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If you are one of the 45,000 customers Pacific Power
serves in northern California, you are about to pay more for the
privilege.
In a press release dated December 28, the company announced that,
effective January 1, 2007, residential customers will be charged 13.3
percent more than last year.
Companies and industries of any size will see an increase of 7.7
percent.
By comparison, KTVL-TV in Medford reported a 5 percent
increase for customers overall, a number confirmed by Bekki Witt,
spokesperson for Pacific Power.
Witt said the discrepancy is due to the fact that separate rate cases
must be filed in each state, and the PUC determinations will be specific
to each state.
In California, the company requested a 15.6 percent increase overall. In
Oregon, a 13.2 percent increase amounting to $112 million was requested.
What they got in California was an overall 10.8
percent increase amounting to $7.3 million. Oregon's PUC allowed 5
percent, which translates to $43 million.
Witt pointed out that the last rate increase case in California was
filed in Dec. 2001, requesting an overall price increase of 29 percent.
An interim increase of $4.8 million was granted in June 2002 and a final
$2.8 million granted in Nov. 2003, for a total 13.6 percent increase and
$7.64 million.
Before that, said Witt, the last rate case was filed
in 1996 and resulted in a decrease in prices in 1998.
The CPUC website indicates that the commissioners granted an
“unopposed settlement of a 2007 test year revenue requirement of
PacifiCorp (and) a revenue allocation and rate design settlement.”
This was disputed only by the Klamath Water Users Association, which
wanted discounted rates on the grounds that its irrigation members
actually returned water to the Klamath River.
The Division of Ratepayer Advocates in July disagreed,
arguing that the deficit would have to be paid by other customers.
The KWUA, composed of approximately 20 public agencies, is mostly
irrigation districts for various agricultural-based businesses in and
around the Upper Klamath River Basin.
On December 17, 2006, Commissioner Geoffrey Brown found in favor of
PacifiCorp and denied KWUA's request for a rate credit.
After the test year, PacifiCorp is also authorized to
adjust for inflation and changes in power costs on January 1, 2008 and
2009, in addition to the price change customers will see this year.
PacifiCorp claims that even with the price changes and subsequent
adjustments, it is charging less on average to California customers than
it did 10 years ago. It also states that its “average rate remains the
lowest among other investor-owned utilities serving California.”
Between Pacific Power and Rocky Mountain Power, PacifiCorp counts about
1.7 million customers in six Western states.
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Source: http://www.mtshastanews.com/articles/2007/01/03/news/05pplincrease.txt