20 minutes

Daily Montanan
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A female agricultural expert and former university agricultural professor is suing large seed-growing corporation Nutrien, the Montana Seedgrowers Association, the Hilldale Hutterite Colony in Havre, and one of its members because she said it’s a well-kept industry secret that Hutterite men present a danger to women, and she was sexually assaulted at work, despite multiple […]

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Daily Montanan
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A female agricultural expert and former university agricultural professor is suing large seed-growing corporation Nutrien, the Montana Seedgrowers Association, the Hilldale Hutterite Colony in Havre, and one of its members because she said it’s a well-kept industry secret that Hutterite men present a danger to women, and she was sexually assaulted at work, despite multiple […]

22 minutes

Washington State Standard
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WASHINGTON — The first year of President Donald Trump’s return to the White House was defined by clashes with the judiciary branch, as the president and his administration pushed forward with an aggressive immigration agenda. In the past year, the Trump administration has aimed to drastically change immigration policy in the United States, including by stripping […]

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Washington State Standard
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WASHINGTON — The first year of President Donald Trump’s return to the White House was defined by clashes with the judiciary branch, as the president and his administration pushed forward with an aggressive immigration agenda. In the past year, the Trump administration has aimed to drastically change immigration policy in the United States, including by stripping […]

23 minutes

Oregon Capital Chronicle
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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Education, for now, is backtracking on plans to garnish wages and seize tax refunds of student loan borrowers in default, the department announced Friday. Less than a month after the agency said it would begin garnishing wages by sending notices to roughly 1,000 borrowers in default the first full […]

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Oregon Capital Chronicle
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WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Education, for now, is backtracking on plans to garnish wages and seize tax refunds of student loan borrowers in default, the department announced Friday. Less than a month after the agency said it would begin garnishing wages by sending notices to roughly 1,000 borrowers in default the first full […]

23 minutes

法国国际广播电台
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法国世界报驻华记者普伊耶周五在该报发表的文章报道了中国电子烟行业所处的困境:在中国,生产电子烟的企业不仅被禁止与本土烟草竞争,而且现在还被要求结束产能过剩。 相关的文章写道,主要面向出口的中国电子烟行业,存在严重的产能过剩。中国政府担心电子烟会威胁到国家烟草专卖制度,因此对电子烟行业采取了罕见严厉的干预措施。

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法国国际广播电台
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法国世界报驻华记者普伊耶周五在该报发表的文章报道了中国电子烟行业所处的困境:在中国,生产电子烟的企业不仅被禁止与本土烟草竞争,而且现在还被要求结束产能过剩。 相关的文章写道,主要面向出口的中国电子烟行业,存在严重的产能过剩。中国政府担心电子烟会威胁到国家烟草专卖制度,因此对电子烟行业采取了罕见严厉的干预措施。

23 minutes

法國國際廣播電台
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法國世界報駐華記者普伊耶周五在該報發表的文章報道了中國電子煙行業所處的困境:在中國,生產電子煙的企業不僅被禁止與本土煙草競爭,而且現在還被要求結束產能過剩。 相關的文章寫道,主要面向出口的中國電子煙行業,存在嚴重的產能過剩。中國政府擔心電子煙會威脅到國家煙草專賣制度,因此對電子煙行業採取了罕見嚴厲的干預措施。

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法國國際廣播電台
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法國世界報駐華記者普伊耶周五在該報發表的文章報道了中國電子煙行業所處的困境:在中國,生產電子煙的企業不僅被禁止與本土煙草競爭,而且現在還被要求結束產能過剩。 相關的文章寫道,主要面向出口的中國電子煙行業,存在嚴重的產能過剩。中國政府擔心電子煙會威脅到國家煙草專賣制度,因此對電子煙行業採取了罕見嚴厲的干預措施。

From national comedy tours and Broadway-style musicals to crab feeds and hat decorating, this weekend in Stockton and nearby cities brings a mix of entertainment, food and fun for all ages. Things to do in Stockton Jan. 16–18: Jo Koy comedy, Restaurant Week, Freaky Friday musical, and more is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

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Stocktonia News
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From national comedy tours and Broadway-style musicals to crab feeds and hat decorating, this weekend in Stockton and nearby cities brings a mix of entertainment, food and fun for all ages. Things to do in Stockton Jan. 16–18: Jo Koy comedy, Restaurant Week, Freaky Friday musical, and more is a story from Stocktonia News, a rigorous and factual newsroom covering Greater Stockton, California. Please consider making a charitable contribution to support our journalism.

For most of modern history, the open ocean has been treated as a place apart. Beyond the 200-nautical-mile limits of national jurisdiction, it was governed by custom, fragmented rules, and the assumption that what lay far offshore was too vast to manage and too resilient to exhaust. That assumption has worn thin. On January 17th […]

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Mongabay
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For most of modern history, the open ocean has been treated as a place apart. Beyond the 200-nautical-mile limits of national jurisdiction, it was governed by custom, fragmented rules, and the assumption that what lay far offshore was too vast to manage and too resilient to exhaust. That assumption has worn thin. On January 17th […]

Zee Wilcox, who is running for Texas House, was removed from the GOP primary for using the wrong form when filing.

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Fort Worth Report
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Zee Wilcox, who is running for Texas House, was removed from the GOP primary for using the wrong form when filing.

29 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – San Francisco is getting new state funding for homelessness and mental health services. Speaking Friday at a San Francisco event titled "Treatments, Not Tents," Gov. Gavin Newsom said this will build on the state’s recent 9% reduction in unsheltered homelessness. “Extraordinary progress is being made in San Francisco,” Newsom, a Democrat, told reporters at a news conference with Mayor Daniel Lurie. “It’s not just the data that’s presented, people are feeling it again, they’re experiencing it again, and that’s the most difficult perhaps thing to move, and that’s perception, and no one has done that more effectively than Mayor Lurie.” The state is giving $419 million to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego as part of the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention program. HHAP is designed to assist local efforts to end homelessness through support services as well as interim and permanent housing. These funds add to those from Proposition 1, a voter-approved initiative to help communities in their efforts to combat housing, mental, and behavioral health problems. Of the $419 million, $328.8 million will go to Los Angeles. San Diego will receive $50,9 million. And $39.9 million will go to San Francisco, where Mayor Lurie, a Democrat who describes himself as a centrist, said the city is already “changing its approach to homelessness” to get people off the street and on a path to stability. “We launched our Breaking the Cycle plan to bring together health services, social services, law enforcement and emergency responders,” said Lurie. “We combined nine different neighborhood outreach teams into one, breaking down silos and increasing shelter placements by 40% this past year.” Lurie also pointed to new legislation that moves families living in RVs into housing and restores public spaces. “Just this past year, we opened 600 new treatment-focused beds so people on the street can get inside and get help,” said Lurie. “In December, we reached a record low number of encampments, down 44% over the prior year.” Lurie said the new resources from the state are “crucial,” whether it is Proposition One, HHAP dollars or funding to make sure freeway off-ramps and on-ramps are clean. “So, governor, thank you for providing us with real money that funds real solutions for people exiting homelessness throughout our community,” said Lurie.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – San Francisco is getting new state funding for homelessness and mental health services. Speaking Friday at a San Francisco event titled "Treatments, Not Tents," Gov. Gavin Newsom said this will build on the state’s recent 9% reduction in unsheltered homelessness. “Extraordinary progress is being made in San Francisco,” Newsom, a Democrat, told reporters at a news conference with Mayor Daniel Lurie. “It’s not just the data that’s presented, people are feeling it again, they’re experiencing it again, and that’s the most difficult perhaps thing to move, and that’s perception, and no one has done that more effectively than Mayor Lurie.” The state is giving $419 million to San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego as part of the Homeless Housing, Assistance and Prevention program. HHAP is designed to assist local efforts to end homelessness through support services as well as interim and permanent housing. These funds add to those from Proposition 1, a voter-approved initiative to help communities in their efforts to combat housing, mental, and behavioral health problems. Of the $419 million, $328.8 million will go to Los Angeles. San Diego will receive $50,9 million. And $39.9 million will go to San Francisco, where Mayor Lurie, a Democrat who describes himself as a centrist, said the city is already “changing its approach to homelessness” to get people off the street and on a path to stability. “We launched our Breaking the Cycle plan to bring together health services, social services, law enforcement and emergency responders,” said Lurie. “We combined nine different neighborhood outreach teams into one, breaking down silos and increasing shelter placements by 40% this past year.” Lurie also pointed to new legislation that moves families living in RVs into housing and restores public spaces. “Just this past year, we opened 600 new treatment-focused beds so people on the street can get inside and get help,” said Lurie. “In December, we reached a record low number of encampments, down 44% over the prior year.” Lurie said the new resources from the state are “crucial,” whether it is Proposition One, HHAP dollars or funding to make sure freeway off-ramps and on-ramps are clean. “So, governor, thank you for providing us with real money that funds real solutions for people exiting homelessness throughout our community,” said Lurie.

La blusa de volantes de Zara demuestra que los pequeños detalles son los que realmente marcan la diferencia en un look.

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Mundiario
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La blusa de volantes de Zara demuestra que los pequeños detalles son los que realmente marcan la diferencia en un look.

El regreso de Trump acelera un acuerdo histórico entre la UE y Mercosur: comercio, geopolítica y supervivencia en un mundo hostil.

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Mundiario
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El regreso de Trump acelera un acuerdo histórico entre la UE y Mercosur: comercio, geopolítica y supervivencia en un mundo hostil.

Dinamarca y las autoridades groenlandesas han rechazado cualquier escenario de compra, anexión o control forzado, y han subrayado que el futuro de la isla debe decidirlo su propia población. El enviado especial de EE UU viajará a la isla ártica en marzo.

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Mundiario
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Dinamarca y las autoridades groenlandesas han rechazado cualquier escenario de compra, anexión o control forzado, y han subrayado que el futuro de la isla debe decidirlo su propia población. El enviado especial de EE UU viajará a la isla ártica en marzo.

Según las autoridades, el contenido de la obra era susceptible de “incitar al odio hacia la población israelí”, según un informe del Ministerio de Justicia.

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Mundiario
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Según las autoridades, el contenido de la obra era susceptible de “incitar al odio hacia la población israelí”, según un informe del Ministerio de Justicia.

John Forté, a Grammy-nominated musician best known for his work with the Fugees, was found dead at his Massachusetts home at age 50, according to police. The post Grammy-nominated musician John Forté found dead at 50 in Massachusetts home appeared first on The Haitian Times.

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The Haitian Times
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John Forté, a Grammy-nominated musician best known for his work with the Fugees, was found dead at his Massachusetts home at age 50, according to police. The post Grammy-nominated musician John Forté found dead at 50 in Massachusetts home appeared first on The Haitian Times.

The international firm, Foster + Partners, is tasked with adding a contemporary, sustainable west wing to the San Diego Museum of Art.

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Times of San Diego
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The international firm, Foster + Partners, is tasked with adding a contemporary, sustainable west wing to the San Diego Museum of Art.

38 minutes

Capitol News Illinois
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A lapse in federal disclosure requirements briefly grounded the effort.

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Capitol News Illinois
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A lapse in federal disclosure requirements briefly grounded the effort.

Mission Times Courier: Jan. 16, 2026
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41 minutes

Times of San Diego
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Mission Times Courier’s Jan. 16–Feb. 12, 2026 issue highlights community giving at Mission Trails Regional Park, wildfire safety planning, local government actions, East County wine country, sports milestones, new California laws, neighborhood events, and voices from Allied Gardens, Del Cerro, San Carlos, and surrounding communities.

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Times of San Diego
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Mission Times Courier’s Jan. 16–Feb. 12, 2026 issue highlights community giving at Mission Trails Regional Park, wildfire safety planning, local government actions, East County wine country, sports milestones, new California laws, neighborhood events, and voices from Allied Gardens, Del Cerro, San Carlos, and surrounding communities.

انقلاب ايران و وحشت پيرامون؛ چرا همسایگان ایران از خيزش مردم می‌ترسند

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صدای آمریکا
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انقلاب ايران و وحشت پيرامون؛ چرا همسایگان ایران از خيزش مردم می‌ترسند

43 minutes

Nashville Banner
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Chancellor I'Ashea Myles granted a temporary injunction to a collective of plaintiffs seeking greater access and transparency to executions in Tennessee, ordering changes to the state's lethal injection and electrocution protocols to ensure the public interest is served. The post Judge Orders Alterations to Tennessee’s Lethal Injection Protocol appeared first on Nashville Banner.

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Nashville Banner
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Chancellor I'Ashea Myles granted a temporary injunction to a collective of plaintiffs seeking greater access and transparency to executions in Tennessee, ordering changes to the state's lethal injection and electrocution protocols to ensure the public interest is served. The post Judge Orders Alterations to Tennessee’s Lethal Injection Protocol appeared first on Nashville Banner.

44 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Pacific Gas & Electric customers are going to see changes to their electricity rates starting in March, according to an email to a PG&E customer obtained by The Center Square. The email said a “base services charge” will change what some PG&E customers will pay every month in California. PG&E serves the northern and central portions of the state. It isn’t a new charge, according to PG&E, but it is what the company is using to describe certain charges, including fees for start-up connection, energy programs, call center services and billing service charges. Those fees were previously included in customers’ bills, but are now being rolled into the base services charge, the PG&E email said. That charge will be $25.15 a month, according to information sent by PG&E. Instituting the rate will reduce the cost of electricity anywhere from 5 to 7 cents per kilowatt hour, according to PG&E documents sent to The Center Square. Changes to customers’ bills caused by the base services charge is in response to Assembly Bill 205, which was passed by the California Legislature and signed into law in 2022. The bill required utility providers to find ways to accelerate clean energy projects to reduce the state’s dependence on fossil fuels, according to the bill analysis. Despite the newly-instituted base services charge, not everyone will see an increase in their bill, particularly low-income customers, a PG&E representative told The Center Square. “The goal of Assembly Bill 205 is to lower rates for low-income customers,” a PG&E spokesperson told The Center Square. “Customers who are on the income-qualified programs pay a lower fixed charge than people who are not. The base charge goes onto bills, and as part of the restructuring, the actual rate per kilowatt hour gets decreased for all customers.” Some programs that companies like PG&E and Southern California Edison participate in, like the California Alternative Rates for Energy program, or CARE, and the Family Electric Rate Assistance program, or FERA, charge lower energy rates if a customer is considered low-income. Southern California Edison customers enrolled in those programs can expect to see lower base service charges than their higher-income counterparts. Customers enrolled in CARE get charged only $6 a month for the base service charge, while customers enrolled in the FERA program pay $12 a month for the base service charge, according to Southern California Edison’s website. “Low-income customers’ bills should be lower,” the PG&E representative said. “For customers who are not on CARE and FERA, they might see a slight bill impact, but the thought is between the September and January decreases, that might offset any bill impact they might see.” Rates were decreased in recent months, company officials told The Center Square, in large part in anticipation of the rollout of the base services charge. The new restructure of what PG&E customers pay for electricity will also include a lower price per kilowatt hour, although since each customer’s energy usage can vary, the rate restructure might not lead to a lower overall bill each month, PG&E officials familiar with the rate change told The Center Square. “​​As required by the CPUC, PG&E will implement the Base Services Charge (BSC) in March,” PG&E told The Center Square. “Reducing the price of electricity makes it more affordable for low-income customers and encourages the transition to more clean-powered electric appliances in the home.” The PG&E representative added that the company will know more in February about how the base service charge will affect customer bills. A result of the bill changes might see lower-usage customers pay more for their PG&E bill every month, while higher-usage customers might be paying more, according to graphs showing one customer’s current and new bill rates included in the email sent from PG&E to the customer. For example, one customer’s bill showed that under the new change to customer’s bills, monthly usage under 200 kilowatts would increase the bill from $75 to $95 with the inclusion of the new base service charge. Medium monthly usage would increase that same customer’s bill from $184 to $188, and would actually reduce the bill for high usage. That would bring the customer’s monthly bill down from $304 to $296 a month, according to an email from PG&E. Another electricity provider in the state, Southern California Edison, is also instituting a base services charge. That charge went into effect in November 2025, according to the company. According to Southern California Edison’s website, some customers who are low users of energy might see their electricity bill go up because the base services charge, set at $24 a month, might offset the decrease in the per-kilowatt hour rate. Customers who are not enrolled in programs meant to help low-income households, like CARE and FERA, but who still try to reduce their energy use, might actually see their bills go up if they are low-energy users, according to Southern California Edison’s website. That’s because the company is trying to charge households for energy use in ways that will reduce customers’ energy bills as more and more households replace gas appliances with electric ones, according to a company spokesperson. “The purpose of the base services charge is to make it more affordable for all residential customers to use electric technologies,” Gabriela Ornelas, a spokesperson for Southern California Edison, told The Center Square. “We know this transition to electrification is ongoing, and as customers incorporate more efficient appliances in their home, like an electric vehicle, their electric usage will go up.” The base services charge is meant to ultimately lower customers’ bills, Ornelas told The Center Square. The lower cost of the kilowatt hour, Ornelas said, may help offset the cost of the base services charge. “For high-usage customers, the lower cost per kilowatt hour may help offset the base services charge,” Ornelas said. “Consequently, for low-usage customers, the low cost per kilowatt hour may not be enough to offset the base services charge.” The PG&E official who spoke to The Center Square also said the base services charge is meant to encourage customers to use electrical appliances. “Not only does an incentive to encourage conservation remain, but this rate restructuring also supports important state decarbonization goals by making it more affordable for customers to electrify their homes and vehicles to help California achieve our clean energy transition goals,” the PG&E official told The Center Square. Despite the explanations of officials at California’s two largest electricity companies, at least one lawmaker is skeptical of the base services charge. “This is advertised as a transparent method to detail grid infrastructure costs and energy use costs separately,” Sen. Ben Allen, D-El Segundo, told The Center Square via an emailed statement. “But I share concerns that this may lead to subsidizing our highest consumers through redistributed charges. Such subsidizing is exactly what we need to be avoiding in the face of current affordability challenges.” Allen added, “I am eager to see the net results of total electric costs as base charges are implemented.” A fact sheet sent to The Center Square on Friday explains that all PG&E customers already pay for building and maintaining the electric grid, but that the newly-instituted base service charge reallocates how those costs are shared by customers. An official with PG&E familiar with the rate changes explained that low-income customers pay a lower fixed charge. Staff who work for the California Public Utilities Commission, which approved the rate changes to electrical customers' bills in 2025, were unavailable to talk to The Center Square in recent days. Employees of the commission sent a fact sheet to The Center Square on Jan. 9 explaining the base service charge, but did not send a statement to The Center Square via email. Multiple phone calls to the commission went unreturned as of Friday afternoon. When approached at the commission’s Sacramento office this week, employees of the commission who work in that office were unable to answer questions in person. Assemblymember Cottie Petrie-Norris, chair of the Assembly Utilities and Energy Committee, also was not available to speak with The Center Square.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – Pacific Gas & Electric customers are going to see changes to their electricity rates starting in March, according to an email to a PG&E customer obtained by The Center Square. The email said a “base services charge” will change what some PG&E customers will pay every month in California. PG&E serves the northern and central portions of the state. It isn’t a new charge, according to PG&E, but it is what the company is using to describe certain charges, including fees for start-up connection, energy programs, call center services and billing service charges. Those fees were previously included in customers’ bills, but are now being rolled into the base services charge, the PG&E email said. That charge will be $25.15 a month, according to information sent by PG&E. Instituting the rate will reduce the cost of electricity anywhere from 5 to 7 cents per kilowatt hour, according to PG&E documents sent to The Center Square. Changes to customers’ bills caused by the base services charge is in response to Assembly Bill 205, which was passed by the California Legislature and signed into law in 2022. The bill required utility providers to find ways to accelerate clean energy projects to reduce the state’s dependence on fossil fuels, according to the bill analysis. Despite the newly-instituted base services charge, not everyone will see an increase in their bill, particularly low-income customers, a PG&E representative told The Center Square. “The goal of Assembly Bill 205 is to lower rates for low-income customers,” a PG&E spokesperson told The Center Square. “Customers who are on the income-qualified programs pay a lower fixed charge than people who are not. The base charge goes onto bills, and as part of the restructuring, the actual rate per kilowatt hour gets decreased for all customers.” Some programs that companies like PG&E and Southern California Edison participate in, like the California Alternative Rates for Energy program, or CARE, and the Family Electric Rate Assistance program, or FERA, charge lower energy rates if a customer is considered low-income. Southern California Edison customers enrolled in those programs can expect to see lower base service charges than their higher-income counterparts. Customers enrolled in CARE get charged only $6 a month for the base service charge, while customers enrolled in the FERA program pay $12 a month for the base service charge, according to Southern California Edison’s website. “Low-income customers’ bills should be lower,” the PG&E representative said. “For customers who are not on CARE and FERA, they might see a slight bill impact, but the thought is between the September and January decreases, that might offset any bill impact they might see.” Rates were decreased in recent months, company officials told The Center Square, in large part in anticipation of the rollout of the base services charge. The new restructure of what PG&E customers pay for electricity will also include a lower price per kilowatt hour, although since each customer’s energy usage can vary, the rate restructure might not lead to a lower overall bill each month, PG&E officials familiar with the rate change told The Center Square. “​​As required by the CPUC, PG&E will implement the Base Services Charge (BSC) in March,” PG&E told The Center Square. “Reducing the price of electricity makes it more affordable for low-income customers and encourages the transition to more clean-powered electric appliances in the home.” The PG&E representative added that the company will know more in February about how the base service charge will affect customer bills. A result of the bill changes might see lower-usage customers pay more for their PG&E bill every month, while higher-usage customers might be paying more, according to graphs showing one customer’s current and new bill rates included in the email sent from PG&E to the customer. For example, one customer’s bill showed that under the new change to customer’s bills, monthly usage under 200 kilowatts would increase the bill from $75 to $95 with the inclusion of the new base service charge. Medium monthly usage would increase that same customer’s bill from $184 to $188, and would actually reduce the bill for high usage. That would bring the customer’s monthly bill down from $304 to $296 a month, according to an email from PG&E. Another electricity provider in the state, Southern California Edison, is also instituting a base services charge. That charge went into effect in November 2025, according to the company. According to Southern California Edison’s website, some customers who are low users of energy might see their electricity bill go up because the base services charge, set at $24 a month, might offset the decrease in the per-kilowatt hour rate. Customers who are not enrolled in programs meant to help low-income households, like CARE and FERA, but who still try to reduce their energy use, might actually see their bills go up if they are low-energy users, according to Southern California Edison’s website. That’s because the company is trying to charge households for energy use in ways that will reduce customers’ energy bills as more and more households replace gas appliances with electric ones, according to a company spokesperson. “The purpose of the base services charge is to make it more affordable for all residential customers to use electric technologies,” Gabriela Ornelas, a spokesperson for Southern California Edison, told The Center Square. “We know this transition to electrification is ongoing, and as customers incorporate more efficient appliances in their home, like an electric vehicle, their electric usage will go up.” The base services charge is meant to ultimately lower customers’ bills, Ornelas told The Center Square. The lower cost of the kilowatt hour, Ornelas said, may help offset the cost of the base services charge. “For high-usage customers, the lower cost per kilowatt hour may help offset the base services charge,” Ornelas said. “Consequently, for low-usage customers, the low cost per kilowatt hour may not be enough to offset the base services charge.” The PG&E official who spoke to The Center Square also said the base services charge is meant to encourage customers to use electrical appliances. “Not only does an incentive to encourage conservation remain, but this rate restructuring also supports important state decarbonization goals by making it more affordable for customers to electrify their homes and vehicles to help California achieve our clean energy transition goals,” the PG&E official told The Center Square. Despite the explanations of officials at California’s two largest electricity companies, at least one lawmaker is skeptical of the base services charge. “This is advertised as a transparent method to detail grid infrastructure costs and energy use costs separately,” Sen. Ben Allen, D-El Segundo, told The Center Square via an emailed statement. “But I share concerns that this may lead to subsidizing our highest consumers through redistributed charges. Such subsidizing is exactly what we need to be avoiding in the face of current affordability challenges.” Allen added, “I am eager to see the net results of total electric costs as base charges are implemented.” A fact sheet sent to The Center Square on Friday explains that all PG&E customers already pay for building and maintaining the electric grid, but that the newly-instituted base service charge reallocates how those costs are shared by customers. An official with PG&E familiar with the rate changes explained that low-income customers pay a lower fixed charge. Staff who work for the California Public Utilities Commission, which approved the rate changes to electrical customers' bills in 2025, were unavailable to talk to The Center Square in recent days. Employees of the commission sent a fact sheet to The Center Square on Jan. 9 explaining the base service charge, but did not send a statement to The Center Square via email. Multiple phone calls to the commission went unreturned as of Friday afternoon. When approached at the commission’s Sacramento office this week, employees of the commission who work in that office were unable to answer questions in person. Assemblymember Cottie Petrie-Norris, chair of the Assembly Utilities and Energy Committee, also was not available to speak with The Center Square.