Robert Carroll represents the 44th Assembly District in the New York State Assembly. That is why we have introduced three bills that will give power to the people by bringing Public Power to New York. We know our current utilities have no interest in being part of this transition. If we do these three things we will transform our energy system into one that recognizes the scale of the environmental crisis we face. With this, we will finally have a distribution utility run for and by the rate-payers. This publicly-owned distribution utility will provide rates cheaper than what we pay now, while having democratic oversight. Direct investment and ownership of renewable energy production is the only way to make a meaningful change.įinally, consolidate the privately-owned downstate utilities into the Downstate Power Authority, a democratically-controlled and publicly-owned utility. To meet the state's codified climate goals, and to face environmental realities we need to do much better.
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With our current for-profit model, New York generates only 5% of our energy from wind and solar. Second, turbocharge renewable energy production by allowing the New York Power Authority to own renewable energy production. That is why there is only one thing for New York to do: make our utilities and electric generation publicly owned, 100% renewable, and democratically controlled.įirst, New York should invest in the necessary energy generation to make all state-owned properties 100% renewable by 2025. They have proven that profits and shareholders come before our environment and ratepayers. Con Ed and National Grid have proven that they will not get us there. In voting against this increase she said, "I can't support it because I want to just push us further and further to go faster and faster. Only one PSC Commissioner, Tracey Edwards, had the courage to break the insane cycle of ever- increasing rate hikes coming at the expense of the environment. That won't happen with Con Ed or National Grid. The science tells us that we have a decade to shift from a fossil-fuel based economy to one of renewables. Luckily, National Grid lost, but it is still asking for a rate increase of over 17% this year.
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This phony crisis was all an attempt to bully New York into approving another dirty fracked natural gas pipeline. In this rate case Con Ed did just that!Īnd don't get us started on the coercive actions of National Grid, whose self-imposed gas moratorium hurt thousands of New Yorkers. For Con Ed, new fracked gas pipelines are easier and cheaper to connect to the existing grid, so with their contractually guaranteed return, they choose and advocate for a gas pipeline over a microgrid every time. To regulators, there is no difference between a solar farm or a new fracked gas pipeline. For this, state regulators don't care if projects complement or harm New York's goals of reducing our carbon footprint. It cannot fail financially because it is a privately-owned monopoly providing an essential service: energy. The reason Con Ed is so profitable is simple, we allow them to be. But when you are an unaccountable monopoly, profits to your shareholders will always win out over safety and health. And they mostly happened because Con Ed hasn't done routine grid maintenance. Some of these happened on the hottest days of the year. Last year, hundreds of thousands experienced blackouts, brownouts, and shutoffs. The regulators ignored that Con Edison has been absolutely disastrous for New Yorkers. Despite this, state regulators are once again allowing them to increase rates and their return on investment.
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Nor the $200 million for new fossil-fuel infrastructure baked into Con Ed's request. It doesn't matter that New Yorkers already pay the second highest municipal rates in the country. Like always, it requested and was granted its rate hike. This hike will increase electric rates by 13% and gas rates by 22% over the next three years.Ĭon Edison won. New York’s Public Service Commission recently approved another rate hike for Con Edison, as it does every three years.