Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05507 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/15/2024

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 5507  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING STATE AGENCY AND COURT 
PROCEEDINGS RELATING TO ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION LINES.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes changes to laws affecting the Siting Council and its 
process for granting a certificate of environmental compatibility and 
public need (a “certificate”). Among other things, it: 
1. makes certain transmission lines “affecting facilities” under the 
state’s environmental justice law, thus subjecting them to the 
law’s requirements (§ 1); 
2. increases, from $25,000 to $75,000, the municipal participation fee 
certain certificate applicants must pay when filing their 
applications (§ 3); 
3. increases, from $25,000 to $75,000, the maximum amount a 
municipality may receive from the municipal participation 
account to defray expenses related to certificate proceedings (§ 
2); 
4. adds to the information applicants for transmission lines must 
provide with their certificate application to include certain 
information on property appraisals, electric load, and system 
performance (§ 3); 
5. expands municipal consultation requirements for certificate 
applicants (§ 3); 
6. requires the council to consider certain neighborhood concerns 
before granting a certificate for a transmission line project (§ 4); 
7. allows (a) intervenors in council proceedings to appeal a decision  2024HB-05507-R000493-BA.DOCX 
 
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to Superior Court and (b) the court to award a municipality 
reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs if it prevails in its appeal (§ 
5); 
8. requires the council to consult with and solicit comments from 
the Office of Consumer Council (OCC) before starting a hearing 
for a certificate application (§ 6); and 
9. requires the council to request a municipality’s location 
preferences or siting criteria for transmission line projects and 
requires municipalities to provide this information within 30 
days after the request (§ 7). 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 
SITING IN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE COMMUNIT IES 
The bill makes transmission lines of at least 69 kilovolts in capacity 
“affecting facilities” under the state’s environmental justice law, which 
generally requires applicants seeking to construct, expand, or site 
certain facilities in environmental justice communities to engage in a 
public participation process (see BACKGROUND) . Existing law, 
unchanged by the bill, exempts from these requirements any facility that 
received a Siting Council certificate on or before January 1, 2000.  
MUNICIPAL PARTICIPATION ACCOUNT PAYMENTS 
By law, certain facilities must pay a municipal participation fee when 
filing their application for a certificate from the council. This 
requirement applies to applications for electric transmission lines, fuel 
transmission facilities, electric generation or storage facilities, and 
certain electric substations or switchyards. The bill increases this fee 
from $25,000 to $75,000.  
Under existing law, these fees are deposited into the General Fund’s 
municipal participation account. Municipalities may apply for 
reimbursement from the account to defray expenses incurred from 
participating as a party to a certificate proceeding. The bill increases the 
maximum amount a municipality may receive from the account from 
$25,000 to $75,000. Existing law prohibits municipalities from receiving  2024HB-05507-R000493-BA.DOCX 
 
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any more from the account than the funds they spent. 
TRANSMISSION LINE APPLICATION REQUIREMEN TS 
Land Acquisitions and Easements 
By law, a certificate application for a transmission line project must 
include, among other things, a schedule showing the proposed program 
of right-of-way or property acquisition, construction, completion, and 
operation. The bill additionally requires the application to include any 
appraisal on fair compensation provided to a real property owner in 
connection with entering a right-of-way, including easements or land 
acquisition, completed by an independent appraiser on the applicant’s 
behalf. It requires applicants to use due diligence to seek permission to 
gain access to any property the applicant does not own, lease, or 
otherwise have access to, as shown by the following materials submitted 
with the application: 
1. certified mail, return receipt requested letters, sent to the 
property owners of record and  
2. an affidavit stating that the applicant was not given access to the 
property and, without permission to access the property, the 
applicant made visual inspections to document existing 
conditions from public rights-of-way, existing utility rights-of-
way, or other nearby accessible properties.  
Electric Load and System Performance 
The bill requires certificate applications for transmission line projects 
to include the following information: 
1. actual loads for existing transmission lines in the project’s 
proposed location for the previous 10 years; 
2. the proposed transmission line’s projected load for the 10-year 
period after the application date; 
3. performance of the electric circuits at issue over the previous 10 
years, including service outages or disruptions, their causes, and 
the length of time to restore service; and  2024HB-05507-R000493-BA.DOCX 
 
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4. planning studies conducted by ISO-New England or the 
applicant about the proposed project. 
By law, companies generating, transmitting, or distributing 
electricity must annually report a 10-year load and resources forecast to 
the council (CGS § 16-50r). The bill requires certificate applications for 
transmission projects to also include this report.  
MUNICIPAL CONSULTATI ON REQUIREMENTS 
Under current law, applicants must c onsult with certain 
municipalities 60 days before filing an application with the council and, 
at the consultation, give the municipality’s chief elected official any 
technical reports on the proposed facility’s public need, site selection 
process, or environmental effects.  
The bill pushes this consultation back to 90 days before filing an 
application and also requires the applicant to consult the municipality’s 
legislative body and each state legislator whose district includes a 
proposed or alternative facility location. This consultation must include 
good faith efforts to meet with these officials. The bill allows the chief 
elected official to designate someone for the consult.  
In addition to the technical reports mentioned above, the bill requires 
applicants to provide a public engagement plan at the consultation that 
includes the project’s (1) effects on community services and 
infrastructure and (2) impact on proposed development and the 
municipal tax base. For transmission line project applications, the bill 
requires the applicant to also provide a report summarizing the status 
of any negotiation with real property owners on total compensation 
amounts to be paid to secure any required right-of-way access, 
easements, or land acquisition.  
COUNCIL DETERMINATIONS FOR CERTIFICATE APPROVA L 
Existing law identifies the factors the council must consider and the 
findings it must make before approving a certificate. For all facilities, 
this generally includes a finding that there is a public need for the facility 
and that its environmental impacts are not sufficient reason to deny the  2024HB-05507-R000493-BA.DOCX 
 
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application, among other things. For transmission line projects, this also 
includes finding that the facility conforms to a long-range plan for 
electric power grid expansion and that the project serves the interest of 
electric system economy and reliability. The council must also consider 
which portions of the facility will be located overhead and determine 
that these portions are cost effective and the most appropriate 
alternative. It must find that the line’s location will not pose an undue 
hazard to people or property along the area the line traverses. 
The bill prohibits the council from approving a certificate for a 
transmission line, as proposed by the applicant or modified by the 
council, unless it considers neighborhood concerns with the factors and 
findings described above, including public safety and the proposed 
facility’s anticipated contribution to the municipality’s tax base.  
JUDICIAL REVIEW 
Current law allows parties in council proceedings for certificates or 
certificate amendments to appeal a council decision to Superior Court 
under the Uniform Administrative Procedure Act. The bill (1) extends 
this right to intervenors in council proceedings and (2) allows the court 
to award reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs to a municipality that 
prevails in its appeal. 
Parties to proceedings include the applicant, anyone required to 
receive notice of the proceeding, and certain nonprofit organizations, 
among others. By law, the council may allow other people to participate 
as intervenors if they submit a petition showing that their participation 
is in the interest of justice and will not impair the proceeding’s orderly 
conduct. But it may also limit an intervenor’s participation to specific 
issues and define or restrict an intervenor’s rights to inspect and copy 
records, introduce evidence, or cross examine other parties (CGS §§ 60-
50n(b) & 4-177a). 
OCC CONSULTATION BEF ORE HEARING 
Current law requires the council to (1) schedule a public hearing on 
a certificate application at least 30 days but no more than 150 days after 
it receives the application and (2) consult with and solicit comments  2024HB-05507-R000493-BA.DOCX 
 
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from certain agencies before the hearing (e.g., the Department of Energy 
and Environmental Protection and the Department of Public Health). 
The bill adds the OCC to the list of agencies the council must consult 
and solicit comments from before starting the hearing.  
MUNICIPAL LOCATION P REFERENCES FOR TRANSMISSION 
PROJECTS 
Current law requires the council to request that municipalities 
provide any location preferences or criteria for proposed 
telecommunication tower projects within 30 days after receiving notice 
of the project. The bill extends this requirement to proposed 
transmission lines. It requires municipalities to provide their location 
preferences or criteria within 30 days after the council’s request. The bill 
similarly extends to proposed transmission lines a provision that allows 
the council to consider regional location preferences from neighboring 
municipalities.  
BACKGROUND 
Environmental Justice Law 
By law, an “environmental justice community” is (1) any U.S. census 
block group, as determined by the most recent census, for which at least 
30% of the population consists of low-income people who are not 
institutionalized and have an income below 200% of the federal poverty 
level or (2) a distressed municipality.  
Among other things, the law requires certificate applicants for 
affecting facilities in environmental justice communities to: 
1. file and receive approval for a meaningful public participation 
plan before filing their certificate application; 
2. make a reasonable and good faith effort to give the public clear, 
accurate, and complete information about the affecting facility 
proposal at an informal public meeting; 
3. consult with the chief elected officials of the towns in which the 
proposed facility will be located or expanded to evaluate the 
need for a community environmental benefit agreement; and  2024HB-05507-R000493-BA.DOCX 
 
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4. enter into a community environmental benefit agreement if the 
facility will be in a municipality that already has at least five 
affecting facilities.  
The law allows the Siting Council to deny a certificate application for 
a proposed affecting facility if it finds that approving it would, together 
with other environmental or public health stressors affecting the 
environmental justice community involved, produce adverse 
cumulative stressors that are higher than those experienced by other 
communities in the state, county, or other geographic area, as the 
council determines. Under certain conditions, it also allows the council 
to apply reasonable conditions on a new certificate for an affecting 
facility related to its construction and operation to protect the 
environment and public health (CGS § 22a-20a).  
Related Bills 
sSB 198 (File 184), favorably reported by the Environment 
Committee, adds to the Siting Council an elector from the municipality 
where a proposed facility would be located. 
sHB 5361 (File 365), favorably reported by the Energy and 
Technology Committee, requires, among other things, the Siting 
Council to consider the testimony of the chief elected official of any 
municipality in which a proposed facility would be located. 
HB 5453, favorably reported by the Government Administration and 
Elections Committee, makes various changes to the council’s 
membership, requires applicants for proposed electric transmission 
facilities to include additional information with their applications, and 
expands the issues the council must consider when deciding whether to 
approve an application.  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Judiciary Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 35 Nay 1 (03/26/2024)