Bill could grant Florida Public Service Commission more power, less accountability | Opinion

Floridians are struggling with skyrocketing energy bills. The implications for energy justice and our climate are enormous. Newly introduced legislation could make it all worse.

House Bill 229, filed by state Rep. Bobby Payne (R-Palatka), proposes tweaking the structure of Florida’s Public Service Commission. The PSC is the agency in charge of deciding how much utility corporations charge Floridians for their energy.

The bill removes specific time-bound designations, thus allowing the PSC to operate year-over-year without seeking re-approval each fiscal year, and removes a check on PSC rulemaking. If passed, HB 229 could lead to less public oversight of the commission’s decisions, increasing the energy burden for millions and greasing the wheels for more fossil fuel use.

Energy burden — the percentage of one’s income that is used for energy bills — is a critical component of energy justice and a way of measuring equity in the clean energy transition away from fossil fuels. In Miami, one in four low-income households has an energy burden above 11%, more than 3.5 times higher than the national average.

Increased oversight of the PSC is necessary to protect Floridians struggling with high energy burden — HB 229 takes us in the wrong direction.

Rising bills are directly connected to rising seas. Climate-killing fracked gas makes up a staggering 74% of Florida’s energy mix. For profit, utility corporations pass off their infrastructure and fuel costs to Florida residents and businesses, who have very little opportunity to weigh in on the energy choices these utilities make. HB 229 has the potential to remove annual fiscal review and oversight of PSC rulemaking and threatens to increase barriers to public participation, stifling much-needed action to move off fossil fuels.

The PSC has historically worked in the interest of investor-owned utilities, giving into corporate greed at the expense of Floridians. The language of the bill and its implications are murky; while the language of the bill implies less oversight of how the PSC internally governs itself, there’s the possibility that the exemptions could prevent advocacy, providing the PSC with more avenues to avoid transparency.

The lobbyists behind the bill also represent the biggest players in Florida power companies: four from TECO, three from Florida Power & Light, and two from Peoples Gas System. Given the ceaseless corporate requests for higher energy rates, any bill backed by our investor-owned utilities warrants heightened scrutiny.

Unfortunately, legislation like this is business-as-usual in Tallahassee. The past few years have seen an onslaught of pro-utility bills pass the state Legislature.

Meanwhile, the PSC has become a rubber stamp for utility-requested rate increases, awarding, for instance, FPL a $4.868 billion rate increase in 2021. Although the courts have ordered the PSC to use due diligence in future cases, the body is still under the supervision and control of utility-friendly Gov. Ron DeSantis and his super-majority state Legislature.

In the absence of state leadership, grassroots groups throughout the state have been turning to local governments to alleviate the energy burden. In response to activist pressure, the city of Tampa released a Climate Action and Equity Plan that draws a clear line between eliminating fossil fuels and reducing energy burden.

Activism is turning the tide. As we continue to build grassroots pressure, we are ultimately building the political power to fight legislation in Tallahassee like HB 229 that strengthens the utility stranglehold on energy justice and climate progress. Floridians are prepared to fight.

Dr. Chelsea Rivera is a policy organizer at Central Florida Jobs with Justice and a member of the Florida Climate Equity Cohort. Brooke Ward is senior Florida organizer with Food & Water Watch. This opinion piece was distributed by The Invading Sea (www.theinvadingsea.com).

Rivera ©ALASMedia
Rivera ©ALASMedia
Ward
Ward