Cedar Valley News – September 25, 2025

Letter To The Editor
When a Business Comes Up Short, It Cuts Costs—Why Not Our Utility?

By: George Khan

From the fictional town of Cedar Valley, where characters from Quiet Echo continue to respond to real-world events.

To the Editor,

Cedar Valley Electric has filed for its second rate increase this year. In February, we swallowed a 4.3% hike. Now, just months later, the utility is asking the Regulatory Commission to approve another 3% increase. The reason? According to their filing, they’ve seen “increases in costs and declines in sales,” with sales dropping more than 3% due to an unusually warm winter.

Let me be plain: when a salesperson in town makes fewer sales, they don’t walk into their customer’s home asking for a handout. They cut expenses. They work harder. They tighten their belts just like every responsible family in Cedar Valley. Our electric company should be no different.

We all know weather swings are part of life here. Warm winters, cold snaps, ice storms, dry summers—this isn’t new. Families plan ahead, businesses plan ahead, and yes, even farmers plan ahead. So why doesn’t our utility? If a warm winter reduces revenue enough to justify a rate increase, does a cold winter—when demand and revenue climb—bring a rate reduction? I think we all know the answer.

This is what frustrates residents. We are asked to absorb the highs, but never see relief in the lows. Cedar Valley Electric’s request makes it sound as if its members, who already shoulder higher bills, must also carry the company’s lack of foresight. A community-owned utility should plan for lean times, not simply pass its shortfalls onto hardworking families and small businesses.

I respect the men and women who keep the lights on during storms and emergencies. Their work matters. But leadership must show the same discipline every Cedar Valley household practices. Don’t spend more than you take in. Don’t ask neighbors to cover for your own failure to prepare.

The Commission will decide whether this rate increase is “just and reasonable.” From where I sit, the just and reasonable thing is for Cedar Valley Electric to do what the rest of us do when times get tight—cut costs, plan smarter, and carry the burden themselves before asking their neighbors to carry it for them.

Sincerely,
George Khan
Cedar Valley Resident

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.

It’s free, it’s fresh, and it’s waiting for you on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms starting October 6. We’re launching Quiet Echo—A Cedar Valley News Podcast! Every day, you’ll hear a short editorial straight from the fictional newsroom of the Cedar Valley News. Join us in Cedar Valley—you’ll feel right at home.

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