Legislature(2007 - 2008)BELTZ 211
03/01/2007 04:00 PM Senate COMMUNITY & REGIONAL AFFAIRS
| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| SB16 | |
| Adjourn |
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| += | SB 16 | TELECONFERENCED | |
SB 16-EXTEND REGULATORY COMMISSION OF ALASKA
CHAIR OLSON announced the consideration of SB 16.
SENATOR WAGONER moved the committee substitute (CS) of SB 16,
labeled, 25-LS0148\E, Kane. Hearing no objections, Version E was
before the committee.
SENATOR GENE THERRIAULT, Alaska State Legislature, said the new
language for SB 16 requests a two-year review of the Regulatory
Commission of Alaska (RCA) by the Division of Legislative Audit.
It would not be a full audit as is done prior to a sunset, but
it would provide a report card as to how the RCA is moving
dockets through the system, meeting deadlines, and other aspects
of efficiency. In Section 4, the initial bill suggested an
eight-year extension, and there was some concern that that was
too long, so it was changed to six years. He said the bill
should remove the committee's concerns from the last meeting.
4:09:59 PM
SENATOR STEVENS asked about the six-year extension.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said because of the two-year report card, he
wanted the extension to be divisible by two.
4:10:54 PM
CHAIR OLSON asked about the fiscal note change.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said he doubted it would change the fiscal
note, because the "audit shop" is already budgeted for ongoing
operations of the legislature.
KATE GIARD, Chair, Regulatory Commission of Alaska, said the CS
will provide stability for the RCA and for the state. The two-
year audits are wise and responsible, and it will make sure the
RCA keeps on track. She handed out the RCA annual report to the
committee, which includes the number of statutory extensions the
RCA authorized. They can either be at the request of the parties
or by RCA's authority, which allows a one-time 90-day extension.
Parties and the RCA have extended for various reasons, she said.
The information is reported to legislative auditors quarterly.
She said page 75 of the report speaks to commission proceedings.
4:14:37 PM
MS. GIARD said there are substantive, final decisions-generally
after a rate case or at the very end of the matter; substantive,
non-final decisions, which occur when parties disagree; and
procedural decisions, which the administrative law judges make
or the RCA affirms. The report lists the number of dockets, she
stated, and it shows what is pending, how many cases came to the
RCA, how many were closed, and how many remain.
SENATOR WAGONER asked why there are a high number of letter
orders issued in FY05.
MS. GIARD said letter orders are documents issued by RCA staff
and are related to the number of applications. They can be for
incomplete applications or other correspondence. The RCA focuses
on adjudicatory decisions and not letter orders, she said.
4:16:49 PM
MS. GIARD said the report shows appealed cases. Page 54 lists
the appeals, and it is a bit overwhelming because they take up a
number of pages. Most are individual appeals of the Transalaska
Pipeline System (TAPS) owners, who individually appeal RCA
orders on a case by case basis. Sometimes they are appealed to
the Superior Court and then the Supreme Court, she noted.
Quality bank has been appealed since 1986, so those are all
matters that are continuing to go through. For utility matters,
there is a description of what the appeals were about. She can
provide more information on the appeals. The report shows how
many utilities are certificated to give the committee an idea of
what the RCA does. It is broken down between those that are
economically regulated, where the RCA sets the rates, and those
that are exempt from economic regulation but needing to meet
safety, service area, and other standards. Ms. Giard added that
the report has details on telecommunication competitive entry
and markets.
4:19:45 PM
SENATOR THOMAS asked for an example of what the RCA would do if
it wasn't regulating an entity's economics.
MS. GIARD said the RCA may regulate service areas, safety
requirements, or the overall management. For example, the RCA
has jurisdiction over Aurora [Energy], but it doesn't regulate
rate changes.
4:21:20 PM
SENATOR STEVENS asked about the previously discussed topics of
qualifications and salaries of the commissioners, adding a chief
of staff, and changing the deadlines for rate cases.
MS. GIARD said she provided a copy of the statutory revisions
that the RCA is recommending to the governor, who will come
forward with legislation. The changes that the RCA proposes are:
increase the regulatory cost-charge limit from seven to nine in
order to fund the PERS liability that the RCA absorbed in 2008;
increase civil penalties from $100 to up to $1,000; adopt a 12-
month timeline for anything that does not have a timeline (as
recommended by the utilities); [adding] an office of general
counsel-"we've talked to you about the relationship that the RCA
has with the Attorney General coming before us and also acting
in adjudication with us"; add an administrative law section to
make the RCA distinct from the Office of Administrative
Hearings; put in a natural gas and oil pipeline section; allow
the RCA access to certain personnel, like an executive
secretary, and; update commissioner qualifications and salaries.
4:26:42 PM
SENATOR WAGONER said Bill Gates couldn't become a commissioner
based on the proposed qualifications.
MS. GIARD said he could because he has had executive level
experience for a period of five years.
SENATOR WAGONER said the wording uses "and," so it might need to
be reworded.
4:27:56 PM
CHAIR OLSON said his office has had a number of calls regarding
the proposed statutory changes, and he asked Senator Therriault
for his opinion on those.
SENATOR THERRIAULT said he just received the document, and there
are companies in the regulatory community that have not seen it
and may have suggestions.
4:29:23 PM
CHAIR OLSON asked if a utility can opt out of being economically
regulated.
MS. GIARD said any utility can come to the RCA and seek an
exemption from regulations. They can petition to become
regulated or to become unregulated--like the cooperatives. There
may currently be an application from Alaska Waste to be
deregulated for commercial activities. Then the public advocate
weighs in, and then there will be a hearing and a decision on
the matter. But no pipeline carrier has that option, she said.
4:31:22 PM
CHAIR OLSON asked, "If an entity has an adverse ruling by your
commission, can they opt out of that then?"
MS. GIARD said no one can opt out, but anyone can petition. The
RCA may say no, but then they will likely come to the
legislature.
CHAIR OLSON asked how many entities have been exempted.
MS. GIARD said several cooperatives have had elections to come
out from underneath regulation, including the utility in Kodiak.
All cooperative electric utilities have the option of having
their members vote them out from regulation.
4:33:06 PM
PAT LUBY, Advocacy Director, AARP-Alaska, encouraged the passage
of SB 16 to extend the RCA, which has been a referee in
telecommunication wars and has oversight on all utility issues.
The RCA is the consumer watchdog and the only thing standing
between the customers and all the utility companies. It is there
to review every rate case to determine if it is justified or
excessive. This morning, Mr. Luby heard an assistant attorney
general and an RCA attorney argue a water case on behalf of
Anchorage customers. All Alaskan families need the RCA, he said.
4:34:29 PM
PAT DAVIDSON, Division of Legislative Audit, said the CS is
clear, and the two-year audit is not complex. It puts the onus
on the commission to do the work and she would simply verify it.
In response to Chair Olson's question about the fiscal note, she
said about 60 percent of her workload is statutorily driven and
40 percent comes from audit requests approved by committee. SB
16 will only move the RCA audit ahead of the requested audits.
The audit will just go in with the rest of her work and
typically won't have a fiscal note with it.
CHAIR OLSON said, "So no addition during finance committee?"
MS. DAVIDSON said, "If you like the level of audit services that
you're getting right now, then we'll just be coming in with a
maintenance budget."
4:37:10 PM
FRANK CORBIN, General Manager, Nushagak Cooperative, Dillingham,
said the cooperative has electric, telephone, cable TV and
internet, and it is exempt from the RCA [rate] regulations, but
it still files reports and is subject to the RCA. He expressed
support for the bill. As a business person, he feels
qualifications should be minimal, because raising the bar will
exclude people. He fears creating an elite social club that
nobody can get into. Steeper qualifications might affect
legislative vigilance. He supports an increase in salary, which
will attract higher-quality applicants. He said, "I do agree
with the concept of having a former utility executive being
available for commission positions in light of the number of ex-
commissioners that have gone to work in the utility industry."
4:40:43 PM
MR. CORBIN said competition is the buzz word everywhere, and it
is nothing new in a capitalist country. A social construct of a
safety net has developed out of competition. "The economic fact
is that there is some point upon which competition does not
address…; individuals within our society have agreed to this
point that that's a social responsibility that different
government entities take upon themselves to address those areas
where competition is not the answer." That tipping point is
evident even in the cooperatives that have exempted out from
under regulation, he said. It is a financial burden and those
cooperatives have decided that there is no return on their
investments. He continued, "Depending on which side of the net
you're on, it's either a ceiling or a floor. It exists. It's
real and it's economic, and I ask for consideration of that." He
noted that the Nushagak cooperative was involved in protesting
the Yukon-Crowley merger, and he observed testimony of the state
attorney general who said the monopoly in the region was a good
thing for the state because it was more efficient.
4:43:53 PM
MR. CORBIN said, "We were assured that there was still the
semblance of competition because, for example, Delta Western
could lease space from Crowley in Bethel, and therefore there
would be two fuel resellers in Bethel." When a Delta
representative was questioned about that business arrangement,
he said it didn't matter how much Crowley charged him because
the profits in Bethel were so deep. He said that is a serious
issue for the bush.
CHAIR OLSON asked if he wants the RCA to look at fuel retailers
for regulation, as it was under the Alaska Public Utilities
Commission (APUC).
MR. CORBIN said, "We would like some relief out there in some
form, and we have asked everywhere." He has been told that the
RCA is the answer, but when he gets there he is told it is not.
4:45:35 PM
BRAD REEVE, General Manager, Kotzebue Electric Association and
President of the Alaska Power Association, said his utility
deregulated economically from the RCA in 1993. His role in the
trade association puts him in contact with the RCA. Under Chair
Giard things are improving, and he said his concerns have been
listened to. He said he is seeing more transparency and things
have been more pleasant. When his association decided to
deregulate in 1993, it was very expensive--all hearings were in
Anchorage--and the members felt they had no voice. The
relationship has greatly improved over the past few years, he
concluded.
CHAIR OLSON asked about the financial burden on small
cooperatives.
4:48:27 PM
MR. REEVE said when his association was regulated a rate filing
could run from $40,000 to $80,000, and members were excluded
from any input. The members voted to deregulate, and it works
well. There are still safety regulations, and the RCA is
involved in power cost equalization, he explained.
CHAIR OLSON asked if he has seen the proposed statutory changes.
MR. REEVE said his attorney said they are acceptable.
SENATOR THOMAS asked how the association raises its rates.
4:50:21 PM
MR. REEVE said two public hearings are held, and the board of
directors acts as an adjudicator. Mr. Reeve presents a case to
the board and allows members to attend. "Then I have to build a
case along with the auditor and other professional staff…to make
the case that we need an increase."
SENATOR THERRIAULT said the CS is reasonable for the extension,
and he noted that he has been told by the power companies that
the RCA is so much better than years ago, and that is
gratifying. Clearly the legislature doesn't want to take on the
duties of the RCA, he said, and the 6-year extension and 2-year
report card is reasonable. The proposed changes can be discussed
with the administration, and perhaps an independent bill can be
drafted to put these ideas on the table.
SENATOR WAGONER moved the CS for SB 16, labeled 25-LS0148\E,
from committee with individual recommendations and accompanying
fiscal notes. Hearing no objections, CSSB 16(CRA) moved out of
committee.
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