EMMITSBURG,
Md. – Though Allegheny Power’s electric rates
are locked in until the end of 2008, residents who get their
electricity from Allegheny Power will still see their electric
bills increase about 15 percent beginning this year.
“Allegheny
Power has already raised them on the residential customer
base,” said Emmitsburg Mayor James Hoover.
Because
of the expected dramatic increases in the electric rates
that Allegheny Power expects when the price caps end at
the end of 2008, the Maryland Public Service Commission
approved rate stabilization plan that allows Allegheny Power
to begin phasing in the expected power increase. The first
phase of the increase will show on July bills.
“The
rates may or may not increase depending on which plan the
customer chooses,” said Allegheny Power spokesman
Allan Staggers. “We have enacted a series of rate
increases that works out to about 15 percent annually for
about four years.”
The
rate stabilization plan was approved at the end of March.
The company then notified customers for two billing cycles
that they could opt out of the program and accept the full
electric increase at the beginning of 2009. If customers
did not opt out, they were automatically enrolled in the
program of phased-in increases.
Currently,
the cost of electricity from Allegheny Power is $74.15 for
1,000 kilowatt hours. When the rate caps come off, residents
under the rate stabilization plan will be paying about $106.16
for 1,000 kilowatt hours while residents who opted out of
the program will be paying $123.98 for 1,000 kilowatt hours.
Staggers
said that under the program, “In 2007 and 2008, you
will pay a little more, but in 2009, you will pay a little
less and at the end of 2010, things should level out.”
The
additional costs will show as a surcharge on the electric
bill. The money collected will go into an interest-earning
fund. Once the caps come off Allegheny Power’s rates,
the surcharge will then become a credit to the customers
in the program to reduce their rates to lower than the market
rate.