2018 -- S 2329 | |
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LC004136 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2018 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC UTILITIES AND CARRIERS | |
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Introduced By: Senators Lombardo, Lombardi, and Archambault | |
Date Introduced: February 15, 2018 | |
Referred To: Senate Commerce | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 39-1-27.7.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 39-1 entitled "Public |
2 | Utilities Commission" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 39-1-27.7.1. Revenue decoupling. |
4 | (a) The general assembly finds and declares that electricity and gas revenues shall may be |
5 | fully decoupled from sales pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and further finds and |
6 | declares that any decoupling proposal submitted by an electric-distribution company as defined in |
7 | subdivision 39-1-2(12) or gas-distribution company included as a public utility in subdivision 39- |
8 | 1-2(20) that has greater than one hundred thousand (100,000) customers, shall be for the |
9 | following purposes: |
10 | (1) Increasing efficiency in the operations and management of the electric- and gas- |
11 | distribution system; |
12 | (2) Achieving the goals established in the electric-distribution company's plan for system |
13 | reliability and energy efficiency and conservation procurement as required pursuant to subsection |
14 | 39-1-27.7(c); |
15 | (3) Increasing investment in least-cost resources that will reduce long-term electricity |
16 | demand; |
17 | (4) Reducing risks for both customers and the distribution company including, but not |
18 | limited to, societal risks, weather risks, and economic risks; |
19 | (5) Increasing investment in end-use energy efficiency; |
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1 | (6) Eliminating disincentives to support energy-efficiency programs; |
2 | (7) Facilitating and encouraging investment in utility infrastructure, safety, and |
3 | reliability; and |
4 | (8) Considering the reduction of fixed, recurring customer charges and transition to |
5 | increased unit charges that more accurately reflect the long-term costs of energy production and |
6 | delivery. |
7 | (b) Each electric-distribution company as defined by subdivision 39-1-2(12) and gas- |
8 | distribution company included as a public utility in subdivision 39-1-2(20) having greater than |
9 | one hundred thousand (100,000) customers shall file proposals at the commission to implement |
10 | the policy set forth in subsection (a). The commission shall may approve such proposals, |
11 | provided they contain the features and components set forth in subsection (c), and that they are |
12 | consistent with the intent and objectives contained in subsection (a). Actions taken by the |
13 | commission in the exercise of its ratemaking authority for electric- and gas-rate cases shall be |
14 | within the norm of industry standards and recognize the need to maintain the financial health of |
15 | the distribution company as a stand-alone entity in Rhode Island. |
16 | (c) The proposals shall contain the following features and components: |
17 | (1) A revenue decoupling reconciliation mechanism that reconciles annually the revenue |
18 | requirement allowed in the company's base distribution-rate case to revenues actually received for |
19 | the applicable twelve-month (12) period; provided that the mechanism for gas distribution shall |
20 | be determined on a revenue-per-customer basis, in a manner typically employed for gas- |
21 | distribution companies in the industry. Any revenues over-recovered or under-recovered shall be |
22 | credited to, or recovered from, customers, as applicable; and |
23 | (2) An annual infrastructure, safety, and reliability spending plan for each fiscal year and |
24 | an annual rate-reconciliation mechanism that includes a reconcilable allowance for the anticipated |
25 | capital investments and other spending pursuant to the annual pre-approved budget as developed |
26 | in accordance with subsection (d). |
27 | (d) Prior to the beginning of each fiscal year, gas- and electric-distribution companies |
28 | shall consult with the division of public utilities and carriers regarding their infrastructure, safety, |
29 | and reliability spending plan for the following fiscal year, addressing the following categories: |
30 | (1) Capital spending on utility infrastructure; |
31 | (2) For electric-distribution companies, operation and maintenance expenses on |
32 | vegetation management; |
33 | (3) For electric-distribution companies, operation and maintenance expenses on system |
34 | inspection, including expenses from expected resulting repairs; and |
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1 | (4) Any other costs relating to maintaining safety and reliability that are mutually agreed |
2 | upon by the division and the company. |
3 | The distribution company shall submit a plan to the division and the division shall |
4 | cooperate in good faith to reach an agreement on a proposed plan for these categories of costs for |
5 | the prospective fiscal year within sixty (60) days. To the extent that the company and the division |
6 | mutually agree on a plan, such plan shall be filed with the commission for review and approval |
7 | within ninety (90) days. If the company and the division cannot agree on a plan, the company |
8 | shall file a proposed plan with the commission and the commission shall review and, if the |
9 | investments and spending are found to be reasonably needed to maintain safe and reliable |
10 | distribution service over the short and long term, approve the plan within ninety (90) days. |
11 | (e) Every electric- or gas-distribution company, as defined in subsection (a) of this |
12 | section, shall submit a general rate schedule change filing (i.e. full rate filing) no later than |
13 | January 1, 2019, and at least every three (3) years thereafter. |
14 | (e)(f) The commission shall have the following duties and powers, in addition to its |
15 | existing authorities established in title 39 of the general laws: |
16 | (1) To maintain reasonable and adequate service-quality standards, after decoupling, that |
17 | are in effect at the time of the proposal and were established pursuant to § 39-3-7. |
18 | (2) The commission may exclude the low-income rate class from the revenue decoupling |
19 | reconciliation-rate mechanism for either electric or gas distribution. The commission also may |
20 | exclude customers in the large commercial and industrial rate class from the gas-distribution |
21 | mechanism. |
22 | (3) The commission may adopt performance incentives for the electric-distribution |
23 | company that provides a shared-savings mechanism whereby the company would receive a |
24 | percentage of savings realized as a result of achieving the purposes of this section while the |
25 | remaining savings are credited to customers. |
26 | (4) The commission shall review and approve, with any necessary amendments, |
27 | performance-based, energy-savings targets developed and submitted by the Rhode Island energy |
28 | efficiency and resources management council. Said performance-based targets shall also be used |
29 | as a consideration in any shared-savings mechanism established by the commission pursuant to |
30 | subdivision (3) herein. |
31 | (5) The general assembly recognizes that the revenue decoupling mechanism |
32 | substantially reduces the risk to the company and its investors. The commission may consider the |
33 | availability of revenue decoupling during any rate filing by reducing the appropriate profit level |
34 | to offset the full impact of the company's reduced risk attributable to decoupling. |
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1 | (f)(g) The Rhode Island energy efficiency and resources management council shall |
2 | propose performance-based, energy-savings targets to the commission no later than September 1, |
3 | 2010. The targets shall include, but not be limited to, specific energy kilowatt-hour savings |
4 | overall and peak-demand savings for both summer- and winter-peak periods expressed in total |
5 | megawatts as well as appropriate targets recommended in the opportunities report filed with the |
6 | commission pursuant to § 39-1-27.7(c)(3). The council shall revise, as necessary, these targets on |
7 | an annual basis prior to the reconciliation process established pursuant to subsection (c) and |
8 | submit its revisions to the commission for approval. |
9 | (g)(h) Reporting. Every electric-distribution company, as defined in subsection (a) shall |
10 | report to the governor, general assembly, division of public utilities, and public utilities |
11 | commission annually on or before September 1, 2012. Said report shall include, but not be limited |
12 | to, the following elements: |
13 | (1) A comparison of revenues from traditional rate regulation and how the revenues have |
14 | differed as part of an approved decoupling structure; |
15 | (2) A summary of how the company is achieving the performance-based targets that may |
16 | have been adopted pursuant to subdivision (e)(f)(4); |
17 | (3) A summary of any shared savings the company may have received pursuant to the |
18 | performance incentives authorized in subdivision (e)(f)(3); |
19 | (4) A summary of how the company is achieving the service-quality standards required in |
20 | subdivision (e)(f)(1); |
21 | (5) An overview of how decoupling is impacting revenue stabilization goals that have |
22 | resulted from decoupling; and |
23 | (6) A summary of any customer education programs provided. |
24 | SECTION 2. 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 | |
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1 | This act would permit, rather than require, electricity and gas revenues to be decoupled |
2 | from sales and require submission of a full rate filing every three (3) years by electric and gas |
3 | distribution companies. |
4 | This act would also require electric-distribution companies to provide an annual report on |
5 | revenues to the governor, general assembly, division of public utilities, and the PUC. |
6 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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