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BPA interim agreement flawed for our customers
Customers face too much risk and not enough rate relief so Rocky Mountain Power cannot accept Residential Exchange Agreement.
Unacceptable risk and virtually no reward to its customers is the reason Rocky Mountain Power will not sign a proposed Residential
Exchange Interim Relief Agreement offered Friday, Feb. 22 by the Bonneville Power Administration. This agreement is an attempt
by the BPA to temporarily restore benefits of the Northwest federal hydropower system to Northwest residential and small farms
customers while BPA undergoes a rate proceeding that will set the level of future benefits.
Utilities had 32 days from Feb. 22 to decide if they will sign the agreement, and at best, benefits for customers could resume
beginning in April. BPA hopes to complete its long-term rate proceeding in the fall
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"While the interim agreement would temporarily restore some level of benefits to customers, it is far from their fair share,"
said Rich Walje, president of Rocky Mountain Power.
BPA's proposed interim benefit for Rocky Mountain Power customers would be a fraction of the previous benefit customers had
received from the Residential Exchange Program until the payments were suspended last spring. The actual net benefit to eligible
customers this year would only amount to a nickel per month of rate relief.
"Customers should receive a benefit from this decision regardless of where they live," said Walje. "The way these interim
benefits are calculated points to a fundamental flaw in the 1980 Northwest Power Act. Customers who are served by a low-cost
utility, such as Rocky Mountain Power, are penalized with reduced benefits from the federal hydropower system. That's not
right, it's not fair, and it's not how the Northwest Power system should work."
Rocky Mountain Power will continue to work on behalf of its customers to restore benefits from the federal hydropower system
to all Northwest families and small farms through the rate case filed by BPA in early February.
"If the law penalizes our customers for being served by a low-cost utility, then something clearly needs to change," said
Walje.
 Since last June, you have been paying more due to the loss of the BPA credit. This is how much more:
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Idaho
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$16.76 per month (25.3%)
based on average monthly usage
of 1,000 kilowatt-hours per month
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This isn’t fair and we are working for a more equitable solution to how we share the benefits of the northwest hydropower
system. As we do this, we know your budget is your primary concern. Here some ways to manage higher bills created by the loss
of the BPA credit:
 You can take advantage of energy efficiency and assistance programs for residential and agricultural customers in Idaho:
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