BILL ANALYSIS 1 SENATE ENERGY, UTILITIES AND COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE DEBRA BOWEN, CHAIRWOMAN AB 2638 - Calderon Hearing Date: August 8, 2000 A As Amended: August 7, 2000 FISCAL B 2 6 3 8 DESCRIPTION Current law permits an irrigation district to sell and distribute electricity both inside and outside its boundaries. Current law permits an irrigation district to be the lead agency under the review mandated by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) for new electric facility construction projects it undertakes - even when the project is outside of the district's boundaries. Current law discourages competition between irrigation districts and investor-owned utilities (IOU) and creates a process for establishing exclusive service areas for each. This bill finds it is essential that California have a rational energy policy related to electric service by irrigation districts within the service territory of an investor-owned utility on or after May 1, 2000. This bill establishes numerous conditions on the ability of irrigation districts to sell electricity both inside and outside the boundaries of the district, including: The irrigation district shall offer service to customers within the district boundaries on a just, reasonable, non-discriminatory basis. The irrigation district may not offer service to a customer that is already connected to an IOU unless the irrigation district pays the IOU an exit fee which reimburses the utility for its costs incurred to provide electric transmission and distribution service. The amount of such a fee would be determined by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). If the irrigation district offers rates to commercial and industrial customers which are less than the rates charged by the IOU currently providing service, then the irrigation district must also discount its rates to agricultural and residential customers by the same percentage. Service by the irrigation district may not adversely affect the reliability of electric service to others. The irrigation district may not provide electric service to any retail customer located outside of the district's boundaries unless, in addition to the above requirements, the irrigation district also provides service to at least 50% of the residential and agricultural customers within its boundaries. Furthermore, a minimum of one-third of the electricity sold by the irrigation district outside of its boundaries must be associated with residential and/or agricultural customers. This bill provides that CEQA review of any new electrical facilities outside of the irrigation district boundaries shall be conducted by the board of supervisors of the county in which the majority of the construction occurs. This bill gives the CPUC the authority to adjudicate complaint cases brought against an irrigation district by an interested party located outside the irrigation district's boundaries. This bill exempts an irrigation district from all the above provisions if the irrigation district acquires substantially all the electric facilities of the IOU that has the obligation to serve customers within the irrigation district's boundaries, and if the CPUC approves a service area agreement between the irrigation district and the IOU. This bill bars an irrigation district from exercising the power of eminent domain to acquire property owned by an IOU if the irrigation district intends to put the property to similar use. This bill changes the burden of proof when the CPUC evaluates a proposed service agreement between an irrigation district and an IOU by presuming such an agreement is reasonable unless the CPUC finds it's not in the public interest. This bill provides pricing flexibility for IOUs by permitting the utility to discount its electric service to its marginal cost in order to compete with an irrigation district. The electrical corporation may recover the lost revenues from remaining customers up to the amount that the revenues would have been recoverable had the customer been lost to the irrigation district. BACKGROUND Irrigation Districts . While there are over sixty irrigation districts in the state, the California Municipal Utilities Association (CMUA) states that only four of them - Modesto Irrigation District (Modesto), Turlock Irrigation District (TID), Merced Irrigation District (Merced), and Imperial Irrigation District (IID) - are providing electricity services at this time. According to CMUA, the Patterson and Laguna irrigation districts are preparing to enter the electricity market in the near future. A Little History . In 1998, Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) agreed to sell its facilities in the Central Valley cities of Oakdale, Riverbank, Ripon, and Escalon to Modesto. The CPUC, which has the authority to veto any such sale, exercised that power in this case, arguing the agreement was anti-competitive and that PG&E's stockholders, not the ratepayers, would be the primary beneficiaries of the sale. According to PG&E, it's losing about $22 million in revenue - out of an $8 billion pie - each year as a result of decisions by customers to switch to the Modesto and Merced Irrigation Districts for their electrical service. However, if distribution competition continues to grow, a much greater amount of money would be at risk. The Economic Conflicts . Current law creates an economic conflict between the interests of irrigation districts and the IOUs because it allows for competition between them. This has recently surfaced in disputes between PG&E and three irrigation districts located in central California: Modesto Irrigation District (Modesto), Merced Irrigation District (Merced), and Turlock Irrigation District (Turlock). The nature of the disputes have two distinct variations. The first is the case of Modesto, where it is the sole and long-time provider of electric service within its territorial boundaries. Modesto now wants to offer service, as permitted under existing law, to customers outside of its boundaries who are now served by PG&E. The second case is Merced, where PG&E is the long-time provider of electric service within the irrigation district boundaries. In this case, Merced has chosen to compete with PG&E by providing electric service to selected areas within its boundaries and also to offer service outside of its boundaries. Merced has invested $55 million over the last few years in building an electric transmission and distribution system and is now attempting to acquire customers to pay for that investment. The Legal Conflicts . Current law allows irrigation districts and IOUs to compete for customers, but the law tries to discourage, not encourage, competition in this area. This is articulated in Public Utilities Code Section 8101, which was created in 1951 to read: 8101. Under certain conditions the sale and distribution of electric power and energy in the same geographical area both by an electrical utility and by an irrigation district, results in duplication of service, waste of materials, increase in costs, waste of manpower and economic loss, and is detrimental to the efficiency and best interests of such districts. It is the policy of this State to induce such utilities and irrigation districts to prevent or remove such economic waste and to adopt more efficient and economic methods of distribution of electric power and energy, and to that end encourage the definition of areas to be served or not to be served by each. While this section of law discourages competition, it clearly doesn't preclude it from taking place. Article XI, Section 9(a) of the California Constitution provides that: (a) A municipal corporation may establish, purchase, and operate public works to furnish its inhabitants with light, water, power, heat, transportation, or means of communication. It may furnish those services outside its boundaries, except within another municipal corporation which furnishes the same service and does not consent. KEY QUESTIONS 1.Will the restrictions imposed by this bill on irrigation districts that provide electric service inhibit or end their ability to provide that service? 2.Should the IOU cost recovery portions of the bill be amended to ensure that the IOU ratepayers are completely protected? 3.Should the "exit fee" proposed by this bill be made more uniform instead of being established on a case by case basis? 4.Should the mandate to ensure that service be provided to certain customer classes be altered to ensure that the service be offered to those customer classes? COMMENTS 1)Distribution Competition . As noted in the "Background" section, competition between irrigation districts and IOUs for electrical customers is discouraged, but not banned, by California law. Arguably, the electric restructuring statutes created by AB 1890 (Brulte), Chapter 854, Statutes of 1996, implicitly recognized competition between irrigation districts and IOUs as legitimate in some cases. 2)Exit Fee . Page 5, Lines 1-18, require an irrigation district to pay an "exit fee" to an investor-owned utility for every retail customer the irrigation district acquires from the IOU - both inside and outside of the irrigation district's boundaries. That exit fee, which would be established by the CPUC, covers the IOUs costs of providing electric transmission and distribution service. This is intended to make the IOU whole for the loss of the customer, protecting IOU customers by eliminating the need for a rate increase to make up any lost revenue. However, because this exit fee won't be known in advance, it makes it difficult, if not impossible, for an irrigation district to know if competing for a customer is a financially viable proposition. As such, the author and committee may wish to consider whether the CPUC should instead be required to establish a generic or uniform exit fee that an irrigation district will be able to rely on and factor in as a "cost of doing business" should it choose to offer electrical service to retail entities. That fee should be designed to ensure that the customers who remain with the IOU aren't harmed and don't see their rates go up. 3)IOU Price Flexibility . Page 2, Line 3, through Page 3, Line 2 of the bill permit IOUs to discount their rates to the marginal cost of serving a customer if that customer is offered service by an irrigation district. The bill permits any revenue lost as a result of the "discount" given to the customer to be recovered from the IOU's other ratepayers to the extent that such revenue would have had to be made up had the IOU lost the customer. This provision illustrates how competition between irrigation districts and IOUs can hurt other captive IOU customers by shifting costs. Under this bill, an IOU ratepayer would be better off if the irrigation district won the customer because the irrigation district would pay an exit fee, thereby minimizing any cost shift. By including this "rate recovery" section in the bill, the IOU is indifferent to the outcome because it's made whole either from the ratepayers left in its system or from the exit fee. However, the IOU's remaining ratepayers aren't made whole. To ensure that IOU ratepayers - not just the IOU - are protected, the author and committee may wish to consider altering this section to align the IOUs incentives with those of its ratepayers by ensuring that any loss in revenues is shared equally between IOUs and their customers. 4)Cherry Picking - Part 1 . "Cherry picking" is the practice whereby an irrigation district, because it doesn't have a universal service mandate to provide electricity services to everyone in a given territory, could simply choose to provide service to those entities where the district would be likely to turn the largest profit. In general, that would mean providing services to large industrial and commercial customers instead of to small, residential customers. Page 5, Lines 19-27 require an irrigation district that offers a large customer a rate that's lower than the rate offered by the IOU to also offer a rate that's discounted by the same percentage to residential and agricultural customers. In other words, if an irrigation district provides a rate to an industrial consumer that's 20% less than the IOU industrial consumer rate, it also must offer a rate to residential and agricultural customers that's at least 20% less than the IOU residential and agricultural customer rates. It's unclear why it's appropriate to impose an arbitrary rate structure for irrigation districts that's based on the rates of the IOU. Irrigation districts are made up of publicly elected boards that are charged with setting rates. If customers don't think the rates are low enough or enough of a savings over the rates they're paying to the IOU, they don't have to opt to receive service from the irrigation district. If the goal of this section is to prevent unfair competition by preventing an irrigation district from "cherry picking" certain customers or customer classes, that goal is arguably already being achieved by the section of this bill that requires irrigation districts to pay an "exit fee." An alternate approach to this section that the author and committee may wish to consider would be to require the CPUC to establish a universal service policy for irrigation districts who want to provide electricity services to customers within their boundaries. The policy could, for example, require the district to offer services to all customers within a certain distance from their facilities and/or require that any "service area" include a certain percentage of residential customers who must be offered service. While it could be argued that a district could discourage residential customers from asking for service by "offering" it at prices above what they're currently paying for service from an IOU, that appears to be precluded by Page 4, Lines 37-40, which requires districts to offer service to customers at "published tariff rates and on a just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory basis." 5)Cherry Picking - Part 2 . Page 5, Line 31, through Page 6, Line 19 deals with "cherry picking" IOU customers located outside of the irrigation district's boundaries. Under this section of the bill, before an irrigation district can offer or provide service to any entity outside of its boundaries, it must first provide electric service to no less than 50% of the residential and agricultural customers within its boundaries. Once that hurdle is cleared, the irrigation district must ensure that at least one-third of the electricity sold outside of the district boundaries is sold to residential and small commercial customers. The concern about cherry picking is it unfairly shifts costs to those customers who stay with the IOU system and may not have an opportunity to leave the system - typically residential and small commercial customers. However, the author and committee may wish to consider whether it's fair or feasible to require an irrigation district to provide service to a certain number of small customers in exchange for being able to offer service to large customers. An irrigation district can't compel businesses or residential customers to leave their existing IOU service provider, so the 50% and 33.3% service mandates in the bill may effectively bar distribution competition from irrigation districts. As an alternative, the author and committee may wish to consider requiring an irrigation district, before it can offer to service customers outside of its territory, to offer to provide service at reasonable rates to every small and large customer inside of its territory. After all, if irrigation districts can offer rates that are below those charged by IOUs, shouldn't all residents of the district have the option to receive such a rate before the district offers it to entities outside of the district boundaries? Once that hurdle has been cleared, the author and committee may wish to consider replacing the 33.3% service mandate with a requirement similar to the one suggested in Comment 4. That is, if an irrigation district wants to provide service to a particular entity outside of its boundaries, the CPUC would be charged with establishing a service area outside of the district boundaries that contains a certain percentage of small and residential customers. The irrigation district would then be required to offer service to everyone in that service area at costs comparable to those paid by the district customers within its boundaries. 6)CEQA Review . Under current law, an irrigation district proposing to build and install electrical service lines and equipment serves as its own lead agency under CEQA. By contrast, an IOU wishing to install the same equipment to provide the same services obviously can't serve as its own lead agency for CEQA because it's not a public entity. Instead, the IOU has the CPUC serving as its lead agency for CEQA. This bill precludes, for irrigation district electric construction projects outside of the district's boundaries, the district from serving as its own lead agency under CEQA. Instead, the county in which the majority of the construction is to occur would serve as the lead agency under CEQA. For an IOU engaged in a major construction project, the CPUC serves as the lead agency under CEQA. As such, the author and committee may wish to consider whether the CPUC should also perform this function for irrigation districts or whether it's appropriate to, as the bill does now, award the CEQA lead agency function to the county where a majority of the construction project will take place. 7)Complaints . In cases where the irrigation district provides service to an entity outside of the district boundaries, this bill provides the CPUC with jurisdiction to adjudicate complaints brought against the irrigation district by that customer. Irrigation districts are headed by an elected board, so it could be argued that this provision of the bill usurps local control and creates a "two-tiered" system whereby customers located the district would have their complaints handled by the irrigation district board but customers located outside of the district would have their complaints handled by the CPUC. On the other hand, the customer located outside of the irrigation district doesn't have the ability to vote for any member of the irrigation district and as such, may be deserving of a neutral third party to provide protection for consumers. Currently, all IOU and municipal utility customers can take their complaints to the CPUC for resolution and this bill attempts to extend that same benefit to customers of irrigation districts who are located outside of the district's boundaries. 8)Eminent Domain . Page 7, Line 37, through Page 8, Line 2 of the bill bars an irrigation district from exercising its right of eminent domain to acquire property owned by an IOU if the irrigation district intends to put the property to similar use. Article I, Section 19, of the California Constitution provides public agencies with the right to exercise the powers of eminent domain and establishes how compensation is to be awarded: Private property may be taken or damaged for public use only when just compensation, ascertained by a jury unless waived, has first been paid to, or into court for, the owner. The Legislature may provide for possession by the condemnor following commencement of eminent domain proceedings upon deposit in court and prompt release to the owner of money determined by the court to be the probable amount of just compensation. It's unclear why it's appropriate, or whether it's even constitutional, to limit a public agency's ability to exercise its constitutionally-granted eminent domain authority based on the use of the property if the agency meets the "just compensation" test. As such, the author and committee may wish to consider removing this section. 9)Joint Powers Agencies . The limitations imposed by this bill also apply to joint powers authorities (JPA) that include irrigation districts (Page 7, Lines 6-11). The author believes this is necessary to prevent irrigation districts from forming JPAs to evade the restrictions on irrigation districts created by this bill. Opponents argue that the formation of a JPA can't and won't relieve an irrigation district of its obligations and in any event, this "problem" is speculative at best. 10) Technically Speaking . Items (b)(6) (Page 3, Lines 35-38) and (b)(9) (Page 4, Lines 10-13) in the intent section of the bill aren't addressed in the operative sections of the measure and as such, the author and committee may wish to consider deleting them. 11) Related Legislation . SB 1939 (Alarcon) requires municipal utilities and irrigation districts to provide low-income assistance programs in much the same way the IOUs have to provide them and repeals the requirement that irrigation district board members be landowners of the district they represent. When SB 1939 was heard by this committee, it contained a provision conceptually similar to the one embodied in AB 2638. However, that provision was removed at the request of the Chair so it could be dealt with in the context of AB 2638. SB 1939 is scheduled to be heard in the Assembly Utilities & Commerce Committee on August 7, 2000. SB 1571 (Costa) changes the voting requirements in the James Irrigation District and the Corcoran Irrigation District to require all voters in district elections to be landowners. It also eliminates the requirement that those landowners actually have to live in the district in order to vote. SB 1571 is scheduled to be heard in the Assembly Appropriations Committee on August 9, 2000. ASSEMBLY VOTES Assembly Utilities & Commerce Committee(11-0)* Assembly Floor (73-3)* * Votes were cast for a substantially different version of the bill. POSITIONS Sponsor: Pacific Gas and Electric Support: American GI Forum City of Oakdale Latino Issues Forum Oppose: California Municipal Utilities Association City of Redding Merced Irrigation District Northern California Power Agency Turlock Irrigation District Randy Chinn AB 2638 Analysis Hearing Date: August 8, 2000