Newport-Mesa braces for electricity rate hikes
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT-MESA -- A decision by the California Public Utilities
Commission to raise electricity rates Tuesday caused some consternation
among city officials who worried about what effects the hikes may have on
basic services.
The commission passed a three-tiered increase for residential
customers of Southern California Edison, which includes both Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach.
Starting June 1, Newport-Mesa residents will pay 6%, 20% or 37% more
for electricity, depending on the amount of usage. Basically, those who
use more will pay more.
Others were also hit with increases. Small- and medium-sized
businesses will see a 36% hike. Industrial customers will pay 49% more.
City officials were unsure which category their cities would fall
into, but they worried that a significant hike would take its toll.
“That’s a tremendous hit,” Costa Mesa Mayor Libby Cowan said about the
new rates. “It will require major conservation.”
The commission also voted Tuesday to retroactively apply a rate
increase originally approved March 27.
Low-income customers, some medical users and residents who reduce
their power won’t be affected by the rate hikes. To qualify for
low-income status, a family of four could earn no more than $31,100
annually.
Newport Beach Councilman Tod Ridgeway said his phone hasn’t been
burning up with calls from residents outraged by the hikes, which began
in January.
“We elected officials are the only ones talking about it,” Ridgeway
said. “We’re not getting a lot of discussion from our citizens. But that
may have to do with us being a wealthy community.”
Newport Beach spends about $2 million a year to power the city. The
City Council allocates 50% of that to pay for sewage and water pumps and
25% for traffic and street lights.
Conservation efforts are underway in both cities. City Manager Homer
Bludau has encouraged city department heads to lower their power use by
10%.
In Costa Mesa, city lightbulbs were replaced with more efficient ones.
Officials from both cities worried they would have to cut other
services to pay for higher utility bills.
“If we had a 50% impact, there would have to be an action plan,”
Accounting Manager Dan Matusiwicz said. “We wouldn’t just be able to
absorb that.”
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