Bill Text: FL S1166 | 2018 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Storm Hardening
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2018-03-10 - Died in Communications, Energy, and Public Utilities [S1166 Detail]
Download: Florida-2018-S1166-Introduced.html
Florida Senate - 2018 SB 1166 By Senator Rodriguez 37-01032-18 20181166__ 1 A bill to be entitled 2 An act relating to storm hardening; amending s. 3 366.8260, F.S.; defining the term “storm hardening”; 4 requiring an electric utility, when petitioning the 5 Public Service Commission for a storm-recovery 6 financing order, to identify its storm hardening plan, 7 its compliance with the plan, and its overall prudence 8 in ensuring electric service reliability; requiring 9 the commission, when making a determination on a 10 petition, to consider the utility’s prudence in storm 11 hardening, previously received storm hardening costs, 12 and the utility’s prudence in expending such funds; 13 conforming a cross-reference; requiring that electric 14 utilities provide a discount on storm-recovery charges 15 to certain customers who have underground electric 16 utility distribution lines servicing their property or 17 who live in certain jurisdictions limiting the 18 planting of certain types of trees near certain 19 utility equipment; providing an effective date. 20 21 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 22 23 Section 1. Present paragraphs (k) through (q) of subsection 24 (1) of section 366.8260, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as 25 paragraphs (l) through (r), respectively, a new paragraph (k) is 26 added to that subsection, paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection 27 (2) and paragraph (b) of subsection (5) of that section are 28 amended, present subsections (13), (14), and (15) of that 29 section are redesignated as subsections (14), (15), and (16), 30 respectively, and a new subsection (13) is added to that 31 section, to read: 32 366.8260 Storm-recovery financing.— 33 (1) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term: 34 (k) “Storm hardening” means upgraded design and 35 construction practices, as well as maintenance practices, so 36 that electric transmission and distribution systems are better 37 able to withstand high winds, storm surges, and flooding 38 resulting from storms. 39 (2) FINANCING ORDERS.— 40 (a) An electric utility may petition the commission for a 41 financing order. For each petition, the electric utility shall: 42 1. Describe the storm-recovery activities that the electric 43 utility has undertaken or proposes to undertake and describe the 44 reasons for undertaking the activities. 45 2. Set forth the known storm-recovery costs and estimate 46 the costs of any storm-recovery activities that are not 47 completed, or for which the costs are not yet known, as 48 identified and requested by the electric utility. 49 3. Set forth the level of the storm-recovery reserve that 50 the utility proposes to establish or replenish and has 51 determined would be appropriate to recover through storm 52 recovery bonds and is seeking to so recover and such level that 53 the utility is funding or will seek to fund through other means, 54 together with a description of the factors and calculations used 55 in determining the amounts and methods of recovery. 56 4. Indicate whether the electric utility proposes to 57 finance all or a portion of the storm-recovery costs and storm 58 recovery reserve using storm-recovery bonds. If the electric 59 utility proposes to finance a portion of such costs, the 60 electric utility shall identify that portion in the petition. 61 5. Estimate the financing costs related to the storm 62 recovery bonds. 63 6. Estimate the storm-recovery charges necessary to recover 64 the storm-recovery costs, storm-recovery reserve, and financing 65 costs and the period for recovery of such costs. 66 7. Estimate any cost savings or demonstrate how it would 67 avoid or significantly mitigate rate impacts to customers 68 resulting from financing storm-recovery costs with storm 69 recovery bonds as opposed to the traditional method of 70 recovering such costs from customers and through alternative 71 financing methods available to the electric utility. 72 8. Identify its storm hardening plan for the storm-impacted 73 area, its compliance with the plan, and its overall prudence in 74 protecting utility assets and ensuring reliable electric 75 transmission and distribution service in the storm-impacted 76 area. 77 9.8.File with the petition direct testimony supporting the 78 petition. 79 (b)1. Proceedings on a petition submitted pursuant to 80 paragraph (a) shall begin with a petition by an electric utility 81 and shall be disposed of in accordance withthe provisions of82 chapter 120 and applicable rules, except thatthe provisions of83 this section, to the extent applicable, shall control. 84 a. Within 7 days after the filing of a petition, the 85 commission shall publish a case schedule, which schedule shall 86 place the matter before the commission on an agenda that will 87 permit a commission decision no later than 120 days after the 88 date the petition is filed. 89 b. No later than 135 days after the date the petition is 90 filed, the commission shall issue a financing order or an order 91 rejecting the petition. A party to the commission proceeding may 92 petition the commission for reconsideration of the financing 93 order within 5 days after the date of its issuance. The 94 commission shall issue a financing order authorizing financing 95 of reasonable and prudent storm-recovery costs, the storm 96 recovery reserve amount determined appropriate by the 97 commission, and financing costs if the commission finds that the 98 issuance of the storm-recovery bonds and the imposition of 99 storm-recovery charges authorized by the order are reasonably 100 expected to result in lower overall costs or would avoid or 101 significantly mitigate rate impacts to customers as compared 102 with alternative methods of financing or recovering storm 103 recovery costs and storm-recovery reserve. Any determination of 104 whether storm-recovery costs are reasonable and prudent shall be 105 made with reference to the general public interest in, and the 106 scope of effort required to provide, the safe and expeditious 107 restoration of electric service. Such determination must also 108 consider whether the utility has acted prudently in adequately 109 storm hardening its electric transmission and distribution 110 service, whether the utility has already requested and 111 previously received storm hardening costs from customers, and 112 whether such funds were expended in a prudent manner. 113 2. In a financing order issued to an electric utility, the 114 commission shall: 115 a. Except as provided in sub-subparagraph f. and in 116 subparagraph 4., specify the amount of storm-recovery costs and 117 the level of storm-recovery reserves, taking into consideration, 118 to the extent the commission deems appropriate, any other 119 methods used to recover these costs, and describe and estimate 120 the amount of financing costs which may be recovered through 121 storm-recovery charges; and specify the period over which such 122 costs may be recovered. 123 b. Determine that the proposed structuring, expected 124 pricing, and financing costs of the storm-recovery bonds are 125 reasonably expected to result in lower overall costs or would 126 avoid or significantly mitigate rate impacts to customers as 127 compared with alternative methods of financing or recovering 128 storm-recovery costs. 129 c. Provide that, for the period specified pursuant to sub 130 subparagraph a., the imposition and collection of storm-recovery 131 charges authorized in the financing order shall be paid by all 132 customers receiving transmission or distribution service from 133 the electric utility or its successors or assignees under 134 commission-approved rate schedules or under special contracts, 135 even if the customer elects to purchase electricity from an 136 alternative electric supplier following a fundamental change in 137 regulation of public utilities in the state. 138 d. Determine what portion, if any, of the storm-recovery 139 reserves must be held in a funded reserve and any limitations on 140 how the reserve may be held, accessed, or used. 141 e. Include a formula-based mechanism for making expeditious 142 periodic adjustments in the storm-recovery charges that 143 customers are required to pay under the financing order and for 144 making any adjustments that are necessary to correct for any 145 overcollection or undercollection of the charges or to otherwise 146 ensure the timely payment of storm-recovery bonds and financing 147 costs and other required amounts and charges payable in 148 connection with the storm-recovery bonds. 149 f. Specify the storm-recovery property that is, or shall 150 be, created in favor of an electric utility or its successors or 151 assignees and that shall be used to pay or secure storm-recovery 152 bonds and financing costs. 153 g. Specify the degree of flexibility to be afforded to the 154 electric utility in establishing the terms and conditions of the 155 storm-recovery bonds, including, but not limited to, repayment 156 schedules, interest rates, and other financing costs. 157 h. Provide that storm-recovery charges be allocated to the 158 customer classes using the criteria set out in s. 366.06(1), in 159 the manner in which these costs or their equivalent were 160 allocated in the cost-of-service study approved in connection 161 with the electric utility’s last rate case. If the electric 162 utility’s last rate case was resolved by a settlement agreement, 163 the cost-of-service methodology filed by the electric utility in 164 that case shall be used. 165 i. Provide that, after the final terms of an issuance of 166 storm-recovery bonds have been established and prior to the 167 issuance of storm-recovery bonds, the electric utility shall 168 determine the resulting initial storm-recovery charge in 169 accordance with the financing order and such initial storm 170 recovery charge shall be final and effective upon the issuance 171 of such storm-recovery bonds without further commission action. 172 j. Include any other conditions that the commission 173 considers appropriate and that are not otherwise inconsistent 174 with this section. 175 176 In performing the responsibilities of this subparagraph and 177 subparagraph 5., the commission may engage outside consultants 178 or counsel. Any expenses associated with such services shall be 179 included as part of financing costs and included in storm 180 recovery charges. 181 3. A financing order issued to an electric utility may 182 provide that creation of the electric utility’s storm-recovery 183 property pursuant to sub-subparagraph 2.f. is conditioned upon, 184 and shall be simultaneous with, the sale or other transfer of 185 the storm-recovery property to an assignee and the pledge of the 186 storm-recovery property to secure storm-recovery bonds. 187 4. If the commission issues a financing order, the electric 188 utility shall file with the commission at least biannually a 189 petition or a letter applying the formula-based mechanism 190 pursuant to sub-subparagraph 2.e. and, based on estimates of 191 consumption for each rate class and other mathematical factors, 192 requesting administrative approval to make the adjustments 193 described in sub-subparagraph 2.e. The review of such a request 194 shall be limited to determining whether there is any 195 mathematical error in the application of the formula-based 196 mechanism relating to the appropriate amount of any 197 overcollection or undercollection of storm-recovery charges and 198 the amount of an adjustment. Such adjustments shall ensure the 199 recovery of revenues sufficient to provide for the payment of 200 principal, interest, acquisition, defeasance, financing costs, 201 or redemption premium and other fees, costs, and charges in 202 respect of storm-recovery bonds approved under the financing 203 order. Within 60 days after receiving an electric utility’s 204 request pursuant to this paragraph, the commission shall either 205 approve the request or inform the electric utility of any 206 mathematical errors in its calculation. If the commission 207 informs the utility of mathematical errors in its calculation, 208 the utility may correct its error and refile its request. The 209 timeframes previously described in this paragraph shall apply to 210 a refiled request. 211 5. Within 120 days after the issuance of storm-recovery 212 bonds, the electric utility shall file with the commission 213 information on the actual costs of the storm-recovery bond 214 issuance. The commission shall review such information to 215 determine if such costs incurred in the issuance of the bonds 216 resulted in the lowest overall costs that were reasonably 217 consistent with market conditions at the time of the issuance 218 and the terms of the financing order. The commission may 219 disallow any incremental issuance costs in excess of the lowest 220 overall costs by requiring the utility to make a contribution to 221 the storm reserve in an amount equal to the excess of actual 222 issuance costs incurred, and paid for out of storm-recovery bond 223 proceeds, and the lowest overall issuance costs as determined by 224 the commission. The commission may not make adjustments to the 225 storm-recovery charges for any such excess issuance costs. 226 6. Subsequent to the earlier of the transfer of storm 227 recovery property to an assignee or the issuance of storm 228 recovery bonds authorized thereby, a financing order is 229 irrevocable and, except as provided in subparagraph 4. and 230 paragraph (c), the commission may not amend, modify, or 231 terminate the financing order by any subsequent action or 232 reduce, impair, postpone, terminate, or otherwise adjust storm 233 recovery charges approved in the financing order. After the 234 issuance of a financing order, the electric utility retains sole 235 discretion regarding whether to assign, sell, or otherwise 236 transfer storm-recovery property or to cause the storm-recovery 237 bonds to be issued, including the right to defer or postpone 238 such assignment, sale, transfer, or issuance. 239 (5) STORM-RECOVERY PROPERTY.— 240 (b)1. Except as specified in this section, the Uniform 241 Commercial Code does not apply to storm-recovery property or any 242 right, title, or interest of a utility or assignee described in 243 subparagraph (1)(p)1.(1)(o)1., whether before or after the 244 issuance of the financing order. In addition, such right, title, 245 or interest pertaining to a financing order, including, but not 246 limited to, the associated storm-recovery property and any 247 revenues, collections, claims, rights to payment, payments, 248 money, or proceeds of or arising from storm-recovery charges 249 pursuant to such order, mayshallnot be deemed proceeds of any 250 right or interest other than in the financing order and the 251 storm-recovery property arising from the order. 252 2. The creation, attachment, granting, perfection, 253 priority, and enforcement of liens and security interests in 254 storm-recovery property to secure storm-recovery bonds is 255 governed solely by this section and not by the Uniform 256 Commercial Code. 257 3. A valid, enforceable, and attached lien and security 258 interest in storm-recovery property may be created only upon the 259 later of: 260 a. The issuance of a financing order; 261 b. The execution and delivery of a security agreement with 262 a financing party in connection with the issuance of storm 263 recovery bonds; or 264 c. The receipt of value for the storm-recovery bonds. 265 266 A valid, enforceable, and attached security interest shall be 267 perfected against third parties as of the date of filing of a 268 financing statement in the Florida Secured Transaction Registry, 269 as such registry is defined in Article 9 of the Uniform 270 Commercial Code, in accordance with subparagraph 4., and shall 271 thereafter be a continuously perfected lien; and such security 272 interest in the storm-recovery property and all proceeds of such 273 storm-recovery property, whether or not billed, accrued, or 274 collected, and whether or not deposited into a deposit account 275 and however evidenced, shall have priority in accordance with 276 subparagraph 8. and take precedence over any subsequent judicial 277 or other lien creditor. No continuation statement need be filed 278 to maintain such perfection. 279 4. Financing statements required to be filed pursuant to 280 this section shall be filed, maintained, and indexed in the same 281 manner and in the same system of records maintained for the 282 filing of financing statements in the Florida Secured 283 Transaction Registry under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial 284 Code. The filing of such a financing statement shall be the only 285 method of perfecting a lien or security interest on storm 286 recovery property. 287 5. The priority of a lien and security interest perfected 288 under this paragraph is not impaired by any later modification 289 of the financing order or storm-recovery property or by the 290 commingling of funds arising from storm-recovery property with 291 other funds, and any other security interest that may apply to 292 those funds shall be terminated as to all funds transferred to a 293 segregated account for the benefit of an assignee or a financing 294 party or to an assignee or financing party directly. 295 6. If a default or termination occurs under the terms of 296 the storm-recovery bonds, the financing parties or their 297 representatives may foreclose on or otherwise enforce their lien 298 and security interest in any storm-recovery property as if they 299 were a secured party under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial 300 Code; and a court may order that amounts arising from storm 301 recovery property be transferred to a separate account for the 302 financing parties’ benefit, to which their lien and security 303 interest shall apply. On application by or on behalf of the 304 financing parties to a circuit court of this state, such court 305 shall order the sequestration and payment to the financing 306 parties of revenues arising from the storm-recovery property. 307 7. The interest of a pledgee of an interest or any rights 308 in any storm-recovery property is not perfected until filing as 309 provided in subparagraph 4. 310 8. The priority of the conflicting interests of pledgees in 311 the same interest or rights in any storm-recovery property is 312 determined as follows: 313 a. Conflicting perfected interests or rights of pledgees 314 rank according to priority in time of perfection. Priority dates 315 from the time a filing covering the interest or right is made in 316 accordance with this paragraph. 317 b. A perfected interest or right of a pledgee has priority 318 over a conflicting unperfected interest or right of a pledgee. 319 c. A perfected interest or right of a pledgee has priority 320 over a person who becomes a lien creditor after the perfection 321 of such pledgee’s interest or right. 322 (13) STORM-RECOVERY CHARGE DISCOUNT.— 323 (a) In areas where an electric utility customer or group of 324 customers, such as a homeowners’ association, has underground 325 electric utility distribution lines servicing their property or 326 group of properties, the electric utility serving those 327 customers must provide a 15 percent discount on any storm 328 recovery charge over other customers of the same class who do 329 not have underground distribution lines servicing their 330 property. This paragraph applies only when such distribution 331 lines were undergrounded at the direct request of, and upon the 332 assessment of an impact or other discrete fee to, the current or 333 previous customer or group of customers serviced at such 334 property or group of properties. 335 (b) If a local government adopts an ordinance prohibiting 336 the planting of trees, other than small trees that will reach a 337 maximum height of 10 feet, within 5 lateral feet, at ground 338 level, of any overhead utility distribution or transmission 339 line, an electric utility shall provide a 15 percent discount on 340 any storm-recovery charge to customers within such local 341 government’s jurisdiction over other customers of the same class 342 who are not within such jurisdiction. 343 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2018.