As Utilities Push for Higher Energy Bills, Will New York Fund the Watchdogs Pushing Back?

Source: New York Focus  |  By Colin Kinniburgh

This June, for the third year in a row, the New York state legislature passed a bill aiming to level the playing field by reimbursing advocacy groups for some of their expenses from participating in rate proceedings. That could add up to millions of dollars in funding each year, paid by utilities themselves and bringing consumer groups slightly closer to what the companies spend in their own defense.

The Utility Reform Network, or TURN, California’s largest ratepayer advocacy group, gets about $5 million from utility customers, covering most of its budget. In return, the group says, it helped block more than $3 billion worth of unnecessary utility spending just last year, by proposing more affordable alternatives. “We’re talking about a fraction of a penny on the dollar that the utilities spend” on their own lawyers and consultants, said Mark Toney, TURN’s executive director. “If the net result is that rates are lower than they would have been, then it’s worth it.”

 
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A Stunt or First Step? Inside California’s Last-Minute Effort to Cut Electric Bills and Streamline Clean Energy

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