• City Hall
  • Province House
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Investigation
  • Journalism
  • Commentary
  • PRICED OUT
  • @Tim_Bousquet
  • Log In

Halifax Examiner

An independent, adversarial news site in Halifax, NS

  • Home
  • About
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Commenting policy
  • Archives
  • Contact us
  • Subscribe
    • Gift Subscriptions
  • Donate
  • Swag
  • Manage your account
You are here:Home / Commentary /Nova Scotia Power: the Houston government says ‘no option is off the table’

Nova Scotia Power: the Houston government says ‘no option is off the table’

The best option would be to make the private utility public again. But don't bet that will be on the table.

February 6, 2022ByStephen Kimber3 Comments

唐尼卡梅伦指责。

During the early 1990s, Donald William Cameron became the unelected, less than one-term premier of Nova Scotia. In 1991, Cameron replaced disgraced Progressive Conservative Premier John Buchanan, who abruptly quit in the middle of more simultaneous scandals than I can even remember to take a Senate sinecure in Ottawa. In his first general election as leader just over two years later, Cameron led his party to an ignominious defeat at the hands of Liberal John Savage.

Cameron’s political career is remembered for only a few things.

The first, and worst, of course, is the Westray Mine disaster. As the local MLA and minister of development, he had championed the project and lobbied for massive government subsidies to make it happen, despite widespread safety concerns about both the mine and its operator. On May 9, 1992, a methane gas explosion killed 26 Westray miners.

Cameron, who died last year, is also remembered, and mostly for the better, as the dour Pictou County dairy farm boy — “I went to school and went home and did my chores. I never took part in sports or anything,”he told the Canadian Press in 1991— who grew up to become a parsimonious public crusader against political patronage. He reduced the size of the cabinet, sold off the government’s private plane and forced his ministers to fly economy, not to forget he paid for his own lunches. More substantively, he helped change the appointment process for judges to make it less political and established a non-partisan electoral boundaries commission.

All good. But then, on the night his government was defeated, Cameron huffily resigned both his party leadership and his job as MLA. A month later, he plucked his own plum from the Brian Mulroney patronage tree, accepting a juicy appointment as Canadian consul general in Boston.

Oh, yes, and then there is this for which we also remember him: Donald Cameron was the premier who privatized Nova Scotia Power and created a mess we’re still dealing with today.

A fiscal conservative who campaigned for his party’s leadership on a promise to reduce the province’s debt and deficit, he considered the public utility low-hanging fruit.

In April 1992, 14 months after he was chosen premier by his fellow Tories and 13 months before his government was defeated by his fellow Nova Scotians, Cameron peddled the public utility to private enterprise, despite the fact no one in his government had bothered to do a cost-benefit analysis of the deal.

“It’s just something I believe in,” the Tory-appointed president of the power company told a legislative committee at the time.

An aside. Twenty years before, in 1971, Gerald Regan’s new Liberal government outraged the province’s business community by nationalizing privately owned Nova Scotia Light & Power and folding it in with the much smaller publicly owned Nova Scotia Power Commission. Regan’s goal wasn’t ideological; he saw creating a single utility as part of a larger project to upgrade the province’s power grid. And his government’s decision at the time actually brought Nova Scotia into step with the rest of Canada where 90% of Canadians were served already by public utilities. Until, of course, Cameron reversed Regan’s nationalization without much concern for the long-term consequences.

One more aside. One of the unintended consequences of Regan’s decision to nationalize the power company was that it turned a Halifax stockbroker named Donald Ripley into an implacable enemy who vowed to “devote my life to kicking Gerry Regan out of office.” Ripley did more than that. More than 20 years later, Ripley went to the RCMP and triggered the investigation that would lead to Regan’s 1998 trial for serial sexual assaults.

But that’s another story.

Back to the 1992 future. Donald Cameron’s government re-privatized Nova Scotia Power, selling off the utility for what was touted at the time to be $192 million but was later calculated as a net loss of $108 million “since the combined equity of NSPC was in the vicinity of $300 million.” Noted the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives in a 2012 analysis:

Thus, the initial transaction established an ongoing template: the public interest taken to the cleaners [for the benefit] of private profit. And indeed, since then, NSPI has grown fat at the taxpayer’s expense, generating more than $2 billion in profits for its shareholders.

Things haven’t gotten better since 2012 — except, of course, for those shareholders.

NSPI — now owned by its own bastard spawn, Emera — is a private monopoly with a guaranteed rate of return it is constantly angling to increase. Its executives’ more than generous salaries are frequently topped up with even more generous bonuses, apparently for goosing up shareholder value while skimping on customer service, maintenance and infrastructure renewal.

Late last month, Nova Scotia Powersubmitted an applicationto the Nova Scotia Utilities and Review Board for what amounts to a 10% rate increase over three years. Its 3,152-page application contained a cornucopia of buried shareholder treats that are only now beginning to be uncovered.

Allnovascotia.com’s例如,吉莉安Cormier报道,巴勒斯坦权力机构ge 80 of its application, the utility asks for “two changes to its profit-earning mechanism.

The first is to expand its allowable earnings band from 8.75 per cent to 9.25 per cent, to 8.5 per cent to 9.5 per cent, giving it an additional 0.25 per cent of potential upside.

The second change is a proposal that would allow it to earn above this fixed amount — so long as it splits that amount with its customers…

Previously, that money went back to customers.

然后是它的提议ed new “storm recovery charge” to cover any costs incurred to turn the lights back on after storms. As my colleague,Jennifer Henderson noted:

Nova Scotia Power is asking customers to cover every imaginable cost attached to storm preparation, clean up, and restoration separate and above what is currently covered through the monthly power bill.

“所有非资本准备、响应和备份文件夹ation related costs associated with Level 3 and Level 4 storms will be eligible for inclusion in the Storm Rider, including (1) storm preparedness including crew staging and related logistical expenses; (2) incremental NSPI wages, benefits, and overtime pay related to storm recovery; (3) costs of external service providers and mutual aid utilities hired by the Company during restoration efforts; (4) materials and supplies used to repair damaged assets and any associated expenses; (5) other recoverable expenses, including extra costs for temporary repairs and to expedite the permanent repair of damaged property and expenses incurred for providing services to customers whose electric service has been interrupted.”

Service interruptions?

Let us count. Last Thursday (February 3), there was what Nova Scotia Power unhelpfully described as a “transmission interruption” that closed more than a dozen schools and cut off power to more than 24,000 customers from Dartmouth to Eastern Passage and North Preston. That same day, 2,300 customers in the Lake Charles area lost their electricity because of “salt contamination.” And then of course power crews began to mobilize for an actual winter storm while NSP’s accountants sharpened their pencils.

(周六上午9点后不久,新苏格兰人ia Power reported 694 outages affecting 52,794 customers. New Brunswick, by contrast, reported five outages with 14 customers in the dark. Although the impact of this storm was different in each province, the outage results seem to follow a predictable pattern.)

Perhaps, instead of charging us to restore power, the Utility Review Board should reduce NSP’s guaranteed rate of return for every power interruption. That would get shareholders’ attention!

Meanwhile, to undermine potential competition from those who install solar energy for their homes, Nova Scotia Power also applied tocharge customers for selling their excess power back to the grid, a move experts said would — perhaps not coincidentally — decimate the province’s nascent solar power industry.

That finally brought new Premier Tim Houston, whose party supports solar energy, into the fray. Donning the cloak of Consumer Protector, hewrote a letter to the province’s Utility and Review Board, telling it not to waste its time considering NSP’s solar power provision. Instead, he said the province “plans to quickly bring into effect the necessary legislative and regulatory framework” to scuttle the utility’s solar power grab in order to “support the greening of the grid, not discourage it.”

In response, Nova Scotia Power withdrew its solar provisions. For now.

As for other aspects of Nova Scotia Power’s application, Houston told reporters, “no option is off the table… It’s time to look at every aspect of the relationship between Nova Scotians and Nova Scotia Power.”

It would be nice if “no option off the table” included the possibility of making Nova Scotia Power a for-the -public public utility again.

Don’t hold your breath.


Subscribe to the Halifax Examiner


We have many othersubscription options available, or drop usa donation. Thanks!

Filed Under:Commentary,Environment,Featured,Province HouseTagged With:electricity rates,Nova Scotia Power,Premier Tim Houston,solar energy

Comments

  1. Velsays

    February 6, 2022 at 3:14 pm

    “Perhaps, instead of charging us to restore power, the Utility Review Board should reduce NSP’s guaranteed rate of return for every power interruption. That would get shareholders’ attention!”

    I like this suggestion!

    “It would be nice if “no option off the table” included the possibility of making Nova Scotia Power a for-the -public public utility again.”

    I somehow doubt this will happen anytime soon, but it would be nice, wouldn’t it?

    Thanks for the excellent article. I learned a lot that I didn’t know before. As someone living on a fixed income, I’m following this issue closely because just a few dollars difference in my power bill has a big impact on my budget.

    Log in to Reply
  2. Colin Maysays

    February 6, 2022 at 3:57 pm

    If you don’t understand the weather in Nova Scotia it may be best to stay away from any essays/comments regarding power outages. Nova Scotia weather is hard to predict and possibly the most unique climate in the world.

    Log in to Reply
  3. Eric Wagnersays

    February 6, 2022 at 5:36 pm

    What a mess this Emera and NS Power setup has been since the start.

    Log in to Reply

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

You must belogged into post a comment.

PRICED OUT

A collage of various housing options in HRM, including co-ops, apartment buildings, shelters, and tents
PRICED OUT is the Examiner’s investigative reporting project focused on the housing crisis.

You can learn about the project, including how we’re asking readers to direct our reporting, our published articles, and what we’re working on, on thePRICED OUT homepage.

The Tideline, with Tara Thorne

The Tideline logo, which is white hand drawn text reading
Episode 65 of The Tideline, with Tara Thorne, is published.

Here at the top of February things are normal: It’s freezing, the sidewalks are a mess, and Nova Scotia Power wants to hike the rates. Neil Young threw a big punch at Spotify that actually landed, but was it for the right reasons? (Spoiler alert: LOL.) No one can stop talking about Euphoria, the HBO show that single-handedly revived a dead film stock and set a record for non-pornographic full-frontal male nudity — that also happens to be made by the son of an Oscar-winning producer and director (it’s always the hardest-working ones who succeed.) W. Kamau Bell bravely waded into The Discourse with his searing, can’t-miss series We Need To Talk About Cosby, and in our only bit of joy news, Mitski finally returns with Laurel Hell (just in time for Bandcamp Friday’s triumphant comeback). That’s a lot for one week! Plus songs by Mo Kenney, Terra Spencer, and Aquakultre.

Listen to the full episode here.

Check out some of the past episodeshere.

Subscribe to the podcast to get episodes automatically downloaded to your device — there’s agreat instructional article here.Email Suzannefor help.

You canreach Tara here.

Uncover: Dead Wrong

In 1995, Brenda Way was brutally murdered behind a Dartmouth apartment building. In 1999, Glen Assoun was found guilty of the murder. He served 17 years in prison, but steadfastly maintained his innocence. In 2019, Glen Assoun was fully exonerated.

Halifax Examiner founder and investigative journalist Tim Bousquet has followed the story of Glen Assoun's wrongful conviction for over five years. Now, Bousquet tells that story as host of Season 7 of the CBC podcast series Uncover: Dead Wrong.

Click here to go to listen to the podcast, or search for CBC Uncover on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast aggregator.

About the Halifax Examiner

Examiner folkThe Halifax Examiner was founded by investigative reporter Tim Bousquet, and now includes a growing collection of writers, contributors, and staff. Left to right: Joan Baxter, Stephen Kimber, Linda Pannozzo, Erica Butler, Jennifer Henderson, Iris the Amazing, Tim Bousquet, Evelyn C. White, El Jones, Philip MoscovitchMore about the Examiner.

Sign up for email notification

Sign up to receive email notification when we publish new Morning Files and Weekend Files. Note: signing up for this email is NOT the same as subscribing to the Halifax Examiner. To subscribe,click here.

Recent posts

  • 95 hospitalized because of COVID, 349 new cases reported in Nova Scotia on Feb. 6February 6, 2022
  • Nova Scotia Power: the Houston government says ‘no option is off the table’February 6, 2022
  • Staff recommend Halifax stop conducting pre-employment polygraph testsFebruary 6, 2022
  • 102 COVID hospitalizations, 382 new cases announced in Nova Scotia on Feb. 5February 5, 2022
  • Weekend FileFebruary 5, 2022

Commenting policy

All comments on the Halifax Examiner are subject to our commenting policy. You can view our commenting policyhere.

Copyright © 2022