Posted on August 5, 2024
Connecticut’s High Energy Rates
One of my priorities in Hartford is to make our state more affordable, especially by addressing utility rates, and I’m proud to have been recognized as an AARP Affordable Utilities Champion for my leadership and support of policies that aim to reduce the burden of utility costs for all people, especially seniors.
High energy rates are caused by factors like our location and lack of natural resources, infrastructure upgrades, Connecticut’s high business costs, legislative policies, and decisions by state utility regulators.
In recent years, the state’s Public Utilities Regulatory Authority (PURA) and utility companies seem to be in open conflict over rates, programs, infrastructure, and policy proposals. As the Governor tries to stay largely out of the fray, he still hasn’t fully staffed PURA, leaving two vacancies on the panel. At the same time, Credit rating agency Moody’s has branded our state’s regulatory environment “inconsistent and unpredictable.”
Our system is broken. Connecticut needs a comprehensive and bipartisan energy strategy, led by the Governor, now more than ever.
Earlier this year, minority party Republicans addressed this crisis and offered proposals to deliver short and long-term relief. Unfortunately, those please were dismissed by the majority party.
TODAY, I joined Republican legislators to once again highlight our plan to provide relief for customers facing unprecedented cost increases that are just not sustainable.
I believe the legislature should authorize the use of a small portion of the state’s fully-funded Budget Reserve Fund (“Rainy Day Fund”) to offset these massive hikes and spare ratepayers. The legislature could also allocate funds from the FY24 General Fund surplus of $329.3 million to cover the entire shortfall. These are one-time expenses to provide immediate relief to those who kept up on their payments. You should not be paying for someone else’s electric bill!
Caucus proposals include reallocating remaining end-of-year American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds, and examining budgetary options that could make available as much as $1 billion to provide immediate relief to ratepayers who are being forced to shoulder the cost of the government-forced moratorium they themselves did nothing to create.
We also proposed reducing the Budget Reserve Fund maximum threshold from 18 percent back to 15 percent permanently, and reallocating the difference to ratepayers.
Our plan includes redefining Class I renewable energy sources to include all forms of hydropower and all nuclear power, and studying ways to get more natural gas into New England to reduce our reliance on more expensive fuel-mix used to generate electricity. If our plan becomes law energy bills will be reduced.
Other Republican proposals include:
Provide autonomy for PURA. PURA is a division within the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) and I fear that the environmental (and ideological) goals of Governor Lamont’s DEEP, such as banning the sales of new gas-powered vehicles, aren’t aligned with the interests of ratepayers. PURA should be removed from DEEP to provide it the greatest autonomy possible.
Unbundling the Public Benefits Charge. Your bill includes charges that pay for hardship protection measures, low-income conservation programs and other public policies. We should consider funding these programs as part of the state budget appropriations process rather than including them on ratepayer bills.
Set reasonable caps on future power purchase agreements (PPAs). To stimulate growth of renewable energy projects, the state requires utility companies to purchase clean electricity (such as wind and solar) at rates that are sometimes substantially higher than others available on the market. Republicans proposed to improve this situation by capping future PPAs so that no contract can be significantly higher than the wholesale electric market price.
Unfortunately, our ideas have been shot down by our majority party colleagues. Last year, our proposal to study how electric distribution companies could be reconstituted to bring more competition into the market was also rejected.
Decisions made by the state have a significant impact on your monthly bill, such as roughly four years of moratoriums on service shutoffs (citing COVID-19), which socialized the cost of unpaid bills to all ratepayers. That’s why, in an effort to improve transparency, Republicans insisted upon a provision that requires your electric bill to indicate the amount of your monthly cost that is attributable to these “public benefits” decisions.
The effect on ratepayers was among the reasons why I opposed the electric vehicle mandate sought by DEEP and Democrats, and why I opposed legislation requiring installation of electric heat pumps in thousands of homes. Both would have added significant load to our grid, require massive infrastructure upgrades, and ultimately impact the “public benefits” tally on bills and create homeowner system upgrade costs. Thankfully, those concepts stalled, for now.
However, if approved, a draft PURA decision could allow utilities companies to recover from ratepayers the costs from another initiative tied to the state’s ambitious climate goals: a rebate program for residential electric vehicle charging stations.
We can’t continue to lurch from one crisis to the next. I want you to know that I will continue to press for strategies to stabilize, and ultimately lower, electric rates for homes and businesses. For now, if you’re using a third-party supplier for your electricity, you should compare whether your per kilowatt hour rate is more than the current standard offer rate from your utility company.