
By Steve Haner
Four years after approval, a state program to provide lower electricity costs to low income families is still struggling to get going.ย Administrative costs have far exceeded any actual benefits to utility customers to date.
It is called the Percentage of Income Payment Program (PIPP) and was created by the 2020 General Assembly as part of the Virginia Clean Economy Act. Almost three years ago, both Appalachian Power Company and Dominion Energy Virginia received permission to charge extra on their customer monthly bills to fund it.
Both companies have now filed updates with the State Corporation Commission and are seeking to adjust the amount they collect from general customers.ย Dominion, which had enrolled 8,600 PIPP beneficiary accounts as of late March, is seeking to eliminate its monthly charge for a while. Appalachian, which still had zero customers enrolled by the time of its report, has applied to raise its surcharge.
Both are relatively tiny amounts so far. Just how large and how expensive the program might become over time remains anybodyโs guess, but as utility costs grow so will the total amount of subsidies and surcharges. The intention is to limit a poor familyโs electric bill to 10 percent of income if they use electricity for heat, and 6 percent if they use some other heating source.
So, another cost driver for the long term will be the continued push from government to eliminate the use of anything but electricity for heat. Natural gas and heating oil are squarely in the crosshairs of the Biden Administration and others who accept the climate catastrophe narrative and blame it on carbon-based fuels. (more…)






Introduction: For those unfamiliar with the Virginia Military Institute (VMI), disciplinary actions against Cadets include โdemeritsโ recorded in their records, confinement to barracks, and โpenalty toursโ (PT) or a combination of those for misconduct ranging from minor infractions (uniform violations, dirty rooms) to major (drinking in barracks, disrespect to cadet officers, breaking VMI regulations).
by Jon Baliles
by Kerry Doughertyย 


