and (iv) the ease of communications, see American Electric Power
                                                      -----------------------
Co., HCAR No. 20633 (July 21, 1978)(distance of corporate headquarters from
---
local management was a "less important factor in determining what is in the
public interest" given the "present-day ease of communications and
transportation"). These elements will all be satisfied here. The Transco is
being created in response to local needs. The Wisconsin legislature has
determined that the Transco will improve electric service in Wisconsin. Each
local utility will elect one director to the Corporate Manager's board of
directors. Each Member Utility will continue to exist after the transmission


                                       39
<PAGE>


assets are transferred to the Transco. Finally, communication between the
Transco and its members will flow easily. 20

C.        SECTION 10(f)

               Section 10(f) provides that

          The Commission shall not approve any acquisition as to which an
          application is made under this section unless it appears to the
          satisfaction of the Commission that such State laws as may apply in
          respect of such acquisition have been complied with, except where the
          Commission finds that compliance with such State laws would be
          detrimental to the carrying out of the provisions of section 11.

          As discussed above, the Transco is being created pursuant to, and in
accordance with, Wisconsin law. WPL and South Beloit have filed applications
with the Wisconsin Commission and the Illinois Commission, respectively (copies
of both applications are attached hereto as Exhibits D-7 and D-9, respectively).
Thus, the requirements Section 10(f) are satisfied.

          Rule 54 Analysis. The transactions proposed herein are also subject to
          ----------------
Section 32(h)(4) of the Act and Rule 54 thereunder. Rule 54 provides that, in
determining whether to approve any transaction that does not relate to an


------------------------
20   In addition, under the Transco Legislation, the Transco and/or the
Midwest ISO are obligated, to the maximum extent practicable, to "eliminate[]
advantages in electric generation, wholesale and retail markets that are
otherwise related to ownership, control or operation of transmission facilities"
and "[s]atisf[y] the reasonable needs of transmission users in this state for
reliable, low-cost and competitively priced electric service". Section
196.485(3)(c) of the Wisconsin Statutes.


                                       40
<PAGE>


"exempt wholesale generator" ("EWG") or "foreign utility company" ("FUCO"), as
defined in Sections 32 and 33, respectively, the Commission shall not consider
the effect of the capitalization or earnings of any subsidiary which is an EWG
or FUCO upon the registered holding company system if paragraphs (a), (b) and
(c) of Rule 53 are satisfied.

          Alliant Energy is in compliance with all requirements of Rule 53(a).
Alliant Energy's "aggregate investment" (as defined in Rule 53(a)(1)(i)) in all
EWGs and FUCOs at June 30, 2000 was $190 million, or about 15% of Alliant
Energy's "consolidated retained earnings" ($1,243 million for the four quarters
ended June 30, 2000 as defined in Rule 53(a)(1)(ii) and including Alliant
Energy's accumulated other comprehensive income). In addition, Alliant Energy
has complied and will comply with the record-keeping requirements of Rule
53(a)(2), the limitation under Rule 53(a)(3) on the use of the Operating
Companies' personnel to render services to EWGs and FUCOs, and the requirements
of Rule 53(a)(4) concerning the submission of copies of certain filings under
the Act to retail regulatory commissions. Finally, none of the circumstances
described in Rule 53(b) has occurred or is continuing. Alliant Energy need not


                                       41
<PAGE>


make the affirmative demonstration contemplated by Rule 53(c) because Alliant
Energy has satisfied the requirements of Rule 53(a) and (b).

ITEM 4.   REGULATORY APPROVALS.
          --------------------

          WPL's application to the FERC seeking authorization to transfer the
WPL Transmission Assets to the Transco has been approved. South Beloit filed a
corresponding application with the FERC with respect to the South Beloit
Transmission Assets on July 31, 2000, which application is pending. The Transco
has also filed an application with the FERC seeking approval of the Transco
OATT. In addition, the Wisconsin Commission, the Illinois Commission and the
Michigan Public Service Commission must approve certain aspects of the
transactions contemplated herein. No other state commission and, other than this
Commission, no other federal commission, has jurisdiction over the proposed
transactions. In addition, it is expected that other Member Utilities will make
the requisite state, FERC and Commission applications with respect to certain
aspects of the transactions discussed herein.

ITEM 5.   PROCEDURE.
          ---------

          The Commission is requested to publish a notice under Rule 23 with
respect to the filing of this Application/Declaration as soon as practicable.
The applicants request that the Commission's Order be issued as soon as
practicable after the notice period and in any event not later than December 1,


                                       42
<PAGE>


2000 in order to accommodate a closing before December 15, 2000. This will
facilitate the Member Utilities' meeting the January 1, 2001 deadline
contemplated by the Transco Legislation for the commencement of Transco
operations and the timely completion of the transmission asset transfers that
are predicated to the Wisconsin public utility holding companies' relief from
the Wisconsin non-utility asset cap limit.

          The applicants further request that there should not be a 30-day
waiting period between issuance of the Commission's order and the date on which
the order is to become effective, hereby waive a recommended decision by a
hearing officer or any other responsible officer of the Commission, and consent
that the Division of Investment Management may assist in the preparation of the
Commission's decision and/or order, unless the Division opposes the matters
proposed herein.

ITEM 6.   EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.
          ---------------------------------

     A. - EXHIBITS.
          --------

A-1  Form of Articles of Organization of the Transco. - - Incorporated by
     reference to Alliant Energy SEC File No. 70-9695.

A-2  Form of Operating Agreement of the Transco. - - Incorporated by reference
     to Alliant Energy SEC File No. 70-9695.


                                       43
<PAGE>


A-3  Form of Articles of Incorporation of the Corporate Manager. - -
     Incorporated by reference to Alliant Energy SEC File No. 70-9695.

A-4  Form of By-laws of the Corporate Manager. - - Incorporated by reference to
     Alliant Energy SEC File No. 70-9695.

A-5  Form of Articles of Organization of NewCo.*

A-6  Form of Operating Agreement of NewCo.*

B-1  Form of O&M Agreements.*

B-2  Form of Services Agreements.*

B-3  Form of System Operating Agreement.*

B-4  Form of Agency Agreement.*

C    Not Applicable.

D-1  Application of WPL to the FERC.

D-2  Application of South Beloit to the FERC.*

D-3  Application of Alliant Energy Corporate Services, Inc. to the FERC.*

D-4  Order of the FERC regarding WPL Application.*

D-5  Order of the FERC regarding South Beloit Application.*

D-6  Order of the FERC regarding Alliant Energy Corporate Services, Inc.
     Application.*

D-7  Application of WPL to the Wisconsin Commission.*

D-8  Order of the Wisconsin Commission regarding WPL.*

D-9  Application of South Beloit to the Illinois Commission.*

D-10 Order of the Illinois Commission regarding South Beloit.*


                                       44
<PAGE>


D-11 Application of the Transco to the FERC.*

D-12 Order of the FERC regarding Transco Application.*

E    Interconnection Map - to be filed pursuant to Form SE.*

F-1  Opinion of Barbara Swan, Esq.*

F-2  Opinion of DeFrees & Fiske.*

G    Not applicable.

H    Form of Notice.*

I    Description and valuation of transferred assets.*

*    To be filed by amendment.

     B.   FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.
          --------------------

1.1  Balance Sheet of Alliant Energy and consolidated subsidiaries, as of June
     30, 2000 (incorporated by reference to the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of
     Alliant Energy for the quarter ended June 30, 2000) (File No. 1-9894).

1.2  Statement of Income of Alliant Energy and consolidated subsidiaries for the
     period ended June 30, 2000(incorporated by reference to the Quarterly
     Report on Form 10-Q of Alliant Energy for the quarter ended June 30, 2000)
     (File No. 1-9894).

1.3  Balance Sheet of WPL, as of June 30, 2000 (incorporated by reference to the
     Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of WPL for the quarter ended June 30, 2000)
     (File No. 0-337).


                                       45
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1.4  Statement of Income of WPL for the period ended June 30, 2000 (incorporated
     by reference to the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of WPL for the quarter
     ended June 30, 2000) (File No. 0-337).

ITEM 7.   INFORMATION AS TO ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS.
          ---------------------------------------

          None of the matters that are the subject of this Application or
Declaration involve a "major federal action" nor do they "significantly affect
the quality of the human environment" as those terms are used in section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy Act. The transaction that is the
subject of this Application or Declaration will not result in changes in the
operation of the Applicants that will have an impact on the environment. The
Applicants are not aware of any federal agency that has prepared or is preparing
an environmental impact statement with respect to the transactions that are the
subject of this Application or Declaration.


                                       46
<PAGE>


SIGNATURE

          Pursuant to the requirements of the Public Utility Holding Company Act
of 1935, as amended, the undersigned companies have duly caused this Application
or Declaration filed herein to be signed on their behalf by the undersigned
thereunto duly authorized.

                                        WISCONSIN POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY

                                    By: /s/ Edward M. Gleason
                                        Name:  Edward M. Gleason
                                        Title: Vice President-Treasurer
                                               and Corporate Secretary


                                        SOUTH BELOIT WATER, GAS & ELECTRIC
                                        COMPANY

                                    By: /s/ Edward M. Gleason
                                        Name:  Edward M. Gleason
                                        Title: Vice President-Treasurer
                                               and Corporate Secretary


                                        AMERICAN TRANSMISSION COMPANY LLC
                                    By: ATC Management Inc., Its Manager

                                    By: /s/ John E. Ebright
                                        Name:  John E. Ebright
                                        Title: Vice President, Chief
                                               Financial Officer and Treasurer


                                        ATC MANAGEMENT INC.

                                    By: /s/ John E. Ebright
                                        Name:  John E. Ebright
                                        Title: Vice President, Chief
                                               Financial Officer and Treasurer

Date:   August 15, 2000




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