Showing posts with label rate hike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rate hike. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Auditors Question $1.4 Million in Expenses for SCE&G Rate Hike--Zumba Classes, Single Malt Scotch Among Costs


Free Times
October 31, 2012

BY
EVA MOORE
South Carolina Electric & Gas Co. is asking state regulators for permission to raise rates.

But auditors with the state Office of Regulatory Staff found some eye-raising expenses in documents provided by SCE&G to show that the rate increase is needed.

Among the expenses the auditors called into question: Over $1,200 worth of alcohol at two meetings of the SCANA board, SCE&G’s parent company, at Ruth’s Chris Steak House — including several glasses of Macallan 25 scotch, which runs $50 a glass. (Some opted for the Macallan 18, at $30 a glass; others for the Macallan aged only 12 or 15 years.)

The company also included 166 Zumba and body-sculpting classes for employees in its filing.

“How does Zumba help SCE&G provide service?” auditors wrote in the notes column of their report.

Altogether, Office of Regulatory Staff auditors categorized $1.4 million in expenses as unallowable, including alcohol, advertising costs, gifts and novelty items. SCE&G will now have a chance to challenge those findings as the state Public Service Commission holds hearings on the rate hike.

The audit was shared with the media by Frank Knapp, president of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce, who is intervening in the rate hike case. He called the findings “appalling and offensive.”

“Intentionally including these costs to justify a rate hike demonstrates a blind eye toward their customers’ economic struggles,” Knapp said. “There is nothing wrong with Zumba classes for SCE&G employees but the employees or the company should be paying for them, not the customers.”

The Zumba classes are a legitimate part of SCE&G’s employee wellness program, which lowers health care costs, according to spokesman Eric Boomhower.

“We have a very comprehensive health and wellness initiative,” he says. “Health care costs are part of what is involved with providing service to our customers.”
“Those exercise classes just happen to be a Zumba class,” he adds.

Including the alcohol, on the other hand, was absolutely a mistake, says Boomhower.

When the company files its financial reports with the state, it’s supposed to code all expenses as either rate-related or shareholder-related.

“This was human error,” Boomhower says. “Those are absolutely not costs that should have been coded to the customer side of the ledger.”

SCE&G is asking for an average rate increase of 6.61 percent. However, the company is also asking permission to adjust fuel rates ahead of schedule, says Boomhower, passing on some savings to customers. That means the hike it’s requesting would raise the average bill by about 4.85 percent.

According to Office of Regulatory Staff director Dukes Scott, the average residential user would pay $141.73 per month under the proposed rates. His agency is charged with balancing consumer interests with economic development and corporate well-being in utility cases.

The rate hike is necessary because SCE&G has spent millions to improve reliability
and comply with federal regulations, SCE&G’s Boomhower says.

“Since our last filing we’ve spent $300 million improving transmission,” he says.
That includes trimming trees, and replacing poles and lines.

The company also installed a $280 million scrubber at its Wateree station to reduce emissions.

The Charleston Post & Courier’s editorial board writes that customers should be “outraged” by the rate hike, given the unallowable expenses — not to mention the fact that SCE&G’s rates are already much higher than those of the other big utilities in the state.

Indeed, Knapp points out that SCE&G’s rates are 22 percent higher than Duke Energy, and 28 percent higher than Progress Energy.

Knapp has intervened in four previous rate hike cases, and has seen rate hikes cut by as much as 50 percent as a result.

“It’s almost like a little game that’s played where the company comes in for much more than they expect,” Knapp says.

Boomhower says that’s not a fair characterization.

“I don’t think it’s a game,” Boomhower says. “We file for what we feel like we can stand up for,” he says. “Is there some subjectivity to the process? Certainly.”

The Public Service Commission holds two more public hearings on the proposed rate hike: In Charleston on Nov. 5; and in Columbia on Tuesday, Nov. 27, 6 p.m., at 101 Executive Center Drive.


http://www.free-times.com/index.php?cat=1992912064022708&ShowArticle_ID=11013010124236628



 

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Say ‘no’ to SCE&G rate hike

Charleston Post & Courier
Editorial
October 28, 2012


If SCE&G has its way, its average customer will pay $141.73 per month. That’s 42.4 percent more than customers of Duke Energy, 40.6 percent more than customers of Progress Energy and 25.8 percent more than Santee-Cooper customers.
SCE&G customers should be outraged at the disparity. But then they should have been outraged all along. They already pay 35.7 percent more than Duke’s, 34 percent more than Progress’ and 26.1 percent more than Santee-Cooper’s customers.

SCE&G contends that it needs the rate increase because of several situations. At the Wateree Station power plant, a new “scrubber” ($280 million) was brought into service in 2010 to meet federal clean air standards. Nearly $30 million has been spent on other environmental upgrades and projects.
With the downturn in financial markets, SCE&G has incurred additional expenses associated with employee pensions.

And SCE&G wants to add to a storm reserve to help in the event of another Hurricane Hugo.

Still, it is puzzling that SCE&G should need so much more for operations and maintenance than its counterparts.
Maybe the utility needs to economize. If expenses cited by the state’s Office of Regulatory Staff are any indication, there’s room for cost-cutting, and maybe for a change of attitude, too.

Case in point: An audit of SCE&G by the ORS, which serves as the state’s consumer advocate on utilities, found that one member of the board of directors charged a $50 glass of scotch whiskey to the company.
And SCE&G paid $370 for a $37 steak at a Ruth’s Chris Steak House. The ORS says the restaurant made a mistake on the bill, but it’s alarming that SCE&G’s accounting department didn’t question paying $370 for a steak. Even a $37 steak is pretty pricey.

Auditors for ORS caught those two charges by reviewing just a sample of the utility’s expenses. You have to wonder what a top-to-bottom audit might produce — and what it might reveal about the utility’s mindset on budgeting and spending.
SCE&G customers who don’t want to see their already-high bills get higher can send a loud message to the S.C. Public Service Commission, which must approve or deny the request.

The PSC has scheduled three public hearings across the state to gather public input. On Nov. 5, the hearing will be at 6 p.m. in Charleston at the International Longshoremen’s Association Local 1422 on Morrison Drive.
History shows that people can make a difference by speaking up in a night hearing. In 2010, after catching considerable flak from understandably alarmed customers, SCE&G dropped its initial proposal for a boost in electricity rates from 9.52 percent to 6.55 percent over one year. Then it dropped its proposal to 4.88 percent — over three years.

Writing letters of protest helps, but the ORS says commissioners do not see those letters. They do pay heed when customers speak out in person.
The ORS is still determining what it will recommend to the PSC. It will definitely protest part of the rate increase request, and it might well protest a significant portion of the request.

Other entities expected to address the rate hike include AARP, industrial customers, the Navy, Walmart and the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce, which described SCE&G’s rationale for a rate hike as “appalling and offensive.”
Consumers should be advised that SCE&G also is likely to portray itself as the good guy by proposing a reduction in fuel costs to customers. But the fact is that state regulations dictate that the reduction would happen regardless of whether a rate hike is approved, according to the ORS.

SCE&G’s ability to continue providing electricity is vital to our state’s citizens and to its economic future. But it’s difficult to imagine that the utility can justify a rate scale that tops others by 40 percent and more.
If the PSC can rein them in, well, we’d drink to that — though with something less expensive than a $50 glass of scotch.