Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HB550 House Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                    83R20784 JJT-D
 By: Turner of Harris, Reynolds H.B. No. 550
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 550:
 By:  Cook C.S.H.B. No. 550


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to financing programs for low-income electric customers
 and certain other electric customers; lowering the amount of a fee;
 imposing a fee.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 17.007, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 17.007.  ELIGIBILITY PROCESS FOR CUSTOMER SERVICE
 DISCOUNTS. The commission by rule shall provide for an integrated
 eligibility process for customer service discounts, including
 discounts under Sections 39.9035 [39.903] and 55.015.
 SECTION 2.  Section 39.002, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 39.002.  APPLICABILITY.  This chapter, other than
 Sections 39.155, 39.157(e), 39.203, 39.903, 39.9035, 39.904,
 39.9051, 39.9052, and 39.914(e), does not apply to a municipally
 owned utility or an electric cooperative. Sections 39.157(e),
 39.203, and 39.904, however, apply only to a municipally owned
 utility or an electric cooperative that is offering customer
 choice. If there is a conflict between the specific provisions of
 this chapter and any other provisions of this title, except for
 Chapters 40 and 41, the provisions of this chapter control.
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter Z, Chapter 39, Utilities Code, is
 amended by amending Section 39.903 and adding Section 39.9035 to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 39.903.  SYSTEM BENEFIT FUND. (a)  The system benefit
 fund is an account in the general revenue fund.  Money in the
 account may be appropriated only for the purposes provided by this
 section [or other law].  Interest earned on the system benefit fund
 shall be credited to the fund.  Section 403.095, Government Code,
 does not apply to the system benefit fund.
 (b)  The system benefit fund is financed by a nonbypassable
 system benefit fund fee set by the commission in an amount not to
 exceed two [65] cents per megawatt hour. The system benefit fund
 fee is allocated to customers based on the amount of kilowatt hours
 used.
 (c)  The nonbypassable system benefit fund fee may not be
 imposed on the retail electric customers of a municipally owned
 utility or electric cooperative before the sixth month preceding
 the date on which the utility or cooperative implements customer
 choice. Money distributed from the system benefit fund to a
 municipally owned utility or an electric cooperative shall be
 proportional to the nonbypassable fee paid by the municipally owned
 utility or the electric cooperative[, subject to the reimbursement
 provided by Subsection (i)]. On request by a municipally owned
 utility or electric cooperative, the commission shall reduce the
 nonbypassable fee imposed on retail electric customers served by
 the municipally owned utility or electric cooperative by an amount
 equal to the amount provided by the municipally owned utility or
 electric cooperative or its ratepayers for [local low-income
 programs and] local programs that educate customers about the
 retail electric market in a neutral and nonpromotional manner. The
 commission shall adopt rules providing for reimbursements from
 appropriated system benefit fund money for activities authorized
 for funding under this section.
 (d)  The commission shall annually review and approve system
 benefit fund accounts, projected revenue requirements, and
 proposed nonbypassable fees. The commission shall report to the
 electric utility restructuring legislative oversight committee if
 the system benefit fund fee is insufficient to fund the purposes set
 forth in Subsection (e) to the extent required by this section.
 (e)  Money in the system benefit fund may be appropriated to
 provide funding solely for the following regulatory purposes [, in
 the following order of priority]:
 (1)  [programs to:
 [(A)     assist low-income electric customers by
 providing the 10 percent reduced rate prescribed by Subsection (h);
 and
 [(B)     provide one-time bill payment assistance to
 electric customers who are or who have in their households one or
 more seriously ill or disabled low-income persons and who have been
 threatened with disconnection for nonpayment;
 [(2)]  customer education programs;
 (2)  [,] administrative expenses incurred by the
 commission in implementing and administering this chapter;
 (3)  [, and] expenses incurred by the office under this
 chapter;
 (4) [(3)]  programs to assist low-income electric
 customers by providing weatherization or other [the targeted]
 energy efficiency programs [described by Subsection (f)(2);
 [(4)     programs to assist low-income electric customers
 by providing the 20 percent reduced rate prescribed by Subsection
 (h)]; and
 (5)  reimbursement to the commission and the Health and
 Human Services Commission for expenses incurred in the
 implementation and administration of an integrated eligibility
 process created under Section 17.007 for customer service discounts
 relating to retail electric service, including outreach expenses
 the commission determines are reasonable and necessary.
 (f)  The legislature may appropriate from the system benefit
 fund not more than $50 million each state fiscal biennium for the
 purposes of Subsection (e)(4).  Money appropriated from the system
 benefit fund for the purposes of Subsection (e)(4) must be
 transferred to the low-income electric customers program fund for
 disbursement under Section 39.9035.
 Sec. 39.9035.  LOW-INCOME ELECTRIC CUSTOMERS PROGRAM FUND.
 (a)  In this section, "critical care residential customer" means a
 residential customer who has a person permanently residing in the
 customer's home who is diagnosed by a physician as being dependent
 on an electric-powered medical device to sustain life.
 (b)  The commission shall adopt and enforce rules requiring
 transmission and distribution utilities to establish a low-income
 electric customers program fund under commission oversight. The
 rules must provide for:
 (1)  the fund to be established as a trust fund outside
 of the state treasury;
 (2)  the fund to be held by an administrator selected by
 the transmission and distribution utilities in accordance with
 standards adopted by the commission; and
 (3)  any interest earned on money in the fund to be
 credited to the fund.
 (c)  The administrator serves as trustee of the fund for the
 benefit of low-income electric customer programs described by this
 section, and in accordance with commission rules, the administrator
 may make any payments or reimbursements from the fund to further the
 programs. Commission rules must prescribe the maximum percentage
 of money available in the fund that may be used for the expenses of
 administering the fund and for annual independent auditing of the
 fund and expenditures and other transactions related to the fund.
 The commission or its agents may at any time examine any records
 related to the fund or investigate any fund-related expenditures or
 expenses. The administrator and each transmission and distribution
 utility shall fully cooperate with any investigation regarding the
 fund conducted by the commission or its agents.
 (d)  The commission by rule shall impose a nonbypassable
 low-income electric customers program fund fee to be set by the
 commission in an amount not to exceed 50 cents per megawatt hour,
 allocated to customers based on the amount of kilowatt hours used.
 (e)  The commission shall provide for a nonbypassable fee in
 the same amount as the fee imposed under Subsection (d) to be
 imposed on the retail electric customers of a municipally owned
 utility or electric cooperative beginning on the first day of the
 sixth month preceding the date on which the utility or cooperative
 implements customer choice.
 (f)  Commission rules adopted under this section must
 provide that the low-income electric customers program fund fees
 collected for the programs described by this section are collected
 through the rates of the transmission and distribution service
 providers and deposited into the low-income electric customers
 program fund.
 (g)  Except as provided by Subsection (h), money in the
 low-income electric customers program fund may be spent only for
 the following regulatory purposes and must be allocated as follows:
 (1)  not more than 96 percent of the money available in
 the fund must be used to provide a 15 percent reduced rate for
 low-income households for each billing period; and
 (2)  not more than 4 percent of the money available in
 the fund must be used for bill payment assistance for critical care
 residential customers with total household incomes not to exceed
 400 percent of the federal poverty guidelines.
 (h)  Only money appropriated for the purposes of Section
 39.903(e)(4) and transferred to the fund may be used to finance
 low-income electric customer weatherization programs under this
 section.  The programs must be operated by a statewide network of
 federal weatherization program providers under federal
 weatherization program guidelines and may include related
 low-income energy efficiency programs.
 (i) [(f)     Notwithstanding Section 39.106(b), the commission
 shall adopt rules regarding programs to assist low-income electric
 customers on the introduction of customer choice. The programs may
 not be targeted to areas served by municipally owned utilities or
 electric cooperatives that have not adopted customer choice. The
 programs shall include:
 [(1)     reduced electric rates as provided by Subsections
 (h)-(l); and
 [(2)     targeted energy efficiency programs to be
 administered by the Texas Department of Housing and Community
 Affairs in coordination with existing weatherization programs.
 [(g)]  Until customer choice is introduced in a power region,
 an electric utility may not reduce, in any manner, programs already
 offered to assist low-income electric customers.
 (j) [(h)]  The commission shall adopt rules for a retail
 electric provider to determine a reduced rate for eligible
 customers to be discounted off the standard retail service package
 as approved by the commission under Section 39.106 and shall
 require a retail electric provider to apply the same reduction to
 any rate plan under which an eligible low-income electric customer
 is receiving service [, or the price to beat established by Section
 39.202, whichever is lower].  Municipally owned utilities and
 electric cooperatives shall establish a reduced rate for eligible
 customers to be discounted off the standard retail service package
 established under Section 40.053 or 41.053, as appropriate.  The
 reduced rate for a retail electric provider shall result in a total
 charge for each billing period that is at least 15 [10] percent
 [and, if sufficient money in the    system benefit fund is available,
 up to 20 percent,] lower than the amount the customer would
 otherwise be charged for each billing period.  To the extent the
 low-income electric customers program [system benefit] fund is
 insufficient to pay for [fund] the 15 [initial 10] percent rate
 reduction, the commission may increase the fee to an amount of not
 more than 50 [65] cents per megawatt hour, as provided by Subsection
 (d) [(b)].  If the fee is set at 50 [65] cents per megawatt hour or
 if the commission determines that revenues anticipated to be due
 for deposit to the fund are [appropriations are] insufficient to
 pay for [fund] the 15 [10] percent rate reduction, the commission
 shall [may] reduce the rate of the reduction to less than 15 [10]
 percent.  For a municipally owned utility or electric cooperative,
 the reduced rate shall be equal to an amount that can be fully
 funded by that portion of the nonbypassable fee proceeds paid by the
 municipally owned utility or electric cooperative that is allocated
 to the utility or cooperative by the commission under Subsection
 (g) [(e)] for programs for low-income customers of the utility or
 cooperative.  The reduced rate for municipally owned utilities and
 electric cooperatives under this section is in addition to any rate
 reduction that may result from local programs for low-income
 customers of the municipally owned utilities or electric
 cooperatives.
 (k) [(i)]  A retail electric provider, municipally owned
 utility, or electric cooperative seeking reimbursement from the
 low-income electric customers program [system benefit] fund may not
 charge an eligible low-income customer a rate higher than the
 appropriate rate determined under Subsection (j) [(h)].
 Commission rules must provide for [A retail electric provider not
 subject to the price to beat, or] a municipally owned utility or
 electric cooperative subject to the nonbypassable fee under
 Subsection (e) to [(c), shall] be reimbursed from the [system
 benefit] fund for the difference between the reduced rate and the
 rate established under [Section 39.106 or, as appropriate, the rate
 established under] Section 40.053 or 41.053, as appropriate. A
 retail electric provider [who is subject to the price to beat] shall
 be reimbursed from the [system benefit] fund for the difference
 between the reduced rate and the rate plan under which the customer
 is receiving service [the price to beat]. The commission shall
 adopt rules providing for the reimbursement.
 (l) [(j)]  The commission shall adopt rules providing for
 methods of enrolling customers eligible to receive the reduced
 rates determined under Subsection (j) [(h)]. The rules must
 provide for automatic enrollment as one enrollment option. The
 Health and [Texas Department of] Human Services Commission, on
 request of the commission, shall assist in the adoption and
 implementation of these rules. The commission and the Health and
 [Texas Department of] Human Services Commission shall enter into a
 memorandum of understanding establishing the respective duties of
 the agencies [commission and the department] in relation to the
 automatic enrollment. Rules adopted under this section must
 provide that:
 (1)  an electric customer eligible for the reduced
 rates determined under Subsection (j) is also eligible for reduced
 rates for telecommunications services offered for low-income
 customers; and
 (2)  a customer eligible for reduced rates for
 telecommunications services offered for low-income customers is
 also eligible for the reduced rates established under Subsection
 (j).
 (m) [(j-1)]  The commission shall adopt rules governing the
 bill payment assistance program provided under Subsection (g)(2)
 [(e)(1)(B)].  The rules must provide that a customer is eligible to
 receive the assistance only if the assistance is necessary to
 prevent the disconnection of service for nonpayment of bills for a
 critical care residential customer [and the electric customer is or
 has in the customer's household one or more seriously ill or
 disabled low-income persons whose health or safety may be injured
 by the disconnection].  The commission may prescribe the
 documentation necessary to demonstrate eligibility for the
 assistance and may establish additional eligibility criteria.  The
 Health and Human Services Commission, on request of the commission,
 shall assist in the adoption and implementation of these rules.
 (n) [(k)]  A retail electric provider is prohibited from
 charging the customer a fee for participation in the reduced rate
 program.
 (o)  Notwithstanding Subsections (d), (e), (f), and (j), the
 low-income electric customers program fund fee may not be imposed
 after August 31, 2023.  After that date, the commission and the
 administrator shall undertake to continue the low-income electric
 customers programs described by this section until the balance of
 the fund is exhausted.
 [(l)     For the purposes of this section, a "low-income
 electric customer" is an electric customer:
 [(1)     whose household income is not more than 125
 percent of the federal poverty guidelines; or
 [(2)     who receives food stamps from the Texas
 Department of Human Services or medical assistance from a state
 agency administering a part of the medical assistance program.]
 SECTION 4.  Section 39.905(f), Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (f)  Unless funding is provided under Section 39.9035
 [39.903], each unbundled transmission and distribution utility
 shall include in its energy efficiency plan a weatherization and
 [targeted] low-income energy efficiency program as described by
 Section 39.9035(h) [39.903(f)(2)], and the savings achieved by the
 program shall count toward the transmission and distribution
 utility's energy efficiency goal.  The commission shall determine
 the appropriate level of funding to be allocated to both the
 required weatherization programs [targeted] and standard offer
 low-income energy efficiency programs in each unbundled
 transmission and distribution utility service area.  The level of
 funding for the required weatherization programs and low-income
 energy efficiency programs shall be provided from money approved by
 the commission for the transmission and distribution utility's
 energy efficiency programs.  The commission shall ensure that
 annual expenditures for the required weatherization programs and
 [targeted] low-income energy efficiency programs of each unbundled
 transmission and distribution utility are not less than 10 percent
 of the transmission and distribution utility's energy efficiency
 budget for the year.  A required weatherization program or a
 [targeted] low-income energy efficiency program must comply with
 the same audit requirements that apply to federal weatherization
 subrecipients.  In an energy efficiency cost recovery factor
 proceeding related to expenditures under this subsection, the
 commission shall make findings of fact regarding whether the
 utility meets requirements imposed under this subsection.  The
 state agency that administers the federal weatherization
 assistance program shall provide reports as required by the
 commission to provide the most current information available on
 energy and peak demand savings achieved in each transmission and
 distribution utility service area.  The agency shall participate in
 energy efficiency cost recovery factor proceedings related to
 expenditures under this subsection to ensure that the required
 weatherization programs and [targeted] low-income weatherization
 programs are consistent with federal weatherization programs and
 adequately funded.
 SECTION 5.  Section 40.001(a), Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, except
 Sections 39.155, 39.157(e), 39.203, 39.903, 39.9035, and 39.904,
 this chapter governs the transition to and the establishment of a
 fully competitive electric power industry for municipally owned
 utilities. With respect to the regulation of municipally owned
 utilities, this chapter controls over any other provision of this
 title, except for sections in which the term "municipally owned
 utility" is specifically used.
 SECTION 6.  Section 40.004, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 40.004.  JURISDICTION OF COMMISSION. Except as
 specifically otherwise provided in this chapter, the commission has
 jurisdiction over municipally owned utilities only for the
 following purposes:
 (1)  to regulate wholesale transmission rates and
 service, including terms of access, to the extent provided by
 Subchapter A, Chapter 35;
 (2)  to regulate certification of retail service areas
 to the extent provided by Chapter 37;
 (3)  to regulate rates on appeal under Subchapters D
 and E, Chapter 33, subject to Section 40.051(c);
 (4)  to establish a code of conduct as provided by
 Section 39.157(e) applicable to anticompetitive activities and to
 affiliate activities limited to structurally unbundled affiliates
 of municipally owned utilities, subject to Section 40.054;
 (5)  to establish terms and conditions for open access
 to transmission and distribution facilities for municipally owned
 utilities providing customer choice, as provided by Section 39.203;
 (6)  to require collection of the nonbypassable fees
 [fee] established under Section 39.903(b) and Section 39.9035(e);
 (7)  [and] to administer the renewable energy credits
 program under Section 39.904(b) and the natural gas energy credits
 program under Section 39.9044(b); and
 (8) [(7)]  to require reports of municipally owned
 utility operations only to the extent necessary to:
 (A)  enable the commission to determine the
 aggregate load and energy requirements of the state and the
 resources available to serve that load; or
 (B)  enable the commission to determine
 information relating to market power as provided by Section 39.155.
 SECTION 7.  Section 41.001, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 41.001.  APPLICABLE LAW. Notwithstanding any other
 provision of law, except Sections 39.155, 39.157(e), 39.203,
 39.903, 39.9035, and 39.904, this chapter governs the transition to
 and the establishment of a fully competitive electric power
 industry for electric cooperatives. Regarding the regulation of
 electric cooperatives, this chapter shall control over any other
 provision of this title, except for sections in which the term
 "electric cooperative" is specifically used.
 SECTION 8.  The Public Utility Commission of Texas shall
 adopt or revise, as necessary to implement this Act, rules
 governing the system benefit fund and the low-income electric
 customers program fund under Section 39.903, Utilities Code, as
 amended by this Act, and Section 39.9035, Utilities Code, as added
 by this Act, not later than January 1, 2014.
 SECTION 9.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2013.