Close X
Monday, January 6, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills

The Canadian Press, 23 Sep, 2016 11:07 AM
    CALGARY — Energy bills arriving in Fort McMurray, Alta., months after a wildfire forced the entire city to evacuate have come as a shock to some residents still trying to restore some normalcy to their lives.
     
    Many have taken to a Facebook support group to vent their frustration at recent bills that lumped together months' worth of charges, in many instances demanding four-digit sums at once.
     
    Carla Young said she can't fathom how her bill came to more $1,700 and has been struggling to get an explanation from her provider, Direct Energy.
     
    "I was not impressed at all," said the mother of three, who runs a swim team.
     
    When she got someone from the company on the phone, she said "they didn't understand it either."
     
    The city was emptied out for most of May while firefighters battled the blaze and crews worked to get basic services back up and running. People were allowed to return in phases beginning in early June.
     
    A Direct Energy bill of more than $1,100 was an unwelcome surprise for massage therapist Christine Unruh, who returned to her house in mid June to find it damaged by water.
     
    Unruh's bill includes charges spanning early April to early August.
     
    She couldn't figure out how the company came up with its final tally. The bill shows higher electricity usage for the month of May — when she was out of her home — than it did for April.
     
    But the sum includes credits to offset amounts charged between May 4 and June 4, including $85 for electricity usage and about $170 for distribution fees.
     
    Even with the credits, the bill is a lot for her family of four to handle at once and some leniency from the company would have been welcome, she said.
     
     
     
    "When I called them, the lady on the other line couldn't care less about my problem," she said.
     
    "This is the first time we've had issues with Direct Energy or their billing process, but we're definitely exploring other options and have been in contact with some of their competitors."
     
    Martha Boyko, an educational assistant at a high school, said she was taken aback when she and her husband got a nearly $700 bill.
     
    "They just said that's the way it is and that's what you have to pay," she said.
     
    Her husband, who works in the oilsands, has had his hours and pay cut back, so money was already tighter.
     
    "There's only so many punches you can take."
     
    Direct Energy has 26,700 customers in Fort McMurray and the surrounding area.
     
    Spokeswoman Wendy Tynan said there should be no charges for the evacuation period. It took time to individually apply all of the credits, which is why customers did not get bills for much of the summer.
     
    She said she can see how it would be hard to make sense of the calculations.
     
    "If you're actually going through your bill and trying to analyze it, it's obviously confusing."
     
    A message on the bills informed Fort McMurray customers of the one-time evacuation credits. But the company on Thursday added a more detailed question-and-answer section to its website to help better explain the bills' breakdown.
     
     
     
    "This really should be the last thing that you need to worry about," said Tynan, adding customers can call the company to work out payment plans if they're feeling pinched.
     

     

    "We didn't need to make things harder. We can always do a better job of communicating with our customers."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Housing Market Continues To Cool As Sales Drop For 20th Month

    Calgary Housing Market Continues To Cool As Sales Drop For 20th Month
    The Calgary Real Estate Board said Tuesday that sales activity totalled 1,741 units last month, for a 12.6 decrease over last year.

    Calgary Housing Market Continues To Cool As Sales Drop For 20th Month

    Family Says Quebecer Living In Ecuador Shot Dead On Cocoa Plantation

    Family Says Quebecer Living In Ecuador Shot Dead On Cocoa Plantation
    Relatives of a Quebecer living in Ecuador say he has been killed under suspicious circumstances.

    Family Says Quebecer Living In Ecuador Shot Dead On Cocoa Plantation

    Chief Of Manitoba Reserve Calls For Change After Two Teens Killed In Joyride

    Chief Of Manitoba Reserve Calls For Change After Two Teens Killed In Joyride
    RCMP have said nine children were riding in a pickup truck when it rolled outside the Bloodvein First Nation, north of Winnipeg, early Saturday.

    Chief Of Manitoba Reserve Calls For Change After Two Teens Killed In Joyride

    Canadians Urged To Take Precautions After Zika Virus Discovery Found In Miami

    The warning comes after U.S. health officials said mosquitoes have apparently started spreading Zika on the U.S. mainland

    Canadians Urged To Take Precautions After Zika Virus Discovery Found In Miami

    'Misinformed Vandals' Target Wrong Agency For Restrictions On Trans Blood Donors

    'Misinformed Vandals' Target Wrong Agency For Restrictions On Trans Blood Donors
    The Red Cross said Monday signs around its building in Dartmouth, two trailers, two trucks, a van and a sedan were all defaced with permanent markers sometime late Friday or early Saturday.

    'Misinformed Vandals' Target Wrong Agency For Restrictions On Trans Blood Donors

    Celine Dion 'Ecstatic' To Be Home After Kicking Off Quebec Tour At Bell Centre

    Celine Dion 'Ecstatic' To Be Home After Kicking Off Quebec Tour At Bell Centre
    MONTREAL — Celine Dion says she's happy to be home and doing well after an emotional first Quebec show kicking off the Canadian leg of her tour on Sunday night — just months after losing her husband to cancer.

    Celine Dion 'Ecstatic' To Be Home After Kicking Off Quebec Tour At Bell Centre