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Gas Pains: Analyzing the NW Natural Rate Hike (Vancouver WA 2026)

If you thought the only thing rising in Vancouver was the height of the new waterfront condos, think again. NW Natural is proposing a rate hike that might make you want to cook your dinner over a candlelight vigil instead of a stove.

🔥 The 20% “Ouch” Factor

NW Natural, the utility monopoly for Southwest Washington, is asking state regulators to approve a massive price jump. We aren’t talking about a few pennies for the piggy bank…they want to hike rates by nearly 20% starting this August 2026.

Here is the rate increase breakdown:

  • Phase 1 (August 2026): A 19% jump, adding an average of $12.96 to your monthly bill.
  • Phase 2 & 3 (2027-2028): Additional hikes of 5.1% and 5.9%.
  • The Grand Total: By 2028, you’ll likely be paying roughly $268 more per year just to keep the pilot light on.

🥊 In This Corner: The Attorney General

Washington’s Attorney General, Nick Brown, isn’t exactly sending NW Natural a Christmas card this year. He’s calling on the Utilities & Transportation Commission (UTC) to shut this proposal down.

Brown’s take? He argues that “captive consumers” shouldn’t have to fund corporate profit pushes while the cost of living is already doing backflips. Meanwhile, NW Natural claims they haven’t raised base rates in ages and that safely managing a gas system isn’t getting any cheaper.

📣 Your Turn to Mic-Drop

Think this hike is “unjustified”? Or do you believe the utility’s “obligation to safety” warrants the extra cash? Either way, the state wants to hear from you before they make it official.

The UTC is holding a Virtual Public Hearing:

This is your chance to tell the regulators exactly how an extra $270 a year affects your household budget. Don’t let the decision happen in a vacuum…or in this case, a pressurized gas pipe!

💡 What Can You Do Now?

  1. Mark April 30th on your calendar to attend the UTC meeting.
  2. Submit a written comment to the UTC if you can’t make the virtual meeting.
  3. Start looking at those drafts around your windows in preparation for an expensive winter ahead.

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