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File #: 0079X-2011    Version: 1
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 5/13/2011 In control: Ginther
On agenda: 5/16/2011 Final action: 5/18/2011
Title: To express support for the Office of the Ohio Consumers' Counsel and urge the Ohio General Assembly to preserve the mission of the OCC by restoring funding to their budget.
Sponsors: Hearcel Craig, Zach M. Klein, A. Troy Miller, Michelle M. Mills, Eileen Paley, Priscilla Tyson, Andrew Ginther



Title

To express support for the Office of the Ohio Consumers' Counsel and urge the Ohio General Assembly to preserve the mission of the OCC by restoring funding to their budget.


Body

WHEREAS, in 1976, The Ohio Consumers' Counsel was created by the Ohio General Assembly to represent the interests of Ohio's residential utility customers in matters relating to regulated public utility services; electric, natural gas, water and telephone and the activities of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO); and

WHEREAS, funded independently by mandatory assessments on utilities and not by taxes, the Ohio Consumers' Counsel's budget does not affect the State's General Revenue Fund; and

WHEREAS, the Ohio Consumer's Counsel's current operating budget is approximately $8.5 million per year; however, under the proposed biennial budget, their budget would be reduced to $4.1 million per year; and

WHEREAS, the Ohio Consumers' Counsel staff, which includes attorneys, accountants, economists, engineers, investigators and other highly skilled professionals participate in legal proceedings, analyze utility issues, educate customers, resolve informal complaints relating to utility services through the highly effective Consumer Call Center and advocates on behalf of Ohio's residential households; and

WHEREAS, in the current biennium, the Ohio Consumers' Counsel has saved customers $54.8 million directly through its advocacy, and an additional $1.9 billion in shared savings with other partners and furthermore, during the past 35 years, the Ohio Consumers' Counsel has saved utility customers $10 billion in avoided utility costs, thus the savings have far exceeded the costs; and

WHEREAS, any budget reduction to the Ohio Consumers' Counsel would not go back to the taxpayers, but would go to the utility companies, and the proposed budget cuts would have a detrimental impact on the residential utility customers of the State of Ohio and the ability ...

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