BC Hydro ordered to cut rate increases by 50% - Action News
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British Columbia

BC Hydro ordered to cut rate increases by 50%

B.C. Premier Christy Clark is offering no apologies for her government's decision to cap BC Hydro rate increases.

Rate to increase 17% rather than 30% over 3 years, energy minister says

B.C. Premier Christy Clark is offering no apologies for her government's decision to cap BC Hydro rate increases.

On Tuesday, Energy Minister Rich Coleman ordered a nearly 50-per-cent cut in proposed rate increases for BC Hydro customers, saying families need the break and the Crown corporation can afford the cut.

Next April, during the provincial election campaign,electricity rates are due to increase by 1.4 per cent, Coleman said.

B.C. Energy Minister Rich Coleman says BC Hydro can get by on less than it's asked for from the province's consumers. ((CBC))

Clark said the government has told the B.C. Utilities Commission the rates must increase by no more than 17 per cent over three years.

"People are struggling. It's a tough economy and Hydro rates are just one other burden that government puts on people in terms of costs, so we're finding a way to pay down the deferral accounts to about $250 million," said Clark on Wednesday.

But the Opposition New Democrats, who have been decryingelectricity rate hikes for years, immediately accused the Liberals of using their power to bypass an independent regulatory body.

The union representing BC Hydro workers said the government is hiding its own mismanagement, while holding back rate increases until after next May's provincial election.

Coleman said he directed the B.C. Utilities Commission to reduce the proposed rate increases without holding two weeks of public hearings set for next month.

"It stops us from going into a lengthy oral hearing process where we already had agreement from all the people who were basically interveners for the most part," he said. "These rates make sense and they are better for the consumer, and we don't need to have higher rates."

BC Hydro originally proposed to increaseelectricity rates by about 30 per cent over three years starting last May. Rates increased by eight per cent in May 2011 and they went up 7.1 per cent last month.

CEO resigns

Last year when BC Hydro proposed the 30-per-cent increases, the government ordered a review of the corporation.

The review resulted in BC Hydro agreeing to drop rates and cut expenses by more than $800 million over three years by putting some projects on hold and making changes to how it awards contracts and manages its finances.

The review panel also recommended the utility cut up to 1,200 jobs.

Last fall, former BC Hydro chief executive officer Dave Cobb resigned to return to the private sector after barely 17 months on the job.

Coleman said the government believed the utilities commission didn't fully appreciate the results of the BC Hydro review report, which found ways to save money and lower rates.

"The B.C. Utility Commission has been ignoring basically what we found out in the hydro report and that is that we thought we could keep rates lower than we thought, and they wanted us to keep them higher," he said.

Philip Nakoneshny, the commission's director of rates, said the independent regulatory agency will follow the government's demand to cut the rate increases, but still will decide whether or not to convene some sort of hearing process into the ordered rate cuts.

The commission will likely decide within a week if it will hold a conference to hear submissions from interveners or call for written submissions, said Nakoneshny.

NDP energy critic John Horgan, who consistently criticizes the Liberals for risingelectricity rates, said the cuts are merely an attempt to get around a public hearing process that would likely reveal financial mismanagement at BC Hydro and impending rate hikes.

"This is the culmination of a decade of disastrous energy policy in British Columbia," he said. "Now they're putting in what they characterize as a rate reduction as a disguise to again thwart a public hearing into the activities at BC Hydro under the B.C. Liberals."