Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. Photo by John Schreiber.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. Photo by John Schreiber.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said Monday he supports the proposed electricity rate hikes headed for a vote Tuesday by the Board of Water and Power Commissioners.

Garcetti said the increases, which would be implemented over a five-year period, are “critical to modernizing our aging electricity grid and bringing our power system into the 21st century.”

“DWP needs to have the resources to be successful,” he said. “After five years of rate increases, the typical residential customer would see a $6 to $12 increase to their monthly bill. The price of inaction would be much higher than this.”

He added that the rate hikes, if implemented, “does not mean we let up on our efforts to reform the DWP.”

“As the Board of (Water and Power) Commissioners acts and the City Council takes up this important matter, I’ll continue to work on making the DWP more efficient, transparent and prepared to meet the needs of Los Angeles,” he said.

If the Water and Power commissioners sign off tomorrow on the rate hikes, the proposal will be sent — along with proposed water rate hikes that were approved by the board last year — to the City Council and the mayor for consideration.

Garcetti’s backing of the electricity rate increases comes several days after ratepayer advocate Fred Pickel, who leads the Office of Public Accountability tasked with monitoring the Department of Water and Power, issued a report saying the increase is “just and reasonable.”

Garcetti said the rate hike proposal includes regular monitoring to determine if the extra revenue is being used to improve the DWP’s power system, and a formal review after two years.

“These reviews are critical as the utility industry is in a moment of transition and innovation,” Garcetti said.

He noted the DWP is expected to replace 70 percent of its power sources over the next 15 years “to meet state mandates, fight climate change and fund the energy efficiency programs that enable customers to lower their bills even as rates rise.”

Pickel recommended that the board adopt the rate hikes, but also noted that the 21 percent average increase over the next five years — which averages 3.86 percent annually — is “less than what is needed” and the utility’s power system “will continue to be challenged to perform activities at planned levels.”

A typical, single-family household that uses 500 kilowatt-hours per month — putting it in “zone 1” — could see a $12 monthly bill increase after five years, according to the OPA.

Monthly bills for such households would rise from the $76-$78 range to between $80 and $82 after one year, eventually going up to about $90 per month after five years, according to the report.

The rate hikes would mean that DWP power revenue would eventually grow to $4.22 billion in fiscal year 2019-20, up from $3.45 billion in fiscal year 2014-15, according to the OPA’s report.

The OPA report also raised concerns that there would be inadequate staffing “for the growing levels of planned capital project expenditures, in part due to the anticipated personnel retirements and constraints on outsourcing.”

DWP officials said they were “pleased” with Pickel’s assessment of the planned rate hikes, which were proposed to pay for the replacement of aging infrastructure needed to keep electricity service reliable.

The rate hikes — if approved by the DWP board, the City Council and mayor — would “allow us to continue the transformation of our power system to a clean energy future that protects the environment, while complying with regulatory mandates,” according to a statement issued by the utility.

–City News Service

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