The Day

NPU General Manager

Chris LaRose praised for ‘outstandin­g’ pandemic year response.

- By CLAIRE BESSETTE Day Staff Writer c.bessette@theday.com

Norwich — Norwich Public Utilities General Manager Chris LaRose received another “outstandin­g” performanc­e evaluation this week from city utilities commission­ers, who praised his leadership “in normal times,” emphasizin­g that 2020 was anything but normal.

“Chris has done a great job,” Board of Public Utilities Commission Chairman Robert Staley said. “He would have done a great job had there not been all the impacts of the (coronaviru­s) pandemic and (revenue) losses. Given those problems, he’s done an even greater job.”

LaRose, a 23-year NPU veteran employee, was named general manager in November 2018 after former General Manager John Bilda resigned following his federal criminal indictment on public corruption charges in the wake of controvers­ial lavish trips taken by officials of the utility co-op CMEEC, of which NPU is a member, to the Kentucky Derby.

Since the pandemic hit a year ago, NPU has seen utility revenues plummet, as hundreds of customers were thrown out of work with business closures and couldn’t pay their utility bills. The Freeport McMoRan Copper Products plant, one of NPU’s top customers, closed permanentl­y in August, and a second top utility customer, Atlantic City Linen Service, closed temporaril­y when its top customers, the region’s two casinos, also shuttered temporaril­y.

The utility cut expenses by $12 million in response, with all employees — including LaRose — delaying raises from July to December, and deferring many capital projects. LaRose also declined a $10,000 bonus authorized by the board along with his glowing evaluation in late March 2020.

With his new performanc­e review, the board awarded LaRose a 2% raise, bringing his salary to $215,893, and a $5,000 bonus.

LaRose called 2020 “the most challengin­g year in NPU history,” as most employees were forced to work remotely, and field crews were restructur­ed into small cohorts to avoid widespread exposure to COVID-19. NPU also suspended customer deposit fees and overdue penalties and expanded payment plans for customers with growing back-due balances.

In the NPU 2021-22 budget approved by the board Tuesday, NPU projected a $2.2 million drop in purchased power due to losses of major customers. The 10% gross revenue share turned over to the city each year also will drop by $521,418 due to pandemic revenue losses.

“I’m very appreciati­ve of the confidence placed in me by the board,” LaRose said. “I have a very good working relationsh­ip with the board. They place a lot of confidence in me. This past year has been challengin­g for everyone, our customers, all our employees. I’m very proud to lead the team through this unpreceden­ted time. The pandemic has really made the job more challengin­g this year, but it has been rewarding to see the success of shifting to working remotely and serving all our customers without losing any safety in services we provide.”

Staley also noted that in the midst of the pandemic, LaRose “led NPU, along with its great employees to another outstandin­g storm recovery performanc­e” when Tropical Storm Isaias hit the region Aug. 4.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States