Pact With PSC Staff Would Increase O&R Rates 2.5% Overall
PEARL RIVER, NY May 21, 2008 — A rate plan endorsed by Orange and Rockland Utilities, Inc. (O&R)
and the staff of the New York State Department of Public Service (NYSDPS) and other interested parties, including
the Town of Ramapo, would permit O&R to raise its electric delivery rates by 2.5 percent overall.
This increase would affect customers' bills beginning August 1, 2008. If approved, the settlement agreement
would permit increases effective July 1, 2009 and July 1,
2010. The settlement agreement is subject to public hearings and then a vote by the Public Service Commission,
which can approve, amend or reject the settlement agreement.
Electric system expansion and service reliability improvements driven by a growing customer base and increasing
demands for electricity prompted O&R to file the request on August 10, 2007. That began an intensive
public review process with the NYSDPS and interested parties,
including consumer groups, environmental organizations and
local governments.
The rate plan provides for tens of millions of dollars in investment in the communities O&R serves in
Rockland, Orange and Sullivan counties in New York for energy
efficiency and for building new substations, upgrading infrastructure, including transmission and distribution
lines and facilities, and further automating key electric system operations, including a Smart Grid pilot
program, to provide greater service reliability and control over costs for customers.
In addition to enabling investments to help provide O&R customers with safe, adequate and reliable service
at reasonable rates, the rate proposal would, at the same time, help to provide O&R with the necessary
financial security to attract the required capital to finance these projects at a reasonable cost.
To provide for the continued reliable operation of the O&R delivery system for the benefit of its 221,000
New York electric customers, O&R is seeking approval of a $15.6 million increase in electric base delivery
rates, an overall increase in electric revenues of 2.5 percent
or an eight percent increase in delivery revenues. This increase
will affect customers' bills beginning August 1, 2008. O&R is seeking similar increases
effective July 1, 2009 and July 1, 2010.
If this filing is approved by the NYSPSC, effective August 1, 2008, the total electric bill for a typical
residential electric full service customer using a monthly
average of 677 kilowatt hours (kWh) would increase overall
on average $4.37 per month, from $114.30 to $118.67, or a
3.8 percent increase from today's rates.
O&R President and Chief Executive Officer John D. McMahon said, "O&R has not had a rate increase
since 1993 due in large part to our success in continuing
to achieve increased productivity and greater operating efficiencies
in our business. Now, we have reached the point where we
require rate relief to continue to meet our customers' electric
needs."
He added, "Since O&R's last electric base rate increase in 1993, our customers' use of electricity
has dramatically changed as has their dependence on the services
electricity makes possible. Virtually every new home built
in our service territory has central air conditioning. From
the rise of the Internet to the increased affordability of
home computers to the development of plasma screen TVs, electricity
usage has grown substantially. To meet that substantial growth
reliably, O&R
must fortify and expand its electric delivery system."
He said, "At the same time, we have developed a number of innovative and creative programs to help our customers
use energy more wisely, more efficiently, and at a lower
cost. We envision energy efficiency as a major and growing
element of our area's energy profile going forward."
McMahon said, "This significant continuing investment in the communities we serve offers more than a sound
and reliable electric supply, as vital as that is to our
area. This plan offers residential customers greater well-being
and comfort, business customers' more confidence in the continuity
and security of their operations, and public officials the
potential for greater prosperity for our communities, for
our people and for our economy through new development, more
jobs and an expanding tax base."
O&R customers' demand for electricity, chiefly for air conditioning, broke O&R's all-time record for
the second year in a row with 1,617 megawatts (MW) of demand
on August 2, 2006.
In fact, five of the top 10 highest demand records in O&R history were set in the summer of 2006. The
seventh highest demand day in O&R's history was this summer on July 10 with 1,474 MW of demand. The other
four records in the top 10 were set in 2005. The eleventh
and twelfth highest demand days were also this year: August
8, with 1,450 MW of demand and August 2 with 1,446 MW of demand.
This rate filing only covers the cost of delivering electricity to O&R's customers. The other two components
that affect the monthly electric bill are the cost of the
electricity itself which is set by largely unregulated market
activity and the amount of electricity the customer uses,
both of which have grown substantially over the past 14 years.
O&R is planning approximately $170 million in new major capital investment over the next three years
that will directly benefit the communities O&R serves. Chief among those projects are these:
In Rockland County, the plan calls for major new capital investment including two new substations and a substation
expansion in Clarkstown, two new substations in Orangetown and the upgrading of transmission lines from Hillburn
to Sloatsburg and Stony Point to West Nyack.
In Orange County, the plan calls for major new capital investment including three new substations, two substation
upgrades and a substation expansion. Also outlined in the plan are upgrades on transmission lines running
between Port Jervis and Rio and Sugarloaf and Middletown.
A significant number of the projects proposed by the Company have benefits for multiple counties and for all
of its New York service territory customers.
To maintain the ongoing reliability, safety and security of the electric distribution system, O&R also
will initiate a number of high-tech projects to serve the expanding needs of the communities it serves.
Smart Grid
O&R is proposing to develop a new and innovative pilot project that couples state-of-the-art equipment
design with cutting-edge technological advances in computer analysis, system monitoring and control to enhance
electric system reliability and service.
This advanced system would be capable of providing a significantly higher level of electric service reliability
by restoring customers' electric service automatically when
disturbances occur and minimizing the extent of outages through
expanded distribution automation.
O&R proposes to implement its Smart Grid pilot project in the vicinity of the Company's West Nyack substation
and the proposed Snake Hill substation, both in West Nyack,
N.Y. The Smart Grid pilot project would be implemented over
a three-year period at a capital cost of approximately $4.4 million.
Enhanced Distribution Automation
O&R plans to expand this successful program which reduces the number, scope and duration of outages on
O&R's electric distribution system by shortening the length of existing circuits through the installation
of sectionalizing devices. O&R's plan is to increase the number of these devices and to coordinate their
installation with new substation construction.
The new devices also will be equipped with two-way communication capabilities (and the already installed devices
will be retrofitted) so that they can be monitored and operated remotely rather than by hand in the field
as they are now. O&R estimates that the incremental capital costs for this program will total approximately
$1 million annually.
Further, this filing addresses significant investments in manufactured gas plant remediation projects, wage
and benefit schedules for employees and pensions and benefits for retired employees, which are consistent
with the industry in our region.
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