N.S. Power to discuss rates for low-income residents
CBC News
Posted: Sep 14, 2012 10:58 AM AT
Last Updated: Sep 14, 2012 2:20 PM AT
Related
Claire McNeil, with the Affordable Energy Coalition, has been fighting for special power rate provisions for low-income residents. (CBC)Nova Scotia Power has agreed to hold talks with the Affordable Energy Coalition to discuss ways to help low-income customers deal with rising power rates.
The agreement — reached Friday morning at a Utility and Review Board hearing — commits both sides to meet regularly over the next nine months "with a view to resolving bill payment, credit and collections matters affecting low-income residential customers."
The deal does not lower rates for low-income residents — it commits both sides to talks and the results are to be brought before the UARB by June 30.
Claire McNeil, with the Affordable Energy Coalition, told the UARB she sees the process eventually leading to an alternate rate setting for low-income Nova Scotians.
"Those are rules around interest charges, disconnection fees, some of the rules around payment agreements," she told reporters outside the hearing room.
"From our point of view, for people living below the poverty line, electricity is unaffordable."
Nova Scotia Power's current rules do not permit subsidizing any rate class, but the president of Nova Scotia Power said the utility could control its internal procedures.
Rob Bennett, the president and CEO of Nova Scotia Power, speaks with reporters on Friday. (CBC)"We don't control public policy but we control how the company manages within that public policy and we control how our internal procedures work," said Rob Bennett.
"Our commitment here is to work with the Affordable Energy Coalition and others and fine-tune our procedures and be supportive if there is something that can be done."
Peter Gurnham, the chair of the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board, said the agreement was the result of a "useful consultation amongst lawyers outside the hearing room."
Nova Scotia Power representatives are currently before the UARB for public hearings into electricity rates. The utility wants to raise rates for residential customers by three per cent in each of the next two years.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Halifax man rescued after 24 hours stranded in the woods
- A Halifax man can thank police, a concerned friend and his dog for saving him after a dramatic rescue near Musquodoboit Harbour on Monday. more »
- Victoria Day name-change petition stokes controversy
- A new petition to change Victoria Day to "Victoria and First Peoples' Day" has many Canadians thinking about what this day really means to us. more »
- Halifax woman prepares for big Gambia run
- As thousands of Nova Scotians recover from running in Bluenose Marathon events, a Halifax woman is preparing to run 17 half-marathons in 17 days — in Gambia. more »
- Halifax musicians rally behind guitarist Rick Edgett
- A group of Halifax musicians are rallying behind a local guitar player who's dying of cancer. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Will alleged Rob Ford video overshadow Toronto casino debate?
- A debate about a proposed downtown casino is supposed to take centre stage at Toronto City Hall on Tuesday, but it seems a safe bet that a still-unseen video of Mayor Rob Ford will continue to be a topic of conversation. more »
- NDP wants RCMP inquiry into $90K payment to Duffy
- The NDP has asked the RCMP to launch an investigation into the $90,000 payment from the prime minister's former top aide, Nigel Wright, to Senator Mike Duffy in relation to the Senate expense scandal. more »
- Keith Boag: Have you heard about the murderous abortion doctor?
- The gruesome trial and murder conviction of Philadelphia abortion provider Dr. Kermit Gosnell is unlikely to change American abortion law, Keith Boag writes. But it has U.S. journalists questioning their priorities and how they cover such a senstive issue. more »
- Canadian on EI shut out amid foreign worker influx
- A jobless Canadian IT professional who is collecting employment insurance is upset because he now suspects several recent jobs he applied for went to temporary foreign workers. more »
- Police respond to fatal crash in Cole Harbour
- Halifax man rescued after 24 hours stranded in the woods
- Halifax musicians rally behind guitarist Rick Edgett
- UFO sightings in Canada in 2012 doubled previous record
- Conservative MP remains tight-lipped on Duffy scandal
- Halifax woman prepares for big Gambia run
- Canadian on EI shut out amid foreign worker influx
- Cape Breton fishermen pray as lobster season begins
- Thousands race in 10th Blue Nose Marathon

