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B.C. Hydro says more customers hit by scams in 2018 than in the last four years

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B.C. Hydro says fraudsters posing as employees of the Crown utility conned customers out of thousands of dollars last year, making it the most scam-ridden period since frauds started gaining momentum in 2014.

Hydro says in a statement that it’s received nearly 6,000 reports of customers being contacted by swindlers in the last four years, and that 2,000 of those complaints came in 2018.

But the utility estimates the number of complaints is far lower than the actual number of scams because it believes most attempted and successful frauds are not reported.

It says customers provincewide were bilked out of more than $45,000 in 2018 alone, with Vancouver, Nanaimo, Surrey, Vernon, Burnaby and Richmond the most targeted communities.

Victims were contacted by phone, email or text and told their electricity would be cut off if a payment was not received via prepaid cash or credit card, or through a bitcoin ATM.

Hydro is reminding customers that it does not accept payment in bitcoin or via prepaid cash or credit cards, and it sends notices by mail and automated telephone message if an account is in arrears.

In November, a Prince George resident Douglas Kean told PrinceGeorgeMatters a young woman asking to see the efficiency rating of his furnace showed up at his door.

When contacted by PrinceGeorgeMatters, BC Hydro spokesperson Tanya Fish said the company is aware of scammers who are claiming to work for BC Hydro and are trying to gain access to a person's home to inspect their furnace or hot water heater. 

If someone does request access to your home claiming to be B.C. Hydro, Fish says to ask for their B.C. Hydro Employee I.D.

- With files from Jessica Fedigan