{"id":41861,"date":"2024-11-19T16:57:26","date_gmt":"2024-11-19T22:57:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.citizensutilityboard.org\/?p=41861"},"modified":"2024-11-20T15:26:40","modified_gmt":"2024-11-20T21:26:40","slug":"news-release-cub-urges-icc-to-cut-comed-rate-hike","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.citizensutilityboard.org\/blog\/2024\/11\/19\/news-release-cub-urges-icc-to-cut-comed-rate-hike\/","title":{"rendered":"News release: CUB urges ICC to cut ComEd rate hike"},"content":{"rendered":"

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As CUB prepared to argue that state regulators should cut Commonwealth Edison\u2019s $678 million rate-hike request, the consumer group has identified hundreds of\u00a0millions of dollars in excessive spending proposed by Illinois\u2019 largest electric utility. (Read the full CUB news release from Tuesday, Nov. 19.<\/strong><\/a>)<\/p>\n

\u201cWe urge the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) to remove wasteful and improper spending by ComEd in its multi-year rate plan,\u201d CUB Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz said. \u201cIllinois\u2019 largest electric utility is required by law to prove that its grid plan is affordable\u2014they don\u2019t get a blank check.\u201d<\/p>\n

Oral arguments in the ComEd rate case (Docket 24-0181) were scheduled for Tuesday morning, Nov. 19 (CUB General Counsel Eric DeBellis participated.) The ICC\u2019s final order in the case is expected Dec. 5.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s the latest in what has been a sometimes dramatic series of developments for ComEd in recent years before the ICC. In 2022, after an investigation sparked by the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), the ICC ordered ComEd to pay a $38 million fine in connection with its corruption scandal. (ComEd was fined $200 million by federal authorities in 2020, after admitting to a bribery scheme to pass legislation that implemented a \u201cformula rate\u201d system and hundreds of millions of dollars in rate hikes over a decade.)<\/p>\n

CEJA, the groundbreaking clean energy legislation passed in 2021, scrapped the old formula rates, and implemented a new system in which ComEd proposed a four-year plan for investing in the grid. The utility has to prove that the plan would be affordable and beneficial to customers.<\/p>\n

Last December, the ICC rejected the utility\u2019s first proposed grid plan for, among other things, failing to prove affordability, and slashed its proposed four-year rate hike. Earlier this year,\u00a0ComEd\u00a0refiled its grid plan and proposed a less enormous, but still significant, series of rate hikes through 2027.<\/p>\n

Over the course of the case (Docket 24-0181), the proposed rate hike has been adjusted, and it now stands at about $678.1 million, according to a recent ComEd filing. State regulatory judges in October issued a Proposed Order recommending a total rate hike of about $648.6 million. This is on top of $506 million in higher rates the ICC approved last December, regarding issues regulators considered separately. Put together, ComEd\u2019s annual rates would increase by about $1 billion.<\/p>\n

In expert testimony filed this past summer, CUB recommended the ICC reduce ComEd\u2019s rate hike by at least $89 million, and reject hundreds of millions of dollars more in wasteful or improper spending ComEd planned to recover in decades to come. A summary of key parts of CUB\u2019s testimony:<\/p>\n