Columbia,
SC—With
many South Carolinians still struggling to simply put food on the table and
small businesses trying to keep their doors open, South Carolina Electric &
Gas (SCE&G) wants its 668,000 customers to pay an average 6.6% increase in
electricity rates. SCE&G justifies
its need for an increase in revenue in part because of “Zumba and body sculpt
classes” for its employees as well as dinner and drinks at an expensive restaurant
for SCANA Board members. This public information
was released today by the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce
that opposes the rate increase.
On June 29, 2012, SCE&G filed for a general rate
hike that calls for residential customers to pay 7.35% more for electricity while
businesses would pay 4.19% to 6% higher rates.
The new rates on their own would bring in about an additional $151
million to the company. SCANA, parent
company of SCE&G, reported a 29% increase in earnings to $72 million in the
second quarter this year compared to last year.
The documents provided to the S.C. Office of
Regulatory Staff (ORS) to justify the rate hike show that SCE&G paid nearly
$3200 for 166 “Zumba and body sculp” classes for employees from a private
trainer in 2011. This company expense
was just part of the $1.4 million in unallowable expenses found by the ORS. SCE&G also wants its customers to pick up
the tab for dinners and drinks at Ruth’s Chris Steak House in Columbia for the
SCANA Board members. Those bills showed $593
of liquor at a January 2011 dinner and a $643 alcohol tab at the same
restaurant in August 2011. Included in
those drink charges were four Macallan 25 Scotches at $50 each and five $56-bottles
of wine.
“Asking the SCE&G customers to pay for Zumba
classes and alcohol is appalling and offensive,” said Frank Knapp, Jr.,
president and CEO of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Knapp has formerly intervened in the
SCE&G rate case as a private customer as he has done four times before.
“While these costs are small compared to the total
revenue sought by SCE&G,” Knapp continued, “the company knows that they are
absolutely unallowable expenses to be included in a rate case. Several years ago SCE&G tried to include
the cost of massages and ORS rightfully threw that out.”
“Intentionally including these costs to justify a
rate hike demonstrates a blind-eye toward their customers’ economic struggles,”
said Knapp. “Just going out for a family
dinner is out of reach for many SCE&G customers because they have so many
other bills they must pay, like the electric bill, which for SCE&G
residential customers is already 22% higher than Duke customers and 28% more
than Progress Energy customers.”
Knapp added, “Every unnecessary dollar paid by a
residential customer to SCE&G is a dollar that won’t be spent in a local
small business to help grow the economy.
And every unnecessary dollar paid by a small business to SCE&G is a
dollar that can’t be used for paying higher wages to workers. This issue is not just about keeping
SCE&G financially healthy. It’s about
how to do that without hurting the state’s economy by asking consumers to pay
more than is absolutely necessary.”
At the rate hearing set for November 27, Mr. Knapp
will also challenge SCE&G’s rate hike request for a much higher Return on Equity
(ROE) than the rate Duke Power currently has.
“SCANA is a profitable company because our regulators make sure that it
is. Wall Street doesn’t need anywhere
near the 10.95% ROE that SCE&G is asking for in order to entice it to buy
the company’s paper. Wouldn’t we all
like to get even 10% return on our investments,” asked Mr. Knapp.
(Supporting
documents and Mr. Knapp’s full statement can be found at www.scsbc.org under issues.)
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