Bill Text: MI HB4433 | 2019-2020 | 100th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Public utilities: rates; power to set rates for certain water and sewer authorities; grant to public service commission. Amends secs. 6 & 6a of 1939 PA 3 (MCL 460.6 & 460.6a) & adds sec. 6aa.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 9-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-04-10 - Bill Electronically Reproduced 04/09/2019 [HB4433 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2019-HB4433-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 4433
April 9, 2019, Introduced by Reps. Hope, Cherry, Garrett, Garza, Whitsett, Hammoud, Neeley, Camilleri and Gay-Dagnogo and referred to the Committee on Local Government and Municipal Finance.
A bill to amend 1939 PA 3, entitled
"An act to provide for the regulation and control of public and
certain private utilities and other services affected with a public
interest within this state; to provide for alternative energy
suppliers; to provide for licensing; to include municipally owned
utilities and other providers of energy under certain provisions of
this act; to create a public service commission and to prescribe
and define its powers and duties; to abolish the Michigan public
utilities commission and to confer the powers and duties vested by
law on the public service commission; to provide for the powers and
duties of certain state governmental officers and entities; to
provide for the continuance, transfer, and completion of certain
matters and proceedings; to abolish automatic adjustment clauses;
to prohibit certain rate increases without notice and hearing; to
qualify residential energy conservation programs permitted under
state law for certain federal exemption; to create a fund; to
encourage the utilization of resource recovery facilities; to
prohibit certain acts and practices of providers of energy; to
allow for the securitization of stranded costs; to reduce rates; to
provide for appeals; to provide appropriations; to declare the
effect and purpose of this act; to prescribe remedies and
penalties; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,"
by amending sections 6 and 6a (MCL 460.6 and 460.6a), section 6 as
amended by 2005 PA 190 and section 6a as amended by 2016 PA 341,
and by adding section 6aa.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 6. (1) The public service commission is vested with
complete power and jurisdiction to regulate all public utilities in
the state except a municipally owned electric or natural gas
utility, the owner of a renewable resource power production
facility as provided in section 6d, and except as otherwise
restricted by law. The public service commission is vested with the
power and jurisdiction to regulate all rates, fares, fees, charges,
services, rules, conditions of service, and all other matters
pertaining to the formation, operation, or direction of public
utilities. The public service commission is further granted the
power and jurisdiction to hear and pass upon all matters pertaining
to, necessary, or incident to the regulation of public utilities,
including electric light and power companies, whether private,
corporate, or cooperative; water, including municipally owned water
and sewage systems; telegraph, oil, gas, and pipeline companies;
motor carriers; private wastewater treatment facilities; and all
public transportation and communication agencies other than
railroads and railroad companies.
(2) A private, investor-owned wastewater utility may apply to
the commission for rate regulation. If an application is filed
under this subsection, the commission is vested with the specific
grant of jurisdictional authority to regulate the rates, fares,
fees, and charges of private, investor-owned wastewater utilities.
As used in this subsection, "private, investor-owned wastewater
utilities"
utility" means a utility that delivers wastewater
treatment services through a sewage system and the physical assets
of which are wholly owned by an individual or group of individual
shareholders.
Sec. 6a. (1) A gas utility, electric utility, water utility,
or steam utility shall not increase its rates and charges or alter,
change, or amend any rate or rate schedules, the effect of which
will be to increase the cost of services to its customers, without
first receiving commission approval as provided in this section. A
utility shall coordinate with the commission staff in advance of
filing its general rate case application under this section to
avoid resource challenges with applications being filed at the same
time as applications filed under this section by other utilities.
In the case of electric utilities serving more than 1,000,000
customers in this state, the commission may, if necessary, order a
delay in filing an application to establish a 21-day spacing
between filings of electric utilities serving more than 1,000,000
customers in this state. The utility shall place in evidence facts
relied upon to support the utility's petition or application to
increase its rates and charges, or to alter, change, or amend any
rate or rate schedules. The commission shall require notice to be
given to all interested parties within the service area to be
affected, and all interested parties shall have a reasonable
opportunity for a full and complete hearing. A utility may use
projected costs and revenues for a future consecutive 12-month
period in developing its requested rates and charges. The
commission shall notify the utility within 30 days after filing,
whether the utility's petition or application is complete. A
petition or application is considered complete if it complies with
the rate application filing forms and instructions adopted under
subsection (8). If the application is not complete, the commission
shall notify the utility of all information necessary to make that
filing complete. If the commission has not notified the utility
within 30 days of whether the utility's petition or application is
complete, the application is considered complete. Concurrently with
filing a complete application, or at any time after filing a
complete application, a gas utility serving fewer than 1,000,000
customers in this state may file a motion seeking partial and
immediate rate relief. After providing notice to the interested
parties within the service area to be affected and affording
interested parties a reasonable opportunity to present written
evidence and written arguments relevant to the motion seeking
partial and immediate rate relief, the commission shall make a
finding and enter an order granting or denying partial and
immediate relief within 180 days after the motion seeking partial
and immediate rate relief was submitted. The commission has 12
months to issue a final order in a case in which a gas utility has
filed a motion seeking partial and immediate rate relief.
(2) If the commission has not issued an order within 180 days
of the filing of a complete application, the utility may implement
up to the amount of the proposed annual rate request through equal
percentage increases or decreases applied to all base rates. If the
utility uses projected costs and revenues for a future period in
developing its requested rates and charges, the utility may not
implement the equal percentage increases or decreases before the
calendar date corresponding to the start of the projected 12-month
period. For good cause, the commission may issue a temporary order
preventing or delaying a utility from implementing its proposed
rates or charges. If a utility implements increased rates or
charges under this subsection before the commission issues a final
order, that utility shall refund to customers, with interest, any
portion of the total revenues collected through application of the
equal percentage increase that exceed the total that would have
been produced by the rates or charges subsequently ordered by the
commission in its final order. The commission shall allocate any
refund required by this subsection among primary customers based
upon their pro rata share of the total revenue collected through
the applicable increase, and among secondary and residential
customers in a manner to be determined by the commission. The rate
of interest for refunds shall equal 5% plus the London interbank
offered rate (LIBOR) for the appropriate time period. For any
portion of the refund that, exclusive of interest, exceeds 25% of
the annual revenue increase awarded by the commission in its final
order, the rate of interest shall be the authorized rate of return
on the common stock of the utility during the appropriate period.
Any refund or interest awarded under this subsection shall not be
included, in whole or in part, in any application for a rate
increase by a utility. This subsection only applies to completed
applications
filed with the commission before the effective date of
the
amendatory act that added section 6t.April 20, 2017.
(3) This section does not impair the commission's ability to
issue a show cause order as part of its rate-making authority. An
alteration or amendment in rates or rate schedules applied for by a
public utility that will not result in an increase in the cost of
service to its customers may be authorized and approved without
notice or hearing. There shall be no increase in rates based upon
changes in cost of fuel, purchased gas, or purchased steam unless
notice has been given within the service area to be affected, and
there has been an opportunity for a full and complete hearing on
the cost of fuel, purchased gas, or purchased steam. The rates
charged by any utility under an automatic fuel, purchased gas, or
purchased
steam adjustment clause shall must
not be altered,
changed, or amended unless notice has been given within the service
area to be affected, and there has been an opportunity for a full
and complete hearing on the cost of the fuel, purchased gas, or
purchased steam.
(4) The commission shall adopt rules and procedures for the
filing, investigation, and hearing of petitions or applications to
increase or decrease utility rates and charges as the commission
finds necessary or appropriate to enable it to reach a final
decision with respect to petitions or applications within a period
of time allotted by law to issue a final order after the filing of
the complete petitions or applications. The commission shall not
authorize or approve adjustment clauses that operate without notice
and an opportunity for a full and complete hearing, and all such
clauses are abolished. The commission may hold a full and complete
hearing to determine the cost of fuel, purchased gas, purchased
steam, or purchased power separately from a full and complete
hearing on a general rate case and may hold that hearing
concurrently with the general rate case. The commission shall
authorize a utility to recover the cost of fuel, purchased gas,
purchased steam, or purchased power only to the extent that the
purchases are reasonable and prudent.
(5) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection and
subsection (1), if the commission fails to reach a final decision
with respect to a completed petition or application to increase or
decrease utility rates within the 10-month period following the
filing of the completed petition or application, the petition or
application is considered approved. If a utility makes any
significant amendment to its filing, the commission has an
additional 10 months after the date of the amendment to reach a
final decision on the petition or application. If the utility files
for an extension of time, the commission shall extend the 10-month
period by the amount of additional time requested by the utility.
(6) A utility shall not file a general rate case application
for an increase in rates earlier than 12 months after the date of
the filing of a complete prior general rate case application. A
utility may not file a new general rate case application until the
commission has issued a final order on a prior general rate case or
until the rates are approved under subsection (5).
(7) The commission shall, if requested by a gas utility,
establish load retention transportation rate schedules or approve
gas transportation contracts as required for the purpose of serving
industrial or commercial customers whose individual annual
transportation volumes exceed 500,000 decatherms on the gas
utility's system. The commission shall approve these rate schedules
or approve transportation contracts entered into by the utility in
good faith if the industrial or commercial customer has the
installed capability to use an alternative fuel or otherwise has a
viable alternative to receiving natural gas transportation service
from the utility, the customer can obtain the alternative fuel or
gas transportation from an alternative source at a price that would
cause them not to use the gas utility's system, and the customer,
as a result of their use of the system and receipt of
transportation service, makes a significant contribution to the
utility's fixed costs. The commission shall adopt accounting and
rate-making policies to ensure that the discounts associated with
the transportation rate schedules and contracts are recovered by
the gas utility through charges applicable to other customers if
the incremental costs related to the discounts are no greater than
the costs that would be passed on to those customers as the result
of a loss of the industrial or commercial customer's contribution
to a utility's fixed costs.
(8) The commission shall adopt standard rate application
filing forms and instructions for use in all general rate cases
filed by utilities whose rates are regulated by the commission. For
cooperative electric utilities whose rates are regulated by the
commission, in addition to rate applications filed under this
section, the commission shall continue to allow for rate filings
based on the cooperative's times interest earned ratio. The
commission may modify the standard rate application forms and
instructions adopted under this subsection.
(9) If, on or before January 1, 2008, a merchant plant entered
into a contract with an initial term of 20 years or more to sell
electricity to an electric utility whose rates are regulated by the
commission with 1,000,000 or more retail customers in this state
and if, before January 1, 2008, the merchant plant generated
electricity under that contract, in whole or in part, from wood or
solid wood wastes, then the merchant plant shall, upon petition by
the merchant plant, and subject to the limitation set forth in
subsection (10), recover the amount, if any, by which the merchant
plant's reasonably and prudently incurred actual fuel and variable
operation and maintenance costs exceed the amount that the merchant
plant is paid under the contract for those costs. This subsection
does not apply to landfill gas plants, hydro plants, municipal
solid waste plants, or to merchant plants engaged in litigation
against an electric utility seeking higher payments for power
delivered pursuant to contract.
(10) The total aggregate additional amounts recoverable by
merchant plants under subsection (9) in excess of the amounts paid
under the contracts shall not exceed $1,000,000.00 per month for
each affected electric utility. The $1,000,000.00 per month limit
specified
in this subsection shall must
be reviewed by the
commission upon petition of the merchant plant filed no more than
once per year and may be adjusted if the commission finds that the
eligible merchant plants reasonably and prudently incurred actual
fuel and variable operation and maintenance costs exceed the amount
that those merchant plants are paid under the contract by more than
$1,000,000.00
per month. The annual amount of the adjustments shall
must
not exceed a rate equal to the United
States consumer price
index.
Consumer Price Index. The commission shall not make an
adjustment unless each affected merchant plant files a petition
with the commission. If the total aggregate amount by which the
eligible merchant plants reasonably and prudently incurred actual
fuel and variable operation and maintenance costs determined by the
commission exceed the amount that the merchant plants are paid
under the contract by more than $1,000,000.00 per month, the
commission shall allocate the additional $1,000,000.00 per month
payment among the eligible merchant plants based upon the
relationship of excess costs among the eligible merchant plants.
The $1,000,000.00 limit specified in this subsection, as adjusted,
does not apply to actual fuel and variable operation and
maintenance costs that are incurred due to changes in federal or
state environmental laws or regulations that are implemented after
October 6, 2008. The $1,000,000.00 per month payment limit under
this subsection does not apply to merchant plants eligible under
subsection (9) whose electricity is purchased by a utility that is
using wood or wood waste or fuels derived from those materials for
fuel in their power plants. As used in this subsection, "United
States
consumer price index" Consumer
Price Index" means the United
States
consumer price index Consumer
Price Index for all urban
consumers as defined and reported by the United States Department
of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
(11) The commission shall issue orders to permit the recovery
authorized under subsections (9) and (10) upon petition of the
merchant plant. The merchant plant is not required to alter or
amend the existing contract with the electric utility in order to
obtain the recovery under subsections (9) and (10). The commission
shall permit or require the electric utility whose rates are
regulated by the commission to recover from its ratepayers all fuel
and variable operation and maintenance costs that the electric
utility is required to pay to the merchant plant as reasonably and
prudently incurred costs.
(12) Subject to subsection (13), if requested by an electric
utility with less than 200,000 customers in this state, the
commission shall approve an appropriate revenue decoupling
mechanism that adjusts for decreases in actual sales compared to
the projected levels used in that utility's most recent rate case
that are the result of implemented energy waste reduction,
conservation, demand-side programs, and other waste reduction
measures, if the utility first demonstrates the following to the
commission:
(a) That the projected sales forecast in the utility's most
recent rate case is reasonable.
(b) That the electric utility has achieved annual incremental
energy savings at least equal to the lesser of the following:
(i) One percent of its total annual retail electricity sales
in the previous year.
(ii) The amount of any incremental savings yielded by energy
waste reduction, conservation, demand-side programs, and other
waste reduction measures approved by the commission in that
utility's most recent integrated resource plan.
(13) The commission shall consider the aggregate revenues
attributable to revenue decoupling mechanisms, financial
incentives, and shared savings mechanisms the commission has
approved for an electric utility relative to energy waste
reduction, conservation, demand-side programs, peak load reduction,
and other waste reduction measures. The commission may approve an
alternative methodology for a revenue decoupling mechanism
authorized under subsection (12), a financial incentive authorized
under section 75 of the clean and renewable energy and energy waste
reduction act, 2008 PA 295, MCL 460.1075, or a shared savings
mechanism authorized under section 6x if the commission determines
that the resulting aggregate revenues from those mechanisms would
not result in a reasonable and cost-effective method to ensure that
investments in energy waste reduction, demand-side programs, peak
load reduction, and other waste reduction measures are not
disfavored when compared to utility supply-side investments. The
commission's consideration of an alternative methodology under this
subsection shall be conducted as a contested case pursuant to
chapter 4 of the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA
306,
MCL 24.271 to 24.287.24.288.
(14)
Within 1 year after the effective date of the amendatory
act
that added this subsection, By
April 20, 2018, the commission
shall conduct a study on an appropriate tariff reflecting equitable
cost of service for utility revenue requirements for customers who
participate in a net metering program or distributed generation
program under the clean and renewable energy and energy waste
reduction act, 2008 PA 295, MCL 460.1001 to 460.1211. In any rate
case filed after June 1, 2018, the commission shall approve such a
tariff for inclusion in the rates of all customers participating in
a net metering or distributed generation program under the clean
and renewable energy and energy waste reduction act, 2008 PA 295,
MCL 460.1001 to 460.1211. A tariff established under this
subsection does not apply to customers participating in a net
metering program under the clean and renewable energy and energy
waste reduction act, 2008 PA 295, MCL 460.1001 to 460.1211, before
the date that the commission establishes a tariff under this
subsection,
who continues continue to participate in the program at
their current site or facility.
(15) Except as otherwise provided in this act, "utility" and
"electric utility" do not include a municipally owned electric
utility.
(16) As used in this section:
(a) "Full and complete hearing" means a hearing that provides
interested parties a reasonable opportunity to present and cross-
examine evidence and present arguments relevant to the specific
element or elements of the request that are the subject of the
hearing.
(b) "General rate case" means a proceeding initiated by a
utility in an application filed with the commission that alleges a
revenue deficiency and requests an increase in the schedule of
rates or charges based on the utility's total cost of providing
service.
(c) "Steam utility" means a steam distribution company
regulated by the commission.
(d) "Water utility" means a water or sewage system regulated
by the commission.
Sec. 6aa. (1) The public service commission is vested with the
power and jurisdiction to regulate all rates, fares, fees, and
charges of any water or sewage system that provides water supply
service or sewage service, or both, in this state.
(2) The public service commission shall, within 1 year after
the effective date of the amendatory act that added this section,
study the possibility of establishing a uniform system of accounts
for use by providers of water and sewerage service and make
recommendations to the governor and legislature.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days
after the date it is enacted into law.