California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB1292 Compare Versions

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1-Enrolled April 27, 2018 Passed IN Senate April 23, 2018 Passed IN Assembly April 26, 2018 Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1292Introduced by Assembly Member PattersonFebruary 17, 2017 An act to amend Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to energy utilities services. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1292, Patterson. Electrical corporations: computation of average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage.Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
1+Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1292Introduced by Assembly Member PattersonFebruary 17, 2017 An act to amend Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to energy utilities services. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1292, as amended, Patterson. Electrical corporations: computation of average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage.Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by SB 711 to be operative only if this bill and SB 711 are enacted and this bill is enacted last.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.SEC. 2.Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739.(a)As used in this section:(1)Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2)Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b)The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c)(1)The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2)Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d)(1)The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2)In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3)At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e)(1)Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A)Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B)Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C)Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D)Usage comparison with prior periods.(E)Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F)Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G)Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2)An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A)Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B)Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3)The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4)The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f)Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g)Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.SEC. 2.5.Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739.(a)As used in this section:(1)Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2)Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b)The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c)(1)The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2)Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d)(1)The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2)In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3)At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e)(1)Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A)Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B)Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C)Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D)Usage comparison with prior periods.(E)Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F)Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G)Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2)An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A)Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B)Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3)The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4)The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f)Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g)Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.SEC. 3.Section 2.5 of this bill incorporates amendments to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by both this bill and Senate Bill 711. That section shall only become operative if (1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or before January 1, 2018, (2) each bill amends Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, and (3) this bill is enacted after Senate Bill 711, in which case Section 2 of this bill shall not become operative.SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
22
3- Enrolled April 27, 2018 Passed IN Senate April 23, 2018 Passed IN Assembly April 26, 2018 Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1292Introduced by Assembly Member PattersonFebruary 17, 2017 An act to amend Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to energy utilities services. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1292, Patterson. Electrical corporations: computation of average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage.Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1292Introduced by Assembly Member PattersonFebruary 17, 2017 An act to amend Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to energy utilities services. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1292, as amended, Patterson. Electrical corporations: computation of average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage.Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by SB 711 to be operative only if this bill and SB 711 are enacted and this bill is enacted last.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Enrolled April 27, 2018 Passed IN Senate April 23, 2018 Passed IN Assembly April 26, 2018 Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017
5+ Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017
66
7-Enrolled April 27, 2018
8-Passed IN Senate April 23, 2018
9-Passed IN Assembly April 26, 2018
107 Amended IN Senate April 09, 2018
118 Amended IN Senate August 29, 2017
129 Amended IN Senate June 28, 2017
1310 Amended IN Assembly April 26, 2017
1411 Amended IN Assembly April 03, 2017
1512
1613 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
1714
1815 Assembly Bill No. 1292
1916
2017 Introduced by Assembly Member PattersonFebruary 17, 2017
2118
2219 Introduced by Assembly Member Patterson
2320 February 17, 2017
2421
2522 An act to amend Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, relating to energy utilities services.
2623
2724 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2825
2926 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3027
31-AB 1292, Patterson. Electrical corporations: computation of average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage.
28+AB 1292, as amended, Patterson. Electrical corporations: computation of average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage.
3229
33-Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.
30+Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by SB 711 to be operative only if this bill and SB 711 are enacted and this bill is enacted last.
3431
3532 Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations. Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law requires the commission to designate a baseline quantity of electricity and gas necessary for a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer and to establish a higher energy allowance above the baseline for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment.
3633
3734 This bill would require the commission, when computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for electricity usage, to appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.
3835
36+This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by SB 711 to be operative only if this bill and SB 711 are enacted and this bill is enacted last.
37+
38+
39+
3940 ## Digest Key
4041
4142 ## Bill Text
4243
43-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
44+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.SEC. 2.Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739.(a)As used in this section:(1)Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2)Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b)The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c)(1)The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2)Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d)(1)The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2)In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3)At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e)(1)Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A)Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B)Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C)Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D)Usage comparison with prior periods.(E)Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F)Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G)Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2)An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A)Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B)Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3)The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4)The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f)Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g)Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.SEC. 2.5.Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739.(a)As used in this section:(1)Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2)Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b)The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c)(1)The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2)Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d)(1)The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2)In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3)At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e)(1)Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A)Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B)Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C)Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D)Usage comparison with prior periods.(E)Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F)Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G)Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2)An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A)Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B)Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3)The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4)The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f)Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g)Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.SEC. 3.Section 2.5 of this bill incorporates amendments to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by both this bill and Senate Bill 711. That section shall only become operative if (1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or before January 1, 2018, (2) each bill amends Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, and (3) this bill is enacted after Senate Bill 711, in which case Section 2 of this bill shall not become operative.SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
4445
4546 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4647
4748 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4849
4950 SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.
5051
5152 SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.
5253
5354 SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that the computation of baseline quantity required by this act be implemented coincident with the regularly scheduled rate proceedings of the commission for electrical corporations.
5455
5556 ### SECTION 1.
5657
57-SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
58+
59+
60+
61+
62+(a)As used in this section:
63+
64+
65+
66+(1)Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.
67+
68+
69+
70+(2)Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.
71+
72+
73+
74+(b)The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.
75+
76+
77+
78+(c)(1)The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.
79+
80+
81+
82+(2)Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.
83+
84+
85+
86+(3)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
87+
88+
89+
90+(4)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
91+
92+
93+
94+(5)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.
95+
96+
97+
98+(6)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.
99+
100+
101+
102+(d)(1)The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.
103+
104+
105+
106+(2)In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.
107+
108+
109+
110+(3)At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.
111+
112+
113+
114+(e)(1)Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:
115+
116+
117+
118+(A)Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.
119+
120+
121+
122+(B)Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.
123+
124+
125+
126+(C)Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.
127+
128+
129+
130+(D)Usage comparison with prior periods.
131+
132+
133+
134+(E)Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.
135+
136+
137+
138+(F)Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.
139+
140+
141+
142+(G)Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.
143+
144+
145+
146+(2)An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:
147+
148+
149+
150+(A)Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.
151+
152+
153+
154+(B)Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.
155+
156+
157+
158+(3)The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.
159+
160+
161+
162+(4)The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.
163+
164+
165+
166+(f)Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.
167+
168+
169+
170+(g)Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
171+
172+
173+
174+
175+
176+
177+
178+(a)As used in this section:
179+
180+
181+
182+(1)Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.
183+
184+
185+
186+(2)Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.
187+
188+
189+
190+(b)The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.
191+
192+
193+
194+(c)(1)The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.
195+
196+
197+
198+(2)Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.
199+
200+
201+
202+(3)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
203+
204+
205+
206+(4)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
207+
208+
209+
210+(5)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.
211+
212+
213+
214+(6)The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.
215+
216+
217+
218+(d)(1)The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.
219+
220+
221+
222+(2)In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.
223+
224+
225+
226+(3)At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.
227+
228+
229+
230+(e)(1)Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:
231+
232+
233+
234+(A)Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.
235+
236+
237+
238+(B)Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.
239+
240+
241+
242+(C)Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.
243+
244+
245+
246+(D)Usage comparison with prior periods.
247+
248+
249+
250+(E)Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.
251+
252+
253+
254+(F)Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.
255+
256+
257+
258+(G)Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.
259+
260+
261+
262+(2)An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:
263+
264+
265+
266+(A)Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.
267+
268+
269+
270+(B)Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.
271+
272+
273+
274+(3)The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.
275+
276+
277+
278+(4)The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.
279+
280+
281+
282+(f)Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.
283+
284+
285+
286+(g)Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
287+
288+
289+
290+
291+
292+Section 2.5 of this bill incorporates amendments to Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code proposed by both this bill and Senate Bill 711. That section shall only become operative if (1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or before January 1, 2018, (2) each bill amends Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code, and (3) this bill is enacted after Senate Bill 711, in which case Section 2 of this bill shall not become operative.
293+
294+
295+
296+SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
58297
59298 SEC. 2. Section 739 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to read:
60299
61300 ### SEC. 2.
62301
63-739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
302+739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
64303
65-739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
304+739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
66305
67-739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
306+739. (a) As used in this section:(1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.(2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.(b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.(c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.(2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.(3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.(5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.(6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.(d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.(2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.(3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:(A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.(C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.(D) Usage comparison with prior periods.(E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.(F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.(G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.(2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:(A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.(B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.(3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.(4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.(f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.(g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.
68307
69308
70309
71310 739. (a) As used in this section:
72311
73312 (1) Baseline quantity means a quantity of electricity or gas allocated by the commission for residential customers based on from 50 to 60 percent of average residential consumption of these commodities, except that, for residential gas customers and for all-electric residential customers, the baseline quantity shall be established at from 60 to 70 percent of average residential consumption during the winter heating season. In establishing the baseline quantities, the commission shall take into account climatic and seasonal variations in consumption and the availability of gas service. The commission shall review and revise baseline quantities as average consumption patterns change in order to maintain these ratios and may do so during the rate case or other ratesetting proceeding of a gas corporation or electrical corporation. The commission shall make efforts to minimize bill volatility for residential customers, including all-electric residential customers. Those efforts may include modifying the length of the baseline seasons or defining additional baseline seasons. When computing the average residential consumption of electricity and the baseline quantity for usage of electricity, the commission shall appropriately account for any consumption that is met by residential customer generation located on the customers side of the meter.
74313
75314 (2) Residential customer means those customers receiving electrical or gas service pursuant to a domestic rate schedule and excludes industrial, commercial, and every other category of customer.
76315
77316 (b) The commission shall designate a baseline quantity of gas and electricity which is necessary to supply a significant portion of the reasonable energy needs of the average residential customer. In estimating those quantities, the commission shall take into account differentials in energy needs between customers whose residential energy needs are currently supplied by electricity alone or by both electricity and gas. The commission shall develop a separate baseline quantity for all-electric residential customers. For these purposes, all-electric residential customers are residential customers having electrical service only or whose space heating is provided by electricity, or both. The commission shall also take into account differentials in energy use by climatic zone and season.
78317
79318 (c) (1) The commission shall establish a standard limited allowance which shall be in addition to the baseline quantity of gas and electricity for residential customers dependent on life-support equipment, including, but not limited to, emphysema and pulmonary patients. A residential customer dependent on life-support equipment shall be allocated a higher energy allocation than the average residential customer.
80319
81320 (2) Life-support equipment means that equipment which utilizes mechanical or artificial means to sustain, restore, or supplant a vital function, or mechanical equipment which is relied upon for mobility both within and outside of buildings. Life-support equipment, as used in this subdivision, includes all of the following: all types of respirators, iron lungs, hemodialysis machines, suction machines, electric nerve stimulators, pressure pads and pumps, aerosol tents, electrostatic and ultrasonic nebulizers, compressors, IPPB machines, and motorized wheelchairs.
82321
83322 (3) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to paraplegic and quadriplegic persons in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
84323
85324 (4) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to multiple sclerosis patients in consideration of the increased heating and cooling needs of those persons.
86325
87326 (5) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to scleroderma patients in consideration of the increased heating needs of those persons.
88327
89328 (6) The limited allowance specified in this subdivision shall also be made available to persons who are being treated for a life-threatening illness or have a compromised immune system, if a licensed physician and surgeon or a person licensed pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act certifies in writing to the utility that the additional heating or cooling allowance, or both, is medically necessary to sustain the life of the person or prevent deterioration of the persons medical condition.
90329
91330 (d) (1) The commission shall require that every electrical and gas corporation file a schedule of rates and charges providing baseline rates. The baseline rates shall apply to the first or lowest block of an increasing block rate structure which shall be the baseline quantity. In establishing these rates, the commission shall avoid excessive rate increases for residential customers, and shall establish an appropriate gradual differential between the rates for the respective blocks of usage.
92331
93332 (2) In establishing residential electric and gas rates, including baseline rates, the commission shall ensure that the rates are sufficient to enable the electrical corporation or gas corporation to recover a just and reasonable amount of revenue from residential customers as a class, while observing the principle that electricity and gas services are necessities, for which a low affordable rate is desirable and while observing the principle that conservation is desirable in order to maintain an affordable bill.
94333
95334 (3) At least until December 31, 2003, the commission shall require that all charges for residential electric customers are volumetric, and shall prohibit any electrical corporation from imposing any charges on residential consumption that are independent of consumption, unless those charges are in place prior to April 12, 2001.
96335
97-(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:
336+(e) (1) Each electrical corporation and each gas corporation shall, in a timeframe consistent with each electrical and gas corporations its next general rate case, disclose on the billing statement of a residential customer all of the following:
98337
99338 (A) Cost per kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.
100339
101340 (B) Allocation of kilowatthour or gas therm per tier.
102341
103342 (C) Visual representation of usage and cost per tier.
104343
105344 (D) Usage comparison with prior periods.
106345
107346 (E) Itemized cost components in the bill to identify state and local taxes.
108347
109348 (F) Identification of delivery, generation, public purpose, and other charges.
110349
111350 (G) Contact information for the commissions Consumer Affairs Branch.
112351
113352 (2) An electrical corporation and a gas corporation shall make available online to residential customers both of the following:
114353
115354 (A) Examples of how conservation measures, including changing thermostat settings and turning off unused lights, could reduce energy usage and costs.
116355
117356 (B) Examples of how energy-saving devices and weatherization measures could reduce energy usage and costs.
118357
119358 (3) The commission may modify, adjust, or add to the requirements of this subdivision as the individual circumstances of each electrical corporation or gas corporation merits, or for master-meter customers, as individual circumstances merit.
120359
121360 (4) The commission shall, as part of the general rate case of an electrical corporation or gas corporation, assess opportunities to improve the quality of information contained in the utilitys periodic billings.
122361
123362 (f) Wholesale electrical or gas purchases, and the rates charged therefor, are exempt from this section.
124363
125364 (g) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to prohibit experimentation with alternative gas or electrical rate schedules for the purpose of achieving energy conservation.