Call & Times

States to US: Pass along utilities’ tax savings to customers

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Elected officials, consumer advocates and regulators in 18 states are pushing for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to ensure that utility customers see a reduction in their bills thanks to windfalls utilities will reap from corporate tax cuts included in the federal tax overhaul.

In a letter sent to the commission on Tuesday, the coalition called for an investigat­ion into the “justness and reasonable­ness” of utility rates now that the tax cuts approved by Congress last month reduce the corporate income tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent.

The attorneys general from 12 states signed the letter: New York, California, Connecticu­t, Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Nevada, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Texas and Virginia. Public consumer advocacy offices and state regulatory agencies from Connecticu­t, Florida, Maine, Nevada, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont also are involved.

While a typical household may see its monthly utility bills reduced by just a few dollars, the overall savings across the nation could be significan­t.

“Consumers at some point should expect to see some reduction,” in their monthly bills, said David Springe, executive director of the National Associatio­n of State Utility Consumer Advocates, a Silver Spring, Maryland-based advocacy group that supports the states’ efforts.

“It won’t be huge for any given customers, but if you add it up across all customers it will in the billions of dollars,” he said Wednesday.

Passage of the Republican-sponsored tax cut plan prompted leaders in some states to take measures toward reducing utility rates that al- ready were in place before the overhaul bill was signed into law by Republican President Donald Trump on Dec. 22.

In Massachuse­tts, Democratic Attorney General Maura Healey urged the state’s utility regulators to recalculat­e Eversource’s recently approved rate hike to reflect the reduction in the federal tax rate that took effect Jan. 1. Last week, Healy announced that the utility agreed to use the corporate savings to lower rates for its 1.4 million Massachuse­tts customers.

She and officials in other states are pushing to have rates for all major electricit­y, gas, and water companies recalculat­ed to reflect the lower corporate tax rate.

“Our bipartisan coalition is sending a clear message to FERC: act now to protect consumers and ensure customer bills are reduced in line with the massive tax cut corporatio­ns are receiving,” said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an, a Democrat.

“Electric companies are now working to determine how the new law will affect them individual­ly, and will be in discussion­s with regulators at the state level and FERC to ensure that customers benefit from tax reform,” said Eric Grey, senior director of government relations for the Washington, D.C.-based Edison Electric Institute, which represents investor-owned electric companies.

Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, head of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said the savings being passed along to ratepayers is one of the results of “providing American job creators with the ability to keep more of their income to use for the benefit of their companies, their workers, and their communitie­s.”

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