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Tag Archives: Ontario budget

Ontario budget: ratepayers will pay and pay and pay

28 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Charles Sousa, electricity bills Ontario, hydro bills Ontario, Kathleen Wynne, Ontario, Ontario budget, Ontario budget 2015, Ontario deficit, Ontario economy

Reposted from Wind Concerns Ontario

Ontario ratepayers on the hook for Ontario deficit

Ontario on the brink of the financial abyss--with electricity ratepayers on the hook for millions
Ontario on the brink of the financial abyss–with electricity ratepayers on the hook for millions [Photo: the whirlpool in Niagara Gorge]

“Building Ontario Up”…to a huge disappointment

A letter directed to Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli, dated April 1, 2015, suggesting how he might stop the climb in electricity prices remains unanswered.

The budget preview posted on the WCO site April 19, 2015, however, has been verified.  The Ontario Budget, “Building Ontario Up,” released by Finance Minister Sousa April 23, 2015 has lots of bad news for Ontario ratepayers.

Prior to the release of the budget, Sousa released a 191-page report: “Ontario’s Long-Term Report on the Economy,” which got no media attention.  The report speaks to the wonders of how the current government plans for Ontario’s future will look, but with a caveat:  “It is beyond the scope of projections of this nature to quantify the risks of global political disruptions, extreme weather due to climate change, major health emergencies such as pandemics, disruptive technologies or an increase in international conflicts. Any of these factors, in addition to other unforeseen risks, could significantly impact the long-term outlook for the Ontario economy.”

With respect to electricity, it had this to say: “This will mean pursuing lower-cost options to meet energy needs when and where they are needed and other initiatives to reduce the cost increases in electricity now and in the future. Compared to the previous plan, the 2013 LTEP is expected to reduce projected cost increases by a cumulative $16 billion in the near term (2013–17), and $70 billion by 2030.”

The take-away from the lack of a response from Energy Minister, Bob Chiarelli is that the Liberal agenda, as it relates to the electricity sector, is written in stone and ratepayers are now regarded as a “revenue tool.”  Ratepayers are needed to pay for the agenda, to help balance the budget, and eliminate the deficit, despite the dishonest comment in the preceding quote.

The budget confirmed most of the preview forecast and included areas that extracts after-tax ratepayer dollars, despite the rhetoric in the “Long-Term Report on the Economy.” Non-budget Items, Reduced Spending and Increased Revenue from Ratepayers are three categories reviewed as follows.

►Non-budget Items affecting ratepayers

The budget claims the province is making “investments” falsely by extracting monies from ratepayers as the following quote about the “Northern Industrial Electricity Rate Program” (NIER) notes: “the government is committing to ongoing support for northern industrial facilities beyond March 2016, with continued investment of up to $120 million annually.”

The $120 million referenced will be paid by ratepayers, not taxpayers. It’s just one example.  The rest include: the newly announced Ontario Electricity Support Program (OESP) for “low-income” households of $225 million (see below under “Reduced Spending”); the Class A to Class B shift for industrial consumers with peak demand of 3 Megawatts costing an estimated $200 million; the recently approved rate increase by the Ontario Energy Board for the OPG which increased electricity costs $600 million; and the anticipated increases in delivery charges for LDC (local distribution companies) of $600 million.  Collectively the foregoing represent over $1.7 billion. This additional cost to ratepayers attracts the Ontario Portion of the HST (see below under “Increased Revenue”).

►Reduced Spending

The Ontario Clean Energy Benefit will officially end December 31, 2015 meaning the forecast in the budget reduces this cost by $220 million; it will be followed in the next budget by a further reduction of $900 million.  This reduced spending will than be paid fully by ratepayers and include the HST, raising costs another $145 million putting $90 million into Ontario’s sales tax revenue slot. The budget also shows a cut of $243 million in “Social Service” spending reflecting the advent of the OESP.  Total reduced spending next year will be $450 million and in two years, will be reduced by $1.4 billion!

►Increased Revenue from ratepayers

The budget anticipates increased Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PIL) of $315 million. That means the province is anticipating huge profits being generated by LDC that will be directly taken from ratepayers’ pockets.   In addition, the province’s portion of “sales tax” (forecast to increase $1.2 billion) on HST revenues will produce another $160 million for the 2015/16 year and in excess of $230 million in 2016/17.  Increased Revenue will be $550 million.

Eliminating the double counting on LDC revenue (PIL of $315 versus forecast “Non-budget Item” of $600 million) and “Social Service” spending ($243 million) will saddle ratepayers with costs in excess of $2.1 billion for budget year 2015/16 and $3.1 billion the following year—that’s without including the costs of the additional industrial wind and solar generation now in the contracting process!

In short

The ratepayers in Ontario should be grateful the reduction in those “projected cost increases by a cumulative $16 billion in the near term (2013–17), and $70 billion by 2030” have been tackled by our incumbent government, or the excesses we have seen, past, present and future from the proliferation of industrial wind turbines and solar panels, would have driven all industry from Ontario and have us freezing in the dark and unable to buy groceries.

As it is, the budget claims:  “Ontario remains the leading destination in North America for FDI” (Foreign Direct Investment). That particular claim fails to mention that as much as $25 billion of the “FDI” came from foreign companies rushing to Ontario to sign those lucrative ratepayer-backed wind and solar contracts, guaranteeing them 20 years of subsidies!

The current Liberal government has brought Ontario to the brink of the whirlpool. Unless they change their push for more wind and solar generation “Athens-on-the-lake” (a.k.a. Queen’s Park) and  Ontario will be sucked into the abyss.

©Parker Gallant

April 25, 2015

The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily represent Wind Concerns Ontario policy

Where is Ontario getting money for the deficit? Out of your pocket

24 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bob Chiarelli, hydro rates Ontario, Ontario budget, Ontario deficit, Ontario electricity rates, Ontario Energy Board, Parker Gallant

New rate increase removes $635 million from electricity customers’ pockets

Ontario now has highest electricity bills in Canada

Ontario’s Minister of Energy Bob Chiarelli in a press release of March 26, 2015 announced the end of the Debt Retirement Charge December 31, 2015. In the “Quick Facts” of the release stated: “Removing the Debt Retirement Charge will save the typical residential electricity ratepayer $5.60 per month.”

Less than a month later the Ontario Energy Board (OEB) issued their semi-annual rate setting letter for the upcoming six months of May 1st to November 30th; it was full of continuing bad news for households and small businesses.   The OEB told us effective May 1st, our electricity bill would increase $5.71 a month.  So much for that savings of $5.60 a month!

Written to assuage the reader, the OEB’s letter pretends to be what it isn’t.  Rates are going up substantially and while the letter states monthly increases for the “average” consumer will be 4.6% or $5.71 per month, on the Electricity, line the truth is more daunting.  The rate increases should be annualized, but they aren’t.  If they were, the additional $70 annual increase suggested would be $143.

Off-peak rates are up 6.7% or about four times the inflation rate and the On-peak rate jumps up over 19% per annum.

By increasing on-peak rates by 19%, the OEB suggests the “ratio” shift to 2:1 between on-and off-peak prices “will benefit customers who shift their use to the cheapest time period.”  In another document the OEB released they say that about two-thirds of consumption is already in the off-peak period leaving the consumption split between mid and on-peak at 17% each.

So small businesses operating during on-peak periods, seniors living on fixed incomes, people with disabilities, the unemployed, and stay-at-home parents are locked into paying 16.1 cents per kilowatt hour.   Those who can least afford high rates are the ones expected to shoulder the burden.  This increase will simply add to the 570,000 households Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli admits are currently living in “energy poverty” in Ontario.

If one annualized the rate increases as it applies to “average” households and small businesses, the electricity sector will take approximately $635 million more from ratepayers’ pockets in pre-tax (small businesses) and after-tax dollars (households) in the next 12 months.  They will extract $281 million from on-peak, $134 million from mid-peak and $220 million from off-peak consumption from “average” ratepayers based on 4.5 million residential and small business ratepayers.

Ontario can now claim to be the highest cost electricity market in Canada, and rivals all but three or four of the U.S. states such as California, Alaska and Hawaii.

The Liberals can claim we are “green” but that green is supporting foreign investors enjoying the benefits of ratepayer dollars flowing into their pockets for wind and solar contracts obtained from the OPA under the direction of past and present Liberal Ministers of Energy.

Ontario: now “a place to groan.” No shifting of consumption will ease the burden or stop inflation of our electricity bills.

©Parker Gallant, April 21, 2015

The views expressed are those of the author and do not represent Wind Concerns Ontario policy.

Parker’s Calculations

May 2015  electricity consumer prices vs May 2014

Consumption is based on 66% off-peak, 17% mid-peak, 17% on-peak

TOU Consumption kWh Rates/kWh/cents 2015 costs $ 2014 costs $ Increase $
Off-peak 6,336 8.0 506.88 456.19 50
Mid-peak 1,632 12.2 199.10 169.73 30
On-peak 1,632 16.1 262.75 199.10 63
TOTAL 9,600 968.73 825.02 143

Liberal ex-Finance Minister warned of debt crisis

11 Sunday May 2014

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Charles Sousa, debt levels, Dwight Duncan, election Ontario 2014, Kathleen Wynne, Ontario budget, Ontario debt crisis, Ontario Finance Minister, Scott Stinson, Tim Hudak

This is a re-publish from The National Post.

Former Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan  went on an anti-debt crusade in his last months at the legislature.

by Scott Stinson, The National Post, May 10, 2014

ANALYSIS

The week before Charles Sousa tabled the Ontario budget that failed to pass, triggering a provincial election, the man who preceded him as Ontario Finance Minister came to Queen’s Park with a warning.

“Ontario is faced with a staggering debt,” Dwight Duncan said, and he called for public services to be contracted out. Government, he said, would have to “fundamentally re-evaluate its role.”

It didn’t escape notice that his warning was akin to a Kardashian tut-tutting someone about overexposure: Ontario’s debt rose from $154-billion to $281-billion during Mr. Duncan’s own time as Finance Minister. But he had warned about debt issues, he said, before he left office.

That much is true. Seemingly emboldened by the fact that it wasn’t his problem to solve anymore, Mr. Duncan went on an anti-debt crusade in his last months at the legislature. Given the province’s debt levels, he said in January, 2013, low interest rates were a “ticking time bomb.” He warned contenders for the Liberal leadership that spending cuts would have to be doubled if the government was still going to reach a balanced budget by 2017-18.

Kathleen Wynne won that race, of course. There is little indication she was listening.

The 2014 budget fattened the deficit, leaving Ontario with an annual hole of $12.5-billion this fiscal year. Total debt is now forecast to reach almost $338-billion by 2016-17.

It is a staggering number. But perhaps just as surprising has been the Liberals’ disinclination to do anything too rash in trying to reduce it.

Consider that the generally accepted blueprint for disastrous economic management was provided by the Bob Rae NDP government of the early 1990s. In 1993, a deficit that was anticipated to be around $10-billion came in closer to $12-billion.

…

 

Read the full story here.

Election goal: unseat Ontario’s Minister of Energy

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bob Chiarelli, election 2014, electricity bills Ontario, Liberal energy minister Bob Chiarelli, Ontario budget, Ottawa Citizen city hall columnist Randall Denley, Ottawa West-Nepean, Progressive Conservatives, Randall Denley

Ottawa West-Nepean candidates are familiar rivals

Bob Chiarelli faces off against Randall Denley and Alex Cullen

CBC News Posted: May 06, 2014 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: May 06, 2014 2:57 PM ET

NDP candidate Alex Cullen, left, and Progressive Conservative Randall Denley, right, are both familiar foes of current MPP and Liberal energy minister Bob Chiarelli, centre.

Residents in Ottawa West-Nepean could be forgiven for forgetting which election they were voting in when they cast their ballots on June 12, as three men equally known for their roles in municipal politics battle in the Ontario riding.

Related links:

  • Complete coverage of Ontario Votes 2014
  • Ottawa West Nepean riding profile
  • View results from riding in 2011 election

Former mayor and current Liberal energy minister Bob Chiarelli again faces off against former Ottawa Citizen city hall columnist Randall Denley, the candidate for the Progressive Conservatives he beat in 2011. Joining them in the race this time is another familiar face from city hall: former Bay Ward councillor Alex Cullen, who is representing the New Democratic Party.

But all three candidates say their campaigns will be focused firmly on the issues today facing the province and the riding.

Chiarelli to campaign on budget

Chiarelli said he and his party will campaign on their recently released budget, which both the NDP and Progressive Conservatives said they would not support.

The budget called for the province to spend $130 billion over a 10-year period, another $11.4 billion on hospital expansion and laid out plans to establish an Ontario Retirement Pension Plan.

After NDP leader Andrea Horwath said she had lost confidence in the minority government of Kathleen Wynne and signalled she would not support the budget, Wynne went to Lt.-Gov. David Onley to dissolve the legislature, triggering the election.

Denley, who lost to Chiarelli by just over 1,000 votes in the 2011 election, said people he’s spoken with this weekend are most concerned about their high power bills.

“Of course I’m running against the energy minister, and people understand that and they’re not very happy with it,” said Denley.

…

Read the full story here.

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