PSC suspends AEP electric rate hike until May as customers protest against another increase

By Caity Coyne

West Virginia Watch

A potential rate increase for nearly 461,000 electric customers in West Virginia that would have, if approved by the state Public Service Commission, gone into effect next month has been postponed until the spring, according to case filings with the PSC.

The rate increases were proposed by Appalachian Power Company and Wheeling Power Company — both subsidiaries of American Electric Power — and would have raised rates nearly 18% for residential customers using 1,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity a month. That would raise bills by about $28.72 monthly for families, according to PSC filings, while yielding a 15.4% increase in revenue — about $265 million — for the companies. 

In an order filed Thursday, the PSC delayed considering the rate increases until May 29 to “allow for further examination” of the proposal. If approved at that time, the rate changes would be implemented on May 30, according to the order. The rate hikes, without the delay, would have been considered for approval by the PSC and gone into effect on Sept. 1.

The currently proposed increase — as opposed to most of those implemented since 2019 — is a normal base rate increase, which utilities undergo every few years to accommodate the increased cost of providing services. The companies said in a press release earlier this month that they have invested more than $1 billion in energy infrastructure over the last few years, which contributes at least in part to their need to collect more revenue from ratepayers.

The order to delay the proceedings came two days after the PSC’s Consumer Advocacy Division filed a petition to intervene in the case on behalf of West Virginia ratepayers. 

According to the Charleston Gazette-Mail, Appalachian Power customers have faced 14 rate increases from the company from 2017 to March 2023. In the last five years alone, according to Appalachian Power, residential rates for electricity have risen from $128.09 in March 2019 to $169.93 in June 2024. That’s a 32.6% increase in rates.

Just last month, the PSC approved the companies a 1.61% increase for residential payers — about $2.71 a month for those using 1,000 kilowatt-hours — in electric rates for environmental compliance surcharges. That increase will garner about $35.6 million for the company and will be reflected on ratepayers’ bills starting in September.

On Thursday, about two dozen West Virginians gathered in downtown Charleston to protest against the most recent rate hikes. With protest signs and a megaphone, they led chants and rallied against the rising costs of power in West Virginia while those driving by honked in support.

Among the protesters was South Charleston resident Linda Farwell. Farwell and her family moved to Kanawha County from out of state in 2008 for “a better life.”

“But since we’ve come here, it’s been absolutely nonstop,” Farwell said. “The increases won’t stop coming and it’s pushing us over the edge.”

Farwell said she understands that utility rates need to increase over time as maintenance needs arise and market shifts affect energy costs. She wishes, however, the increases were more “reasonable” and took into account the impact they have on families.

“If it were reasonable we’d understand, but this is year after year after year, sometimes multiple times a year, over and over,” Farwell said. “When I get my bill, every time I think, ‘what’s the next one going to look like? Where does this end?’ I wish [Appalachian Power] would stop gouging the public like this.”

Linda Childers, a newly-elected member of the Cabell County Board of Education and a representative of the Cabell County Democratic Party, said she was frustrated with the PSC and what she viewed as complacency over the constant rate increases. Those extend not just to electricity but to other utilities as well, including water and sewage.

“We pay some of the highest utility rates in the nation and we’re living in one of the poorest states,” Childers said. “How does that make any sense?”

Read the full article here.