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Give Us Your Feedback
Today is a time of change in the utility industry. Utilities must embrace innovation and move quickly to find new and better ways to deliver affordable, reliable and environmentally sensitive energy services to you, our customer-owners.
From time to time, OPPD’s Board of Directors will call upon customers to provide feedback on specific topics. Your feedback is used to help shape OPPD’s decisions and how we operate now and in the future.
We invite you to be part of the conversation.
Today’s Topic: Strategic Directive (SD) - 2 Rates
At the May Board of Directors meeting, the board discussed revisions to SD-2: Rates. The public has an opportunity to review and provide comments ahead of the June board vote. The deadline for comments is June 14, 2026.
Click the image above to view the SD-2 revision (redline)
Click the image above to view the SD-2 revision (clean)
Public Records Disclaimer
Nebraska's public records law may require OPPD to provide to interested persons, including members of the news media, copies of your communications to us, including your name and other contact information.
Give Us Your Feedback
Today is a time of change in the utility industry. Utilities must embrace innovation and move quickly to find new and better ways to deliver affordable, reliable and environmentally sensitive energy services to you, our customer-owners.
From time to time, OPPD’s Board of Directors will call upon customers to provide feedback on specific topics. Your feedback is used to help shape OPPD’s decisions and how we operate now and in the future.
We invite you to be part of the conversation.
Today’s Topic: Strategic Directive (SD) - 2 Rates
At the May Board of Directors meeting, the board discussed revisions to SD-2: Rates. The public has an opportunity to review and provide comments ahead of the June board vote. The deadline for comments is June 14, 2026.
Click the image above to view the SD-2 revision (redline)
Click the image above to view the SD-2 revision (clean)
Public Records Disclaimer
Nebraska's public records law may require OPPD to provide to interested persons, including members of the news media, copies of your communications to us, including your name and other contact information.
Please note, "Guestbook" is for comments only and they will be passed along to the Board of Directors. OPPD's Board of Directors is accepting comments on SD-2 Revisions through June 14, 2026.
Please know, OPPD cannot respond to comments or questions left on this guestbook comments tool. Your opinion matters and all comments provided here in this tool are shared with OPPD leadership. Please leave your feedback here in our guestbook.
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I would just like to say that rates for public power are already ridiculous. OPPD is a public power district who should be looking out for it’s lifelong residential customers and small businesses rather than the greedy corporations. If anyone’s rates should change or increase, it should be the customers that use the most power. Facebook and Google perhaps. Anything over a certain amount of use should have a higher rate, not a discount. In my opinion, these billion dollar companies should be forced to build their own infrastructure for their “corporate” use or pay a higher rate. At least equivalent to everyone else. Residential customers are already struggling to pay their utilities and basic necessities to live. Charge the greedy corporations a higher rate, not the public.
I would just like to say that rates for public power are already ridiculous. OPPD is a public power district who should be looking out for it’s lifelong residential customers and small businesses rather than the greedy corporations.
If anyone’s rates should change or increase, it should be the customers that use the most power. Facebook and Google perhaps.
Anything over a certain amount of use should have a higher rate, not a discount.
In my opinion, these billion dollar companies should be forced to build their own infrastructure for their “corporate” use or pay a higher rate. At least equivalent to everyone else.
Residential customers are already struggling to pay their utilities and basic necessities to live. Charge the greedy corporations a higher rate, not the public.
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