1 / 11

Public Utilities’ War on the Poor

Public Utilities’ War on the Poor. Presentation to: National Community Action Foundation (NCAF) Roger D. Colton Fisher, Sheehan & Colton Public Finance and General Economics. Issues to consider. Higher initial blocks rates/customer charges Higher connect/reconnect fees.

cissy
Download Presentation

Public Utilities’ War on the Poor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Utilities’ War on the Poor Presentation to: National Community Action Foundation (NCAF) Roger D. Colton Fisher, Sheehan & Colton Public Finance and General Economics

  2. Issues to consider • Higher initial blocks rates/customer charges • Higher connect/reconnect fees. • Imposition of new fees. • New/higher interest rates/”late fees.” • Higher disconnect fees. • Direct assignment of collection costs.

  3. Higher initial blocks/customer charges • Increases in initial step blocks/higher customer charges. • Purported reason for change: help the low-income. • Real reason for change: isolate revenue from consumption change. • Harm to poor: LI have lower usage--direct income transfer/reduce efficacy of Wx. • Issue to watch for: higher LI usage per square foot vs. lower overall LI usage.

  4. Higher connect/reconnect fees • Increased fees/fees apply when changing service (moving). • Purported reason for change: Assign costs to cost-causer. • Real reason for change: Lower percentage rate increase. • Harm to poor: LI have higher mobility/LI are more often tenants rather than homeowners. • Issue to watch for: Embedded cost analysis rather than decremental or incremental analysis.

  5. Imposition of new fees • Field collection fees/field payment fees. • Purported reason for change: Assign costs to cost-causer. • Real reason for change: Lower percentage rate increase. • Harm to poor: LI are disproportionately payment-troubled/closed field offices/unbanked customers/huge percentage bill increase. • Issue to watch for: LI impose higher costs and should not receive special dispensation.

  6. New/higher interest rates/late fees • Increase late fees/impose late fees on budget billing and/or payment plans. • Purported reason for change: Assign costs to cost-causer. • Real reason for change: Increased revenue, especially if done outside rate case. • Harm to poor: LI more often in arrears/more often on deferred payment plans. • Response: Late fee not cost-based now/interest rates going down/expenses paid through other fees/expenses not incurred. • Issue to watch for: LI exemption tied to LIHEAP, reaching fraction of LI population/late fee “voluntary.”

  7. New/higher disconnect/reconnect fees • Move disconnect fees higher/disaggregate disconnect and reconnect fees. • Purported reason for change: Assign costs to cost-causer. • Real reason for change: Cushion political costs of rate cases. • Harm to poor: LI more often disconnected/huge barrier to reconnection/diversion of income. • Response: Disparate impact on LI/late fee not cost-based now/interest rates going down/decremental/incremental cost analysis.

  8. Direct assignment of collection costs • Collection costs quantified and directly assigned to customer through a collection “rider.” • Purported reason for change: Assign costs to cost-causer. • Real reason for change: Cushion political costs of rate cases/avoid regulatory review of collection costs. • Harm to poor: LI more often payment-troubled. • Response: No regulatory review (contrary to statute)/”least cost” provision of service/not entitled to cost recovery (only opportunity for ROE)/collection costs should be in base rates (subject to management control and not highly volatile).

  9. Affirmative issues to raise • Cross-subsidy now exists from poor to non-poor. • Old and depreciated service drops. • Older distribution system. • Higher density. • Non-cost-based late fee (decreasing interest). • Don’t do fees via “rules” but rather in base rate case. • Offsetting savings • Not guaranteed cost recovery. • Already embedded in rates--double collection.

  10. For more information: http://www.fsconline.com (library/news)

  11. For more information: roger@fsconline.com

More Related