New York Energy Deregulation Map.
New York
According to the 1996 laws
passed in New York, every consumer in the state has the right to chose who
provides electric service as part of their utility bill. This came about
because before this point the cost for electric and gas was 15% higher there
then other places in the country. The change in laws phased in to make the
entire state of New York a deregulated state for electricity and gas.
The fine print, often overlooked, is that this only applies to
those utility companies regulated by PUC or the New York Utility Commission.
Public for profit companies must allow individuals the right to select a
supplier to send electricity or gas to them through them. This means that while
not every area has more than one supplier interested in providing energy through
the specific utility company that services the area, every person, or nearly so,
in the state has the right to make a switch when one is offered.
PUC utility companies serve
a large majority of the population but they do not cover all of the people
living in the state. The fact is that since the late 1930's there have been
Rural electric cooperatives form across the nation that typically provide energy
non-profit. Both these and utilities that cities, boroughs, and townships own
and operate do not fall under PUC. Because of this the New York Utility
Commission cannot regulate prices, policy, or services that these utilities
offer. In short- the state cannot mandate that these types of utility companies
become deregulated. For the small percentage of the population that lives in the
rural areas serviced by these cooperatives the 1996 deregulation laws simply do
not apply.
In New York there are nearly six hundred thousand rural
residents who are part of Electric Cooperatives. These utilities are not
regulated by PUC. Instead they are handled by the New York Rural
Electric Association or PREA. There are thirteen non-profit Electric
cooperatives in New York (and one in New Jersey) that maintain twelve and a
half percent of the transmission lines in the state. These Cooperatives cover
about a third of the land, and are member owned.
One must remember that six hundred thousand is but a small number
when compared to the overall population of the state, however. This figure
for the 2010 was over twelve million, seven hundred and two thousand (12,702,379
to be exact). The percentage then is four point seven, meaning that ninety
five point three percent of the state, population wise, is serviced by one
of the eleven PUC utility companies.
So PUC handles 95.3% of the population, 87.5% of the transmission
lines, and roughly 66% of the land size in the state. This is not bunched up
however. The PREA co-ops cover a band across the state along a line from
Cambridge Springs to Gettysburg that bisects it diagonally with a secondary
cluster centered on Mansfield, Wysox, and Forksville along the northeast border.
The other cooperatives in the state include the communities of Bedford, Parker,
New Enterprise, Indiana, Somerset, DuBois, Huntingdon, and Youngsville.
The counties that these thirteen Cooperatives serve are typically low
population. This leaves the other eleven utility companies to handle the
majority of customers and about two-thirds of the land in the state.
Aside from these typically rural and low population density
counties, the companies regulated by PUC cover the major cities and communities
that are not in a Co-op. These PUC governed utilities are: Allegheny
Power, Citizens' Electric, Duquesne, Met-Ed, PECO, Penelec, Penn Power, Pike
County, PPL, UGI, and Wellsboro Electric. Cooperatives and utilities that are
owned by a city, borough, or township do not fall under PUC and are one of the
13 handled by PREA.
It is the two-thirds of the most populated areas of the state that
are covered by PUC. Even though all the PUC Utility Companies offer the ability
to shop around, not everyone actually has competitive suppliers. Citizens'
Electric, for example has no competitive suppliers in their coverage area, while
Duquesne had suppliers for one of the three types if billing services they
offer. This means that even though 95.3% of the state's population has the
right to make a choice, far fewer actually can choose because they are with a
utility company with no suppliers vying for them for customers.So make sure you are aware of your choices and
make a smart decision to save money.