Oregon's Public Utility Commission (PUC, the state regulator that sets electricity rates) delayed Portland General Electric's (PGE) proposed 29% large-load rate rise, and the matching 1.3% household bill cut, to a decision on 7 July 1. PUC chair Letha Tawney cited roughly 200 pages of tariff updates that staff needed time to review. PGE had filed the rise under the Oregon POWER Act, a state law that attributes grid-reinforcement costs to large loads such as data centres, and it filed as the first US utility to turn such a law into an actual tariff .
Neither side of the tariff has taken effect. The 29% increase and the residential reduction are both on hold, which means the precedent everyone cited, that operators rather than households absorb grid costs, exists on paper and nowhere else. A delay is not a defeat, but it is not the clean win the framing implied either. If the commission trims the 29% figure on 7 July or reopens the cost-attribution method, Oregon's claim to be first to implement the mechanism narrows to first to file it.
The stall mirrors the procedural friction holding up Virginia's capacity fee, where a cancelled session rather than a hostile vote is what blocks the charge. Both instruments now wait on a calendar rather than a count of yeses and noes, and both aim at the same large data-centre loads. The mechanism advances even where no decision has landed, which is a different kind of progress from a vote won.
