Bill Text: FL S1548 | 2024 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: Energy

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Failed) 2024-03-08 - Died in Regulated Industries [S1548 Detail]

Download: Florida-2024-S1548-Introduced.html
       Florida Senate - 2024                                    SB 1548
       
       
        
       By Senator Gruters
       
       
       
       
       
       22-01633-24                                           20241548__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to energy; amending s. 337.25, F.S.;
    3         prohibiting the Department of Transportation from
    4         assigning or transferring its permitting rights across
    5         transportation rights-of-way operated by the
    6         department to certain third parties under certain
    7         circumstances; amending s. 337.403, F.S.; prohibiting
    8         authorities from requiring the relocation of utilities
    9         on behalf of certain other third party or governmental
   10         agency projects; amending s. 366.04, F.S.; requiring
   11         the Public Service Commission to approve targeted
   12         storm reserve amounts for public utilities; providing
   13         requirements for the targeted storm reserve amounts;
   14         providing for base rate adjustments; amending s.
   15         409.508, F.S.; defining and redefining terms;
   16         requiring the Department of Commerce to expand
   17         categorical eligibility for the low-income home energy
   18         assistance program to include individuals who are
   19         enrolled in certain federal disability programs;
   20         requiring the department to develop a comprehensive
   21         process for automatic payments to be made on behalf of
   22         such individuals; providing requirements for such
   23         process; making technical changes; requiring the
   24         Public Service Commission to conduct or cause to be
   25         conducted a feasibility study on the use of small
   26         modular nuclear reactors in this state; defining the
   27         term “small modular nuclear reactor” or “reactor”;
   28         providing requirements for the feasibility study;
   29         requiring the commission to submit a report on the
   30         findings and conclusion of the feasibility study to
   31         the Governor and the Legislature by a specified date;
   32         providing requirements for the report; providing an
   33         effective date.
   34          
   35  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   36  
   37         Section 1. Paragraph (e) is added to subsection (1) of
   38  section 337.25, Florida Statutes, to read:
   39         337.25 Acquisition, lease, and disposal of real and
   40  personal property.—
   41         (1)
   42         (e)The department may not, without prior approval from the
   43  Legislature, assign or transfer its permitting rights across any
   44  transportation right-of-way operated by the department to a
   45  third party or governmental entity that does not operate the
   46  transportation right-of-way.
   47         Section 2. Subsection (1) of section 337.403, Florida
   48  Statutes, is amended to read:
   49         337.403 Interference caused by utility; expenses.—
   50         (1) If a utility that is placed upon, under, over, or
   51  within the right-of-way limits of any public road or publicly
   52  owned rail corridor is found by the authority to be unreasonably
   53  interfering in any way with the convenient, safe, or continuous
   54  use, or the maintenance, improvement, extension, or expansion,
   55  of such public road or publicly owned rail corridor, the utility
   56  owner shall, upon 30 days’ written notice to the utility or its
   57  agent by the authority, initiate the work necessary to alleviate
   58  the interference at its own expense except as provided in
   59  paragraphs (a)-(j). The authority may not require a utility
   60  within a public road operated by the authority to be relocated
   61  on behalf of any other third-party or governmental agency
   62  project related to a separate public or private road or
   63  transportation corridor. The work must be completed within such
   64  reasonable time as stated in the notice or such time as agreed
   65  to by the authority and the utility owner.
   66         (a) If the relocation of utility facilities, as referred to
   67  in s. 111 of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, Pub. L. No.
   68  84-627, is necessitated by the construction of a project on the
   69  federal-aid interstate system, including extensions thereof
   70  within urban areas, and the cost of the project is eligible and
   71  approved for reimbursement by the Federal Government to the
   72  extent of 90 percent or more under the Federal-Aid Highway Act,
   73  or any amendment thereof, then in that event the utility owning
   74  or operating such facilities shall perform any necessary work
   75  upon notice from the department, and the state shall pay the
   76  entire expense properly attributable to such work after
   77  deducting therefrom any increase in the value of a new facility
   78  and any salvage value derived from an old facility.
   79         (b) When a joint agreement between the department and the
   80  utility is executed for utility work to be accomplished as part
   81  of a contract for construction of a transportation facility, the
   82  department may participate in those utility work costs that
   83  exceed the department’s official estimate of the cost of the
   84  work by more than 10 percent. The amount of such participation
   85  is limited to the difference between the official estimate of
   86  all the work in the joint agreement plus 10 percent and the
   87  amount awarded for this work in the construction contract for
   88  such work. The department may not participate in any utility
   89  work costs that occur as a result of changes or additions during
   90  the course of the contract.
   91         (c) When an agreement between the department and utility is
   92  executed for utility work to be accomplished in advance of a
   93  contract for construction of a transportation facility, the
   94  department may participate in the cost of clearing and grubbing
   95  necessary to perform such work.
   96         (d) If the utility facility was initially installed to
   97  exclusively serve the authority or its tenants, or both, the
   98  authority shall bear the costs of the utility work. However, the
   99  authority is not responsible for the cost of utility work
  100  related to any subsequent additions to that facility for the
  101  purpose of serving others. For a county or municipality, if such
  102  utility facility was installed in the right-of-way as a means to
  103  serve a county or municipal facility on a parcel of property
  104  adjacent to the right-of-way and if the intended use of the
  105  county or municipal facility is for a use other than
  106  transportation purposes, the obligation of the county or
  107  municipality to bear the costs of the utility work shall extend
  108  only to utility work on the parcel of property on which the
  109  facility of the county or municipality originally served by the
  110  utility facility is located.
  111         (e) If, under an agreement between a utility and the
  112  authority entered into after July 1, 2009, the utility conveys,
  113  subordinates, or relinquishes a compensable property right to
  114  the authority for the purpose of accommodating the acquisition
  115  or use of the right-of-way by the authority, without the
  116  agreement expressly addressing future responsibility for the
  117  cost of necessary utility work, the authority shall bear the
  118  cost of removal or relocation. This paragraph does not impair or
  119  restrict, and may not be used to interpret, the terms of any
  120  such agreement entered into before July 1, 2009.
  121         (f) If the utility is an electric facility being relocated
  122  underground in order to enhance vehicular, bicycle, and
  123  pedestrian safety and in which ownership of the electric
  124  facility to be placed underground has been transferred from a
  125  private to a public utility within the past 5 years, the
  126  department shall incur all costs of the necessary utility work.
  127         (g) An authority may bear the costs of utility work
  128  required to eliminate an unreasonable interference when the
  129  utility is not able to establish that it has a compensable
  130  property right in the particular property where the utility is
  131  located if:
  132         1. The utility was physically located on the particular
  133  property before the authority acquired rights in the property;
  134         2. The utility demonstrates that it has a compensable
  135  property right in adjacent properties along the alignment of the
  136  utility or, after due diligence, certifies that the utility does
  137  not have evidence to prove or disprove that it has a compensable
  138  property right in the particular property where the utility is
  139  located; and
  140         3. The information available to the authority does not
  141  establish the relative priorities of the authority’s and the
  142  utility’s interests in the particular property.
  143         (h) If a municipally owned utility or county-owned utility
  144  is located in a rural area of opportunity, as defined in s.
  145  288.0656(2), and the department determines that the utility is
  146  unable, and will not be able within the next 10 years, to pay
  147  for the cost of utility work necessitated by a department
  148  project on the State Highway System, the department may pay, in
  149  whole or in part, the cost of such utility work performed by the
  150  department or its contractor.
  151         (i) If the relocation of utility facilities is necessitated
  152  by the construction of a commuter rail service project or an
  153  intercity passenger rail service project and the cost of the
  154  project is eligible and approved for reimbursement by the
  155  Federal Government, then in that event the utility owning or
  156  operating such facilities located by permit on a department
  157  owned rail corridor shall perform any necessary utility
  158  relocation work upon notice from the department, and the
  159  department shall pay the expense properly attributable to such
  160  utility relocation work in the same proportion as federal funds
  161  are expended on the commuter rail service project or an
  162  intercity passenger rail service project after deducting
  163  therefrom any increase in the value of a new facility and any
  164  salvage value derived from an old facility. In no event shall
  165  the state be required to use state dollars for such utility
  166  relocation work. This paragraph does not apply to any phase of
  167  the Central Florida Commuter Rail project, known as SunRail.
  168         (j) If a utility is lawfully located within an existing and
  169  valid utility easement granted by recorded plat, regardless of
  170  whether such land was subsequently acquired by the authority by
  171  dedication, transfer of fee, or otherwise, the authority must
  172  bear the cost of the utility work required to eliminate an
  173  unreasonable interference. The authority shall pay the entire
  174  expense properly attributable to such work after deducting any
  175  increase in the value of a new facility and any salvage value
  176  derived from an old facility.
  177         Section 3. Subsection (10) is added to section 366.04,
  178  Florida Statutes, to read:
  179         366.04 Jurisdiction of commission.—
  180         (10)The commission shall approve a targeted storm reserve
  181  amount to be effective January 1, 2025, for each public utility.
  182  The targeted storm reserve amount must be set at a level equal
  183  to 80 percent of the approved incremental storm costs incurred
  184  for the public utility’s highest cost storm impacting its
  185  service area over the 5 calendar years before January 2025. The
  186  approved incremental storm costs that form the basis for the
  187  targeted storm reserve amount must be based on the filings of
  188  the public utility with the commission and orders issued by the
  189  commission.
  190         (a)1.The initial targeted storm reserve amount established
  191  by the commission:
  192         a.Is subject to adjustment on an annual basis for
  193  successive rolling 5-year periods;
  194         b.Must be funded by an increase in base rates effective
  195  January 1, 2025; and
  196         c.Must be designed to allow the utility to recover the
  197  costs to fund the targeted reserve level over a 4-year period.
  198         2.All base rate adjustments and accompanying tariffs must
  199  be:
  200         a.Implemented by administrative approval of the commission
  201  and employ the most recent authorized base rate structure for
  202  the public utility;
  203         b.Filed by October 15 together with the current storm
  204  reserve and supporting documentation and the highest cost storm
  205  over the prior 5 years as reflected by commission order; and
  206         c.Administratively approved by each November 15 to take
  207  effect on January 1 of the following calendar year.
  208         (b)Suspension of base rate increases and implementation of
  209  base rate adjustments under this subsection based on use and
  210  depletion of the storm reserve and the determination of the
  211  annual storm reserve amount must be administratively determined
  212  and approved by the commission consistent with calendar
  213  deadlines under paragraph (a).
  214         (c)The adjustments to base rates must be designed to fund
  215  the public utility storm reserves; the cost recovery of such
  216  base rates must be without regard to any impact on a public
  217  utility’s previous, current, or projected earnings; and the
  218  revenues from such base rates may not be considered in the
  219  calculation of a public utility’s earnings in earnings
  220  surveillance reports filed with the commission.
  221         Section 4. Section 409.508, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  222  read:
  223         409.508 Low-income home energy assistance program.—
  224         (1) As used in this section, the term:
  225         (a) “Department” means the Department of Commerce.
  226         (b) “Eligible household” means a household eligible for
  227  funds from the program Low-income Home Energy Assistance Act of
  228  1981, 42 U.S.C. ss. 8621 et seq.
  229         (c)(b) “Home energy” means a source of heating or cooling
  230  in residential dwellings.
  231         (d)“Program” means the federal low-income home energy
  232  assistance program established pursuant to 42 U.S.C. ss. 8621 et
  233  seq.
  234         (e)(c) “Utility” means any person, corporation,
  235  partnership, municipality, cooperative, association, or other
  236  legal entity and its lessees, trustees, or receivers now or
  237  hereafter owning, operating, managing, or controlling any plant
  238  or other facility supplying electricity or natural gas to or for
  239  the public within this state, directly or indirectly, for
  240  compensation.
  241         (2) The department of Economic Opportunity is designated as
  242  the state agency to administer the program Low-income Home
  243  Energy Assistance Act of 1981, 42 U.S.C. ss. 8621 et seq. The
  244  department may of Economic Opportunity is authorized to provide
  245  home energy assistance benefits to eligible households which may
  246  be in the form of cash, vouchers, certificates, or direct
  247  payments to electric or natural gas utilities or other energy
  248  suppliers and operators of low-rent, subsidized housing in
  249  behalf of eligible households. Priority must shall be given to
  250  eligible households having at least one elderly or handicapped
  251  individual and to eligible households with the lowest incomes.
  252         (3)(a)The department shall expand categorical eligibility
  253  for the program to include households with residents of this
  254  state who are enrolled in any of the following federal
  255  disability programs:
  256         1.Social Security Disability Insurance program.
  257         2.Social Security Insurance program.
  258         3.United States Department of Veterans Affairs disability
  259  benefits.
  260         4.Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program.
  261         5.Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
  262         (b)The department shall develop a comprehensive process
  263  for automatic program payments on behalf of such individuals to
  264  be made directly to the household’s home energy supplier. The
  265  process must include all of the following:
  266         1.Detailed requirements for any necessary statutory or
  267  regulatory changes, application process changes, or other
  268  requirements necessary to allow the department to identify
  269  individuals who qualify under this subsection for automatic
  270  program payments without requiring the individual to submit
  271  additional program applications.
  272         2.A data sharing process detailing the steps the
  273  department will take to identify and share a list of
  274  categorically eligible residents with home energy suppliers. A
  275  home energy supplier that agrees to receive direct program
  276  payments must apply the benefits as prescribed to the resident
  277  accounts identified by the department and document such payments
  278  in its annual program performance measures report.
  279         (4) Agreements may be established between electric or
  280  natural gas utility companies, other energy suppliers, the
  281  department, and the Department of Revenue to provide, and the
  282  Department of Economic Opportunity for the purpose of providing
  283  payments to energy suppliers in the form of a credit against
  284  sales and use taxes due or direct payments to energy suppliers
  285  for services rendered to low-income, eligible households.
  286         (5)(4) The department of Economic Opportunity shall adopt
  287  rules to carry out the provisions of this section act.
  288         Section 5. (1)The Public Service Commission shall conduct
  289  or cause to be conducted a study regarding the feasibility of
  290  using small modular nuclear reactors in this state. As used in
  291  this section, the term “small modular nuclear reactor” or
  292  “reactor” means a nuclear reactor that:
  293         (a)Has a rated capacity of not more than 300 megawatts of
  294  electricity;
  295         (b)Can be constructed and operated in combination with
  296  other similar reactors at a single site if multiple reactors are
  297  necessary; and
  298         (c)Has been licensed by the United States Nuclear
  299  Regulatory Commission and is in compliance with all requirements
  300  and conditions associated with the license.
  301         (2)The feasibility study must include an evaluation of all
  302  of the following:
  303         (a)Existing state law, to determine and identify which, if
  304  any, statutes and agency rules would need to be amended to
  305  enable the construction and operation of small modular nuclear
  306  reactors in this state;
  307         (b)The economic feasibility of replacing carbon-based
  308  energy sources with reactors, while accounting for the net
  309  present value of revenue requirements that would result from the
  310  retirement of coal-fired plants;
  311         (c)The safety of and the waste stream resulting from the
  312  construction and operation of reactors; and
  313         (d)The property tax benefits to counties, school
  314  districts, and special taxing districts in connection with the
  315  use of reactors.
  316         (e)The number of jobs that could be created and the
  317  overall impact to local economies in connection with the use of
  318  small modular nuclear reactors.
  319         (f)The reliability and cost of small modular nuclear
  320  reactors as compared to natural gas, wind, and solar energy
  321  production.
  322         (g)Local government permitting requirements or approvals
  323  that would be required for the operation of small modular
  324  nuclear reactors in this state.
  325         (h)Any other information that the commission deems
  326  necessary.
  327         (3)On or before July 1, 2025, the commission shall submit
  328  a report of the findings and conclusions of the feasibility
  329  study to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the
  330  Speaker of the House of Representatives. The report must include
  331  any recommendations regarding:
  332         (a)The potential for using small modular nuclear reactors
  333  to provide energy in this state; and
  334         (b)Administrative or legislative action needed to promote
  335  the use of small modular nuclear reactors in this state.
  336         Section 6. This act shall take effect July 1, 2024.

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