BILL NUMBER: AB 1647	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  JUNE 21, 2004
	AMENDED IN SENATE  JUNE 9, 2004
	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 28, 2004
	AMENDED IN SENATE  JULY 16, 2003

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member  Wiggins  
Jerome Horton 
    (Coauthor:  Senator Alpert) 

                        FEBRUARY 21, 2003

    An act to add Section 1229 to the Water Code, relating to
water.   An act to add Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
Section 2735) to Part 2 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code,
relating to water supply. 


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 1647, as amended,  Wiggins   Jerome Horton
 .   Appropriations of water:  livestock stockponds
  Public water systems:  mutual water companies:  grant
funds  . 
   Under existing law, generally, any person, firm, or corporation,
their lessees, trustees, receivers or trustees appointed by any
court, owning, controlling, operating, or managing any water system
within this state, who sells, leases, rents, or delivers water to any
person, firm, corporation, municipality, or any other political
subdivision, whether under contract or otherwise, is a public
utility, and is subject to the jurisdiction, control, and regulation
of the Public Utilities Commission.  Existing law authorizes a mutual
water company to perform specified acts without becoming a public
utility subject to the jurisdiction, control, or regulation of the
commission.
   This bill would provide that a public water system regulated by
the commission or a mutual water company, as defined, is eligible for
grant funding from the sale of any general obligation bond
authorized by the voters, for the purposes stated in the authorizing
bond act, unless not included or excluded by express provisions of
the bond act, subject to certain conditions.  
   The Water Rights Permitting Reform Act of 1988 authorizes any
person to obtain a right to appropriate water for a small domestic or
livestock stockpond use, as defined, upon registering the use with
the State Water Resources Control Board, as prescribed, payment of a
registration fee, and application of the water to reasonable and
beneficial use with due diligence. The act authorizes any registrant
to change the point of diversion or place of use by delivering to the
board an amended registration form, including payment of the
registration fee, but prohibits a change in the purpose of the use.
   This bill would provide that, for the purposes of the act, the use
of a livestock stockpond for irrigation purposes does not constitute
a change in the purpose of the use of the water involved, if no more
than one stockpond is designated for irrigation purposes for each 50
acres irrigated.  
   Vote:  majority.  Appropriation:  no.  Fiscal committee:  yes.
State-mandated local program:  no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  
  SECTION 1.  Section 1229 is added to the Water Code, to 

  SECTION 1.  The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) More than 20 percent of all California residents receive their
drinking water supply from a public water system regulated by the
commission or a mutual water company.  Many of these public water
systems and mutual water companies serve disadvantaged communities
and populations that are least able to pay for public water supply
system improvements.
   (b) All California residents, including those served by public
water systems regulated by the commission and mutual water companies,
should be entitled to participate fully in the benefits of bond
measures that are passed by the voters to provide a safe and reliable
water supply.
   (c) Public water systems regulated by the commission and mutual
water companies should be entitled to compete on an equal basis for
bond proceeds that their customers help finance with their tax
dollars, provided that those bond funds do not benefit any private
party or entity, but rather, will benefit the public at the time they
are awarded and for the entire useful life of the utility plant
constructed or acquired with those bond funds.
   (d) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that no
community is barred or disadvantaged from participating in and
receiving the benefits of bond measures that are passed and paid for
by all of the voters on the basis of the type of public water system
that provides their water service.
  SEC. 2.  Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 2735) is added to
Part 2 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code, to read:

      CHAPTER 3.5.  FUNDING FOR WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM IMPROVEMENTS

   2735.  (a) As used in this section, the following terms have the
following meanings:
   (1) "Mutual water company" means a corporation formed under the
General Corporation Law (Division 1 (commencing with Section 100) of
Title 1 of the Corporations Code) or the Nonprofit Mutual Benefit
Corporation Law (Part 3 (commencing with Section 7110) of Division 2
of Title 1 of the Corporations Code), organized for, and engaged in
the business of, developing, distributing, supplying, or delivering
water for irrigation or domestic use, or both, to its members or
shareholders, at actual cost plus necessary expense.
   (2) "Original grant basis" means the original cost of a utility
plant financed with grant funds.
   (b) A public water system regulated by the commission or a mutual
water company is eligible for grant funding from the sale of any
general obligation bond authorized by the voters, for the purposes
stated in the authorizing bond act, unless not included or excluded
by express provisions of the bond act, subject to all of the
following:
   (1) A public water system regulated by the commission that
receives grant funds shall account for all grant funds they receive
for construction or acquisition of a utility plant in Account 265 for
contributions in aid of construction, as set forth in the commission'
s Uniform System of Accounts.
   (2) Consistent with the commission's ratemaking policies, the
commission shall not authorize a public water system regulated by the
commission to earn a rate of return on those grant funds used to
acquire or construct a utility plant.
   (3) A public water system regulated by the commission may not sell
or lease a utility plant that is necessary or useful to that public
water system in performing its public utility obligations except
pursuant to an order of the commission in accordance with Section
851.
   (4) If a utility plant is sold and will continue to be used as
part of a public water system regulated by the commission, this
section applies to the entity that acquires the utility plant.
   (5) If the grantee or an entity that acquires the utility plant
sells the utility plant or otherwise disposes of it, and at the time
of disposition the utility plant is no longer necessary or useful to
the public water system regulated by the commission, the public water
system shall determine that portion of the original grant basis and
refund to the state an amount equal to the lesser of the following:
   (A) The original grant basis, after being reduced for depreciation
in accordance with the commission's adopted useful life of a utility
plant at the time the utility plant was placed in service, less the
cost of removal and restoration.
   (B) The net proceeds from the sale or disposition of the utility
plant.
   (c) Notwithstanding any provision in a mutual water company's
governing instruments, including, but not limited to, its bylaws and
articles of incorporation, or any provision in the Corporations Code,
with respect to a mutual water company receipt of grant funds
pursuant to this section, if the assets purchased, constructed,
financed, or otherwise acquired with grant funds are sold,
distributed, disposed of, or otherwise transferred, whether upon
dissolution or otherwise, to any individual or entity that does not
utilize the assets for the benefit of the public, that individual or
entity shall refund to the state an amount equal to the lesser of the
following:
   (1) The original grant basis, after being reduced for depreciation
in accordance with general accounting principles, less the cost of
removal and restoration.
   (2) The net proceeds from the sale or other disposition of the
utility plant.    read:
   1229.  For the purposes of this article, the use of a livestock
stockpond for irrigation purposes does not constitute a change in the
purpose of the use of the water involved, if no more than one
stockpond is designated for irrigation purposes for each 50 acres
irrigated.