Switch from natural gas to electricity hits Regina Beach couple hard - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Switch from natural gas to electricity hits Regina Beach couple hard

James Misfeldt made the switch from natural gas to electricity after shifting ground in Regina Beach, Sask., caused damage to his home and rendered it unsafe.

James Misfeldt says it costs $400 a month to heat his home with electricity, compared to $250 with gas

James Misfeldt said the $2,500 offered by SaskEnergy helped but did not completely cover costs to transition from natural gas to electricity. (CBC)

James Misfeldt made the transition from natural gas to electricity after shifting ground rendered his Regina Beach, Sask., home unsafe for gas lines.

It's a switch that's putting serious financial strain on his family.

"Heating the home by electricity is very expensive compared to the heating by natural gas,"Misfeldtsaid.

Now, hundreds moreresidentsin theLast Mountain Lake area will be making the same switch as Misfeldtdid,as the utility moves to cut its natural gas service for the same reason.

Two years ago, SaskEnergy cut off natural gas service to 30 properties. Now, 250 more properties in six different communities are being forced to make the switch because of shifting ground. (CBC News)

Thenumber of customers affected in the area breaks down as:

Buena Vista62.
Craven12.
Regina Beach76(less than six per cent of that community).
Saskatchewan Beach87.
Shore Acres6.
Sundale4.

Customers with service less than 10 years old will be proportionally reimbursed.

Last Mountain Lake customers losing natural gas service

On Tuesday,SaskEnergyannounced it was permanently removing natural gas infrastructure in the Last Mountain Lake area for some customersby the time Labour Day rolls around, earlier if shifting ground conditions worsen.

The 247propertiesrepresent16 per cent ofSaskEnergy'scustomer base in the area.

RyanLuedtkeowns property in Buena Vista and in Regina Beach. As of Thursday, he hadn't heard from the utility yet.

"Everyone istextingme to see if I am one of them and I ran into a friend's father, he lives out at Sask beach, he's having to get changed so he's stressed out about it," he said.

"Everyone's wanting to know if I'm one of them and I don't know I just read about it last night."

Ryan Luedtke stands near SaskEnergy gas line markers at his home in Buena Vista. He's not sure if those lines will be cut due to a decision by the crown utility. (CBC)

Bill Dinu is the mayor of Buena Vista and said that residents' safety is paramount.

"We can't endanger our residents. If there's anything that will cause this to change quickly with the potential to blow up a house or kill a resident that's just not acceptable at all."

A group of property owners are currently suing the utility after an explosion in December 2014, which SaskEnergy said was caused by a natural gas leak.

At least one home was destroyed and other properties were damaged.

Photo shows bent infrastructure which has been damaged by shifting ground. (Supplied by SaskEnergy)

Costly switch

Each resident will receive $2,500 from SaskEnergy tomake the switch from natural gas to another fuel source.

However, that paymenthelped but didn't entirely cover the costs, Misfeldt said.

Misfeldtexplainedthe option to switch to propane wasn't available for him due to the slumping ground around his home.

He offered this advice to folks needing to make the transition: "When you switch over to electricity, you really have to do the research as to how you can efficiently heat your home with electric heat."

Misfeldt estimates the cost of heating his home through natural gas was about $250 a month. When the switch was made to electricity, the cost ballooned to about $400 a month in instalment payments toSaskPower.

"I guess we're behind," he said of the payments. "In order for us to keep up with the cost of heating our home with the electric furnace, we would be making $600 payments to, by the end of the year,equalize our payments."

About a year before the switch, Misfeldt said he and his wife bought a furnace, which is now useless.But they're still paying it off.

With files from CBC Radio's The Morning Edition