California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB813 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 813Introduced by Assembly Member Holden(Coauthors: Assembly Members Patterson and Quirk)(Coauthors: Senators Stern and Wieckowski)February 15, 2017An act to add Section 359.5 to, to add Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) to Division 4.1 of, to repeal Section 352 of, to repeal and add Section 359 of, and to repeal Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to electricity.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 813, as amended, Holden. Multistate regional transmission system organization: membership. Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and the state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, requirements and to provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements requirements, to submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. If notice is delivered by the Energy Commission during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO the bill would authorize the ISO, beginning 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program. If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.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. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).(b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.(c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.SEC. 2. Section 352 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 359 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 5.Section 359.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359.5.(a)If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b)If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.SEC. 6.SEC. 5. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 7.SEC. 6. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read: CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
1+Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 813Introduced by Assembly Member Holden(Coauthors: Assembly Members Patterson and Quirk)(Coauthors: Senators Stern and Wieckowski)February 15, 2017An act to add Section 359.5 to, to add Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) to Division 4.1 of, to repeal Section 352 of, to repeal and add Section 359 of, and to repeal Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to electricity.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 813, as amended, Holden. Multistate regional transmission system organization: membership. Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission, Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board, Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission) for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) PUC and the State Air Resources Board (state board), state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program. If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.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. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).(b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.(c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.SEC. 2. Section 352 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 359 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 5. Section 395.5 359.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.SEC. 6. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 7. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read: CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
22
3- Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 813Introduced by Assembly Member Holden(Coauthors: Assembly Members Patterson and Quirk)(Coauthors: Senators Stern and Wieckowski)February 15, 2017An act to add Section 359.5 to, to add Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) to Division 4.1 of, to repeal Section 352 of, to repeal and add Section 359 of, and to repeal Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to electricity.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 813, as amended, Holden. Multistate regional transmission system organization: membership. Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and the state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, requirements and to provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements requirements, to submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. If notice is delivered by the Energy Commission during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO the bill would authorize the ISO, beginning 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program. If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 813Introduced by Assembly Member Holden(Coauthors: Assembly Members Patterson and Quirk)(Coauthors: Senators Stern and Wieckowski)February 15, 2017An act to add Section 359.5 to, to add Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) to Division 4.1 of, to repeal Section 352 of, to repeal and add Section 359 of, and to repeal Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to electricity.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 813, as amended, Holden. Multistate regional transmission system organization: membership. Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission, Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board, Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission) for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) PUC and the State Air Resources Board (state board), state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program. If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017
5+ Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017
66
7-Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018
87 Amended IN Senate August 07, 2018
98 Amended IN Senate June 12, 2018
109 Amended IN Senate June 06, 2018
1110 Amended IN Senate March 08, 2018
1211 Amended IN Senate September 08, 2017
1312 Amended IN Senate August 31, 2017
1413 Amended IN Assembly May 30, 2017
1514 Amended IN Assembly March 21, 2017
1615
1716 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
1817
1918 Assembly Bill No. 813
2019
2120 Introduced by Assembly Member Holden(Coauthors: Assembly Members Patterson and Quirk)(Coauthors: Senators Stern and Wieckowski)February 15, 2017
2221
2322 Introduced by Assembly Member Holden(Coauthors: Assembly Members Patterson and Quirk)(Coauthors: Senators Stern and Wieckowski)
2423 February 15, 2017
2524
2625 An act to add Section 359.5 to, to add Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) to Division 4.1 of, to repeal Section 352 of, to repeal and add Section 359 of, and to repeal Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to electricity.
2726
2827 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2928
3029 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3130
3231 AB 813, as amended, Holden. Multistate regional transmission system organization: membership.
3332
34- Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and the state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, requirements and to provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements requirements, to submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. If notice is delivered by the Energy Commission during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO the bill would authorize the ISO, beginning 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program. If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.
33+ Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission, Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board, Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission) for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) PUC and the State Air Resources Board (state board), state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program. If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.
3534
36- Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.
35+ Existing law provides for the establishment of an Independent System Operator (ISO) as a nonprofit public benefit corporation and requires the ISO to ensure efficient use and reliable operation of the electrical transmission grid consistent with achieving planning and operating reserve criteria no less stringent than those established by the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the North American Electric Reliability Council. The Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 provides for the transformation of the ISO into a regional organization, with the approval of the Legislature, pursuant to a specified process. That process provides that modifications to the ISOs governance structure, through changes to its bylaws or other corporate governance documents, will not become effective until the ISO, the Public Utilities Commission, Commission (PUC), the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, Commission (Energy Commission), the State Air Resources Board, Board (state board), the Governor, and the Legislature take specified actions on or before January 1, 2019.
3736
38-This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and the state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, requirements and to provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements requirements, to submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. If notice is delivered by the Energy Commission during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO the bill would authorize the ISO, beginning 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.
37+This bill would prohibit a California electrical transmission facility owner, a retail seller of electricity, or a local publicly owned electric utility from joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, as defined, unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization, and the organizations operations, meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and other specified requirements. The bill would require a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, to submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission (Energy Commission) for review. The bill would require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) PUC and the State Air Resources Board (state board), state board, to review those materials for compliance with the bills requirements. The bill would prohibit a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility from joining the multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet those requirements. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet those requirements, the bill would require that the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility not remain in the organization. The bill would authorize the ISO to develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with those requirements, require the Energy Commission, in consultation with the PUC and state board, to review the proposal for compliance with the bills requirements, and, if the Energy Commission determines that the proposal meets those requirements and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the ISO indicating an intent to become a participating transmission owner, would authorize the ISO to proceed to implement the proposal. The bill would prohibit the ISO from implementing the new governance structure prior to January 1, 2021.
3938
4039 Existing law establishes the California Renewables Portfolio Standard Program, which requires the PUC to establish a renewables portfolio standard requiring all retail sellers, defined as including electrical corporations, to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources, as defined, so that the total kilowatthours of those products sold to their retail end-use customers achieves certain percentages of retail sales by certain dates. The program additionally requires each local publicly owned electric utility to procure a minimum quantity of electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources to achieve the procurement requirements established by the program. The program, consistent with the goals of procuring the least-cost and best-fit eligible renewable energy resources that meet project viability principles adopted by the commission, requires that all retail sellers and local publicly owned electric utilities procure a balanced portfolio of electricity products from specified categories of eligible renewable energy resources, known as portfolio content categories. Existing law provides that electricity products may be differentiated for these purposes by their impacts on the operation of the electrical grid in supplying electricity, as well as meeting the requirements of the program.
4140
42-
43-
4441 If the ISO becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization and thereafter operates an expanded balancing authority area that includes one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, this bill would specify that the boundary of the balancing authority area used for determining the portfolio content categories is the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. However, if another balancing authority in California elects to join the ISOs balancing authority area, the bill would add the facilities of that balancing authority to the ISOs balancing authority area for purposes of determining the portfolio content categories.
45-
46-
4742
4843 ## Digest Key
4944
5045 ## Bill Text
5146
52-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).(b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.(c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.SEC. 2. Section 352 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 359 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 5.Section 359.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359.5.(a)If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b)If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.SEC. 6.SEC. 5. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 7.SEC. 6. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read: CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
47+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).(b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.(c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.SEC. 2. Section 352 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 3. Section 359 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.SEC. 5. Section 395.5 359.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.SEC. 6. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.SEC. 7. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read: CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
5348
5449 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5550
5651 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5752
5853 SECTION 1. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).(b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.(c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.
5954
6055 SECTION 1. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).(b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.(c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.
6156
6257 SECTION 1. (a) In enacting this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to enable the transition of the Independent System Operator to a regional governance structure. To that end, it is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue the work it began with stakeholder groups throughout the region that resulted in the Second Revised Proposal: Principles for Governance of a Regional ISO published on October 7, 2016 (October 2016 Proposal).
6358
6459 ### SECTION 1.
6560
6661 (b) The October 2016 Proposal included a two-step process for selecting regional board members that consisted of the following: (1) a stakeholder-based nominating committee that selects nominees with the assistance and support of a professional search firm and (2) an approval committee, consisting of the voting members of the western states committee, which would confirm each slate of nominees. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.
6762
6863 (c) The October 2016 Proposal proposed that the western states committee would also have primary approval authority over certain regional Independent System Operator proposals on specific topics within the subject areas of transmission cost allocation and resource adequacy. In that proposal, primary authority means the committee will play the lead role for its defined areas of authority, and approval by the committee would be a prerequisite for any filing made by the Independent System Operator with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 205 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. Section 824d) for approval of tariff provisions in those areas. It is the intent of the Legislature that the Independent System Operator continue to work with regional stakeholders to develop and refine this proposal, subject to its public process.
6964
7065 SEC. 2. Section 352 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
7166
7267 SEC. 2. Section 352 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
7368
7469 ### SEC. 2.
7570
7671
7772
7873 SEC. 3. Section 359 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
7974
8075 SEC. 3. Section 359 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
8176
8277 ### SEC. 3.
8378
8479
8580
86-SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
81+SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
8782
8883 SEC. 4. Section 359 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:
8984
9085 ### SEC. 4.
9186
92-359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
87+359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
9388
94-359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
89+359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
9590
96-359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
91+359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.(d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.(f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.(2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
9792
9893
9994
100-359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8392. The Independent System Operator shall provide notice and a copy of this submission to the Legislature and the Governor at the same time as it is submitted to the Energy Commission.
95+359. (a) The Independent System Operators Board of Governors may develop and submit to the Energy Commission a governance proposal that complies with each of the requirements of Section 8391. 8392.
10196
102-(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (m) of Section 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.
97+(b) For purposes of meeting the requirements of subdivision (n) (m) of Section 8391, 8392, the proposal shall provide for the establishment of a western states committee. The committee shall have three representatives from each state that has a transmission owner participating in the Independent System Operator. The representatives from California shall be appointed by the Governor, subject to confirmation by the Senate. The committee shall provide guidance to the Independent System Operator on all matters of interest to more than one state.
10398
104-(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8392.
99+(c) The open meeting policy and records availability policy of the Independent System Operator in effect as of January 31, 2018, shall meet the requirements of subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 8391. 8392.
105100
106101 (d) The Energy Commission, in consultation with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the governance proposal for compliance with the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the proposal and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.
107102
108-(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 4.1, then the Energy Commission shall submit the governance proposal to the Governor and to the Legislature with a declaration that the Energy Commission has so found. Notice to the Legislature may be at any time during a regular session of the Legislature. Not before 270 days after receipt of notice by the Legislature, provided such notice was delivered during a regular session of the Legislature, and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.
103+(e) If the Energy Commission determines that the governance proposal meets the requirements of Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) of Division 4.1 and if a transmission owner from outside California that is not a participating transmission owner as of January 1, 2019, has entered into an agreement with the Independent System Operator indicating its intent to become a participating transmission owner and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved any changes to the Independent System Operators tariff necessary for the new participating transmission owner to join, then the Independent System Operator may proceed with implementing a governance structure consistent with the proposal. The new governance structure shall not be implemented before January 1, 2021. Upon completing implementation of the governance structure, the Independent System Operator or its successor shall provide notice to the Energy Commission.
109104
110105 (f) (1) The Energy Commission shall verify that the Independent System Operator has implemented a governance structure consistent with this section and, upon so verifying, shall promptly provide notice to the Secretary of State. Upon receipt of notice by the Secretary of State, Article 2 (commencing with Section 334), Section 345.5, and Sections 346 to 349, inclusive, shall become inoperative.
111106
112107 (2) The Energy Commission shall report to the Legislature its verification and notification to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1). The report to the Legislature shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
113108
109+SEC. 5. Section 395.5 359.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.
110+
111+SEC. 5. Section 395.5 359.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to read:
112+
113+### SEC. 5.
114+
115+395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.
116+
117+395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.
118+
119+395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018. (b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.
114120
115121
116122
123+395.5.359.5. (a) If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018.
117124
118-(a)If the Independent System Operator becomes a multistate regional transmission system organization pursuant to the process set forth in Section 359 and thereafter operates a balancing area that expands beyond the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as for December 31, 2018, to include one or more new participating transmission owners located outside of California, the balancing authority area boundary used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16, except as provided in subdivision (b), shall continue to be the boundary of the Independent System Operators balancing authority area as of December 31, 2018.
125+(b) If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.
126+
127+SEC. 6. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
128+
129+SEC. 6. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
130+
131+### SEC. 6.
119132
120133
121134
122-(b)If another balancing authority in California elects to join the Independent System Operators balancing authority area, the balancing authority used for determining compliance with the requirements of Section 399.16 shall include facilities of that other balancing authority that are added to the Independent System Operators balancing authority area.
135+SEC. 7. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read: CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
123136
137+SEC. 7. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:
124138
139+### SEC. 7.
125140
126-SEC. 6.SEC. 5. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
141+ CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
127142
128-SEC. 6.SEC. 5. Article 5.5 (commencing with Section 359.5) of Chapter 2.3 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code is repealed.
129-
130-### SEC. 6.SEC. 5.
131-
132-
133-
134-SEC. 7.SEC. 6. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read: CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
135-
136-SEC. 7.SEC. 6. Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 8390) is added to Division 4.1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:
137-
138-### SEC. 7.SEC. 6.
139-
140- CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
141-
142- CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
143+ CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
143144
144145 CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations
145146
146147 CHAPTER 7. Multistate Regional Transmission System Organizations
147148
148-8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.
149+8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:(a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.(b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.(d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.
149150
150151
151152
152153 8390. For purposes of this chapter, the following terms have the following meanings:
153154
154155 (a) California participating transmission owner means a California transmission owner that has become a participating transmission owner by turning over operational control of some or all of its bulk electrical transmission facilities to an independent system operator or a multistate regional transmission system organization.
155156
156157 (b) California transmission owner means an electrical corporation, local publicly owned electric utility, or other entity that owns bulk electrical transmission facilities located in California.
157158
158-(c) Except as provided in Section 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.
159+(c) Except as provided in Section 8394, 8395, multistate regional transmission system organization means an entity that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has determined satisfies the requirements for operating as an independent system operator or regional transmission organization and that has participating transmission owners from multiple states.
159160
160161 (d) Retail seller has the same meaning as defined in Section 399.12.
161162
162163 8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:(a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.(c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.
163164
164165
165166
166167 8391. In order to pursue critical California environmental and human health policy goals and to safeguard existing California authority to protect, preserve, and promote the welfare and well-being of its citizens, a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall only join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization that maintains, to the fullest extent possible consistent with federal law, market rules and policies that do not conflict with, and allow for consideration of, all of the following:
167168
168169 (a) State authority over generation preference, transmission siting, resource portfolios, and resource planning, including, but not limited to, a prohibition on a centralized capacity market in California or other forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.
169170
170171 (b) State rules or public policy requirements to provide reliable electrical service for the safety, health, and welfare of the states citizenry and economy, to encourage new or clean generation, reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases, or state-assigned policy attributes of electricity generation, such as requirements for California utilities to purchase electricity products from eligible renewable energy resources and from zero-carbon sources.
171172
172173 (c) State law and regulation over California utilities, including, but not limited to, those that may affect, but do not set, the rate for the same wholesale sale of electricity at a price different and distinct from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved rate.
173174
174-8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.
175+8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:(a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.(b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.(c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.(d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.(e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.(f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.(g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.(h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.(i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.(2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.(j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.(k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.(l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.(m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.(n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.(o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.(p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.(q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.
175176
176177
177178
178-8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:
179+8391.8392. A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization as a California participating transmission owner unless the bylaws or other organizational documents that govern the organization and its operations meet Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requirements and do all of the following:
179180
180181 (a) Prohibit a member of the governing board of the organization from any affiliation with a participant in any market overseen by the organization. A member of the governing board also shall not have been an employee of a market participant within two years prior to becoming a member of the board.
181182
182183 (b) Limit conflicts of interest by prohibiting any member of the governing board from directly owning any interest in energy-related assets that are appreciably affected by the actions of the organization and by requiring annual disclosure of significant financial interests.
183184
184185 (c) Provide for and maintain a decisionmaking process that is independent of control by any market participant or class of participants.
185186
186187 (d) Provide for and maintain open meeting standards and meeting notice requirements that are consistent with the general policies of the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code) and afford the public the greatest possible access to meetings, consistent with other duties of the organization.
187188
188189 (e) Subject to reasonable measures to limit the length of meetings or disruptions to meetings, authorize interested members of the public and representatives of customers to participate in person or through remote electronic means in meetings of the governing board and in the meetings of any advisory group to the governing board.
189190
190191 (f) Provide public access to the records of the organization consistent with the general policies of the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), consistent with the other duties of the organization.
191192
192193 (g) Require that the governing documents of the organization be posted and maintained on the organizations public Internet Web site.
193194
194195 (h) Protect and preserve a states authority over matters regulated by the state, including procurement policy, resource planning, and resource or transmission siting within the state.
195196
196197 (i) (1) Require retail sellers in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit each state to establish resource adequacy standards for its retail sellers that exceed those required by federal law, in the states discretion.
197198
198199 (2) Require a participating local publicly owned electric utility in each state to meet minimum resource adequacy standards and permit the governing board of a participating local publicly owned electric utility to establish resource adequacy standards that exceed those required by federal law, in the discretion of the governing body.
199200
200201 (j) Prohibit the multistate regional transmission organization from operating a centralized capacity market in California for the forward procurement of electrical generating capacity that requires capacity to clear at a market clearing price in order to count for resource adequacy purposes.
201202
202203 (k) Ensure that the dispatch of resources by the multistate regional transmission organization to serve load in California appropriately reflects the costs for resources to comply with Californias climate policies, as implemented by the State Air Resources Board. The multistate regional transmission system organization shall maintain a transparent system for tracking emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from resources dispatched to serve California load.
203204
204205 (l) Establish and maintain equitable transmission cost allocation rules through an open stakeholder process approved by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The rules shall ensure that California participating transmission owners receive equitable use of, and just and reasonable compensation for, their past investments in the transmission system assets for which operational control is transferred to a multistate regional transmission system organization.
205206
206207 (m) Enhance the competitive structure of the organization by providing for and maintaining an independent market monitor.
207208
208209 (n) Establish a clear process, structure, and organizational support for state regulators within the region served by the multistate regional transmission system organization to collaborate and provide guidance to the organization on matters of interest to more than one state, including on issues relating to the organizations independent market monitoring function established by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
209210
210211 (o) Enable participation of demand response, storage, and other distributed energy resources in the organizations markets.
211212
212213 (p) Provide for and maintain a process for obtaining stakeholder input on policy initiatives requiring approval of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission that is open to all members of the public and that does not require payment of a membership fee or other charge to participate.
213214
214215 (q) Ensure the right of any participating transmission owner to unilaterally withdraw from the multistate regional transmission system organization, with or without cause, upon giving reasonable notice, not to exceed two years.
215216
216-8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.
217+8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.
217218
218219
219220
220-8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.
221+8392.8393. This chapter does not require any California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility to join or remain in a multistate regional transmission system organization.
221222
222-8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.
223+8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.
223224
224225
225226
226-8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.
227+8393.8394. (a) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall, before joining a multistate regional transmission system organization, submit the bylaws and other organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system organization to the Energy Commission for review.
227228
228-(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.
229+(b) Unless specified otherwise in Section 8391, 8392, the Energy Commission, in consultation with the commission and the State Air Resources Board, shall review the bylaws and organizational documents that govern the multistate regional transmission system operator for compliance with the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. This review shall include public review of, and written comment on, the materials and at least one public workshop or hearing at which public comment is received.
229230
230-(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.
231+(c) A California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not join a multistate regional transmission system organization unless the Energy Commission has determined that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents meet the requirements of Section 8391. Sections 8391 and 8392. If a California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility has joined an independent system operator that becomes a multistate regional transmission organization and the Energy Commission determines that the organizations bylaws and organizational documents do not meet the requirements of Section 8391, Sections 8391 and 8392, the California transmission owner, retail seller, or local publicly owned electric utility shall not remain in the organization.
231232
232-8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
233+8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
233234
234235
235236
236-8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.
237+8394.8395. The Independent System Operator shall not be deemed to be a multistate regional transmission system organization unless and until it has completed the governance change process requirements of Section 359 and the Energy Commission has provided notice of this change to the Secretary of State pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of that section.