Community Corner

BGE Rate Hike Would Cover Past Work

Money from a rate increase will not be used for new work, but BGE will continue to update infrastructure, spokesman said.

A rate adjustment requested by BGE will mostly cover work that the utility company has already performed, according to a spokesman. 

“In Maryland, that’s the way it works,” BGE Spokesman Rob Gould said. “You spend the money and then you go back to the [Public Service] Commission and you ask them for recovery of the costs that you incurred.”

BGE announced Friday evening that it had , according to the utility, would add an additional $7.22 to the “typical” customer’s electric bill. 

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There are a few places where BGE will use some of the money going forward, Gould said, including vegetation maintenance.    

“BGE customer bills will still be lower in total than then were in 2009, because we’ve seen a decline in the cost of the fuel.” Gould said. “The price of natural gas has dropped 25 percent since 2009.”

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“This is only the second request for an electric distribution rate adjustment in 20 years,” Gould said, “And the reality is that much of our infrastructure dates back to the 40s and 50s, and some of it even before that.”

In an email, Ellicott City resident David Rubin said he believed BGE was requesting the increase because, since a January PSC ruling, the utility can only for the first 24 hours of an outage.

The utility will receive money via "bill stabilization" to cover some of the lost revenue from the derecho-related power outages. , Gould said.

“We urge that if BGE is permitted to increase their rates, that 100% of all revenue generated from such an increase be ordered by the PSC to go directly towards upgrading their infrastructure,” Rubin wrote, “to include burying lines and investing in 21st century technology.”

Gould noted that in the Ellicott City neighborhoods that are part of the investigation. Some lines have already been buried and BGE has adjusted its tree-trimming schedule, doing maintenance ahead of its previous schedule. That plan, he said, is still moving forward.

“Any moneys we get in the adjustment is largely reinvested back into the infrastructure,” Gould said.  

The PSC has also scheduled a during the that swept through the region in late June after .


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