Ontario cuts Hydro Bills by 25% across the board

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Premier Kathleen Wynne made an announcement today that will give Ontario households a 25% cut on their hydro bills.

“If you’re paying electricity prices in Ontario, you will save 25% and no price increase for 4 years” the Premier announced Thursday morning.

The Province will go even further for those in rural areas or for the low income families.

The Premier said the rate decrease will hold for the next four years and rates will only increase with inflation, about 2%.

“It means if you’re paying $135 a month today, it will reduce your bill to about $101” Wynne said.

The Premier admitted the funding of the Hydro situation was a mistake. “were refinancing the mortgage” The burden of the hydro costs will be made more fair and even.

The Premier has been forced to tackle rising hydro bills across the province and the issue has dodged the Liberal government for over two years.

The reduction means adding $2.6 billion to Ontario’s debt but Wynne said her government is on target to balance the budget by 2018.

The Province released the following this morning:

System Restructuring Delivers Lasting Relief to Households Across Province
Ontario is lowering electricity bills by 25 per cent on average for all residential customers as part of a significant system restructuring that will address long-standing policy challenges and ensure greater fairness.

Starting this summer, Ontario’s Fair Hydro Plan would provide households with this 25 per cent break. Many small businesses and farms would also benefit from the initiative. ‎People with low incomes and those living in eligible rural communities would receive even greater reductions to their electricity bills. As part of this plan, rate increases over the next four years would be held to the rate of inflation for everyone.

These measures include the eight per cent rebate introduced in January and build on previously announced initiatives to deliver broad-based rate relief on all electricity bills.

Taken together, these changes will deliver the single-largest reduction to electricity rates in Ontario’s history.

Recently, electricity rates have risen for two key reasons:

Decades of under-investment in the electricity system by governments of all stripes resulted in the need to invest more than $50 billion in generation, transmission and distribution assets to ensure the system is clean and reliable
The decision to eliminate Ontario’s use of coal and produce clean, renewable power, as well as policies put in place to provide targeted support to rural and low-income customers, have created additional costs.
The burden of financing these system improvements and funding key programs has unfairly fallen almost entirely on the shoulders of today’s ratepayers. To relieve that burden and share costs more fairly, two system fixes are being undertaken.

Recognizing that the electricity infrastructure that has been built will last for many decades to come, the province would refinance those capital investments to ensure that system costs are more equitably distributed over time. In addition, a number of important programs, such as the Ontario Electricity Support Program (OESP), will now be funded by the government instead of by ratepayers.

The province will also launch a new Affordability Fund, enhance the existing OESP and Rural or Remote Rate Protection (RRRP) program and provide on-reserve First Nations households with a delivery credit. These new measures will cost the government up to $2.5 billion over the next three years.

Notwithstanding that hydro rate relief costs will add significant pressure on the fiscal framework, the province continues to project a balanced budget for 2017-18, and will provide a full update on its fiscal plan in the spring budget.

Reducing electricity costs is part of Ontario’s plan to create jobs, grow our economy and help people in their everyday lives.

QUICK FACTS
Ontario’s Fair Hydro Plan would improve sector efficiency and modernize the province’s electricity market, working in collaboration with the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) and the Ontario Energy Board (OEB).
The Province will expand the RRRP to provide distribution charge relief to additional customers served by LDCs with the highest rates. About 800,000 customers would benefit from the enhanced RRRP program.

The Affordability Fund would be accessible to Local Distribution Companies (LDCs) for customers who do not qualify for low-income conservation programs and who are unable to undertake energy efficiency improvements without financial assistance.

On-reserve First Nations customers will receive a 100 per cent credit of the delivery line on their monthly electricity bills.

The expanded OESP will provide an additional $180 to $276 per year for households of eligible size and combined income.

Ontario is expanding the Industrial Conservation Initiative (ICI) program by reducing the threshold from 1 mW to 500 kW and targeting more small manufacturing and industrial consumers.


6 COMMENTS

  1. Ok ! My bill is 397. 00 a month on equal billing , and we are on a pension . What will this mean to me ? Gass prices for my car. have also gone up, Oh wait water prices have gone up. Also getting tired of paying for this retirement fee when I can barely live on my money now.

  2. It is quite obvious that Wynne has lost whatever voter confidence she once may have had. It is time for her to step down as Premier and call an election. I am amazed that neither of the opposition parties have called for her resignation and to dissolve parliament and call an election. What are they waiting for? I suspect that neither of those 2 parties has a plan to “fix” the mess Ontario is now in. It is time for the opposition to stop attacking the Liberals and get on with FIXING the problem.
    By the way….who is the sacrificial lamb that will represent the Liberals in the upcoming by election locally? I suspect she cannot call the election because she has no candidate to run.

  3. Folks, this is how wynne’s plan works: smoke & mirrors, SMOKE & MIRRORS, smoke & mirrors……..smoke & mirrors……………..smoke & mirrors, SMOKE & MIRRORS !!!!!!!!!! Seriously folks, you can’t make this sh?t up.
    wynne is just delaying the tremendous hydro bills that she dumped on us in the 1st place. Please don’t fall for this. Let wynne know how angry you are at this next by-election. Please don’t be fooled folks. This once great Province is in deep sh?t with wynne’s lieberals. Seriously !!!
    ( Just a concerned and very, very frustrated taxpayer )

  4. In other words 12% reduction? Not nearly enough, they add 13% HST on top of the bill whatever it is.
    They need to remove the ridiculous delivery charge, which is almost as much as the power bill itself.
    (As they continue to give the majority of the power to the U.S. for pennies on the dollar)
    Not good enough. Wynne STILL needs to step down.

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