I always like to see information presented. Sometimes, I question how it is gathered, summarized and reported.
In this case, the info is all public information and pretty easily gathered, also easy to verify. That particular chart is created by the DOE department responsible for compliling those numbers and making them available. It's probably healthy to question any source, but I think in this case the info is pretty reliable. If you have another source that you think is more reliable, I'd love to hear about it.
And if there are any documented cases of businesses leaving Vt primarily because of electric rates, I'd be interested in that too. I'm not convinced it's happening, although I will grant that some energy-intensive operations would logically locate in areas of the country where rates are lower. But I don't think we can do much about that. We would have to cut our rates in half to match what costs are in some states, and there's no way we can do that. What we can do is keep them as low as possible given the regional realities, and I think we're already doing a pretty good job of that (not perfect, of course).
I have several co-workers in Northern NY who are paying 11 cents/kwh or less.
That's not surprising, there are lots of different rates. Some folks pay more than average, some less. Those state averages take into account different utilities, different rate structures, etc., so there are always some folks paying more than average and some less. In New York, the somewhat lower rates in some areas are offset by higher rates elsewhere, including NYC, which has rather high rates in camparison to most other areas in the state. Similarly, in Vt the rates you pay depend on the utility (among other things), so for example if you are a Vt Electric Coop customer you probably pay more than the Vt average. Most Fairfax residents are on CVPS, which has rates that are about average for Vt.
Here's another way of thinking about electric costs. An average human being can put out about 200 watts if they are working hard. For instance, if you were to climb on a bicycle-powered generator and pedal really hard for about 5 hours, you could generate about 1 kilowatt-hour of electricity. That amount of power costs less than 10 cents (retail, national average. In Vt, about 13 cents). Remarkably cheap, really.