AVALANCHE: Charities set up program to help low-income residents.
JUNEAU -- Two charities in Juneau have rolled out a city-funded grant program designed to help thousands of low-income residents weather the effects of a 447 percent increase in the price of electricity.
The United Way of Southeast Alaska and Catholic Community Services are calling the program Juneau Unplugged.
Program coordinator Kevin Ritchie said the organizations are charting new territory. They are looking for comment on the process as people begin to fill out applications, which are now available.
"We recognize that we will likely have to make changes as we go along," Ritchie said.
The grant program was approved by the Juneau Assembly to mitigate the effects of high energy costs while repairs are being made to the transmission lines from the Snettisham hydroelectric project.
The repairs are expected to take about three months. The town is being powered by diesel generators in the meantime, which accounts for the higher cost of electricity.
The grant amounts have not been determined yet. Ritchie said they hope to cover 70 percent of the increased portion on a household bill. He said household conservation would help families cover the rest of the increase.
After the subsidy is determined, the money will go directly to Alaska Electric Light & Power Co.
In general, families below 200 percent of the federal poverty level will qualify. Many are pre-qualified by current participation in any federal program, Ritchie said. Five partner agencies will assist in reaching those most likely to qualify.
Ritchie said he expects to see 3,000 qualified applications before the crisis is over.
For now, Juneau Unplugged has $1 million to aid the neediest in Juneau.
The exact amount available to each home will depend on how many people apply and whether the city dips into the additional $1 million that the Assembly appropriated for the program.
Ritchie said the city was "playing it by ear."
"We're trying to help everyone who's qualified," he said.
Firm to pay increase for employees
A Juneau business is offering to help pay its employees' electric bills.
Kent Adams, who manages eight employees at Willie's Marine, says he brought the problem to the attention of a board member for the business's out-of-state parent company.
The board member, Frank Gaughan, called back a day later to say the parent company -- Doc Warner's Enterprises of Bountiful, Utah -- would cover the increase in employees' home electric bills.
Juneau residents are faced with skyrocketing costs after avalanches wiped out transmission lines.
-- The Associated Press
Increase calculated from avalanche date
Some Juneau utility customers will get a small reprieve in their electric bills.
They won't have to pay higher utility rates for the entire month of April.
Instead, the high rates will be calculated from April 16.
That's the date avalanches wiped out transmission towers from the Snettisham hydropower project and forced the city onto diesel generators.
The Regulatory Commission of Alaska on Wednesday approved the request from Juneau's power company, Alaska Electric Light and Power, to change the date.
The company said it was responding to concerns that the increased tariff should apply only to power consumed after the avalanches, when many residents started conserving energy.
The new higher rates won't show up until bills issued May 16.
-- The Associated Press