Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro Deferral Accounts At $5.5 Billion, Says Rate Review By Auditor General

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2019 08:26 PM
  • BC Hydro Deferral Accounts At $5.5 Billion, Says Rate Review By Auditor General

VICTORIA — Auditor general Carol Bellringer says BC Hydro has deferred $5.5 billion in expenses that it plans to recover from ratepayers over time.


Bellringer focuses on the deferred expenses in a report on the public utility's use of rate-regulated accounting to control the prices it charges customers.


She says rate-regulated accounting is used widely across North America, but cautions that Hydro has largely overridden the role of the independent B.C. Utilities Commission to regulate rates.


Last June, the B.C. government launched a two-phase review of BC Hydro to find cost savings and look at the direction of the Crown utility.


The review came shortly after a planned government rate freeze was overturned by the utilities commission, which resulted in a three per cent rate increase in April 2018.


A statement by BC Hydro and the government says a key objective of the review due this month is to enhance the regulatory oversight of the commission.

MORE National ARTICLES

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas
A member of Alberta's United Conservative Party is apologizing for making what he says was an unintentional comparison between the rainbow LGBTQ pride flag and swastikas in a speech this weekend.

UCP Member John Carpay Apologizes For 'Unintentionally' Comparing Pride Flag To Swastikas

Trial Begins For Woman Accused Of Killing Her Two Young Daughters

Trial Begins For Woman Accused Of Killing Her Two Young Daughters
LAVAL, Que. — When her two daughters were found dead in the family playroom on March 31, 2009, dressed in their school uniforms, Adele Sorella was going through a difficult time, a jury heard Monday.

Trial Begins For Woman Accused Of Killing Her Two Young Daughters

A Fine, No Jail Time For Canadian Charged With Vandalizing Historic Thai Wall

A Canadian woman who was arrested in northern Thailand for spraying paint on an ancient wall has avoided more jail time, but must still pay a $4,000 fine for her actions.

A Fine, No Jail Time For Canadian Charged With Vandalizing Historic Thai Wall

New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond Goes Into Circulation Next Week

New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond Goes Into Circulation Next Week
HALIFAX — A new $10 banknote featuring Viola Desmond's portrait will go into circulation in a week, just over 72 years after she was ousted from the whites-only section of a movie theatre in New Glasgow, N.S.

New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond Goes Into Circulation Next Week

Canadian Forces Safe After Attack In Mali; Jihadists Claim Responsibility

Canadian Forces Safe After Attack In Mali; Jihadists Claim Responsibility
GAO, Mali — A car-bomb explosion in northern Mali killed three civilians on Monday, and one group reportedly claimed that Canadian soldiers and other foreign forces were targeted.

Canadian Forces Safe After Attack In Mali; Jihadists Claim Responsibility

New Affordable Homes For Middle-Income Earners Coming To 42 Communities In B.C.

New Affordable Homes For Middle-Income Earners Coming To 42 Communities In B.C.
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government is funding 4,900 new affordable rental units to be built in the next three years as part of its efforts to tackle a housing crisis across the province.

New Affordable Homes For Middle-Income Earners Coming To 42 Communities In B.C.