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If you’ve had sticker shock from your recent gas and electric bills, you’re not alone. Most customers are seeing substantial increases in their monthly bills.
Your energy bill is going up mostly because the costs to deliver gas and electricity to your home have been rising significantly in recent years. Excessive cold or hot temperatures also drive up your bill because you use more energy to heat or cool your home.
Last week, OPC's People's Counsel David Lapp sat down with "On The Record" host Sheilah Kast on WYPR 88.1FM to talk about rising utility bills for both gas and electric customers. Listen to the 14-minute episode here.
Click here to learn more about rate changes from your utility.
Click here to read our new gas utility spending report.
If you are a BGE customer, click here for a look at recent changes.
If you are a Delmarva Power customer, click here for a look at recent changes.
If you are a Pepco customer, click here for a look at recent changes.
What can I do to keep my bill from increasing?
Most of your bill is calculated based on your usage. Using less electricity or gas over the month will lower your bill. You should consider reaching out to programs that can make your home more energy-efficient. Free and low-cost programs are available to people at most income levels through the MD Department of Housing and Community Development. Visit the “Energy Bill Savings” section on our website to learn more.
If you want to start small on your energy-efficiency journey, call your utility company and request a FREE home-energy audit. When you call, they will schedule a time for someone to come to your home and check for quick ways you can save money by reducing your usage. They will provide you with free energy-saving products for your home like LED lightbulbs, a smart thermostat, water heater pipe insulation, and more.
Where can I get help?
If you are falling behind or struggling to pay your gas and/or electric bill, there is help available. Visit the “Get Help” section on our website for resources.
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Don’t be caught off guard. If you are interested in replacing appliances in your home, check to see if there are any EmPOWER rebates available before you buy. EmPOWER Maryland programs are funded by a charge on your energy bill. EmPOWER programs can help you reduce your energy consumption and save you money.
Read through our website to learn more.
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Have a complaint or dispute with your gas and/or electric utility company?
Do you have a complaint against or dispute with your gas and/or electric company? You can file with the Public Service Commission (PSC), Community Affairs Division (PSC/CAD). The PSC regulates gas/electric utilities, and CAD handles consumer complaints and disputes about gas/electric utilities.
You must contact the utility first to try to resolve your problem before PSC/CAD will take your complaint/dispute.
Examples as to why you may choose to file a complaint:
- You believe your bill amount is incorrect and the utility company will not investigate or claims it is the correct amount.
- You have a dispute about a utility retail supplier amount on your bill. You did not sign a contract with the retail supplier, or believe that the retail supplier was deceptive in its marketing.
- You believe there is something wrong with your meter.
- You believe the utility company has violated a consumer protection.
- You are being charged for someone else's utility bill.
To file a complaint, you have four options:
- File a complaint online.
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Download a PSC/CAD complaint form and mail it with any supporting documents.
Maryland Public Service Commission 6 St. Paul Street, 15th Floor Baltimore, MD 21202
- If you do not have a computer or access to one, call PSC/CAD at 410-767-8028 or 1-800-492-0474 and ask them to mail you a complaint form. Inform the PSC/CAD representative if you have a shut-off notice or are off-service and ask them to take a complaint by phone. A form will be mailed to you to fill out and return.
- You can fax a written complaint with any supporting documents to 410-333-6844.
Recommendations when filing a complaint:
- Before you file a complaint, make sure you have spoken with your utility company to try and resolve the issue.
- Be clear about your complaint and why you are making the complaint. You are telling them why you disagree with the utility’s decision.
- List out what actions you have already taken to try and resolve the issue with the utility. Be specific and include any details about documents, dates, and people.
- Have a well-documented response from the utility about your complaint. Who you spoke with, on what date, and what was their decision. Details matter.
While CAD investigates your complaint, a utility cannot terminate your service for a bill amount in dispute. However, you are still responsible for the undisputed portion of bill. You are entitled to a written decision about the complaint. You also have the right to appeal the decision by PSC/CAD. If at the end of the complaint process, you receive an unfavorable decision, you have 30 days to file in Circuit Court against the decision.
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The rising costs of gas utility charges are putting a strain on Maryland household budgets. While there is little we can do to lower the distribution charges that have already been approved by the Public Service Commission, we can try to stop these costs from continuing to rise.
HB 419 Natural Gas-Strategic Infrastructure Development Enhancement (Ratepayer Protection Act) is being considered this legislative session and could have big impacts on the ways utilities build and maintain gas infrastructure—which impacts your utility bill.
HB 419/Ratepayer Protection Act puts guardrails in place for the utilities which will slow the increases on all of our bills.
The Ratepayer Protection Act requires the utility to:
- Ensure gas infrastructure spending is cost effective;
- Prioritize projects based on safety;
- Use leak detection and a “fix it first” approach where it saves money;
- Consider non-pipeline alternatives to gas; and
- Give gas customers 2 years notice before work so they have time to plan.
Supporting HB419 - Ratepayer Protection Act is the best way Marylanders can help slow down the rising costs of gas utility bills.
Learn more about this bill and where it is in the legislative process.
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State regulators should update and revise rules intended to protect utility customers from having their utility service terminated or denied, the Office of People’s Counsel said in a petition filed with the Public Service Commission. OPC’s proposed rule changes would end certain punitive utility payment practices and give customers more time to seek assistance when they have trouble paying their bills.
“It’s time to reduce the utilities’ broad ability to deny or terminate service or impose additional costs on utility customers,” Maryland People’s Counsel David S. Lapp said. “We need to minimize barriers for customers—particularly those who are low-income—who try to maintain, establish, or reestablish their essential utility services. Our proposed changes will increase transparency and standardize minimum arrearage and termination practices to prevent different outcomes for customers in similar situations and will give customers facing termination more time before service is terminated to resolve difficult situations.”
Dramatic increases in terminations from 2019 to 2023—Baltimore Gas & Electric had nearly 80,000 residential terminations in 2023—laid bare the need for comprehensive consumer protection reform, OPC’s petition points out. Terminations declined in 2024 from 2023 at BGE and some other utilities, as the Commission took action to temporarily increase summer termination notice periods and certain utilities voluntarily halted terminations amid exhaustion of bill assistance funding. Yet high levels of terminations are likely to continue, with per-person energy assistance funding dropping and as utility rates continue to rise—in some cases, significantly, as documented in OPC’s June 2024 rates report. Rates for gas customers will continue to rise significantly in the coming years absent a change in course, as documented in OPC’s gas spending report released this year. These circumstances are leaving many customers without sufficient help to pay unaffordable utility bills and pushed the number of calls to OPC’s Consumer Assistance Unit to a record number in Fiscal Year 2024.
The Commission recently voted to propose new summertime heat protections, following OPC’s June petition for emergency action to protect customers from shutoffs during soaring summer temperatures, and opened a docket to consider other changes. OPC’s supplemental petition asks the Commission to revisit numerous other regulations intended to protect customers having trouble paying their bills.
OPC’s filing highlights examples of customers experiencing issues that its proposed rule changes are intended to address. One example highlights a customer's reported termination affecting the home of a mother with a 3-month-old infant relying on electric-powered breathing equipment. Other examples illustrate policies that exacerbate customer affordability issues, such as requiring customers to pay large new security deposits in addition to outstanding bills to restore service—or even to pay new security deposits after late payments that don’t result in termination.
Among other rule changes, OPC’s petition asks the Commission to:
- Rein in punitive utility practices on late fees, deposits, and credit requirements for low-income customers. These fees often serve to penalize households that simply cannot afford to pay and have little to do with the administrative costs that utilities incur in trying to obtain payment.
- Limit the utilities’ ability to require customers to “reestablish” credit based on prior payment history or to terminate service for a failure to pay new deposit requirements. Regulations currently allow utilities to require an existing customer to pay a deposit based on a change in a customer’s circumstances. Rules also allow a utility to terminate service to a customer who has paid their bill but failed to pay an imposed deposit.
- Enhance and standardize minimum requirements for arrearage and collection practices to increase transparency and uniformity among utilities. Current regulations give utilities flexibility in establishing certain minimum requirements for these arrearage and collection “practices” or “timelines.” BGE’s policy states that “[a]rrearage notices vary by customer payment behavior. Some customers will receive a reminder and others will receive a turn-off notice.” OPC’s petition seeks a minimum 30-day termination notice period in most circumstances, to prohibit terminations for outstanding bills less than $500 (or $700 for a dual-service utility), and to require collections and termination information to be made available in a regulator-approved Customer Rights and Assistance Pamphlet.
“About a fifth of Maryland households face high energy burdens,” Lapp said. “With rising energy costs and decreased benefit amounts, the affordability crisis is mounting. While rule changes will not address the underlying issues, they will help more people retain utility service, reduce arbitrary terminations and collections practices, and ultimately help prevent extreme customer hardships.”
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Processing of personal income tax returns for Tax Year 2024 has begun. The federal and state individual income tax filing deadline is Tuesday, April 15, 2025.
Helpful tips on filing your taxes
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For questions or assistance, contact Brandi Nieland, Director of Consumer Assistance at brandi.nieland@maryland.gov. |
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Your People's Counsel is David S. Lapp. Our team is here to help and advocate for you. We represent Maryland residential customers before the Public Service Commission and federal agencies, and we provide you assistance dealing with your utility issues, including affordable and reliable service.
To see what OPC is currently working on, click here for our recent press releases or click here for our media coverage.
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