Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

We Energies customers to see 10.9% rate boost

Higher electric bills join smaller increase for gas

- Karl Ebert

We Energies residentia­l customers will see a double digit increase in their electric bills, and a smaller increase in their natural gas bills next year.

The Public Service Commission of Wisconsin on Thursday agreed to a rate increase of 10.9% for residentia­l electric service. The panel adopted a staff recommenda­tion that was lower than the 13% increase sought by We Energies, but higher than the amount sought by consumer advocates.

The decision resolves an unusually contentiou­s rate case that focused on energy affordability, particular­ly for thousands of low-income households that are struggling with inflation.

We Energies estimates the increase will add about $11 to the average residentia­l customer’s monthly electric bill.

The exact amount of the increase remains an estimate. Staff is reviewing the rate and other decisions made by commission­ers that reduced the utility’s operating costs to prepare a final rate schedule for each class of customer. The PSC will finalize rates at a future meeting.

The rate case drew the attention of community activists who staged rallies and filed objections in the arcane ratesettin­g process.

Consumer ire ignited in October when the utility — after reaching a partial settlement agreement with many of its largest customers and some, but not all, of the environmen­tal and consumer advocates that had signed on as intervenor­s — changed the rate increases to favor its largest customers.

Huge number of public comments

The case drew more than 1,200 public comments, most critical of the utility’s proposal to increase residentia­l electric rates by 13% while dropping the proposed rate increase by 50% for its largest industrial customers.

“One of the things that really stood out from all the comments that the public provided was that this is not a time to be sticking residentia­l customers with a double-digit increase. And that’s exactly where it landed,” said Tom Content, executive director of the Citizens Utility Board of Wisconsin.

PSC chairperso­n Rebecca Cameron Valcq suggested setting rates based on We Energies’ initial proposal of a 5.5% increase for residentia­l customers. That idea received no support from commission­ers Tyler Huebner and Ellen Nowak, who agreed in a 2-1 vote to follow the staff recommenda­tions.

“They had a chance to make this a single-digit increase for residentia­l customers and they didn’t grasp that chance,” Content said. “They let go of it.”

Residentia­l natural gas rates will also

go up for 2023.

Commission staff estimate natural gas costs will go up 6.2%, or about $47 a year, for residentia­l customers of Wisconsin Gas, which serves the city of Milwaukee, its western and northern suburbs and Ozaukee and Washington counties. Wisconsin Electric Gas Operations customers in the southern suburbs and Waukesha, Walworth, Racine and Kenosha counties will pay about 9.5% more for gas service. That adds up to an estimated $63 in additional annual gas costs.

Some wins for consumers

In setting the rates, the commission set the utility’s profit limit at 9.8% for both its electric and gas operations, a reduction from 10.2% and 10%, respective­ly. The move follows the commission­ers’ preference for gradual change. The decision was a blow to consumer groups like CUB that had sought a reduction to 9%. We Energies had asked to keep its profit rate unchanged, arguing that a reduction would hurt investors and its ability to borrow funds at favorable rates.

“It’s good to see the profit rate come down, but it’s still a profit rate that’s higher than the national average and much, much higher than these utilities need to raise capital in the market,” Content said. “That was that was a step in a small step in the right direction, but not far.”

Other changes resulted in a $65.5 reduction of We Energies’ revenue requiremen­t, the amount it needs from ratepayers to cover its operating costs, according to a memo prepared by PSC staff.

Consumer advocates claimed victory on several issues, including agreements for We Energies to:

Write off more $34 million in unpaid bills and late fees stemming from a prohibitio­n on utility disconnect­ions during the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Extend a pilot program for low-income ratepayers known as the Low-Income Forgivenes­s Tool, or LIFT.

Reduce a fixed monthly service charge from $16 to $15.

Work with consumer organizati­ons to develop a pilot program for a scaled rate based on household income that was proposed by Walnut Way, the Lindsay Heights neighborho­od organizati­on that was among the intervenor­s in the rate case.

Rate cases typically address customer costs for two years. This year, the PSC agreed to keep 2024 open in recognitio­n of the economic volatility wrought by inflation, this year’s spike in natural gas prices and other concerns.

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