This year’s elections for the Public Service Commission (PSC), a little-known board of five people who regulate our utilities and railroads, are incredibly important races for the future of Georgia. In a January AJC poll, voters ranked “Cost of Living” as our state’s most critical issue. Combined with “Jobs/Economy,” nearly half of all voters who make up to $99,000/year agreed: something has to be done for working families. People are paying unprecedented bills for the electricity they need to keep breathing machines on, food refrigerated, and air conditioning going during the hot Georgia summer. I know it can be challenging for people to pay attention to down-ballot races, but that’s what makes 2025 so unique. Due to a series of discriminatory and unconstitutional election laws passed or defended by the people in power now, the PSC elections are the only statewide elections on the ballot this year, and everybody gets to vote on them.
Here are the top three reasons why this year’s PSC elections are critical to the future of Georgia.
Reason 1 – Cost of Living
It’s expensive out here, y’all. No matter who someone voted for in 2024, or whether it was fair to lay the blame for the cost of living and inflation at the feet of President Biden, the fact remains that Georgians have seen the cost of housing double in the last five years. An under-appreciated factor in that rise has been an incredible rise in our utility bills. Since 2023, the Public Service Commission has approved six rate increases on Georgia Power customers, for an average residential increase of $43 a month. That’s over $500 yearly, or more money than Governor Kemp’s now annual tax rebates. Here’s a Southern Environmental Law Center graphic showing these latest increases.
Want to know the worst part? They aren’t finished. These increases came from the PSC mismanaging a massive project – the Plant Vogtle nuclear reactors outside of Augusta. The construction went so far over budget and over time that it ended up costing almost $40 billion, and these bill increases pay for that. You can learn more about that epic saga of incompetence at GCVEF’s website. Current commissioners have told my staff that they want to build four new nuclear reactors. Even if new reactors only cost half as much as the last two, it’d still cost more than the entire state budget.
Reason 2 – Voting Rights
Okay, I lied. That wasn’t the worst part. The worst part is that these bill increases were approved by Public Service Commissioners who didn’t have to face the voters for accountability. The Public Service Commission uses an old, Jim-Crow era style of voting called “at-large voting.” Some municipalities have a couple of these “at-large” seats representing the entire city on top of the City Councilmember or County Commissioner who serves your district specifically.
Not the Public Service Commission, though. The PSC only has these at-large elections. That means that, while the candidates must live in the district they’re running for, they’re elected by the entire state. Historically, this has been used by a white-majority to overwhelm the desires of a Black minority, and I challenged the law under the Voting Rights Act. A federal judge said I was correct, but the Secretary of State appealed, and the Appellate Court said it was a matter of “states’ rights” and therefore they couldn’t change anything.
The State Legislature changed things, though. They conspired with members of the Commission to gerrymander an opponent out of the district they were running for and then unconstitutionally delayed the elections until 2025 – illegally extending some Commissioners’ terms by years. The upshot is that several members of the PSC haven’t had to face the voters for almost a decade, and they’ve used that time to increase our bills, deprioritize safe, affordable energy, and double down in support of anything that Georgia Power says it wants.
This year, though, there’s nowhere to hide.
Reason 3 – Consumer issues won’t get lost beneath Senate or Governor races.
Finally, this year’s elections for the Public Service Commission are so crucial because they’re front and center. There’s no gubernatorial or Senatorial race to take all the spotlight. If we stay grounded in our message of lower bills, safe, affordable energy like community solar, and holding Wall Street-owned corporations like Southern Company accountable, we have the chance to reach Georgians turned off by partisan politics. If we tell our friends and neighbors that this election is the best way to reach people where they are, we can educate thousands of people on the importance of these positions. There’s no one else on the ballot to make this race about anything else. It’s the only thing to vote for outside of municipal elections, and history is on our side.
Did you know that the first modern Republican elected to Constitutional office in Georgia was Bobby Baker in 1992? He ran on lowering bills and protecting people, and he won a seat on the Public Service Commission. Mark Twain famously remarked that history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.
Let’s make it rhyme for justice. Go here to learn about all the candidates running for the Public Service Commission this year.
Brionté McCorkle is the Executive Director of Georgia Conservation Voters and Georgia Conservation Voters Education Fund. She has spent her career training activists, advancing equity and inclusion in the environmental movement, and organizing grassroots voters. She formerly served as the director of engagement at EcoDistricts, and before that, as the Georgia Sierra Club assistant director.