Stock Markets
Daily Stock Markets News

Brookhaven urging residents to compare town’s natural gas prices to National


When Brookhaven introduced a natural gas program last year that was supposed to cut homeowners’ bills by up to $100 annually by offering a fixed rate, Herb Mones opted not to join.

“My suspicion was it was not going to be very cost-effective,” the Stony Brook retiree and civic activist said. “It was an overreach of the government getting into the private marketplace, and that usually doesn’t work out very well.”

Mones, 72, may have a point.

Since Brookhaven rolled out the program last May, town residents participating in the optional program have paid more each month than customers of National Grid, Long Island’s major gas supplier.

WHAT TO KNOW

  • Brookhaven last year said its new energy program could save town residents as much as $100 annually on their gas bills.
  • Nine months after the program started, participants in the town program pay more than customers of National Grid.
  • Some civic leaders say many residents don’t know about the program or that they have the right to opt out.

While National Grid rates fluctuate monthly, the program offered by the town uses a flat rate — which has been higher than Grid’s rates each month since the town program started. Town officials are planning a mailing as part of a campaign encouraging residents to compare rates each month, but critics of the program, including civic leaders and AARP, say it’s not reasonable to ask residents to shop monthly for better gas prices.

Civic leaders said many town residents appear to be unaware of the program or that they may opt out at any time without penalty. 

A state-authorized energy program

Brookhaven is one of only two Long Island municipalities to adopt a state-authorized energy program called Community Choice Aggregation, or CCA. State officials approved the program in 2016, hoping it would foster competition that would bring down consumer energy costs.

The Village of Lynbrook, the only other Long Island community to adopt a CCA, dropped it in fall 2022, saying it had not brought any benefits for its residents.

Brookhaven officials said they have no plans to drop its two-year program, which ends in April 2025, but will step up efforts to educate residents about it — and possibly advise them when to opt out. 

We want our residents to save money. People should opt out of the program, and then when [National Grid] prices rise, opt back in.

—Brookhaven Supervisor Dan Panico 

“We want our residents to save money,” Supervisor Dan Panico said in an interview, adding he believes the program should eventually produce savings for town residents. “People should opt out of the program, and then when [National Grid] prices rise, opt back in. Opt out and then opt back in. That’s when the savings begin.” 

There is no hard data to indicate whether CCA programs are successful: Out of hundreds of municipalities statewide, only 57 have CCAs, said James Denn, spokesman for the state Department of Public Service, which oversees utilities. 

The towns of Hempstead, Southampton and East Hampton are considering whether to adopt CCA programs for either gas or electricity.

Brookhaven last year hired Manhattan-based Good Energy to manage its CCA. Residents who participate in the program still pay their gas bills through National Grid. Participants initially were automatically enrolled last May.

There are 43,937 Brookhaven customers in the town program, out of about 54,874 potential customers, including homes and some small businesses, Good Energy spokesman Doug Donaldson said Friday. Almost 11,000 had left the program for a 19.93% opt-out rate, he said.

Consumers pay a flat monthly rate

Brookhaven CCA customers pay a flat monthly rate of 69.5 cents per therm — or about $139 per month for a household using 200 therms, compared with about $107.50 for National Grid customers at the company’s current rate for the Long Island region. A therm is a unit of measurement. 

Since May 1, when the Brookhaven program began, National Grid rates have plummeted — as low as 27.8 cents per therm in July and peaking last month at 55 cents. Grid’s rate dropped on Feb. 1 to 53.8 cents per therm. 

Donaldson said Brookhaven ratepayers may see lower costs from the town program over time, noting that the company’s flat rate acts as a buffer against “unpredictable” cost fluctuations at suppliers such as National Grid. Energy prices can vary due to volatility in the international energy marketplace.

“Brookhaven residents who stay opted into the CCA program can benefit from stable and predictable rates over time,” he said. “Staying in the CCA as a set-it-and-forget-it option will keep rates stable throughout the year despite market fluctuations. That is one of the greatest benefits of the Brookhaven CCA program.”

National Grid has said it supports…



Read More: Brookhaven urging residents to compare town’s natural gas prices to National

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.