Changeflow GovPing Energy Oregon PUC Approves New Rules for Utility Custo...
Priority review Rule Added Final

Oregon PUC Approves New Rules for Utility Customer Protections

Favicon for www.oregon.gov Newsroom.aspx
Published December 31st, 2025
Detected March 17th, 2026
Email

Summary

The Oregon Public Utility Commission (PUC) has approved new rules and interim actions to enhance protections for residential utility customers, particularly those facing financial hardship or medical needs. These measures apply to customers of investor-owned utilities in Oregon and aim to make services safer, more affordable, and accessible, with expanded protections during emergencies and a new one-time arrearage forgiveness grant of up to $500 for eligible low-income customers.

What changed

The Oregon Public Utility Commission (PUC) has finalized new rules and adopted temporary measures under Docket Nos. AR 671 and UM 2211 to strengthen protections for residential utility customers served by investor-owned utilities. Key changes include easier service initiation with additional ID forms, reduced reconnection costs (especially for income-qualified and medically certified customers), extended payment periods for past-due bills (up to six billing cycles), stronger weather-related shutoff protections, and clearer communication of customer rights. Temporary actions include monthly energy burden reporting, 24-month payment arrangements, a 30-day pause on disconnections for economic hardship, a disconnection moratorium for bill discount participants and medical certificate holders, and a one-time arrearage forgiveness grant of up to $500 for eligible low-income customers.

These new rules and interim actions require immediate attention from the affected investor-owned utilities (Avista, Cascade Natural Gas, Idaho Power, NW Natural, PacifiCorp, and PGE) to implement the enhanced customer protections and reporting requirements. Specific temporary measures are in effect through March 1, 2026, or May 1, 2026, for payment arrangements. Utilities must ensure compliance with the new reconnection fee policies, extended payment timelines, and the provision of clearer information to customers. The arrearage forgiveness grant is to be automatically applied in March 2026. Non-compliance could lead to regulatory scrutiny and potential enforcement actions by the PUC.

What to do next

  1. Implement new rules for easier service initiation and reduced reconnection costs.
  2. Extend payment terms for past-due bills to six billing cycles.
  3. Ensure compliance with temporary measures including monthly reporting, payment arrangements, disconnection moratoriums, and arrearage forgiveness grant by specified deadlines.

Source document (simplified)

Docket Nos.: AR 671, UM 2211 Media Release FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Kandi Young, Public Information Officer Date: December 31, 2025 kandi.young@puc.oregon.gov, (503) 551-5290 cell phone OREGON PUC STRENGTHENS UTILITY CUSTOMER PROTECTIONS AND ADVANCES NEW MEASURES TO REDUCE ENERGY INSECURITY SALEM, Ore. – The Oregon Public Utility Commission (PUC) has approved new rules and interim actions designed to continue expanding protections for residential utility customers, especially those facing financial hardship, medical needs, or severe weather conditions. These changes apply to customers served by Oregon’s investor- owned utilities, including Avista, Cascade Natural Gas, Idaho Power, NW Natural, PacifiCorp, and Portland General Electric (PGE). The new and updated rules are aimed at making utility services safer, more affordable, and easier to access. They also expand protections during emergencies, such as extreme weather, air quality, and wildfire evacuations, and help prevent unnecessary disconnections. Below is a list of key customer protection expansions as a result of new and updated rules. • Easier access to utility service – Utilities will now accept additional forms of identification to initiate service. • Lower reconnection costs – No reconnection fees when utilities can do so remotely or for income- qualified customers and those with medical certificates at any time. Additionally, no reconnection fee or outstanding balance payment required for income qualified or medical certificate holders seeking reconnection after a wildfire evacuation or severe weather event. • More time to pay past-due bills – Customers seeking reconnection now have up to six billing cycles to catch up on overdue utility balances, expanding on the previous two billing cycles. • Stronger weather-related shutoff protections – Disconnections will be paused during and for 48 hours after a severe weather event for all residential customers. • Clearer Information about customer protections – Utilities will offer simple explanations of available protections in bill inserts, online, and through community action agencies and customer service teams. In addition to the new and updated rules, the PUC also approved additional temporary measures following growing concern about energy insecurity and the need for stronger customer protections from Oregon legislators, energy justice advocates, and PUC staff, in light of federal policy changes and ongoing uncertainty.

Docket Nos.: AR 671, UM 2211 The approved temporary actions directing Avista, Cascade Natural Gas, Idaho Power, NW Natural, PacifiCorp, and PGE to: • Temporarily submit monthly reports that will regularly track and monitor energy burden metrics for residential customers. • Provide the option for 24-month Time Payment Arrangements for customers with overdue balances on their utility bills who request additional flexibility through at least May 1, 2026. • Provide a minimum 30-day pause on disconnections for customers who self-report economic hardship through March 1, 2026. Additionally, Idaho Power, PacifiCorp and PGE are directed to: • Implement a temporary disconnection moratorium for bill discount program participants and customers with medical certificates through March 1, 2026, with no late fees assessed during this time. • Provide a one-time arrearage forgiveness grant of up to $500 for eligible low-income customers, automatically applied to past-due balances on March 2026 bills. “These rules and temporary measures reflect months of collaboration among utilities, community organizations and advocates, and PUC staff,” said PUC Chair Letha Tawney. “They provide some of the strongest customer protections in the country and are critical steps to protect our most vulnerable neighbors by reducing unnecessary disconnections, protecting health and safety during emergencies, and supporting low-income households.” For more information about available customer protections, residents are encouraged to contact their electric or natural gas utility service providers directly. # # # The PUC regulates customer rates and services of the state’s investor-owned electric and natural gas utilities, including Portland General Electric, Idaho Power, Pacific Power, Avista, Cascade Natural, and NW Natural. The PUC also regulates landline telephone providers and select water companies. The PUC’s mission is to ensure Oregonians have access to safe, reliable, and fairly priced utility services that advance state policy and promote the public interest. We use an inclusive process to evaluate differing viewpoints and visions of the public interest and arrive at balanced, well-reasoned, independent decisions supported by fact and law. For more information about the PUC, visit oregon.gov/puc.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State PUC
Published
December 31st, 2025
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Energy companies
Geographic scope
State (Oregon)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Energy Utilities Consumer Finance

Get Energy alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when Newsroom.aspx publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.