LEGISLATIVE SERVICES AGENCY OFFICE OF FISCAL AND MANAGEMENT ANALYSIS 200 W. Washington St., Suite 301 Indianapolis, IN 46204 (317) 233-0696 iga.in.gov FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT LS 6951 NOTE PREPARED: Jan 29, 2024 BILL NUMBER: SB 247 BILL AMENDED: Jan 29, 2024 SUBJECT: Water and Wastewater Utility Infrastructure. FIRST AUTHOR: Sen. Koch BILL STATUS: 2 nd Reading - 1 st House FIRST SPONSOR: FUNDS AFFECTED: GENERAL IMPACT: State & Local XDEDICATED FEDERAL Summary of Legislation: (Amended) The bill amends the statute concerning the acquisition of a water or wastewater utility to provide that if: (1) the appraised value of the utility property to be acquired does not exceed $3 M; and (2) the purchase price for the utility property is less than the appraised value; the utility company seeking to acquire the utility property of an offered utility: the acquiring utility company may submit to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Agency (IURC) a filing to include in the acquiring utility company's rate base specified costs associated with the acquisition. The bill sets forth certain information that must be included in an acquiring utility company's 30 day administrative filing. It provides that if the IURC approves an acquiring utility company's filing, the IURC: (1) may only authorize that: (A) the full purchase price; and (B) estimated: (i) incidental expenses; and (ii) other costs of acquisition; be recorded as the acquiring utility company's net original cost of acquisition; and (2) shall provide that any estimated: (i) incidental expenses; and (ii) other costs of the acquisition; are subject to a reasonableness review as part of the acquiring utility company's next base rate case. The bill also adds language specifying that the Indiana Code chapter that governs the transfer, acquisition, and improvement of utilities by municipalities applies to a municipally owned natural gas utility (in addition to a municipally owned electric, water, wastewater, or combined water and wastewater utility). Effective Date: July 1, 2024. SB 247 1 Explanation of State Expenditures: (Revised) The bill provides exemptions to sale filing requirements for sale of a distressed water or wastewater utility. Instead, if the sale of a distressed utility meets the requirements in the bill, a purchasing utility would file a 30-day administrative filing with the IURC concerning the sale. This change could decrease IURC workload to review distressed water and wastewater utility sale filings and instead review administrative filings, if the filings are not contested. To the extent these filings are contested and would require a hearing, there would be no workload savings to the IURC. Additional Information - Since CY 2015, the IURC received a total of 29 requests for mergers and acquisitions of water and wastewater treatment facilities. Explanation of State Revenues: Explanation of Local Expenditures: The bill would increase municipality workload to comply with the requirements in statute if a municipality intends to transfer, acquire, or improve a natural gas utility the entity owns. Additional Information - Currently, the statutory requirements for the transfer, acquisition, and improvement of a municipally-owned utility do not apply to Indianapolis and natural gas utilities owned by municipalities. The requirements currently apply to all electric, water, wastewater, or combined water and wastewater utilities owned by municipalities, except those owned by Indianapolis. The bill would expand these requirements to include natural gas utilities owned by municipalities. There are currently 19 municipally-owned natural gas utilities in the state, of which only one is currently under IURC authority. Explanation of Local Revenues: State Agencies Affected: IURC. Local Agencies Affected: Municipally-owned natural gas utilities. Information Sources: Luke Wilson, IURC; https://www.in.gov/oucc/watersewer/tips-and-publications/municipal-utilities-a-brief-regulatory-overvie w/ Fiscal Analyst: Bill Brumbach, 317-232-9559. SB 247 2