Stucco said:
Bob Yancy said:
If a for profit utility would benefit stockholders in its profits, what's wrong with municipally owned utilities operating margin being used to benefit taxpayers?
The monopoly.
powertochoose.org
But on the issue, the artificially high utility rates burden heavy utility users, as opposed to valuable property owners. That is likely a wash to an average taxpayer, but data would be interesting. It is also a consumption tax, which should reduce utility usage overall and help us to plan better for infrastructure. The part I dislike is the shell game. It should appear on the utility bill as a city tax, not be hidden in the rates. Taken a step further, force the tax on any provider that wants in, then deregulate and compete.
If the utility rates were higher, I'd agree, but for the most part our utility rates are somewhat competitive with open market areas as well.
Under BTU, my electric section of my bill (monthly meter fee, energy and delivery costs and regulatory recoup costs) has my almost 3600kWh consumption at $389. CSU, based on their rates and equivalent fees would have my electricity cost at $496. The cheapest power plan on PowertoChoose for Houston ZIP 77080 (picked a random one) would have my bill at $441. Cheapest in Waco 76712 would be $452. Arlington, TX would match Waco as they also have the same plan for the lowest cost. So, CS a bit higher than the lowest market participants, at least for my power consumption levels.
Those power plans would also potentially have market adjustments for price during the contract with a large contract termination fee. Some of the open plans have free nights or weekends or a certain number of days/month, and there could be ways to game those systems, but on the whole reliable power with the added restraint on the utility to have to go to council to get rate increases is something I do value. Closer to 1000 kWh/month, and there are plans that could be cheaper, definitely.
According to the PUCT, there is no area in Texas where, on average, I could have an all-in energy rate lower than what I'd get through CSU and certainly not what I do get with BTU.
https://ftp.puc.texas.gov/public/puct-info/industry/electric/rates/RESrate/rate23/Dec23Rates.pdfNow, could I find something cheaper than CSU; yes, but with some caveats. I have not found one on the open market in Texas that would be cheaper for my power consumption.