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Electric co presentations on the Northumberland supes March 12 meeting agenda

Well, BOS chair Brann’s “not at the meeting” didn’t last long. According to the Northumberland County Board of Supervisors March 12 regular meeting agenda, reps from Dominion Energy and Northern Neck Electric Cooperative will present on high electric bills at the meeting. Residents and others will be able to comment on the topic during the public comment period at the end of the meeting.

I stand by my suggestions, having dealt with similarly frustrating and opaque issues in my career as a policy and budget wonk and advocate. If you think a comprehensive meeting is required, contact your supervisor; contact information is on the county website.


Suggestions email to supes Long and Brann

Good afternoon.

I wanted to touch base regarding Mr. Long’s request that Dominion and NNEC appear at the next meeting of the Board of Supervisors.

I know that people have questions about their bills during the recent cold snap and agree that a public meeting would be beneficial. However, I would suggest that rather than having reps attend the next supes meeting, the county should organize a public meeting where Dominion, NNEC, and an energy expert (more on this later) each make short presentations and then take questions from the audience.

WHY this approach: This is not a county issue to resolve though the county could direct funding to DSS to help with electric bills. The most the county can really do is to be informed, inform stakeholders (residents, biz owners, etc.), and connect the most in need to services and supports. Such a public meeting would accomplish what a presentation at the supes meeting will not: It will present a range of info (more on this later) from the players in the energy sector and allow for questions from the public. And, if you invite service providers to table, people may end up being connected to energy and other programs/services/supports.

Proposed speakers:

* SCC’s Division of Public Utility Regulation (https://www.scc.virginia.gov/regulated-industries/utility-regulation/)

* Rep from Dominion

* Rep from NNEC

* Virginia energy expert (along the lines of legislative committee staffer, think tank person, etc.)

* Event facilitator who will keep the panel and Q&A moving along. You need someone highly skilled to do this.

I would suggest using the invitation, promotion, and RSVP process to share and gather information. Re: sharing, in no particular order:

* Map of Electric Service Territories (PDF) (State Corporation Commission)

* Mechanism to file a complaint with the State Corporation Commission

* An article or two (and/or video) about electricity bills during the recent storm

* A one-page fact sheet about electricity costs during cold months (some organization has to have done this)

* Explainers produced by Dominion/NNEC and any info the other panelists want to share

On the collection side, you can ask that people RSVP online (I understand most people will not) and collection questions and information in advance so you can report at the beginning of the meeting.

For registration, collect:

* Name

* Address

* Email

* What they are (FT resident, PT resident, biz owner, other, etc.)

* What questions they have for the panelists

Separate from registration is anonymous data collection where you ask people to report on residential property bill info: 2025 and 2026 bill amounts for same period, any significant changes in use (elderly parent moved in and temp increased), etc.

You can choose to stream the event and/or record it. If you stream, the easiest thing is to only take questions from the people at the physical event and questions submitted when registering.

I would suggest you have tabling opps for social/human service organizations such as DSS (Northumberland and Lancaster County offices, maybe Richmond County if you think people living there will attend), The Link, Bay Aging, and other appropriate nonprofits. Orgs should table before and after the program.

In the meantime, sharing some info I found interesting, again in no order:

* https://time.com/7355839/why-are-electricity-prices-high-2026/

* https://fortune.com/2026/02/10/american-electric-bills-skyrocketing-extreme-weather-data-centers-inflation/

* Image [above] https://www.reddit.com/r/Virginia/comments/1r1dpon/dominion_energy_billing_bitter_cold_but_new_fee/ - rate changes




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