Indiana General Assembly
Pro-Consumer Voting Percentages
& Campaign Contributions
2019 | 50% | $1,600 | 2022 | 41% | $7,550 | |
2020 | 58% | $5,200 | Cumulative: | 44% | |
|
2021 | 33% | $5,200 |
CAC considers that 80% is a passing grade for the legislators, meaning that if their Pro-Consumer Voting Percentage is 80% or above, they are working to protect consumers in the Indiana Statehouse. If their percentage is below 80%, they are not working to protect consumers.
The cumulative voting record percentage represents voting records from the last 10 years.
Campaign contribution information comes from followthemoney.org, and includes money taken from the Energy and Natural Resources industries, including: utilities, coal, mining, oil, natural gas, steel, and environmental services & equipment.
The campaign contributions represent money taken in the previous 11 years.
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Representative Beau Baird (R-Greencastle, District 44)
2022 Campaign Contributions: $7,550
2012 - 2022
2022 Pro-Consumer Voting Percentage: 41%
For bill details, visit our 2022 Indiana General Assembly page.
HB1100: Utility Regulatory Commission Reporting and Rules
Status: Died in the Senate Commerce and Technology Committee
Contains “no more stringent than” language from legislation in previous years, which would make it illegal for Indiana’s Executive Branch to pass policies that are tighter for public health than what the U.S. EPA does, for those situations where the EPA has set standards. While the EPA has acted decisively to protect our air quality, there are many areas where the EPA has been, candidly, weak. The EPA has not adequately protected the public from such serious environmental problems as pollution from fracking, factory farm manure pits, and outdoor wood boilers. HB1100 allows unnecessary legislative interference in administrative rule makings and places additional burdens on administrative agencies.
Committee Votes on HB1100: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
House Floor Votes on HB1100: 2 votes; 1 Anti-Consumer, 1 Pro-Consumer
HB1111: Utility Regulatory Commission Reporting and Rules
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
IURC agency bill, authorizes FERC Order 2222 rulemaking
Committee Votes on HB1111: none
House Floor Votes on HB1111: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
HB1196: Homeowners Associations and Solar Power
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
HB1196 makes it harder for Homeowners Associations to prohibit residents from adding solar panels.
Committee Votes on HB1196: none
House Floor Votes on HB1196: 2 votes; 1 Pro-Consumer, 1 Excused
HB1209: Carbon Sequestration Projects
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Outlines a framework for entities conducting carbon capture and sequestration in Indiana (CCS - underground storage of toxic, liquefied, and highly pressurized carbon dioxide). Addresses issues related to CCS, including mineral rights, pore space ownership, permitting for pipelines and storage related activities, and creates the carbon storage facility trust fund. Seeks to protect adjacent landowners with notification and compensation - with “forced pooling” if 60% of the pore space area approves. It does not speak to the controversial immunity provisions. However, it does require that the State of Indiana assume ownership and the associated liability 10 years after a certificate of completion is issued by DNR.
Committee Votes on HB1209: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
House Floor Votes on HB1209: 4 votes, all Anti-Consumer
HB1221: Electric Vehicles and Electricity Pricing
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
As introduced, HB1221 exempted (non-utility) owners and hosts of EVs and EV charging stations from regulation by IURC, authorizes hosts and owners of EV supply equipment who make the equipment available to the public to charge by the kwh, defines an electric utility “EV pilot” program for jurisdictional utilities, authorizes utilities to file for approval of pilot programs, authorizes the IURC to approve the pilot programs and the associated cost recovery. It was amended in the Senate Utilities Committee to require that any businesses that host EV chargers purchase the electricity for the chargers from the monopoly utility that is the provider for their geographical region. This means that they cannot generate their own electricity for the EV chargers (even if they are already generating their own electricity).
Committee Votes on HB1221: none
House Floor Votes on HB1221: 2 votes; 1 Anti-Consumer, 1 Excused
HB1224: Government Investments and Contracts
Status: Died in the House
Prohibits the State and other political subdivisions from making certain investments in companies that boycott energy companies or companies that do business with energy companies, requires that before entering into a contract the State and local units of government must receive a written verification from companies that “the company does not boycott energy companies and will not boycott energy companies during the term of the contract.”
Committee Votes on HB1224: none
House Floor Votes on HB1224: none - HB1224 was never called down for a third reading vote on the House Floor.
HB1249: Carbon Sequestration Pilot Project (companion to SB265)
Status: Died in the Senate Natural Resources Committee
HB1249 & SB265 are being pushed by a privately-owned corporation known as Wabash Valley Resources who is claiming that they will develop the largest carbon capture and sequestration project (CCS) ever in the US. They opine that it is a climate change mitigation strategy, but the best way to mitigate climate change is to NOT produce carbon dioxide in the first place.
Committee Votes on HB1249: none
House Floor Votes on HB1249: 1 vote, Excused
SB147: Underground Pumped Storage Hydropower
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Adds underground pumped hydro to the definition of clean energy and renewable energy.
Committee Votes on SB147: none
House Floor Votes on SB147: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
SB265: Carbon Sequestration Pilot Project
Status: Died in the House
HB1249 & SB265 are being pushed by a privately-owned corporation known as Wabash Valley Resources who is claiming that they will develop the largest carbon capture and sequestration project (CCS) ever in the US. They opine that it is a climate change mitigation strategy, but the best way to mitigate climate change is to NOT produce carbon dioxide in the first place.
Committee Votes on SB265: none
House Floor Votes on SB265: 2 votes; 1 Anti-Consumer, 1 Pro-Consumer
SB271: Small Modular Nuclear Reactors
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
SB271 will shift the financial risk to captive consumers by extending the subsidy that is Construction Work in Progress (CWIP) to Small Modular Nuclear Reactors (SMRs - baby nukes). CWIP allows utilities to charge ratepayers for power plants while they are under construction, before they are producing any electricity, and even if they NEVER produce any electricity. It should be noted that this technology is in no way commercially viable at this current moment in time. No public utility in the U.S. has built any SMRs, and there are no operating SMRs in the U.S. at all.
Committee Votes on SB271: none
House Floor Votes on SB271: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
SB272: Wastewater Infrastructure
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Adopts the recommendations of the Wastewater Task Force.
Committee Votes on SB272: none
House Floor Votes on SB272: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
SB273: Financing of Water and Wastewater Utility Assets
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Provides a new tracker to the water/wastewater utilities to “to permit a utility to recover increased costs resulting from referenda or from decisions made by elected officials or governmental entities.”, provides the water and wastewater utilities additional trackers under certain circumstances.
Committee Votes on SB273: none
House Floor Votes on SB273: 1 vote, Excused
SB411: Commercial Solar and Wind Energy (siting bill)
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Creates default standards for the siting of commercial-scale wind and solar projects, creates incentives for communities to become solar-energy ready and wind-energy ready communities.
Committee Votes on SB411: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
House Floor Votes on SB411: 1 vote, Excused
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Representative Beau Baird (R-Greencastle, District 44)
2021 Campaign Contributions: $5,200
2011 - 2021
2021 Pro-Consumer Voting Percentage: 33%
For bill details, visit our 2021 Indiana General Assembly page.
HB1114: Residential building design elements
Status: Died in the House
Prohibits local units of government from regulating design standards for residential structures, regardless of how their local constituency feels about such matters. House Bill 1114 sends a negative signal to Hoosiers by deregulating building materials and their oversight at the local level. This is especially harmful regarding design standards targeting energy efficiency, which helps Hoosiers to reduce their energy costs.
Committee Votes on HB1114: none
House Floor Votes on HB1114: none - HB1114 was never called down for a third reading vote on the House Floor.
HB1164: Various Utility Matters
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
HB1164 expanded the authority of telecommunication providers to place small cell (5G) wireless structures, generally defined as 50 ft. or less, in communities, and prohibits those communities from imposing any restrictions on the height of the structures or the distance between each structure. The bill effectively grants telecommunication providers eminent domain to place 5G towers and infrastructure in public right of ways. The bill also further diminishes IURC authority over telecommunications providers by eliminating certain reporting requirements, such as filing their tariffs or information regarding the services they offer.
Committee Votes on HB1164: none
House Floor Votes on HB1164: 2 votes, both Anti-Consumer
HB1191: Local unit power to prohibit utility connection
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Because of climate change, there is a movement by cities and towns in certain parts of the country to ban natural gas hookups for new construction in order to move away from fossil fuels and to electrify America to enable a shift to 100% renewable energy. While there is no municipality in Indiana talking about this, the intent of this bill is to circumvent the possibility of this happening in Indiana. The reality is that HB1191 only protects monopoly utilities; nothing in this bill protects the rights of private property owners to generate their own energy or lease (or not lease) their land to third parties for energy generation. It does little or nothing to advance renewable energy in Indiana; in fact, it flies in the face of policies designed to mitigate the impact of the existential threat of climate change. HB1191 is short-sighted and forecloses the opportunity to have a meaningful dialogue around long-term policies designed to address climate change and climate justice.
Committee Votes on HB1191: none
House Floor Votes on HB1191: 3 votes; 2 Anti-Consumer, 1 Excused
HB1287: Water or wastewater service
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
HB1287 is a continuation of the policy conversation related to ensuring that all Hoosiers have access to clean water and functioning sewers. The bill is designed to make extending water and wastewater service more affordable for unserved or underserved communities by eliminating deposit requirements for customers under certain circumstances.
Committee Votes on HB1287: none
House Floor Votes on HB1287: 2 votes, both Pro-Consumer
HB1381: Commercial wind and solar standards and siting
Status: Died in the Senate
HB1381 would have created default standards for the siting of commercial scale solar and wind projects in an effort to expand investments in clean and renewable energy in Indiana. The bill would have voided the ordinances adopted by certain counties which prohibit, or otherwise restrict, the development of renewable energy in Indiana, if those ordinances established siting requirements that were more restrictive than the standards that would have been established in the bill.
Committee Votes on HB1381: none
House Floor Votes on HB1381: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
HB1449 established stronger standards for broadband service by increasing the requirements related to the speed of the connection. The bill also prioritized public school corporations, rural health centers, and homes with k-12 students for the purposes of awarding grants from the rural broadband fund. The bill also authorized funds from the rural broadband fund to be used for financial assistance for customers who otherwise would not be able to afford the service.
Committee Votes on HB1449: none
House Floor Votes on HB1449: 2 votes, both Pro-Consumer
HB1520: Electric utility reliability adequacy metrics
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
This bill was the result of a recommendation from the Energy Task Force. The bill requires that the utilities operate and maintain their power plants using “good utility practices”. It requires that the utilities file a report with the IURC detailing the resources that they own and operate, or otherwise procure under contract in the markets, to serve their customers with reliable energy. And the bill empowers the IURC to order the utilities to acquire or construct resources should the IURC determine that the utilities do not have adequate resources to serve their customers. CAC believes that this bill is unnecessary, as it’s the utilities legal obligation to serve the customers, and the bill is redundant, as the utilities are already required to do short-term and long-term planning at the IURC and must meet reliability requirements established by the grid operators and the Federal government. The bill creates additional and unneeded bureaucracy and regulation and may ultimately create unnecessary legislative intrusion into the markets depending on how the bill is implemented and used.
Committee Votes on HB1520: none
House Floor Votes on HB1520: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
HB1581 is the bill that creates the new legislative district maps based on the 2020 census. These maps will go into effect on the date of the 2022 election. The maps for the Indiana State Representatives and Indiana's 9 Congressional Districts were drawn by the Indiana House Republicans. The map for the Indiana State Senators was drawn by the Indiana Senate Republicans.
Committee Votes on HB1581: none
House Floor Votes on HB1581: 5 votes, all Anti-Consumer
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
SB352 is designed to bring more transparency to, as well as streamline the application process at the Office of Community and Rural Affairs for providers seeking to provide broadband service to unserved or underserved communities.
Committee Votes on SB352: none
House Floor Votes on SB352: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
SB359 required INDOT to create a broadband corridor program, the Dig Once Program, in the continued effort to further enable to deployment of broadband service to unserved and underserved communities.
Committee Votes on SB359: none
House Floor Votes on SB359: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
Status: Died in Conference Committee
This bill was pushed by Wabash Valley Resources, and would have granted eminent domain to private corporations to force Hoosier property owners to allow dangerous carbon dioxide waste to be stored long-term underneath their properties without their consent. This bill put Hoosiers on the hook for the long-term costs and liabilities associated with any problems which can occur as a result of storing carbon dioxide waste underground.
Committee Votes on SB373: none
House Floor Votes on SB373: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
SB377 created the Indiana Broadband Connectivity Program in the continued effort to further enable to deployment of broadband service to unserved and underserved communities. The program established a public portal through which individuals may report that they do not have access to broadband service that meets the minimum requirements related to the speed of the connection. The program would allow broadband providers to bid every 3 months for grants to provide service to those individuals who currently lack an adequate connection.
Committee Votes on SB377: none
House Floor Votes on SB377: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Across the country and in Indiana, utilities are finding it cheaper to invest in new renewables than it is to keep operating their current generation assets, most notably their aging coal plants. However, with traditional utility financing, customers often do not see big savings in the short term from cheaper energy, and may instead see their rates spike. Utilizing securitization could lower the costs to customers by reducing the interest rate and spreading out the timeline which customers would pay for the unrecovered costs related to the coal plant being retired. Additionally, proceeds from securitization could provide needed financial assistance for both the communities who will lose tax revenues when these coal plants retire, and the workers who will need help transitioning to new employment.
Committee Votes on SB386: none
House Floor Votes on SB386: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
SB389: Repeals state regulated wetlands law
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Repeals the law requiring a permit from the department of environmental management for wetland activity in a state regulated wetland. Makes corresponding changes to eliminate references to that law. States that the repeal of that law is not intended to affect: (1) the regulation in Indiana under the federal Clean Water Act of the discharge of dredged or fill material into waters of the United States; or (2) the authorization of the state of Indiana to administer the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit program.
Committee Votes on SB389: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
House Floor Votes on SB389: 3 votes, all Anti-Consumer
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Rep. Beau Baird (R-Greencastle, District 44)
2020 Campaign Contributions: $5,200
2010 - 2020
2020 Pro-Consumer Voting Percentage: 58%
For bill details, visit our 2020 Indiana General Assembly page.
HB1414: Electric generation
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
House Bill 1414 obstructs Indiana’s electric utilities’ ability to retire their dirty, expensive, and outdated coal-fired power plants. It is designed to keep Indiana in the dark ages by delaying and obstructing our transition to clean energy. It is a deliberate attempt by the coal interests to convince Indiana lawmakers to use the heavy hand of government to interfere with the markets and protect Indiana’s fleet of coal-fired power plants. The effort is being led by Alliance Coal, Hallador Energy, and White Stallion Energy, who have been aggressively peddling their influence and money at the Indiana Statehouse.
House Floor Votes on HB1414: 2 votes; 1 Excused, 1 Anti-Consumer
HB1265: Drinking water testing
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Requires that the drinking water in every child care center, child care home, child care ministry site, child care program site, child caring institution, and school building be tested before January 1, 2023, for compliance with the national primary drinking water regulations for lead and copper. Provides, however, that the testing requirement is satisfied if the drinking water of the child care facility or school building has already been tested for compliance with the national primary drinking water regulations at least once since 2016. Provides that if a test of the drinking water of a child care facility or school building indicates the presence of lead in the water equal to or greater than the federal lead action level of 15 parts per billion, the person or entity having authority over the child care facility or school building is required to take action to reduce the lead levels in the drinking water to less than 15 parts per billion. The bill originally only applied to Lake County, but after a column entitled "High lead levels were found in our school water — but not where you would think" was published in the Indy Star on 1/26/20, HB1265 was amended to apply to the entire state.
Committee Votes on HB1265: 2 votes; 1 Anti-Consumer, 1 Excused
House Floor Votes on HB1265: 4 votes, all Pro-Consumer
HB1337: Notification of water utilities and water treatment
Status: Died in the Senate Environmental Affairs Committee
Provides that the environmental rules board shall amend provisions within the administrative rules governing spills to provide for notification to a water utility and water treatment plant in the event of a spill or release of any substance to a water that may cause a threat to the operation of a water utility or water treatment plant. This is in response to the latest release of toxic chemicals into Lake Michigan by Arcelor-Mittal. This toxic spill happened in August 2019, and was not reported to the public until three days after the spill occurred. Lake Michigan is the source of drinking water for 7 million people.
Committee Votes on HB1337: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
House Floor Votes on HB1337: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
SB229: Maintenance of regulated drains
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Provides that a permit is not required from the Indiana Department of Environmental Management for the reconstruction or maintenance of regulated drains for purposes of the law concerning state regulated wetlands. SB229 deregulates the drain pipes that drain into Indiana wetlands. This will almost certainly result in more toxins being dumped into Indiana waterways.
Committee Votes on SB229: 2 votes, both Excused
House Floor Votes on SB229: 3 votes, all Anti-Consumer
SB254: Water and wastewater utilities
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Amends the law allowing the adjustment of a water or wastewater utility's rates and charges to enable the utility to recover the cost of eligible infrastructure improvements, by providing that the general maximum limit on the revenues used in determining the adjustment does not apply to infrastructure improvement costs associated with the construction, reconstruction, or improvement of a highway, street, or road. Amends the law that allows a public water utility to treat the costs of replacing customer-owned lead service lines as eligible infrastructure improvements for which a utility's rates and charges may be adjusted, by providing that the law applies to municipally owned utilities as well as public utilities. Establishes a procedure under which a public utility, municipally owned utility, or not-for-profit utility that provides water or wastewater service to the public and is under the jurisdiction of the commission for the approval of rates and charges may seek to recover, through a periodic rate adjustment, the cost of certain utility plant or equipment expenditures that are related to compliance with environmental requirements or made for health, safety, or environmental protection purposes.
House Floor Votes on SB254: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
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Rep. Beau Baird (R-Greencastle, District 44)
2019 Campaign Contributions: $1,600
2009 - 2019
2019 Pro-Consumer Voting Percentage: 50%
For bill details, visit our 2019 Indiana General Assembly Bill Watch List.
SB4: Water and wastewater utilities and runoff
Status: Signed into law by Gov. Holcomb
Requires the Indiana Finance Authority to study the water and wastewater utilities across Indiana to assess the water infrastructure and needs across the state. Requires each utility to perform an annual audit of their water systems to identify water losses and begin reigning in waste. Urges the Indiana General Assembly to assign an appropriate interim study committee to study issues regarding water systems across Indiana.
House Floor Votes on SB4: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
SB442: Underground storage of carbon dioxide
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb
SB442 grants eminent domain to private corporations to force Hoosier property owners to allow dangerous carbon dioxide waste captured from dirty manufacturing facilities, like ammonia plants and coal-fired power plants, to be stored long-term underneath their properties without their consent. Additionally, SB442 puts Hoosiers on the hook for the long-term costs and liabilities associated with any problems which can occur as a result of storing carbon dioxide waste underground.
SB442 is being pushed by a privately-owned corporation known as Wabash Valley Resources. They are claiming it is a climate change mitigation strategy, but the best way to mitigate climate change is not to produce carbon dioxide in the first place. This is clearly another huge science experiment for which another private corporation wants to force Indiana taxpayers to assume liability.
House Floor Votes on SB442: 2 votes, both Anti-Consumer
SB471: Offenses involving critical infrastructure
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb
SB471 threatens the Constitutional Rights of all Hoosiers, including Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Assembly, and Freedom of Association. It will impose high criminal punishment for offenses involving “critical infrastructure facilities,” which it defines as places such as power plants, pipelines, refineries, and dams, among many others. This legislation elevates the misdemeanor of trespass to a FELONY offense, punishable with up to 2½ years in prison and a $10,000 fine. If property damage occurs, the offense is punishable by up to six years and a $10,000 fine. The bill goes even further to make entire groups of people collectively liable for the actions of one individual. Any organization that simply verbalizes support for an individual, an organization, or an action, can be found guilty of an offense under this legislation, and could be fined up to $100,000. SB471 is riddled with ambiguity and will have an enormous chilling effect on the Constitutional Rights of Hoosiers.
House Floor Votes on SB471: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
SB472: Utility rates and acquisitions
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb.
SB472 was originally an attempt to modify and clarify regulatory laws around the acquisition of municipally owned water and wastewater utilities by larger investor-owned water utilities. This bill is an attempt to address the heart of the water & wastewater issues facing residents in Lake Station, IN, and Charlestown, IN.
House Floor Votes on SB472: 3 votes, all Pro-Consumer
SB613: Consumer credit (Payday lending)
Status: Died in the House
SB613 would create new payday installment loans of up to $1,800 in addition to the current payday products Indiana already offers. Plus, with these loans, lenders could add on fun stuff like credit insurance to make them even more expensive. CAC supports the lead taken by The Indiana Institute for Working Families in fighting to stop the passage of this bill.
House Floor Votes on SB613: 2 votes, both Anti-Consumer
HB1266: Sediment and erosion control in construction
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb
Prohibits a community from requiring erosion and sediment control measures that are more stringent than those required by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM). HB1266 removes a measure of local control that communities have over construction projects within their communities.
Committee Votes on HB1266: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer
House Floor Votes on HB1266: 2 votes, both Anti-Consumer
HB1278: Environmental matters
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb
Prohibits a community from requiring erosion and sediment control measures that are more stringent than those required by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM). HB1266 removes a measure of local control that communities have over construction projects within their communities.
Committee Votes on HB1278: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
House Floor Votes on HB1278: 2 votes, both Pro-Consumer
HB1331: Homeowners associations and solar power
Status: Died in Conference Committee
Prohibits homeowners associations (HOAs) from prohibiting homeowners within the association from installing solar systems on their homes; imposing unreasonable limitations on the owner's ability to install or use a solar energy system; and requiring the removal of a solar energy system that has been installed.
Provides, however, that a homeowners association may require preapproval of the location of a solar energy system and of the manner in which the solar energy system is installed. Applies only to rules, covenants, declarations of restrictions, and other governing documents adopted or amended by a homeowners association after June 30, 2019.
House Floor Votes on HB1331: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
HB1406: Water infrastructure assistance fund and program
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb
HB1406 is a response to a very real clean water crisis that is growing across Indiana. Across the country and across our state, water delivery infrastructure is crumbling. It has not been properly maintained since it was originally installed. In many cases, the water delivery infrastructure has gone over 100 years without any real maintenance.
HB1406 is designed to allow the Indiana Finance Authority (IFA) to have access to money from the State of Indiana to be able to create and manage loans for these small utilities to be able to make the necessary upgrades to their systems, while simultaneously allowing them to phase in the necessary rate increases over time in order to pay the loans back. The goal is to ensure that customers of these small utilities have access to clean water, while also preventing them from getting a jolting rate shock on their water and wastewater bills all at once.
House Floor Votes on HB1406: 1 vote, Pro-Consumer
HB1470: Utility transmission improvements and costs
Status: Signed into law by Governor Holcomb
HB1470 is a clear attempt by Indiana’s monopoly utilities to usurp the regulatory process so they can raise your rates as much as they want, whenever they want. HB1470 amends the controversial Senate Enrolled Act 560 (SEA560, 2013), which gave Indiana’s electric and natural gas utilities a tracker to raise your rates virtually automatically for the costs related to investments in transmission and distribution infrastructure. This tracker is commonly referred to as the TDSIC (Transmission, Distribution, and Storage Improvement Charge).
HB1470 will effectively guarantee that captive Hoosier gas and electric customers will face ENORMOUS increases in their monthly utility bills. HB1470 mandates that the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission approve the TDSIC tracker even if the utilities have no idea what they will spend your money on. HB1470 mandates that the IURC allow the utilities to force you to pay for smart meters by including the cost of smart meters in the TDSIC tracker.
House Floor Votes on HB1470: 1 vote, Anti-Consumer