Restaurant owner says electricity bill has doubled since B.C. Hydro installed smart meter
The co-owner of a restaurant is blaming recent utility bill spikes on the installation of a smart meter at the establishment she cofounded in 1983.
“It can only be one thing,” Maureen Loucks told the Straight by phone from the Mahle House Restaurant in rural Cedar, close to Nanaimo. “All other logical things have been checked out, you know, and we’re only open five days a week. Even our dishwasher is a low-temp dishwasher. We’re using gas, but electricity? There’s no reason for that [bill] to over double.”
According to Loucks, her most recent bimonthly bill was $1,084.56, and her bill for the period December 14, 2011, to February 13, 2012, was $1,192.67. But the bill before those two, for October 15 to December 13 of last year—during which time (on November 28) the smart meter was installed to replace the old analogue meter—was just $532.72.
Despite being furious at what she called “huge increases”, Loucks said she reluctantly paid the last two bills on May 9, fearing her power would be cut, adding that B.C. Hydro is “the only show in town”.
“I often think, ‘If we just went to the restaurant and we doubled our prices, we’d probably go out of business because nobody would come,’ ” Loucks said. “But with B.C. Hydro…”
B.C. Hydro media spokesperson Greg Alexis directed the Straight to Jim Nicholson, B.C. Hydro’s director of customer care. Nicholson did not respond to the Straight about Loucks’s concerns by deadline. As well, Rich Coleman, B.C.’s energy minister, did not respond to a message by deadline.
Loucks said she received a generic email response from B.C. Hydro’s customer care team on April 12, in which staff listed eight factors that could have contributed to the spike, including the winter season, additional machinery being installed, and human error.
“I have had everybody check out my system,” Loucks countered. “I have had Houle Electric in to see if there was anything that they could suggest. I’ve had our heat pump checked out, to make sure that nothing was malfunctioning. This was another thing that Hydro said: ‘Well, surely something is malfunctioning.’ Well, it’s not. That’s the whole thing. We’ve never, in the history of the Mahle House, had such huge bills.”
Loucks said business does roll along despite the smart meter–induced uncertainty, but these bill spikes eat away at the restaurant’s bottom line.
“I wonder if you could even find somebody whose meter reading has gone down with the smart meters,” she added. “I bet you can’t.”






The way the 'smart meters' have been pushed on us, the customers, is sneaky. They don't appear to be CSA-approved, and the people installing them seem clueless.
Then they implented a rate based on time of usage. This of course will affect all business & a lot of families. You can't run most businesses when the rates are low at 3 a.m.
The new meters are just another tax grab. Those who benefited are the friends of campbell who got the almost billion $ contract to install them & the company that made them.
I really like the idea of a class action. I certainly would join. The cost of everything is going up but nobodies salaries or profits of small business can keep up. When hydro bills go up as much as they have with the new meters, in many families something has to give. Frequently it means less food. Remember B.C. has the highest rate of child poverty in Canada, 8 yrs running and the demand at food banks increases constantly. Higher hydro bills do nothing to help the situation.
Given the California experience with smart meters shows that they're not all that reliable and prone to dramatic errors in readings, I'd say the attitude of "blame the meter" is quite justified given the facts and reality you're supposedly entrenched in.
Some of the arguments here are like complaining about how much gas a car uses with no idea how far the car is being driven.
Nothing to see here. Just move along and pay your bills.
I am on fixed income and am severely disabled and am now not going to be able eat healthly and dare not ask for assistance because I can't take the abuse of a government that will treat u cruel for being severely disabled and unable to work and just another British Columbina fool.
And the next group of sheeple go to the guy in the suit.
And the next suit, and the next suit...
UN-REAL COINCIDENCE!
The error is in my favour. The new meter has said my consumption is ONE SEVENTH of what I normally use in this time period and I keep meticulous records, have utility bills going back for a decade.
Pages