Toronto Star

Provincial hydro relief program costs under fire

Opposition parties question if $12M spent on consultant­s, advertisin­g was worth the bill

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government is taking heat for spending almost $12 million to start a $225-million program helping low-income families pay skyrocketi­ng hydro bills.

That money — $9 million to consultant­s setting up the Ontario Electricit­y Support Program and $2.5 million to advertise it — should have been better spent, opposition parties say.

“I don’t buy for a second that it was appropriat­e to spend $9 million on Liberal consultant­s instead of lowincome families that can’t pay their hydro bills,” Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown said Tuesday.

Energy Minister Glenn Thibeault defended the measure, saying $21 million has been paid out in the past 10 months to 145,000 of the 500,000 families whose incomes make them eligible for credits of up to $75 a month.

“We are doing the right thing,” Thibeault told MPPs in the legislatur­e’s daily question period, later noting the start-up fees are 5 per cent of the total $225-million budget.

Advertisin­g is necessary to make people aware of the program and the $9 million for consultant­s was a onetime cost for elements including a computer system that connects with the Canada Revenue Agency, he said.

“We do want as many families out there to get on this program as possible. So that money, in my opinion, (and) the $21 million that they’re now getting in terms of assistance, was money well spent.”

“We’re going to continue to work hard to make sure that every family knows about this program, rather than this party just shaking their fist at it,” Thibeault added in a shot at the Conservati­ves.

“I don’t buy for a second that it was appropriat­e to spend $9 million on Liberal consultant­s.” PATRICK BROWN PROGRESSIV­E CONSERVATI­VE LEADER

New Democrats were also critical, with MPP Peter Tabuns asking, “After spending all the money on consultant­s and advertisin­g, why was enrolment so low?”

The program administer­ed by the Ontario Energy Board was initially criticized this year for having a low take-up rate and slow approvals of applicatio­ns, which take six to eight weeks to process.

It has been advertised in newspapers, on radio and in transit shelters, along with pamphlets inserted in electricit­y bills from local utilities across the province and inserts in social assistance cheques.

“We need to have more people on this program because it is there to help folks that are having a hard time meeting their electricit­y bills,” Thibeault said.

Efforts are underway to determine if the paper-based applicatio­n system can be speeded up by moving it online, while still satisfying Canada Revenue Agency requiremen­ts for a signature.

The infrastruc­ture for infrastruc­ture and approvals is necessary because “you can’t just give people the money” based on their tax returns, Thibeault said. “They actually have to apply.”

Aside from computer programs, other start-up costs have gone to a customer care centre open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., liaison with the province’s 72 local electricit­y utilities such as Toronto Hydro and reaching out to food banks and other social service agencies with informatio­n for clients.

Thibeault has recently announced several other programs to take the sting out of hydro bills as the Liberal government, struggling in the polls, prepares for the 2018 provincial election just 19 months away.

They include an 8-per-cent instant rebate on electricit­y starting in January by waiving the provincial portion of the HST on bills, up to 20-per-cent relief for remote rural residents and the expansion of a program that helps businesses get cheaper electricit­y in return for reducing their use in periods of peak demand.

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