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NY: National Grid Agrees To Connect Customers, Pay Penalties

FILE - In this Feb. 14, 2019, file photo, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks before signing a bill in New York. Cuomo said that the plaintiffs in a challenge to the Republican-led tax overhaul filed last year "are evaluating all options including appeal," after a federal judge in New York has ruled that the 2017 federal tax overhaul's cap on state and local tax deductions was not an "unconstitutional assault" on the sovereignty of high-tax Democratic-leaning states. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

A utility that imposed a natural gas hookup moratorium in parts of New York City and Long Island after the state rejected its pipeline plans has agreed to restore gas service and pay $36 million in penalties, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday.

“This agreement is a victory for customers,” the Democrat said. “National Grid will pay a significant penalty for its failure to address the supply issue, its abuse of its customers, and the adverse economic impact they have caused.”

Cuomo said the utility has identified short-term supply alternatives to serve all customers and new applicants for the next two years. The company also must present an analysis of long-term options to residents of Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island within three months, with a long-term plan to be in place by next fall.

Long term options may include renewable energy sources, conservation, a new pipeline, liquefied natural gas facilities and compressed natural gas facilities, Cuomo said.

National Grid imposed a moratorium on new gas hookups in the area after New York regulators blocked construction of a $1 billion 37-mile pipeline from Pennsylvania to New Jersey and New York in May. National Grid said the pipeline was critical to meet rising demand for natural gas in the metropolitan region.

Earlier this month, Cuomo threatened to revoke National Grid’s license to operate in the southern part of New York, where it supplies gas to 1.8 million customers, if the moratorium wasn’t lifted. Cuomo said Monday that the Public Service Commission won’t proceed with that revocation if the conditions of the agreement are satisfied.

“We have worked hard to identify an innovative series of alternatives to meet growing demand,” John Bruckner, president of National Grid New York, said in a statement. “With this agreement, we will present options for long term supply solutions that ensure our customers have the service they require and desire.”

The $36 million penalty will be used to compensate customers adversely impacted by the moratorium and to support energy conservation and clean energy projects, Cuomo said.

(AP)



3 Responses

  1. Thank you Governor Cuomo. The wrongful National Grid policy created a severe hardship for a family that I know with a faulty oil boiler who desired to convert to gas heat and impacted another homeowner in a flood zone who wishes to install a natural gas generator.

  2. The gas pressure will drop for everyone. Cuomo rejected the pipeline and liquified gas. You can’t make it out of thin air. But Cuomo doesn’t care about people, only about making up phony environmental issues that he can then fight and earn cheap points in the media.

  3. This was pure corruption. Blackmail the state and citizens in order to get a pipeline authorized? You can bet they weren’t trying to do it for the good of their customers. Big business in this country has basically taken over the government, at the cost to the average person, and I’m glad New York has decided to fight back.

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