2017 -- S 0879 | |
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LC002545 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2017 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS -- PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION | |
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Introduced By: Senators Quezada, Crowley, and Goodwin | |
Date Introduced: May 11, 2017 | |
Referred To: Senate Commerce | |
(Lieutenant Governor) | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 39-1-27, 39-1-27.7.1 and 39-1-38 of the General Laws in Chapter |
2 | 39-1 entitled "Public Utilities Commission" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 39-1-27. Electric distribution companies required to file restructuring plans. |
4 | (a) Each electric distribution company shall file with the commission a plan for |
5 | transferring ownership of generation facilities into a separate affiliate of the electric distribution |
6 | company. The transmission facilities owned by the electric distribution company also may be |
7 | transferred to an affiliated electric transmission company at a price that shall equal the book value |
8 | of the transmission facilities on the electric distribution company's accounts net of depreciation |
9 | and deferred taxes as the date of transfer, but such a transfer is not required. The generation plant, |
10 | equipment, and facilities owned by an electric distribution company shall be transferred to an |
11 | affiliate that is a nonregulated power producer at a price that shall equal the book value of the |
12 | generation plant, equipment, and facilities on the electric distribution company's accounts net of |
13 | depreciation and deferred taxes as of the date of the transfer. Consistent with the schedule for |
14 | implementing retail access in § 39-1-27.3, each electric transmission company shall file tariffs |
15 | with the federal energy regulatory commission (FERC) and electric distribution companies shall |
16 | file tariffs with the commission. The tariffs will provide the terms, conditions and rates for |
17 | nondiscriminatory access to transmission and distribution facilities to wholesale and retail |
18 | customers and to nonregulated power producers. The tariffs shall (1) conform to the standards, |
19 | policies, and requirements of the federal energy regulatory commission or the commission as |
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1 | appropriate with respect to nondiscriminatory access to transmission and distribution services, (2) |
2 | fulfill such standards with respect to both transmission and distribution services for the benefit of |
3 | both wholesale and retail customers and their suppliers, and (3) provide retail access in |
4 | accordance with the schedule set forth in § 39-1-27.3. For purposes of this section, |
5 | "nondiscriminatory access" means access to transmission and distribution services on rates, terms |
6 | and conditions found to be reasonable by the FERC or the commission as appropriate and applied |
7 | consistently to all customers in a rate class regardless of their supplier. When establishing terms |
8 | and conditions for distribution service, the commission shall implement standards, policies, and |
9 | requirements consistent with those established by the federal energy regulatory commission for |
10 | transmission service unless it determines that alternative terms and conditions are in the public |
11 | interest. |
12 | (b) The commission shall review the plan within six (6) months of filing and if the plan is |
13 | in compliance with chapter 3 of this title, shall authorize the property transfers, securities |
14 | issuances, and affiliate transactions pursuant to this title and shall grant all necessary regulatory |
15 | approvals. All existing state and local rights, authorizations, and approvals, including but not |
16 | limited to, permits, licenses, locations, indentures, leases, orders, or similar rights associated with |
17 | the ownership and operation of plant and equipment, shall be deemed transferred with the |
18 | associated plant and equipment upon the commission's authorization of the transfer effective as of |
19 | the date of transfer. Notwithstanding any provisions of this section, if the electric distribution |
20 | company's wholesale power supplier chooses to transfer its generation assets to a nonaffiliate of |
21 | the electric distribution company for purposes of carrying out the market valuation required by § |
22 | 39-1-27.4(g), and such transfer to a nonaffiliate is specified in the electric distribution company's |
23 | restructuring plan filed with the commission pursuant to subsection (a) of this section, the transfer |
24 | of the electric distribution company's interest in the generation facilities may be made directly to |
25 | the nonaffiliate. In the case of such a transfer directly to a nonaffiliate, all of the state and local |
26 | rights, authorizations and approvals, including those enumerated above, shall be deemed |
27 | transferred with the associated plant and equipment upon the commission's authorization of the |
28 | transfer effective as of the date of the transfer. |
29 | (c) The electric distribution company shall implement the corporate reorganizations and |
30 | property transfers specified in such restructuring plan, terminate its all requirements contract with |
31 | its wholesale power supplier on the terms set forth in § 39-1-27.4 and provide retail access for all |
32 | customers in Rhode Island with a standard offer as set forth in § 39-1-27.3 no later than three (3) |
33 | months after retail access is available to forty percent (40%) or more of the kilowatt-hour sales in |
34 | New England. The commission may extend this time if it determines that additional time is |
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1 | necessary to implement the transactions on reasonable terms and in accordance with a reasonable |
2 | schedule; provided, however, that nothing in this section shall be construed to limit the effect of § |
3 | 39-1-27.3 or permit the commission to unduly discriminate in providing retail access among or |
4 | within rate classes. |
5 | (d) Following the complete implementation of the restructuring plans, electric |
6 | distribution companies shall be prohibited from selling electricity at retail and from owning, |
7 | operating, or controlling generating facilities, although such facilities may be owned by affiliates |
8 | of electric distribution companies. For purposes of this paragraph providing the standard offer |
9 | service and last resort power supply in accordance with subsections (d) and (f) of § 39-1-27.3 |
10 | shall not be construed as selling electricity at retail. Furthermore: |
11 | (1) Generation activities shall remain separate from transmission and distribution |
12 | activities; |
13 | (2) Electric distribution companies shall be removed from the business of electric |
14 | generation; |
15 | (3) The commission shall not approve any petition, plan, contract or schedule that shifts |
16 | the risks of generation investments toward ratepayers and away from private investors in the |
17 | competitive market, including, but not limited to, the following: |
18 | (i) The commission shall not approve ratepayer-backed, long-term contracts by electric |
19 | distribution companies for gas capacity; and |
20 | (ii) The commission shall not approve any rate increase for an electric distribution |
21 | company to finance the construction or expansion of natural gas pipelines or related facilities. |
22 | (e) Following the termination of the electric distribution company's contracts with its |
23 | wholesale power supplier, the wholesale power supplier shall become a nonregulated power |
24 | producer, and shall be free, subject to the requirements of the standard offer set forth in § 39-1- |
25 | 27.3(e) and retail electric licensing commission plan requirements pursuant to § 39-1-27.1 to sell |
26 | electricity generated from each of its facilities on either the wholesale or retail markets at market |
27 | prices, either directly or through an affiliate, which shall also become a nonregulated power |
28 | producer. The former wholesale power supplier and its affiliates shall be free to apply to become |
29 | exempt wholesale generators pursuant to section 32 of the Public Utility Holding Company Act |
30 | of 1935, 15 U.S.C. § 79z-5a, and other federal law, rules and regulations, and each and every |
31 | generating facility of the former wholesale power supplier shall become an eligible facility |
32 | pursuant to that statute. Accordingly, the legislature hereby finds and declares that the division |
33 | has sufficient regulatory authority, resources, access to books and records to exercise its duties; |
34 | and that the full participation of former wholesale power suppliers and affiliated nonregulated |
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1 | power producers in the market and the designation of each of the former wholesale power |
2 | supplier's facilities as eligible facilities will benefit consumers, is consistent with state law, will |
3 | not provide any unfair competitive advantage by virtue of their status as a former wholesale |
4 | power supplier or as affiliates of electric distribution companies, and is in the public interest. |
5 | (f) Although reducing air emissions from power plants is a goal of electricity industry |
6 | restructuring, power plants in Rhode Island already have low emissions relative to their |
7 | counterparts in other states. For this reason, it is unnecessary for the restructuring plans required |
8 | by this section to address in-state air emission reductions. However, to the extent a wholesale |
9 | power supplier receiving contract termination fees pursuant to § 39-1-27.4(b)(4) owns and |
10 | operates as of December 31, 1995 fossil fired generation in another state which does not meet air |
11 | emission standards applicable as of that date to new electric generating facilities in that state, such |
12 | wholesale power suppliers shall cooperate with the appropriate environmental officials in the |
13 | state or states where such generating facilities are located to develop a plan for reducing the |
14 | emissions of nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and particulate matter from such plants on an overall |
15 | basis through retirements, replacements, controls or offsets or any combination of the above |
16 | toward the air emissions standards applicable to new electric generating facilities in effect in the |
17 | state or states where the plants are located as of January 1, 1996. Such plans shall be implemented |
18 | in connection with electric industry restructuring in the state or states where the generating |
19 | facilities are located. |
20 | (g) An electric distribution company, whether public, quasi-municipal or investor owned, |
21 | that as of January 1, 1996 did not purchase power at wholesale from a wholesale power supplier |
22 | under an all requirements contract shall include proposals for recovering transition costs |
23 | consistent with the elements which would be comparable in nature to the elements included in |
24 | termination fees pursuant to § 39-1-27.4(b) through (g) and for providing a standard offer |
25 | consistent with requirements of § 39-1-27.3(d) in its plan filed with the commission pursuant to |
26 | this section. The filing by an electric distribution company that is a quasi-municipal corporation |
27 | shall also address any unique circumstances affecting the electric distribution company including |
28 | special contract requirements or charter restrictions and the conditions that the quasi-municipal |
29 | corporation must satisfy in order to participate in retail competition. In reviewing the filing and |
30 | determining the appropriate level of transition cost recovery, the commission shall apply |
31 | standards consistent with those contained in § 39-1-27.4(b) through (g) and with this subsection. |
32 | The commission shall be authorized to take any action or to grant any approval necessary to |
33 | maintain hydro-electric power purchases from the Niagara and St. Lawrence power projects by |
34 | quasi-municipal corporations. Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, quasi- |
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1 | municipal electric distribution companies that purchase hydro-electric power from the Niagara |
2 | and St. Lawrence power projects shall be authorized to continue to resell such power to |
3 | residential customers within their service territories. After notice and public hearing, the |
4 | commission may exempt electric distribution companies subject to this paragraph from: (1) the |
5 | requirement to transfer ownership of generation and transmission facilities to affiliated companies |
6 | pursuant to subsection (a); and (2) the prohibition against selling electricity at retail pursuant to |
7 | subsection (d) of this section with respect to sales within the service territory of such electric |
8 | distribution company, if it determines that such exemptions are in the public interest. |
9 | (h) With the exception of the requirements of the standard offer set forth in § 39-1- |
10 | 27.3(e) and (f) and retail electric licensing commission plan requirements pursuant to § 39-1-27.1, |
11 | nothing in this section shall be construed or interpreted to constrain the application of anti-trust |
12 | laws to nonregulated power producers, whether affiliated or not with an electric distribution |
13 | company. |
14 | 39-1-27.7.1. Revenue decoupling. |
15 | (a) The general assembly finds and declares that electricity and gas revenues shall may be |
16 | fully decoupled from sales pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and further finds and |
17 | declares that any decoupling proposal submitted by an electric-distribution company as defined in |
18 | subdivision 39-1-2(12) or gas-distribution company included as a public utility in subdivision 39- |
19 | 1-2(20) that has greater than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers, shall be for the |
20 | following purposes: |
21 | (1) Increasing efficiency in the operations and management of the electric- and gas- |
22 | distribution system; |
23 | (2) Achieving the goals established in the electric-distribution company's plan for system |
24 | reliability and energy efficiency and conservation procurement as required pursuant to subsection |
25 | 39-1-27.7(c); |
26 | (3) Increasing investment in least-cost resources that will reduce long-term electricity |
27 | demand; |
28 | (4) Reducing risks for both customers and the distribution company including, but not |
29 | limited to, societal risks, weather risks, and economic risks; |
30 | (5) Increasing investment in end-use energy efficiency; |
31 | (6) Eliminating disincentives to support energy-efficiency programs; |
32 | (7) Facilitating and encouraging investment in utility infrastructure, safety, and |
33 | reliability; and |
34 | (8) Considering the reduction of fixed, recurring customer charges and transition to |
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1 | increased unit charges that more accurately reflect the long-term costs of energy production and |
2 | delivery. |
3 | (b) Each electric-distribution company as defined by subdivision 39-1-2(12) and gas- |
4 | distribution company included as a public utility in subdivision 39-1-2(20) having greater than |
5 | one hundred thousand (100,000) customers shall file proposals at the commission to implement |
6 | the policy set forth in subsection (a). The commission shall may approve such proposals, |
7 | provided they contain the features and components set forth in subsection (c), and that they are |
8 | consistent with the intent and objectives contained in subsection (a). Actions taken by the |
9 | commission in the exercise of its ratemaking authority for electric- and gas-rate cases shall be |
10 | within the norm of industry standards and recognize the need to maintain the financial health of |
11 | the distribution company as a stand-alone entity in Rhode Island. |
12 | (c) The proposals shall contain the following features and components: |
13 | (1) A revenue decoupling reconciliation mechanism that reconciles annually the revenue |
14 | requirement allowed in the company's base distribution-rate case to revenues actually received for |
15 | the applicable twelve-month (12) period; provided that the mechanism for gas distribution shall |
16 | be determined on a revenue-per-customer basis, in a manner typically employed for gas- |
17 | distribution companies in the industry. Any revenues over-recovered or under-recovered shall be |
18 | credited to, or recovered from, customers, as applicable; and |
19 | (2) An annual infrastructure, safety, and reliability spending plan for each fiscal year and |
20 | an annual rate-reconciliation mechanism that includes a reconcilable allowance for the anticipated |
21 | capital investments and other spending pursuant to the annual pre-approved budget as developed |
22 | in accordance with subsection (d). |
23 | (d) Prior to the beginning of each fiscal year, gas- and electric-distribution companies |
24 | shall consult with the division of public utilities and carriers regarding their infrastructure, safety, |
25 | and reliability spending plan for the following fiscal year, addressing the following categories: |
26 | (1) Capital spending on utility infrastructure; |
27 | (2) For electric-distribution companies, operation and maintenance expenses on |
28 | vegetation management; |
29 | (3) For electric-distribution companies, operation and maintenance expenses on system |
30 | inspection, including expenses from expected resulting repairs; and |
31 | (4) Any other costs relating to maintaining safety and reliability that are mutually agreed |
32 | upon by the division and the company. |
33 | The distribution company shall submit a plan to the division and the division shall |
34 | cooperate in good faith to reach an agreement on a proposed plan for these categories of costs for |
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1 | the prospective fiscal year within sixty (60) days. To the extent that the company and the division |
2 | mutually agree on a plan, such plan shall be filed with the commission for review and approval |
3 | within ninety (90) days. If the company and the division cannot agree on a plan, the company |
4 | shall file a proposed plan with the commission and the commission shall review and, if the |
5 | investments and spending are found to be reasonably needed to maintain safe and reliable |
6 | distribution service over the short and long term, approve the plan within ninety (90) days. |
7 | (e) Prior to making any filing related to revenue decoupling, and at least annually, the |
8 | company shall submit a report to the commission and division, with supporting documentation, |
9 | which shall include, but not be limited to, the following elements: |
10 | (1) A detailed summary of how the company is achieving increased efficiency in the |
11 | operations and management of the electric- or gas-distribution system; |
12 | (2) A detailed summary of how the company has encouraged investment in end-use |
13 | energy efficiency and supported energy-efficiency programs; |
14 | (3) A detailed summary of customer service-related complaints received by the company |
15 | (with or without division or commission involvement), the company's method for tracking and |
16 | responding to such complaints, and the timing for resolving such service-related complaints; |
17 | (4) A detailed summary of customer billing-related complaints received by the company |
18 | (with or without division or commission involvement), the company's method for tracking and |
19 | responding to such complaints, and the timing for resolving such billing-related complaints; and |
20 | (5) A detailed summary of all incentive payments received by the company, including the |
21 | total earned under each incentive program, and any actions taken by the company to earn such |
22 | incentive payments. |
23 | (f) Every electric- or gas-distribution company, included in subsection (a) of this section, |
24 | shall submit a general rate schedule change filing (i.e. full rate filing) no later than January 1, |
25 | 2018, and at least every three (3) years thereafter. |
26 | (e)(g) The commission shall have the following duties and powers, in addition to its |
27 | existing authorities established in title 39 of the general laws: |
28 | (1) To maintain reasonable and adequate service-quality standards, after decoupling, that |
29 | are in effect at the time of the proposal and were established pursuant to § 39-3-7. |
30 | (2) The commission may exclude the low-income rate class from the revenue decoupling |
31 | reconciliation-rate mechanism for either electric or gas distribution. The commission also may |
32 | exclude customers in the large commercial and industrial rate class from the gas-distribution |
33 | mechanism. |
34 | (3) The commission may adopt performance incentives for the electric-distribution |
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1 | company that provides a shared-savings mechanism whereby the company would receive a |
2 | percentage of savings realized as a result of achieving the purposes of this section while the |
3 | remaining savings are credited to customers. |
4 | (4) The commission shall review and approve, with any necessary amendments, |
5 | performance-based, energy-savings targets developed and submitted by the Rhode Island energy |
6 | efficiency and resources management council. Said performance-based targets shall also be used |
7 | as a consideration in any shared-savings mechanism established by the commission pursuant to |
8 | subdivision (3) herein. |
9 | (5) The general assembly recognizes that the revenue decoupling mechanism |
10 | substantially reduces the risk to the company and its investors. The commission shall consider the |
11 | availability of revenue decoupling during any rate filing by reducing the appropriate profit level |
12 | to offset the full impact of the company's reduced risk attributable to decoupling. |
13 | (f)(h) The Rhode Island energy efficiency and resources management council shall |
14 | propose performance-based, energy-savings targets to the commission no later than September 1, |
15 | 2010. The targets shall include, but not be limited to, specific energy kilowatt-hour savings |
16 | overall and peak-demand savings for both summer- and winter-peak periods expressed in total |
17 | megawatts as well as appropriate targets recommended in the opportunities report filed with the |
18 | commission pursuant to § 39-1-27.7(c)(3). The council shall revise, as necessary, these targets on |
19 | an annual basis prior to the reconciliation process established pursuant to subsection (c) and |
20 | submit its revisions to the commission for approval. |
21 | (g) Reporting.(i) Every electric-distribution company, as defined in subsection (a) shall |
22 | report to the governor, general assembly, division of public utilities, and public utilities |
23 | commission annually on or before September 1, 2012. Said report shall include, but not be limited |
24 | to, the following elements: |
25 | (1) A comparison of revenues from traditional rate regulation and how the revenues have |
26 | differed as part of an approved decoupling structure; |
27 | (2) A summary of how the company is achieving the performance-based targets that may |
28 | have been adopted pursuant to subdivision (e)(g)(4); |
29 | (3) A summary of any shared savings the company may have received pursuant to the |
30 | performance incentives authorized in subdivision (e)(g)(3); |
31 | (4) A summary of how the company is achieving the service-quality standards required in |
32 | subdivision (e)(g)(1); |
33 | (5) An overview of how decoupling is impacting revenue stabilization goals that have |
34 | resulted from decoupling; and |
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1 | (6) A summary of any customer education programs provided. |
2 | 39-1-38. Liberal construction -- Incidental powers -- Severability. |
3 | The provisions of this title shall be interpreted and construed liberally in aid of its |
4 | declared purpose. The commission and the division shall have, in addition to powers specified in |
5 | this chapter, all additional, implied, and incidental power which may be proper or necessary to |
6 | effectuate their purposes. The commission, notwithstanding any mandatory approval language set |
7 | forth elsewhere throughout the general laws or any rule or regulation, shall always have the |
8 | overriding right and duty to review all commission filings and to modify them as the commission |
9 | deems necessary and desirable to ensure the result is just and reasonable for ratepayers. No rule, |
10 | order, act or regulation of the commission and of the division shall be declared inoperative, |
11 | illegal, or void for any omission of a technical nature. If any provision of this title, or of any rule |
12 | or regulation made thereunder, or the application thereof to any company of circumstance, is held |
13 | invalid by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of the title, rule, or regulation, and the |
14 | application of such provision to other companies or circumstances shall not be affected thereby. |
15 | The invalidity of any section or sections or parts of any section or sections of this title shall not |
16 | affect the validity of the remainder of the title. |
17 | SECTION 2. Section 39-2-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-2 entitled "Duties of |
18 | Utilities and Carriers" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
19 | 39-2-1. Reasonable and adequate services -- Reasonable and just charges. |
20 | (a) Every public utility is required to furnish safe, reasonable, and adequate services and |
21 | facilities. The rate, toll, or charge, or any joint rate made, exacted, demanded, or collected by any |
22 | public utility for the conveyance or transportation of any persons or property, including sewage, |
23 | between points within the state; or for any heat, light, water, or power produced, transmitted, |
24 | distributed, delivered, or furnished; or for any telephone or telegraph message conveyed; or for |
25 | any service rendered or to be rendered in connection therewith, shall be reasonable and just, and |
26 | every unjust or unreasonable charge for the service is prohibited and declared unlawful, and no |
27 | public utility providing heat, light, water, or power produced, transmitted, distributed, delivered, |
28 | or furnished shall terminate the service or deprive any home or building, or whatsoever, of |
29 | service if the reason therefor is nonpayment of the service without first notifying the user of the |
30 | service, or the owner, or owners, of the building as recorded with the utility of the impending |
31 | service termination by written notice at least ten (10) days prior to the effective date of the |
32 | proposed termination of service. |
33 | (1) Effective immediately, following the issuance of a decision by the commission under |
34 | 39-1-27.2(d), the utility shall collect a LIHEAP enhancement charge from all utility customers, |
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1 | for the funding of the LIHEAP Enhancement Fund. |
2 | (b) Any existing rules and regulations dealing with the termination of utility service and |
3 | establishing reasonable methods of debt collection promulgated by the commission pursuant to |
4 | this chapter and the provisions of § 39-1.1-3 including, but not limited to, any rules and |
5 | regulations dealing with deposit and deferred-payment arrangements, winter moratorium and |
6 | medical emergency protections, and customer dispute resolution procedures, shall be applicable |
7 | to any public utility which distributes electricity. |
8 | (c) The commission shall promulgate such further rules and regulations as are necessary |
9 | to protect consumers following the introduction of competition in the electric industry and which |
10 | are consistent with this chapter and the provisions of § 39-1.1-3. In promulgating such rules and |
11 | regulations, the commission shall confer with the retail electric licensing commission and shall |
12 | give reasonable consideration to any and all recommendations of the retail electric licensing |
13 | commission. |
14 | (d) (1) On or before August 15, 2011, the commission shall administer such rules and |
15 | regulations, as may be necessary, to implement the purpose of subdivision (2) of this subsection |
16 | and to provide for the restoration of electric and/or gas service to low-income home energy |
17 | assistance program (LIHEAP)-eligible households, as this eligibility is defined in the current |
18 | LIHEAP state plan for Rhode Island filed with the U.S. Department of Health and Human |
19 | Services. |
20 | (2) Effective no later than September 1, 2016, notwithstanding the provisions of part V |
21 | sections 4(E)(1)(B) and (C) of the public utilities commission rules and regulations governing the |
22 | termination of residential electric-, gas-, and water-utility service, a LIHEAP-eligible customer, |
23 | as defined above in this section, who has been terminated from gas and/or electric service or is |
24 | recognized, pursuant to a rule or decision by the division, as being scheduled for actual shut-off |
25 | of service on a specific date, shall not be deprived electric and/or gas utility service provided the |
26 | following conditions are met: |
27 | (i) The customer has an account balance of at least three hundred dollars ($300) that is |
28 | more than sixty (60) days past due; |
29 | (ii) The customer is eligible for the federal low-income home-energy assistance program |
30 | and the account is enrolled in the utility low-income rate if offered; |
31 | (iii) If utility service has been terminated, the customer shall make an initial payment of |
32 | twenty-five percent (25%) of the unpaid balance, unless the commission has enacted emergency |
33 | regulations in which case the customer shall pay the down payment required by the emergency |
34 | regulations; |
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1 | (iv) The customer agrees to participate in energy efficiency programs; |
2 | (v) The customer applies for other available energy-assistance programs, including fuel |
3 | assistance and weatherization; |
4 | (vi) The customer agrees to make at least twelve (12) monthly payments in an amount |
5 | determined by the utility and based on the customer's average monthly usage of the previous year, |
6 | and the customer's actual or anticipated fuel assistance, if known. The electric- and/or gas-utility |
7 | company shall review the payment plan every three (3) months and may adjust said plan based on |
8 | the following: the amount of or change in fuel assistance; the customer moves, actual usage |
9 | differs from estimated usage; and/or significant changes in the company's energy costs or rates |
10 | from the time of anticipated enrollment; |
11 | (vii) With each payment, a portion of the customer's outstanding account balance shall be |
12 | forgiven in an amount equal to the total past-due balance divided by the number of months in the |
13 | customer agreement; |
14 | (viii) Up to one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500) shall be forgiven in a twelve- |
15 | month (12) period. If the outstanding account balance is greater than one thousand five hundred |
16 | dollars ($1,500), the length of the agreement may, at the request of the customer, be extended for |
17 | more than twelve (12) months to accommodate the total outstanding balance, provided that the |
18 | customer is current with payments at the conclusion of the previous twelve-month (12) period; |
19 | (ix) The customer agrees to remain current with payments. For purposes of this |
20 | subsection, remaining current shall mean that the customer: (A) Misses no more than two (2) |
21 | payments in a twelve-month (12) period covered by the agreement; and (B) That the amount due |
22 | under the agreement is paid in full, by the conclusion of the twelve-month (12) period of the |
23 | agreement; |
24 | (x) Failure to comply with the payment provisions set forth in this subsection shall be |
25 | grounds for the customer to be removed from the repayment program established by this |
26 | subsection and the balance due on the unpaid balance shall be due and payable in full, in |
27 | accordance with the rules of the commission governing the termination of residential electric-, |
28 | gas-, and water-utility service, provided, that any arrearage already forgiven under subsection |
29 | (d)(2)(ii) of this section shall remain forgiven and be written off by the utility. The amount of the |
30 | arrearage, so forgiven, shall be recovered by the electric and/or gas company through an annual |
31 | reconciling factor approved by the commission; |
32 | (xi) The commission may promulgate rules and regulations to implement this section that |
33 | ensure efficient administration of the program in a non-discriminatory manner consistent with the |
34 | goal of providing assistance to customers who are willing and able to meet their obligations to the |
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1 | utility under this program; |
2 | (xii) Each public utility that provides gas or electric service to residential ratepayers shall |
3 | file tariffs implementing the requirements of this section on a date to be determined by the |
4 | commission which shall allow for the program to be in place no later than October 1, 2016; and |
5 | (xiii) After two (2) years from the date of completion of the plan or removal from the |
6 | plan for failure to remain current with payments and upon recommendation from a community |
7 | action partnership agency, a customer shall be eligible to enroll in a subsequent arrearage |
8 | forgiveness plan. |
9 | (xiv) A customer, who completes the schedule of payments pursuant to this subsection, |
10 | shall have the balance of any arrearage forgiven, and the customer's obligation to the gas and/or |
11 | electric company for such unpaid balance shall be deemed to be fully satisfied. The amount of the |
12 | arrearage, so forgiven, shall be treated as bad debt for purposes of cost recovery by the gas or the |
13 | electric company up to the amount allowed in the gas and/or electric company's most recent |
14 | general rate filing. In the event the gas or electric company's bad debt for a calendar year exceeds |
15 | the amount allowed in the most recent general-rate filing for the same period, the gas or electric |
16 | company shall be entitled to recovery of those write-offs that were the result of the arrearage |
17 | forgiveness plan set forth in this section. |
18 | (3) A customer terminated from service under the provisions of subdivision (d)(1) or |
19 | (d)(2) shall be eligible for restoration of service in accordance with the applicable provisions of |
20 | part V section 4(E)(1)(C), or its successor provision, of the public utilities commission rules and |
21 | regulations governing the termination of residential electric, gas, and water service. |
22 | (e) The commission shall complete a comprehensive review of all utility- and energy- |
23 | related programs and policies impacting protected classes and low-income ratepayers. In |
24 | conducting its review, the commission shall consult with the division, the attorney general, the |
25 | utility, the department of human services, the ratepayers advisory board established by § 39-1- |
26 | 37.1, community-based organizations, a homeless advisory group, and community action |
27 | agencies, each of whom shall cooperate with meetings scheduled by the commission and any |
28 | requests for information received by the commission by providing responses within twenty-one |
29 | (21) days from issuance. The commission shall submit a report of its findings and |
30 | recommendations to the governor and the general assembly no later than November 1, 2018. No |
31 | later than November 15, 2017, and annually thereafter, the commission shall submit to the |
32 | governor, the senate president, and the speaker of the house a report on the effectiveness of the |
33 | customer arrearage program which shall include a cost-benefit analysis and recommendations to |
34 | improve effectiveness of the arrearage program. |
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1 | (f) Every public utility shall provide prompt and adequate customer service to its rate |
2 | payers as provided in §39-2-1.5. |
3 | SECTION 3. Chapter 39-1 of the General Laws entitled "Public Utilities Commission" is |
4 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
5 | 39-1-27.13. Alternative suppliers and purchase of receivables program. |
6 | (a) The general assembly recognizes the importance of competitive choice in electric |
7 | generation service. |
8 | (b) Residential or commercial customers: |
9 | (1) Initiating new utility service; |
10 | (2) Reinstating service following a change of residence or business location; |
11 | (3) Making an inquiry regarding their rates; or |
12 | (4) Seeking information regarding energy efficiency shall be offered the option to learn |
13 | about their ability to enroll with a participating alternative supplier of energy. Customers |
14 | expressing an interest in learning about their electric supply options shall be informed of offers |
15 | available by participating alternative suppliers. The electric distribution company shall describe |
16 | then available offers using a method approved by the commission. |
17 | (c) Participating alternative suppliers of energy may list qualifying electric offers to |
18 | provide electric generation service to residential or commercial customers in each customer's |
19 | utility bill. The commission shall determine the manner such information may be presented in |
20 | customers' utility bills. |
21 | (d) For electric suppliers who have chosen the complete billing service, as described in |
22 | Narragansett Electric Company's Terms and Conditions for Nonregulated Power Producers, |
23 | R.I.P.U.C. No. 1191. Section 2.1.1, the electric distribution company shall make timely payments |
24 | to such suppliers in accordance with this subsection. The distribution company shall: |
25 | (1) Bill all of the electric supplier's customers in a service class according to complete |
26 | billing; |
27 | (2) Pay such suppliers the full amounts due from customers for generation services in a |
28 | time period consistent with the average payment period of the participating class of customer, less |
29 | a percentage of such amounts that reflects the average of the uncollectible bills for the |
30 | participating customer classes of the electric distribution company and other reasonable |
31 | development, operating or carrying costs incurred, as approved by the commission. |
32 | SECTION 4. Chapter 39-2 of the General Laws entitled "Duties of Utilities and Carriers" |
33 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
34 | 39-2-1.5. Minimum customer service levels. |
| LC002545 - Page 13 of 17 |
1 | (a) Every public utility shall provide prompt and adequate customer service which shall |
2 | include prompt installation of new service and service upgrades to its ratepayers, and compliance |
3 | with statutory and regulatory deadlines for all projects. |
4 | (b) Each electric-distribution company as defined by §39-1-2 having greater than one |
5 | hundred thousand (100,000) customers and each gas-distribution company included as a public |
6 | utility in §39-1-2 having greater than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers shall complete |
7 | the installation of new service or upgrade of service as follows: |
8 | (1) New service installations requiring no construction of electric or gas facilities or |
9 | construction of electric or gas facilities with a total cost of less than two thousand dollars ($2,000) |
10 | shall be completed within three (3) business days after the utility has been notified that the service |
11 | location is ready for service and all necessary tariff and regulatory requirements have been met. |
12 | (2) Service upgrades or new service installations that require construction of electric or |
13 | gas facilities with a total of cost of two thousand dollars ($2,000) or greater shall be completed |
14 | within fourteen (14) business days after the utility has been notified that the service location is |
15 | ready for service and all necessary tariff and regulatory requirements have been met. The division |
16 | may grant reasonable extensions to the utility for good cause shown. |
17 | (c) Each electric-distribution company as defined by §39-1-2 having greater than one |
18 | hundred thousand (100,000) customers and each gas-distribution company included as a public |
19 | utility in §39-1-2 having greater than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers shall take |
20 | measures necessary to keep sufficient records to report the following data to the division: |
21 | (1) The percent of telephone calls answered at each company's call center or business |
22 | office, or both, within thirty (30) seconds with a company representative ready to render |
23 | assistance and to accept information necessary to process the call. An acknowledgment that the |
24 | customer or applicant is waiting on the line does not constitute an answer. |
25 | (2) The number of calls to a company's call center or business office that received a busy |
26 | signal divided by the number of calls that were received for each call center, business office, or |
27 | both. |
28 | (3) The number of calls to a company's call center or business office that were abandoned |
29 | divided by the total number of calls received at the company's call center, business office, or both. |
30 | (4) The actual number of disputes for which the company did not provide a response to |
31 | the complaining party within fourteen (14) days of the initiation of the dispute. |
32 | (d) Beginning in 2018, each company set forth in section (b) of this section shall file a |
33 | report annually with the division on or before February 1. Each report shall contain all data set |
34 | forth in subsection (c) of this section, reported by month, as well as a twelve (12) month |
| LC002545 - Page 14 of 17 |
1 | cumulative average for the preceding calendar year. Each report shall contain an analysis and |
2 | comparison of the data reported under this chapter for the previous two (2) years. Each report |
3 | shall include the name and telephone number for the utility contact person responsible for the |
4 | report. |
5 | (e) The commission shall evaluate and address the customer service performance of any |
6 | company that requests a rate increase as part of the rate case review process. The commission |
7 | may require improved customer service, as well as proof of improvement, prior to approving any |
8 | rate increase. |
9 | (f) Any ratepayer who alleges that a utility has failed to provide prompt and adequate |
10 | customer service, has failed to promptly install service upgrades or new service, or has failed to |
11 | comply with any statury or regulatory deadline may submit a formal or informal complaint with |
12 | the division. The division shall investigate and rule upon such complaints in an expedited manner |
13 | and shall provide status updates to the ratepayer or project manager as the investigation proceeds. |
14 | (g) The division shall have the authority to assess a penalty against any utility that fails or |
15 | neglects to provide prompt and adequate customer service, promptly install service upgrades or |
16 | new service, or to comply with any statury or regulatory project deadline as determined by the |
17 | division. |
18 | (1) The penalty may include: |
19 | (i) Costs and reasonable attorney's fees for any ratepayers who filed complaints, to be |
20 | paid to the injured ratepayers; |
21 | (ii) Consequential damages sustained by any ratepayers who filed complaints, including, |
22 | but not limited to, lost profits due to unreasonable delays, to be paid to the injured ratepayers; and |
23 | (iii) A sum not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), for each separate offense, which |
24 | shall be remitted to, or for the benefit of, all ratepayers in a manner to be determined by the |
25 | division. |
26 | (2) Any payment as a result of a penalty as provided in this section, and the cost of |
27 | litigation and investigation related to any such penalty, shall not be recoverable from ratepayers. |
28 | (3) The remedies provided by this section are in addition to any other remedies provided |
29 | in law. |
30 | (h) Any ratepayer that is overcharged for any service or assessment shall be given the |
31 | option of receiving either a bill credit or a full refund. Credits or refunds to the ratepayer shall be |
32 | within thirty (30) days following a final determination by the division. |
33 | SECTION 5. Chapter 39-3 of the General Laws entitled "Regulatory Powers of |
34 | Administration" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
| LC002545 - Page 15 of 17 |
1 | 39-3-12.3. Incentive information required. |
2 | (a) No utility regulated by the commission shall be allowed to file its rate schedules or |
3 | notice of changes in rates unless it shall also file a statement containing the following |
4 | information: |
5 | (1) A detailed summary of all incentive payments received by the company, including the |
6 | total earned under each incentive program, and |
7 | (2) A detailed summary of all actions taken by the company to earn such incentive |
8 | payments. |
9 | (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of the general laws, whether of specific or |
10 | general application, any incentive payments authorized by law and approved by the commission |
11 | shall be: |
12 | (1) Considered billed distribution revenue for the purpose of determining any revenue |
13 | decoupling mechanism adjustment factor authorized by law and approved by the commission; |
14 | and |
15 | (2) Considered billed distribution revenue in any future rate case. |
16 | 39-3-37.4. Itemized charges -- Electrical distribution company. |
17 | (a) Every electrical distribution company which shall charge for the distribution of |
18 | electricity to any house, building, tenement or estate shall provide an itemized bill or statement |
19 | following any installation, construction, site visit, work associated with an interconnection |
20 | agreement, or any other service for which there is any fee assessed. |
21 | (b) The electrical distribution company shall provide a detailed written estimate prior to |
22 | performing any chargeable service, unless the total estimated cost for such service is less than one |
23 | hundred dollars ($100). |
24 | (c) The bill, statement, or estimate shall include the following information: |
25 | (1) Total cost of installation, construction, site visit or other service; |
26 | (2) Number of hours worked and hourly rate of work performed; |
27 | (3) Itemized costs for supplies or materials, if any; |
28 | (4) Permit fees, if any; |
29 | (5) Relocation costs, if any; |
30 | (6) All other costs or fees related to installation, construction, site visit or other service. |
31 | SECTION 6. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS -- PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION | |
*** | |
1 | This act would remove electric distribution companies from the business of electric |
2 | generation, promote alternative supplier and purchaser of receivables programs. |
3 | The act would also improve the efficiency and management of electric and gas |
4 | distribution systems, while promoting better customer service complaints' resolution. |
5 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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