by Josephine Djuhana | July 12, 2015 6:00 am
[1]With a recently approved proposal to hike electricity rates throughout the state and a new proposal from a local board to increase water and power rates, Californians are about to see a spike in energy costs.
Last week, the California Public Utilities Commission unanimously approved changes that would move electricity rates from four to two tiers.
“Most residential customers in California will see their electricity bills increase under a new rate structure passed … by state regulators,” reported[2] ABC 7 News. The new plan essentially “raises rates on more efficient users while giving a break to big energy users.”
The tier overhaul was prompted by utility companies and regulators looking to charge based on the actual cost of providing power. According[3] to the San Jose Mercury News, proponents of this new plan argued, “Low-usage customers have essentially been subsidized by high-usage ratepayers under the current system, which has been in place since the electricity crisis 15 years ago, when there was a push to encourage conservation.”
PUC President Michael Picker said[4] in a prepared statement, “Rate reform is necessary to move us into a future where consumers have the tools they need to manage their own energy use, and can install new, clean technologies such as storage and renewables.
“Our decision helps align rates with the actual cost of service. It also builds a more nimble rate structure to allow us to add more and more renewables to the grid, and to encourage customers to use energy when we have excess renewables and to cut back during peak periods.”
The changes would also introduce the following items:
In addition, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power on Wednesday also proposed rate hikes over the next five years.
According[5] to CBS Los Angeles, the proposal would “raise more than a billion dollars for infrastructure repairs, including broken underground pipes and power poles.” The $1.3 billion in new funds would be split, with $230 million going to water projects and $900 million for power projects.
Rates would be increased across all spectrums of energy and water users. “If approved, low water and power users would see an increase of 2.4 percent or about $2 more a month, while average users would see a 3.4 percent increase equating to about $5 more per month. High users, though, would see a 5.4 percent raise, which comes out to about $18 a month.”
The DWP board will not vote on the increase until October; even after approval from the board, it must also be approved by the L.A. City Council and Mayor Eric Garcetti.
In the meantime, the DWP has planned four months of public outreach at business groups, neighborhood councils and other areas. Southern California Public Radio notes[6] that the DWP “must overcome bad publicity from its poor oversight of $40 million[7] given to two trusts run by its employee union, a recently-discovered embezzlement of several million dollars[8] by an employee, and the botched rollout[9] of its new customer billing system.”
Source URL: https://calwatchdog.com/2015/07/12/electricity-tier-changes-rate-hikes-bring-higher-energy-costs/
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