State, businesses keep consumers’ sales tax overpayments

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

Missouri Kept Overpaid Sales Taxes
By DAVID A. LIEB
forbes.com

Former longtime Sen. Wayne Goode, a state financial expert who then was the ranking minority member on the Senate Appropriations Committee, said Wednesday that he also was unaware that the state had stopped notifying business of overpaid sales taxes.

But “with the downturn in revenue, and how desperately the Holden administration was trying to hold things together, I can see how that could have happened and probably did,” said Goode, who now is on the board of directors for the Consumers Council of Missouri.

Most distressing for Goode and other consumer advocates is that very little, if any, of the sales tax refunds are likely to make it into the wallets and purses of Missouri shoppers.

For the whole story, click here.

AG candidate wants product safety law

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

By DAVID A. LIEB The Associated Press
August 15, 2007
The Columbia Missourian

JEFFERSON CITY—Democratic attorney general candidate Margaret Donnelly on Wednesday called for Missouri to enact a children’s product safety law that could penalize businesses that don’t quickly inform consumers of product recalls.

Donnelly wants Missouri to model its measure on one in Illinois, which makes it illegal to sell children’s products that have been recalled, are subject to safety warnings or don’t meet federal standards.

For more of the story, click here.

MoPSC Proposes Weak Customer Credits for Storm Outages . . . Relief Available Only After 5 days

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

What kind of refund should customers receive when they suffer through power outages that last for days at a time?  Amazingly, there remains a controversy within the Missouri Public Service Commission (MoPSC) about whether to order any credits to such customers.  As for the AmerenUE and the other regulated electric utilities, they are pulling out all the stops to lobby the MoPSC against rate relief to customers that are inconvenienced by long storm outages. 

Last week, a strongly divided commission voted 3-2 to simply consider the adoption of rules that include credit provisions, and then sent the proposed rules to the Department of Economic Development for its political consideration.  Ultimately, the rules will be published and then public comment can take place formally.  The issue is far from being ultimately decided because one or more commissioner may yet change their minds prior to adoption of the final rule.

 

The Consumers Council of Missouri is pleased that at least a majority of the MoPSC is moving forward with some recognition of the inconvenience that customers suffer suring the kind of long outages that the St. Louis area experienced twice last year.  However, the current proposal is weak compared with the credits granted to consumers in other states.  Pacific Gas & Electric (PGE) voluntarily grants a $25 credit for each day after 48 hours of an outage (up to a maximum of $100)—no matter the reason for the outage.  The 48-hour mark recognizes the fact that 2 days is a reasonable threshold for being out of power, even after a major storm. 

 

By comparison, the MoPSC is proposing that there be only a one-time credit of $25 and only after 120 hours (5 days) in case of a major event (i.e., storm outage).  There are proposing a one-time credit of $25 if your power is not restored within 16 hours, if the interruption occurred “under normal conditions”.

 

Here is the wording of the PSC’s relevant portions of the rule dealing with customer credits:

Unless an electrical corporation requests a waiver pursuant to (§_____) of these rules, an electrical corporation that fails to restore service to a customer within 120 hours after an interruption that occurred during the course of a major event shall provide to any affected customer a bill credit on the customer’s next bill.  The amount of the credit provided to a residential customer shall be the greater of $25.00 or the customer’s monthly customer charge. 

Unless an electrical corporation request a waiver pursuant to _____ of these rules, an electrical corporation that fails to restore service to a customer within 16 hours after an interruption that occurred during normal conditions shall provide to any affected customer that notifies the electrical corporation of the interruption a bill credit on the customer’s next bill.  The amount of the credit provided to a residential customer shall be the greater of $25.00 or the customer’s monthly customer charge.  The amount of the credit provided to any other distribution customer shall be the customer’s minimum bill prorated on a daily basis.

Many customers were forced to throw out everything in their refrigerators twice last year.  And those that couldn’t survive without heat or air conditioning had to search out extraordinarily costly alternatives, such as finding hotel rooms many miles away or purchase gasoline-powered generators.  The average AmerenUE customer who was out of power for periods lasting longer than 48 hours during the 2006 outages suffered expenses that far exceeded $25.

 

The Consumers Council of Missouri is shocked that AmerenUE has not decided to implement any voluntary program that would be similar to what PGE and other electric utilities have offered to their customers.  It would be a nice gesture to let consumers know that AmerenUE was putting its money where its mouth is as far as ensuring reliable service, and could help to improve that company’s image.  It might even serve as an incentive to finding the best ways to improve its system and avoid the disastrous outages of 2006.

 

Of course, AmerenUE is the company that chose to give its top executives bonuses as a result of the “good job” that they did during the storm outages last year.

 

Here is a link to a newspaper article about the action that the MoPSC has recently taken on customer credits—

http://www.semissourian.com/story/1236729.html 

Informal comments can be sent to MoPSC Chairman Jeff Davis at the Public Service Commission, P.O. Box 360, Jefferson City MO 65102.  Reference “Customers credits for storm outages”.

Comments may also be submitted electronically at—

https://www.efis.psc.mo.gov/mpsc/Comments.html