TURN Newsroom
Utility Company Cites Climate Change in Push for Additional Rate Hikes
Source: Blaze Media | By Candace Hathaway
The Utility Reform Network, a nonprofit group opposed to the "outrageous" rate hikes, accused PG&E of gouging its customers. "It's gonna be between $12 and $20 additional each month. That's on top of the $33 that's coming January 1," said Mark Toney, the network's executive director. "They want them to start collecting in March, even before the CPUC has held a proceeding and decided whether PG&E should get paid back by rate payers; $2 billion for overspending," Toney continued. "Oh, PG&E has several requests for at least another $3 billion." Toney explained that the electric company is attempting to get customers to cover costs "for something that has not even happened." He noted that the Utility Reform Network is partnering with legislators to set price increase limits to protect customers.
Pacific Gas and Electric Company customers will see their bills increase by $33 per month starting at the beginning of the year. However, PG&E claims it is not enough to protect against climate concerns. The utility company is now seeking approval for another rate hike that will increase monthly bills by $12-$20 per month on top of the already-approved New Year's Day increases that have yet to appear on customers' bills.
Here's What Your Pacific Gas and Electric Bill Will Look Like Next Year
Source: SF Gate | By Madilynne Medina
This interim rate would add another $12 - $20 to customers’ bills per month for a year starting in May, on top of the recently approved 12.8% boost, Mark Toney, executive director of TURN – The Utility Reform Network, said in a Tuesday statement. That would mean a total hike per month of $40 to $60 over what customers paid in 2023, Toney said.
Be prepared for your PG&E bill to be higher next year. Starting with their bill sent in February, customers will pay on average about $30 to $35 per month more than what they paid in 2023. The increase, which takes effect Jan. 1, comes as the result of unanimous approval last month by the California Public Utilities Commission of a 12.8% rate hike. And if PG&E gets its way, an additional increase could land later in the year
PG&E: Mark Toney, Utility Reform Network (TURN)
Source: KMJ Now | By Broeske and Musson
Less than a month after rate hikes were approved, PG&E wants another $2 billion from customers. INTERVIEW: Mark Toney/Executive Director, Utility Reform Network (TURN) discusses what he's trying to do to stop the extra increase.
PG&E Pushes for Additional Price Hikes
Source: KRON 4 | By Terisa Estacio
“This is outrageous to have this again on top of that increase puts $30 on our bills,” Mark Toney, executive director of TURN, watchdog agency The Utility Reform Network. Toney is not holding back on his perspective of PG&E saying it needs more money. “This would put $12 on top of the $30,” Toney said.
Last month, the California public utilities commission approved an increase in monthly bills that would add about thirty dollars for gas and electricity users. Now the utility company is back to the table asking for more money that would impact customers. PG&E filed an application to the California Public Utilities Commission on Dec. 1. It lays out why the utility company says it needs $2 billion from rate payers. They claim it is for safety reasons.
PG&E Requests Another Rate Increase. Here's How Much You Could Pay in 2024
Source: ABC 7 News | By Dustin Dorsey
"Every increase that you hear about is just the tip of the iceberg,' The Utility Reform Network exec. director Mark Toney said. "And every increase that gets approved by the California Public Utilities Commission stacks on top of each other." The Utility Reform Network, or TURN, says the company wants to start collecting those increases from customers before the CPUC has even completed a proceeding with all parties involved.
Get ready to pay more on your electric bill. Last month, the California Public Utilities Commission approved a nearly 13% rate hike which you'll start seeing that on your bills starting Jan. 1. But now, PG&E has requested another hike and they're asking for another $2 billion.
PG&E Asks for Another Rate Hike Due to Climate Change
Source: KTVU | By Tom Vacar
Consumer group, The Utility Reform Network is hotly opposed. "It's gonna be between $12 and $20 additional each month. That's on top of the $33 that's coming January 1," said The Utility Reform Network’s Executive Director Mark Toney. Here's the kicker. "They want them to start collecting in March, even before the CPUC [California Public Utilities Commission] has held a proceeding and decided whether PG&E should get paid back by rate payers; two billion dollars for overspending," said Toney. One more kicker. "Oh, PG&E has several requests for at least another $3 billion," said Toney.
Climate change has aggravated inflation, but nowhere more than with Pacific Gas & Electric, the first major utility to deal with far more effects of extreme weather related to fire and floods. PG&E wants more money on top of the average $33 a month rate increase coming on New Year's Day.
PG&E Makes Another Request to Increase Rates
Source: The San Joaquin Valley Sun | By Reid Stone
The utility company is seeking an interim authorization to begin raising customers’ bills as early as March, even before the CPUC approves its latest rate increase proposal. Combined with the annual true up of energy costs that start in January, the rate increases could increase average monthly bills by $40 to $60, The Utility Reform Network (TURN) executive director Mark Toney told The Mercury News.
Pacific Gas and Electric is asking for another $1.46 billion from customers to cover costs for wildfire mitigation and catastrophic events. This comes less than one month after the utility’s request for rate increases was approved by the California Public Utilities Commission.
PG&E Customers Face Higher Bills — Again — After New Company Request
Source: The Mercury News | By George Avalos
“2024 is shaping up to be a painful year for PG&E customers, who may be looking at bill increases of $40 to $60 a month more than in 2023, once all the increases are added up,” Toney said. PG&E is seeking approval of the interim rates to cover recent expenditures in 2022 and 2023 that were linked to wildfire mitigation, vegetation management and catastrophic events such as winter storms that required extraordinary responses by the utility.
PG&E customers face a fresh round of increases in monthly bills — yet again — because the utility seeks to win regulatory approval of early collections even before a key rate case is decided. The most recent request from PG&E sketches out a proposal for an eyebrow-raising $1.46 billion to cover the utility’s recent spending on wildfire mitigation, as well as to help the company stabilize its financial situation.
PG&E Seeks Another $2 Billion Rate Increase. Customer Bills Could Soar $40-$60 a Month.
Source: GV Wire | By Nancy Price
PG&E has racked up uncompensated costs that the company says are creating a financial burden and putting its creditworthiness at risk. Toney said PG&E’s decision to significantly overspend on wildfire mitigation and in other accounts shouldn’t be borne by customers whose rates are already among the highest in the nation. “Yes, they may be in debt. But guess who put them in debt? It was themselves,” he said.
Not even a month after Pacific Gas and Electric’s rate case adding billions of dollars of revenue annually was approved by the California Public Utilities Commission, PG&E is seeking another $2 billion from customers. On Dec. 1, the utility company filed a motion with PUC for higher revenues to cover its unreimbursed costs for wildfire mitigation, catastrophic events, and other items.
Why 16 Million Households in Northern and Central California are About to Pay More for Electricity
Source: Capital and Main | By Mark Kreidler
“It’s the tip of the iceberg,” said Mark Toney, executive director of TURN, the utility reform network that lobbies for affordable and accessible power for Californians. “I think that people will see a $50 per month increase in one year,” or an extra $600 during that time. Households will struggle more. Over the past four years, PG&E’s bill increases have dramatically outstripped inflation, according to data compiled by TURN. While the Consumer Price Index showed an 18% jump from January 2020 to September 2023, PG&E’s electric rates went up 51% for most households — and, remarkably, 67% for those enrolled in the company’s CARE program for rate relief, according to the advocacy group’s analysis. There’s a far less expensive option, TURN’s Toney said. Called “hardening,” it involves insulating existing power lines with fire-protective coating. It can be completed more quickly, and for about $800,000 per mile — and Southern California Edison has already done it successfully. As always, the burden of bearing this cost will fall hardest on lower-income households, even if they qualify for PG&E discounts. Using data collected from the company’s own disconnection reports, TURN found that the percentage of PG&E customers who were four months behind on their bills rose from 3.8% in 2019 to 7.0% last July. “That’s a stunning increase,” Toney said.
Beginning Jan. 1, power giant Pacific Gas & Electric, which serves 16 million Californians, will impose a 13% increase on the average household bill. That comes to $32.50 a month, or nearly $400 extra per year.
SDG&E is Making More Money Than Ever Before and Ratepayers are Noticing
Source: NBC San Diego | By Kelvin Henry
Critics like Mark Toney, Executive Director of The Utility Reform Network, say their earning model is unsustainable. “SDG&E is recording record profits. Nearly a billion dollars in the past year and this is something that’s of a lot of concern,” Executive Director of The Utility Reform Network Mark Toney told NBC 7's Kelvin Henry. Utility companies like SDG&E often cite climate change, the rise of electric vehicles and the battery storage necessary to sustain them as factors driving costs up. Toney says costs are about priorities. "Every utility company, including SDG&E, has choices to make as to where to make their investment and how to make things as safe as possible at the most cost-effective manner," Toney said. "There needs to be a cap on annual rate increases and the cap should be no more than the cost of living adjustment that social security recipients receive," Toney said.
SDG&E's profits have soared in recent years and ratepayers are taking notice after seeing higher monthly bills. The utility company that serves more than 3 million people in San Diego County says a large reason why their profits are up is because of record investments that improve their products for ratepayers. The utility company reportedly made over $900 million in profits in 2022.
SDG&E profits have jumped sharply in recent years. What’s going on?
Source: The San Diego Union Tribune | By Rob Nikolewski
“If we’re going to stop that trajectory, we will need to look ahead and think about the ultimate price tag of some of these initiatives,” said Jennifer Dowdell, senior policy expert at The Utility Reform Network, or TURN, a consumer group based in San Francisco. “At this point, we are operating in a rate environment that has no margin of safety.” “The utilities will invest in anything the regulator indicates they’d like them to invest in,” said Dowdell of TURN, “because every dime they spend on rate base, they make money.” For Dowdell, the policy expert for the consumer group TURN, the auditor’s report shows the CPUC must keep a sharp eye on approving projects that go into the rate base because that “is a huge driver” in higher monthly bills that customers pay. “When you look at that rate base trajectory, that to me is the story,” Dowdell said, adding, “The commission and policymakers have to recognize that there may not be sufficient room in rates to fund every policy initiative.”
A review by the Union-Tribune of federal financial submissions shows SDG&E profits have been steadily increasing for about a generation, with the pace accelerating since 2008. Last year’s earnings came to $915 million, the highest in company history. At its current pace, the utility may crack the $1 billion mark by the end of 2023.
PG&E customers are hammered by insanely high rates. Is no one looking out for them?
Source: The Tribune | By McClatchy California Editorials Boards
TURN, The Utility Reform Network, suggests putting a cap on rate increases; tie them to the rise in the consumer price index, for example. “It is not sustainable to have the sky be the limit,” TURN Executive Director Mark Toney said.
Another big rate increase will hit PG&E customers next year, making California — already the most expensive state in the Union — even less affordable. As recently as Nov. 16, the commission unanimously approved a 13% rate increase for PG&E gas and electric customers, which will add $32.50 to the average bill. Lower-income households that quality for the utility’s CARE program will pay around $21 more per month.
PG&E Bills to Soar Nearly $400 a Year in 2024 for Millions of California Households
Source: San Francisco Chronicle | By Julie Johnson
“This is the biggest rate case TURN has ever seen,” said Katy Morsony, an assistant managing attorney for The Utility Reform Network, or TURN, an advocacy group for ratepayers. Ratepayer advocacy groups such as TURN pushed for the commission to promote a far less expensive and faster method by insulating bare wires instead of the laborious process of burying them. The CPUC opted to allow for more buried lines. “We’re disappointed,” Morsony said. “We need to be choosing only the most affordable and fastest wildfire safety measures to protect customers and their pocketbooks.”
Millions of California households served by Pacific Gas and Electric Co. will pay about $384 more in 2024 for utilities to help the company prevent wildfires and meet rising demands for electricity. That amounts to about $32.50 more per month for average residential customers, according to PG&E. The California Public Utilities Commission approved the increase Thursday, ending a yearslong debate over how much more PG&E customers must pay to help the embattled utility — which caused a catastrophic explosion in 2010 and major wildfires in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2021 — modernize its infrastructure, primarily to be more safe.
PG&E Customers Say They Aren't Happy About Coming Rate Hikes
Source: NBC Bay Area | By Pete Suratos
There are also other changes to look forward to after next year, according to the Utility Reform Network’s Executive Director Mark Toney. The consumer advocacy group is pushing for a cap on PG&E rate increases. The typical monthly bill will increase by nearly $33 starting next year, according to PG&E. In 2025, the increase will be around $4. And we’ll see a decrease of $8 in 2026. The exact monthly increase will depend on usage. Still, Toney feels the costs of PG&E addressing wildlife safety shouldn’t be passed along to consumers. “The shareholders want the ratepayers to pay everything,” said Toney. “We think it’s absolutely important that the shareholders put money in.”
The California Public Utilities Commission unanimously approved Thursday a monthly rate increase of nearly 13% starting next year. The money is set to help pay for wildfire risk investments, including undergrounding more than 1,200 miles of power lines.
PG&E Customers to Face Significant Rate Hike in the New Year, Following CPUC Approval
Source: ABC 7 | By Muna Sadek
"Rather than pursuing the lower cost option, we’re out of the gate going with the highest cost option which will be impacting customer rates for a really long time," said Katy Morsony, with Oakland-based group The Utility Reform Network (TURN). "[Insulated powerlines] are the powerlines that stay in the air but they have layers of protection on them so in cases where vegetation blows in, it doesn't necessarily create a fault or a spark." Morsony says she believes price hikes should be dictated based on factors like inflation rates. "What is really astounding here is the degree of the rate increase, especially at a time when customers are already hurting," she said. "We should be limiting how much we see our energy bills go up so that they stay more in lockstep with people's take-home pay otherwise we see what's happening now which is a bigger and bigger piece of people's paycheck going to their energy bills."
PG&E customers will see higher energy bills in the new year, following a decision by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). The regulatory board approved a new spending plan for the utility company on Thursday, which will result in a 12.8 percent increase to monthly bills for electricity and gas customers.
Ratepayers Share Frustration Over PG&E Rate Hike
Source: KTVU | By Tom Vacar
"Which we think is more than necessary to provide safe and reliable service," said the Utility Reform Network Attorney Katy Morsony." In the last couple of years, we have reduced wildfire risk in our system by about 94 percent," said PG&E’s Paulo. "We just see rate increase after rate increase after rate increase really when customers can't bear to take on more," said the network's Morsony.
The California Public Utilities Commission voted Thursday to increase PG&E gas and electric bills. The average residential bill will be an additional $32.62 a month. Low-income CARE bills will rise by $21.66 additional dollars for next year. CPUC voted on PG&E's "massive" rate hike. It also approved a proposal to take away many benefits given to solar power system owners to increase utility company incomes even further.
PG&E Bills to Increase by Nearly 13% Starting Jan. 1
Source: CBS News | By Tori Apodaca
"This is at a time where customers are already struggling to pay their utility bills," said Katy Morsony with The Utility Reform Network (TURN) that advocates for ratepayers. TURN had supported the cheaper option that would have done less undergrounding and more insulating of lines. Morsony said this is not the only rate increase PG&E customers will see over the next three years. Paulo agreed and said that rates could continue to increase on top of this hike.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) made a 5-0 vote to approve the Alternate Proposed Decision that will increase PG&E customer rates by about 12.8%. The CPUC said the vote, which was delayed earlier this month, was not an easy decision and its biggest rate case ever.
Energy Regulators to Vote on PG&E Price Hike Request
Source: ABC 10 | By Gurajpal Sangha
Mark Toney says PG&E needs to achieve safety in the most cost-effective manner. “Electricity is a necessity, not a luxury,” said Mark Toney, executive director of The Utility Reform Network. “We are captive customers of PG&E.” Toney says PG&E needs to achieve safety in the most cost-effective manner. He said the price hikes should be capped and limited by the cost-of-living adjustment that social security recipients get. “The California Public Utilities Commission needs to do more,” said Toney. “They need to prioritize the affordability for everyday customers and not let PG&E empty their customer pockets.” Toney says as more people get their power shut off because they cannot afford the price hike, that is a leading contributor to people being evicted.
The California Public Utilities Commission (CUPC) could decide Thursday whether PG&E customers have to pay higher prices. Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) is requesting a double-digit rate increase that could start as soon as Jan. 1, 2024, if approved.
Officials weigh proposal to raise electric rates of 16 million customers
Source: Spectrum News 1 | By Jamie Kennedy
The commission has returned with two counter options to bury much fewer miles of lines and insulate them instead for wildfire protection because the cost is so high. An issue the utility consumer advocacy group, Turn, believes is critical given rates for customers have in the last few years increased by over 30%, outpacing inflation, executive director of Turn Mark Toney said. “It is faster and cheaper and as safe to insulate the overhead lines as it is to bury them underground,” Toney said.
PG&E aims to bury 10,000 miles of power lines. The company said it costs $3 million per mile and is asking the California Public Utilities Commission to let the company raise rates by 25% over four years to bury 2,000 lines.