Arizona 2025 2025 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2679 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/24/2025

                    Assigned to NR 	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Seventh Legislature, First Regular Session 
 
FACT SHEET FOR H.B. 2679 
 
power; utilities; UCC; securities 
Purpose 
Establishes a process for a public power entity to initiate a securitization transaction by 
providing public notice of the public power entity's intent to adopt a financial resolution or for an 
applicant to request permission to initiate a securitization transaction from the Arizona Corporation 
Commission (ACC) by submitting an application for a financing order. 
Background 
The Arizona Constitution deems all corporations, other than municipal, engaged in 
furnishing gas, oil or electricity for light, fuel, power, water for irrigation, fire protection or other 
public purposes, or in furnishing, for profit, hot or cold air or steam for heating or cooling purposes 
as public service corporations. Corporations, other than municipal, that engage in collecting, 
transporting, treating, purifying and disposing of sewage through a system for profit or that 
transmit messages or furnish public telegraph or telephone service, and all corporations other than 
municipal, operating as common carriers are also deemed public service corporations (Ariz. Const. 
art. 15 § 2).  
Public power entity means any municipal corporation, city, town or other political 
subdivision that is organized under state law, that generates, transmits, distributes or otherwise 
provides electricity and that is not a public service corporation (A.R.S. § 30-801).  
The ACC regulates investor-owned or privately-owned utilities that provide gas, water, 
electricity or telephone service (ACC). The ACC has the power to inspect and investigate the 
property, books, papers, business, methods and affairs of any corporation whose stock is offered 
for sale to the public and any public service corporation doing business within Arizona (Ariz. 
Const. art. 15 § 4). The ACC has the power and authority to enforce its rules, regulations and 
orders by the imposition of such fines as the ACC may deem just (Ariz. Const. art. 15 § 19). The 
Arizona Constitution allows the Legislature to enlarge the powers and extend the duties of the 
ACC and to prescribe rules and regulations to govern proceedings by and before the ACC (Ariz. 
Const. art. 15 § 6). 
There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation. 
Provisions 
Securitization Transactions for Public Power Entities 
1. Allows a public power entity to initiate a securitization transaction by providing public notice 
of the public power entity's intent to adopt a financing resolution. 
2. Requires the public notice to identify the date, time and location of the public meeting of the 
governing body, which must occur not less than 30 days and not more than 60 days after the 
notice is published.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 2 
 
3. Requires the public power entity, after the public notice is published, to make the 
securitization proposal available at the public power entity's main office and on its publicly 
accessible website. 
4. Requires the public power entity to provide the outlined public notice by completing the 
following: 
a) issuing one publication in one or more newspapers of general circulation within the 
public power entity's electric service area; 
b) sending notice by U.S. mail to the public power entity's standard electric rate schedule 
customers of record; and 
c) sending notice to the governing body of each city, town or county where a public power 
entity is located in whole or in part. 
5. Requires the securitization proposal to: 
a) identify, as applicable, any transition assets, transition asset retirement costs, 
unrecovered fuel costs and significant event recovery costs; 
b) estimate the transition costs and financing costs; 
c) describe the expected characteristics of the transition bonds; 
d) provide the projected financing charges and explain how the financing charges will result 
in the collection of financing revenues in amounts sufficient but not greater than 
necessary to enable the timely and complete recovery and payment of all ongoing 
financing costs; 
e) estimate the financing charges and unit financing charges before the first application of 
the true-up mechanism; 
f) describe the proposed true-up mechanism and how the true-up mechanism will adjust the 
financing charges and unit financing charges over time to correct for any overcollection 
or undercollection of financing revenues; 
g) identify the qualified special purpose entity; 
h) provide a report that concludes that the transition bonds are expected to satisfy the current 
published criteria for an AAA rating or the equivalent that is prepared by a securities firm 
experienced in underwriting and bond issuance; 
i) identify any anticipated ancillary agreements, individually or by description; 
j) describe how the public power entity proposed to permanently reduce or offset the value 
of either; 
i. any undepreciated transition assets and any associated regulatory assets or recorded 
liabilities with respect to an offering of transition bonds to recover transition asset 
retirement costs; or 
ii. any regulatory asset or recorded liability that is associated with transition bonds to 
recover unrecovered fuel costs or significant event recovery costs in exchange for the 
net proceeds of the transition bonds; 
k) include a proposed transition billing services tariff if the proposed initial servicer is a 
public power entity; 
l) describe the process to notify the public of the final structure and pricing of the transition 
bonds; 
m) commit to providing a statement of actual upfront financing costs; 
n) commit to providing an updated calculation of the estimated financing charges and unit 
financing charges over the life of the transition bonds; and  
o) provide a proposed form of financing resolution.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 3 
 
6. Stipulates that the unit financing charges may differ between customers and groups of 
customers, but if that occurs, each customer group and how the group is defined must be 
described in the securitization proposal. 
7. Stipulates that unit financing charges are determined and imposed without regard to whether, 
or to what extent, a customer uses the services of any public power entity during the period 
in which a particular unit financing charge will apply. 
8. Allows interested persons to file written comments with the public power entity's governing 
body at any time during or before the public meeting of the governing body. 
9. Requires the board of directors, at the public meeting, to provide: 
a) the representatives of the public power entity's management with an opportunity to 
explain the securitization proposal and answer questions; 
b) any consultants that were retained by the public power entity with an opportunity to 
comment on the securitization proposal; and 
c) any interested persons with a reasonable opportunity to submit written comments or make 
oral presentations of views, questions and comments on the securitization proposal. 
10. Requires the governing body of a public power entity, on review of the information and 
comments, to adopt a financing resolution that approves, approves with conditions or rejects 
the initiation of the proposed transaction. 
11. Allows the governing body to approve or approve with conditions the initiation of the 
proposed transaction only if the governing body finds that: 
a) the securitization proposal complies with the outlined requirements relating to the 
securitization proposal; 
b) the transition benefit test has been satisfied; 
c) any proposed transition billing services tariff supports affordability and reliability, is in 
the public interest and must be placed into effect; 
d) for a securitization proposal that involves a transition asset that is an electric power 
generation facility that will be or has been retired, sold, abandoned, disposed of or 
otherwise removed from service of the applicant's customers, in whole or in part, the 
replacement means of satisfying the customer load served by the electric power 
generation facility that will be or has been removed from service is more cost-effective 
for the applicant's customers than continued reliance on or operation of the electric power 
generation facility that will be or has been removed from service; and 
e) the securitization proposal is just and reasonable, is in the public interest and should be 
placed into effect. 
12. Determines that the transition benefit test is satisfied on showing that the proposed structure 
and pricing of the transition bonds are reasonably expected to result, on a net present value 
basis over the life of the transition bonds, in the lowest financing charges that are 
commercially available consistent with market conditions at the time the transition bonds are 
priced and with the terms of the financing resolution. 
13. Prescribes how cost-effectiveness must be determined. 
   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 4 
 
14. Requires the cost-effectiveness evaluation to include a description of a portfolio that contains 
new and existing resources that will provide reliable replacement generation of equivalent 
resource adequacy as the electric power generation that will be or has been removed from 
service. 
Securitization Transactions for Public Service Corporations 
15. Allows an applicant to request permission to initiate a securitization transaction from the 
ACC by submitting an application for a financing order. 
16. Requires the outlined application to: 
a) identify, as applicable, any transition assets, transition asset retirement costs, 
unrecovered dual costs or significant event recovery costs; 
b) estimate the transition costs and financing costs; 
c) describe the expected characteristics of the transition bonds; 
d) project the financing charges and explain how the financing charges will result in the 
collection of financing revenues in amounts sufficient but not greater than necessary to 
enable the timely and complete recovery and payment of all ongoing financing costs; 
e) estimate the financing charges and unit financing charges before the first application of 
the true-up mechanism; 
f) describe the proposed true-up mechanism and how the true-up mechanism will adjust the 
financing charges and unit financing charges over time to correct for any overcollection 
or undercollection of financing revenues;  
g) identify the qualified special purpose entity; 
h) include a report that is prepared by a securities firm experienced in underwriting and 
bond issuance and that concludes the transition bonds are expected to satisfy the current 
published criteria for an AAA rating or the equivalent;  
i) identify any anticipated ancillary agreements, individually or by description; 
j) describe how the applicant proposes to permanently reduce or offset the value of: 
i. undepreciated transition assets in rate base or recovered through rates and any 
associated regulatory assets or recorded liabilities with respect to an offering of 
transition bonds to recover transition asset retirement costs; or 
ii. any regulatory asset or recorded liability that is associated with transition bonds to 
recover unrecovered fuel costs or significant event recovery costs in exchange for the 
net proceeds of the bonds; 
k) include a proposed transition billing services tariff if the proposed initial servicer is a 
public service corporation; 
l) commit to making an informational filing with the ACC that will describe the final 
structure and pricing of the transition bonds, a statement of actual upfront financing costs 
and an updated calculation of the estimated financing charges and unit financing charges 
over the life of the transition bonds; provide a proposed financing order; and 
m) for a combined cooperative securitization, describe the allocation of financing costs or 
financing charges and unit financing charges to each cooperative applicant's customers, 
and how the true-up mechanism will allocate or reallocate financing costs to the 
cooperative applicant's customers over time. 
17. Requires the ACC to issue a financing order that approves, approves with conditions or 
rejects the initiation of the proposed transaction.   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 5 
 
18. Allows the ACC to approve or approve with conditions the proposed transaction only if the 
ACC finds that: 
a) the application complies with all of the requirements in the outlined application; 
b) the transition benefit test is satisfied; 
c) the proposed transition billing services tariff is just and reasonable, is in the public 
interest and should be in effect; or  
d) the proposed transaction, as described in the application for financing order, is just and 
reasonable, is in the public interest and should be put into effect. 
19. Stipulates that the transition benefit test is satisfied on showing: 
a) the projected net present value over the term of the transition bonds of the financing 
charges minus, to the extent applicable, the revenue requirement credits that arise from 
any deferred income tact balances associated with the transition cost will be smaller in 
absolute value than the projected net present value that is calculated at the same discount 
rate of the portion of the annual revenue requirements of the applicant that is associated 
with the transition cost, if the cost were to be financed directly by the applicant;  
b) the proposed structure and projected pricing of the transition bonds are reasonably 
expected to result, on a net present value basis over the life of the transition bonds, in the 
lowest financing charges that are commercially available consistent with market 
conditions at the time the transition bonds are priced and with the terms of the financing 
order; and 
c) for a financing application that involves a transition asset that is an electric power 
generation facility that will be or has been retired, sold, abandoned, disposed of or 
otherwise removed from service of the applicant's customers, in whole or in part, the 
replacement means of satisfying the customer load served by the electric power 
generation facility that will be or has been removed from service is more cost-effective 
for the applicant's customers than continued reliance on or operation of the electric power 
generation facility that will be or has been removed from service. 
20. Prescribes how cost-effectiveness must be determined. 
21. Requires the ACC to issue a final decision regarding the application for a financing order 
within 120 days after the date the application for financing was filed. 
22. Allows the ACC to extend the time for an additional 90 days for good cause shown. 
23. Prohibits the parent, holding or other direct beneficial owner of an applicant that is also a 
public service company from purchasing transition bonds. 
Authority of the ACC 
24. Grants the ACC, on an applicant's receipt of the net proceeds of the issuance of the transition 
bonds, the authority to ensure that: 
a) any undepreciated value of the transition assets on the applicant's books are reduced by 
the corresponding account, including any reductions in associated regulatory assets or 
recorded liabilities, as applicable; 
   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 6 
 
b) any regulatory assets that are related to unrecovered fuel costs or significant event 
recovery costs are reduced by that corresponding amount; and 
c) any incurred costs of a recorded liability that are incurred and associated with 
unrecovered fuel costs or significant event recovery costs are reduced by that 
corresponding amount. 
25. Stipulates that the outlined requirements relating to utility securitization does not abrogate 
or prevent the ACC's authority to: 
a) establish and regulate rates of public service corporations; 
b) investigate the practices of public service corporations; 
c) review and audit the books and records of public service corporations, including the 
actions taken under a transition billing services tariff and the receipt, handling and 
remittance to the qualified special purpose entity of financing revenues;  
d) investigate an applicant's compliance with the terms and conditions of a financing order 
and to require that the applicant comply with the financing order; and 
e) impose regulatory sanctions on an applicant for the willful failure to comply with a 
financing order. 
26. Prohibits the ACC from ordering or requiring, directly or as a condition for any other action 
or finding, a public service corporation to apply for permission to initiate or engage in a 
securitization transaction. 
27. Stipulates that the outlined requirements relating to utility securitization do not preclude the 
ACC from considering the bill impact of unit financing charges when determining the design 
of the rates within its jurisdiction or the allocation of the costs to and among people or groups 
of people paying the rates. 
Transition Property 
28. Stipulates that a transition property is immediately created by operation of law on the latter 
of the approval of a financing order or financing resolution, the creation and capitalization 
of a qualified special purpose entity and the issuance and receipt of value for the applicable 
transition bonds. 
29. Determines that transition property continues to exist until the corresponding transition 
bonds and all ongoing financing costs related to the transition bonds have been fully paid. 
30. Determines that on creation, transition property belongs to the qualified special purpose 
entity. 
31. Prohibits a qualified special purpose entity from providing utility service. 
32. Determines that a qualified special purpose entity is not a public service corporation, public 
power entity or cooperative. 
33. Prohibits a qualified special purpose entity from conducting any business unrelated to 
owning, protecting and administering the transition property or issuing, marketing, placing, 
authorizing, repaying, refinancing, servicing, administering or refunding transition bonds.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 7 
 
34. Determines that transition property constitutes a vested, existing, present, continuing and 
irrevocable property right for all purposes, regardless of the fact that the value of the 
transition property may depend on, or be affected by, events or actions that have not yet 
occurred. 
35. Prohibits transition property from being an asset of the public power entity, the applicant or 
any other public service corporation. 
36. Prohibits a public power entity from having an ownership or beneficial interest or any claim 
of right in the transition property, other than the requirement to calculate, impose, charge, 
collect and receive the financing charges as a servicer and transfer the resulting financing 
revenues to the qualified special purpose entity that is entitled to receive those financing 
revenues. 
37. Allows the qualified special purpose entity to pledge all or any portion of the transition 
property to secure the timely and complete payment of transition bonds and financing costs.  
38. Stipulates that transition property, financing charges, financing revenues and the interests of 
a financing party or any other person in transition property or in financing revenues are not 
subject to offset, counterclaim, surcharge or defense by a servicer, a customer, an applicant, 
a public power entity, a creditor of a public power entity, a creditor of an applicant, a creditor 
of the qualified special purpose entity or any other person, or in connection with any default, 
bankruptcy, reorganization or other insolvency proceeding of any such person. 
39. Determines that if there is a default on the transition bonds, both of the following apply: 
a) any secured party has the right to foreclose on transition property or otherwise enforce 
its rights as to the transition property in the same manner as if it were a secured party 
under the uniform commercial code; and 
b) on application by an interest party, and without limiting the outlined rights or any other 
remedies available to the applying party, a court must order the sequestration and 
payment of the monies arising from the transition property to the person that is entitled 
to receive the monies. 
40. Requires the outlined order to remain in full force and effect regardless of any bankruptcy, 
reorganization or other insolvency or receivership proceedings of a public power entity, an 
applicant or the qualified special purpose entity. 
41. Requires transition property to be in existence regardless of whether the revenues or proceeds 
with respect to the transition property have accrued and regardless of whether the value of 
the property right is dependent on customers receiving service. 
42. Stipulates that the outlined requirements relating to transition property apply to all purported 
transfers of, grants of liens on or security interests in transition property. 
43. Stipulates that the creation, perfection and enforcement of a security interest in transition 
property that is pledged to secure the payment of the ongoing financing costs are governed 
by the outlined requirements relating to transition property. 
   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 8 
 
44. Determines that the description of or reference to transition property in a transfer or security 
agreement and a financing statement is sufficient if the description or reference refer to 
outlined statute and the financing resolution or financing order describing the transition 
property. 
45. Determines that a security transition property is created, valid, binding and enforceable at 
the latest of: 
a) when the transition bonds are issued by the qualified special purpose entity; 
b) when a security agreement is executed and delivered by the qualified special purpose 
entity; and 
c) when value is received by the qualified special purpose entity for the transition bonds. 
46. Determines that the security interest in transition property is a statutory lien that attaches 
automatically in favor of the applicable financing party when the transition bond is issued 
and value for the transition bond is received. 
47. Determines that the security interest attaches without any physical delivery of any collateral 
or other act, and the security interest is valid, binding and perfected against all parties that 
have claims of any kind against the person granting the security interest, regardless of 
whether the parties have notice of a lien, on the filing of a financing statement with the 
Secretary of State. 
48. Requires the Secretary of State to maintain the financing statement in the same manner and 
in the same recordkeeping system maintained for financing statements that meet statutorily 
outlined filing cabinets. 
49. Stipulates that outlined financing statements are effective without the need to file a 
continuation statement until a termination statement is filed. 
50. Determines that a transfer of an interest, including a grant of a lien or security interest, in 
transition property is perfected against all third parties. 
51. Determines that a security interest in transition property is a continuously perfected security 
interest and has priority over any other lien that may subsequently attach to the transition 
property unless the holder of the security interest has agreed in writing otherwise. 
52. Determines that the priority of a security interest in transition property is not affected by the 
commingling of financing revenues with other funds. 
53. Determines that any pledge or secured party has a perfected security interest in the amount 
of all financing revenues that are deposited in any account of the amount of all financing 
revenues that are deposited in any account of the servicer in which financing revenues have 
been commingled with other monies, and any other security interest that may apply to such 
financing revenues is terminated when those funds are transferred to a segregated account 
for a financing party or assignee of a financing party. 
54. States that the true-up mechanism does not affect the validity, perfection or priority of a 
security interest in or transfer of transition property.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 9 
 
55. Determines that the validity, perfection or priority of a lien and security interest is not 
impaired by any later modification of a financing resolution or financing order or changes in 
a customer's financing charges. 
Transition Bonds 
56. Authorizes a qualified special purpose entity, after approval of a financing resolution or 
financing order, to issue one or more series, classes or tranches of transition bonds and to 
pledge transition property to secure the payment of ongoing financing costs. 
57. Requires the qualified special purpose entity, on issuance of the transition bonds, to transfer 
to the public power entity or the applicant the net proceeds of the transition bonds minus the 
upfront financing costs paid by the qualified special purpose entity. 
58. Stipulates that the approval of a financing resolution or financing order does not obligate a 
public power entity, applicant or a qualified special purpose entity to engage in the approved 
transaction. 
59. Stipulates that neither a public power entity, applicant or a qualified special purpose be 
subject to any regulatory conditions, sanction or other penalties for not engaging in an 
approved transaction. 
60. Requires the public power entity or applicant, if the qualified special purpose entity 
determines not to issue transition bonds authorized by a financing resolution or financing 
order, to reimburse the qualified special purpose entity for any costs paid by the qualified 
special purpose entity that would have constituted upfront financing costs had the transition 
bonds been issued. 
61. Stipulates that delaying the issuance of transition bonds pending final resolution of any 
appeals from the financing resolution or financing order or any legal challenges is not 
deemed to be such a determination. 
62. Stipulates that on or after the issuance of transition bonds, the transition property, the true-up 
mechanism and the financing charges are irrevocable, final, nondiscretionary and effective 
without the need for further action by the governing body, this state, the ACC or any other 
person. 
63. Stipulates that the outlined financing charges are not subject to a rescission, alteration, 
amendment, reduction, impairment or adjustment by further action of this state, the ACC or 
any other body or person, except pursuant to the true-up mechanism. 
64. Declares that this state, including all agencies, public corporations, municipalities or other 
instrumentalities of this state, pledges to and agrees with the financing parties, including 
present and future holders of transition bonds, the public power entity, the applicant, the 
qualified special purpose entity and any other person that enter into an ancillary agreement 
that after the issuance of transition bonds and until all financing costs, including the principal 
and interest on the transition bonds and all amounts to be paid under an ancillary agreement, 
are fully met and discharged.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 10 
 
65. Prohibits this state or any agency, public corporation, municipality or other instrumentality 
of this state from taking or allowing any action to be taken to limit, reduce, alter, impare, 
delay or terminate any of the following: 
a) the rights conferred by outlined statutes relating to securitization, including the rights in 
transition property or transition bonds;  
b) the imposition of financing charges and unit financing charges by the qualified special 
purpose entity; 
c) the operation of the true-up mechanism to adjust financing charges and unit financing 
charges; 
d) the collection of financing revenues in payment of financing charges and unit financing 
charges; or 
e) the payment of financing costs. 
66. States that it is the intention of this state that the outlined pledges can and will be relied on 
by a public power entity, the applicant, the qualified special purpose entity, other persons 
that enter into an ancillary agreement and any financing party. 
67. Allows the outlined pledges to be included in transition bonds, ancillary agreements and 
other documentation relating to issuing, rating and marketing the transition bonds. 
68. Stipulates that on and after the issuance of the transition bonds, the failure of a public power 
entity, the applicant or a qualified special purpose entity to comply with outlined 
requirements or the financing resolution or financing order do not invalidate, impair or affect 
the financing resolution or financing order, the transition property, financing charges, 
transition bonds or financing costs. 
69. Stipulates that a financing resolution, financing order, transition property and financing 
charges is not affected by: 
a) the bankruptcy, reorganization, sale, dissolution or insolvency of the public power entity, 
the applicant or the qualified special purpose entity or the successors or assigns of the 
public power entity, the applicant or the qualified special purpose entity; or 
b) the commencement of any proceeding for bankruptcy or the appointment of a receiver as 
to either the public power entity, the applicant, the qualified special purpose entity or the 
successors of the public power entity, the applicant or the qualified special purpose entity. 
70. Stipulates that transition bonds are not a public debt, a lien nor a pledge of the revenues, faith 
and credit or taxing power of a public power entity, this state or any county, municipality or 
other local government unit of this state. 
71. Stipulates that the approval of a financing resolution or financing order does not obligate this 
state or any county, municipality or political subdivision of this state to levy any tax or make 
any appropriation for payment of any financing cost, including the principal and interest on 
transition bonds. 
72. Prohibits this state or a county, municipality or political subdivision of this state from levying 
any tax on holders of transition bonds or owners of transition property. 
73. Stipulates that holders of transition bonds or owners of transition property do not have a right 
to have taxes levied by this state or the taxing authority of any county, municipality or 
political subdivision of this state for the payment of the principal of interest on or premium 
on transition bonds.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 11 
 
74. Stipulates that transition bonds are not an obligation, debt, lien or pledge of the assets or 
revenues of the public power entity. 
75. Stipulates that transition bonds are not an obligation of an applicant or a pledge of the assets 
of the applicant. 
76. Stipulates that approval is not required or for the approval of a financing resolution or financing 
order, for the issuance of transition bonds, for the sale or issuance of transition bonds or for an 
assignment or transfer transition property or any interest in transition property. 
77. Authorizes a customer that is a cooperative to include the costs of paying financing charges 
in the costs it is authorized to recover from people who use the cooperative's services. 
78. Stipulates that transition bonds are legal investments for all governmental units, permanent 
funds of this state, finance authorities, financial institutions, insurance companies, fiduciaries 
and other persons requiring statutory authority regarding legal investments. 
Financing Charges and the True-Up Mechanism 
79. Stipulates that financing charges are nonbypassable, are mandatory and apply to all customers. 
80. Requires financing revenues to be used solely for the payment of ongoing financing costs. 
81. Requires the true-up mechanism to correct for any overcollection or under collection of 
financing revenues and provide for timely and complete payment of ongoing financing costs. 
82. Requires adjustments to financing charges that are made in accordance with the true-up 
mechanism to be applied through an equal percentage change to all unit financing charges or 
through an alternative nondiscretionary mathematical process of adjusting unit financing 
charges that is included in the true-up mechanism and that is described in the financing 
resolution. 
83. Allows the true-up mechanism, for combined cooperative securitization, to also allocate or 
reallocate financing costs or financing charges and unit financing charges to the customers 
of the cooperative applicants. 
84. Stipulates that adjustments to the financing charges and unit financing charges resulting from 
the application of the true-up mechanism are not subject to regulation by the ACC and are 
effective without any order or action of the governing body or the ACC of the public power 
entity or any other body. 
85. Stipulates that when transition bonds are issued, the determination and imposition of 
financing charges, the recovery of financing revenues and the adjustment of the financing 
charges through the true-up mechanism are not subject to review or approval by any 
government entity, including state agencies, public corporations, municipalities or other 
instrumentalities of Arizona. 
86. Stipulates that the superior court has exclusive jurisdiction to and, on commencement of a 
suit against the qualified special purpose entity by a customer, review and determine whether 
there has been a mathematical or administrative error in the calculation or application of the 
true-up mechanism or the calculation of the resulting financing charges and unit financing 
charges.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 12 
 
87. Stipulates that the jurisdiction and authority of the superior court is limited to determining 
the financing charges and unit financing charges that result from the correct calculation and 
application of the true-up mechanism. 
88. Prohibits the superior court from ordering or requiring any modification to the true-up 
mechanism or limiting, reducing, altering, impairing, delaying or terminating the application 
of the true-up mechanism or the collection and remittance of financing revenues. 
89. Prohibits a party from bringing any action to enjoin, restrain, stay or delay the validity, 
calculation and imposition of financing charges or the collection of financing revenues, 
including the establishment and application of the true-up mechanism and the collection and 
remittance of financing revenues. 
90. Requires an outlined action to be filed within 10 days after the qualified special purpose 
entity or servicer files notice with the public power entity or the ACC. 
91. Prohibits the time for bringing action from being tolled or extended for any reason. 
92. Requires the superior court, within 60 days after the filing of an action, to hear and issue a 
decision on the matter. 
93. Stipulates that the decision is appealable only to the supreme court. 
94. Requires the notice of appeal to be filed within five days after the decision of the superior 
court in the action. 
95. Requires the supreme court to render a decision on the appeal promptly but not later than 90 
days after the notice of appeal is filed with the supreme court. 
96. Prohibits a court from enjoining, restraining, staying or delaying the application of the  
true-up mechanism or the collection and remittance of financing revenues.  
97. Requires the servicer, if the final judgement of the superior court, after all appeals are 
exhausted, requires a modification of any adjustment made under the true-up mechanism, to 
make that modification at the time of and as part of the next periodic adjustment of the 
financing charges following the outlined final judgement and on the exhaustion of all appeals 
through the true-up mechanism. 
98. Prohibits any adjustments that are made pursuant to the true-up mechanism, any review of 
the calculations of those adjustments or any action brought to determine whether there has 
been a mathematical or administrative error in the application of the true-up mechanism from 
affecting the irrevocability of the transition property, the financing resolution, the financing 
charges, the financing order, the nobypassability of the financing charges or the outlined 
nonimpairment pledges. 
99. Stipulates that regardless of whether financing charges are administered, billed or collected 
by a servicer that is a public power entity or a public service corporation, the financing 
charges are not rates or charges imposed by or made by a public power entity for utility 
service or a public service corporation for electric service. 
   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 13 
 
100. Stipulates that the right to receive financing charges and to collect financing revenues is 
independent of any rate that is established, made or charged by a public power entity for 
public utility services or a public service corporation for electric services, including collected 
revenues. 
101. Stipulates that financing revenues are the property of the qualified special purpose entity and 
are not the property of the servicer or any other public power entity or public service 
corporation. 
102. Requires the servicer, as agent for the qualified special purpose entity, at a minimum 
semiannually and quarterly during the two-year period preceding the final maturity date of 
the transition bonds or the final maturity date of the series, class or tranche of such bonds 
with the latest final maturity date, if more than one series, class or tranche has been issued, 
to perform calculations for: 
a) estimating whether the existing financing charges and resulting financing revenues are 
sufficient to provide for a timely and complete payment of any ongoing financing costs 
or whether an overcollection or undercollection of financing revenues is projected; and 
b) undertaking the processes used in the true-up mechanism to determine the adjustment to 
the financing charges that are projected to correct for any overcollection or 
undercollection of financing revenues. 
103. Requires the qualified special purpose entity or the servicer as agent for the qualified special 
purpose entity to file with the governing body of the public power entity or the ACC an 
informational notice that identifies the adjusted unit financing charges that are to be included 
on a customer's bills under the transition services tariff. 
104. Stipulates that the outlined notice is required to inform the customer and must be provided 
not later than 15 days before the date the unit financing charges become effective. 
105. Requires the outlined notice to provide sufficient information to verify the mathematical 
calculation of the adjusted financing charges and the unit financing charges that result from 
applying the true-up mechanism. 
106. Allows the qualified special purpose entity or the servicer as agent of the qualified special 
purpose entity, if a customer does not pay any unit financing charge, to bring suit in any court 
of competent jurisdiction against the customer to collect the unpaid unit financing charges. 
107. Requires reasonable attorney fees and costs to be awarded to the prevailing party. 
108. Stipulates that commencement of the suit does not affect the calculation of any adjustment 
that is authorized by the true-up mechanism until the net proceeds are recovered and paid to 
the qualified special purpose entity as financing revenues. 
Public Power Entities and Public Service Corporations as Servicers 
109. Requires the public power entity or public service corporation, if a servicer is a public power 
entity or public service corporation, to use its resources and systems to perform the duties of 
a servicer under a transition billing services tariff. 
110. Stipulates that the ACC has continuing jurisdiction over the terms of a transition billing 
services tariff that is filed and maintained by a public service corporation.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 14 
 
111. Stipulates that if a service collects payment made by a customer for financing charges, 
whether under a transition billing services tariff or otherwise, the monies collected are 
financing revenues when the monies are paid by the customer, and the servicer has not right, 
title or interest in the revenues other than as an agent for the qualified special purpose entity. 
112. Requires the partial payment, if the customer pays only a portion of the charges stated on a 
bill provided by the servicer that includes the financing charges, to be first applied to paying 
the financing charges. 
113. Allows the qualified special purpose entity or the holders of the transition bonds, if a servicer 
fails to make any required payment of financing revenues to a qualified special purpose entity 
or fails to fulfill its service obligations under an applicable transition billing services tariff, 
to request that the superior court order the sequestration and payment of the financing 
revenues for the benefit of any financing parties or their assignees and to request any other 
applicable relief. 
114. Requires the order to remain in full force and effect regardless of any bankruptcy, 
reorganization or other insolvency or receivership proceedings of the service or the qualified 
special purpose entity. 
115. Requires the authorization, if this state, through the governing body of the public power 
entity, order of the ACC or otherwise, allows the billing, collection and remittance by a third 
party of sums that would otherwise be billed, collected or remitted by a public power entity 
or public service corporation that acts as a servicer, to be consistent with the rating agencies 
requirements that are necessary for the transition bonds to receive and maintain a AAA or 
equivalent rating. 
Financing Resolutions and Financing Orders 
116. Allows a party to the proceeding who is dissatisfied with a governing body or the ACC's 
decision as to an outlined financing resolution or an application for a financing order or the 
Attorney General on behalf of this state to apply to the governing body for rehearing. 
117. Requires the rehearing to be filed by 20 days after the governing body's decision on the 
financing resolution or the ACC's decision on an application for a financing order. 
118. Deems that if the governing body or the ACC do not grant the application for rehearing 
within 20 days after the application is filed, the application is denied. 
119. Allows a party that files a rehearing application, within 10 days after a rehearing is denied or 
granted and not afterwords, to file, in the superior court in the county in which the governing 
body or the ACC has its office, an action that seeks to vacate, set aside, affirm in part, reverse 
in part or remand the governing body or ACC's decision regarding the financing resolution. 
120. Prohibits the time for bringing any outlined action from being tolled or extended for any 
reason. 
121. Determines that a party that seeks to vacate, set aside or otherwise challenge a financing 
resolution, financing order or other governing body or ACC decision, in whole or in part, 
bears the burden of proof.   FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 15 
 
122. Allows relief to be awarded in an action that challenges a financing resolution, financing 
order or related decision that resulted from a financing resolution or an application for a 
financing order, only if the superior court determines, based on clear and satisfactory 
evidence, that: 
a) the financing resolution, financing order or other governing body or ACC decision is 
unlawful; or 
b) the factual findings made in the financing resolution or financing order or other ACC 
decision are unsupported by the financing resolution, application or evidence in the 
proceeding that was presented before the governing body or ACC. 
123. Requires the superior court, within 60 days after the filing of the action, to hear and issue a 
decision on the matter. 
124. Allows the superior court to extend the timeframe to issue a decision by up to 30 days for 
good cause. 
125. Allows a party to appeal a decision in an outlined action only to the Arizona Supreme Court. 
126. Requires the party to file the outlined notice of appeal within five days after the decision of 
the superior court in the action. 
127. Prohibits the time for filing the notice of appeal from being tolled or extended for any reason. 
128. Requires the Arizona Supreme Court to issue a decision on the appeal promptly. 
129. Stipulates that a court in this state does not have jurisdiction to review, enjoin, restrain, 
suspend, stay or delay any of the following: 
a) a financing resolution or financing order; 
b) the creation of transition property; 
c) the issuance of transition bonds; or  
d) a governing body or the ACC's performance of its duties. 
130. Requires an order or decree that is issued by a governing body in the performance of its 
duties or that are fixed by the ACC to remain in force pending the decision of the court. 
Fees and Taxes 
131. Stipulates that financing charges are not subject to either: 
a) a franchise fee that is imposed by a municipality, county or other local government unit 
as a result of a franchise agreement or lawful ordinance; or 
b) taxes that are applicable to services provided by the rates of a public power entity or 
public service corporation. 
Miscellaneous 
132. Requires any successor to a public power entity or an applicant, whether pursuant to any 
bankruptcy, reorganization or other insolvency proceeding or pursuant to any merger, 
acquisition, sale or transfer or other business combination by operation of law or agreement 
of the public power entity or applicant or otherwise, to perform and satisfy all obligations of 
and have the same rights and obligations or any financing resolution as the public power 
entity or financing order as the applicant in the same manner and to the same extent as the 
public power entity or applicant, including acting as a servicer and collecting and paying to 
the person entitled to receive the financing charges and financing revenues.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 16 
 
133. Stipulates that the laws of this state govern the validity, enforceability, attachment, 
perfection, priority and exercise of remedies with respect to the creation or transfer of, or of 
any interest in, transition property financing charges for financing revenues. 
134. Stipulates that the outlined requirements relating to securitization, if there is any conflict 
between the requirements relating to securitization and any other law regarding the creation, 
attachment, transfer, assignment or perfection of, or the effect of perfection on or the priority 
of any security interest in transition property, financing charges or financing revenues, 
govern to the extent of the conflict. 
135. Stipulates that if all or any part of the requirements relating to securitization are invalidated, 
superseded, replaced, repealed or expires for any reason, that occurrence does not affect the 
validity of any prior action whether taken by a public power entity, the ACC, a public service 
corporation, a qualified special purpose entity or any other person, and does not affect 
transition bonds that were already issued or transition property that was already created. 
136. Defines applicant as any of the following in each case that files an application for a financing 
order with the ACC: 
a) a public service corporation that provides electric service, including a member-owned 
cooperative corporation; and 
b) a group of two or more member-owned cooperatives seeking approval of a combined 
cooperative securitization. 
137. Defines combined cooperative securitization as a securitization transaction that involves two 
or more member-owned cooperatives acting together including a generation and 
transmission cooperative and one or more of its member distribution cooperatives even if all 
applicable transition costs are incurred or will be passed down to the distribution 
cooperatives. 
138. Stipulates that a qualified special purpose entity relating to public service corporation 
securitization transactions: 
a) is a legal entity that does not provide electric service and is not a public service 
corporation; 
b) may not conduct any business that is unrelated to owning, protecting and administering 
the transition property or issuing, marketing, placing, authorizing, supporting, replaying, 
refinancing, servicing, administering or refunding transition bonds; and 
c) for a combined cooperative securitization, the ownership interests in a qualified special 
purpose entity may be allocated to the relevant cooperative applicants in proportion to 
the transition costs that are allocated to each of them or in any other manner approved by 
the financing order. 
139. Stipulates that significant event recovery costs and transaction asset retirement costs relating 
to public service corporation securitization transactions for a combined cooperative 
securitization, may include costs that have been incurred by a generation and transmission 
cooperative applicant that would otherwise be passed on to distribution cooperative 
applicants in wholesale power or similar charges, regardless of whether the costs have been 
passed through to distribution cooperative applicants at any given time.  FACT SHEET 
H.B. 2679 
Page 17 
 
140. Stipulates that unrecovered fuel costs relating to public service corporation securitization 
transactions for a combined cooperative securitization, may include unrecovered fuel costs 
that have been incurred by a generation and transmission cooperative applicant that otherwise 
would be passed on to distribution cooperative applicants in wholesale power or similar 
charges regardless of whether the unrecovered fuel costs have been passed through to 
distribution cooperative applicants at any given time. 
141. Defines transition bonds as bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness that are issued 
by a qualified special purpose entity and that are described in an application for a financing 
order, the proceeds of which are used, directly or indirectly, to recover, finance, refinance or 
refund transition costs and upfront financing costs and that are directly or indirectly payable 
from, or secured by, transition property, financing charges or financing revenues. 
142. Defines true-up mechanism as: 
a) a formula, described in the application for a financing order and established before or 
concurrent with the issuance of transition bonds, that adjusts financing charges over time 
to correct for any overcollection or undercollection of financing revenues so that a 
qualified special purpose entity timely and completely recovered all ongoing financing 
costs; and 
b) for a combined cooperative securitization and in addition to the outlined mechanism, is 
a mechanism that may also be used to allocate or reallocate financing costs to the 
customers of the cooperative applicants. 
143. Defines terms. 
144. Contains statements of public policy. 
145. Becomes effective on the general effective date.  
House Action 
NREW 2/4/25 DP 7-2-1-0 
3
rd
 Read 3/12/25  35-21-4 
Prepared by Senate Research 
March 24, 2025 
SB/slp