According to The Washington Post, the average BGE customer will face a yearly $743 price hike and the average Pepco customer an extra $468 per year. A number of legislative bills are swirling around the assembly to ameliorate or reverse this price hike, from re-regulating the industry, to providing low income people with assistance, to phasing in the increase over two or more years.
The Baltimore Sun reports on March 10 that in this legislative election year, state delegates are scrambling to make something happen. State House Speaker Michael Busch (D-Md.) told The Baltimore Sun that BGE users will face a price hike, but below what has been announced.
What will happen remains to be seen.
Deregulation of the energy industry has not created free-market competition as its proponents have contended. The predominate trend in energy, media, and telecom industries these days is toward conglomeration. AT&T recently made a $67 billion bid to purchase telecom giant BellSouth, and BGE itself is in the middle of merger with Florida Power & Light.
Past critics of this deal say the Florida company is in a weak financial position and attempting to pass off costs to Maryland customers. Deregulation of the energy industry also helped create the 2001-2002 energy-crisis in California that led to rolling black-outs and numerous out-of-state energy companies, such as Enron, over-charging California consumers.
Within a year of the 1999 deregulation of the California energy industry, wholesale electricity costs for the state spiked from $7.4 billion to $27.1 billion, according to the California State Attorney General's office. The Attorney General there has been suing energy companies for overcharging and market manipulation ever since, and to date claims to have recovered $3 billion. Their Attorney General also has produced a 2004 report on the crisis and concluded that deregulation "failed." Instead of lowering prices through competition, deregulation led to ratepayers facing "black outs and huge bills as they watched energy generators and traders game the system."
The "Attorney General's Energy White Paper" can be found online at
ag.ca.gov/publications/energywhitepaper.pdf.
Whether the Maryland state assembly will restore state control of the utility industry remains to be seen, but they should. State control of the utility industry ensures that out-of-state companies cannot swoop in, purchase Maryland energy companies, and suck out profits. It empowers state regulatory bodies to set fair prices in a market that never can be free, fair, and competitive as some free-market theorists assert.
Public staples such as health care, energy services, and schooling cannot be viewed as commodities like toothpaste or pizza that can be created and sold easily. In energy, transportation and delivery systems cost billions and as a result become defacto monopolies, ensuring multiple companies cannot compete with each other. While heating in the winter is sometimes overconsumed, it is needed at some level by most citizens. This combination of hooked-in demand and monopoly infrastructure creates an environment that can lead to soaring, unjustified prices. Price-gouging is the logical result if an energy company views state residents as solely a means to boost their own income and company stock values.
Comments
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
-carl
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
Update: 3-23-2006
The Baltimore Sun presents a chart showing that a monthly bill of $81.65 would rise to $105.80 in six months, and to $150 on Oct. 1, 2007. This appears to be a roughly 80 percent spike over 1.5 years, more than the previously floated figure.
The Maryland legislature continues to debate alternatives to the price hike and this phase in proposal.
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
If any of you want to show your disapproval of this, there is a protest tomorrow (3/30) at 5 pm in front of the BGE headquarters
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
There getting us at the fuel pumps now electric.
And not getting any raises at the job.
What else can happen!
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
pepco is overcharging me
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
Re: BGE Price Hike of 70-Plus Percent Stuns Maryland
June 29, 2007 – Power was restored at 2:30 am, therefore, I tried to rest for work in a couple of hours. I arrived at work to begin catch-up on work unable to complete the day before.
June 29, 2007 - While speaking with the Corporate President on the phone at 9:45 am, the power suddenly went our again. We concluded our conversation, and I called to speak with Mr. Lambert, who could only say BGE will be on-sight in several minutes to continue correcting the problem, at assured me, service would be restored by 1pm.
June 29, 2007 - I had to order lunch for my bed-ridden grandmother because I had no electricity to prepare her routine Friday diet, visit with her and expecting restored service when I returned home at 2:30pm.
June 29, 2007 - Called BGE at 2:30 pm and asked why the power still had not been restored. The woman on the phone could not answer any questions and asked to speak with Mr. Lambert, but was asked to speak with Mr. Sickler. Mr. Sickler did not answer my questions at first, except to say the crew was working on it and we’d have service by 5:00 pm. Mr. Sickler was advised that it was unacceptable and with persistence placed me on hold to speak with a field person to get answers to some of my questions. Mr. Sickler came back on line with me and said the crew were en-route to our area and be here in 10 minutes to have the problem corrected by 6:00pm. Growing increasingly frustrated, I asked why the time had changed to 6:00 pm. He denied saying 5:00pm. I told him that concerns had already been communicated BGE, Constellation Energy, the Public Service Commission, and the media, and that the community has talked of legal representation to get our concerns heard and we concluded our phone call. I decided to wait until 5:15pm to call back for another update. The power was restored in my home at 4:59 pm.
August 17, 2007 – At 12:35 a.m., the power was out again, and we were told it would be back on at 3:00 a.m. 3:00 a.m. came and went and another was placed to BGE; this time they said it was underground, and the power would be back on at 4:00 a.m. At 5:00 a.m., we called and spoke with supervisor Ms. Sturtevant, who said the power would be back on at 7:00 a.m.
It is the same area – 1700 block of E. Fairmount Avenue, the 1700 block of E. Baltimore Street and the unit block of North Broadway. Why are these the only areas affected, and why are we being told the problem is underground. When it happened in June, and we were out for three-days, someone forgot to flip a switch at the poles. Who is going to pay the food spoilage this time? Who is going to pay the medical expenses for the elderly and the sick? Better yet, who is going to compensate a grieving family because someone expired? At 7:00 a.m. I called BGE and Ms. Spriggs the time for service to be restored is moved to 10:30 a.m.
We want answers, and we want them NOW!