Black Hills Vitality was granted a $17 million electrical fee enhance by state utility regulators Wednesday — over the protests of shoppers and southern Colorado officers.
The Colorado Public Utilities Fee trimmed the corporate’s $25 million request by a couple of third. South Dakota-based Black Hills has about 309,000 clients in Colorado with Pueblo, Cañon Metropolis and Florence in its service space.
The corporate initially sought a $37 million enhance, which might have raised the common month-to-month electrical energy invoice, for 600 kilowatt-hours, by 18% to $129 a month.
Approaching the heels of a March $1.50 month-to-month surcharge on payments to pay for the corporate’s state-mandated Clear Vitality Plan, the proposed fee enhance sparked a wave of protest from shoppers and native officers.
Black Hills then minimize the request to $25.1 million, however the opposition continued. Pueblo, Cañon Metropolis and Florence officers, in addition to the Colorado Workplace of Utility Client Advocate, all argued that Black Hills ought to get no enhance in any respect.
“The burden of this increase on the city’s most vulnerable residents and the city itself is too great to ignore,” Andrew Hayes, Pueblo’s director of public works, informed a PUC listening to final October.
Black Hills Vitality mentioned it wants the rise to cowl the price of crucial gear and repair upgrades. Black Hills didn’t reply to a request by The Solar for remark.
The permitted $17 million enhance will elevate the common residential month-to-month invoice by 7% or $7.40 a month. The payments of small industrial clients can even go up by 7% or about $17.50 a month.
“It’s a mixed bag,” mentioned Emily Tracy, a Cañon Metropolis council member. “We appreciate the smaller increase. I think all the activism helped, but the south-central part of the state is already paying the highest electricity costs in Colorado.”
Cañon Metropolis and Pueblo are excessive poverty areas the place persons are “already struggling,” Tracy mentioned. The median earnings in Fremont County in 2023 was 39% beneath the median state earnings. Pueblo County was 37% beneath the state common.
“For years high electric rates have been a major challenge for residents, businesses and economic development efforts — it seems the ruling of the Public Utilities Commission will continue this trend for Pueblo and our southern Colorado neighbors,” Pueblo Mayor Heather Graham mentioned in a press release to the Solar.
“The reality is that this is a win for the pocketbooks of the shareholders in Black Hills Energy and their executives, all while increasing the cost to the detriment of our Pueblo residents,” Graham mentioned.
Pueblo Metropolis Councilman Joe Latino mentioned “people in my district are already strapped. Another $7.40 is big.”
Seven years in the past, Tracy began Cañon Metropolis’s Vitality Future, a gaggle exploring options to getting its electrical energy from Black Hills. Town didn’t renew its franchise settlement with the utility paying for its service 12 months to 12 months.
Nonetheless, the town couldn’t discover a viable different. “We hit a brick wall,” Tracy mentioned. “The law doesn’t make it easy.”
A referendum to create a municipal utility in Pueblo to switch Black Hills additionally failed in 2020 with 77% of the voters towards the choice. Nonetheless, Pueblo voters will as soon as once more weigh in on whether or not to choose out of Black Hills in a particular election in Might.
“This has been one of the most difficult cases I’ve had at my time at the PUC as I was moved and deeply concerned by the comments we heard regarding the impact of this rate increase on these customers and communities,” PUC Chairman Eric Clean mentioned in voting for the speed hike.
“At the same time, we clearly have legal and fiduciary duties to the utility that limit and constrains us,” Clean mentioned. “I am really unhappy about raising rates. We have no choice and are doing the best we can do given the $370 million in capital increases in spending.”