Las Vegas Review-Journal

Controvers­ial utility fee up for vote in state body

Critics say NV Energy charge is subsidy to North

- By Mike Shoro

NV Energy customers across the state may begin paying the same usage fee to fund a multimilli­on-dollar natural disaster protection plan, a move that a consumer advocacy group and the state’s largest gaming companies warn represents a subsidy from Southern to Northern Nevada.

The Public Utilities Commission, which regulates the power company, gave the plan a thumbs-up last month and will vote Wednesday on whether the company can charge the same fee to customers in Southern and Northern Nevada to pay for the plan.

NV Energy contends that its proposed fee represents a fair way for Nevadans to share the cost of an infrastruc­ture plan that could cost up to $240 million by 2023 and benefits the entire state. But opponents say the fee, calculated by power usage, effectivel­y subsidizes energy users in the much less densely populated northern part of the state.

The fee will appear on customers’ energy bills starting Thursday, and

if approved, the statewide usage charge would amount to $.000025 per kilowatt-hour.

NV Energy has argued in commission filings that the statewide usage fee would share up to $8.6 million in equipment costs, inspection­s, vegetation management and other safeguards incurred in 2019 under a natural disaster plan required by Senate Bill 329, which was signed into law last year.

The law requires NV Energy to protect its infrastruc­ture and prevent power loss from wildfires, earthquake­s or other calamities, as happened in California during the 2018 Camp Fire that killed 85 people and devastated the town of Paradise in the Sierra Nevada foothills.

NV Energy is the holding company for Sierra Pacific Power in Northern Nevada and Nevada Power in Southern Nevada, which each operate as separate utility companies.

However, NV Energy says the disaster plan benefits the whole state and therefore the whole state should pay the same fee. The commission agreed in its approval, saying the plan prevents disproport­ionate costs for one set of customers.

“A natural disaster in Lake Tahoe, or Mt. Charleston, or the Las Vegas Strip impacts Nevada’s economy,”

the commission wrote.

NV Energy argued in filings with the commission that there is nothing in the disaster plan legislatio­n or state law that prevents the company from “socializin­g” the costs.

Protection improvemen­ts last year cost about $489,000 in Southern Nevada and $8.1 million in Northern Nevada, according to the Bureau of Consumer Protection. Yet Southern Nevadans would pay about 69 percent of the total costs under a single fee, amounting to a $5.4 million subsidy from South to North, the bureau argued in a June 16 commission filing.

“The service, facilities and customers for the two electric utilities are separate,” regulatory manager David Chairez wrote on behalf of the bureau.

He described a statewide fee as “unjust,” “unreasonab­le” and “unlawful.”

The commission’s independen­t branch that provides recommenda­tions to the commission, its regulatory operations staff, also harbored reservatio­ns. NV Energy hasn’t previously charged all its customers as a single group based solely off usage, staff senior financial analyst Charles Whitman argued in filings, adding that the Northern Nevada expenses were higher because the land is more susceptibl­e to wildfires.

The Nevada attorney general’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, the Nevada Resort Associatio­n and all six of the largest gaming companies in Nevada jumped in after the plan was approved to voice their opposition and ask the commission to rethink what they also called an “unlawful” decision.

“Such a substantia­l shift from establishe­d agency policy that charges (Southern Nevada’s) customers with costs incurred in and for the benefit of (Northern Nevada’s) territory is not a rule that can lawfully be establishe­d in a contested case,” reads a late petition for interventi­on filed by Caesars Entertainm­ent Inc.

Legal representa­tives for the gaming companies did not provide comment.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Joe Burbank
Walt Disney World in Florida is one of two Walt Disney Co. parks subject to layoffs that were announced Tuesday.
The Associated Press file Joe Burbank Walt Disney World in Florida is one of two Walt Disney Co. parks subject to layoffs that were announced Tuesday.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye
The Public Utilities Commission will vote Wednesday on whether NV Energy can charge a statewide fee to pay for a natural disaster protection plan.
Las Vegas Review-journal Bizuayehu Tesfaye The Public Utilities Commission will vote Wednesday on whether NV Energy can charge a statewide fee to pay for a natural disaster protection plan.

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