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Windsor

EnWin hints at delivery fee hikes for customers

The utility is distributing a survey to determine whether customers could stomach an increase in delivery charges to help ensure a more reliable power grid. EnWin CEO Helga Reidel told Windsor Morning delivery charges must go up if the company is to maintain its infrastructure.

EnWin CEO Helga Reidel says the company needs to maintain infrastructure

(Derek Spalding/CBC)

EnWin Customers should prepare themselves for an increase on their power bills.

The utility is distributing a surveyto determinewhether customers could stomach an increase in delivery charges to helpensure a more reliable power grid. EnWin CEOHelgaReidel told Windsor Morning delivery charges must go up if the company is to maintain its infrastructure.

"What EnWin manages is the cost of the lines you see around the city, the transmission lines along the city and we have to keep those in good repair," said Reidel. "Ultimately, yes, this is a survey to see what our customers will tolerate and what our customers expect in terms of that reliability and what they are willing to pay for it."

Reidel says businesses like Chrysler's Windsor Assembly Plant rely on "perfect power" and outages cost them money. She saidEnWin was able to restore power relatively quickly to most customers during the mass outages on Wednesday butthe infrastructure won't be so reliable in years to come without additionalinvestment.

"In the longterm, eventually the system would decay and we could not be able to restore power as quickly as we did in this most recent storm," said Reidel. "Over time the system would breakdown ... people would eventually seeit and business, unfortunately, would eventually feel that pain."

Reidel says the increase in delivery fees is still a few years away, 2019 at the earliest. Any hike would alsoneed approval of the Ontario Energy Board.