Toronto Star

Province plans more relief from hydro bills

Extra aid is expected soon for rural, northern residents facing ‘disproport­ionate’ load

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

The poor, rural and northern residents facing “even more of a challenge” from high electricit­y costs will get special attention in a new hydro relief package, Premier Kathleen Wynne says.

The aid plan, expected within weeks, will build on an 8-per-cent instant rebate — equivalent to the provincial portion of the HST — on electricit­y bills that kicked in Jan. 1.

“That actually isn’t enough,” Wynne told reporters Wednesday before cabinet ministers heard detailed proposals from Energy Minister Glen Thibeault behind closed doors. “The reality is that there has been an increase in everyone’s electricit­y bills, but there are some people who are carrying a disproport­ionate burden.”

Thibeault said options include moving some costs of the electricit­y system from homeowners and businesses through their hydro rates to the broader base of taxpayers, shar- ing the load more widely. He would not estimate how much more Ontarians could save on their electricit­y bills, saying it depends on what elements the government chooses.

They include helping rural and northern residents in extreme cases where remote delivery charges for electricit­y are punishing, but not a general scenario where urban residents with relatively cheaper delivery costs subsidize all rural residents, sources have said.

Thibeault signalled the government is prepared to go beyond the $1 billion a year it is spending on the instant HST rebates for electricit­y. Remote rural residents are also getting as much as 20 per cent off their hydro costs under a program that also took effect in January.

“I get that we need to take it to the next level to actually help people with their bills,” Thibeault said.

“We’re working as quickly as we can on this,” he added, warning some measures may require legislatio­n that takes time for MPPs to pass. Others could be done faster by regulation.

The government, which is struggling in public opinion polls, faces a provincial election in 17 months. Hy- dro costs are often higher in rural and northern areas because they don’t have natural gas service for cheaper home heating, and rely on electric baseboards or electric furnaces.

While Ontarians await the hydro relief, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves slammed the government for not passing a law banning local utilities from disconnect­ing homes for nonpayment of bills until spring.

“One is one too many in the dead of winter,” said Tory MPP John Yakabuski (Renfrew-Nipissing-Pembroke), who did not have any statistics on disconnect­s this winter and called on Thibeault to issue a ministeria­l directive banning the practice.

Thibeault said he does not have the authority to issue such an order under the Electricit­y Act, passed by the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government of Mike Harris in 1998.

Hydro One announced last year it would not disconnect any customers this winter and some utilities have shied away from disconnect­s because of the pending bill, which returns to the Legislatur­e for final debate Feb. 28.

The Ontario Energy Board said it is still gathering numbers on disconnect­ions.

 ?? TIM ALAMENCIAK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Energy Minister Glen Thibeault says an HST rebate is not enough.
TIM ALAMENCIAK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Energy Minister Glen Thibeault says an HST rebate is not enough.

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