Brown, Merkley, Colleagues Press Nation’s Utility Companies to Cease Utility Shutoffs For the Duration of the COVID-19 Crisis
Washington D.C. – U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown
(D-OH) – ranking member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and
Urban Affairs, and Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), today led their
colleagues in sending letters to the nation’s largest utility companies
including Duke Energy, Southern
Company, Exelon Corporation, FirstEnergy, American
Electric Power, Xcel
Energy, Entergy Corporation, Dominion
Energy, PPL
Corporation, Public
Service Enterprise Group, Ameren
Corporation, Berkshire
Hathaway Energy, American
Water, Aqua
America, Corix Group of
Companies, Comcast, Charter Communications, AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Cox Communications, and Lumen
Technologies. The lawmakers urged the companies to suspend
all utility shutoffs for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Because of the economic devastation wrought
by the pandemic, millions of Americans are struggling to make ends meet and are
at risk for having their electricity, water, and broadband services terminated.
In order to effectively address the concurrent public health and economic
crises, the families you serve must have uninterrupted access to these
essential public services,” wrote the lawmakers.
The letter was also signed by Senators Chris
Van Hollen (D-MD), Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Bernard Sanders (I-VT), Ed Markey (D-MA), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), and
Tina Smith (D-MN).
Full text
of the letter can be found below and here.
Lynn Good
Chief Executive Officer
Duke Energy
Dear Ms. Good:
We write to urge you to suspend all utility
shutoffs until the COVID-19 public health emergency has ended. Because of the
economic devastation wrought by the pandemic, millions of Americans are
struggling to make ends meet and are at risk for having their electricity,
water, and broadband services terminated. In order to effectively address the
concurrent public health and economic crises, the families you serve must have
uninterrupted access to these essential public services.
A staggering number of people – almost 179
million – are at risk of having their electricity shut off.[1] Electric and
gas debts alone may reach as high as $24.3 billion by the end of the year as
many Americans, through no fault of their own, cannot afford to pay even the
most essential of household bills.[2] Minority and low-income families
who have disproportionately borne the brunt of the current economic crisis are
particularly at risk for utility shutoffs.[3] Foreshadowing even
greater hardship, shutoff moratoriums have expired (or were never implemented)
in 33 states, and seven more states have moratoriums that will expire next
month.[4]
Every day more people in our communities become at risk for losing access to
the water they need to wash their hands or the electricity they need to keep
the lights on.
In addition, as millions of children are
forced to learn remotely, the internet, like water and electricity, is an
essential public service. The Constitution guarantees that every child has the
opportunity to access public education. Because of the pandemic, the lack of a
reliable internet connection deprives children of that right. Already, 14
percent of school-age children lack access to an internet connection at home.[5]
Without a moratorium on electricity and broadband disconnections, many more
children, in particular those in minority, low-income, and rural communities,
are at risk of falling behind.[6]
We support legislation that would impose a
federal moratorium on all utility shutoffs and provide federal government
support to utilities for operations as well as customers, in light of declining
utility revenues caused by unemployment, small business shutdowns, and rising poverty.
In the meantime we ask that you proactively cease all shutoffs by your
companies for nonpayment for families dealing with the economic effects of the
COVID-19 pandemic until such time as the President lifts the National Emergency
declaration and the states in which you operate have lifted state emergency
declarations.
It is imperative that Congress have access to
complete data on the effect of the coronavirus pandemic on utility services
provision, in order to protect families and our children’s future. Given the
number of utility companies and patchwork of state regulations, collecting
complete and accurate data is nearly impossible. Therefore, we ask that you
provide the following data so we have a clear understanding of the problem, on
a monthly basis, from January 1, 2020, to date by zip code and type of customer
(residential, commercial, or industrial):
1. Total number of customers;
2. Number of service termination/disconnection notices issued to customers for nonpayment of bills;
3. Number of customers disconnected for nonpayment of bills;
4. Number of service restorations for customers disconnected for nonpayment of bills;
5. Number of customers that became eligible for disconnection due to nonpayment of bills but were not disconnected;
6. Average time in between service disconnection for nonpayment of bills and service restoration;
7. Number of customers in arrears;
8. Total dollar amount and average dollar amount in arrears;
9. Number of accounts and dollar values in arrears by age of arrears (30-60 days, 60-90 days, etc);
10. Average and median monthly bills and standard monthly usage;
11. Monthly total dollar amount of late fees collected;
12. Monthly number of customers that paid late fees;
13. Monthly average late fee charged per customer subject to fees; and
14. A description and utilization statistics on customer assistance programs.
Please confirm receipt of this communication
and provide the expected date(s) of your outreach plan to Jan Singelmann with
Senator Brown’s office at Jan_Singelmann@banking.senate.gov no later than November 13, 2020. Thank you for
your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
###
[1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/10/01/power-water-gas-bills/
[2] https://neada.org/covidarrearagespr/
[3] https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/12/politics/utility-shutoffs-coronavirus/index.html
[4] https://neada.org/utilityshutoffsuspensions/
[5] https://usafacts.org/articles/internet-access-students-at-home/
[6] https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/a-national-crisis-as-coronavirus-forces-many-schools-online-this-fall-millions-of-disconnected-students-are-being-left-behind/2020/08/16/458b04e6-d7f8-11ea-9c3b-dfc394c03988_story.html
Next Article Previous Article