Liberty Utilities seeks major rate hike for Tahoe-area customers; local groups push back
PLACERVILLE, Calif. — Liberty Utilities (CalPeco Electric) has asked the California Public Utilities Commission to authorize a roughly 19.1% increase in its 2025 revenue requirement — a move the company says is needed to cover rising wildfire insurance, storm and infrastructure costs and other operational pressures. The filing (Application A.24-09-010) would translate to an average residential bill increase of about 20.6%, or roughly $37.51 per month for the typical customer, if regulators approve Liberty’s request.
Liberty’s application frames the request as necessary “to continue to provide its customers with safe and reliable electric service” and to recover higher wildfire insurance and storm-related expenses, plus investments in grid hardening and customer systems. The company’s public materials and FAQs say wildfire mitigation and sharply higher insurance premiums are major drivers of the requested increase.
Local residents and consumer advocates say the timing and size of the request are unacceptable. Danielle Hughes, founder of the resident group TAHOE SPARK, told the CPUC in prepared testimony that “Liberty’s current rate structure disproportionately burdens Permanent Residents,” arguing the utility’s proposal fails to account for visitor-driven demand and regional fairness. Other intervenors — including the Tahoe Energy Ratepayers Group and state consumer advocates — have filed testimony and protests opposing aspects of the plan.
The company has also filed a separate cost-recovery application tied to wildfire liabilities from the Mountain View/Mountain Fire incidents; Liberty asks regulators for authority to recover wildfire-related claim payments, defense costs and related insurance expenses in a distinct proceeding. Local reporting has noted Liberty is facing multiple wildfire-related lawsuits and that those legal and insurance costs are part of the company’s broader rate requests.
What happens next: the CPUC is reviewing Liberty’s GRC and related filings; the commission’s docket shows the application (A.24-09-010) is contested and subject to testimony, public comment and hearings before a final decision. Liberty requested interim rates be set at 50% of the requested increase to take effect as soon as practicable; consumer groups and the CPUC staff will weigh evidence before any change to customer bills is approved.
Why it matters to El Dorado County readers: Liberty’s CalPeco service territory includes parts of the California side of the Lake Tahoe Basin and adjacent communities in El Dorado County. A sizeable increase would affect residents, small businesses and seasonal-workforce affordability in a high-cost, tourism-driven economy — an outcome local advocates say deserves close scrutiny and a robust regulatory record.
“For residents already squeezed by housing and living costs, a sudden jump in monthly bills is more than an accounting issue — it’s a threat to household budgets and the local workforce,” said Hughes in her testimony. Liberty, in its filings, emphasizes the same trade-off from its perspective — increased costs now to avoid greater reliability or wildfire risk later.
Residents who want to review the filings, submit comments, or follow hearing dates can find the CPUC docket for Liberty’s GRC and related proceedings on the commission’s website. The CPUC posts evidentiary filings, public comments and hearing notices in the A.24-09-010 docket.