Electric Rates

2011 Legislative Agenda

The legislative agenda is the master plan for this session’s lobbying, research and issue communications with members.

ENVIRONMENT:
 
Protecting the Public’s Health from Toxic Bisphenol-A (BPA) in Thermal Receipt Paper: SB 210
 
SB 210 does two things. It proposes to ban BPA from thermal paper receipts like those found in ATM machines, gas pumps and cash registers with a safer alternative. It also moves us toward a sustainable framework for listing chemicals of high concern such as carcinogens, developmental toxins and reproductive toxins.
 
Background: BPA, a known endocrine disruptor, is linked to several diseases including breast and prostate cancer, reproductive disorders, insulin resistance, diabetes and learning/behavioral disorders. Recent reports show that BPA is present in many thermal paper receipts. BPA in thermal paper is unbound and readily transmits to hands and money. Our exposure to BPA is much higher than previously imagined and is of particular concern for workers in check-out lines. This is one more example of why we need a framework to prioritize the most toxic chemicals and, with federal reform stalled, states like Connecticut are taking the lead.
 
Preventing Mercury Contamination from Old Thermostats: SB 205
 
There are over 1,700,000 mercury thermostats in Connecticut homes; each contains between three to five grams of mercury. That means that Connecticut mercury thermostats contain over 11,500 pounds of mercury. A single gram of mercury is enough to contaminate a 20 acre lake.
 
Mercury thermostats were built to last about 30 years. As they reach their end-of-use, only about 5% are properly recycled; the others end up in landfills where they are often burned, releasing mercury into the atmosphere.
 
SB 205 would require manufacturers to finance a collection and recycling program paying a $5 incentive for each mercury thermostat returned. Similar laws in Maine and Vermont increased recycling by a factor of 10. Connecticut needs to step up and require manufacturers to dramatically increase collection rates.
 
On March 22nd, substitute language was inserted into SB 205 rendering it ineffective. We are now fighting to reinstate the original language.
 
CONSUMER PROTECTION:
 
Fair Taxation
 
Bank of America - Profiting without pitching in:
It’s time for Bank of America and all of the big banks in CT to pay their fair share. When big banks profit without pitching in, it hurts every tax payer in Connecticut. Although it holds more than $1 of every $5 of deposits in Connecticut, Bank of America pays virtually no taxes to support our local economy, while their foreclosures drive down home values and cost our communities millions of dollars. Bank of America is stifling job creation by refusing to lend to small business. CCAG will continue to pressure the bank to ease up on foreclosures, increase lending to job-creating small businesses, and increase efforts to work with homeowners who need mortgage modifications.
 
DEMOCRACY
 
National Popular Vote: HB 6163
 
Equality is fundamental to representative democracy. Everyone's vote should be equal when electing the President. Our current Electoral College system, grounded in state law, leads presidential candidates to concentrate their resources on voters in a handful of swing states, relegating the majority of the country to spectator status. CCAG is advocating for direct election of the President. The National Popular Vote plan ensures that every vote for President is equally valued no matter where it is cast.
 
Last year, this bill passed the house but was never taken up by the Senate. CCAG is fighting to see that HB 6163 gets passed in both chambers and is signed by the Governor this year. Passing this legislation would add Connecticut's voice to the national dialogue and give every voter an equal chance to let their voices be heard.
 
No Excuse Absentee Ballot/Early Voting: SB 941
 
In Connecticut, a registered voter seeking an absentee ballot must provide an excuse as to why they cannot vote at their polling station on Election Day. Connecticut should join the other 30 states that have eliminated this unnecessary barrier to voting. For any host of reasons (transportation, inclement weather, illness or work schedule) it may be difficult for voters to reach the polls on Election Day. This measure would help ensure a greater participation in our elections.

ENERGY REFORM: (SB 1)
 
CCAG supports a strong, progressive energy policy for Connecticut
 
Create an Energy Department and disband the DPUC. The current DPUC Commissioners have consistently sided with power producers and Wall Street speculators over consumers and small businesses. The current DPUC structure needs to be dissolved. We need a clear, coherent energy policy in Connecticut with an emphasis on conservation and renewables. Administration actions need to match its rhetoric. For instance, dedicated funds for conservation and renewables have been the first casualties during budget shortfalls. This raiding must stop.
 
Hire a Procurement Manager within the Energy Department or create a Public Power Authority to lower energy rates in Connecticut by 15% to 20%. A study in 2009 concluded that a Public Power Authority in Connecticut could lower electric rates by 15% to 20% over several years. Illinois lowered their rates by 9% in 2009, the first year of their Public Power Authority. We need to end the closed auction procurement system Connecticut currently has (the same one California had that Enron manipulated) and replace it with one that benefits consumers.
 
End so-called “Retail Competition”. The legislature had good intentions when it decided to spur competition among electric suppliers. The system has clearly failed. Connecticut ratepayers have subsidized fake competition to the tune of over $150 million dollars over the last 10 years. It’s time to end this deceptive charade and lower everybody’s electric rates, not prop up companies who couldn’t survive if we weren’t paying higher electric rates.
 
Reducing Energy Costs for Consumers: HB 5699 and HB 6026
CT needs to pass one of these two bills as we work to lower energy prices

 
HB 5699 Seeks to provide relief to electricity consumers. CCAG believes that the Federal pricing rules create an inequity for consumers. A windfall profits rebate would restore some balance as we work to lower energy prices in Connecticut. The windfall profits rebate would be assessed only on profits above a 20% rate of return-on-equity. Corporations would keep 100% of their profits under the 20% rate of return, and 50% of their profits over the 20% rate of return.
 
HB 6026 is another proposal that would reduce costs to consumers by implementing a straight tax on output. A one cent per kilowatt-hour tax on coal, and a 2 cent tax on nuclear generation would capture almost $330 million in revenue. There is way too much ratepayer money going to fatten corporations’ bottom lines at our expense. These generation facilities have been paid for many times over; we should not be paying for them over and over and over.
 
HEALTH CARE:
 
Implementation of the SustiNet Plan: HB 6305
 
SustiNet + Federal Health Care Reform = A Win-Win for Connecticut
 
Connecticut’s landmark 2009 health care law, SustiNet, uniquely prepares our state to benefit from the new federal Patient Protection Affordable Care Act. SustiNet put Connecticut at the front of the line for new federal dollars that will enhance state-based health care initiatives while helping to boost the economy. Connecticut and federal laws will work together to make good, affordable health care choices available to individuals, families and small businesses. You can track the Board’s progress at: www.ct.gov\sustinet
 
State Prescription Drug Purchasing: HB 6322
 
The state is the largest purchaser of prescription drugs in Connecticut. Through an initiative with the Department of Social Services, HB 6322 will allow the Office of the State Comptroller to procure prescription drugs for the Connecticut Medical Assistance Programs. This would strengthen the state's purchasing power, yielding at least $66.5 million in savings (according to State Comptroller Kevin Lembo), and would not change the way that patients and consumers access their medications.
 
The Establishment of the Connecticut Healthcare Partnership: HB 6308
 
CCAG is supporting HB 6308. This bill would allow cities and towns, non-profits and small businesses (50 employees or less) to tap into the State Employee healthcare system. This partnership would lower administrative costs and take advantage of the bargaining power of the State plan’s 200,000 members.

The Time is NOW to act on Energy Reform

CCAG supported energy legislation in 2010 that would have reorganized the Department of Public Utility Control (DPUC) to include a procurement manger, responsible for purchasing electricity at the lowest cost and least risk to consumers and small businesses. The bill also set statutory goals to:

  • Reduce electric rates by 15% for every residential consumer.
  • Create a discount electric and gas rate for low-income families and seniors.
  • Provide low-interest financing for energy efficient furnaces and boilers.
  • Establish strong consumer protections for residents who choose to buy electricity from a competitive, retail supplier.
  • Increase investment in renewable, especially solar technologies and installations.

The current DPUC commissioners and Governor Rell worked hard to defeat the bill, and Rell ultimately vetoed the energy legislation. It’s time to clean house and raise the bar for energy policy.

2010 Legislative Highlights

Toxic Chemical Reform

Chemical Innovations Institute Gets Green Light

Promising to help Connecticut move beyond the one-chemical-at-a-time approach to toxic chemical regulation, House Bill 5126 establishes the mission and the Board of Directors of a Chemical Innovations Institute (CII) for research and education in green technologies. The program will be housed at UConn Health Center but will operate largely on outside funding. It will protect the environment and the citizens of CT while also constituting an economic development opportunity for the state.

Tell Your State Senator: Override Rell's Energy Veto!

Jodi Rell ignored you. She vetoed PA 10-97 (Senate Bill 493), our energy reform legislation. She turned a deaf ear to your thousands of calls, e-mails, faxes and letters calling for energy reform and sided with power producers, the utilities and Wall Street speculators who have driven our electricity prices to the second highest in the United States only to Hawaii.

Call Governor Rell and urge her to sign Senate Bill 493 into law

Call Governor Rell's office during business hours toll-free: 800-406-1527 or at 860-566-4840.

Ask her to sign Senate Bill 493 into law.

Jobs At Stake As Rell Weighs Energy Bill

Hartford Business Journal - May 24, 2010

The May issue of Chief Executive Magazine contains the publication’s annual ‘Best & Worst States’ survey that asks CEOs to rank states on business conditions including job growth potential. Connecticut’s slip from 38th in 2009 to 45th in 2010 was the second biggest drop of any state.

The cost of electric power has a lot to do with it.

In no state in America, with the exception of Hawaii, do electric power companies charge more for electricity than in Connecticut. Rising unemployment was another reason for the state’s poor ranking.

A new energy bill just approved by state lawmakers after long debate aims to reduce the cost of electricity and create thousands of clean energy jobs. This important legislation is currently awaiting Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s signature of approval.

Senate, House pass sweeping energy bill

Connecticut Mirror - Wednesday May 5, 2010

Mark Pazniokas
May 5, 2010

The House gave final legislative approval at 6:01 a.m. today to a bill that subsidizes solar power, encourages energy efficiency and exerts influence over a deregulated electric industry that has given Connecticut the nation's second-highest electric rates.

The most heavily lobbied bill of year was passed 20 to 14 in the Senate on Tuesday night and 81 to 40 in the House as the sun rose over the State Capitol today, the final day of the 2010 session.

Gov. M. Jodi Rell has expressed opposition, but environmentalists urged her to sign a bill that encourages the consolidation of energy functions in one department, an idea proposed by Rell in 2007.

"This bill is an important first step in addressing a broken energy infrastructure, and a way for the state to move towards cleaner energy and a stronger economy," said Charles Rothenberger, a staff attorney for the Connecticut Fund for the Environment.

As session winds down, plans for a sweeping energy overhaul emerge

Connecticut Mirror - Friday April 30, 2010

Mark Pazniokas
April 30, 2010

A thaw in one of the General Assembly's chilliest relationships has produced a sweeping, 11th-hour proposal to overhaul Connecticut's electric regulatory structure and subsidize solar energy.

Setting aside three years of conflict, Sen. John W. Fonfara, D-Hartford, and Rep. Vickie O. Nardello, D-Prospect, are collaborating on what could be the biggest energy bill since deregulation in 1998.

The two co-chairs of the Energy and Technology Committee circulated drafts of their legislation this week, setting off a scramble by industry and environmental groups.

"It's getting everyone in this building in a frenzy," said Sen. Kevin D. Witkos, R-Canton, the ranking Republican on the committee. "This is huge, and it never had a public hearing."

And the bill is unfinished.

Online Energy Forum

CCAG Online Energy Forum

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Get involved in lowering the high cost of energy!

CCAG and AARP have held Energy Forums in Watertown, Hartford and Waterford--but in order to reach the greatest number of people with resources for lowering our energy bills, we are presenting this Online Energy Forum.

At this Online Energy Forum you can view videos of speakers at the Waterford forum, peruse Rep. Vickie Nardello's powerpoint presentation on energy, and follow links to resources that will help you lower your energy bills. You can also look at some of the proposed legislation to help consumers with energy costs, including a bill that would create a Connecticut Power Authority.

Most importantly, the Online Energy Forum is a resource that will be periodically updated with the latest information. We suggest that you bookmark this page (http://ccag.net/energyforum) so that if you need resources on energy assistance, you can find them.

In the video below from the Waterford forum, State Representative Vickie Nardello, House Co-Chair of the General Assembly’s Energy and Technology Committee, explains why Connecticut has the highest electric rates in the continental United States and how we can fight back.

Representative Nardello also discusses the major legislation that will be coming out of the Energy and Technology Committee, which includes a public power authority proposal and a windfall profits rebate. For the last three years, CCAG, AARP and Attorney General Richard Blumenthal have advocated for a public power authority. AARP has commissioned a study that proves Connecticut consumers would save money on their power bills if we had a public power authority.

Presentations

Representative Nardello's Presentation



View Rep. Nardello's slides below:

Rep. Nardello explains how a Connecticut Power Authority will help Connecticut ratepayers.

Shirley Berger of Connecticut Legal Services speaks about ways that consumers can lower their energy bills.

Utility Day Events

Don Becker from CL&P speaks about the resources available to consumers.

Resources



Citizen's Oil Co-Op

AARP

CT Energy Info

Legal Assistance Resource Center of Connecticut

CL&P

DSS Energy Hotline

  • 1 (800) 842-1132

General Assembly

CL&P Scraps Bonus Request

Hartford Courant - November 9, 2007
By MARK PETERS Courant Staff Writer

Connecticut Light & Power agreed Thursday to withdraw its request that ratepayers pick up the cost of bonuses paid to top executives in the face of mounting criticism from customers, elected officials and consumer advocates.

The cost of incentive bonuses has traditionally been paid by shareholders, not ratepayers.

The utility company's decision came four days after The Courant reported how CL&P, the state's largest power company, had asked regulators for permission to pass on the $3.5 million cost of annual executive bonuses through higher electric rates.

CL&P officials had defended the change, contained in hundreds of pages of documents related to its request for a rate increase, as a cost of doing business that should be passed on to customers. They said the incentives help the company recruit top talent and ensure that executives do the best job possible.

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