Bill Text: WV HB2100 | 2021 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating to payment for the construction of any expanded or upgraded public service district facilities in certain circumstances
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-02-10 - To House Workforce Development [HB2100 Detail]
Download: West_Virginia-2021-HB2100-Introduced.html
WEST virginia legislature
2021 regular session
Introduced
House Bill Number
By Delegate Doyle
[Introduced February 10, 2021; Referred to the Committee on Workforce Development then the Judiciary]
A BILL to amend and reenact §16-13A-9 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, relating to requiring new commercial and industrial customers to pay for the construction of any expanded or upgraded public service district facilities if the district’s present facilities are insufficient to serve the needs of that commercial or industrial consumer; and prohibiting any costs being passed on to present consumers.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
ARTICLE 13A. PUBLIC SERVICE DISTRICTS.
§16-13A-9. Rules; service rates and charges; discontinuance of service; required water and sewer connections; lien for delinquent fees.
(a)(1) The board may make, enact, and enforce all needful rules in connection with the acquisition, construction, improvement, extension, management, maintenance, operation, care, protection, and the use of any public service properties owned or controlled by the district. The board shall establish, in accordance with this article, rates, fees, and charges for the services and facilities it furnishes, which shall be sufficient at all times, notwithstanding the provisions of any other law or laws, to pay the cost of maintenance, operation, and depreciation of the public service properties and principal of and interest on all bonds issued, other obligations incurred under the provisions of this article, and all reserve or other payments provided for in the proceedings which authorized the issuance of any bonds under this article. The schedule of the rates, fees, and charges may be based upon:
(A) The consumption of water or gas on premises connected with the facilities, taking into consideration domestic, commercial, industrial, and public use of water and gas;
(B) The number and kind of fixtures connected with the facilities located on the various premises;
(C) The number of persons served by the facilities;
(D) Any combination of paragraphs (A), (B), and (C) of this subdivision; or
(E) Any other basis or classification which the board may determine to be fair and reasonable, taking into consideration the location of the premises served and the nature and extent of the services and facilities furnished. However, no rates, fees, or charges for stormwater services may be assessed against highways, road, and drainage easements or stormwater facilities constructed, owned, or operated by the West Virginia Division of Highways.
(2) The board of a public service district with at least 4,500 customers and annual combined gross revenue of $3 million providing water or sewer service separately or in combination may make, enact, and enforce all needful rules in connection with the enactment or amendment of rates, fees, and charges of the district. At a minimum, these rules shall provide for:
(A) Adequate prior public notice of the contemplated rates, fees, and charges by causing a notice of intent to effect such a change to be provided to the customers of the district for the month immediately preceding the month in which the contemplated change is to be considered at a hearing by the board. The notice shall include a statement that a change in rates, fees, and charges is being considered, the time, date, and location of the hearing of the board at which the change will be considered and that the proposed rates, fees, and charges are on file at the office of the district for review during regular business hours. The notice shall be printed on, or mailed with, the monthly billing statement, or provided in a separate mailing.
(B) Adequate prior public notice of the contemplated rates, fees, and charges by causing to be published, after the first reading and approval of a resolution of the board considering the revised rates, fees, and charges but not less than one week prior to the public hearing of the board on the resolution, as a Class I legal advertisement, of the proposed action, in compliance with the provisions of §59-3-1 et seq. of this code. The publication area for publication shall be all territory served by the district. If the district provides service in more than one county, publication shall be made in a newspaper of general circulation in each county that the district provides service.
(C) The public notice of the proposed action shall summarize the current rates, fees, and charges and the proposed changes to said rates, fees, and charges; the date, time, and place of the public hearing on the resolution approving the revised rates, fees, and charges and the place or places within the district where the proposed resolution approving the revised rates, fees, and charges may be inspected by the public. A reasonable number of copies of the proposed resolution shall be kept at the place or places and be made available for public inspection. The notice shall also advise that interested parties may appear at the public hearing before the board and be heard with respect to the proposed revised rates, fees, and charges.
(D) The resolution proposing the revised rates, fees, and charges shall be read at two meetings of the board with at least two weeks intervening between each meeting. The public hearing may be conducted by the board prior to, or at, the meeting at which the resolution is considered for adoption on the second reading.
(E) Rates, fees, and charges approved by resolution of the board shall be forwarded in writing to the county commission with the authority to appoint the members of the board. The county commission shall publish notice of the proposed revised rates, fees, and charges by a Class I legal advertisement in compliance with the provisions of §59-3-1 et seq. of this code. Within 45 days of receipt of the proposed rates, fees, and charges, the county commission shall take action to approve, modify, or reject the proposed rates, fees, and charges, in its sole discretion. If, after 45 days, the county commission has not taken final action to approve, modify, or reject the proposed rates, fees, and charges, as presented to the county commission, shall be effective with no further action by the board or county commission. In any event, this 45-day period shall be mandatory unless extended by the official action of both the board proposing the rates, fees, and charges, and the appointing county commission.
(F) Enactment of the proposed or modified rates, fees, and charges shall follow an affirmative vote by the county commission and shall be effective no sooner than 45 days following action. The 45-day waiting period may be waived by public vote of the county commission only if the commission finds and declares the district to be in financial distress such that the 45-day waiting period would be detrimental to the ability of the district to deliver continued and compliant public services.
(G) The public service district, or a customer aggrieved by the changed rates or charges who presents to the circuit court a petition signed by at least 750 customers or 25 percent of the customers served by the public service district, whichever is fewer, when dissatisfied by the approval, modification, or rejection by the county commission of the proposed rates, fees, and charges under the provisions of this subdivision may file a complaint regarding the rates, fees, and charges resulting from the action of, or failure to act by, the county commission in the circuit court of the county in which the county commission sits: Provided, That any complaint or petition filed hereunder shall be filed within 30 days of the county commission’s final action approving, modifying, or rejecting the rates, fees, and charges, or the expiration of the 45-day period from the receipt by the county commission, in writing, of the rates, fees, and charges approved by resolution of the board, without final action by the county commission to approve, modify, or reject the rates, fees, and charges, and the circuit court shall resolve the complaint: Provided, however, That the rates, fees, and charges so fixed by the county commission, or those adopted by the district upon which the county commission failed to act, shall remain in full force and effect, until set aside, altered, or amended by the circuit court in an order to be followed in the future.
(3) Where water, sewer, stormwater, or gas services, or any combination thereof, are all furnished to any premises, the schedule of charges may be billed as a single amount for the aggregate of the charges. The board shall require all users of services and facilities furnished by the district to designate on every application for service whether the applicant is a tenant or an owner of the premises to be served. If the applicant is a tenant, he or she shall state the name and address of the owner or owners of the premises to be served by the district. Notwithstanding the provisions of §24-3-8 of this code to the contrary, all new applicants for service shall deposit the greater of a sum equal to two twelfths of the average annual usage of the applicant’s specific customer class or $50 with the district to secure the payment of service rates, fees, and charges in the event they become delinquent as provided in this section. If a district provides both water and sewer service, all new applicants for service shall deposit the greater of a sum equal to two twelfths of the average annual usage for water service or $50 and the greater of a sum equal to two twelfths of the average annual usage for wastewater service of the applicant’s specific customer class or $50. In any case where a deposit is forfeited to pay service rates, fees, and charges which were delinquent at the time of disconnection or termination of service, no reconnection or reinstatement of service may be made by the district until another deposit equal to the greater of a sum equal to two twelfths of the average usage for the applicant’s specific customer class or $50 has been remitted to the district. After 12 months of prompt payment history, the district shall return the deposit to the customer or credit the customer’s account at a rate as the Public Service Commission may prescribe: Provided, That where the customer is a tenant, the district is not required to return the deposit until the time the tenant discontinues service with the district. Whenever any rates, fees, rentals, or charges for services or facilities furnished remain unpaid for a period of 20 days after the same become due and payable, the user of the services and facilities provided is delinquent and the user is liable at law until all rates, fees, and charges are fully paid. The board may, under reasonable rules promulgated by the Public Service Commission, shut off and discontinue water or gas services to all delinquent users of either water or gas facilities, or both, 10 days after the water or gas services become delinquent: Provided, however, That nothing contained within the rules of the Public Service Commission may be considered to require any agents or employees of the board to accept payment at the customer’s premises in lieu of discontinuing service for a delinquent bill.
(b) If a commercial or industrial concern locates one or more of its facilities in a public service district whose facilities are insufficient to serve the needs of that commercial or industrial consumer without expansion or upgrade to the district’s facilities, the commercial or industrial customer is responsible for all costs associated with the construction of the expanded or upgraded public service district facilities. While the affected public service district may determine the rates for the future and ongoing services it provides to that commercial or industrial consumer, in no event may it or the Public Service Commission permit the expansion or upgrade costs be passed along or borne by the district’s other customers.
(b) (c) If any publicly or privately owned
utility, city, incorporated town, other municipal corporation or other public
service district included within the district owns and operates separate water
facilities, sewer facilities, or stormwater facilities, and the district owns
and operates another kind of facility, either water or sewer, or both, as the
case may be, then the district and the publicly or privately owned utility,
city, incorporated town or other municipal corporation or other public service
district shall covenant and contract with each other to shut off and discontinue
the supplying of water service for the nonpayment of sewer or stormwater
service fees and charges: Provided, That any contracts entered into by a
public service district pursuant to this section shall be submitted to the
Public Service Commission for approval. Any public service district which
provides water and sewer service, water and stormwater service or water, sewer,
and stormwater service has the right to terminate water service for delinquency
in payment of water, sewer, or stormwater bills. Where one public service
district is providing sewer service and another public service district or a
municipality included within the boundaries of the sewer or stormwater district
is providing water service and the district providing sewer or stormwater
service experiences a delinquency in payment, the district or the municipality
included within the boundaries of the sewer or stormwater district that is
providing water service, upon the request of the district providing sewer or
stormwater service to the delinquent account, shall terminate its water service
to the customer having the delinquent sewer or stormwater account: Provided,
however, That any termination of water service must comply with all rules
and orders of the Public Service Commission: Provided further, That
nothing contained within the rules of the Public Service Commission shall be
deemed to require any agents or employees of the public service districts to
accept payment at the customer’s premises in lieu of discontinuing service for
a delinquent bill.
(c) (d) Any district furnishing sewer facilities
within the district may require or may, by petition to the circuit court of the
county in which the property is located, compel or may require the Bureau for
Public Health to compel all owners, tenants, or occupants of any houses,
dwellings, and buildings located near any sewer facilities where sewage will
flow by gravity or be transported by other methods approved by the Bureau for
Public Health, including, but not limited to, vacuum and pressure systems,
approved under the provisions of §16-1-9 of this code, from the houses,
dwellings, or buildings into the sewer facilities, to connect with and use the
sewer facilities and to cease the use of all other means for the collection,
treatment, and disposal of sewage and waste matters from the houses, dwellings,
and buildings where there is gravity flow or transportation by any other
methods approved by the Bureau for Public Health, including, but not limited
to, vacuum and pressure systems, approved under the provisions of §16-1-9 of
this code and the houses, dwellings, and buildings can be adequately served by
the sewer facilities of the district and it is declared that the mandatory use
of the sewer facilities provided for in this subsection is necessary and
essential for the health and welfare of the inhabitants and residents of the
districts and of the state. If the public service district requires the
property owner to connect with the sewer facilities even when sewage from
dwellings may not flow to the main line by gravity and the property owner
incurs costs for any changes in the existing dwellings’ exterior plumbing in
order to connect to the main sewer line, the public service district board
shall authorize the district to pay all reasonable costs for the changes in the
exterior plumbing, including, but not limited to, installation, operation,
maintenance, and purchase of a pump or any other method approved by the Bureau
for Public Health. Maintenance and operation costs for the extra installation
should be reflected in the users charge for approval of the Public Service
Commission. The circuit court shall adjudicate the merits of the petition by
summary hearing to be held not later than 30 days after service of petition to
the appropriate owners, tenants, or occupants.
(d) (e) Whenever any district has made available
sewer facilities to any owner, tenant, or occupant of any house, dwelling, or
building located near the sewer facility and the engineer for the district has
certified that the sewer facilities are available to and are adequate to serve
the owner, tenant, or occupant and sewage will flow by gravity or be
transported by other methods approved by the Bureau for Public Health from the
house, dwelling, or building into the sewer facilities, the district may
charge, and the owner, tenant, or occupant shall pay, the rates and charges for
services established under this article only after 30 days’ notice of the
availability of the facilities has been received by the owner, tenant, or
occupant. Rates and charges for sewage services shall be based upon actual
water consumption or the average monthly water consumption based upon the
owner’s, tenant’s, or occupant’s specific customer class.
(e) (f) The owner, tenant, or occupant of any real
property may be determined and declared to be served by a stormwater system
only after each of the following conditions is met: (1) The district has been
designated by the Environmental Protection Agency as an entity to serve a West
Virginia Separate Storm Sewer System community, as defined in 40 C. F. R.
§122.26; (2) the district’s authority has been properly expanded to operate and
maintain a stormwater system; (3) the district has made available a stormwater
system where stormwater from the real property affects or drains into the
stormwater system; and (4) the real property is located in the Municipal
Separate Storm Sewer System’s designated service area. It is further hereby
found, determined, and declared that the mandatory use of the stormwater system
is necessary and essential for the health and welfare of the inhabitants and
residents of the district and of the state. The district may charge and the
owner, tenant, or occupant shall pay the rates, fees, and charges for
stormwater services established under this article only after 30 days’ notice
of the availability of the stormwater system has been received by the owner. An
entity providing stormwater service shall provide a tenant a report of the
stormwater fee charged for the entire property and, if appropriate, that
portion of the fee to be assessed to the tenant.
(f) (g) All delinquent fees, rates, and charges of
the district for either water facilities, sewer facilities, gas facilities, or
stormwater systems or stormwater management programs are liens on the premises
served of equal dignity, rank, and priority with the lien on the premises of
state, county, school, and municipal taxes. Nothing contained within the rules
of the Public Service Commission may require agents or employees of the public
service districts to accept payment at the customer’s premises in lieu of
discontinuing service for a delinquent bill. In addition to the other remedies
provided in this section, public service districts are granted a deferral of
filing fees or other fees and costs incidental to the bringing and maintenance
of an action in magistrate court for the collection of delinquent water, sewer,
stormwater, or gas bills. If the district collects the delinquent account, plus
reasonable costs, from its customer or other responsible party, the district
shall pay to the magistrate the normal filing fee and reasonable costs which
were previously deferred. In addition, each public service district may
exchange with other public service districts a list of delinquent accounts: Provided,
That an owner of real property may not be held liable for the delinquent rates
or charges for services or facilities of a tenant, nor may any lien attach to
real property for the reason of delinquent rates or charges for services or
facilities of a tenant of the real property unless the owner has contracted
directly with the public service district to purchase the services or
facilities.
(g) (h) Anything in this section to the contrary
notwithstanding, any establishment, as defined in §22-11-3 of this code, now or
hereafter operating its own sewage disposal system pursuant to a permit issued
by the Department of Environmental Protection, as prescribed by §22-11-11 of
this code, is exempt from the provisions of this section.
(h) (i) Notwithstanding any code provision to the
contrary, a public service district may accept payment for all fees and charges
due, in the form of a payment by a credit or check card transaction or a direct
withdrawal from a bank account. The public service district may set a fee to be
added to each transaction equal to the charge paid by the public service
district for use of the credit or check card or direct withdrawal by the payor.
The amount of the fee shall be disclosed to the payor prior to the transaction
and no other fees for the use of a credit or check card or direct withdrawal
may be imposed upon the payor and the whole of the charge or convenience fee
shall be borne by the payor: Provided, That to the extent a public
service district desires to accept payments in the forms described in this
subsection and does not have access to the equipment or receive the services
necessary to do so, the public service district shall first obtain three bids
for services and equipment necessary to affect the forms of transactions
described in this subsection and use the lowest qualified bid received.
Acceptance of a credit or check card or direct withdrawal as a form of payment
shall comport with the rules and requirements set forth by the credit or check
card provider or banking institution.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to require new commercial and industrial customers to pay for the construction of any expanded or upgraded public service district facilities if the district’s present facilities are insufficient to serve the needs of that commercial or industrial consumer. The bill prohibits any costs being passed on to present consumers.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.