California's Latest Tax-the-Rich Scheme: Electric Bills Based on Income
And it undercuts energy efficiency investments already made by millions of Californians.

Electric power customers typically pay more if they use more. Under a new law, customers of California's three largest private utilities will be charged a fixed fee based on their incomes, not just how much power they use. The chief motivation behind this scheme is to provide some relief to low-income customers who are being hammered by escalating electricity rates as the Golden State transitions from fossil fuels to wind and solar power.

The average cost of electricity to residential customers in California is now $0.27 per kilowatt-hour (kWh). The U.S. average is around $0.16 per kWh. The state's three big private utilities are proposing to the California Public Utilities Commission to add Income Graduated Fixed Charges (IGFCs) to all of their residential rate schedules. The idea is to pay for the various fixed costs, including those associated with connecting customers to their grids, billing, and meter reading. In addition, they want the fixed fee to cover "the costs of wildfire mitigation and vegetation management, reliability improvements, safety and risk management distribution costs, ongoing distribution operations and maintenance, many regulatory balancing accounts, and various programs and policy mandates through its distribution rates."

The four income brackets for families of four are divvied up as follows: (1) less than $28,000, (2) $28,000 to $69,000, (3) $69,000 to $180,000, and (4) $180,000 or more. The acronyms CARE and FERA refer to programs that already offer electric power rates discounted by 30 percent to 35 percent and 18 percent, respectively, to lower-income families.
So let's do some rough calculations using the proposed San Diego Gas & Electric rates. First, the average non-CARE monthly electric bill is $156 per month, adding up to $1,872 annually. Under the new scheme, electricity rates would drop from $0.47 to $0.27 per kWh, amounting to a rate cut of about 42 percent. For the lowest income bracket, this would mean that their expense for power consumption would drop to $1,085 annually. Adding $288 in fixed fees cuts their bill to $1,373, a drop of nearly $500 per year.
Let's now assume that higher-income customers use 50 percent more electricity so that their bill averages $234 per month, totaling $2,808 annually. Applying the 42 percent rate cut would mean the amount they pay for the electricity they use would fall to $1,629 annually. However, their monthly fixed fee of $128 adds up to $1,536 annually. This yields a total annual bill of $3,165, or an increase of $30 per month.
Perversely, if a high-income residential customer's monthly electric bill is $400 per month, that is, $4800 annually, the fixed fee scheme ends up lowering their power bills. The new lower rates mean that the expense for their electricity use drops to $2,784. Adding the $1,536 fixed fee brings the new bill's total to $4,320 annually, an annual reduction of nearly $500 for such a high-income customer.

Still, the utilities calculate that the cost of the new fixed rates would be largely borne by the 19 percent of California households earning more than $180,000 per year.
The power companies argue that the lower per kWh rates will encourage people to further electrify their homes and switch to electric vehicles. This would help to address the problem of climate change that is associated with the atmospheric increase of greenhouse gases emitted from the burning of fossil fuels like natural gas.
However, under the current rate structure, prices escalate as customers use more electricity, thus strongly encouraging residents to conserve. In fact, California ranks number 50 out of 51 U.S. jurisdictions in residential energy consumption. The lower flat rate per kWh under the new proposal will significantly reduce the incentive for customers to conserve energy, thus hampering the state government's goal of cutting greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, the rising demand for electricity will stress the state's already shaky power grid even more, possibly resulting in more brownouts and blackouts.
In addition, the value of the investments in energy efficiency already made by millions of Californians will be undercut. For example, consider a high income customer who has put in better insulation, bought energy-sparing appliances, or even installed a solar energy system and thereby cut his monthly electric bill to $50 per month. His cost for electricity is now $600 annually. The 42 percent cut in his rates lowers that to $348 per year, but the total fixed fee is $1,536. That results in more than tripling his bill to $1,884 annually.*
One further consideration: How would power companies keep track of the incomes of their customers? The utility companies want the state government to supply them with that information. But transferring and protecting such information would be a bureaucratic nightmare fraught with significant privacy concerns.
As a final note, California's confiscatory tax rates are driving many high-income residents out of the state. This new income-based fixed electricity rates proposal will add to that impetus since it largely functions as just another tax aimed at already fed up high-income earners.
*CORRECTION: The original version of this piece miscalculated the annual cost of electricity in this hypothetical case and the ultimate consequences for his bill.
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California is a cancer on the nation.
California: Being Retarded And Forcing It On the Rest Of Us.
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I guess California has way too many "rich" people these days since they appear so eager to get rid of as many as possible as quickly as possible. Maybe that will drive down the value or real estate far enough for houses to be affordable on a homeless person's salary.
They want to tax people even after they leave the state though.
For the people who are actually rich by CA standards (actual "1%"ers are effectively middle class in may parts of the state), nothing about this power billing concept will be enough money to "move the needle".
Based on those income levels for the four "brackets", it's hard to imagine that anyone in "Bracket 1" actually has a fixed address or an account with any utility company; $28k/year isn't even enough to allow someone to sleep on the street in L.A. or SF. Anyone in "Bracket 2" will be living with multiple roommates in any 1BR or larger apartment in any major city unless they've been in the same rent controlled place for 10-15 years. In L.A. a good portion of people in "Bracket 3" can't afford the rent on a median-priced apartment, and in S.F. half the range of that bracket is still below the real "poverty line" (based on local cost of living instead of national averages).
The people who will really be hurt by this plan are the ones in the upper tiers of Bracket 3 and lower Bracket 4 who make up what passes for a "middle class" or entry-level homeowners in the major high-cost cities in the State.
Since the only current "backup" power supply in the state is from NatGas fired steam plants, the new plan's disincentives for conservation combined with the snail's pace that state/federal regulation is imposing on the build-out of new "green" sources and transmission infrastructure, any resulting spike in power demand will lead to direct increases in CO2 emissions despite the mandates that CA electricity come from non-emitting sources.
I don't know where this bullcrap comes from. I live in the Sierras and My June PG&E bill was at $0.42 (off-peak) and $0.51 (peak), and baseline credit of $0.08. I am well under the baseline allowance, making my prices $0.34 and $0.43. Nowhere near that mythical $0.27.
But then I see this
and this
And think this article needs some clarifying edits.
Edits? What edits? We don’t need no stinking edits!
You are correct. My bill is similar rate. Southern California, Coastal. Also, we have a shitload of fixed fees. Tiny house, lit with 7 watt bulbs, no AC, no Heat, so the only thing using power is my computer. Last month was $175.
And it's all over the fucking place, too. Constantly going up, but in November and December we got a massive spike, my bill was 170% what it was the year before even though I'd used about 85% as much.
All they're doing is hiding the fact that State policy has fucked up the market. Renewables are expensive and unreliable.
The Bullshit here mirrors the Democrats in Sacramento larping Progressive:
The power companies argue that the lower per kWh rates will encourage people to further electrify their homes and switch to electric vehicles. This would help to address the problem of climate change that is associated with the atmospheric increase of greenhouse gases emitted from the burning of fossil fuels like natural gas.
My cooking dinner five or six nights a week is not what's causing climate change.
They're just trying to out progressive one another because the loudest voice in their ear is San Francisco, and they have no Republican minority or Republican, or even old-school liberal, check in the Governor's chair. It has become religious with them, practicality be damned. But the utils, who KNOW otherwise, can pull this climate change shit out of their ass knowing Sacramento won't call them on it.
Here it is. Standard electric rates are 45 cents below baseline, 57 cents above:
https://www.sdge.com/sites/default/files/regulatory/1-1-23%20Schedule%20DR%20Total%20Rates%20Table.pdf
"And think this article needs some clarifying edits."
The editing of Reason is horrible. KMW has obviously lost the passion for this rag, and she is just riding it out until someone finally gives her the heave ho. If anyone on the board of directors actually read this site on a regular basis, they would have done it at least a year ago.
For example, consider a customer who has put in better insulation, bought energy-sparing appliances, or even installed a solar energy system and thereby cut his monthly electric bill to $50 per month. His annual cost for electricity is now $1,200 per month. The 42 percent cut in his rates lowers that to $700 per year, but the total fixed fee is $1,536. That results in nearly doubling his bill to $2,326 annually.
Ron- you want to take a look at this and make some changes for clarity/accuracy
Yep. Hasty error on my part. Have made the correction. Thank you very much for tabbing it.
I should also add that the title needs some editing.
Half of the "poor" in CA would be at least middle class in most other states. People who need a roommate to afford a 1BR apartment in L.A. and would need a 40% raise to be within sight of the poverty line in the Bay Area could afford to be homeowners on the same annual income if they lived in Kansas, or even parts of Texas and Florida.
This is but a needle story.
The REAL story is Gov-Gun monopolized energy..
Nazi's aren't that stupid; they do know exactly what resources to monopolize (most needed) in their enslavement camp pipe-dream.
I eagerly await the announcement that Reason is leaving California.
... y'all are high-income residents, right? I mean, if you're not, why am I taking fiscal advice from you?
They voted for it.
I already know math is racist; it looks like reviewing articles before publication is about to become racist.
This was like a month ago. Sidelined by covid again Bailey?
Who gets the refunds during the brownouts?
This is clearly idiotic - and, if I read this correctly, may encourage greater use by people with a high average cost, as the marginal cost of further use will be somewhat lower than that average.
Standard democrat policy. See Biden home loan changes. Maybe you people will rethink your strategic votes.
Hah, you're funny, Jesse.
Maybe when the preacher says God is Good the choir won't respond "Amen".
Ahem... "All the time"
I wonder if it would be legal to impose a "Democrat" tax?
So... tax everyone in California? How is that targeted?
Simply, if you are a registered, you have to pay more money to the IRS.
The rich who remain in California may complain about the taxes and now electric bills, but most are happy to for the privilege of living in a carbon-free, gun-free, tobacco-free utopia where they can get abortions and their kids can get gender-affirming care whenever they want.
Works for me. I am 100% OK with California being 5% ultra rich (and/or political class) and 95% illegals, groomers, homeless, addicts, and crazies.
Let's see how long that works.
To repeat the old phrase that “socialism works until you run out of other people’s money”. California will continue to function as a dysfunctional state so long as the ultra wealthy 5% political class stay there, and they seem perfectly happy to. Better that I guess than they leave and bring their ideas to other states.
And for the record, the rich really don’t give a shit about utility bills-they just pay them. The exception being small business owners who have to report their earnings as income.
Josh Hawley, who's literally worse than Ron DeSantis, who's literally worse than Trump, who's literally worse than Hitler, questions FBI officials who admits document about Biden receiving $5 million in bribes exists... after denying the document existed.
What happened to the "pay what you are comfortable with" model that works so well at drug stores and department stores in California?
This creates a strong incentive for anyone who sprung for solar power to tell PGE to get fucked and go off-grid.
-jcr
What happened to the “pay what you are comfortable with” model that works so well at drug stores and department stores in California?
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
The fallacy is that government employees and politicians represent taxpayers. They don't, they represent donors, lobbyists, and non-paying voters.
i.e. The one's who STEAL with Gov-Guns for their livings.
Which always happens once the THEFT premise has been started. (i.e. Socialist/Communist systems).
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