Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

Following Eversource’s 2020 fumbles, state begins overhaul of energy billing

Eversource became the power company that Northwest Corner residents loved to hate in 2020, after the company fumbled in its response to several major storms — most notably Tropical Storm Isaias in August.

The power of the storm and an accompanying tornado knocked trees down throughout the region (and blew apart greenhouses at Paley’s Farm Market in Sharon), which shut down major roads for several days and also left some power company customers without electricity for several days.

Only a few days before the weather events, the power company had announced that it was seeking permission to increase rates from the state’s Public Utility  Regulatory Authority (PURA). 

During the storm, Eversource was criticized not only for not having enough workers on the ground to repair the damaged lines; but also for poorly communicating when power was likely to be restored.

Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and Attorney General William Tong chastised Eversource during the PURA hearing shortly after the storms, accusing the company of putting profits in the pockets of top executives while cutting back on workers on the ground. Anecdotally, power company workers in the Northwest Corner supported that criticism.

Eversource, meanwhile, blamed its purchase of the Millstone power plant on the increase in costs. The company also blamed hot summer weather for an increase in use that led to an increase in costs; an email sent out to Eversource customers in December similarly warned that a cold winter, with many people working from home and doing distance learning, could also increase electricity costs. 

The PURA initially approved the rate hike, but suspended it after customers said their electric bills dramatically increased, sometimes doubling. 

Meanwhile, PURA did a study of how customers ended up with such dramatically higher power rates last summer and part of what it discovered was that much of the Eversource billing process was based on estimates of power usage. 

The agency announced on Dec. 2 a major overhaul of how electric fees will be determined.

The PURA website explains that their “investigation determined that the current framework is problematic because it relies heavily on forecasts, which are inherently incorrect, and depending on the degree to which the forecasts are wrong — like in 2020 — can result in wild swings in a customer’s bill from one month to the next as the utilities essentially work to course correct the associated rates.”

PURA Chairman Marissa P. Gilett said in the announcement that the change should create more stability in billing: “The new process will rely on actual revenues and approved expenses from the previous calendar year as a proxy for expected costs when determining the going-forward rates, which will prevent the yo-yo effect that is witnessed when forecasts are dramatically off-base.”

The agency also found that Eversource was charging interest to customers because the power company was purchasing energy ahead of time based on estimates of what it thought the public would use: “The current process also compensates the utilities at, what PURA determined through this proceeding, to be an unjustifiably high rate (the weighted average cost of capital) for carrying charges associated with these expenditures.”

Eversource will no longer be able to decide its own interest rates; they will have to use the federal prime rate, which is generally several points lower than what the power company was charging. 

PURA is also beginning a redesign of Eversource bills, so that it’s easier for customers to see what they are actually paying. 

Latest News

Three rescuers suffer heat-related illness after rescuing injured hiker on Appalachian Trail

75 rescuers from 15 response teams across Litchfield and Dutchess Counties retrieved an injured and stranded hiker from the Appalachian Trail on Thursday afternoon, July 9. Hot and humid conditions complicated the effort, injuring three rescuers who have since recovered.

Courtesy of Kent Volunteer Fire Department

KENT – An injured hiker was rescued from a rugged section of the Appalachian Trail on Thursday, July 9, but the extreme heat took a toll on rescuers as well, leaving three first responders with heat-related illnesses. All four individuals were in stable condition Friday morning.

The hiker, who was hiking with at least one other person, was found to be dehydrated and suffering from heat-related illness on a section of the trail between the Schaghticoke campsite and Mount Algo campsite. The rescue drew about 75 emergency responders from Connecticut and New York. Responders were dispatched at 12:30 p.m. after a 911 call was placed, and crews wrapped up the scene around 7:30 p.m.

Keep ReadingShow less
Storm-damaged White Hart presses on with NASCAR Pit-Stop Party

The hauler of two-time NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion Ben Rhodes, of ThorSport Racing, rolls past The White Hart on Thursday, July 9, as spectators cheer along the route.

Madi Long

SALISBURY — Days after the July 4 storm left the White Hart Inn and much of Salisbury without power, electricity was restored 24 hours before the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Hauler Parade on Thursday, July 9, giving staff just enough time to salvage the inn’s planned pit-stop party.

Staff, community members and clean-up crews worked around the clock to clear storm debris from the White Hart lawn, allowing the inn to deliver on its promise of prime parade viewing.

Keep ReadingShow less

Legal Notices - July 9, 2026

Legal Notices - July 9, 2026

Legal Notice

BOND RESOLUTION DATED JUNE 15, 2026 OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE WEBUTUCK CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT AUTHORIZING NOT TO EXCEED $429,327 AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS AND/OR INSTALLMENT PURCHASE CONTRACTS TO FINANCE THE ACQUISITION OF A SCHOOL BUSES AND VEHICLES AT AN AGGREGATE ESTIMATED MAXIMUM COST OF$429,327, LEVY OF TAX IN ANNUAL INSTALLMENTS IN PAYMENT THEREOF TAKING INTO ACCOUNT STATE-AID, THE EXPENDITURE OF SUCH SUM FOR SUCH PURPOSE, AND DETERMINING OTHER MATTERS IN CONNECTION THERE-WITH.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Tenmile Distillery is making history the old-fashioned way

Cheers! The Revolutionary Whisky Series at Ten Mile Distillery, each named for a significant battle of the American Revolution, celebrates America at 250.

D.H. Callahan

In December 2024, the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau officially established the Standard of Identity for American Single Malt Whisky. It was the first new classification in more than half a century, creating new possibilities for American distillers. One of the distilleries taking advantage of this new landscape is Wassaic’s Tenmile Distillery. It is well positioned to make history because Tenmile has always honored traditional whiskey-making practices.

Single malts are often associated with Scotch whisky. Perhaps that’s why, years before the new standard was adopted, Tenmile hired Shane Fraser, a Scottish master distiller with 30 years of experience at some of Scotland’s most prestigious distilleries. Fraser began designing the distillery from the ground up. Alongside owner and general manager Joel LeVangia, he emphasized time-honored traditions, favoring hands-on craftsmanship over the increasingly automated methods used by larger producers. When it comes to making the best whisky possible, Tenmile believes in learning from the past. That philosophy extends beyond the distilling process.

Keep ReadingShow less

The magic of Belinda Sinclair

The magic of Belinda Sinclair

Belinda Sinclair

Dean Chamberlain
Sinclair’s show explores the ways women have been practicing forms of magic for centuries, and there is plenty of history to tell.

Belinda Sinclair is the kind of magician who impresses people who don’t like magic. Her tricks are mind-boggling. Her stories are captivating. And if she picks you to write your name on a card, get ready to be wowed. Repeat attendees of her shows, of which there are many, take almost as much delight in watching new jaws drop as they do in seeing an illusion reach its astonishing conclusion.

Since the summer of 2025, Sinclair has been baffling local audiences at the Hughes Memorial Library in West Cornwall, but her magical run comes to a close at the end of August.

Keep ReadingShow less

“Nixon in China” comes to Tanglewood

“Nixon in China” comes to Tanglewood

Renée Fleming, Andris Nelsons and Thomas Hampson.

Hilary Scott

On Friday, July 17 at 8 p.m. in the Koussevitzky Music Shed at Tanglewood, two of the greatest American voices of their generation, soprano Renée Fleming and baritone Thomas Hampson, join Music Director Andris Nelsons and the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a performance of excerpts from John Adams’ groundbreaking opera “Nixon in China.” The piece, performed earlier this year in Boston and at Carnegie Hall in New York City, is a highlight of a program that also includes “Meditations on Grace” (2024) by BSO Composer Chair Carlos Simon, and the melodic and technically demanding Violin Concerto by Samuel Barber.

Fleming is internationally celebrated for her vocal and dramatic artistry, as well as for her advocacy for the powerful impact of the creative arts in health. Hampson has long been recognized as one of the most innovative musicians of our time and has received countless international honors for his singular artistry and cultural leadership. Both performed in “Nixon in China” earlier this year at the Paris Opera under the baton of Kent Nagano.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.