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<title>Environmental &#x26; Consumer Groups Call on House to Repair Senate Energy Bill </title>
<link>http://www.ncpirg.org/news-releases/utilities-watchdog-project/utilities-watchdog-project/environmental--consumer-groups-call-on-house-to-repair-senate-energy-bill</link>
<description>RALEIGH&#x26;mdash;An</description>
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<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jul 2008 17:27:52 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Citizen groups file for independent energy saving program, NC SAVE$</title>
<link>http://www.ncpirg.org/news-releases/utilities-watchdog-project/utilities-watchdog-project/citizen-groups-file-for-independent-energy-saving-program-nc-save</link>
<description>Duke Energy&#x26;rsquo;s</description>
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<pubDate>Mon, 18 Aug 2008 17:47:19 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Broad coalition calls on Duke to pull the plug on costly &#x201C;Save-a-Watt&#x201D;</title>
<link>http://www.ncpirg.org/news-releases/utilities-watchdog-project/utilities-watchdog-project/broad-coalition-calls-on-duke-to-pull-the-plug-on-costly-save-a-watt</link>
<description></description>
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<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jul 2008 17:30:13 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Natural Gas rates may rise if legislation passes; Consumer Rights Group urges Senate to &#x201C;CUT&#x201D; the bill. </title>
<link>http://www.ncpirg.org/news-releases/utilities-watchdog-project/utilities-watchdog-project/natural-gas-rates-may-rise-if-legislation-passes-consumer-rights-group-urges-senate-to-cut-the-bill</link>
<description>Raleigh, NC.  Today,</description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2007 08:21:32 -0600</pubDate>
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<title>VICTORY: PSNC Natural Gas Customers No Longer Pay More For Less</title>
<link>http://www.ncpirg.org/news-releases/utilities-watchdog-project/utilities-watchdog-project/victory-psnc-natural-gas-customers-no-longer-pay-more-for-less</link>
<description>Raleigh, NC.  Legislators and consumer advocates are applauding the Utilities Commission&#x26;rsquo;s decision to suspend PSNC&#x26;rsquo;s rate schedule that charges residents more, who use less in the summer.  Effective June 1st, all residents will be charged the lower, &#x26;ldquo;value&#x26;rdquo; rate.  The decision marks the end of a controversy, spanning seven months. &#x26;ldquo;It is a victory for consumers, smart energy policies, and conservation,&#x26;rdquo; says Representative Pricey Harrison, one of the nineteen legislators who opposed the use-less, pay-more rate structures in an open letter to Public Staff.  Representative Harrison who is sponsoring a renewable energy and efficiency bill in the House added, &#x26;ldquo;North Carolina wants and needs smarter energy policies.&#x26;rdquo;  Shana Becker, Advocate at the North Carolina Public Interest Research Group (NCPIRG), agrees. &#x26;ldquo;People were in the awkward position of having to calculate the benefit of wasting natural gas in the summer to get lower rates in the winter.&#x26;rdquo;  NCPIRG, a non-profit, non-partisan consumer advocacy group, organized legislative sponsorship for the open letter to Public Staff, and residential opposition to the rate structure.  &#x26;ldquo;Whether people are being thrifty or environmentally conscientious, they will save money if they use less, thanks to the Commission,&#x26;rdquo; says Becker. Beginning in November 2006, PSNC imposed a 9.78% surcharge per therm of natural gas on residents who failed to use 24 therms the previous summer.  They paid $1.30 per therm of natural gas, compared to &#x26;ldquo;value rate&#x26;rdquo; customers who paid $1.18. Residents who used less in the summer paid more.  Public Staff, the consumer advocacy arm of the Commission, had stipulated to the rate structure. In response to public pressure, PSNC asked the Commission to reconsider the rate structure.  It requested permission to afford all residents the same value rate, and to accrue interest on lost profits for up to three years during which time it would consider alternative rate structures.  Public Staff gave its consent to PSNC&#x26;rsquo;s proposal. On Wednesday, the Commission granted PSNC&#x26;rsquo;s proposal to place all residents on the value rate, but it rejected the rest of the petition.  The Commission ordered PSNC to propose a new rate structure by July 6, and to have gained approval for it by November 1.  The Commission indicated that it may permit PSNC to recover a return and the profits lost during the six months, but it made no guarantee. Becker says, &#x26;ldquo;Residents are lucky that the Commission did not accept Public Staff&#x26;rsquo;s recommendation.  If they had, residents could have been saddled with a $24 million dollar bill at the end of three years.&#x26;rdquo;  She says, &#x26;ldquo;Residents need Public Staff to advocate zealously on their behalf.  When Public Staff fails, residents lose, and that is what happened with these bad rate structures.&#x26;rdquo;</description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2007 08:22:40 -0600</pubDate>
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<title>Legislators To Public Staff: Fight Harder For Consumers And Conservation</title>
<link>http://www.ncpirg.org/news-releases/utilities-watchdog-project/utilities-watchdog-project/legislators-to-public-staff-fight-harder-for-consumers-and-conservation</link>
<description>Raleigh, NC.  Today, Representatives sent a letter to the consumer advocacy arm of the Utilities Commission, Public Staff, urging stronger defense of conservation and residents&#x26;rsquo; rights.  The letter, focusing on natural gas rate pricing, arrives on the eve of the natural gas rate hearing for PSNC.  On May 14, the Utilities Commission will consider PSNC&#x26;rsquo;s proposal to end a controversial natural gas rate structure, temporarily.  PSNC is one of two natural gas providers that require residents to consume a quota of natural gas in the summer, or else face higher rates in the winter.  Piedmont Natural Gas is the other.  &#x26;ldquo;PSNC and Piedmont Natural Gas&#x26;rsquo;s rate structures . . . reward energy inefficiency by affording a &#x26;lsquo;value rate&#x26;rsquo; to citizens who consume more energy,&#x26;rdquo; states the letter, signed by 18 Democratic and Republican Representatives.    &#x26;ldquo;It is like charging teachers more per gallon of gasoline in the winter for not driving to work in the summer,&#x26;rdquo; says Shana Becker, Advocate at NCPIRG.  &#x26;ldquo;Not only is it bad public policy, it is unfair.&#x26;rdquo;  NCPIRG, which is a non-profit non-partisan watchdog group, organized the letter to Public Staff, and collected 535 residential petitions from across the state.   The controversy over natural gas rate structures erupted in November 2006.  The Commission permitted PSNC to impose a 9.78% surcharge per therm of natural gas on residents who failed to use 24 therms the previous summer.  Public Staff had stipulated to the rate structure.  The same rate structure already had been approved, with little note, for Piedmont Natural Gas. &#x26;ldquo;By agreeing to the rate structure, Public Staff had to value other interests more than conservation and consumer rights.&#x26;rdquo; states Becker.  &#x26;ldquo;Fighting for smart energy policies and rate fairness for residents must be top priority.&#x26;rdquo; On May 14, the Utilities Commission will hear from PSNC and Public Staff regarding PSNC&#x26;rsquo;s proposal.  PSNC has requested to afford all residents the lower &#x26;ldquo;value rate,&#x26;rdquo; and to seek, at a later proceeding, compensation with interest for doing so.  PSNC did not offer to refund the surcharges that they collected from residents last winter who used less.     &#x26;ldquo;The current rate structures of PSNC and Piedmont Natural Gas penalize efficient and thrifty residents, . . . and encourage extra energy consumption,&#x26;rdquo; state the Representatives in the letter. &#x26;ldquo;Such a rate structure makes no environmental or economic sense.&#x26;rdquo; </description>
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<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2007 08:23:15 -0600</pubDate>
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