Commissioners press utilities for clarity after residents report $600 electric bill
Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts
Sign Up FreeSummary
Commissioners asked the administration to invite AEP/SWEPCO to explain billing components and emergency-assistance options after a constituent’s $600.33 electric bill was presented; officials discussed fuel charges, storm riders and tree-trimming as contributors to high bills.
A Caddo Parish commissioner on Feb. 2026 urged staff to invite utility representatives to explain high residential electric bills and available assistance after sharing a constituent’s $600.33 monthly statement.
Commissioner Henderson described a constituent on a $1,314 monthly Social Security income with a current balance of $600.33. He read the bill’s breakdown: residential service $333.12; generation recovery rider $77.37; fuel charge $148.65; advanced metering $3.24; financing/storm cost $25.65; municipal fees $14.64; and a federal EAC adjustment. "That monthly bill is $600.33," he said, asking the commission to coordinate a briefing from AEP or SWEPCO so residents—especially seniors—can better understand assistance options.
Commissioner Atkins provided a technical overview of typical utility-bill components: return on capital (depreciation/return of capital set by the Public Service Commission), operations and maintenance, fuel pass-through charges, and storm riders that recover storm-repair costs over multiyear periods. "When we have storms across the state...the utilities...are allowed...to allocate those storm costs over a certain period of time," Atkins said, noting this can increase bills during recovery periods.
Commissioners also discussed tree trimming and rights-of-way maintenance as resilience measures and the cost burdens on homeowners; several suggested inviting utility leadership to a future meeting to explain billing items and emergency-assistance programs and to share eligibility criteria for vulnerable residents.
No formal action was taken at the meeting; staff agreed to follow up on scheduling a utilities briefing.
