For Immediate Release: UCAN investigation shows SDG&E must lower its rates.

For Immediate Release September 22, 2011
Contact: Michael Shames (619) 610-9000
UCAN Main Switchboard: (619) 696-6966
UCAN FIGHTING TO LOWER
SDG&E'S RATES FOR ELECTRIC
AND NATURAL GAS PRICES
Today, UCAN, the Utility Consumers' Action Network, announced the results of a one-year probe into SDG&E's rate-setting activities.
UCAN's intensive audit shows that in the last three years, SDG&E’s rates have skyrocketed, its profits have soared, and its executives have reaped enormous bonuses even as its customers have suffered through the worst recession since 1929.
For 2012, SDG&E is seeking a "general rate" increase of $168 million. It claims its costs of doing business is higher and it needs more money from its customers. UCAN's team of experts -- 11 of them, pored through SDG&E's books and found that SDG&E should be lowering rates, not raising them. This means a rate reduction could be in the offing.
UCAN was able to document $142 million in inflated costs. UCAN's audit shows that SDG&E's rate increase should be pared back to $26 million. What’s more, the regulatory staff at the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) found an even larger potential for saving as much as $200 million in reductions. Between UCAN's work and that of the CPUC staff, there's a good chance for a rate reduction.
"This case comes down to a question of fairness." says UCAN's Executive Director, Michael Shames, "In the middle of the worst recession in many of our lifetimes, SDG&E’s rate request is lavish, extravagant, and unnecessary."
SDG&E customers have an opportunity to let regulators hear their voice during the week of October 10th, when there will be eight public hearings conducted throughout San Diego County. CPUC, the regulatory agency that makes the final decision on SDG&E's rates is taking public input on the proposed rate increase.
Hearings will be held in San Diego, Chula Vista, El Cajon and Oceanside. The public now has all of the facts. UCAN's experts have shown a tremendous amount of waste and deceit in SDG&E's request for more money. Similarly, the regulators' own staff has found a larger pool of inflated costs. We’ve done our work. The regulatory staff has done theirs. Now it is time for SDG&E customers to express their opinion.
If you can afford a 5-7% rate increase locked in for the next four years, then you needn't do anything but sit on a couch and wave goodbye to your money. But if you feel that you simply can't afford higher gas and electric prices at the moment, you need to make these facts known at the upcoming public hearings held at 2pm and 7pm at each of the four locations:
• San Diego: October 10, 2011 (Al Bahr Shriners Center, 5440 Kearny Mesa Road, San Diego 92111)
• Chula Vista: October 11, 2011 (Comfort Inn & Suites, 632 E. St., Chula Vista 91910)
• El Cajon: October 12, 2011 (El Cajon City Hall Council Chambers, 200 E. Main St, El Cajon 92020)
• Oceanside: October 13, 2011 (Civic Center Library, 330 N. Coast Highway, Oceanside 92054)
Here are just some of the disturbing facts uncovered by UCAN's experts.
- Deceptive Budgeting Gambits: Two of UCAN's analysis teams found that SDG&E management slashed spending at the company during 2009 and 2010. However, the increased net profits caused by the under spending was paid out in executive bonuses and inflating shareholder returns. Not a dime of it went to lower rates. And now, SDG&E is asking for double-digit increases above the rate of inflation, including the same operations/expenses that its management cut in 2010. SDG&E is demanding those increases across the organization, rather than in specific identified accounts to distract and confuse regulators from focusing on any one aspect of its operation.
- Highest Electric Rates in the Nation: Since 2008, SDG&E’s system average rates have leapfrogged to the highest in the continental United States and the highest in California, b -- 15% -- higher than any other utility. Just five years ago SDG&E's rates were about the same as the other California utilities, but now, rates have increases by double-digits in the midst of a full-blown recession. As of 2011, SDG&E's residential average rates are 18.4 cents per kWhr.
- SDG&E's customers are currently paying 13% more than SCE customers and almost 15% more than PG&E customers. Notably, at the last rate case in 2008, the residential rates for all three utilities were just about the same (15.6 for SDG&E, 15.0 for both SCE and PG&E).
- Bonus Happy Managers: In almost every single operational department, SDG&E's bonus-happy managers have found reasons to increase their annual budgets. The only department with a substantial decrease: meter reading. That's only because there are no more meter readers due to the $578 million spent on installing smart meters. SDG&E then inflated costs in almost every operating account, after reducing costs the previous year, through use of a five-year average.
- Failure to Answer Questions SDG&E only offered cursory justifications for most increases, thus requiring an extensive and time-consuming discovery process for every account. UCAN had to pose 72 sets of data requests containing over 5000 questions and, in many cases, never secured complete answers. One glaring example was its failure to detail its over $6 million in public affairs expenses, despite the CPUC requiring SDG&E to provide “a more detailed justification for all public affairs and outreach expense to demonstrate genuine customer benefit that outweighs any incidental corporate image enhancement."
- Pork barrel Spending: SDG&E wants $83 million to “help” customers who buy electric cars and for burdens caused by customers who use solar to generate their own power. UCAN's experts have found that electric car customers do not need SDG&E's help and that solar panels help SDG&E's system, they don't cause additional costs to the system.
- Unnecessary Undergrounding: SDG&E seeks $13 million to place power lines underground so as to make them less susceptible to fires. A number of the proposed undergrounding projects however are not located in fire-prone areas.
- Unneeded Construction: SDG&E proposes to spending $14 million to "fire proof" a transmission line to Mount Laguna. Mount Laguna has 32 households suggesting SDG&E wants to “fire proof” that transmission line at a cost of $437,500 per house.
- Bad Solar Investments: SDG&E wants $6.9 million to place solar panel installations on its SDG&E properties. But SDG&E's version of solar PV is so expensive that it will take 53 years to pay it back.
More information about UCAN's experts' findings can be found at:
http://www.ucan.org/energy/electricity/general_rate_case_2012/ucan_testimony_sdge_grc_2012
Utility Consumers' Action Network - (619) 696-6966
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