Skip to main content

Improve Your Experience

You are using a browser version that we do not support. Please use one of these supported browsers:

News Feed

Newspaper

Read the latest news from your PUD.

Selected Story


With those cold days earlier this February, customers should expect a higher PUD bill, because homes and businesses used a lot more power to keep us warm.

The colder it gets, the harder a heating system has to work, even if the thermostat is unchanged. Heating systems work against the temperature outside, so reaching a nice 65 degrees, for example, takes more power when it’s 20 degrees outside (a 45-degree difference) than when it’s 50 degrees (a 15-degree difference).

Adding space heaters or raising the thermostat can also dramatically increase power usage, and, therefore, bills.

In our area, the biggest energy cost for PUD bills is heating. Certain types of systems are more efficient than others, but will still represent the largest percentage of your energy use during cold months (in summer, cooling becomes the largest percentage).

There are many ways to reduce your power usage, whatever the weather. Check out some tips online at www.energy.gov.

"A district-wide graph shows that when temperatures dramatically decreased in February, power usage dramatically increased."

More News Articles

There will be a Budget Workshop of the Board of Commissioners of Public Utility District No. 1 of Okanogan County: Monday, October 9, 2023 6:00 p…
NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING There will be a Budget Workshop of the Board of Commissioners of Public Utility District No. 1 of Okanogan County:…

Okanogan, WA, August 30, 2023 - Public Utility District No. 1 of Okanogan County (Okanogan PUD) is pleased to announce its selection as a grant…

Okanogan PUD will have three (3) planned power outages between Thursday, September 7th, and Thursday, September 14th. On the night of Thursday,…
August 1 & 2nd Planned Power Outages August 1st - Aeneas Valley (Upper East Valley, Frosty Creek, Moses Meadows Road, and Part of Cape Labelle…
There will be an approximate 6-hour planned power outage on Thursday, June 29th, 2023, from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. In the Aeneas Valley Area…