Florida 2023 2023 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S1312 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 04/10/2023

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Rules  
 
BILL: SB 1312 
INTRODUCER:  Senators Collins and Rodriguez 
SUBJECT:  Regulatory Assessment Fees 
DATE: April 10, 2023 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Schrader Imhof RI Favorable 
2. Schrader Twogood RC Pre-meeting 
 
I. Summary: 
SB 1312 amends s. 120.80, F.S., to add to the list of rules which may be adopted by the Florida 
Public Service Commission that are not subject to Florida’s statement of estimated regulatory 
costs requirements under s. 120.541, F.S. Specifically, rules regarding the Florida Public Service 
Regulatory Trust Fund
1
 and the regulatory assessment fees charged to utilities in Florida
2
 are 
added to the section. 
II. Present Situation: 
Florida Public Service Commission  
The Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) is an arm of the legislative branch of 
government.
3
 The role of the PSC is to ensure Florida’s consumers receive utility services, 
including electric, natural gas, telephone, water, and wastewater, in a safe, affordable, and 
reliable manner.
4
 In order to do so, the PSC exercises authority over public utilities in one or 
more of the following areas: rate base or economic regulation; competitive market oversight; and 
monitoring of safety, reliability, and service issues.
5
 
 
                                                
1
 Enacted pursuant to s. 350.113, F.S., which is the fund used for the operation of the Public Service Commission. 
2
 Enacted pursuant to ss. 364.336, 366.14, 367.145, and 368.109, F.S. Regulatory assessment fees are fees charged to 
regulated utilities by the Public Service Commission to fund the costs of regulation. 
3
 Section 350.001, F.S. 
4
 See Florida Public Service Commission, Florida Public Service Commission Homepage, http://www.psc.state.fl.us (last 
visited Mar 3, 2023). 
5
 Florida Public Service Commission, About the PSC, https://www.psc.state.fl.us/about (last visited Mar 3, 2023). 
REVISED:   BILL: SB 1312   	Page 2 
 
Electric and Gas Utilities 
The PSC monitors the safety and reliability of the electric power grid
6
 and may order the 
addition or repair of infrastructure as necessary.
7
 The PSC has broad jurisdiction over the rates 
and service of investor-owned electric and gas utilities.
8
 However, the PSC does not fully 
regulate municipal electric utilities (utilities owned or operated on behalf of a municipality) or 
rural electric cooperatives. The PSC does have jurisdiction over these types of utilities with 
regard to rate structure, territorial boundaries, bulk power supply operations, and planning.
9
 
Municipally-owned utility rates and revenues are regulated by their respective local governments 
or local utility boards. Rates and revenues for a cooperative utility are regulated by their 
governing body elected by the cooperative’s membership. 
 
Municipal Electric and Gas Utilities, and Special Gas Districts, in Florida  
A municipal electric or gas utility is an electric or gas utility owned and operated by a 
municipality. Chapter 366, F.S., provides the majority of electric and gas utility regulations for 
Florida. While ch. 366, F.S., does not provide a definition, per se, for a “municipal utility,” 
variations of this terminology and the concept of these types of utilities appear throughout the 
chapter. Currently, Florida has 33 municipal electric utilities that serve over 14 percent of the 
state’s electric utility customers.
10
 Florida also has 27 municipally-owned gas utilities and four 
special gas districts.
11
 
 
Rural Electric Cooperatives in Florida 
At present, Florida has 18 rural electric cooperatives, with 16 of these cooperatives being 
distribution cooperatives and two being generation and transmission cooperatives.
12
 These 
cooperatives operate in 57 of Florida’s 67 counties and have more than 2.7 million customers.
13
 
Florida rural electric cooperatives serve a large percentage of area, but have a low customer 
density. Specifically, Florida cooperatives serve approximately 10 percent of Florida’s total 
electric utility customers, but their service territory covers 60 percent of Florida’s total land 
mass. Each cooperative is governed by a board of cooperative members elected by the 
cooperative’s membership.
14
 
 
                                                
6
 Section 366.04(5) and (6), F.S. 
7
 Section 366.05(1) and (8), F.S. 
8
 Section 366.05, F.S. 
9
 Florida Public Service Commission, About the PSC, supra note 5. 
10
 Florida Municipal Electric Association, About Us, https://www.flpublicpower.com/about-us (last visited Mar. 17, 2023). 
11
 Florida Public Service Commission, 2022 Facts and Figures of the Florida Utility Industry, pg. 13, Apr. 2022 (available 
at: https://www.floridapsc.com/pscfiles/website-
files/PDF/Publications/Reports/General/FactsAndFigures/April%202022.pdf). A “special gas district” is a dependent or 
independent special district, setup pursuant to ch. 189, F.S., to provide natural gas service. Section 189.012(6), F.S., defines a 
“special district” as “a unit of local government created for a special purpose, as opposed to a general purpose, which has 
jurisdiction to operate within a limited geographic boundary and is created by general law, special act, local ordinance, or by 
rule of the Governor and Cabinet.” 
12
 Florida Electric Cooperative Association, Members, https://feca.com/members/ (last visited Mar 17, 2023). 
13
 Florida Electric Cooperative Association, Our History, https://feca.com/our-history/ (last visited Mar 17, 2023). 
14
 Id.  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 3 
 
Public Electric and Gas Utilities in Florida 
There are four investor-owned electric utility companies (electric IOUs) in Florida: Florida 
Power & Light Company (FPL), Duke Energy Florida (Duke), Tampa Electric Company 
(TECO), and Florida Public Utilities Corporation (FPUC).
15
 In addition, there are eight investor-
owned natural gas utility companies (gas IOUs) in Florida: Florida City Gas, Florida Division of 
Chesapeake Utilities, FPUC, FPUC-Fort Meade Division, FPUC-Indiantown Division, Sebring 
Gas System, and St. Joe Natural Gas Company. Of these eight gas IOUs, five engage in the 
merchant function servicing residential, commercial, and industrial customers: Florida City Gas, 
FPUC, FPUC-Fort Meade Division, Peoples Gas System, and St. Joe Natural Gas Company. 
Florida Division of Chesapeake Utilities, FPUC-Indiantown Division, and Sebring Gas System 
are only engaged in firm transportation service.
16
 
 
Electric IOU and Gas IOU rates and revenues are regulated by the PSC and the utilities must file 
periodic earnings reports, which allow the PSC to monitor earnings levels on an ongoing basis 
and adjust customer rates quickly if a company appears to be overearning.
17
 
 
Section 366.041(2), F.S., requires public utilities to provide adequate service to customers. As 
compensation for fulfilling that obligation, s. 366.06, F.S., requires the PSC to allow the IOUs to 
recover honestly and prudently invested costs of providing service, including investments in 
infrastructure and operating expenses used to provide electric service.
18
 
 
Water and Wastewater Utilities 
Florida’s Water and Wastewater System Regulatory Law, ch. 367, F.S., regulates water and 
wastewater systems in the state. Section 367.011, F.S., grants the PSC exclusive jurisdiction over 
each utility with respect to its authority, service, and rates. For the chapter, a “utility” is defined 
as “a water or wastewater utility and, except as provided in s. 367.022, F.S., includes every 
person, lessee, trustee, or receiver owning, operating, managing, or controlling a system, or 
proposing construction of a system, who is providing, or proposes to provide, water or 
wastewater service to the public for compensation.” Section 367.022, F.S., exempts certain types 
of water and wastewater operations from PSC jurisdiction and the provisions of ch. 367, F.S. 
(except as expressly provided). Such exempt operations include: municipal water and wastewater 
systems, public lodging systems that only provide service to their guests, systems with a 100-
person or less capacity, landlords that include service to their tenants without specific 
compensation for such service, and mobile home parks operating both as a mobile home park 
and a mobile home subdivision that provide “service within the park and subdivision to a 
combination of both tenants and lot owners, provided that the service to tenants is without 
specific compensation.”
19
 The PSC also does not regulate utilities that have exempted 
themselves from regulation pursuant to s. 367.171, F.S.  
 
                                                
15
 Florida Public Service Commission, 2022 Facts and Figures of the Florida Utility Industry, supra note 11, at 5. 
16
 Id. Firm transportation service is offered to customers under schedules or contracts which anticipate no interruption under 
almost all operating conditions. See Firm transportation service, 18 CFR s. 284.7. 
17
 PSC, 2022 Annual Report, p. 6, (available at: https://www.floridapsc.com/pscfiles/website-
files/PDF/Publications/Reports/General/AnnualReports/2022.pdf) (last visited: Mar. 16, 2023).  
18
 Id. 
19
 Section 367.022(2), F.S.  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 4 
 
Currently, the PSC has over 149 water, wastewater, and water and wastewater utilities that are 
under its regulatory authority.
20
 
 
Telecommunications Carriers 
Under ch. 364, F.S., telecommunications carriers in Florida are also subject to only limited PSC 
regulation. During the 2011 legislative session, the “Regulatory Reform Act” (act) was passed 
and signed into law by the Governor, effective July 1, 2011.
21
 Under the act, the Legislature 
eliminated most of the PSC’s jurisdiction over telecommunications. However, the PSC still: 
 Maintains the authority to ensure that incumbent local exchange carriers meet their obligation 
to provide unbundled access, interconnection, and resale to competitive local exchange 
companies in a nondiscriminatory manner; 
 Administers the system to provide Telecommunications Relay Services; and  
 Oversees the Federal Lifeline Assistance program for Florida.
22
 
 
Natural Gas Transmission 
Natural gas transmission companies are regulated by the PSC under ch. 368, F.S. The term 
“natural gas transmission company,” as defined in s. 368.103, F.S., “means any person owning 
or operating for compensation facilities located wholly within this state for the transmission or 
delivery for sale of natural gas.” The term does not include “any person that owns or operates 
facilities primarily for the local distribution of natural gas or that is subject to the jurisdiction of 
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission under the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. ss. 717 et seq., 
or any municipalities or any agency thereof, or a special district created by special act to 
distribute natural gas.” Section 364.104, F.S., authorizes the PSC to “fix and regulate rates and 
services of natural gas transmission companies, including, without limitation, rules and 
regulations for:” 
 Determining customers and services classifications; 
 Determining rate applicability; and  
 “Ensuring that the provision (including access to transmission) or abandonment of service by 
a natural gas transmission company is not unreasonably preferential, prejudicial, or unduly 
discriminatory.” 
 
Section 368.105, F.S., provides the procedures for the PSC to set rates and services requirements 
for natural gas transmission companies in Florida. 
 
Under chapter 368, F.S., the PSC is authorized to inspect intrastate natural gas systems to ensure 
compliance with rules and regulations regarding safety standards.
23
 Currently, Florida has 3 
major pipelines: Florida Gas Transmission Company, Gulfstream Natural Gas System, and Sabal 
Trail Interstate Pipeline. The state also has two minor pipelines: Gulf South Pipeline Company 
and Southern Natural Gas.
24
 
                                                
20
 Email from Mark Futrell, Deputy Executive Director—Technical, Florida Public Service Commission, to Senate Regulated 
Industries Staff (Mar 19, 2023)(on file with the Senate Regulated Industries Committee). 
21
 Ch. 2011-36, Laws of Fla. 
22
 Florida Public Service Commission, About the PSC, supra note 5. 
23
 Florida Public Service Commission, 2022 Facts and Figures of the Florida Utility Industry, supra note 11, at 13. 
24
 Id.  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 5 
 
Regulatory Assessment Fees  
The PSC collects Regulatory Assessment Fees (RAFs) from all of the utilities under its 
jurisdiction. RAFs, license fees, other fees, and any other charges collected by the PSC are 
credited to the Florida Public Service Regulatory Trust Fund (PSC Trust Fund).
25
 Florida law 
generally directs the PSC to manage its trust fund in such a manner that each utility industry 
funds its own regulation.
26
 Thus, the RAF rate for each industry is designed to correlate with the 
complexity and cost of regulating that industry. While the PSC’s budget is set annually by the 
Legislature, as approved by the Governor, Florida general revenue funds are not used to support 
the PSC’s regulatory activities. The operations of the PSC are funded from the PSC Trust Fund 
as appropriated in the General Appropriation Act approved by the Legislature. The PSC does not 
receive any funding from the General Revenue Fund.
27
 
 
Water and wastewater utilities can include the cost of RAFs utilizing the “pass-through” 
provisions in s. 367.081(4)(b), F.S. This provision allows utilities to revise their rates 
automatically to account for changes in certain specified expenses (such as RAFs, certain 
governmental fees and permitting costs, and taxes). A utility using this provision must provide 
verified notice to the PSC 45 days prior to the implementation of the increase or decrease. The 
electric and gas utility industries do not have a similar “pass-through” provision. 
 
Rates for RAFs are set by PSC rule, subject to maximum rates established by statute. RAFs are 
charged as a percentage of gross operating revenues derived from intrastate business, subject to 
certain exclusions. Chart 1 below provides the current RAFs for Florida utilities, by industry. 
 
                                                
25
 Section 350.113, F.S. 
26
 Specifically: 
 Section 364.336(2) and (3), F.S., requires the PSC to reduce the RAFs for telecommunications industry after the 
Regulatory Reform Act of 2011 to reflect the PSC’s reduced regulatory oversight of that industry; 
 Section 367.145(3), F.S., requires that RAFs collected pursuant to the water and wastewater RAF collection 
authorization may only be used to cover the cost of regulating water and wastewater systems. Also, fees collected under 
the electricity utility industry, gas utility industry, and telecommunications industry RAF collection authorizations may 
not be used to pay for the cost of water and wastewater regulation; and  
 Section 368.109, F.S., states that the RAFs set by the PSC for the natural gas transmission (i.e. natural gas pipeline) 
industry must, to the extent practicable, be related to the cost of regulating that industry. 
27
 Florida Public Service Commission, Bill Analysis for SB 1312/HB 1593, Mar. 10, 2023 (on file with the Senate Regulated 
Industries Committee).  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 6 
 
Chart 1: Regulatory Assessment Fees by Florida Utility Industry 
Utility Type 	Current RAF Statutory Maximum 
Investor-owned Gas Utilities 0.5%
28
 	0.5%
29
 
Municipal Gas Utilities 0.1919%
30
 	0.25%
31
 
Natural Gas Transmission 0.25%
32
 	0.25%
33
 
Telecommunications 
Companies 
0.16%
34
 	0.25%
35
 
Water and Wastewater 
Utilities 
4.5%
36
 	4.5%
37
 
Investor-owned Electric 
Utilities 
0.072%
38
 	0.125%
39
 
Municipal Electric Utilities 
and Rural Electric 
Cooperatives 
0.015625%
40
 	0.015625%
41
 
 
In its analysis of the bill, the PSC points out that “other agencies are exempted from ratification 
and [statement of estimated regulatory costs procedures (SERC)] because the need for additional 
legislative scrutiny imposed by ratification was met by the standards imposed under the 
substantive statutes being implemented by rule.”
42
 For RAFs, as shown above, each statute 
authorizing the PSC to charge RAFs includes a statutory cap on what the PSC can charge. The 
maximum RAFs that could be charged by the PSC are subject to statutory control of the 
maximum fiscal impact. 
 
Rulemaking Authority and Legislative Ratification 
A rule is an “agency statement of general applicability that implements, interprets, or prescribes 
law or policy.”
43
 Rulemaking authority is delegated by the Legislature in law to an agency, and 
authorizes an agency to adopt, develop, establish, or otherwise create a rule.
44
 An agency may 
not engage in rulemaking unless it has a legislative grant of authority to do so.
45
 The statutory 
                                                
28
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-7.0131, (2013). 
29
 Section 366.14, F.S. 
30
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-7.0131, (2013). 
31
 Section 366.14, F.S. 
32
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-7.101, (2013). 
33
 Section 368.109, F.S. 
34
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-4.0161, (2011). 
35
 Section 364.336, F.S. 
36
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-30.120, (2013). 
37
 Section 367.145, F.S. 
38
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-6.0131, (2013). 
39
 Section 366.14, F.S. 
40
 Fla. Admin. Code R. 25-6.0131, (2013). 
41
 Section 366.14, F.S. 
42
 Florida Public Service Commission, Bill Analysis for SB 1312/HB 1593, supra note 27. 
43
 Section 120.52(16), F.S. 
44
 Section 120.52(17), F.S. 
45
 See ss. 120.52(8) and 120.536, F.S.  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 7 
 
authority for rulemaking must be specific enough to guide an agency’s rulemaking and an 
agency rule must not exceed the bounds of authority granted by the Legislature.
46
 
 
Prior to the adoption, amendment, or repeal of any rule, an agency must file a notice of the 
proposed rule in the Florida Administrative Register.
47
 The notice of the proposed rule must 
include:  
 An explanation of the purpose and effect; 
 The specific legal authority for the rule;  
 The full text of the rule; and 
 A summary of the agency’s SERC, if one is prepared.
48
 
 
Within 21 days of the notice, the public may provide an agency with information regarding the 
SERC or provide proposals for a lower cost alternative to the rule.
49
  
 
SERC Requirements 
Pursuant to s. 120.541, F.S., agencies must prepare the SERC for a rule that has an adverse 
impact on small businesses or that increases regulatory costs more than $200,000 within one year 
after implementation of the rule.
50
 
 
A SERC must include estimates of the following: 
 The number of people and entities affected by the proposed rule;  
 The cost to the agency and other governmental entities to implement the proposed rule;  
 Transactional costs likely to be incurred for compliance; and 
 An analysis of the proposed rule’s impact on small businesses, counties, and cities.
51
  
 
The SERC must also include an economic analysis on the likelihood that the proposed rule will 
have an adverse impact in excess of $1 million within the first five years of implementation on:  
 Economic growth, private-sector job creation or employment, or private-sector investment;  
 Business competitiveness,
52
 productivity, or innovation; or 
 Regulatory costs, including any transactional costs.
53
 
 
                                                
46
 See Sloban v. Florida Board of Pharmacy, 982 So.2d 26 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008) and Southwest Florida Water Management 
District v. Save the Manatee Club, Inc., 773 So.2d 594 (Fla 1st DCA 2000). 
47
 See ss. 120.54(2)(a) and 120.55(1)(b), F.S. 
48
 Section 120.54(3)(a)1., F.S. 
49
 See ss. 120.54(3)(a)1., and 120.541(1)(a), F.S. 
50
 Section 120.541(1)(a), F.S. 
51
 Section 120.541(2)(b)-(e), F.S. A small city has an unincarcerated population of 10,000 or less. A small county has an 
unincarcerated population of 75,000 or less. A small business employs less than 200 people, and has a net worth of $5 million 
or less.  
52
 Business competitiveness includes the ability of those doing business in Florida to compete with those doing business in 
other states or domestic markets. 
53
 Section 120.541(2)(a), F.S.  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 8 
 
If the economic analysis results in an adverse impact or regulatory costs in excess of $1 million 
within 5 years after implementation of the rule, then the Legislature must ratify the rule in order 
for it to take effect.
54
 
 
Current Public Service Commission Exemptions to SERC 
Currently, the PSC has exemptions to SERC requirements, as provided under s. 120.541, F.S., 
for the following rulemaking delegations: 
 Pole attachment provisions under s. 366.04(8), F.S.  
 Safety, vegetation management, repair, replacement, maintenance, relocation, emergency 
response, and storm restoration requirements for poles of communication services providers 
under s. 366.04(9), F.S. 
 Redundancy and transfer of ownership provisions regarding poles under s. 366.97, F.S.  
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
Section 1 of the bill amends s. 120.80, F.S., to add ss. 350.113, 364.336, 366.14, 367.145, and 
368.109, F.S., to the rules which may be adopted by the PSC that are not subject to Florida’s 
SERC requirements under s. 120.541, F.S. Section 350.113, F.S., creates and provides the 
requirements for the Florida Public Service Regulatory Trust Fund. Sections 364.336, 366.14, 
367.145, and 368.109, F.S., contain the RAF provisions for the telecommunications, electric and 
gas, water and wastewater, and natural gas transmission industries, respectively. 
 
Section 2 of the bill provides that it shall become effective upon becoming a law. 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
None. 
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
None. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None. 
                                                
54
 Section 120.541(3), F.S. Legislative ratification is not required for adoption of federal standards, amendments to the Florida 
Building Code, or amendments to the Florida Fire Prevention Code. See s. 120.541(4), F.S.  BILL: SB 1312   	Page 9 
 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
While the bill does not substantially financially impact the private sector, it does reduce 
the process requirements for the PSC to amend RAFs. If the PSC was to amend the RAF 
rates paid by utilities, such amended costs would likely impact utility rates. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
None. 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
None. 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends section 12.80 of the Florida Statutes. 
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
None. 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.