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Guide to Your Rights as a
Residential Electric Customer
Under the Home Energy Fair Practices Act
The HEFPA rules give you responsibilities as well as rights
in dealing with the utility that provides your natural gas, electric or
steam service. This PSC Guide describes the highlights of those rules,
and lets you know how you can get help when you feel your rights have
been violated.
APPLICATION FOR SERVICE
Refusal to Provide Service
In most situations, when you apply for service verbally or in writing,
the utility will provide service to you within five business days of receiving
your application. However, the utility can refuse to provide service if
you owe money on a previous account in your name, unless one of the following
situations applies to you:
- You pay the amount you owe in full;
- you make a payment agreement to pay off the amount you owe in installments
over time (see
Deferred Payment Agreements below);
- you have a pending billing complaint with the utility concerning the
amount which has not been paid;
- you receive or have applied for public assistance, Supplemental Security
Income or additional State payments, and the local social services office
has agreed to pay for amounts owed on your previous account and agreed
to provide the utility with a guarantee of future payments on your new
account; or
- the PSC directs the utility to provide you with service.
Delays in Providing Service
Your utility is excused from providing service within the five day time
period for any one of the following reasons:
- for safety considerations;
- where prevented by a labor strike or by law;
- where prevented by physical problems such as weather conditions, incomplete
construction or access difficulties;
- where you have not paid, or agreed to pay, for lawfully required line
extension costs; or
- where you have failed to comply with requirements of rights-of-way,
gas insulation and/or underground line requirements.
In such cases, the utility will provide service as soon as possible after
the problem is resolved.
Written Applications
You can apply for service verbally; however, the utility can require a
written application if, at your residence, there is an amount owed from
a previous account, the meter has been tampered with, the meter reading
has advanced since the last customer left, or the application is made
in your name by someone other than yourself. For a verbal application,
you are only required to provide your name, address and telephone number
and the address and account number of any prior account.
If a written application is requested, the utility can also require reasonable
proof of your identify (such as a driver's license or credit card) to
validate your name and prior address; and proof of responsibility for
service at your residence (such as a lease, deed, bill of sale or other
document).
Denial of Application
If the utility denies your application, it has to send you a notice within
three business days of your date of application, informing you of:
- the reasons for the denial;
- the steps you must take to obtain service; and
- · your rights to a PSC review of the denial.
Billing
When to Pay
Most utility bills are to be paid upon receipt. A payment is
overdue 23 days after the bill is mailed to you. If you pay after that,
your utility can require you to pay a late payment charge. If you have
any questions about your bill, contact your utility immediately at the
phone number listed on the bill. If you are not satisfied with the utility's
response, call the PSC.
How to Pay
Most utilities prefer that you pay your bill by mail. This helps the utility
process your payment quickly. However, you can pay in person at any payment
office of the utility, or at any local bank or store as long as it is
authorized to accept bill payments for the utility. If you want to know
the location of your nearest payment center, have a question as to whether
a store is authorized to accept such payments, or when such payments are
posted to your account, call your utility.
Balanced Billing
A balanced, or levelized, payment plan helps even out bills that are high
in one season and low in another so that your energy charges stay pretty
much the same throughout the year. This payment plan does not reduce your
overall energy expenses for the year, but it does help you manage your
budget. Your utility can provide more information about its balanced billing
program.
Estimated Billing
By reading its meter, your utility is able to send you a bill based on
the actual amount of gas, electricity or steam you used. In certain circumstances,
your utility will send you an estimated bill, based on your previous usage.
Your utility may give you an estimated bill when it is physically prevented
from reading its meter, where it appears that the actual reading may be
incorrect, or if the PSC has approved a billing system for a utility where
estimated rather than actual reading are routinely provided every other
month. You may also receive an estimated bill if you are a seasonal or
short-term customer, but an actual reading has to be taken when service
is canceled.
Any difference between an estimated reading and the actual consumption
for that billing period is resolved automatically when the next actual
reading is taken.
Access to the Meter
If your utility has sent you estimated bills for a period of four months,
it must take additional measures to obtain an actual reading, such as
making an appointment to gain access to the meter at a time other than
normal business hours, or asking you to read the meter. If your utility
has sent you estimated bills for six months, it must send you -- and the
person who controls access to the meter -- a notice, offering you a special
appointment to read its meter, both during and after normal business hours.
If your utility has sent you estimated bills for eight months and it is
unable to gain access to its meter, it may send a letter advising you
that if you do not make an appointment so that the utility can obtain
an actual reading, a $25 charge will be added to your next bill or that
of the party controlling access to the meter. The utility can also get
a court order to gain access to its meter.
A bill based on an actual reading after one or more estimated bills may
show that the estimates were too low. If your actual consumption is 50%
greater than your estimated bill, or is $100 or more, you can pay that
difference in monthly installments over a period of at least three months.
Utility personnel who come to your residence to read the meter are required
to carry photo-identification badges.
Deposits
Conditions Where Deposits May be Required
As a residential customer, you may be required to pay a deposit to your
utility if you:
- did not pay two or more utility bills in a row without making a partial
payment of at least half of the amount you owe; or
- had your service shut off for non-payment of bills within the past
six months; or
- are a short-term or seasonal customer. (A short-term customer wants
service for less than a year. A seasonal customer receives service periodically
each year.)
Conditions Where Deposits May Not Be Required
The utility has to warn you in writing, 20 days in advance, that if you
do not make a timely payment it may require you to pay a deposit. Utilities
cannot require a deposit from you if you are a recipient of public assistance
or Supplemental Security Income. Nor can utilities require a deposit from
you if you are 62 years old or older, unless your service has been shut
off for failure to pay a bill within the past six months.
Deposit Amounts and Payment Periods
If you are required to pay a deposit, it cannot be more than twice the
average monthly bill (or twice the estimated average monthly heating season
bill, if you are a heating customer). If you are not a seasonal or short-term
customer, and the utility requires you to pay a deposit, you can pay it
in installments over a period of at least 12 months.
Deposit Interest and Refund
Utilities have to pay interest on your deposit money. They have to refund
the deposit plus interest to you if, after a year, you have not been behind
in your payments. This is defined as not paying two or more bills in a
row without making a partial payment of at least half the amount you owe.
Service Termination
Service Termination for Non-Payment of Bills
If you fail to pay overdue bills, your utility may turn off your service
after it has given you notice in writing that it plans to shut off your
service, and has waited 15 days to allow you an opportunity to pay the
overdue bill or make a payment agreement on the overdue amount.
Final Termination Notice
If you have not paid a bill, payment agreement installment or deposit
payment, your utility must send you a Final Termination Notice before
it can turn off your service. The notice will state the reasons for the
intended shutoff, the earliest date on which a shutoff might occur, the
address and phone number of your utility, and your rights under HEFPA.
This notice can be sent 20 days after the date payment was due. After
the notice has been sent to you, the utility must allow 15 days for you
to resolve the problem before it can shut off your service. If you make
the payment by a check that is rejected by the bank, your utility can
shut off service without sending another notice.
When Service Can Be Shut Off
Utilities can shut off your service only between the hours of 8 a.m. and
4 p.m. from Monday through Thursday.
When Your Service Cannot Be Shut Off
There are situations where you may not have paid a bill, but where your
utility cannot
shut off service. Service cannot be shut off by the utility if:
- a Final Termination Notice has not been sent to you;
- the amount owed was billed and due more than a year ago, and because
of no fault of yours, your utility did not begin termination procedures;
- a doctor certifies to your utility that there is a medical emergency
(see Medical Emergencies below);
- you have a billing dispute filed with your utility or the PSC concerning
the amount owned;
- you make full payment of the amount owed when your utility comes to
shut off service; or
- you make a payment agreement with your utility which covers the amount
owed (see Deferred Payment Agreements below).
Further, your service cannot be shut off for non-payment on a public
holiday, the day before a holiday, the two-week period which includes
Christmas and New Year's Day, or on a day before your utility business
office closed.
Landlord Problems
If you live in an apartment building or a two-family house and your landlord
fails to pay the utility bill for the building, your utility has to notify
you of the landlord's non-payment. If you live in an apartment building,
your utility must post notices in the building and mail you a separate
notice at least 18 days before disconnection. If you live in a two-family
house, your utility must mail or give you a separate notice at least 15
days before disconnection. Between November 1 and April 15, if your service
is heat-related, you will be given at least 30 days notice of the possible
shutoff of your service.
The notice will tell you how to contact your utility so that it can help
you and other tenants work out a way to avoid service disconnection, even
if the landlord refuses to make payments, and that the PSC will assist
tenants in making payment arrangements with your utility.
A good option available to tenants to avoid service disconnection is for
them to pay current utility bills directly and deduct those utility payments
from their rent payments. This is allowed by State law, and your utility
can help you with this option.
Reconnection of Service
If your service has been shut off for non-payment, the utility has to
turn service back on within 24 hours, where possible, in the following
situations:
- you have paid the amount due or signed a payment agreement and made
the down payment, if required (see Deferred Payment Agreements below);
- when the local Department of Social Services agrees to make a direct
payment on your behalf or provides a written guarantee of payment;
- where the utility is notified that serious harm to health or safety
is likely to result if service is not reconnected (see Special Protections
below); or
- when directed by the PSC.
Special Protections
Special protections are available for consumers with medical emergencies;
or who are elderly, blind or disabled; and to all consumers during the
cold weather period between November 1 and April 15.
If you qualify for the elderly, blind or disabled protections, you should
immediately notify your utility so it can code your account with this
information should it be needed in the future. This information will be
kept in strict confidence.
Medical Emergencies
When your utility is notified by your doctor or the local Board of Health
that a medical emergency exists which will be aggravated by the lack of
utility service, it has to keep your service on for 30 days. The notification
may be made by phone, but must be followed within five business days by
written certification, which includes required identification information
of the certifying authority. This certificate may be renewed for an additional
30 days if the doctor explains why the lack of service would aggravate
your medical emergency and the expected length of time the condition will
last, and you must show why you are unable to pay your utility bill. If
your medical condition is chronic, a longer time period can be approved.
If utility service is required to operate a life-support system, the doctor's
certificate remains effective unless terminated by the PSC. However, every
three months, you must show your utility why you can't pay your bill.
Your utility will code your account to ensure service is continued to
your residence.
During a period of medical emergency, you must make a reasonable effort
to pay utility charges for service. PSC staff will help you work out reasonable
payment arrangements to you don't owe a large amount at the end of the
medical emergency.
Elderly, Blind or Disabled
If your utility is aware that you and all adults living with you are 62
years of age or older, blind or disabled, it will make special attempts
to contact you by phone or, if necessary, in person, at least three days
before a scheduled service shut off in order to help you keep your utility
service on. Your utility will try to work out a payment agreement with
you (see Deferred Payment Agreements, p. 21) or obtain payment or a guarantee
of payment from the local Department of Social Services or a private organization.
If arrangements cannot be made, the company will notify the local Department
of Social Services of the possible service shutoff, and continue service
for another 15 business days.
If your service is shut off, your utility will try to reach you within
10 days after your service has been terminated to determine whether alternative
arrangements for utility service have been made, or whether service can
be restored through an arrangement to pay the bills you owe.
Cold Weather Protections - November 1 to April 15
During the cold weather period of November 1 to April 15, your utility
has to make special efforts to determine if disconnection of your heat-related
service will cause a problem to your health and safety. It will attempt
to contact you or another adult at your home by phone or in person at
least three days before the scheduled service shutoff, and again the day
of the service shutoff, to determine whether shutting off your heat-related
service could cause serious harm to the health or safety of any resident
in your home. If the utility finds that harm might result, it must notify
the local Department of Social Services, which will then conduct its own
investigation. Meanwhile your utility cannot shut off your service for
another 15 business days.
If the utility finds that you may be unable to protect yourself from neglect
or hazardous situations, it will notify an agency, such as your local
Department of Social Services, to help you, and continue your heat-related
service for at least another 15 business days.
If your heat-related service is shut off and your utility was unable to
make contact with an adult at your home prior to service disconnection,
it will attempt to determine whether anyone is living in your residence
and if so, whether there might be serious harm to that person's health
or safety. If there is reason to believe that there might be harm to a
person as a result of your service being shut off, your utility will restore
your service for 15 business days and notify the local Department of Social
Services so that they can investigate.
Deferred Payment Agreements
Payment Agreement Terms
If you have a financial problem that prevented you from paying previous
bills, you can make a deferred payment agreement, which will allow you
to pay the overdue amount in reasonable installments. However, the utility
can refuse to offer you a payment agreement when it believes you can pay
the amount you owe, and after its own investigation, the PSC also determines
that you have the ability to pay what you owe.
While your utility may offer you specific payment agreement terms, you
do not have to accept what it proposes. You can write your own payment
terms. However, these terms must be based upon your ability to make payments
on what you owe as well as full payments on your current bills. Your utility
must accept any terms you propose which are fair and equitable, considering
your financial circumstances; however, it can refuse any terms where you
would be paying less than $10 a month on what you owe.
Unless you agree to large installment payments, your monthly installments
on a payment agreement cannot be more than half of your average monthly
utility bill, or 10% of what you owe, whichever is greater.
Should your financial situation change due to circumstances beyond your
control, at your request, your utility will change your agreement to make
sure that the terms are reasonable.
Down Payments
Based on your financial circumstances, the agreement between you and your
utility may provide for any size down payment or no down payment at all.
Unless you agree otherwise, HEFPA allows down payments no greater than
the following:
- 15% of the amount you owe, or one-half of your average monthly bill,
whichever is greater; however,
- if the total amount you owe is less than this amount, then the down
payment cannot be more than 50% of what you owe.
For example, if you owed $400 and your average monthly bill is $50, 15%
of what you owe is $60 and one-half of your bill is $25. Therefore, the
largest down payment which the utility can require is the greater of the
two, or $60.
Broken Agreements
If you fail to make timely payments on your payment agreement, your utility
can cancel the agreement and take action to have your service shut off.
At least eight days before it starts the process to have your service
shut off, your utility will send you a notice that you have not kept current
in your agreement payments, and offer you an opportunity to make those
payments current. You may also change the terms of the agreement, if your
financial situation has changed due to circumstances beyond your control.
However, if you have a broken agreement which required payments higher
than the greater of one-half of a month's average usage or 10% of the
remaining amount that you owe, the utility must give you another agreement.
This agreement, which would be sent with any final termination notice,
would require monthly payments equal to the greater of those two amounts.
Third Party Notification
As a residential customer, you can select a "third party," such
as a relative or friend, to receive all notices relating to service termination
or other utility credit actions relating to your account, provided that
the third party agrees in writing to accept those notices. The third party
can contact your utility on your behalf and help you work out payment
terms. However, the third party is not responsible for paying your bills.
Your utility will help you designate a third party to help you with these
notices. This is an especially valuable protection for consumers who are
unable to fully understand company notices. Third-party
designation can be very useful if you have a relative or friend you can
rely on to help you out.
Shared Meter Conditions
A Shared Meter Condition is a situation in which a utility meter is providing
gas, electric or steam service to a tenant's apartment as well as service
to space outside that dwelling. Service to outside space includes service
to equipment, such as air conditioning or water heating equipment, operated
for the benefit of common areas of the building or other apartments.
If a Shared Meter Condition exists, then the utility must establish an
account in the landlord's name until the condition is corrected. The utility
cannot charge you for energy you are not using yourself. If you believe
you are being wrongly charged for energy others are using, call your utility
for assistance. It will work with you to correct the service condition.
Delayed Billing
If you never received a bill for service you received over six months
ago, the utility cannot now bill you for that service, unless the delay
in billing was not caused by its negligence or was caused by your actions.
If, under these conditions, it is proper for the utility to bill after
the six months have passed and the delay in billing was not due to your
actions, it must explain to you the reason for the delay in billing and
offer you in writing an installment payment plan. That plan may include
a down payment of no more than 50% of the amount due or three month's
average billing, whichever is less.
Similarly, a utility cannot increase the amount you owed on a bill which
was sent to you over a year ago, unless:
- your utility's failure to provide a correct bill resulted from your
actions,
- the bill was not due to the negligence of the utility or is necessary
to adjust a budget billing payment plan, or
- you had a dispute concerning the amount of that bill which, after
investigation, is being changed to the correct amount.
If there is an increase in a previous bill of at least $100, and this
increase was not because of your actions, you can pay this amount in monthly
installments over a period of at least three months. Your utility will
explain to you in writing the reason for any rebilling of a bill sent
more than a year ago.
Late Payment Charges
If 20 days have passed since a bill payment was due and you have not paid
your bill, the utility can add to your next bill a late payment charge
which is 1.5% per month on the unpaid balance of your bill. You are not
responsible, however, for late fees on amounts in dispute with the utility
or the PSC while that dispute is being investigated. But, if you are found
to owe the amounts in dispute, then you will also have to pay the applicable
late charges.
Complaints
If you doubt the accuracy of any bill or deposit amount, or have a service
problem, you can call your utility and complain about it. If your complaint
involves a financial matter, your utility service cannot be disconnected
for non-payment of that disputed amount while the complaint is being investigated
and for 15 days after the decision on the complaint has been made by your
utility. However, if you owe an amount other than the disputed amount,
your utility can take action to terminate your service for non-payment
of the undisputed amount.
Contacting the PSC
Remember: If you
have a problem or complaint, call your utility first, as soon as you are
aware of the problem. Only call the PSC if you are unable to resolve your
problem with your utility.
- If you are dissatisfied with your utility's decision on your complaint,
you can appeal to the PSC to review that decision. You can contact the
PSC by writing to:
NYS Department of Public Service
Consumer Services Division
3 Empire State Plaza
Albany, NY 12223
- or call our toll-free HELPLINE, 1-800-342-3377 between * 8:30 a.m.
and 4:00 p.m. on business days, for PSC staff assistance if you
have complained to a utility concerning your electric, natural gas,
steam, water or telephone service and are not satisfied with the utility's
response. If your service has been, or is about to be, terminated for
non-payment, you can call our special toll-free Emergency HOTLINE,
1-800-342-3355 between 7:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. on business days
for PSC staff assistance if a utility has terminated, threatened to
terminate, or refused to provide residential electric, natural gas or
steam service.
* If you call either the HELPLINE or the HOTLINE after these scheduled
hours, a recorded announcement will say the office is closed and tell
you when the office will reopen.
- TDD Service - If you have a hearing and/or speech impairment
and have access to a TDD (telecommunications device for the deaf), you
may call the New York Relay Service (1-800-662-1220) or 1-800-421-1220
for hearing persons in order to contact any of the PSC phone numbers.
Bilingual Service - Many utilities have
customer representatives who speak Spanish. If you wish, call your utility's
local customer relations office and ask if a Spanish-speaking representative
is available. The PSC also has Spanish-Speaking Consumer Services Representatives
to help you.
Servicio Bilingüe - Muchas compañías
tienen representantes que hablan español. Si usted necesita este
servicio, llame a la oficina local de ayuda para los clientes y pregunte
por un representante que hable español. La Comisión de Servicios
Públicos también tiene representaantes en la oficina de
servicios al consumidor que hablan español y lo pueden ayudar.
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