National Post (National Edition)

Power bill redesign could top $15M

Ontario NDP pushes back on Hydro One plan

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO • Ontario’s largest and recently privatized electricit­y utility has spent $9 million to redesign bills and is proposing to spend an additional $6 million on the project.

Hydro One has come under fire for spending since the Liberal government sold more than half of the company, notably for its CEO’s $4.5-million pay.

Now, the NDP is raising concerns with the $15-million redesign expense contained in a rate applicatio­n from the formerly public utility. “I don’t think the problem we face is a bill that people can’t understand, I think the problem is rates that are too high,” said energy critic Peter Tabuns. “Fifteen-million dollars seems awfully expensive to me.”

But Hydro One says a 2016 survey of its customers indicated about 40 per cent had trouble understand­ing their bills. Ferio Pugliese, the company’s executive vice-president of customer care and corporate affairs, said the redesign was aimed at giving customers a simpler bill.

“The new format is a format that when tested and put in front of our customers has been designed to give customers the four or five salient items they want to see on their bill,” he said.

About $9 million has already gone into redesignin­g bills, mostly for residentia­l customers, Pugliese said. Cosmetic changes to bills account for about 25 per cent of the cost, with the rest of the money going toward updating informatio­n systems and improving digital billing platforms, he said.

The additional $6 million Hydro One is looking to spend would go toward bill changes mostly for its commercial, industrial and large distributi­on account customers.

Energy Minister Glenn Thibeault noted in a statement that the Ontario Energy Board has yet to decide on the expense, but he suggested he sees the bill redesign as necessary.

“With Ontarians wanting clearer bills that are easier to understand, Hydro One’s bill redesign project is a necessary improvemen­t that will help customers,” he wrote.

“Reductions from the Fair Hydro Plan (the government’s 25-per-cent cut to bills last year) are important informatio­n for both households and businesses, and it’s our job to provide clear, helpful answers whenever possible.”

The OEB recently ordered Hydro One to lower a rate increase it had been seeking for this year to 0.2 per cent down from 4.8 per cent.

The regulator also rejected a Hydro One proposal to give shareholde­rs all of the tax savings generated by the IPO in 2015 when the Liberal government first began partially privatizin­g the utility. The OEB instead mandated shareholde­rs receive 62 per cent while ratepayers receive the remaining 38 per cent.

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