View of the Tampa Electric (TECO) power plant in Apollo Beach, featuring three tall smokestacks releasing large plumes of white exhaust into a clear blue sky, with the industrial facility at the water's edge.
Tampa Electric Company’s Big Bend plant in Apollo Beach, Florida. Credit: Dennis McDonald / TECO Plant Big Bend Apollo Beach

On Tuesday, the Florida Public Service Commission approved a rate hike for Tampa Electric customers.

According to Food & Water Watch, the average TECO residential customer will pay $5.51 more each month starting in January. 

The move is the next step of a decision made last year to increase rates in 2025 and 2026. 

A Food & Water Watch analysis finds that the average TECO customerโ€™s bill will be 82% higher โ€”$939 a year more โ€”than five years ago.

Brooke Ward is the Senior Florida organizer with the Food and Water Watch.

โ€œThatโ€™s almost $1,000 more that families have to be able to scrap together in just the last five years, in order to keep lights on in their home and to use life-saving electricity,โ€ Ward told WMNF.

Ward called the move โ€œa corporate greed grab gameโ€ and called on lawmakers to pass reforms in the upcoming legislative session. 

โ€œThe truth of the matter is that Governor DeSantisโ€™s administration has allowed a series of legislation to be passed over the past few years that allows utilities to get more from us, and weโ€™d like to see some reforms, affordable energy reform legislation that rolls back how much money these utilities can get.โ€ Ward said.

Last weekend, the Tampa Bay Sierra Club, Congress member Kathy Castor, and others protested the rate hike by throwing TECO bills into a trash can full of smoke. 

This post first appeared at WMNF news, which is part of the Tampa Bay Journalism Project (TBJP), a nascent Creative Loafing Tampa Bay effort supported by grants and a coalition of donors who make specific contributions via the Alternative Newsweekly Foundation. If you are a non-paywalled Bay area publication interested in TBJP, please email rroa@ctampa.com. Support WMNF News by visiting the community radio stationโ€™s stationโ€™s support page.


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