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kesagatame-and-Chill t1_j4rwlb7 wrote

So pay them with tax dollars? Which is our money. So we are still paying for record profits? Makes so (little) sense.

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AhbabaOooMaoMao t1_j4ryept wrote

The Republican plan is to literally guarantee payments to Eversource as a reward for their record profits and rising stock price while simultaneously blowing a gaping hole in the state budget.

Never enough money for social programs or school books, but when it comes to a handout to energy companies, those Republicans are right there with a plan all fleshed out.

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ctguy54 t1_j4s33lv wrote

“Based on 2020 energy costs, the change would save the average Connecticut household around $210 per year, they said. “

Then expect your income tax or sales tax to go up the same amount. This is how republicans think.

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silasmoeckel t1_j4s6e73 wrote

So pull out all those unfunded mandates and pay for them? This seems like a good idea to me, as now those pork programs will have line items in the budget instead of being hidden in delivery charges.

Now I dont think it changes the numbers. Fixing out min green mix would be a good start.

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Majestic_Hamster_812 t1_j4sixpw wrote

Buy out eversource, make energy a public commodity in CT, diversify like Ned wants, and sell energy at no profit. Hiding the record profits under tax dollars changes nothing.

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JHolm915 t1_j4sr3ey wrote

You should read the actual plan not the article which is incredibly misleading.(https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Mnx3ML1iKdc8ZYyJ3pxe1ufhwarVkCHi/view) It's calling for the fees imposed by the state on the energy bills to be included in the state budget and not reflected on our energy bills. It has nothing to do with any money that eversource is receiving but government fees imposed by lawmakers. It also calls for a separation of PURA from DEEP to give it more control of the situation and differentiate PURA policies from DEEP which hinder energy procurement sources. It also calls for the expansion of procurement from nuclear, hydro, and other viable and stable options. Lastly it calls for more oversight of utility companies.

Sounds pretty reasonable to me when you actually read it. Considering so far we are just using state programs funded by tax payers and donations to subsidize the higher costs and excuse their practices as you seem to believe this proposal was about.

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solomons-marbles t1_j4ssjzy wrote

The republicans created this problem when the deregulated. Simple solution right here: remove all utilities from Wall Street.

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JHolm915 t1_j4su9rq wrote

The governor was a republican, the legislature who actually makes the policies was not. Don't get blinded by your party affiliation and spread misinformation.

So to correct your comment the Democrats created this problem when the legislature they held the majority of passed the policies which led to deregulation.

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AhbabaOooMaoMao t1_j4tfak1 wrote

>You should read the actual plan not the article which is incredibly misleading.(https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Mnx3ML1iKdc8ZYyJ3pxe1ufhwarVkCHi/view) It's calling for the fees imposed by the state on the energy bills to be included in the state budget and not reflected on our energy bills. It has nothing to do with any money that eversource is receiving but government fees imposed by lawmakers. It also calls for a separation of PURA from DEEP to give it more control of the situation and differentiate PURA policies from DEEP which hinder energy procurement sources. It also calls for the expansion of procurement from nuclear, hydro, and other viable and stable options. Lastly it calls for more oversight of utility companies. > >Sounds pretty reasonable to me when you actually read it. Considering so far we are just using state programs funded by tax payers and donations to subsidize the higher costs and excuse their practices as you seem to believe this proposal was about.

It's all buzzwords and nonsense.

Yes it would certainly be easier for Eversource to run circles around PURA if it didn't have all the lawyers and scientists from DEEP to contend with.

Obviously Eversource would love nothing more than to weaken PURA.

Obviously the rest of the proposal you're okay with, such as neutering the ability of PURA and the AG to enforce settlements against Eversource.

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JHolm915 t1_j4threx wrote

Facts state otherwise from your opinion. We are the only state with a structure like this and coincidentally one of the states with the highest utility rates. PURA wants it's independence and has repeatedly stated that it's neutered by the current structure in place, and we the consumers have seen the effects of this first hand. PURA is a judicial organization devoted to policy relating to utilities, they don't need an environmental organization to oversee their activities and add red tape when it encompasses far more aspects pertaining to consumers and our costs. How have utility rates been since the structure change happened? How much has been able to be done about it, since it was supposedly so helpful?

You should really read that proposal again and then do some research as to what it all means because your opinion of it is completely nonsensical.

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pittiedaddy t1_j4u132b wrote

$210 per YEAR? Fuck off. Some people's bills have increased by that MONTHLY.

So we basically pay their fees out of our state budget?

The party of no fucking plan strikes again.

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Jesus_Freak78 t1_j4ura3d wrote

Everyone talks about Eversource and I get it, but something needs to be done about Southern Connecticut Gas! My gas bill to heat my home this month just went up to $525, the highest I've ever seen it! Just to keep the house at 68 degrees too! And there is no option to try and get your gas from another supplier. It is out of control!

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keepitupxxx t1_j4ut7po wrote

Bull shit Repubs this does not correct the issues just moves the expense

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CANOODLING_SOCIOPATH t1_j4uyiy3 wrote

There is a question of which is better. They could configure it so that the taxes that go up disproportionately affect wealthier people, so that poorer and middle class people come out ahead. But I seriously doubt that is what they would propose.

And there is some merit to having a consumption tax on electricity. We want people to be incentivized to save on energy, and taxing energy consumption rewards energy saving investments. While income tax does not incentivize any societal beneficial behavior.

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JHolm915 t1_j4v4hmi wrote

You realize a governors veto can be overridden when sent back to the house so if they hold the majority and already passed it once it would just happen again. The governors position doesn't hold much power in those aspects. I don't have blinders because I'm independent and think for myself.

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CTrandomdude t1_j4v5ch4 wrote

This is no solution and just a stunt as they really have no solutions they are willing to support. Take a power related mandatory expense. Take it out of the power bill where only power customer’s pay for it and put it in the state budget where everyone pays for it.

I can’t believe this is a serious proposal.

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JHolm915 t1_j4v6ies wrote

So because one individual with little to no power in the situation chooses not to battle a house made up of over 100 legislators when they already showed their decision, it somehow passes all the blame to him and his party? Sounds like a pretty nonsensical standpoint to me, considering all the drafting and voting was overwhelmingly carried out by another party.

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Majestic_Hamster_812 t1_j4v7k6n wrote

Agreed. I moved from CA a few years back and they have even more issues with their giant energy company than we do. LOTS of talk of making the company a public asset, but many raise the exact concerns you just laid out.

I still think it’s a better idea than what we have now, and I don’t agree that they would be able to hide a CEO making 20 million. Waste and nepotism absolutely.

Even with some waste, I think we can do better. Eversource (and most big companies right now) are running away with the economy. Record profits all across the board while the rest of us suffer, and then they cry “inflation!” When asked about their profit margins.

I’m no expert on this, but this is clearly an example of failed capitalism with what we have right now. I agree that there’s risks going too far the other direction (socialism I suppose).

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JHolm915 t1_j4v8znh wrote

It's actually a much more complex issue which other policies have played a role in exacerbating. Most of which was done by one side under the guise of "Green" policy making and then after making several pushes towards certain technologies and fuel source which they reneged on later calling them bad after already implementing too many changes in one direction. Basically it was the reliance on natural gas being pushed then fighting any possible solution to increase the supply to our state after deciding it wasn't good. Then pushing policies for people towards newer technologies which are still in their infancy and not viable yet while punishing the very industry that they called the solution not long ago.

It's a whole lot of hypocrisy essentially and rush decisions without looking at long term side effects and failure to produce actual solutions.

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JHolm915 t1_j4vdok5 wrote

That's where the facts lead to in this topic right now. Which side pushed natural gas as the ultimate solution, subsidized and expanded the industry, offered rebates to anyone switching, then changed their mind conveniently as the demand started to outweigh the supply. Now after all that pushing, fracking and pipelines which are necessary to that change, are suddenly the worst thing. Disregarding that crude oil reliance was still far worse and we have no other viable solution yet. I think pushing everyone to electric heat would be far worse given the amount of production needed and what that would entail for the environment, and that's basically the only other option than natural gas.

We could have more options but the way our houses are built and the land we have hinders geothermal heat or just building underground where there is a comfortable temperature with no heat production needed.

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