EDF sent me a £2,700 bill in my first home after foster care

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"Young Care Leaver Faces £2,700 Electricity Bill Due to Meter Miscommunication"

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A young individual, recently transitioned from foster care, faced a shocking financial burden when they received a bill exceeding £2,700 from EDF for electricity usage. After moving into a flat in 2020, the individual diligently paid £50 monthly to their housing association for gas and electricity, believing this covered their energy costs. However, they were unaware that their flat was part of a communal heating network that included these expenses in the service charge. Compounding the issue, a second electricity meter, which the housing association controlled, was in place but not communicated to the resident. This oversight led to a situation where EDF claimed the individual had not been informed of their electricity consumption and thus had not received corresponding bills, resulting in substantial arrears and the need for a payment plan of £108 per month.

Upon investigation, it was revealed that EDF had sent bills to the property owner rather than the resident, which exempted them from the backbilling rule that would limit charges to the past 12 months. Despite the difficulties faced, EDF acknowledged the situation and offered to explore financial support options for the resident. Furthermore, following the installation of a smart meter in 2023, EDF recalibrated the estimated consumption and reduced the debt by £105, while also moving the individual to a more favorable tariff. In response to this incident, the housing association, Wandle, has committed to enhancing its support for vulnerable residents and will develop an energy information sheet for future tenants to prevent similar occurrences.

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Iam living in my first home since coming out of foster care. I moved into the flat in 2020, and topped up my credit meter with £50 a month, as instructed by my housing association. I understood that this covered my gas and electricity use.

In 2023, I received a demand for more than £2,700 from EDF, stating that I had not been paying my electricity bill.It has since had me on a payment plan of £108 a month. I’ve now beentold thatit should not have billed me for more than a year’s worth of arrears.

I feel thatit is taking advantage of the fact that I don’t know how the system works.

LRE,London

It’s hard to imagine how it must be for young people in care to be flung into the adult world as soon as they come of age without the support most of us take for granted.

I established that your housing association flat is on a communal heating network, which means the costs of heating and hot water are divided among residents and included in the service charge. Those on low incomes can pay incrementally on a prepayment meter, which you have been doing.

Unbeknownst to you, a second meter, supplied by EDF, recorded your electricity consumption. It is locked away and accessible only to the housing association and, since you didn’t know about it, you didn’t inform EDF that you had moved in.

Backbilling rules mean suppliers can’t charge for more than 12 months’ supply if they haven’t previously sent bills.

EDF tells me it did send bills addressed to the owner/occupier since it didn’t have your name. That means the backbilling rule does not apply and you are liable for the electricity you have used since 2020.

EDF doesoffer grantsand deals to help customers on low incomes and it told me it would look into what support it could offer you.

The meter was replaced with a smart meter in 2023 and it has now belatedly discovered that your actual consumption since then shows its previous estimates were too high.

It’s therefore reduced your debt by £105 and moved you to a better tariff that reduces your monthly payments. You can’t access the smart meter, but you can track your consumption on the EDF app.

Your housing association, Wandle, tells me it was unaware that you were vulnerable and that its support team will now be in touch with you. It also says that it will now produce an energy information sheet for new residents to prevent your situation recurring.

We welcome letters but cannot answer individually. Email us atconsumer.champions@theguardian.comor write to Consumer Champions, Money, the Guardian, 90 York Way, London N1 9GU. Please include a daytime phone number. Submission and publication of all letters is subject toour terms and conditions.

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Source: The Guardian