LCO No. 3766 1 of 25 General Assembly Raised Bill No. 966 January Session, 2023 LCO No. 3766 Referred to Committee on ENERGY AND TECHNOLOGY Introduced by: (ET) AN ACT CONCERNING THE PROCUREMENT OF STANDARD SERVICE ELECTRICITY AND THE REGULATION OF PUBLIC UTILITIES. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened: Section 1. Subsection (b) of section 16-19tt of the general statutes is 1 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 2 1, 2023): 3 (b) In any rate case initiated on or after [July 8, 2013] October 1, 2023, 4 or in a pending rate case for which a final decision has not been issued 5 prior to [July 8, 2013] October 1, 2023, the Public Utilities Regulatory 6 Authority [shall] may order the state's gas and electric distribution 7 companies to decouple distribution revenues from the volume of 8 natural gas and electricity sales. [For electric distribution companies, the 9 decoupling mechanism shall be the adjustment of actual distribution 10 revenues to allowed distribution revenues. For gas distribution 11 companies, the decoupling mechanism shall be a mechanism that does 12 not remove the incentive to support the expansion of natural gas use 13 pursuant to the 2013 Comprehensive Energy Strategy, such as a 14 mechanism that decouples distribution revenue based on a use-per-15 customer basis. In making its determination on this matter, the authority 16 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 2 of 25 shall consider the impact of decoupling on the gas or electric 17 distribution company's return on equity and make any necessary 18 adjustments thereto.] The authority shall have the discretion to 19 determine the decoupling mechanism and m ethodology used in 20 decoupling orders made pursuant to this subsection, subject to the 21 principles set forth in subsection (m) of section 16-2. 22 Sec. 2. Subsection (b) of section 16-243p of the general statutes is 23 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from 24 passage): 25 (b) No [electric distribution] public service company shall recover 26 through rates its costs associated with its attendance [or] in, 27 participation in, preparation for or appeal of any [rate-making hearing] 28 contested proceeding conducted before the authority. Such costs shall 29 include, but need not be limited to, attorneys' fees, fees to engage expert 30 witnesses or consultants and related costs identified by the authority. 31 Sec. 3. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) No public service company 32 shall recover through rates any cost associated with membership, dues, 33 sponsorships or contributions to a business or industry trade 34 association, group or related entity incorporated under Section 501 of 35 the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent corresponding 36 internal revenue code of the United States, as amended from time to 37 time. 38 (b) No public service company shall recover through rates any cost 39 associated with lobbying or legislative action, as such terms are defined 40 in section 1-91 of the general statutes. 41 (c) No public service company shall recover through rates any cost 42 associated with advertising, marketing or any other related costs 43 identified by the authority, unless such marketing, advertising or 44 related costs are specifically approved or ordered by the authority. 45 Sec. 4. Section 16-19jj of the general statutes is repealed and the 46 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 47 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 3 of 25 The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority shall, whenever it deems 48 appropriate, [encourage] permit the use of proposed settlements 49 produced by alternative dispute resolution mechanisms to resolve 50 contested cases and proceedings. In order to approve a settlement of a 51 proceeding to amend rates under section 16-19, the authority shall 52 determine that the resulting rates and other terms of the settlement 53 conform to the principles set forth in section 16-19. The term of any 54 provision in a settlement of a proceeding to amend rates under section 55 16-19 shall not extend more than three years from such settlement's 56 approval by the authority. The parties proposing the settlement shall 57 provide the proposed settlement to all parties and intervenors not less 58 than three business days before filing the proposed settlement with the 59 authority. The proposed settlement filed with the authority shall be 60 accompanied by testimony from not less than one witness representing 61 each party to the settlement. Any proceeding to amend rates under 62 section 16-19 that is resolved by a settlement shall not constitute a 63 general rate hearing for purposes of the periodic review required under 64 section 16-19a. 65 Sec. 5. Subsection (c) of section 16-19b of the general statutes is 66 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from 67 passage): 68 (c) If the authority, after notice and hearing, determines that the 69 adoption of an energy adjustment clause would protect the interests of 70 ratepayers of an electric distribution company, ensure economy and 71 efficiency in energy production and purchase by the electric distribution 72 company and achieve the objectives set forth in subsection (a) of section 73 16-19 and in section 16-19e better than would the continued operation 74 of a fuel adjustment clause and a generation utilization adjustment 75 clause, the authority shall approve an energy adjustment clause to be 76 superimposed upon the existing rate schedule of the electric distribution 77 company. The authority shall design any such energy adjustment clause 78 to reflect cost-efficient energy resource procurement and to recover the 79 costs of energy that are proper for rate-making purposes and for which 80 the authority has not authorized recovery through base rates. These 81 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 4 of 25 costs, reflecting prudent and efficient management and operations, may 82 include, but are not limited to, the costs of oil, gas, coal, nuclear fuel, 83 wood or other fuels, and energy transactions with other utilities, 84 nonutility generators or power pools [,] and all or part of the cost of 85 conservation and load management. [, and the gross earnings tax 86 imposed by section 12-264 on the revenues from the energy sources 87 subject to the energy adjustment clause] The authority may establish an 88 efficiency factor in the energy adjustment clause of each electric 89 distribution company, that may provide for less than one hundred per 90 cent recovery of the gross earnings tax imposed pursuant to section 12-91 264 on the revenues from such purchased energy. The authority shall 92 design the energy adjustment clause to provide for recovery of energy 93 costs prudently incurred by an electric distribution company in 94 accordance with section 16-19e. Notwithstanding the provisions of 95 section 16-19, the authority shall change an energy adjustment clause in 96 accordance with the provisions of subsections (e) and (h) of this section. 97 An energy adjustment clause approved pursuant to this section shall 98 apply to all electric distribution companies similarly affected by the 99 costs which form the basis for the adjustment clause. 100 Sec. 6. Section 16-19yy of the general statutes is repealed and the 101 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 102 (a) Notwithstanding any provision of the general statutes, in 103 exercising its discretion regarding whether to allow the recovery 104 through rates of any portion of the compensation package for executives 105 or officers or of any portion of any incentive compensation for 106 employees of any electric distribution company, gas company or water 107 company, as defined in section 16-1, the Public Utilities Regulatory 108 Authority shall consider whether to require that any such compensation 109 that is recoverable through rates be dependent upon the achievement of 110 performance targets. [established pursuant to section 16-244aa.] 111 (b) The total amount of compensation for any executives or officers 112 of the parent company of any electric distribution company, gas 113 company or water company, as defined in section 16-1, shall not exceed 114 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 5 of 25 the base compensation of such executives or officers by five per cent or 115 more. 116 (c) Whenever an increase of more than ten per cent occurs between 117 billing periods of (1) the standard service rate established pursuant to 118 section 16-244c, (2) the energy adjustment clause or purchased gas 119 adjustment clause established pursuant to section 16-19b, or (3) a water 120 company rate adjustment mechanism established pursuant to section 121 16-262w, any public service company with rates incorporating the 122 increase shall provide a monthly bill credit to its customers equal to the 123 total compensation of its executives and officers that is recovered 124 through rates in such monthly bill. Such company or companies shall 125 provide the bill credit for a period of not less than six months. 126 Sec. 7. (NEW) (Effective from passage) On and after January 1, 2024, 127 new electric plant additions shall not be eligible for cost recovery 128 through an on-bill reconciling mechanism first authorized in 2018. 129 Sec. 8. Subsection (b) of section 16-19gg of the general statutes is 130 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from 131 passage): 132 (b) [In any rate amendment proposed on and after May 19, 1992, by a 133 public service company, as defined by section 16-1, the Public Utilities 134 Regulatory Authority shall analyze the effect on ratepayers of a public 135 service company's provision of reduced or free utility service to its 136 employees.] During each proceeding on a rate amendment under 137 section 16-19 proposed by an electric distribution company, gas 138 company or water company, the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority 139 shall consider the following factors in determining a reasonable rate of 140 return: (1) Macroeconomic conditions at the time the rate amendment is 141 pending before the authority; (2) the company's compliance with state 142 law, regulations and decisions and the policies of the authority; (3) the 143 burden of energy costs on residential ratepayers, measured as a 144 percentage of household income, under the current and proposed rate; 145 (4) trends in the company's accrual of bad debt; and (5) any other issue 146 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 6 of 25 deemed relevant by the authority. 147 Sec. 9. Section 16-19 of the general statutes is repealed and the 148 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 149 (a) No public service company may charge rates in excess of those 150 previously approved by the Public Utilities Control Authority or the 151 Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, except that any rate approved by 152 the Public Utilities Commission, the Public Utilities Control Authority 153 or the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority shall be permitted until 154 amended by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, that rates not 155 approved by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority may be charged 156 pursuant to subsection (b) of this section, and that the hearing 157 requirements with respect to adjustment clauses are as set forth in 158 section 16-19b. For water companies, existing rates shall include the 159 amount of any adjustments approved pursuant to section 16-262w since 160 the company's most recent general rate case, provided any adjustment 161 amount shall be separately identified in any customer bill. Each public 162 service company shall file any proposed amendment of its existing rates 163 with the authority in such form and in accordance with such reasonable 164 regulations as the authority may prescribe. Each electric distribution, 165 gas or telephone company filing a proposed amendment shall also file 166 with the authority an estimate of the effects of the amendment, for 167 various levels of consumption, on the household budgets of high and 168 moderate income customers and customers having household incomes 169 not more than one hundred fifty per cent of the federal poverty level. 170 Each electric distribution company shall also file such an estimate for 171 space heating customers. Each water company, except a water company 172 that provides water to its customers less than six consecutive months in 173 a calendar year, filing a proposed amendment, shall also file with the 174 authority a plan for promoting water conservation by customers in such 175 form and in accordance with a memorandum of understanding entered 176 into by the authority pursuant to section 4-67e. Each public service 177 company shall notify each customer who would be affected by the 178 proposed amendment, by mail, at least one week prior to the first public 179 hearing thereon, but not earlier than six weeks prior to such first public 180 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 7 of 25 hearing, that an amendment has been or will be requested. Such notice 181 shall also indicate (1) the date, time and location of any scheduled public 182 hearing, (2) a statement that customers may provide written comments 183 regarding the proposed amendment to the Public Utilities Regulatory 184 Authority or appear in person at any scheduled public hearing, (3) the 185 Public Utilities Regulatory Authority telephone number for obtaining 186 information concerning the schedule for public hearings on the 187 proposed amendment, and (4) whether the proposed amendment 188 would, in the company's best estimate, increase any rate or charge by 189 [twenty] five per cent or more, and, if so, describe in general terms any 190 such rate or charge and the amount of the proposed increase. [, provided 191 no such company shall be required to provide more than one form of 192 the notice to each class of its customers.] The costs of providing such 193 notice shall not be recoverable in rates. If a company fails to provide 194 adequate notice, the authority shall consider the effective filing date of 195 such company's proposed amendment to be the date that the company 196 provides adequate notice to customers, as determined by the authority. 197 Until the effective filing date, no days shall count toward the time limit 198 in this subsection. In the case of a proposed amendment to the rates of 199 any public service company, the authority shall hold one or more public 200 hearings thereon, except as permitted with respect to interim rate 201 amendments by subsections (d) and (g) of this section, and shall make 202 such investigation of such proposed amendment of rates as is necessary 203 to determine whether such rates conform to the principles and 204 guidelines set forth in section 16-19e, or are unreasonably 205 discriminatory or more or less than just, reasonable and adequate, or 206 that the service furnished by such company is inadequate to or in excess 207 of public necessity and convenience, provided the authority may (A) 208 evaluate the reasonableness and adequacy of the performance or service 209 of the public service company using any applicable metrics or standards 210 adopted by the authority pursuant to section 16-244aa, and (B) 211 determine the reasonableness of the allowed rate of return of the public 212 service company based on such performance evaluation. The authority, 213 if in its opinion such action appears necessary or suitable in the public 214 interest may, and, upon written petition or complaint of the state, under 215 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 8 of 25 direction of the Governor, shall, make the aforesaid investigation of any 216 such proposed amendment which does not involve an alteration in 217 rates. If the authority finds any proposed amendment of rates to not 218 conform to the principles and guidelines set forth in section 16-19e, or 219 to be unreasonably discriminatory or more or less than just, reasonable 220 and adequate to enable such company to provide properly for the public 221 convenience, necessity and welfare, or the service to be inadequate or 222 excessive, it shall determine and prescribe, as appropriate, an adequate 223 service to be furnished or just and reasonable maximum rates and 224 charges to be made by such company. In the case of a proposed 225 amendment filed by an electric distribution, gas or telephone company, 226 the authority shall also adjust the estimate filed under this subsection of 227 the effects of the amendment on the household budgets of the 228 company's customers, in accordance with the rates and charges 229 approved by the authority. The authority shall issue a final decision on 230 [each electric distribution or gas company] any public service company 231 rate filing within three hundred fifty days from the [proposed] effective 232 filing date [thereof. The authority shall issue a final decision on all public 233 service company rate filings, except electric distribution or gas company 234 rate filings, within two hundred days from the proposed effective date 235 thereof] of the proposed amendment. 236 (b) If the authority has not made its finding respecting an amendment 237 of any [electric distribution or gas] public service company rate within 238 three hundred fifty days from the proposed effective date of such 239 amendment thereof, [or if the authority has not made its finding 240 respecting an amendment of any public service company rate, except an 241 electric distribution or a gas company rate, within two hundred days 242 from the proposed effective date of such amendment thereof,] such 243 amendment may become effective pending the authority's finding with 244 respect to such amendment upon the filing by the company with the 245 authority of assurance satisfactory to the authority, which may include 246 a bond with surety, of the company's ability and willingness to refund 247 to its customers with interest such amounts as the company may collect 248 from them in excess of the rates fixed by the authority in its finding or 249 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 9 of 25 fixed at the conclusion of any appeal taken as a result of a finding by the 250 authority. 251 (c) Upon conclusion of its investigation of the reasonableness of any 252 proposed increase of rates, the authority shall order the company to 253 refund to its customers with interest any amounts the company may 254 have collected from them during the period that any amendment 255 permitted by subsection (b) of this section was in force, which amounts 256 the authority may find to have been in excess of the rates fixed by the 257 authority in its finding or fixed at the conclusion of any appeal taken as 258 a result of a finding by the authority. Any such refund ordered by the 259 authority shall be paid by the company, under direction of the authority, 260 to its customers in such amounts as are determined by the authority. 261 (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the authority 262 from approving an interim rate increase, if the authority finds that such 263 an interim rate increase is necessary to prevent substantial and material 264 deterioration of the financial condition of a public service company, to 265 prevent substantial deterioration of the adequacy and reliability of 266 service to its customers or to conform to the applicable principles and 267 guidelines set forth in section 16-19e, provided the authority shall first 268 hold a special public hearing on the need for such interim rate increase 269 and the company, at least one week prior to such hearing, notifies each 270 customer who would be affected by the interim rate increase that such 271 an increase is being requested. The company shall include the notice in 272 a mailing of customer bills, unless such a mailing would not provide 273 timely notice, in which case the authority shall authorize an alternative 274 manner of providing such notice. Any such interim rate increase shall 275 only be permitted if the public service company submits an assurance 276 satisfactory to the authority, which may include a bond with surety, of 277 the company's ability and willingness to refund to its customers with 278 interest such amounts as the company may collect from such interim 279 rates in excess of the rates approved by the authority in accordance with 280 subsection (a) of this section. The authority shall order a refund in an 281 amount equal to the excess, if any, of the amount collected pursuant to 282 the interim rates over the amount which would have been collected 283 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 10 of 25 pursuant to the rates finally approved by the authority in accordance 284 with subsection (a) of this section or fixed at the conclusion of any 285 appeal taken as a result of any finding by the authority. Such refund 286 ordered by the authority shall be paid by the company to its customers 287 in such amounts and by such procedure as ordered by the authority. 288 (e) If the authority finds that the imposition of any increase in rates 289 would create a hardship for a municipality, because such increase is not 290 reflected in its then current budget, or cannot be included in the budget 291 of its fiscal year which begins less than five months after the effective 292 date of such increase, the authority may defer the applicability of such 293 increase with respect to services furnished to such municipality until the 294 fiscal year of such municipality beginning not less than five months 295 following the effective date of such increase; provided the revenues lost 296 to the public service company through such deferral shall be paid to the 297 public service company by the municipality in its first fiscal year 298 following the period of such deferral. 299 (f) [Any] No public service company, as defined in section 16-1, may 300 [filing] file an application with the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority 301 to reopen a rate proceeding under this section. [, which application 302 proposes to increase the company's revenues or any rate or charge of the 303 company by five per cent or more, shall, not later than one week prior 304 to the hearing under the reopened proceeding, notify each customer 305 who would be affected thereby that such an application is being filed. 306 Such notice shall indicate the rate increases proposed in the application. 307 The company shall include the notice in a mailing of customer bills, 308 unless such a mailing would not provide timely notice to customers of 309 the reopening of the proceeding, in which case the authority shall 310 authorize an alternative manner of providing such notice.] 311 (g) The authority shall hold either a special public hearing or combine 312 an investigation with an ongoing four-year review conducted in 313 accordance with section 16-19a or with a general rate hearing conducted 314 in accordance with subsection (a) of this section on the need for an 315 interim rate decrease (1) when a public service company has, for the 316 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 11 of 25 rolling twelve-month period ending with the two most recent 317 consecutive financial quarters, earned a return on equity which exceeds 318 the return authorized by the authority by at least [one] one-half of one 319 percentage point, (2) if it finds that any change in municipal, state or 320 federal tax law creates a significant increase in a company's rate of 321 return, or (3) if it [finds] provides appropriate notice that a public service 322 company may be collecting rates or may have an authorized rate of 323 return which is or are more than just, reasonable and adequate, as 324 determined by the authority, provided the authority shall require 325 appropriate notice of hearing to the company and its customers who 326 would be affected by an interim rate decrease in such form as the 327 authority deems reasonable. The company shall be required to 328 demonstrate to the satisfaction of the authority that earning such a 329 return on equity, having an authorized rate of return or collecting rates 330 which are more than just, reasonable and adequate is directly beneficial 331 to its customers. At the completion of the proceeding, the authority may 332 order an interim rate decrease if it finds that such return on equity or 333 rates exceeds a reasonable rate of return or is more than just, reasonable 334 and adequate as determined by the authority. Any such interim rate 335 decrease shall be subject to a customer surcharge if the interim rates 336 collected by the company are less than the rates finally approved by the 337 authority or fixed at the conclusion of any appeal taken as a result of any 338 finding by the authority. Such surcharge shall be assessed against 339 customers in such amounts and by such procedure as ordered by the 340 authority. 341 (h) The provisions of this section shall not apply to the regulation of 342 a telecommunications service which is a competitive service, as defined 343 in section 16-247a, or to a telecommunications service to which an 344 approved plan for an alternative form of regulation applies, pursuant to 345 section 16-247k. 346 (i) No public service company may file an application to amend its 347 rates pursuant to this section or section 16-19e if, at the time of the 348 company's filing, another public service company with the same parent 349 company has an application to amend its rates pending before the 350 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 12 of 25 authority. The authority may waive this provision upon a showing of 351 good cause or at the authority's discretion. 352 Sec. 10. Subsection (a) of section 16-19a of the general statutes is 353 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from 354 passage): 355 (a) (1) The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority shall, at intervals of 356 not more than four years from the last previous general rate hearing of 357 each gas [and] company, electric distribution company or water 358 company having more than seventy-five thousand customers, conduct 359 a complete review and investigation of the financial and operating 360 records of each such company and hold a public hearing to determine 361 whether the rates of each such company are unreas onably 362 discriminatory or more or less than just, reasonable and adequate, or 363 that the service furnished by such company is inadequate to or in excess 364 of public necessity and convenience or that the rates do not conform to 365 the principles and guidelines set forth in section 16-19e. In making such 366 determination, the authority shall consider the gross and net earnings 367 of such company since its last previous general rate hearing, its retained 368 earnings, its actual and proposed capital expenditures, its advertising 369 expenses, the dividends paid to its stockholders, the rate of return paid 370 on its preferred stock, bonds, debentures and other obligations, its credit 371 rating, and such other financial and operating information as the 372 authority may deem pertinent. 373 (2) The authority may conduct a general rate hearing in accordance 374 with subsection (a) of section 16-19, in lieu of the periodic review and 375 investigation proceedings required under subdivision (1) of this 376 subsection. The authority may convene such general rate hearing at an 377 interval of less than four years at the discretion of the authority. 378 Sec. 11. Subdivision (4) of subsection (b) of section 16-8 of the general 379 statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof 380 (Effective from passage): 381 (4) A complete audit of each portion of each gas company, [or] electric 382 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 13 of 25 distribution company or water company having more than seventy-five 383 thousand customers shall begin no less frequently than every six years, 384 so that a complete audit of such a company's operations shall be 385 performed every six years. Such an audit of each such company having 386 more than seventy-five thousand customers shall be updated as 387 required by the authority. 388 Sec. 12. Subdivision (6) of subsection (b) of section 16-8 of the general 389 statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof 390 (Effective from passage): 391 (6) [All reasonable and proper] No costs and expenses [, as 392 determined by the authority,] of complying with any order of the 393 authority pursuant to this subsection shall be recognized by the 394 authority [for all purposes] as proper business expenses of the affected 395 company or person. 396 Sec. 13. Section 16-19bb of the general statutes is repealed and the 397 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 398 The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority shall require that any funds 399 held by an electric distribution company in excess of the company's 400 authorized return on equity, which funds are intended by the authority 401 to offset future rate increases in lieu of a present rate decrease, shall be 402 applied to such rate increases or shall be refunded to the company's 403 customers, [within one year of receipt] in a manner determined by the 404 authority, not later than the conclusion of the company's next 405 proceeding conducted pursuant to section 16-19a. 406 Sec. 14. Section 16-35 of the general statutes is amended by adding 407 subsection (d) as follows (Effective from passage): 408 (NEW) (d) In an appeal, the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority 409 may only stay enforcement of a civil penalty if the person appealing the 410 order, authorization or decision that imposed the penalty provides an 411 escrow deposit, bond or other surety equal to the total amount of the 412 penalty. To obtain a stay of enforcement of any other order, 413 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 14 of 25 authorization or decision of the authority, the person appealing such 414 order, authorization or decision bears the burden of demonstrating that: 415 (1) There is a strong likelihood that the appeal will succeed; (2) the 416 person appealing will suffer substantial and irreparable harm absent a 417 stay; and (3) the stay will not be harmful to the public interest. 418 Sec. 15. Section 16-16 of the general statutes is repealed and the 419 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 420 (a) Each public service company, person involved in the 421 transportation of gas, as such terms are defined in section 16-280a, and 422 electric supplier subject to regulation by the Public Utilities Regulatory 423 Authority shall, in the event of any accident attended with personal 424 injury or involving public safety, which was or may have been 425 connected with or due to the operation of its property, or caused by 426 contact with the wires of any public service company or electric 427 supplier, notify the authority thereof, by contacting the chairperson of 428 the authority or the chairperson's designee by telephone or otherwise, 429 as soon as may be reasonably possible after the occurrence of such 430 accident, but not later than twelve hours after the occurrence, unless 431 such accident is a minor accident. [, as defined by regulations of the 432 authority.] Each such person, company or electric supplier shall report 433 such minor accidents to the authority in writing, in summary form, once 434 each month. If notice of such accident, other than a minor accident, is 435 given otherwise than in writing, it shall be confirmed in writing within 436 five days after the occurrence of such accident. [Any person, company 437 or electric supplier failing to comply with the provisions of this section 438 shall be fined not more than five hundred dollars for each offense.] 439 (b) The monthly report required pursuant to subsection (a) of this 440 section shall incorporate the information described in section 16-19ee. 441 (c) Any person, company or electric supplier failing to comply with 442 the provisions of this section shall be fined not more than one thousand 443 dollars for each offense. A violation of this section shall constitute a 444 continued violation, pursuant to section 16-41, for the period from the 445 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 15 of 25 date the person, company or electric supplier is required to notify the 446 authority of the accident until the date the authority receives such 447 notification in writing. 448 (d) Any restitution ordered by the authority pursuant to section 16-449 41 for customer equipment or customer property damaged in a major or 450 minor accident shall equal the replacement value of such equipment or 451 property. The fines imposed in accordance with subsection (c) of this 452 section shall not reduce or limit the amount of any restitution. 453 (e) Any costs incurred by an electric distribution company pursuant 454 to this section shall not be recoverable through rates. 455 Sec. 16. Section 16-19ee of the general statutes is repealed and the 456 following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): 457 Each electric distribution company shall, in its [periodic] monthly 458 report to the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority [,] required pursuant 459 to section 16-16, provide information concerning the primary cause of 460 all planned and unplanned electrical outages [,] affecting fifty or more 461 customers in the preceding month that is the subject of such report and 462 shall indicate which outages resulted from a power surge. 463 Sec. 17. Subsection (b) of section 16-49 of the general statutes is 464 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 465 2023): 466 (b) On or before July 15, 1999, and on or before May first, annually 467 thereafter, each company shall report its intrastate gross revenues of the 468 preceding calendar year to the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, 469 which amount shall be subject to audit by the authority. For each fiscal 470 year, each company shall pay the authority the company's share of all 471 expenses of the department's Bureau of Energy and Technology, the 472 Office of Consumer Counsel, the Office of Policy and Management's 473 expenses related to the duties under sections 16-330b and 16-330c and 474 the operations of the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority for such fiscal 475 year. The authority shall not recognize such assessments as normal 476 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 16 of 25 operating costs of each company and the assessments shall not be 477 recoverable through rates. On or before September first, annually, the 478 authority shall give to each company a statement which shall include: 479 (1) The amount appropriated to the department's Bureau of Energy and 480 Technology, the Office of Consumer Counsel, the Office of Policy and 481 Management's expenses related to the duties under sections 16-330b and 482 16-330c, [and] the operations of the Public Utilities Regulatory 483 Authority and the operations of any nonprofit agency engaged in 484 energy assistance programs for the fiscal year beginning July first of the 485 same year; (2) the total gross revenues of all companies; and (3) the 486 proposed assessment against the company for the fiscal year beginning 487 on July first of the same year, adjusted to reflect the estimated payment 488 required under subdivision (1) of subsection (c) of this section. Such 489 proposed assessment shall be calculated by multiplying the company's 490 percentage share of the total gross revenues as specified in subdivision 491 (2) of this subsection by the total revenue appropriated to the 492 department's Bureau of Energy and Technology, the Office of Consumer 493 Counsel, the Office of Policy and Management's expenses related to the 494 duties under sections 16-330b and 16-330c, [and] the operations of the 495 Public [Utility] Utilities Regulatory Authority and the operations of any 496 nonprofit agency engaged in energy assistance programs, as specified 497 in subdivision (1) of this subsection. 498 Sec. 18. Subsection (d) of section 16-49 of the general statutes is 499 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 500 2023): 501 (d) Immediately following the close of each fiscal year, the authority 502 shall recalculate the proposed assessment of each company, based on 503 the expenses, as determined by the Comptroller, of the department's 504 Bureau of Energy and Technology, the Office of Consumer Counsel, the 505 Office of Policy and Management's expenses related to the duties under 506 sections 16-330b and 16-330c, [and] the operations of the Public Utilities 507 Regulatory Authority and the operations of any nonprofit agency 508 engaged in energy assistance programs for such fiscal year. On or before 509 September first, annually, the authority shall give to each company a 510 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 17 of 25 statement showing the difference between its recalculated assessment 511 and the amount previously paid by the company. 512 Sec. 19. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) As used in this section: 513 (1) "Compensation" means payment by any public service company 514 that is a party to a proceeding before the Public Utilities Regulatory 515 Authority for all or part, as determined by the authority, of a 516 stakeholder group's reasonable attorneys' fees, reasonable expert 517 witness fees and other reasonable costs for preparation and 518 participation in such proceeding before the authority. Such 519 compensation shall be limited to not more than two hundred thousand 520 dollars for each stakeholder group, and not more than six hundred 521 thousand dollars for all stakeholder groups in each proceeding. 522 (2) "Stakeholder group" means (A) a group of persons designated an 523 intervenor pursuant to section 4-177a of the general statutes or 524 designated a participant pursuant to section 16-1-135 of the regulations 525 of Connecticut state agencies that applies jointly for an award of 526 compensation under this section and represents the interests of more 527 than one (i) residential utility customer residing in an environmental 528 justice community, as defined in section 22a-20a of the general statutes, 529 or (ii) small business customer; or (B) a nonprofit organization in the 530 state authorized to represent the interests of (i) residential utility 531 customers residing in an environmental justice community, as defined 532 in section 22a-20a of the general statutes, or (ii) small business 533 customers. "Stakeholder group" does not include any nonprofit or other 534 organization whose principal interests are the welfare of a public service 535 company or its investors or employees, or the welfare of one or more 536 businesses or industries which receive utility service primarily for use 537 in connection with the manufacture, sale or distribution of goods or 538 services for profit. 539 (3) "Other reasonable costs" means reasonable out-of-pocket expenses 540 incurred by the stakeholder group that are directly related to the group's 541 preparation for or participation in the proceeding before the authority 542 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 18 of 25 that resulted in a substantial contribution. 543 (4) "Proceeding" means a contested case, investigation, rulemaking or 544 other formal proceeding before the authority, or alternative dispute 545 resolution ordered by the authority. 546 (5) "Significant financial hardship" means that a stakeholder group is 547 unable to afford to pay the costs of effectively participating in the 548 proceeding, including attorneys' fees, expert witness fees and other 549 reasonable costs, without undue hardship. 550 (6) "Small business customer" means a commercial or industrial 551 electric customer with less than a two hundred kilowatt peak load. 552 (7) "Substantial contribution" means participation by a stakeholder 553 group in a proceeding that, in the judgment of the chairman of the 554 authority, may substantially assist the authority in making its decision 555 or part of its decision because the authority may adopt one or more 556 factual contentions, legal contentions or policy or procedural 557 recommendations that the stakeholder group presents. 558 (b) A stakeholder group who seeks designation as an intervenor 559 pursuant to section 4-177a of the general statutes or a participant 560 pursuant to section 16-1-135 of the regulations of Connecticut state 561 agencies may apply for an award of compensation under this section in 562 a proceeding. At the same time or before filing its application, the 563 stakeholder group shall serve on every party, intervenor or participant 564 to the proceeding notice of intent to apply for an award of 565 compensation. The authority shall determine appropriate procedures 566 for accepting and responding to such applications, and may require that 567 applicants attend educational trainings sponsored or recommended by 568 the authority as a condition of receiving an award of compensation. Any 569 such trainings shall be designed to support public participation and 570 public understanding of authority decisions and rulings, and general 571 education and awareness regarding public service company regulation 572 and operations, and shall include resources for the public that explain 573 the role and function of the authority and the Office of Consumer 574 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 19 of 25 Counsel. In its performance of duties pursuant to this subsection, the 575 authority may retain consultants to provide training in areas in which 576 staff expertise does not currently exist or when necessary to supplement 577 existing staff expertise, and may incur other reasonable costs, provided 578 the total costs incurred by the authority under this subsection do not 579 exceed one million dollars per year. 580 (c) An application shall include: 581 (1) A statement of the nature and extent and the factual and legal 582 basis of the stakeholder's planned participation, to the extent it is 583 possible to describe such participation with reasonable specificity at the 584 time the application is filed. 585 (2) A detailed description of anticipated attorneys' and expert witness 586 fees and other costs of preparation for and participation in the 587 proceeding. 588 (3) If participation will impose a significant financial hardship and 589 the stakeholder group seeks advance payment of an award of 590 compensation in order to initiate, continue or complete participation in 591 the proceeding, the stakeholder group shall include evidence of 592 significant financial hardship in its application. 593 (4) Any other requirements, as determined by the authority. 594 (d) (1) Not later than thirty days after receiving a stakeholder group's 595 application, the authority shall decide if the stakeholder group's 596 participation constitutes a substantial contribution. If the authority finds 597 that such participation is a substantial contribution, the authority shall 598 describe this substantial contribution and determine the amount of 599 compensation pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection. 600 (2) Notwithstanding subsection (e) of this section, if the authority 601 finds that the stakeholder group has significant financial hardship, the 602 authority may direct the public service company or companies subject 603 to the proceeding to pay all or part of the expected compensation, as 604 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 20 of 25 determined by the authority, to the stakeholder group before the end of 605 the proceeding. If the stakeholder group discontinues its participation 606 in the proceeding without the consent of the authority, the authority 607 may recover all or part of any payments made to such stakeholder and 608 refund such payments to the public service company or companies that 609 made the payments. 610 (3) The calculation of compensation pursuant to subdivision (2) of 611 this subsection shall take into consideration the compensation paid to 612 attorneys, expert witnesses and other persons of comparable training 613 and experience who offer similar services as the services relevant to the 614 stakeholder group's application and compensation. 615 (4) Each stakeholder group shall return any unused compensation to 616 the authority, which the authority shall refund to the public service 617 company or companies that provided the compensation. 618 (5) The authority shall require that every stakeholder group maintain 619 an itemized record of all expenditures incurred as a result of the 620 proceeding. The authority may use the record to verify the stakeholder 621 group's claim of financial hardship and to determine if any unused 622 funds remain at the completion of a proceeding. 623 (6) If the authority determines that two or more stakeholder groups 624 have substantially similar interests, the authority may require such 625 stakeholder groups to apply jointly in order to receive compensation. 626 (e) Any compensation shall be paid at the conclusion of the 627 proceeding by the public service company, in a manner determined by 628 the authority. Compensation shall be paid by all relevant public service 629 companies in proportion to such companies' relative annual load, 630 number of customers or revenue, as determined by the authority. 631 (f) The authority shall not award compensation to any stakeholder 632 group that delays or obstructs, or attempts to delay or obstruct, the 633 orderly and timely fulfillment of the authority's duties under this title. 634 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 21 of 25 Sec. 20. (NEW) (Effective from passage) The Public Utilities Regulatory 635 Authority shall study the procurement processes, policies, procedures 636 and timelines associated with the procurement of standard service and 637 supplier of last resort service and shall submit a report on its findings 638 and recommendations to the joint standing committee of the General 639 Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to energy, in 640 accordance with the provisions of section 11-4a of the general statutes. 641 Sec. 21. Subsection (a) of section 16-32l of the general statutes is 642 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 643 1, 2023): 644 (a) For the purposes of this section: [, "emergency" has the same 645 meaning as provided in subdivision (1) of subsection (a) of section 16-646 32e and "electric distribution company"] 647 (1) "Emergency" means any hurricane, tornado, storm, flood, high 648 water, wind-driven water, tidal wave, earthquake, landslide, mudslide, 649 snowstorm, drought or fire explosion that results in sixty-nine per cent 650 or less of the electric distribution company's customers experiencing an 651 outage at the period of peak electrical demand; 652 (2) "Electric distribution company" has the same meaning as 653 provided in section 16-1; and 654 (3) "After the occurrence of an emergency" means the conclusion of 655 the emergency, as determined by the authority in its sole discretion, 656 through a review of the following: (A) The time when the electric 657 distribution company could first deploy resources safely in its service 658 territory; (B) the first of any official declarations concerning the end of 659 the emergency; or (C) the expiration of the first of any National Weather 660 Service warning applicable to the service territory. 661 Sec. 22. Subsection (d) of section 16-32l of the general statutes is 662 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 663 1, 2023): 664 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 22 of 25 (d) Not later than fourteen calendar days after the occurrence of an 665 emergency, an electric distribution company may petition the authority 666 for a waiver of the requirements of this section, provided the authority 667 shall not grant a waiver for any emergency that results in less than ten 668 per cent of the electric distribution company's customers experiencing 669 an outage at the period of peak electrical demand. Any petition for a 670 waiver made under this subsection shall include the severity of the 671 emergency, [employee] line and restoration crew safety issues and 672 conditions on the ground, and shall be conducted as a contested case 673 proceeding. The burden of proving that such waiver is reasonable and 674 warranted shall be on the electric distribution company. In determining 675 whether to grant such waiver, the authority shall consider whether the 676 electric distribution company received approval and reasonable 677 funding allowances, as determined by the authority, to meet 678 infrastructure resiliency efforts to improve such company's 679 performance. 680 Sec. 23. Subsection (a) of section 16-32m of the general statutes is 681 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 682 1, 2023): 683 (a) For the purposes of this section: [, "emergency" has the same 684 meaning as provided in subdivision (1) of subsection (a) of section 16-685 32e and "electric distribution company"] 686 (1) "Emergency" means any hurricane, tornado, storm, flood, high 687 water, wind-driven water, tidal wave, earthquake, landslide, mudslide, 688 snowstorm, drought or fire explosion that results in sixty-nine per cent 689 or less of the electric distribution company's customers experiencing an 690 outage at the period of peak electrical demand; 691 (2) "Electric distribution company" has the same meaning as 692 provided in section 16-1; and 693 (3) "After the occurrence of an emergency" means the conclusion of 694 the emergency, as determined by the authority in its sole discretion, 695 through a review of the following: (A) The time when the electric 696 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 23 of 25 distribution company could first deploy resources safely in its service 697 territory; (B) the first of any official declarations concerning the end of 698 the emergency; or (C) the expiration of the first of any National Weather 699 Service warning applicable to the service territory. 700 Sec. 24. Subsection (d) of section 16-32m of the general statutes is 701 repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 702 1, 2023): 703 (d) Not later than fourteen calendar days after the occurrence of an 704 emergency, an electric distribution company may petition the authority 705 for a waiver of the requirements of this section, provided the authority 706 shall not grant a waiver for any emergency that results in less than ten 707 per cent of the electric distribution company's customers experiencing 708 an outage at the period of peak electrical demand. Any petition for a 709 waiver made under this subsection shall include the severity of the 710 emergency, [employee] line and restoration crew safety issues and 711 conditions on the ground, and shall be conducted as a contested case 712 proceeding. The burden of proving that such waiver is reasonable and 713 warranted shall be on the electric distribution company. In determining 714 whether to grant such waiver, the authority shall consider whether the 715 electric distribution company received approval and reasonable 716 funding allowances, as determined by the authority, to meet 717 infrastructure resiliency efforts to improve such company's 718 performance. 719 Sec. 25. (Effective July 1, 2023) The sum of five million dollars is 720 appropriated to the Department of Energy and Environmental 721 Protection from the Consumer Counsel and Public Utility Control Fund, 722 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, for the Public Utilities 723 Regulatory Authority to expand its regulatory operations over each 724 electric distribution company, gas company and water company, and to 725 hire or recruit any staff necessary for such expanded operations. 726 Sec. 26. (Effective July 1, 2023) The sum of two million dollars is 727 appropriated to the Department of Energy and Environmental 728 Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 24 of 25 Protection from the Consumer Counsel and Public Utility Control Fund, 729 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, for the Public Utilities 730 Regulatory Authority to investigate the preparation for and response to 731 storms or other emergency events by public service companies, and to 732 hire or recruit any staff necessary for such investigation. 733 This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following sections: Section 1 October 1, 2023 16-19tt(b) Sec. 2 from passage 16-243p(b) Sec. 3 from passage New section Sec. 4 from passage 16-19jj Sec. 5 from passage 16-19b(c) Sec. 6 from passage 16-19yy Sec. 7 from passage New section Sec. 8 from passage 16-19gg(b) Sec. 9 from passage 16-19 Sec. 10 from passage 16-19a(a) Sec. 11 from passage 16-8(b)(4) Sec. 12 from passage 16-8(b)(6) Sec. 13 from passage 16-19bb Sec. 14 from passage 16-35(d) Sec. 15 from passage 16-16 Sec. 16 from passage 16-19ee Sec. 17 July 1, 2023 16-49(b) Sec. 18 July 1, 2023 16-49(d) Sec. 19 from passage New section Sec. 20 from passage New section Sec. 21 October 1, 2023 16-32l(a) Sec. 22 October 1, 2023 16-32l(d) Sec. 23 October 1, 2023 16-32m(a) Sec. 24 October 1, 2023 16-32m(d) Sec. 25 July 1, 2023 New section Sec. 26 July 1, 2023 New section Statement of Purpose: To (1) require the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority to study standard service procurement, (2) prohibit recovery by public utilities of certain costs in rates, (3) amend ratemaking procedures and rate case Raised Bill No. 966 LCO No. 3766 25 of 25 regulations, including by placing limits on the use of settlements and requiring utilities to fund certain stakeholder groups' participation in rate cases, (4) regulate the compensation of executives and officers at public utility companies or parent companies, (5) change accident reporting rules, (6) change the rules applicable to utility outages, and (7) appropriate additional funding for the Authority. [Proposed deletions are enclosed in brackets. Proposed additions are indicated by underline, except that when the entire text of a bill or resolution or a section of a bill or resolution is new, it is not underlined.]