The Telegram (St. John's)

‘A lot of worried people’

Seniors’ advocate wants Nalcor, government to say more on power rates

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K

On Tuesday morning, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s seniors’ advocate, Suzanne Brake, spoke with a woman whose income is $17,046 a year. (The caller was not named by the advocate for privacy reasons). They talked about power rates.

“She explained and described to me exactly what she pays for everything,” Brake said, flipping a page in the notebook in front of her, where she had written down numbers dur- ing the conversati­on.

The woman told the advocate she typically has to plan ahead for purchasing anything, like a new bra or shoes. She takes a medication that requires her teeth be profession­ally cleaned twice a year — something she already struggles to pay for.

Brake said the caller is not yet 70, just one of many seniors she has spoken with since her November 2017 appointmen­t who are fearful of what might happen with power bills, especially in light of Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric project costs.

A public statement was issued by Brake on Tuesday morning, calling for more informatio­n for seniors on what they can expect when it comes to power rates.

The next steps, she suggested to The Telegram, would include detailing what might be done to protect the province’s most vulnerable seniors.

Brake said it’s important to remember seniors age 65 and older make up nearly 20 per cent of provincial residents, but are not a homogenous group.

As with other age brackets, some are financiall­y better off than others.

As she’s met with seniors around the province, she’s heard anxiety across the board. “Everybody is worried and concerned about the proposed, or the anticipate­d, increase in the cost of electricit­y,” she said.

But in her advocacy role, she said she’s most concerned at this point about the state of the most vulnerable seniors, financiall­y speaking. That includes the roughly 15,000 senior couples (30,000 people) with income under $41,200 a year in the province, and the roughly 11,000 single seniors with incomes of less than $24,300 a year.

“That’s a lot of worried people,” she said, adding many others live on fixed incomes, with limited ability to access paid work even if they wanted to take that on in the face of rising costs.

Statistics Canada shows the province has the highest rate of home ownership in the country, but Brake said that doesn’t make the power issue any more manageable for seniors in the lowest income brackets.

“These people, where are they going to get $4,000 to buy a heat pump?,” she asked.

She said home repair programs and energy efficiency programs are already being tapped by seniors, but not all can afford it. And for those who can, it doesn’t do away with their concerns.

As for heating alternativ­es, she said there’s been a lot of talk about increased use of wood stoves and wood heat, but people forget some of the most vulnerable seniors cannot physically cut wood or even stack and handle a cord of wood delivered to their driveway.

“The older you get, the more difficult it is to do that. So, there’s that kind of little added complicati­on,” Brake said, adding that in post-cod moratorium Newfoundla­nd, many adult children moved away and are not there to handle such chores in a way they might have been in the past.

There is money offered by government specifical­ly to assist low-income seniors, but there are limitation­s. Brake said the woman she spoke with that morning would get about $43 a month back from the provincial and federal government­s, and it will now have to go directly to covering electricit­y rate increases being described at the PUB.

So what about the “rate smoothing” plan proposed this week by Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Hydro? Could it help if seniors started to pay now on the Muskrat Falls project costs, and limit the increase to follow once the project is online?

Brake said it’s not a welcome idea.

“Well, if you were 80, would you want to be participat­ing in that?,” she asked.

“Seniors don’t want to be paying for electricit­y that they might use down the road.”

Mainly, she said, she already speaks to seniors choosing between the cost of medication­s and the cost of food, seniors who have foregone dental care to the detriment of their health in order to afford their current light bills, and she hears the worry about power rates.

She thinks something can be done about at least that.

She mentioned The Telegram’s recent story on a power rate protest at the PUB office in St. John’s, saying she was struck by comments included there from Colin Holloway, from a letter sent to organizer Keith Fillier. That was the first she had heard of a rate mitigation committee within the Department of Natural Resources, said to be working on the power cost problem.

Meanwhile, the fears being expressed today were raised over two years ago in the House of Assembly, in March 2016, when NDP MHA Gerry Rogers (now NDP leader) asked about the affordabil­ity of rates.

“Like the member opposite,” Premier Dwight Ball replied at the time, “we, too, understand that we have many people in our province right now — many low income, particular­ly widows and so on, many of our seniors right now — they do struggle. It is not lost on us with an understand­ing of knowing that electricit­y rates play an important part.”

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