STATE
OF MAINE
PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION Docket No. 2002-161
June
13, 2002
PUBLIC
UTILITIES COMMISSION
Interim
Electric Energy Conservation
Programs
ORDER
ON INTERIM FUNDING
WELCH, Chairman; NUGENT and DIAMOND, Commissioners
________________________________________________________________
By this Order, we assess
transmission and distribution utilities for the full amount of money collected
from ratepayers, since March 1, 2000, that was collected to be spent on conservation
programs, but has not been spent on such programs. From now until the “permanent” program plan, including funding
level, is established in Docket No. 2002-162, we will assess T&D utilities
for the amount of conservation expenses included in each T&D utility’s
rates, less any amounts spent on “prior conservation efforts” as defined in
35-A M.R.S.A. § 3211-A(1).
II. BACKGROUND
By Proposed Order on April 26, 2002, we established a process to decide
whether to implement any interim conservation programs pursuant to subsection 7
of P.L. 2001, ch. 624 (the Conservation Act).
In that Order, we stated that we read subsection 7 to constitute a
legislative preference to implement conservation programs before the Commission
has completed the tasks required for “permanent” programs that are stated
within subsections 2 and 3 of the Act.
We remain on schedule to implement interim programs during June through
August, 2002. To implement interim
programs, we must have money in the Conservation Program Fund (established
pursuant to subsection 5). Therefore,
initial funding decisions must be made now, and cannot be delayed until the
“permanent” program decisions are made in Docket No. 2002-162.
On March 1, 2000, when electric
restructuring was implemented and transmission and distribution (T&D)
utilities were created, conservation programs were governed by now-repealed
35-A M.R.S.A. § 3211. We promulgated
the current version of Chapter 380 to implement the policy established by
section 3211. By section 3211 and
Chapter 380, T&D utilities were required to implement conservation programs
consistent with a plan developed by the State Planning Office (SPO). The costs of the conservation programs were
to be recovered in rates from customers of the T&D utilities. The State Planning Office had not completed
its program plan by March 1, 2000, when the initial rates for the newly-created
T&D utilities had to be established.
In the various T&D ratemaking proceedings, the Commission adopted a
policy on conservation spending by which rates were to be set using the best
estimate for prospective conservation program spending, with the understanding
that the actual conservation spending would be reconciled with the estimate
used to set rates.
For Maine Public Service Company
(MPS) and Bangor Hydro-Electric Company (BHE), which had minimal conservation
spending in the years immediately prior to restructuring, we set rates assuming
conservation spending at the statutory floor, 0.5% of the total T&D
revenue. For Central Maine Power
Company (CMP), which had been spending on conservation programs close to the
statutory maximum, 1.5 mils per kWh, rates were set assuming CMP spent at the
statutory maximum. The level of
collection for conservation was not explicitly stated in most COUs’ rate
proceedings.
For various reasons, although a
State Planning Office program plan was developed, it was never
implemented. Accordingly, CMP, BHE and
MPS have significantly underutililized conservation funds since March 1, 2000. Although CMP budgeted to spend on its “prior
conservation programs” at the amount reflected in rates, actual spending has
been less. For the period March 1, 2000
through December 31, 2001, CMP underspent approximately $2,257,000, including
carrying costs, for its Power Partner Program, and approximately $67,000,
including carrying costs, for all other conservation programs.
In Docket No. 2002-124, its annual
price change filing made as part of the ARP 2000 rate plan, CMP proposed to
return the unspent money associated with its Power Partner Program to
customers.[1] CMP did not propose to return to customers
the unspent dollars associated with its other conservation programs. In Docket No. 2002-124, the Examiner
suggested that the issue of the proper treatment of the Power Partner
underspending not be decided in the ARP annual review proceeding, but rather in
one or more of the Conservation Act proceedings. CMP and the other parties accepted the Examiner’s suggestion.
Because the interim program
decisions were scheduled to be made in June, the Commission Staff assigned to
this docket brought CMP’s funding issue to the Commission on an expedited
basis. The staff advisors issued a
recommendation on interim funding, allowing CMP and other interested persons
the
opportunity to file written comments or exceptions before the issue was
presented
to the Commission for decision.[2]
The Advisors recommended that, for
interim program funding, the Commission assess T&D utilities for, and put
into the Commission’s Conservation Program Fund, the full amount of the
pre-Conservation Act underspending. For
the interim period going forward, until the long-term funding decisions are
made by the Commission, the Advisors recommended that the Commission assess the
T&D utilities in the amount that was included in the initial rate cases
(the so-called mega cases) for conservation-related spending. This would result in CMP’s being assessed at
(or near) the statutory maximum while BHE, MPS and the COUs would be assessed
at the statutory minimum during the interim period.
Comments or exceptions were filed by
the Public Advocate, CMP, Richard M. Esteves on behalf of the Residential/Small
Commercial Service Providers Coalition (the Coalition), the Industrial Energy
Consumers Group (IECG), Blue Rock Industries and FMC Corporation.
The Public Advocate generally supported the Advisors’
recommendations. CMP, however,
disagreed with both recommendations. In
CMP’s view, the Advisors erred in concluding the Conservation Act was ambiguous
and in referring to the Act’s preamble to resolve that ambiguity. CMP concluded the Act is clear and prohibits
adding unspent conservation expenses to the Commission’s Conservation Program
Fund.[3] CMP stated that, for the future, the Act
creates a presumption that all T&D utilities will be assessed at a
proportionate level, unless the Commission finds a different amount is
justified. Because the Commission has
decided to postpone such funding issues to the long-term program proceeding,
CMP concluded that the Commission should assess CMP proportionately and
therefore should reduce CMP’S assessment to the statutory floor, the amount all
other T&D utilities are assessed.[4]
The Coalition agreed with the
Advisors’ Recommendations. The
Coalition disagreed with the Advisors’ description that the funds unspent were
an “overcollection.” The utilities
collected the correct amount, the amount reflected in their rates. The correct description of the funds, in the
Coalition’s view, should be that they are unspent or under-utilized. The Coalition stated that the residential,
low-income and small commercial customers should receive a more representative
amount of the interim funding. The
Coalition also suggested that because significant cost effective conservation
is available, to assure itself that conservation funding is more beneficial
than rate reductions, the Commission should require conservation spending to
produce at least twice the utility bill savings than would returning the funds
to ratepayers.
The IECG stated that it opposed
CMP’s proposal to return unspent Power Partners dollars to ratepayers and
supported the use of these dollars to fund interim programs. The IECG reasoned that the funds were
collected for conservation-related spending and ratepayers expected the money
to be spent for that purpose. The IECG
also objected to CMP’s proposal (actually made in Docket No. 2002-124) to
return the funds only to distribution customers. The IECG stated that little or none of the funds would then be
returned to industrial customers, even though 25% to 40% of the funds were
collected from them.[5]
Blue Rock Industries and FMC
Corporation stated that they objected to using the unspent funds for
conservation. As customers, they
preferred lower rates. They also
objected to requiring CMP’s customers to pay for a disproportionate level of
conservation spending compared to other T&D customers.
III. DECISION
In conjunction with the interim program decisions, we must decide two
funding questions. Prior to the
Conservation Act, the T&D utilities collected significantly more
conservation-related revenue than they spent on conservation programs. We must decide whether those
pre-Conservation Act funds should be transferred to the Commission’s
Conservation Program Fund or continue to be deferred by the T&D utilities
for later return to ratepayers. In
addition, we must decide the amount to assess the T&D utilities during this
interim program period, either to fund interim programs or to fund future
programs implemented as part of the Commission’s “permanent” conservation
program plan, until final funding decisions are made in the “permanent”
conservation proceeding.
A. Funds
Collected Before the Conservation Act
The Conservation Act authorizes the
Commission to assess T&D utilities for money to pay for conservation
programs and Commission administrative costs.
The Act directs the Commission to establish a Conservation Program Fund
and a Conservation Administrative Fund as the accounts in which to deposit the
money received from utilities. The
language of the Act, however, does not refer to or otherwise mention the money
that utilities have collected from ratepayers for conservation programs
pursuant to repealed section 3211 but that remain unspent.
CMP asserts that the failure of the
Legislature to mention funds collected by utilities pursuant to now-repealed
section 3211 in the newly-enacted section 3211-A(5) is a clear and unambiguous
statement that such funds should not be placed in the Commission’s Conservation
Program Fund.
We disagree that subsection 5 is a clear and
unambiguous statement that prohibits the Commission from assessing the
utilities for their unspent pre-Conservation Act funds. Subsection 5 establishes the Commission’s program
fund, and directs the Commission to deposit all conservation program
assessments in the fund. It also
directs the treatment for interest earned by the fund and for any grants
received by the Commission from other government or private sources. Last, it requires that unspent program funds
in any fiscal year be carried forward to be used for conservation programs.[6] Subsection 5 merely describes the account in
which assessed money is to be kept, and provides other details about the
account. Subsection 5 is silent on how
the Commission should determine the amount of an assessment.
Subsection 4 authorizes the Commission to
assess T&D utilities “to collect funds for programs and administrative
costs…” Subsection 4 provides for a
floor and cap amount for assessments, but does not mention the unspent funds
that were collected by utilities before the Conservation Act. We also do not read subsection 4’s silence
about pre-Act funds to be a clear and unambiguous statement that the Commission
is not permitted to assess pre-Act funds for inclusion into our program
fund. Likewise, it is not a clear and
unambiguous statement that pre-Act funds must be assessed.
We conclude that the Act itself is ambiguous
as to the Legislature’s intent concerning the disposition of
collected-but-not-spent conservation funds.
This ambiguity, however, is clarified in the emergency preamble of the
Act. The relevant paragraph of the
preamble reads:
Whereas, funds for conservation programs have been allocated pursuant to
existing law, and there is an immediate need to put in place changes to the law
in order to ensure efficient and effective use of these funds[.]
We do not believe it plausible that the Legislature
could intend “efficient and effective use” to mean that such funds should be
refunded to customers without any consideration by the Commission whether the
money could be used to fund conservation programs that meet the statutory
criteria for interim or “permanent” programs.
The words “efficient and effective use” are words typically used in conjunction
with conservation and not rate refunds.
CMP disagrees and asserts that “efficient and effective use” could mean
used for rate refunds, especially in the instance of CMP, whose ratepayers have
spent more for conservation than other Maine T&D utilities.[7]
We are assisted in defining the words “efficient and effective” in the preamble because the words are used in the Conservation Act. In section 3211-A(3)(C)(1), the Commission may select a service provider without using competitive bidding when selection by another means will “promote the efficient and effective delivery of conservation programs…” Thus, within the Act, the phrase “efficient and effective” is used to describe conservation programs. We believe that this use of the phrase adds support to the conclusion that the Legislature intended unspent, pre-Conservation Act funds to be available to pay for Commission-sponsored conservation programs.
We also decide that we should require the T&D utilities to transfer their unspent conservation funds to the Commission’s Conservation Program Fund. In a companion order on interim programs issued today in this docket, we decide to implement cost effective programs that in all reasonable likelihood will require all of the unspent funds to pay for the programs. By requiring the utilities to forward their unspent conservation funds and using those funds to pay for the interim programs, we will fulfill the Legislature’s intent that such funds be put to an efficient and effective use.
CMP also asserts that by assessing to collect the unspent funds now, we reduce our flexibility in the use of that money. We agree that by assessing the unspent funds for inclusion into our program fund, the money must be used to pay for programs or carried forward in the Conservation Fund. This result, however, is acceptable for two reasons. First, we will likely spend the money in the interim period. And as an administrative matter, we do not want to wait to assess the utilities until bills are due to be paid by the Commission. Second, as a practical matter, the loss of flexibility is not significant. Even if we do not spend all of the money in the interim period and carry forward the unspent amounts, future assessments by the Commission can be lowered, effectively returning the money to ratepayers.
B. Program
Funds Collected During Interim Period
Before the Conservation Act became law, a
conservation program plan was to be developed by the State Planning Office and
programs implemented by the T&D utilities.
T&D rates were set to include the best estimate of the
conservation-related expenses that the T&D utilities would incur carrying
out the SPO’s plan. Even now that the
Conservation Act has repealed SPO’s authority and removed the implementation
responsibility from the utilities, the T&D utilities continue to collect
money from ratepayers designed to pay for conservation expenses.
During 2002, as described in Docket No.
2002-162, the Commission will develop its conservation program plan. As part of that plan, the Commission must
decide certain funding issues including whether to fund programs at the floor
level (0.5% of T&D revenue) or the cap level (1.5 mils per kWh), or
somewhere in between. Our funding
decisions:
must result in total conservation expenditures by each transmission and
distribution utility that:
A. Are based on the relevant characteristics of
the transmission and distribution utility’s service territory, including the
needs of customers[.]
35-A M.R.S.A.
§ 3211-A(4).
In addition, while we examine the
characteristics of each T&D utility, our funding decisions must result in
conservation spending that is “proportionally equivalent” to the spending by
other T&D utilities, “unless the Commission finds that a different amount
is justified[.]” 35-A M.R.S.A.
§ 3211-A(4)(D). Thus, the
Commission must set conservation spending that is proportionally equivalent[8]
among all T&D utilities, unless our examination of each T&D service
territory causes us to decide that different spending is reasonable. The Legislature has further prohibited us
from achieving proportional equivalency by simply raising the assessments of
some T&D utilities to the higher level of other T&D assessments for the
sole purpose of achieving proportional equivalency. As mentioned above, BHE’s and MPS’s rates reflect the floor
amount of expenses, while CMP’s reflect the cap. The Commission cannot achieve proportional equivalency simply by
raising BHE and MPS to the cap amount.
To raise BHE and MPS to the cap (and thereby achieve proportional
equivalency with CMP the Commission must find that assessment and spending at
the cap is reasonable and proper based upon the relevant characteristics of the
MPS and BHE service territories.
The funding decisions that the Commission must
make are varied and complex. These
decisions will not be made, and programs will not be implemented based upon
these funding decisions, until 2003. In
the meantime, we must implement interim programs during 2002. The Advisors recommended that we postpone
deciding the “proportionally equivalent” issues and, for the interim period,
assess the T&D utilities in the amount that conservation expenses are
currently reflected in the T&D rates, CMP at the cap and the other T&Ds
at the floor.
In its exceptions, CMP argues that the Commission should not, even in the interim period, authorize this disparate treatment. Because the Commission has not conducted the necessary investigation of each T&D utility service territory to determine that different funding levels between CMP and the other T&D utilities is justified, CMP urges the Commission to follow the presumption created by 3211-A(4)(D), and reject the disparate treatment recommended by the Advisors.
We
do not accept CMP’s argument. We are
authorized, even encouraged, to implement interim programs. So that we “avoid a significant delay,” we
are “not required to satisfy the requirements of Title 35-A, section 3211-A
before implementing [interim] programs.”
P.L. 2001, ch. 624, § 7.
Clearly, we are not prohibited from assessing CMP a different amount
during the interim period, even without a “justification” investigation.
Neither
are we persuaded that we should follow the requirements of subsection (4)(D) in
the interim period. We recognize that,
in the context of long-term programs, we must address these important funding
issues raised by CMP. For the interim
period, however, we have been presented with information on a wide variety of
programs, which appear to satisfy at least some formulations of the cost
effectiveness test that we have been directed to apply. Collecting at “current rate” levels allows
the greatest degree of flexibility in ensuring that funds are available for
interim programs.[9] Similar to the unspent pre-Conservation Act
funds, if the Commission ultimately spends less than its interim period
assessments on interim programs, the money in the program fund can be used to
smooth the transition to implementing the long-term program funding decisions
or to compensate for future expenses associated with existing Power Partners
contracts. Accordingly, our assessments
during this interim period will reflect the amounts expected to be collected in
T&D rates over the remainder of 2002.
Accordingly, the Administrative
Director will issue assessments to all T&D utilities consistent with this
Order. The ongoing assessment shall be
issued quarterly. If the accounting
questions discussed in footnote 2 can be resolved before June 21, 2002,
assessments will be based upon the actual financial data. If the questions cannot be answered by June
21, 2002, the Administrative Director shall assess before June 24, 2002 the
lowest amount that is not in question as to computation, and assess any
additional amount after any accounting or computational issues are resolved.
Dated at Augusta, Maine,
this 13th day of June, 2002.
BY ORDER OF THE COMMISSION
_______________________________
Dennis L. Keschl
Administrative Director
COMMISSIONERS VOTING FOR: Welch
Nugent
Diamond
THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEEN DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF RIGHTS TO
REVIEW OR APPEAL
5
M.R.S.A. § 9061 requires the Public Utilities Commission to give each party to
an adjudicatory proceeding written notice of the party's rights to review or
appeal of its decision made at the conclusion of the adjudicatory
proceeding. The methods of review or
appeal of PUC decisions at the conclusion of an adjudicatory proceeding are as
follows:
1. Reconsideration
of the Commission's Order may be requested under Section 1004 of the
Commission's Rules of Practice and Procedure (65-407 C.M.R.110) within 20 days
of the date of the Order by filing a petition with the Commission stating the
grounds upon which reconsideration is sought.
2. Appeal
of a final decision of the Commission may be taken to the Law Court by
filing, within 21 days of the date of the Order, a Notice of Appeal with
the Administrative Director of the Commission, pursuant to 35-A M.R.S.A. §
1320(1)-(4) and the Maine Rules of Appellate Procedure.
3. Additional
court review of constitutional issues or issues involving the justness or
reasonableness of rates may be had by the filing of an appeal with the Law
Court, pursuant to 35-A M.R.S.A. § 1320(5).
Note: The
attachment of this Notice to a document does not indicate the Commission's view
that the particular document may be subject to review or appeal. Similarly, the failure of the Commission to
attach a copy of this Notice to a document does not indicate the Commission's
view that the document is not subject to review or appeal.
[1]The
estimated underspending would result in a 0.98% decrease in distribution rates.
[2]By means of data requests, the Commission staff has attempted to confirm the precise amounts of underspending that is available either to put into the conservation fund or be returned to customers. The precise amounts cannot be confirmed without further investigation into how CMP’s and BHE’s (and some of the COUs’) megacase orders and stipulations should be interpreted for purposes of accounting for conservation spending (the MPS stipulation appears clear in this matter) and whether the utilities’ accounting treatment complies with Chapter 380 §3(B)(2). We estimate the pre-Conservation Act assessments of CMP, BHE and MPS to total approximately $3 million. However, further analysis must occur before the precise amounts are determined. With this analysis, further process will be granted to interested persons, likely including a technical conference with the T&D utilities’ revenue requirement and accounting experts.
[3]CMP does not explain why unspent Power Partners expenses should be treated differently than unspent funds associated with other conservation programs.
[4]If CMP is
assessed at the statutory floor, CMP describes that entire amount as available
for “new” conservation programs, and not to be used to fund its existing Power
Partners program. If assessed at the
statutory maximum, CMP states that the assessment will be used to fund both
Power Partners and new programs.
[5]CMP filed
a response to this last assertion. CMP
stated that since distribution and stranded cost rates were unbundled, all
conservation costs are recovered from distribution-level customers. Transmission-level customers do not pay for
conservation expenses.
[6]The
complete text of subsection 5 is:
5. Conservation program fund. The commission shall establish a
conservation program fund to be used solely for conservation programs.
A. The commission shall deposit all
assessments collected pursuant to this section, other than funds deposited in
the administration fund, into the program fund.
B. Any interest earned on funds in the
program fund must be credited to the program fund.
C. Funds not spent in any fiscal year
remain in the program fund to be used for conservation programs.
D. The commission may apply for an receive
grants from state, federal and private sources for deposit in the program fund
and also may deposit in the program fund any grants or other funds received by
or from any entity with which the commission has an agreement or contract
pursuant to this section if the commission determines that receipt of those
funds would be consistent with the purposes of this section. If the commission receives any funds
pursuant to this paragraph, it shall establish a separate account within the
program fund to receive the funds and shall keep those funds and any interest
earned on those funds segregated from other funds in the program fund.
[7]We
disagree with CMP’s underlying logic that having more, rather than less, cost
effective conservation available to its ratepayers is somewhat unfair to
them. By passing the Act, the
Legislature obviously has decided cost effective conservation is beneficial to
ratepayers.
[8]
“Proportionally equivalent” is not defined.
The Commission will define the term, for example, by total kWh, total
customers, or some other means.
[9]We will
assume that Consumer-Owned Utilities whose initial T&D rate cases did not
explicitly address conservation expenses have been collecting at the statutory
floor.