Posted on January 17, 2023
Will Save Families Over $210 Per Year Immediately, More Over the Long Term
HARTFORD – Today, Rep. Joe Polletta (R-68) joined Senate and House Republican Leaders to detail a comprehensive package of policy proposals to reduce the cost of electric bills and make energy more affordable over the long term.
The policies will reduce energy costs for CT families by over $362 million per year, saving the average household over $210 next year. In the long run, the plan will drive down costs by even more and implement important ratepayer protections against utilities.
The package of legislative proposals will address two major goals:
“Residents across Connecticut have been unable to escape or ignore the rising cost of energy in our state and they are looking for solutions that will reel in this serious financial burden. Energy affordability will be a top priority for my Republican colleagues and me this session and the plan which we unveiled this afternoon is a necessary step to reducing costs in the short- and long term,” Rep. Polletta (R-68) said. “Failed policies in Hartford and Washington have fueled these cost increases for ratepayers and we are beginning the dialogue to deliver this necessary relief.”
“Wagging a finger at utility companies to grandstand for ratepayers when their frustration understandably boils over is a singular path that produces very little. We instead need an integrated approach that not only introduces systemic change to reduce monthly bills, but one that also examines to what extent residents’ financial stress is fueled by energy policy and goals adopted by the legislature and state agency bureaucrats,” said House Republican Leader Vincent Candelora (R-North Branford).
Connecticut ranks number one in the continental United States as the most expensive state for electricity (Source: Energy Information Administration via Ownerly October 2021 through September 2022). This January, our state utilities implemented shocking rate increases, raising everyone’s electric bills by at least 43 percent at a time when families already face historic inflation.
The proposals detailed by Senate and House Republicans include:
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