
Cuomo to Nat Grid: Pass the gas!
BY BEN VERDE
Governor Andrew Cuomo ordered
National Grid on Friday
to provide more than 1,100 new
customers with gas following
an investigation into the
British-based utility company,
which has refused to hookup
new patrons amid a monthslong
standoff with the state
over a hotly contested pipeline
project.
“It is the fundamental responsibility
of our utilities
to provide reliable service,”
Cuomo said. “Make no mistake
– New York will hold National
Grid accountable.”
The gas provider, which operates
under a state-granted
monopoly in Brooklyn,
Queens and parts of Long Island,
announced a moratorium
of new customers in late
May — shortly after state regulators
nixed a controversial
scheme to construct a 23-mile
gas pipeline off the coast of Coney
Island.
Cuomo’s demands only extend
to the 1,100 New Yorkers
who the gas provider refused
to reconnect after they temporarily
shut off their gasoline
COURIER L 18 IFE, OCT. 18-24, 2019
service, and do not apply
to brand new customers, who
will remain without gas for
the time being.
Many state leaders have
accused National Grid of
strong-arming the state into
green-lighting the pipeline by
holding gas customers hostage.
The utility company could
face millions of dollars in
fi nes resulting from the investigation
— which centers on
whether the company properly
planned to meet the needs
of New Yorkers during the
winter, according to the Governor’s
offi ce.
Assemblyman Robert Carroll
(D-Park Slope) — a frequent
critic of National Grid
since they launched their moratorium
— lauded the Governor’s
decision and called
on Attorney General Letitia
James to further investigate
National Grid.
“I applaud the Governor
for fi nally standing up to National
Grid and calling them
out on their mendacious, disingenuous
campaign to deny
people natural gas,” Carroll
said. “What they are really
trying to do is coerce the state
into approving the Williams
Pipeline.
State Sen. Andrew Gounardes
(D–Bay Ridge) also
praised Cuomo’s decision, but
called for additional action on
behalf of completely new customers.
“We still need to determine
if there are more eligible residents
whose service must be
restored and wait for the results
of the larger investigation,”
Gounardes said.
A National Grid spokeswoman
said they company
is disappointed in the state’s
decision, and it will look into
temporary solutions to reconnect
customers.
“We stand by our analysis
and there are very real
gas supply constraints in the
northeast,” said Karen Young.
“In the meantime, we have
been working to identify unprecedented
temporary solutions
to help mitigate the situation
and will immediately
begin connecting the more
than 1,100 applicants who have
been identifi ed in the order.”
Governor Cuomo announced an investigation into National Grid on Friday
for denying gas service to new customers. Photo by Paul Martinka