A few weeks ago, I took a phone call from a well-spoken young lady from Newfoundland Power. Her purpose was to inform me that electrical power rates, beginning July 1, 2012, would increase by 7%. She could not have known my thoughts at that time. I did not want to seem ungracious, so I thanked her and ended the brief conversation.
Perhaps, it was good PR.
The power utility wanted to save me, and other commercial customers ‘rate
shock’; it thought a little advance warning was necessary. The caller was an able representative of her
company. Yet, I could not help thinking
that Stan Marshall, President and CEO of Fortis Inc., parent company of
Newfoundland Power Co. Ltd. (NP) was really the person with whom I wished to
speak. Why? It was not because of this shock, but because
of all the rate shocks that are pending, for both commercial and residential
customers, as a result of the Muskrat Falls project.
NP distributes virtually all the power required by on island consumers. As the regulated power utility, it profits from that service. That’s fine. The company’s shareholders have a right to a return on their investment.
However, corporations, like Fortis (and through it, NP),
also have a civic responsibility, no differently than individuals do. They
benefit from our laws and institutions; they pay taxes, but they have the
protection of operating within a modern and civilized society; hence, they have
an obligation to contribute to it, even when their Boards and CEOs feel
uncomfortable being at odds with the government. NP distributes virtually all the power required by on island consumers. As the regulated power utility, it profits from that service. That’s fine. The company’s shareholders have a right to a return on their investment.
Because NP has accounts with virtually every household in the Province and is a regulated utility, it is different from most other companies; implicitly, it bears some of the burden of price and consumer protection, insofar as the consumption of electricity is concerned.
Accordingly, NP has a fundamental role to play in the
Muskrat Falls project. Its corporate interests and those of its customers are
more directly aligned than those of most service providers. Therefore, it has a social responsibility, to
take a position in the Muskrat Falls debate.
Fortis Inc. boasts expertise in hydro-electric facilities in
the U.S., Alberta, B.C., as well as in this province and has built
hydro-electric facilities in western Canada and Belize. It is a successful company with homespun
roots; it has comfortably made good profits here.
It is all very well that the corporate leadership prefers to
escape the prospect of offending the politicians who have the ability to make
life difficult for companies exposed to their whims, their ignorance and bad public policies. But Newfoundland and Labrador is not Belize,
or anywhere else Fortis may have been treated poorly. Fortis Inc. owes its customers and the public
generally, the benefit of its substantial experience, expertise and guidance.
Fortis decided not to present before the PUB on Muskrat; a
serious omission, not lost on many observers.
It chose to leave the matter to a plethora of individuals who did not
have the advantage of the funding, experience or research found at Fortis. Inside the corporate boardroom, Directors were
likely impressed by the contributions of several individuals, who clearly had
an impact on the PUB. They must have
jeered at the premature and poorly articulated conclusions of the province’s Consumer
Advocate. Yet, the company stayed
silent, even as one individual ratepayer, preferring to remain anonymous, saw
fit to submit a 165 page Report to the PUB; such was his concern as to its
prospect for failure. Fortis did not
lift a finger to engage the process. It
chose to hide.
Indeed, if Fortis Inc. supports Muskrat Falls, as a
necessary and viable concept and the best option for replacing Holyrood, its
CEO should say so. Clarity is always favoured
over silence. But it requires more courage, too.
Fortis enjoys significant political clout in this Province and
is able to articulate its own interests, as it did, last year, when it weighed
in on the City regulations governing the height of its downtown office tower. The CEO of Fortis Inc. enjoys the reputation of
not being a shrinking violet on behalf of shareholders. Regretfully, when courage is demanded by its customers,
the same CEO chooses to cower rather than tell government, or a concerned
public, what he really thinks. If Muskrat Falls is the boondoggle, as many believe it to be, we will think of the senior executives of Fortis Inc. and Newfoundland Power. But not kindly.