Should California spend nearly $200 million helping public schools install healthier and more efficient heating, ventilation, air-conditioning, and plumbing systems? Or should it send the money back to the state’s biggest utilities so their customers can pay roughly a dollar less on their monthly bills over the course of a single year?

That’s the choice that California lawmakers must make in the coming months.

The funds at stake are part of the California Schools Healthy Air, Plumbing, and Efficiency program, or CalSHAPE, which funds schools’ HVAC and plumbing repairs and upgrades. The state required its three big utilities — Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison, and San Diego Gas & Electric — to fill the initiative’s coffers with about $1 billion in fees collected from customers between 2020 and 2023.

Although much of that total has already been doled out, $194 million in CalSHAPE funds has been frozen since 2024 as state leaders debate ways to curb skyrocketing energy bills. Because current law sunsets CalSHAPE at the start of 2027, the leftover money will revert to utilities by year’s end without legislative action.

Clean energy and community advocates are pressing lawmakers to prevent that from happening.