PG&E customers face higher monthly bills — again — as state OKs new utility fee

Customers of PG&E and the other two utility behemoths in California face a fresh set of monthly charges — on top of already soaring bills for PG&E customers — in the form of a fixed monthly charge.

The state Public Utilities Commission has approved a plan to impose an income-based fixed monthly charge for customers of utility leviathans PG&E, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric.

The highest fixed charge would be $24.15 a month for customers of these three utility giants, including PG&E ratepayers.

Here’s how the new fixed fee will affect customers based on their incomes:

— $6 a month for people in the California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE) program, typically for people at low-income or poverty levels.

— $12 a month for people in the Family Electric Rate Assistance (FERA) program. This is for people of modest incomes with three or more people in the house. As an example, a three-person family would qualify if their annual household income ranges from $49,721 to $62,150.

— $24.15 a month for customers who are not on any sort of subsidized or discounted program.

The state PUC voted 4-0 to approve the new fixed charges.

“We recognize that electricity bills in California are high,” PUC Commissioner Darcie Houck said before the vote. Commissioner Houck added, “This is a relatively modest charge.”

In early January, PG&E residential customers who receive combined electricity and gas services from the utility were jolted with a mammoth increase in monthly bills that hopped higher by more than 20% compared to early January 2023 — far above the increase in the Bay Area inflation rate.

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The fixed fees for monthly bills are slated to go into effect in late 2025 for customers of San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison, and in early 2026 for PG&E customers.

Numerous people spoke before the PUC vote to denounce the new fee, which was made possible by a law that was approved quietly by the state Legislature a few years ago and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

“For millions who live paycheck to paycheck, the impact of the utility tax would be devastating,” Yvette DiCarlo, who represents a coalition of groups that opposes the new fixed fee, said in comments before the state PUC voted.

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