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Ombudsman investigating 7,900 complaints about Hydro One

Ontario Ombudsman André Marin releases his 2013-14 Annual Report outlining public complaints about more than 500 provincial government ministries, corporations, agencies and boards, during a press conference in Toronto on Monday, June, 23, 2014.
Ontario Ombudsman André Marin releases his 2013-14 Annual Report outlining public complaints about more than 500 provincial government ministries, corporations, agencies and boards, during a press conference in Toronto on Monday, June, 23, 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Michelle Siu

TORONTO – Ontario’s watchdog says Hydro One’s billing practices have garnered an unprecedented number of complaints to his office.

Ombudsman Andre Marin says so far, he’s received 7,900 complaints about the provincial utility – and the number keeps going up.

His annual report says it’s the most complaints his office has ever received about a single government organization.

Marin launched an investigation in February after customers complained about delayed or missing invoices, which resulted in high “catch-up” bills.

Read More: Facts and highlights from the 2013-2014 Ombudsman report

His report says the Crown corporation took $8,390 from the bank account of one woman who had authorized automatic payments, saying they’d underestimated her billings for almost two years.

Marin says Hydro One responded immediately after he announced the probe and have taken several short-term measures to alleviate problems.

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His report also noted that a probe into unlicensed daycares launched after the death of a two-year-old girl is expected to be released this summer.

The ombudsman’s office received a record 26,999 complaints last year, up 37 per cent from the previous year, the report said.

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