SENATE BILL No. 437

 

 

July 1, 2015, Introduced by Senator NOFS and referred to the Committee on Energy and Technology.

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1939 PA 3, entitled

 

"An act to provide for the regulation and control of public and

certain private utilities and other services affected with a public

interest within this state; to provide for alternative energy

suppliers; to provide for licensing; to include municipally owned

utilities and other providers of energy under certain provisions of

this act; to create a public service commission and to prescribe

and define its powers and duties; to abolish the Michigan public

utilities commission and to confer the powers and duties vested by

law on the public service commission; to provide for the

continuance, transfer, and completion of certain matters and

proceedings; to abolish automatic adjustment clauses; to prohibit

certain rate increases without notice and hearing; to qualify

residential energy conservation programs permitted under state law

for certain federal exemption; to create a fund; to provide for a

restructuring of the manner in which energy is provided in this

state; to encourage the utilization of resource recovery

facilities; to prohibit certain acts and practices of providers of

energy; to allow for the securitization of stranded costs; to

reduce rates; to provide for appeals; to provide appropriations; to

declare the effect and purpose of this act; to prescribe remedies

and penalties; and to repeal acts and parts of acts,"

 

by amending the title and sections 6a, 6j, 6s, 10, 10a, 10f, 10p,

 

10r, and 10t (MCL 460.6a, 460.6j, 460.6s, 460.10, 460.10a, 460.10f,

 


460.10p, 460.10r, and 460.10t), the title as amended by 2005 PA

 

190, sections 6a, 10, 10a, 10p, and 10r as amended and section 6s

 

as added by 2008 PA 286, section 6j as amended by 1987 PA 81, and

 

sections 10f and 10t as added by 2000 PA 141, and by adding section

 

6t; and to repeal acts and parts of acts.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

TITLE

 

     An act to provide for the regulation and control of public and

 

certain private utilities and other services affected with a public

 

interest within this state; to provide for alternative energy

 

suppliers; to provide for licensing; to include municipally owned

 

utilities and other providers of energy under certain provisions of

 

this act; to create a public service commission and to prescribe

 

and define its powers and duties; to abolish the Michigan public

 

utilities commission and to confer the powers and duties vested by

 

law on the public service commission; to provide for the

 

continuance, transfer, and completion of certain matters and

 

proceedings; to abolish automatic adjustment clauses; to prohibit

 

certain rate increases without notice and hearing; to qualify

 

residential energy conservation programs permitted under state law

 

for certain federal exemption; to create a fund; to provide for a

 

restructuring of the manner in which energy is provided in this

 

state; to encourage the utilization of resource recovery

 

facilities; to prohibit certain acts and practices of providers of

 

energy; to allow for the securitization of stranded costs; to

 

reduce rates; to provide for appeals; to provide appropriations; to

 

declare the effect and purpose of this act; to prescribe remedies

 


and penalties; and to repeal acts and parts of acts.

 

     Sec. 6a. (1) A gas or electric utility shall not increase its

 

rates and charges or alter, change, or amend any rate or rate

 

schedules, the effect of which will be to increase the cost of

 

services to its customers, without first receiving commission

 

approval as provided in this section. The utility shall place in

 

evidence facts relied upon to support the utility's petition or

 

application to increase its rates and charges, or to alter, change,

 

or amend any rate or rate schedules. The commission shall require

 

notice to be given to all interested parties within the service

 

area to be affected, and all interested parties shall have a

 

reasonable opportunity for a full and complete hearing. A utility

 

may use projected costs and revenues for a future consecutive 12-

 

month period in developing its requested rates and charges. The

 

commission shall notify the utility within 30 days of filing,

 

whether the utility's petition or application is complete. A

 

petition or application is considered complete if it complies with

 

the rate application filing forms and instructions adopted under

 

subsection (6). A petition or application pending before the

 

commission prior to before the adoption of filing forms and

 

instructions pursuant to under subsection (6) shall be evaluated

 

based upon the filing requirements in effect at the time the

 

petition or application was filed. If the application is not

 

complete, the commission shall notify the utility of all

 

information necessary to make that filing complete. If the

 

commission has not notified the utility within 30 days of whether

 

the utility's petition or application is complete, the application

 


is considered complete. If the commission has not issued an order

 

within 180 days of the filing of a complete application, the

 

utility may implement up to the amount of the proposed annual rate

 

request through equal percentage increases or decreases applied to

 

all base rates. For a petition or application pending before the

 

commission prior to the effective date of the amendatory act that

 

added this sentence, the 180-day period commences on the effective

 

date of the amendatory act that added this sentence. If the utility

 

uses projected costs and revenues for a future period in developing

 

its requested rates and charges, the utility may not implement the

 

equal percentage increases or decreases prior to the calendar date

 

corresponding to the start of the projected 12-month period. For

 

good cause, the commission may issue a temporary order preventing

 

or delaying a utility from implementing its proposed rates or

 

charges. If a utility implements increased rates or charges under

 

this subsection before the commission issues a final order, that

 

utility shall refund to customers, with interest, any portion of

 

the total revenues collected through application of the equal

 

percentage increase that exceed the total that would have been

 

produced by the rates or charges subsequently ordered by the

 

commission in its final order. The commission shall allocate any

 

refund required by this section among primary customers based upon

 

their pro rata share of the total revenue collected through the

 

applicable increase, and among secondary and residential customers

 

in a manner to be determined by the commission. The rate of

 

interest for refunds shall equal 5% plus the London interbank

 

offered rate (LIBOR) for the appropriate time period. For any

 


portion of the refund which, exclusive of interest, exceeds 25% of

 

the annual revenue increase awarded by the commission in its final

 

order, the rate of interest shall be the authorized rate of return

 

on the common stock of the utility during the appropriate period.

 

Any refund or interest awarded under this subsection shall not be

 

included, in whole or in part, in any application for a rate

 

increase by a utility. Nothing in this This section impairs does

 

not impair the commission's ability to issue a show cause order as

 

part of its rate-making authority. An alteration or amendment in

 

rates or rate schedules applied for by a public utility that will

 

not result in an increase in the cost of service to its customers

 

may be authorized and approved without notice or hearing. There

 

shall be no increase in rates based upon changes in cost of fuel or

 

purchased gas unless notice has been given within the service area

 

to be affected, and there has been an opportunity for a full and

 

complete hearing on the cost of fuel or purchased gas. The rates

 

charged by any utility pursuant to an automatic fuel or purchased

 

gas adjustment clause shall not be altered, changed, or amended

 

unless notice has been given within the service area to be

 

affected, and there has been an opportunity for a full and complete

 

hearing on the cost of the fuel or purchased gas.

 

     (2) The commission shall adopt rules and procedures for the

 

filing, investigation, and hearing of petitions or applications to

 

increase or decrease utility rates and charges as the commission

 

finds necessary or appropriate to enable it to reach a final

 

decision with respect to petitions or applications within a period

 

of 12 10 months from the filing of the complete petitions or

 


applications. The commission shall not authorize or approve

 

adjustment clauses that operate without notice and an opportunity

 

for a full and complete hearing, and all such clauses shall be are

 

abolished. The commission may hold a full and complete hearing to

 

determine the cost of fuel, purchased gas, or purchased power

 

separately from a full and complete hearing on a general rate case

 

and may be held concurrently with the general rate case. The

 

commission shall authorize a utility to recover the cost of fuel,

 

purchased gas, or purchased power only to the extent that the

 

purchases are reasonable and prudent. As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Full and complete hearing" means a hearing that provides

 

interested parties a reasonable opportunity to present and cross-

 

examine evidence and present arguments relevant to the specific

 

element or elements of the request that are the subject of the

 

hearing.

 

     (b) "General rate case" means a proceeding initiated by a

 

utility in an application filed with the commission that alleges a

 

revenue deficiency and requests an increase in the schedule of

 

rates or charges based on the utility's total cost of providing

 

service.

 

     (3) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, if the

 

commission fails to reach a final decision with respect to a

 

completed petition or application to increase or decrease utility

 

rates within the 12-month 10-month period following the filing of

 

the completed petition or application, the petition or application

 

is considered approved. If a utility makes any significant

 

amendment to its filing, the commission has an additional 12 months

 


from the date of the amendment to reach a final decision on the

 

petition or application. If the utility files for an extension of

 

time, the commission shall extend the 12-month period by the amount

 

of additional time requested by the utility.

 

     (4) A utility shall not file a general rate case application

 

for an increase in rates earlier than 12 months after the date of

 

the filing of a complete prior general rate case application. A

 

utility may not file a new general rate case application until the

 

commission has issued a final order on a prior general rate case or

 

until the rates are approved under subsection (3).

 

     (5) The commission shall, if requested by a gas utility,

 

establish load retention transportation rate schedules or approve

 

gas transportation contracts as required for the purpose of

 

retaining industrial or commercial customers whose individual

 

annual transportation volumes exceed 500,000 decatherms on the gas

 

utility's system. The commission shall approve these rate schedules

 

or approve transportation contracts entered into by the utility in

 

good faith if the industrial or commercial customer has the

 

installed capability to use an alternative fuel or otherwise has a

 

viable alternative to receiving natural gas transportation service

 

from the utility, the customer can obtain the alternative fuel or

 

gas transportation from an alternative source at a price which that

 

would cause them to cease using the gas utility's system, and the

 

customer, as a result of their use of the system and receipt of

 

transportation service, makes a significant contribution to the

 

utility's fixed costs. The commission shall adopt accounting and

 

rate-making policies to ensure that the discounts associated with

 


the transportation rate schedules and contracts are recovered by

 

the gas utility through charges applicable to other customers if

 

the incremental costs related to the discounts are no greater than

 

the costs that would be passed on to those customers as the result

 

of a loss of the industrial or commercial customer's contribution

 

to a utility's fixed costs.

 

     (6) Within 90 days of the effective date of the amendatory act

 

that added this subsection, the The commission shall adopt standard

 

rate application filing forms and instructions for use in all

 

general rate cases filed by utilities whose rates are regulated by

 

the commission. For cooperative electric utilities whose rates are

 

regulated by the commission, in addition to rate applications filed

 

under this section, the commission shall continue to allow for rate

 

filings based on the cooperative's times interest earned ratio. The

 

commission may , in its discretion, modify the standard rate

 

application forms and instructions adopted under this subsection.

 

     (7) If, on or before January 1, 2008, a merchant plant entered

 

into a contract with an initial term of 20 years or more to sell

 

electricity to an electric utility whose rates are regulated by the

 

commission with 1,000,000 or more retail customers in this state

 

and if, prior to before January 1, 2008, the merchant plant

 

generated electricity under that contract, in whole or in part,

 

from wood or solid wood wastes, then the merchant plant shall, upon

 

petition by the merchant plant, and subject to the limitation set

 

forth in subsection (8), recover the amount, if any, by which the

 

merchant plant's reasonably and prudently incurred actual fuel and

 

variable operation and maintenance costs exceed the amount that the

 


merchant plant is paid under the contract for those costs. This

 

subsection does not apply to landfill gas plants, hydro plants,

 

municipal solid waste plants, or to merchant plants engaged in

 

litigation against an electric utility seeking higher payments for

 

power delivered pursuant to contract.

 

     (8) The total aggregate additional amounts recoverable by

 

merchant plants pursuant to under subsection (7) in excess of the

 

amounts paid under the contracts shall not exceed $1,000,000.00 per

 

month for each affected electric utility. The $1,000,000.00 per

 

month limit specified in this subsection shall be reviewed by the

 

commission upon petition of the merchant plant filed no more than

 

once per year and may be adjusted if the commission finds that the

 

eligible merchant plants reasonably and prudently incurred actual

 

fuel and variable operation and maintenance costs exceed the amount

 

that those merchant plants are paid under the contract by more than

 

$1,000,000.00 per month. The annual amount of the adjustments shall

 

not exceed a rate equal to the United States consumer price index.

 

An adjustment shall not be made by the commission unless each

 

affected merchant plant files a petition with the commission. As

 

used in this subsection, "United States consumer price index" means

 

the United States consumer price index for all urban consumers as

 

defined and reported by the United States department of labor,

 

bureau of labor statistics. If the total aggregate amount by which

 

the eligible merchant plants reasonably and prudently incurred

 

actual fuel and variable operation and maintenance costs determined

 

by the commission exceed the amount that the merchant plants are

 

paid under the contract by more than $1,000,000.00 per month, the

 


commission shall allocate the additional $1,000,000.00 per month

 

payment among the eligible merchant plants based upon the

 

relationship of excess costs among the eligible merchant plants.

 

The $1,000,000.00 limit specified in this subsection, as adjusted,

 

shall not apply with respect to actual fuel and variable operation

 

and maintenance costs that are incurred due to changes in federal

 

or state environmental laws or regulations that are implemented

 

after the effective date of the amendatory act that added this

 

subsection. October 6, 2008. The $1,000,000.00 per month payment

 

limit under this subsection shall does not apply to merchant plants

 

eligible under subsection (7) whose electricity is purchased by a

 

utility that is using wood or wood waste or fuels derived from

 

those materials for fuel in their power plants. As used in this

 

subsection, "United States consumer price index" means the United

 

States consumer price index for all urban consumers as defined and

 

reported by the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor

 

Statistics.

 

     (9) The commission shall issue orders to permit the recovery

 

authorized under subsections (7) and (8) upon petition of the

 

merchant plant. The merchant plant shall not be required to alter

 

or amend the existing contract with the electric utility in order

 

to obtain the recovery under subsections (7) and (8). The

 

commission shall permit or require the electric utility whose rates

 

are regulated by the commission to recover from its ratepayers all

 

fuel and variable operation and maintenance costs that the electric

 

utility is required to pay to the merchant plant as reasonably and

 

prudently incurred costs.

 


     (10) The commission may approve a revenue decoupling mechanism

 

for a natural gas or electric utility that adjusts for increases or

 

decreases in actual sales volumes compared to the projected levels

 

used in the natural gas or electric utilities' most recent rate

 

case. In determining the revenue decoupling mechanism for a

 

utility, the commission shall give deference to the proposed

 

revenue decoupling mechanism submitted by the utility. The

 

commission may approve a revenue decoupling mechanism that is not

 

submitted by a utility if the commission determines that the

 

revenue decoupling mechanism is reasonable and prudent.

 

     (11) As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Full and complete hearing" means a hearing that provides

 

interested parties a reasonable opportunity to present and cross-

 

examine evidence and present arguments relevant to the specific

 

element or elements of the request that are the subject of the

 

hearing.

 

     (b) "General rate case" means a proceeding initiated by a

 

utility in an application filed with the commission that alleges a

 

revenue deficiency and requests an increase in the schedule of

 

rates or charges based on the utility's total cost of providing

 

service.

 

     Sec. 6j. (1) As used in this act:

 

     (a) "Power supply cost recovery clause" means a clause in the

 

electric rates or rate schedule of a an electric utility which that

 

permits the monthly adjustment of rates for power supply to allow

 

the utility to recover the booked costs, including transportation

 

costs, reclamation costs, and disposal and reprocessing costs, of

 


fuel burned by the utility for electric generation and the booked

 

costs of purchased and net interchanged power transactions by the

 

utility incurred under reasonable and prudent policies and

 

practices.

 

     (b) "Power supply cost recovery factor" means that element of

 

the rates to be charged for electric service to reflect power

 

supply costs incurred by an electric utility and made pursuant to a

 

power supply cost recovery clause incorporated in the rates or rate

 

schedule of an electric utility.

 

     (2) Pursuant to its authority under this act, the The public

 

service commission may incorporate a power supply cost recovery

 

clause in the electric rates or rate schedule of a an electric

 

utility. , but is not required to do so. Any order incorporating a

 

power supply cost recovery clause shall be as a result of a hearing

 

solely on the question of the inclusion of the clause in the rates

 

or rate schedule. , which A hearing under this subsection shall be

 

conducted as a contested case pursuant to chapter 4 of the

 

administrative procedures act of 1969, Act No. 306 of the Public

 

Acts of 1969, being sections 24.271 to 24.287 of the Michigan

 

Compiled Laws, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287, or, pursuant to

 

subsection (18), as a result of a general rate case. Any order

 

incorporating a power supply cost recovery clause shall replace and

 

rescind any previous fuel cost adjustment clause or purchased and

 

net interchanged power adjustment clause incorporated in the

 

electric rates of the utility upon the effective date of the first

 

power supply cost recovery factor authorized for the utility under

 

its power supply cost recovery clause.

 


     (3) In order to implement the power supply cost recovery

 

clause established pursuant to under subsection (2), a an electric

 

utility annually shall file, pursuant to procedures established by

 

the commission, if any, a complete power supply cost recovery plan

 

describing the expected sources of electric power supply and

 

changes in the cost of power supply anticipated over a future 12-

 

month period specified by the commission and requesting for each of

 

those 12 months a specific power supply cost recovery factor. The

 

plan shall be filed not less later than 3 months before the

 

beginning of the 12-month period covered by the plan. The plan

 

shall describe all major contracts and power supply arrangements

 

entered into by the utility for providing power supply during the

 

specified 12-month period. The description of the major contracts

 

and arrangements shall include the price of fuel, the duration of

 

the contract or arrangement, and an explanation or description of

 

any other term or provision as required by the commission. The plan

 

shall also include the utility's evaluation of the reasonableness

 

and prudence of its decisions to provide power supply in the manner

 

described in the plan, in light of its existing sources of

 

electrical generation, and an explanation of the actions taken by

 

the utility to minimize the cost of fuel to the utility.

 

     (4) In order to implement the a power supply cost recovery

 

clause established pursuant to under subsection (2), a an electric

 

utility shall file, contemporaneously with the power supply cost

 

recovery plan required by subsection (3), a 5-year forecast of the

 

power supply requirements of its customers, its anticipated sources

 

of supply, and projections of power supply costs, in light of its

 


existing sources of electrical generation and sources of electrical

 

generation under construction. The forecast shall include a all of

 

the following:

 

     (a) A description of all relevant major contracts and power

 

supply arrangements entered into or contemplated by the utility. ,

 

and such

 

     (b) A demonstration that the utility has adequate resources to

 

meet any reserve margin required by law.

 

     (c) Any other information as the commission may require.

 

     (5) If a an electric utility files a power supply cost

 

recovery plan and a 5-year forecast as provided in subsections (3)

 

and (4), the commission shall conduct a proceeding, to be known as

 

a power supply and cost review, for the purpose of evaluating the

 

reasonableness and prudence of the power supply cost recovery plan

 

filed by a utility pursuant to under subsection (3), and

 

establishing the power supply cost recovery factors to implement a

 

power supply cost recovery clause incorporated in the electric

 

rates or rate schedule of the utility. The power supply and cost

 

review shall be conducted as a contested case pursuant to chapter 4

 

of the administrative procedures act of 1969, Act No. 306 of the

 

Public Acts of 1969.1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287.

 

     (6) In its final order in a power supply and cost review, the

 

commission shall evaluate the reasonableness and prudence of the

 

decisions underlying the power supply cost recovery plan filed by

 

the an electric utility pursuant to under subsection (3), and shall

 

approve, disapprove, or amend the power supply cost recovery plan

 

accordingly. In evaluating the decisions underlying the power

 


supply cost recovery plan, the commission shall consider the cost

 

and availability of the electrical generation available to the

 

utility; the cost of short-term firm purchases available to the

 

utility; the availability of interruptible service; the ability of

 

the utility to reduce or to eliminate any firm sales to out-of-

 

state customers if the utility is not a multi-state utility whose

 

firm sales are subject to other regulatory authority; whether the

 

utility has taken all appropriate actions to minimize the cost of

 

fuel; and other relevant factors. The commission shall approve,

 

reject, or amend the 12 monthly power supply cost recovery factors

 

requested by the utility in its power supply cost recovery plan.

 

The factors shall not reflect items the commission could reasonably

 

anticipate would be disallowed under subsection (13). The factors

 

ordered shall be described in fixed dollar amounts per unit of

 

electricity, but may include specific amounts contingent on future

 

events.

 

     (7) In its final order in a power supply and cost review, the

 

commission shall evaluate the decisions underlying the 5-year

 

forecast filed by a an electric utility pursuant to under

 

subsection (4). The commission may also indicate any cost items in

 

the 5-year forecast that, on the basis of present evidence, the

 

commission would be unlikely to permit the utility to recover from

 

its customers in rates, rate schedules, or power supply cost

 

recovery factors established in the future.

 

     (8) The commission, on its own motion or the motion of any

 

party, may make a finding and enter a temporary order granting

 

approval or partial approval of a power supply cost recovery plan

 


in a power supply and cost recovery review, after first having

 

given notice to the parties to the review, and after having

 

afforded to the parties to the review a reasonable opportunity for

 

a full and complete hearing. A temporary order made pursuant to

 

under this subsection shall be is considered a final order for

 

purposes of judicial review.

 

     (9) If the commission has made a final or temporary order in a

 

power supply and cost review, the an electric utility may each

 

month incorporate in its rates for the period covered by the order

 

any amounts up to the power supply cost recovery factors permitted

 

in that order. If the commission has not made a final or temporary

 

order within 3 months of after the submission of a complete power

 

supply cost recovery plan, or by the beginning of the period

 

covered in the plan, whichever comes later, or if a temporary order

 

has expired without being extended or replaced, then pending an

 

order which that determines the power supply cost recovery factors,

 

a utility may each month adjust its rates to incorporate all or a

 

part of the power supply cost recovery factors requested in its

 

plan. Any amounts collected under the power supply cost recovery

 

factors before the commission makes its final order shall be is

 

subject to prompt refund with interest to the extent that the total

 

amounts collected exceed the total amounts determined in the

 

commission's final order to be reasonable and prudent for the same

 

period of time.

 

     (10) Not less later than 3 months before the beginning of the

 

third quarter of the 12-month period , the described in subsection

 

(3), an electric utility may file a revised power supply cost

 


recovery plan which shall cover that covers the remainder of the

 

12-month period. Upon receipt of the revised power supply cost

 

recovery plan, the commission shall reopen the power supply and

 

cost review. In addition, the commission may reopen the power

 

supply and cost review on its own motion or on the showing of good

 

cause by any party if at least 6 months have elapsed since the

 

utility submitted its complete filing and if there are at least 60

 

days remaining in the 12-month period under consideration. A

 

reopened power supply and cost review shall be conducted as a

 

contested case pursuant to chapter 4 of the administrative

 

procedures act of 1969, Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969,

 

1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287, and in accordance with

 

subsections (3), (6), (8), and (9).

 

     (11) Not more later than 45 days following after the last day

 

of each billing month in which a power supply cost recovery factor

 

has been applied to customers' bills, the an electric utility shall

 

file with the commission a detailed statement for that month of the

 

revenues recorded pursuant to the power supply cost recovery factor

 

and the allowance for cost of power supply included in the base

 

rates established in the latest commission order for the utility,

 

and the cost of power supply. The detailed statement shall be in

 

the manner and form prescribed by the commission. The commission

 

shall establish procedures for insuring that the detailed statement

 

is promptly verified and corrected if necessary.

 

     (12) Not less than once a year, and not later than 3 months

 

after the end of the 12-month period covered by a an electric

 

utility's power supply cost recovery plan, the commission shall

 


commence a proceeding, to be known as a power supply cost

 

reconciliation, as a contested case pursuant to chapter 4 of the

 

administrative procedures act of 1969, Act No. 306 of the Public

 

Acts of 1969. Reasonable 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287. The

 

commission shall permit reasonable discovery shall be permitted

 

before and during the reconciliation proceeding in order to assist

 

parties and interested persons in obtaining evidence concerning

 

reconciliation issues including, but not limited to, the

 

reasonableness and prudence of expenditures and the amounts

 

collected pursuant to the clause. At the power supply cost

 

reconciliation the commission shall reconcile the revenues recorded

 

pursuant to the power supply cost recovery factors and the

 

allowance for cost of power supply included in the base rates

 

established in the latest commission order for the utility with the

 

amounts actually expensed and included in the cost of power supply

 

by the utility. The commission shall consider any issue regarding

 

the reasonableness and prudence of expenses for which customers

 

were charged if the issue was not considered adequately at a

 

previously conducted power supply and cost review.

 

     (13) In its order in a power supply cost reconciliation, the

 

commission shall do all of the following:

 

     (a) Disallow cost increases resulting from changes in

 

accounting or rate-making expense treatment not previously approved

 

by the commission. The commission may order the utility to pay a

 

penalty of not to exceed more than 25% of the amount improperly

 

collected. Costs incurred by the utility for penalty payments shall

 

not be charged to customers.

 


     (b) Disallow any capacity charges associated with power

 

purchased for periods in excess of 6 months unless the utility has

 

obtained the prior approval of the commission. If Not disallow the

 

capacity charges for any facilities if the commission has approved

 

capacity charges in a contract with a qualifying facility, as that

 

term is defined by the federal energy regulatory commission Federal

 

Energy Regulatory Commission pursuant to the public utilities

 

regulatory policies act of 1978, Public Law 95-617, 92 Stat. Stat

 

3117, the commission shall not disallow the capacity charges for

 

the facility in the power supply cost reconciliation unless the

 

commission has ordered revised capacity charges upon

 

reconsideration pursuant to under this subsection. A contract shall

 

be is valid and binding in accordance with its terms, and capacity

 

charges paid pursuant to such a that contract shall be are

 

recoverable costs of the utility for rate-making purposes

 

notwithstanding that the order approving such a that contract is

 

later vacated, modified, or otherwise held to be invalid in whole

 

or in part if the order approving the contract has not been stayed

 

or suspended by a competent court within 30 days after the date of

 

the order, or within 30 days of the effective date of the 1987

 

amendatory act that added subsection (19) by July 29, 1987 if the

 

order was issued after September 1, 1986 , and before the effective

 

date of the 1987 amendatory act that added subsection (19). June

 

29, 1987. The scope and manner of the review of capacity charges

 

for a qualifying facility shall be determined by the commission.

 

Except as to approvals for qualifying facilities granted by the

 

commission prior to before June 1, 1987, proceedings before the

 


commission seeking such those approvals shall be conducted as a

 

contested case pursuant to chapter 4 of the administrative

 

procedures act of 1969, Act No. 306 of the Public Acts of 1969.

 

1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287. The commission, upon its own

 

motion or upon application of any person, may reconsider its

 

approval of capacity charges in a contested case hearing after

 

passage of a period necessary for financing the qualifying

 

facility, provided that:if both of the following apply:

 

     (i) The commission has first issued an order making a finding

 

based on evidence presented in a contested case that there has been

 

a substantial change in circumstances since the commission's

 

initial approval. ; and

 

     (ii) Such a The commission finding shall be is set forth in a

 

commission order subject to immediate judicial review.

 

     The financing period for a qualifying facility during which

 

previously approved capacity charges shall not be subject to

 

commission reconsideration shall be 17.5 years, beginning with the

 

date of commercial operation, for all qualifying facilities, except

 

that the minimum financing period before reconsideration of the

 

previously approved capacity charges shall be for the duration of

 

the financing for a qualifying facility which that produces

 

electric energy by the use of biomass, waste, wood, hydroelectric,

 

wind, and other renewable resources, or any combination of

 

renewable resources, as the primary energy source.

 

     (c) Disallow net increased costs attributable to a generating

 

plant outage of more than 90 days in duration unless the utility

 

demonstrates by clear and satisfactory evidence that the outage, or

 


any part of the outage, was not caused or prolonged by the

 

utility's negligence or by unreasonable or imprudent management.

 

     (d) Disallow transportation costs attributable to capital

 

investments to develop a utility's capability to transport fuel or

 

relocate fuel at the utility's facilities and disallow unloading

 

and handling expenses incurred after receipt of fuel by the

 

utility.

 

     (e) Disallow the cost of fuel purchased from an affiliated

 

company to the extent that such the fuel is more costly than fuel

 

of requisite quality available at or about the same time from other

 

suppliers with whom it would be comparably cost beneficial to deal.

 

     (f) Disallow charges unreasonably or imprudently incurred for

 

fuel not taken.

 

     (g) Disallow additional costs resulting from unreasonably or

 

imprudently renegotiated fuel contracts.

 

     (h) Disallow penalty charges unreasonably or imprudently

 

incurred.

 

     (i) Disallow demurrage charges.

 

     (j) Disallow increases in charges for nuclear fuel disposal

 

unless the utility has received the prior approval of the

 

commission.

 

     (14) In its order in a power supply cost reconciliation, the

 

commission shall require a an electric utility to refund to

 

customers or credit to customers' bills any net amount determined

 

to have been recovered over the period covered in excess of the

 

amounts determined to have been actually expensed by the utility

 

for power supply, and to have been incurred through reasonable and

 


prudent actions not precluded by the commission order in the power

 

supply and cost review. Such The commission shall apportion the

 

refunds or credits shall be apportioned among the customers of the

 

utility utilizing procedures that the commission determines to be

 

reasonable. The commission may adopt different procedures with

 

respect to customers served under the various rate schedules of the

 

utility and may, in appropriate circumstances, order refunds or

 

credits in proportion to the excess amounts actually collected from

 

each such customer during the period covered.

 

     (15) In its order in a power supply cost reconciliation, the

 

commission shall authorize a an electric utility to recover from

 

customers any net amount by which the amount determined to have

 

been recovered over the period covered was less than the amount

 

determined to have been actually expensed by the utility for power

 

supply, and to have been incurred through reasonable and prudent

 

actions not precluded by the commission order in the power supply

 

and cost review. For excess costs incurred through management

 

actions contrary to the commission's power supply and cost review

 

order, the commission shall authorize a utility to recover costs

 

incurred for power supply in the reconciliation period in excess of

 

the amount recovered over the period only if the utility

 

demonstrates by clear and convincing evidence that the excess

 

expenses were beyond the ability of the utility to control through

 

reasonable and prudent actions. For excess costs incurred through

 

management actions consistent with the commission's power supply

 

and cost review order, the commission shall authorize a utility to

 

recover costs incurred for power supply in the reconciliation

 


period in excess of the amount recovered over the period only if

 

the utility demonstrates that the level of such those expenses

 

resulted from reasonable and prudent management actions. Such The

 

amounts in excess of the amounts actually recovered by the utility

 

for power supply shall be apportioned among and charged to the

 

customers of the utility utilizing procedures that the commission

 

determines to be reasonable. The commission may adopt different

 

procedures with respect to customers served under the various rate

 

schedules of the utility and may, in appropriate circumstances,

 

order charges to be made in proportion to the amounts which that

 

would have been paid by such those customers if the amounts in

 

excess of the amounts actually recovered by the utility for cost of

 

power supply had been included in the power supply cost recovery

 

factors with respect to such those customers during the period

 

covered. Charges for such the excess amounts shall be spread over a

 

period that the commission determines to be appropriate.

 

     (16) If the commission orders refunds or credits pursuant to

 

under subsection (14), or additional charges to customers pursuant

 

to under subsection (15), in its final order in a power supply cost

 

reconciliation, the refunds, credits, or additional charges shall

 

include interest. In determining the interest included in a refund,

 

credit, or additional charge pursuant to under this subsection, the

 

commission shall consider, to the extent material and practicable,

 

the time at which the excess recoveries or insufficient recoveries,

 

or both occurred. The commission shall determine a rate of interest

 

for excess recoveries, refunds, and credits equal to the greater of

 

the average short-term borrowing rate available to the utility

 


during the appropriate period, or the authorized rate of return on

 

the common stock of the utility during that same period. Costs

 

incurred by the utility for refunds and interest on refunds shall

 

not be charged to customers. The commission shall determine a rate

 

of interest for insufficient recoveries and additional charges

 

equal to the average short-term borrowing rate available to the

 

utility during the appropriate period.

 

     (17) To avoid undue hardship or unduly burdensome or excessive

 

cost, the commission may do all of the following:

 

     (a) Exempt an electric utility with fewer than 200,000

 

customers in the this state of Michigan from 1 or more of the

 

procedural provisions of this section or may modify the filing

 

requirements of this section.

 

     (b) Exempt an energy utility organized as a cooperative

 

corporation pursuant to under sections 98 to 109 of Act No. 327 of

 

the Public Acts of 1931, being sections 450.98 to 450.109 of the

 

Michigan Compiled Laws, 1931 PA 327, MCL 450.98 to 450.109, from 1

 

or more of the provisions of this section.

 

     (18) Notwithstanding any other provision of this act, the

 

commission may, upon application by an electric utility, set power

 

supply cost recovery factors, in a manner otherwise consistent with

 

this act, in an order resulting from a general rate case. Within

 

120 days following the effective date of this section, By October

 

27, 1987, for the purpose of setting power supply cost recovery

 

factors, the commission shall permit an electric utility to reopen

 

a general rate case in which a final order was issued within 120

 

days before or after the effective date of this section June 29,

 


1987 or to amend an application or reopen the evidentiary record in

 

a pending general rate case. If the commission sets power supply

 

cost recovery factors in an order resulting from a general rate

 

case, all of the following apply:

 

     (a) The power supply cost recovery factors shall cover a

 

future period of 48 months or the number of months which that

 

elapse until the commission orders new power supply cost recovery

 

factors in a general rate case, whichever is the shorter period.

 

     (b) Annual reconciliation proceedings shall be conducted

 

pursuant to under subsection (12) and if an annual reconciliation

 

proceeding shows a recoverable amount pursuant to under subsection

 

(15), the commission shall authorize the electric utility to defer

 

the amount and to accumulate interest on the amount pursuant to

 

under subsection (16), and in the next order resulting from a

 

general rate case authorize the utility to recover the amount and

 

interest from its customers in the manner provided in subsection

 

(15).

 

     (c) The power supply cost recovery factors shall are not be

 

subject to revision pursuant to under subsection (10).

 

     (19) Five years after the effective date of the amendatory act

 

that added this subsection, By June 29, 1992, and every 5 years

 

thereafter, the standing committees of the house and senate that

 

deal with responsible for legislation concerning public utilities

 

shall review the amendatory act that added this subsection.effect

 

of 1987 PA 81.

 

     Sec. 6s. (1) An electric utility that proposes to construct an

 

electric generation facility, make a significant investment in an

 


existing electric generation facility, purchase an existing

 

electric generation facility, or enter into a power purchase

 

agreement for the purchase of electric capacity for a period of 6

 

years or longer may submit an application to the commission seeking

 

a certificate of necessity for that construction, investment, or

 

purchase if that construction, investment, or purchase costs

 

$500,000,000.00 or more and a portion of the costs would be

 

allocable to retail customers in this state. A significant

 

investment in an electric generation facility includes a group of

 

investments reasonably planned to be made over a multiple year

 

period not to exceed 6 years for a singular purpose such as

 

increasing the capacity of an existing electric generation plant.

 

The commission shall not issue a certificate of necessity under

 

this section for any environmental upgrades to existing electric

 

generation facilities or for a renewable energy system.

 

     (1) The commission shall, within 120 days of the effective

 

date of the amendatory act that added section 6t and every 4 years

 

thereafter, commence a proceeding to establish statewide parameters

 

for integrated resource plans required under subsection (2). The

 

commission shall, in consultation with the Michigan agency for

 

energy and the department of environmental quality, do all of the

 

following in a proceeding under this subsection:

 

     (a) Conduct an assessment of the potential for reduction in

 

energy waste in this state, based on what is economically feasible,

 

as well as technologically feasible.

 

     (b) Identify any new state or federal environmental standard,

 

law, or rule and how that standard, law, or rule would affect

 


electric utilities in this state.

 

     (c) Identify any proposed state or federal environmental

 

standard, law, or rule that has been published in the Michigan

 

register or the federal register and how the proposed standard,

 

law, or rule would affect electric utilities in this state.

 

     (d) Identify any required reliability standards in areas of

 

this state.

 

     (e) Establish the modeling scenarios and assumptions each

 

electric utility must use in developing its integrated resource

 

plan filed under subsection (2), including all of the following:

 

     (i) Any required reliability standards.

 

     (ii) All applicable state and federal environmental standards,

 

laws, and rules identified in this subsection.

 

     (iii) Any required investments in generation, transmission,

 

and distribution infrastructure.

 

     (iv) Any supply-side and demand-side resources that could

 

address any need for additional generation capacity, including, but

 

not limited to, the type of generation technology for any proposed

 

generation facility, projected energy efficiency savings, and

 

projected load management and demand response savings.

 

     (v) Any regional infrastructure limitations in this state.

 

     (vi) The projected costs of different types of fuel used for

 

electric generation.

 

     (f) Allow other state agencies to provide input regarding any

 

other regulatory requirements that should be included in modeling

 

scenarios or assumptions.

 

     (g) Publish a copy of the proposed modeling scenarios and

 


assumptions to be used in integrated resource plans on the

 

commission's website.

 

     (h) Before issuing the final modeling scenarios and

 

assumptions each electric utility must use in developing its

 

integrated resource plan, receive written comments and hold

 

hearings to solicit public input regarding the proposed modeling

 

scenarios and assumptions.

 

     (2) Not later than 2 years after the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added section 6t, each electric utility whose

 

rates are regulated by the commission shall file with the

 

commission an integrated resource plan that minimizes the net

 

present value of forward-looking capital and production costs while

 

meeting all applicable state and federal reliability and

 

environmental regulations and provides a long-term projection of

 

the utility's load obligations and a plan to meet those obligations

 

over the ensuing term of the plan. The commission shall establish

 

filing requirements for an integrated resource plan that

 

demonstrates how the utility will comply with requirements to

 

provide generation reliability, including meeting reserve margin

 

requirements established by the commission or a federally

 

authorized regional transmission system operator for a 5-year, 10-

 

year, and 15-year planning period.

 

     (3) (2) The For an electric utility with fewer than 1,000,000

 

customers, the commission may implement separate filing

 

requirements, review criteria, and approval standards for electric

 

utilities with less than 1,000,000 retail customers who seek a

 

certificate of necessity for projects costing less than

 


$500,000,000.00.that differ from those established under subsection

 

(2). An electric utility providing electric tariff service to

 

customers both in this state and in at least 1 other state may

 

design its integrated resource plan to cover all its customers on

 

that multi-state basis. If an electric utility has filed a multi-

 

state integrated resource plan that includes its service area in

 

this state with the relevant utility regulatory commission in

 

another state in which it provides tariff service to retail

 

customers, the commission shall accept that integrated resource

 

plan filing in this state. However, the commission may require

 

supplemental information if necessary to evaluate the plan. Upon

 

request of an electric utility, the commission may adjust the

 

filing dates for a multi-state integrated resource plan filing in

 

this state to place its review on the same timeline as other

 

relevant state reviews.

 

     (3) An electric utility submitting an application under this

 

section may request 1 or more of the following:

 

     (a) A certificate of necessity that the power to be supplied

 

as a result of the proposed construction, investment, or purchase

 

is needed.

 

     (b) A certificate of necessity that the size, fuel type, and

 

other design characteristics of the existing or proposed electric

 

generation facility or the terms of the power purchase agreement

 

represent the most reasonable and prudent means of meeting that

 

power need.

 

     (c) A certificate of necessity that the price specified in the

 

power purchase agreement will be recovered in rates from the

 


electric utility's customers.

 

     (d) A certificate of necessity that the estimated purchase or

 

capital costs of and the financing plan for the existing or

 

proposed electric generation facility, including, but not limited

 

to, the costs of siting and licensing a new facility and the

 

estimated cost of power from the new or proposed electric

 

generation facility, will be recoverable in rates from the electric

 

utility's customers subject to subsection (4)(c).

 

     (4) Before filing its first integrated resource plan under

 

this section, each electric utility whose rates are regulated by

 

the commission shall issue a request for proposals to provide

 

generation capacity resources to serve the utility's reasonably

 

projected electric loads and applicable reserve margins for its

 

customers in this state and customers the utility serves in other

 

states during the initial 3-year planning period to be considered

 

in its integrated resource plan to be filed under this section. The

 

request for proposals is only required before the utility's filing

 

of its first integrated resource plan. Responses to a request for

 

proposals issued under this subsection should include proposals to

 

provide supply side turnkey construction of generating capacity

 

resources, renewable generation, or capacity storage, which assets

 

are designed to be purchased by the utility, and may include

 

proposals for the sale of existing generating assets, but shall not

 

include proposals for demand side resources. Respondents to a

 

request for proposals may request that certain proprietary

 

information be exempt from public disclosure as allowed by the

 

commission. A utility that issues a request for proposals under

 


this subsection shall use the resulting proposals to inform its

 

integrated resource plan filed under this section and include those

 

proposals as part of its integrated resource plan. A utility is not

 

required to accept any proposals submitted in response to its

 

request for proposals.

 

     (5) (4) Within Not later than 270 days of the filing of an

 

application after an electric utility files an integrated resource

 

plan under this section, the commission shall issue an order

 

granting approving or denying, with recommended changes, the

 

requested certificate of necessity. utility's integrated resource

 

plan. The commission shall hold a hearing on the application.

 

integrated resource plan. The hearing shall be conducted as a

 

contested case pursuant to chapter 4 of the administrative

 

procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287. The

 

commission shall allow intervention by interested persons.

 

Reasonable The commission shall request an advisory opinion from

 

the department of environmental quality regarding whether the

 

integrated resource plan can reasonably be expected to achieve

 

compliance with applicable state and federal environmental

 

regulations, and whether the proposed integrated resource plan can

 

reasonably be expected to result in pollution reductions required

 

by applicable state or federal regulations. The commission may

 

invite other state agencies to provide testimony regarding other

 

relevant regulatory requirements related to the integrated resource

 

plan. The commission shall permit reasonable discovery shall be

 

permitted before after an integrated resource plan is filed and

 

during the hearing in order to assist parties and interested

 


persons in obtaining evidence concerning the application,

 

integrated resource plan, including, but not limited to, the

 

reasonableness and prudence of the construction, investment, or

 

purchase for which the certificate of necessity has been requested.

 

plan. The commission shall grant the request approve the integrated

 

resource plan if it determines all of the following:

 

     (a) That the The electric utility has demonstrated a need for

 

the power that would be supplied by the existing or proposed

 

electric generation facility or pursuant to the proposed power

 

purchase agreement through its approved integrated resource plan

 

that complies with subsection (11).investments and resources

 

included in the proposed integrated resource plan.

 

     (b) The electric utility has demonstrated that the investments

 

and resources included in the proposed integrated resource plan

 

would be sufficient to provide the capacity necessary to serve the

 

utility's reasonably projected electric loads and applicable

 

reserve margins.

 

     (c) (b) The information supplied indicates that the existing

 

or proposed electric generation facility proposed integrated

 

resource plan and the resources contained in the plan will comply

 

with all applicable state and federal environmental standards,

 

laws, and rules.

 

     (d) (c) The estimated cost of power from the existing or

 

proposed electric generation facility or the price of power

 

specified in the proposed power purchase agreement is reasonable.

 

The commission shall find that the cost is reasonable if, in the

 

construction or investment in a new or existing facility, to the

 


extent it is commercially practicable, the estimated costs are the

 

result of competitively bid engineering, procurement, and

 

construction contracts, or in a power purchase agreement, the cost

 

is the result of a competitive solicitation. Up to 150 days after

 

an electric utility makes its initial filing, it may file to update

 

its cost estimates if they have materially changed. No other aspect

 

of the initial filing may be modified unless the application is

 

withdrawn and refiled. A utility's filing updating its cost

 

estimates does not extend the period for the commission to issue an

 

order granting approving or denying a certificate of necessity. the

 

integrated resource plan. An affiliate of an electric utility that

 

serves customers in this state and at least 1 other state may

 

participate in the competitive bidding to provide engineering,

 

procurement, and construction services to that electric utility for

 

a project covered by this section.

 

     (e) (d) The existing or proposed electric generation facility

 

or proposed power purchase agreement proposed integrated resource

 

plan represents the most reasonable and prudent means of meeting

 

the power need capacity needs relative to other resource options

 

for meeting power demand, including energy efficiency programs and

 

electric transmission efficiencies.capacity needs, including energy

 

efficiency programs, demand side management, and transmission

 

efficiencies. To determine whether the integrated resource plan is

 

the most reasonable and prudent means of meeting capacity needs,

 

the commission shall consider whether the plan appropriately

 

balances all of the following factors:

 

     (i) Resource adequacy and capacity to serve anticipated peak

 


electric loads and reserve margin requirements.

 

     (ii) Compliance with applicable state and federal

 

environmental regulations.

 

     (iii) Competitive pricing.

 

     (iv) Reliability.

 

     (v) Commodity price risks.

 

     (vi) Diversity of generation supply.

 

     (f) (e) To the extent practicable, the construction or

 

investment in a new or existing facility capacity resource in this

 

state is completed using a workforce composed of residents of this

 

state as determined by the commission. This subdivision does not

 

apply to a facility capacity resource that is located in a county

 

that lies on the border with another state.

 

     (6) (5) The commission may shall consider any other costs or

 

information related to the costs associated with the power that

 

would be supplied by the existing or proposed electric generation

 

facility or pursuant to the proposed purchase agreement proposed

 

integrated resource plan or alternatives to the proposal plan

 

raised by intervening parties, which may include electric

 

customers, potential resource suppliers of the utility's proposed

 

integrated resource plan, any regional transmission organization

 

serving any portion of the utility's service area, the attorney

 

general of this state, or any other parties approved by the

 

commission.

 

     (7) (6) In a certificate of necessity approving an integrated

 

resource plan under this section, the commission shall specify the

 

costs approved for the construction of or significant investment in

 


the an electric generation facility, the price approved for the

 

purchase of the an existing electric generation facility, or the

 

price approved for the a purchase of power pursuant to under the

 

terms of the power purchase agreement, or the costs associated with

 

other investments or resources used to meet capacity needs that are

 

included in the approved integrated resource plan. For power

 

purchase agreements that a utility enters into with an entity that

 

is not affiliated with that utility after the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added section 6t, the commission may authorize

 

a rate of return that does not exceed the utility's weighted

 

average cost of capital. The costs for specifically identified

 

investments included in an approved integrated resource plan that

 

are commenced within 3 years after the commission's order approving

 

the initial plan, amended plan, or plan review are considered

 

reasonable and prudent for cost recovery purposes.

 

     (8) (7) The An electric utility shall annually, file, or more

 

frequent frequently if required by the commission, file reports to

 

the commission regarding the status of any project for which a

 

certificate of necessity an integrated resource plan that has been

 

granted approved under subsection (4), (5), including an update

 

concerning the cost and schedule of that project.any projects

 

included in the integrated resource plan.

 

     (9) (8) If the commission denies any of the relief requested

 

by an electric utility, an electric utility's integrated resource

 

plan, the electric utility may withdraw its application or proceed

 

with the a proposed construction, purchase, investment, or power

 

purchase agreement contained in the withdrawn integrated resource

 


plan without a certificate and the assurances granted under this

 

section. If the commission denies the utility's integrated resource

 

plan but the utility accepts the commission's recommendations

 

regarding the integrated resource plan, the integrated resource

 

plan is considered approved as modified by the utility consistent

 

with the commission's recommendations.

 

     (10) If the commission denies a utility's integrated resource

 

plan, and the utility does not accept the commission's

 

recommendations regarding the denied integrated resource plan under

 

subsection (9), the utility, within 30 days after the date of the

 

final order denying the integrated resource plan, may submit a

 

revised integrated resource plan to the commission for approval.

 

The commission shall commence a contested case hearing under

 

chapter 4 of the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA

 

306, MCL 24.271 to 24.287. Not later than 90 days after the date on

 

which the utility submits the revised integrated resource plan to

 

the commission, the commission shall issue a final order approving

 

or denying, with recommendations, the revised integrated resource

 

plan.

 

     (11) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an order by

 

the commission approving an integrated resource plan may be

 

reviewed by the court of appeals upon a filing by a party to the

 

commission proceeding within 30 days after the order is issued. All

 

appeals of the order shall be heard and determined as expeditiously

 

as possible with lawful precedence over other matters. Review on

 

appeal shall be based solely on the record before the commission

 

and briefs to the court and is limited to whether the order

 


conforms to the constitution and laws of this state and the United

 

States and is within the authority of the commission under this

 

act.

 

     (12) (9) Once the electric generation facility or power

 

purchase agreement is considered used and useful or as otherwise

 

provided in subsection (12), the The commission shall include in an

 

electric utility's retail rates all reasonable and prudent costs

 

for an electric generation facility or power purchase agreement for

 

which a certificate of necessity has been granted. an integrated

 

resource plan approved by the commission. The commission shall not

 

disallow recovery of costs an electric utility incurs in

 

constructing, investing in, or purchasing an electric generation

 

facility or in purchasing power pursuant to a power purchase

 

agreement for which a certificate of necessity has been granted,

 

implementing an approved integrated resource plan, if the costs do

 

not exceed the costs approved by the commission in the certificate.

 

Once the electric generation facility or power purchase agreement

 

is considered used and useful or as otherwise provided in

 

subsection (12), the under subsection (7). The commission shall

 

include in the electric utility's retail rates costs actually

 

incurred by the electric utility that exceed the costs approved by

 

the commission only if the commission finds that the additional

 

costs are reasonable and prudent. If the actual costs incurred by

 

the electric utility exceed the costs approved by the commission,

 

the electric utility has the burden of proving by a preponderance

 

of the evidence that the costs are reasonable and prudent. The

 

portion of the cost of a plant, facility, or power purchase

 


agreement, which or other investment in a resource that meets a

 

demonstrated need for capacity that exceeds 110% of the cost

 

approved by the commission is presumed to have been incurred due to

 

a lack of prudence. The commission may include any or all of the

 

portion of the cost in excess of 110% of the cost approved by the

 

commission if the commission finds by a preponderance of the

 

evidence that the costs were prudently incurred.

 

     (13) (10) Within 90 days of after the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added this section 6t, the commission shall

 

adopt standard application filing forms and instructions for use in

 

all requests for a certificate of necessity an integrated resource

 

plan under this section. The commission may, in its discretion,

 

modify the standard application filing forms and instructions

 

adopted under this section.

 

     (14) (11) The commission shall establish standards for an

 

integrated resource plan that shall be filed by an electric utility

 

requesting a certificate of necessity under this section. An

 

integrated resource plan shall include all of the following:

 

     (a) A long-term forecast of the electric utility's load growth

 

under various reasonable scenarios.

 

     (b) The type of generation technology proposed for the a

 

generation facility contained in the plan and the proposed capacity

 

of the generation facility, including projected fuel and regulatory

 

costs under various reasonable scenarios.

 

     (c) Projected energy and capacity purchased or produced by the

 

electric utility pursuant to any renewable portfolio standard.from

 

a clean energy resource.

 


     (d) Projected energy efficiency program savings under any

 

energy efficiency program requirements and the projected costs for

 

that program.Details regarding the utility's plan to eliminate

 

energy waste, including the total amount of waste reduction

 

expected to be achieved annually, the cost of the plan, and the

 

expected savings for its retail customers.

 

     (e) Projected load management and demand response savings for

 

the electric utility and the projected costs for those programs.

 

     (f) An analysis of the availability and costs of other

 

electric resources that could defer, displace, or partially

 

displace the proposed generation facility or purchased power

 

agreement. , including additional renewable energy, energy

 

efficiency programs, load management, and demand response, beyond

 

those amounts contained in subdivisions (c) to (e).

 

     (g) Electric An analysis of potential new or upgraded electric

 

transmission options for the electric utility.

 

     (h) Data regarding the utility's current generation portfolio

 

including the age, licensing status, and remaining estimated time

 

of operation for each facility in the portfolio.

 

     (i) Plans for meeting current and future capacity needs with

 

cost estimates for all proposed construction, major investments,

 

and power purchase agreements.

 

     (j) An analysis of the cost, capacity factor, and viability of

 

all generation options available to meet projected capacity needs.

 

     (k) Projected economic and environmental threats that could

 

impact rates and the delivery of service.

 

     (l) Projected rate impact for the periods covered by the plan.

 


     (m) How the utility will comply with all applicable state and

 

federal environmental standards, laws, and rules.

 

     (n) A forecast of the utility's peak demand and details

 

regarding how the utility proposes to reduce peak demand.

 

     (15) (12) The commission shall allow financing interest cost

 

recovery in an electric utility's base rates on construction work

 

in progress for capital improvements approved under this section

 

prior to the assets being considered used and useful. Regardless of

 

whether or not the commission authorizes base rate treatment for

 

construction work in progress financing interest expense, an

 

electric utility shall be allowed to may recognize, accrue, and

 

defer the allowance for funds used during construction related to

 

equity capital.

 

     (13) As used in this section, "renewable energy system" means

 

that term as defined in the clean, renewable, and efficient energy

 

act.

 

     (16) An electric utility may seek amendments to an approved

 

integrated resource plan. The commission shall consider the

 

amendments under the same process and standards that govern the

 

review and approval of an integrated resource plan.

 

     (17) An electric utility shall file an application for review

 

of its integrated resource plan not later than 3 years after the

 

effective date of the most recent commission order approving a

 

plan, a plan amendment, or a plan review. The commission shall

 

consider a plan review under the same process and standards

 

established in this section for review and approval of an

 

integrated resource plan.

 


     (18) The commission may order an electric utility to file a

 

plan review. The department of environmental quality may request

 

the commission to order a plan review to address material changes

 

in environmental regulations and requirements that occur after the

 

commission's approval of an integrated resource plan. An electric

 

utility must file a plan review within 270 days after the

 

commission orders the utility to file a plan review.

 

     Sec. 6t. (1) Not later than 90 days after the effective date

 

of the amendatory act that added this section, the commission shall

 

commence a study in collaboration with representatives of each

 

customer class, utilities with 1,000,000 or more retail customers

 

in this state, and other interested parties to consider the

 

adoption of performance-based regulation, under which a utility's

 

profits would depend on the utility achieving targeted policy

 

outcomes. The overall goal of performance-based regulation is to

 

foster greater innovation and investment by the utility industry in

 

this state, in light of the aging utility infrastructure in this

 

state and demands on the utilities with regard to the environment

 

and climate.

 

     (2) In the study required under this section, the commission

 

shall review performance-based regulation systems that have been

 

implemented in another state or country, including, but not limited

 

to, the RIIO (revenue = incentives + innovation + outputs) model

 

utilized in the United Kingdom.

 

     (3) A performance-based regulation system shall include, but

 

not be limited to, the following factors:

 

     (a) A method for estimating the revenue needed by a utility

 


during a multi-year pricing period, and a fair return, that uses

 

forecasts of efficient total expenditures by the utility instead of

 

distinguishing between operating and capital costs.

 

     (b) An increase in the length of time between rate cases, to

 

provide utilities with more opportunity to retain cost savings

 

without the threat of imminent rate adjustments, and to encourage

 

utilities to make investments that have payback periods longer than

 

5 years.

 

     (c) Performance incentives established at the outset of a rate

 

period that pertain to issues such as customer satisfaction,

 

safety, reliability, conditions for connection, environmental

 

impact, and social obligations. Based on a utility's performance

 

regarding those incentives, a utility may receive financial rewards

 

or penalties that adjust its base revenue.

 

     (d) Profit-sharing provisions that can spread efficiency gains

 

among consumers and utility shareholders and can reduce the degree

 

of downside risk associated with attempts at innovation.

 

     (e) The use of utility-drafted business plans based on the

 

factors described in subdivisions (a) to (d) and informed by

 

consultation with environmental groups, consumer advocates,

 

government officials, and third-party service providers. A business

 

plan would include proposals for base revenue, various outcomes of

 

interest that will be pursued, the metrics that will be used to

 

gauge the achievement of those outcomes, and the methods that would

 

be used to manage uncertainty during the extended price control

 

period.

 

     (4) Not later than 180 days after the effective date of the

 


amendatory act that added this section, the commission shall report

 

and make recommendations in writing to the legislature and governor

 

based on the result of the study conducted under this section.

 

     Sec. 10. (1) Sections 10 This section and sections 10a through

 

10bb shall be known and may be cited as the "customer choice and

 

"electricity reliability act".

 

     (2) The purpose of sections 10a through 10bb is to do all of

 

the following:

 

     (a) To ensure that all retail customers in this state of

 

electric power have a choice of electric suppliers.

 

     (b) To allow and encourage the Michigan public service

 

commission to foster competition in this state in the provision of

 

electric supply and maintain regulation of electric supply for

 

customers who continue to choose supply from incumbent electric

 

utilities.

 

     (c) To encourage the development and construction of merchant

 

plants which will diversify the ownership of electric generation in

 

this state.

 

     (a) (d) To ensure that all persons in this state are afforded

 

safe, reliable electric power at a reasonable competitive rate.

 

     (b) (e) To improve the opportunities for economic development

 

in this state and to promote financially healthy and competitive

 

utilities in this state.

 

     (c) (f) To maintain, foster, and encourage robust, reliable,

 

and economic generation, distribution, and transmission systems to

 

provide this state's electric suppliers and generators an

 

opportunity to access regional sources of generation and wholesale

 


power markets and to ensure a reliable supply of electricity in

 

this state.

 

     Sec. 10a. (1) The commission shall issue orders establishing

 

the rates, terms, and conditions of service that allow all retail

 

customers of an electric utility or provider to choose to take

 

service from an alternative electric supplier. The orders shall do

 

all of the following:

 

     (a) Provide Except as otherwise provided in this section,

 

provide that no more than 10% of an electric utility's average

 

weather-adjusted retail sales for the preceding calendar year may

 

take service from an alternative electric supplier at any time.

 

     (b) Set forth procedures necessary to administer and allocate

 

the amount of load that will be allowed to be served by alternative

 

electric suppliers, through the use of annual energy allotments

 

awarded on a calendar year basis. , and shall provide, among other

 

things, that existing customers who are taking electric service

 

from an alternative electric supplier at a facility on the

 

effective date of the amendatory act that added this subdivision

 

shall be given an allocated annual energy allotment for that

 

service at that facility, that customers seeking to expand usage at

 

a facility served through an alternative electric supplier will be

 

given next priority, with the remaining available load, if any,

 

allocated on a first-come first-served basis. The procedures shall

 

also provide how customer facilities will be defined for the

 

purpose of assigning the annual energy allotments to be allocated

 

under this section. The commission shall not allocate additional

 

annual energy allotments at any time when the total annual energy

 


allotments for the utility's distribution service territory is

 

greater than 10% of the utility's weather-adjusted retail sales in

 

the calendar year preceding the date of allocation. The annual

 

energy allotment awarded under this subdivision shall be used by

 

the commission to determine the eligibility of a customer to

 

receive service from an alternative electric supplier under

 

subdivision (d). If the sales of a utility are less in a subsequent

 

year or if the energy usage of a customer receiving electric

 

service from an alternative electric supplier exceeds its annual

 

energy allotment for that facility, that customer shall not be

 

forced to purchase electricity from a utility, but may purchase

 

electricity from an alternative electric supplier for that facility

 

during that calendar year.

 

     (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,

 

customers seeking to expand usage at a facility that has been

 

continuously served through an alternative electric supplier since

 

April 1, 2008 shall be permitted to purchase electricity from an

 

alternative electric supplier for both the existing and any

 

expanded load at that facility as well as any new facility

 

constructed or acquired after the effective date of the amendatory

 

act that added this subdivision that is similar in nature if the

 

customer owns more than 50% of the new facility.

 

     (c) (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,

 

any customer operating an iron ore mining facility, iron ore

 

processing facility, or both, located in the Upper Peninsula of

 

this state, shall be permitted to may purchase all or any portion

 

of its electricity from an alternative electric supplier,

 


regardless of whether the sales exceed 10% of the serving electric

 

utility's average weather-adjusted retail sales, if the utility

 

agrees or if that customer and utility have entered into a

 

settlement agreement allowing the customer to purchase from an

 

alternative electric supplier.

 

     (d) Provide that a customer that is taking service from an

 

alternative electric supplier on January 1, 2015 may elect to

 

continue to take service from an alternative electric supplier.

 

Except as provided in subdivision (e), beginning on the effective

 

date of the amendatory act that added section 6t, only customers

 

who are taking service from an alternative electric supplier on

 

January 1, 2015 are eligible to take service from an alternative

 

electric supplier. Not later than December 15, 2015, each customer

 

that is taking service from an alternative electric supplier shall

 

provide written notice to the electric utility that provides that

 

customer with distribution services. The written notice shall state

 

whether the customer will remain with an alternative electric

 

supplier or whether that customer intends to return to standard

 

tariff service with the electric utility upon the termination of

 

the customer's electricity supply contract with an alternative

 

electric supplier. If a customer intends to return to standard

 

tariff service, the customer shall include with the notice the date

 

that the customer intends to return to standard tariff service.

 

     (e) Provide that a customer on a list awaiting retail open

 

access service on January 1, 2015 may elect to continue to remain

 

on the list to take service from an alternative electric supplier

 

if that service becomes available. Not later than December 15,

 


2015, each customer qualified to receive service under this

 

subdivision shall provide written notice to the electric utility

 

that provides that customer with distribution services. The written

 

notice shall state whether the customer will remain on the list of

 

customers qualified to receive retail open access service.

 

     (f) Require each utility to file with the commission no later

 

than January 15, 2016 a list of all customers that have made an

 

election to be eligible for retail open access service under

 

subdivision (d) or (e). The filing must include the estimated

 

amount of electricity used by each customer.

 

     (g) Provide that customers seeking to expand usage at a

 

facility that is served by an alternative electric supplier may

 

purchase electricity from an alternative electric supplier for both

 

the existing and any expanded load at that facility as well as any

 

new facility constructed or acquired after the effective date of

 

the amendatory act that added section 6t that is similar in nature

 

if the customer owns more than 50% of the new facility, regardless

 

of whether the sales exceed 10% of the serving electric utility's

 

average weather-adjusted retail sales.

 

     (h) Provide that a customer receiving service from an

 

alternative electric supplier may subsequently provide notice to

 

the electric utility of the customer's desire to receive standard

 

tariff service from the electric utility. If a customer that was

 

receiving service from an alternative electric supplier on the

 

effective date of the amendatory act that added section 6t

 

subsequently elects to return to electric supply service from the

 

electric utility, that customer is no longer eligible to receive

 


electric supply service from an alternative electric supplier. A

 

customer that elects to continue to receive electric supply service

 

from an alternative electric supplier after providing a utility the

 

notice required under subdivision (d) may return to standard tariff

 

service from an electric utility if they provide the electric

 

utility 3 years' advance written notice of the intent to return to

 

standard tariff service. A notice of the intent to return to

 

standard tariff service under this subdivision is irrevocable. The

 

electric utility may waive any or part of this notice requirement

 

for any customer returning to standard tariff service. If a

 

customer returns to the utility for electric supply service without

 

providing 3 years' advance notice, any incremental costs, including

 

but not limited to, capacity, energy, ancillary services,

 

distribution service, and transmission service, associated with the

 

return of the customer shall not be borne by any other customer of

 

the electric utility or by the electric utility. If the return of a

 

customer that did not provide 3 years' advance notice to the

 

electric utility creates additional costs or impairs reliability,

 

the commission may establish tariff provisions or other terms and

 

conditions to assign those costs or impairments of reliability to

 

the returning customer.

 

     (i) Provide that if the customer next on the list awaiting

 

retail open access service is notified that less than 10% of an

 

electric utility's average weather-adjusted retail sales for the

 

preceding calendar year is taking service from an alternative

 

electric supplier, the customer may purchase all or any portion of

 

its electricity from an alternative electric supplier, regardless

 


of whether the sales exceed 10% of the serving electric utility's

 

average weather-adjusted retail sales. The orders shall also

 

provide that if the customer next on the list awaiting retail open

 

access service refuses to take service from an alternative electric

 

supplier within 7 days after being notified that less than 10% of

 

an electric utility's average weather-adjusted retail sales for the

 

preceding calendar year is taking service from an alternative

 

electric supplier, that customer will be removed from the list and

 

is not eligible to receive electric generation service from an

 

alternative electric supplier.

 

     (j) Provide that an electric utility has no duty to provide

 

generation resource adequacy for customers receiving service from

 

an alternative electric supplier under this section.

 

     (2) The commission shall issue orders establishing a licensing

 

procedure for all alternative electric suppliers. To ensure

 

adequate service to customers in this state, the commission shall

 

require that an alternative electric supplier maintain an office

 

within this state, shall assure that an alternative electric

 

supplier has the necessary financial, managerial, and technical

 

capabilities, shall require that an alternative electric supplier

 

files all of its electricity supply contracts with the commission,

 

the price terms of which may be filed under seal, shall require

 

that an alternative electric supplier maintain records which that

 

the commission considers necessary, and shall ensure an alternative

 

electric supplier's accessibility to the commission, to consumers,

 

and to electric utilities in this state. The commission also shall

 

require alternative electric suppliers to agree that they will

 


collect and remit to local units of government all applicable

 

users, sales, and use taxes. An alternative electric supplier is

 

not required to obtain any certificate, license, or authorization

 

from the commission other than as required by this act.

 

     (3) As a condition of licensure, except as provided under

 

subsection (4), an alternative electric supplier shall by November

 

1 of each year demonstrate to the commission, in a format

 

determined by the commission, that it will be able to supply enough

 

dedicated, firm, and physical electric generating capacity to serve

 

its retail electric customers' total current peak demand including

 

a reasonable projection of total peak demand growth, plus the

 

applicable planning reserve margin requirements, for the subsequent

 

3 years or the term of any contract, whichever is longer.

 

     (4) If the appropriate independent system operator, where the

 

alternative electric supplier's demand is served, issues a resource

 

adequacy forecast or similar capacity assessment report that

 

projects a capacity shortfall within the subsequent 2-year period,

 

an alternative electric supplier shall demonstrate to the

 

commission by November 1 of the year in which the report is issued,

 

in a format determined by the commission, that it will be able to

 

supply enough dedicated, firm, and physical electric generating

 

capacity to serve its retail electric customers' total current peak

 

demand including a reasonable projection of total peak demand

 

growth, plus the applicable planning reserve margin requirements

 

for the subsequent 5 years or the term of any contract, whichever

 

is longer. If the appropriate independent system operator has not

 

issued a resource adequacy forecast or similar capacity assessment

 


report for at least the subsequent 2-year period, the commission

 

shall make a formal request to the appropriate independent system

 

operator to issue a resource adequacy forecast or similar capacity

 

assessment report.

 

     (5) In determining whether an alternative electric supplier

 

has demonstrated adequate dedicated, firm, and physical electric

 

generating capacity to meet the requirements of subsections (3) and

 

(4), the commission shall only consider the following:

 

     (a) Capacity that is physically located in or deliverable to

 

the resource adequacy zone, as defined by the appropriate

 

independent system operator, where the alternative electric

 

supplier's demand is served in this state.

 

     (b) If the alternative electric supplier relies on power

 

purchase contracts for any portion of its demonstration of capacity

 

supply under subsections (3) and (4), that the power purchase

 

contracts are prepaid for the periods required under subsections

 

(3) and (4).

 

     (c) If the alternative electric supplier relies on capacity

 

that is the result of a wholesale market auction for any portion of

 

its demonstration of capacity supply under subsections (3) and (4),

 

that the market auction purchases shall not exceed 5% of the

 

alternative electric supplier's capacity requirements under

 

subsections (3) and (4).

 

     (d) If the alternative electric supplier's capacity purchases

 

under subdivision (b) or (c) require the capacity to be transported

 

into this state, that the alternative electric supplier has the

 

contracted transmission capacity to import that capacity into the

 


resource adequacy zone, as defined by the appropriate independent

 

system operator, where the alternative electric supplier's demand

 

is served in this state.

 

     (6) If an alternative electric supplier is unable to

 

demonstrate to the commission that it has procured the dedicated,

 

firm, and physical capacity under the requirements of subsections

 

(3), (4), and (5), the commission shall notify the alternative

 

electric supplier in writing that the alternative electric supplier

 

has 60 days to remedy any defects identified by the commission. If

 

the alternative electric supplier fails to remedy the defects

 

identified by the commission within 60 days, the commission shall

 

revoke the alternative electric supplier's license to supply

 

electricity and bar that alternative electric supplier from

 

providing electricity supply in this state for a 3-year period.

 

     (7) The commission's consideration of an alternative electric

 

supplier's annual demonstration of capacity required shall be

 

performed under a contested case proceeding under chapter 4 of the

 

administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.271 to

 

24.287.

 

     (8) The commission shall establish planning reserve margin

 

requirements under subsections (3) and (4) for all customer

 

electric loads served by alternative electric suppliers in this

 

state. The planning reserve margin requirements shall be based on

 

recent actual levels of peak demand plus a reasonable projection of

 

5-year peak demand growth, and shall be designed to ensure that the

 

risk of an outage in this state due to lack of electricity supply

 

is no more likely than once every 10 years. The planning reserve

 


margin requirement may take into account customer demand response

 

measures only if the commission determines that the demand response

 

measures are as reliable as firm, physical generating capacity. The

 

commission may elect to use the planning reserve margin requirement

 

set by the appropriate independent system operator.

 

     (9) (3) The commission shall issue orders to ensure that

 

customers in this state are not switched to another supplier or

 

billed for any services without the customer's consent.

 

     (10) (4) No later than December 2, 2000, the The commission

 

shall establish a code of conduct that shall apply applies to all

 

electric utilities. The code of conduct shall include, but is not

 

limited to, measures to prevent cross-subsidization, information

 

sharing, and preferential treatment, between a an electric

 

utility's regulated electric services and unregulated retail open

 

access services, whether those services are provided by the utility

 

or the utility's affiliated entities. The code of conduct

 

established under this subsection shall also be is applicable to

 

electric utilities and alternative electric suppliers consistent

 

with section 10, this section, and sections 10b through 10cc.

 

     (11) (5) An electric utility may offer its customers an

 

appliance service program and other value added programs and

 

services. Except as otherwise provided by this section, the utility

 

shall comply with the code of conduct established by the commission

 

under subsection (4). As used in this section, "appliance service

 

program" or "program" means a subscription program for the repair

 

and servicing of heating and cooling systems or other appliances.

 

     (12) (6) A utility offering a program under subsection (5)

 


(11) shall do all of the following:

 

     (a) Locate within a separate department of the utility or

 

affiliate within the utility's corporate structure the personnel

 

responsible for the day-to-day management of the program.

 

     (b) Maintain separate books and records for the program,

 

access to which shall be made available to the commission upon

 

request.

 

     (c) Not promote or market the program through the use of

 

utility billing inserts, printed messages on the utility's billing

 

materials, or other promotional materials included with customers'

 

utility bills.

 

     (13) (7) All costs directly attributable to an appliance

 

service a program allowed under subsection (5) (16) shall be

 

allocated to the program as required by this subsection. The direct

 

and indirect costs of employees, vehicles, equipment, office space,

 

and other facilities used in the appliance service program shall be

 

allocated to the program based upon the amount of use by the

 

program as compared to the total use of the employees, vehicles,

 

equipment, office space, and other facilities. The cost of the

 

program shall include administrative and general expense loading to

 

be determined in the same manner as the utility determines

 

administrative and general expense loading for all of the utility's

 

regulated and unregulated activities. A subsidy by a utility does

 

not exist if costs allocated as required by this subsection do not

 

exceed the revenue of the program.

 

     (14) (8) A utility may include charges for its appliance

 

service program programs offered under subsection (11) on its

 


monthly billings to its customers if the utility complies with all

 

of the following requirements:

 

     (a) All costs associated with the billing process, including

 

the postage, envelopes, paper, and printing expenses, are allocated

 

as required under subsection (7).(13).

 

     (b) A customer's regulated utility service is not terminated

 

for nonpayment of the appliance service program portion portions of

 

the bill.

 

     (c) Unless the customer directs otherwise in writing, a

 

partial payment by a customer is applied first to the bill for

 

regulated service.

 

     (15) (9) In marketing its appliance service a program offered

 

under subsection (11) to the public, a utility shall do all of the

 

following:

 

     (a) The list of customers receiving regulated service from the

 

utility shall be available to a provider of appliance repair

 

service the program upon request within 2 business days. The

 

customer list shall be provided in the same electronic format as

 

such that information is provided to the appliance service program.

 

A new customer shall be added to the customer list within 1

 

business day of the date the customer requested to turn on service.

 

     (b) Appropriately allocate costs as required under subsection

 

(7) (13) when personnel employed at a utility's call center provide

 

appliance service program marketing information to a prospective

 

customer.

 

     (c) Prior to Before enrolling a customer into the program, the

 

utility shall inform the potential customer of all of the

 


following:

 

     (i) That appliance service programs may be available from

 

another provider.

 

     (ii) That the appliance service program is not regulated by

 

the commission.

 

     (iii) That a new customer shall have has 10 days after

 

enrollment to cancel his or her appliance service program contract

 

without penalty. This cancellation period does not apply to a

 

utility's other value added programs and services offered under

 

subsection (11).

 

     (iv) That the customer's regulated rates and conditions of

 

service provided by the utility are not affected by enrollment in

 

the program or by the decision of the customer to use the services

 

of another provider of appliance repair service.a program.

 

     (d) The utility name and logo may be used to market the

 

appliance service program provided that if the program is not

 

marketed in conjunction with a regulated service. To the extent

 

that If a program utilizes the utility's name and logo in marketing

 

the program, the program shall include language on all material

 

indicating that the program is not regulated by the commission.

 

Costs shall not be allocated to the program for the use of the

 

utility's name or logo.

 

     (16) (10) This section does not prohibit the commission from

 

requiring a utility The commission is not required to include

 

revenues from an appliance service a program in establishing base

 

rates. If the commission includes the revenues of an appliance

 

service a program in determining a utility's base rates, the

 


commission shall also include all of the costs of the program as

 

determined under this section. The commission may permit a utility

 

to retain profits generated by a program, and the utility may use a

 

portion of the revenues from a program to invest in business

 

development of new programs and services.

 

     (11) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the code of

 

conduct with respect to an appliance service program shall not

 

require a utility to form a separate affiliate or division to

 

operate an appliance service program, impose further restrictions

 

on the sharing of employees, vehicles, equipment, office space, and

 

other facilities, or require the utility to provide other providers

 

of appliance repair service with access to utility employees,

 

vehicles, equipment, office space, or other facilities.

 

     (17) (12) This act does not prohibit or limit the right of a

 

person to obtain self-service power and does not impose a

 

transition, implementation, exit fee, or any other similar charge

 

on self-service power. A person using self-service power is not an

 

electric supplier, electric utility, or a person conducting an

 

electric utility business. As used in this subsection, "self-

 

service power" means any of the following:

 

     (a) Electricity generated and consumed at an industrial site

 

or contiguous industrial site or single commercial establishment or

 

single residence without the use of an electric utility's

 

transmission and distribution system.

 

     (b) Electricity generated primarily by the use of by-product

 

fuels, including waste water solids, which electricity is consumed

 

as part of a contiguous facility, with the use of an electric

 


utility's transmission and distribution system, but only if the

 

point or points of receipt of the power within the facility are not

 

greater than 3 miles distant from the point of generation.

 

     (c) A site or facility with load existing on June 5, 2000 that

 

is divided by an inland body of water or by a public highway, road,

 

or street but that otherwise meets this definition meets the

 

contiguous requirement of this subdivision regardless of whether

 

self-service power was being generated on June 5, 2000.

 

     (d) A commercial or industrial facility or single residence

 

that meets the requirements of subdivision (a) or (b) meets this

 

definition whether or not the generation facility is owned by an

 

entity different from the owner of the commercial or industrial

 

site or single residence.

 

     (18) (13) This act does not prohibit or limit the right of a

 

person to engage in affiliate wheeling and does not impose a

 

transition, implementation, exit fee, or any other similar charge

 

on a person engaged in affiliate wheeling. As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Affiliate" means a person or entity that directly, or

 

indirectly through 1 or more intermediates, controls, is controlled

 

by, or is under common control with another specified entity. As

 

used in this subdivision, "control" means, whether through an

 

ownership, beneficial, contractual, or equitable interest, the

 

possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or to

 

cause the direction of the management or policies of a person or

 

entity or the ownership of at least 7% of an entity either directly

 

or indirectly.

 

     (b) "Affiliate wheeling" means a person's use of direct access

 


service where an electric utility delivers electricity generated at

 

a person's industrial site to that person or that person's

 

affiliate at a location, or general aggregated locations, within

 

this state that was either 1 of the following:

 

     (i) For at least 90 days during the period from January 1,

 

1996 to October 1, 1999, supplied by self-service power, but only

 

to the extent of the capacity reserved or load served by self-

 

service power during the period.

 

     (ii) Capable of being supplied by a person's cogeneration

 

capacity within this state that has had since January 1, 1996 a

 

rated capacity of 15 megawatts or less, was placed in service

 

before December 31, 1975, and has been in continuous service since

 

that date. A person engaging in affiliate wheeling is not an

 

electric supplier, an electric utility, or conducting an electric

 

utility business when a person engages in affiliate wheeling.

 

     (19) (14) The rights of parties to existing contracts and

 

agreements in effect as of January 1, 2000 between electric

 

utilities and qualifying facilities, including the right to have

 

the charges recovered from the customers of an electric utility, or

 

its successor, shall are not be abrogated, increased, or diminished

 

by this act, nor shall the receipt of any proceeds of the

 

securitization bonds by an electric utility be a basis for any

 

regulatory disallowance. Further, any securitization or financing

 

order issued by the commission that relates to a qualifying

 

facility's power purchase contract shall fully consider that

 

qualifying facility's legal and financial interests.

 

     (15) A customer who elects to receive service from an

 


alternative electric supplier may subsequently provide notice to

 

the electric utility of the customer's desire to receive standard

 

tariff service from the electric utility. The procedures in place

 

for each electric utility as of January 1, 2008 that set forth the

 

terms pursuant to which a customer receiving service from an

 

alternative electric supplier may return to full service from the

 

electric utility are ratified and shall remain in effect and may be

 

amended by the commission as needed. If an electric utility did not

 

have the procedures in place as of January 1, 2008, the commission

 

shall adopt those procedures.

 

     (20) (16) The commission shall authorize rates that will

 

ensure that an electric utility that offered retail open access

 

service from 2002 through the effective date of the amendatory act

 

that added this subsection October 6, 2008 fully recovers its

 

restructuring costs and any associated accrued regulatory assets.

 

This includes, but is not limited to, implementation costs,

 

stranded costs, and costs authorized pursuant to under section

 

10d(4) as it existed prior to the effective date of the amendatory

 

act that added this subsection, before October 6, 2008, that have

 

been authorized for recovery by the commission in orders issued

 

prior to the effective date of the amendatory act that added this

 

subsection. before October 6, 2008. The commission shall approve

 

surcharges that will ensure full recovery of all such costs within

 

5 years of the effective date of the amendatory act that added this

 

subsection.by October 6, 2013.

 

     (17) As used in subsections (1) and (15):

 

     (a) "Customer" means the building or facilities served through

 


a single existing electric billing meter and does not mean the

 

person, corporation, partnership, association, governmental body,

 

or other entity owning or having possession of the building or

 

facilities.

 

     (b) "Standard tariff service" means, for each regulated

 

electric utility, the retail rates, terms, and conditions of

 

service approved by the commission for service to customers who do

 

not elect to receive generation service from alternative electric

 

suppliers.

 

     (21) As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Affiliate" means a person or entity that directly, or

 

indirectly through 1 or more intermediates, controls, is controlled

 

by, or is under common control with another specified entity. As

 

used in this subdivision, "control" means, whether through an

 

ownership, beneficial, contractual, or equitable interest, the

 

possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or to

 

cause the direction of the management or policies of a person or

 

entity or the ownership of at least 7% of an entity either directly

 

or indirectly.

 

     (b) "Affiliate wheeling" means a person's use of direct access

 

service where an electric utility delivers electricity generated at

 

a person's industrial site to that person or that person's

 

affiliate at a location, or general aggregated locations, within

 

this state that was either 1 of the following:

 

     (i) For at least 90 days during the period from January 1,

 

1996 to October 1, 1999, supplied by self-service power, but only

 

to the extent of the capacity reserved or load served by self-

 


service power during the period.

 

     (ii) Capable of being supplied by a person's cogeneration

 

capacity within this state that has had since January 1, 1996 a

 

rated capacity of 15 megawatts or less, was placed in service

 

before December 31, 1975, and has been in continuous service since

 

that date. A person engaging in affiliate wheeling is not an

 

electric supplier, an electric utility, or conducting an electric

 

utility business when a person engages in affiliate wheeling.

 

     (c) "Appliance service program" means a subscription program

 

for the repair and servicing of heating and cooling systems or

 

other appliances.

 

     (d) "Customer" means the building or facilities served through

 

a single existing electric billing meter and does not mean the

 

person, corporation, partnership, association, governmental body,

 

or other entity owning or having possession of the building or

 

facilities.

 

     (e) "Program" means an appliance service program or other

 

value added programs and services, or both.

 

     (f) "Standard tariff service" means, for each regulated

 

electric utility, the retail rates, terms, and conditions of

 

service approved by the commission for service to customers that do

 

not elect to receive generation service from alternative electric

 

suppliers.

 

     Sec. 10f. (1) If, After after subtracting the average demand

 

for each retail customer under contract that exceeds 15% of the

 

utility's retail load in the relevant market, an electric utility

 

has commercial control over more than 30% of the generating

 


capacity available to serve a relevant market, the utility shall do

 

1 or more of the following with respect to any generation in excess

 

of that required to serve its firm retail sales load, including a

 

reasonable reserve margin:

 

     (a) Divest a portion of its generating capacity.

 

     (b) Sell generating capacity under a contract with a nonretail

 

purchaser for a term of at least 5 years.

 

     (c) Transfer generating capacity to an independent brokering

 

trustee for a term of at least 5 years in blocks of at least 500

 

megawatts, 24 hours per day.

 

     (2) The total generating capacity available to serve the

 

relevant market shall be determined by the commission and shall

 

equal the sum of the firm available transmission capability into

 

the relevant market and the aggregate generating capacity located

 

within the relevant market, less 1 or more of the following:

 

     (a) If a municipal utility does not permit its retail

 

customers to select alternative electric suppliers, the generating

 

capacity owned by a municipal utility necessary to serve the retail

 

native load.

 

     (b) Generating capacity dedicated to serving on-site load.

 

     (c) The generating capacity of any multistate electric

 

supplier jurisdictionally assigned to customers of other states.

 

     (3) Within 30 days after a commission determination of the

 

total generating capacity under subsection (2) in a relevant

 

market, an electric utility that exceeds the 30% limit shall file

 

an application with the commission for approval of a market power

 

mitigation plan. The commission shall approve the plan if it is

 


consistent with this act or require modifications to the plan to

 

make it consistent with this act. The utility shall retain retains

 

the right to determine what specific actions to take to achieve

 

compliance with this section.

 

     (4) An independent brokering trustee shall be completely

 

independent from and have no affiliation with the utility. The

 

terms of any transfer of generating capacity shall ensure that the

 

trustee has complete control over the marketing, pricing, and terms

 

of the transferred capacity for at least 5 years and shall provide

 

appropriate performance incentives to the trustee for marketing the

 

transferred capacity.

 

     (5) Upon application to the commission by the utility, the

 

commission may issue an order approving a change in trustees during

 

the 5-year term upon a showing that a trustee has failed to market

 

the transferred generating capacity in a prudent and experienced

 

manner.

 

     (6) Within 1 year of the effective date of the amendatory act

 

that added this section, the commission shall issue a report to the

 

governor and the legislature that analyzes all aspects relating to

 

market power in the Upper Peninsula of this state. The report shall

 

include, but not be limited to, concentration of generating

 

capacity, control of the transmission system, restrictions on the

 

delivery of power, ability of new suppliers to enter the market,

 

and identification of any market power problems under the existing

 

market power test. Prior to issuing its report, the commission

 

shall receive written comments and hold hearings to solicit public

 

input.

 


     Sec. 10p. (1) Each electric utility operating in this state

 

shall establish an industry worker transition program that shall,

 

in consultation with employees or applicable collective bargaining

 

representatives, provide skills upgrades, apprenticeship and

 

training programs, voluntary separation packages consistent with

 

reasonable business practices, and job banks to coordinate and

 

assist placement of employees into comparable employment at no less

 

than the wage rates and substantially equivalent fringe benefits

 

received before the transition.

 

     (2) The costs resulting from subsection (1) shall include

 

audited and verified employee-related restructuring costs that are

 

incurred as a result of the amendatory act that added this section

 

2000 PA 141 or as a result of prior commission restructuring

 

orders, including employee severance costs, employee retraining

 

programs, early retirement programs, outplacement programs, and

 

similar costs and programs, that have been approved and found to be

 

prudently incurred by the commission.

 

     (3) In the event of a sale, purchase, or any other transfer of

 

ownership of 1 or more Michigan divisions or business units, or

 

generating stations or generating units, of an electric utility, to

 

either a third party or a utility subsidiary, the electric

 

utility's contract and agreements with the acquiring entity or

 

persons shall require all of the following for a period of at least

 

30 months:

 

     (a) That the acquiring entity or persons hire a sufficient

 

number of nonsupervisory employees to safely and reliably operate

 

and maintain the station, division, or unit by making offers of

 


employment to the nonsupervisory workforce of the electric

 

utility's division, business unit, generating station, or

 

generating unit.

 

     (b) That the acquiring entity or persons not employ

 

nonsupervisory employees from outside the electric utility's

 

workforce unless offers of employment have been made to all

 

qualified nonsupervisory employees of the acquired business unit or

 

facility.

 

     (c) That the acquiring entity or persons have a dispute

 

resolution mechanism culminating in a final and binding decision by

 

a neutral third party for resolving employee complaints or disputes

 

over wages, fringe benefits, and working conditions.

 

     (d) That the acquiring entity or persons offer employment at

 

no less than the wage rates and substantially equivalent fringe

 

benefits and terms and conditions of employment that are in effect

 

at the time of transfer of ownership of the division, business

 

unit, generating station, or generating unit. The wage rates and

 

substantially equivalent fringe benefits and terms and conditions

 

of employment shall continue for at least 30 months from the time

 

of the transfer of ownership unless the employees, or where

 

applicable collective bargaining representative, and the new

 

employer mutually agree to different terms and conditions of

 

employment within that 30-month period.

 

     (4) The electric utility shall offer a transition plan to

 

those employees who are not offered jobs by the entity because the

 

entity has a need for fewer workers. If there is litigation

 

concerning the sale, or other transfer of ownership of the electric

 


utility's divisions, business units, generating stations, or

 

generating units, the 30-month period under subsection (3) begins

 

on the date the acquiring entity or persons take control or

 

management of the divisions, business units, generating stations,

 

or generating units of the electric utility.

 

     (5) The commission shall adopt generally applicable service

 

quality and reliability standards for the transmission, generation,

 

and distribution systems of electric utilities and other entities

 

subject to its jurisdiction, including, but not limited to,

 

standards for service outages, distribution facility upgrades,

 

repairs and maintenance, telephone service, billing service,

 

operational reliability, and public and worker safety. In setting

 

service quality and reliability standards, the commission shall

 

consider safety, costs, local geography and weather, applicable

 

codes, national electric industry practices, sound engineering

 

judgment, and experience. The commission shall also include

 

provisions to upgrade the service quality of distribution circuits

 

that historically have experienced significantly below-average

 

performance in relationship to similar distribution circuits.

 

     (6) Annually, each jurisdictional utility or entity shall file

 

its report with the commission detailing actions to be taken to

 

comply with the service quality and reliability standards during

 

the next calendar year and its performance in relation to the

 

service quality and reliability standards during the prior calendar

 

year. The annual reports shall contain that data as required by the

 

commission, including the estimated cost of achieving improvements

 

in the jurisdictional utility's or entity's performance with

 


respect to the service quality and reliability standards.

 

     (7) The commission shall analyze the data to determine whether

 

the jurisdictional entities are properly operating and maintaining

 

their systems and take corrective action if needed.

 

     (8) The commission shall submit a report to the governor and

 

the legislature by September 1, 2009. In preparing the report, the

 

commission should review and consider relevant existing customer

 

surveys and examine what other states have done. This report shall

 

include all of the following:

 

     (a) An assessment of the major types of end-use customer power

 

quality disturbances, including, but not limited to, voltage sags,

 

overvoltages, oscillatory transients, voltage swells, distortion,

 

power frequency variations, and interruptions, caused by both the

 

distribution and transmission systems within this state.

 

     (b) An assessment of utility power plant generating cost

 

efficiency, including, but not limited to, operational efficiency,

 

economic generating cost efficiency, and schedules for planned and

 

unplanned outages.

 

     (c) Current efforts employed by the commission to monitor or

 

enforce standards pertaining to end-use customer power quality

 

disturbances and utility power plant generating cost efficiency

 

either through current practice, statute, policy, or rule.

 

     (d) Recommendations for use of common characteristics,

 

measures, and indices to monitor power quality disturbances and

 

power plant generating cost efficiency, such as expert customer

 

service assessments, frequency of disturbance occurrence, duration

 

of disturbance, and voltage magnitude.

 


     (e) Recommendations for statutory changes that would be

 

necessary to enable the commission to properly monitor and enforce

 

standards to optimize power plant generating cost efficiency and

 

minimize power quality disturbances. These recommendations shall

 

include recommendations to provide methods to ensure that this

 

state can obtain optimal and cost-effective end-use customer power

 

quality to attract economic development and investment into the

 

state.

 

     (8) (9) By December 31, 2009, the commission shall , based on

 

its findings in subsection (8), review its existing rules under

 

this section and amend the rules, if needed, under the

 

administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to

 

24.328, to implement performance standards for generation

 

facilities and for distribution facilities to protect end-use

 

customers from power quality disturbances.

 

     (9) (10) Any standards or rules developed under this section

 

shall be designed to do the following, as applicable:

 

     (a) Establish different requirements for each customer class,

 

whenever those different requirements are appropriate to carry out

 

the provisions of this section, and to reflect different load and

 

service characteristics of each customer class.

 

     (b) Consider the availability and associated cost of necessary

 

equipment and labor required to maintain or upgrade distribution

 

and generating facilities.

 

     (c) Ensure that the most cost-effective means of addressing

 

power quality disturbances are promoted for each utility, including

 

consideration of the installation of equipment or adoption of

 


operating practices at the end-user's location.

 

     (d) Take into account the extent to which the benefits

 

associated with achieving a specified standard or improvement are

 

offset by the incremental capital, fuel, and operation and

 

maintenance expenses associated with meeting the specified standard

 

or improvement.

 

     (e) Carefully consider the time frame for achieving a

 

specified standard, taking into account the time required to

 

implement needed investments or modify operating practices.

 

     (10) (11) The commission shall also create benchmarks for

 

individual jurisdictional entities within their rate-making process

 

in order to accomplish the goals of this section to alleviate end-

 

use customer power quality disturbances and promote power plant

 

generating cost efficiency.

 

     (11) (12) The commission shall establish a method for

 

gathering data from the industrial customer class to assist in

 

monitoring power quality and reliability standards related to

 

service characteristics of the industrial customer class.

 

     (12) (13) The commission is authorized to may levy financial

 

incentives and penalties upon any jurisdictional entity which

 

exceeds or fails to meet the service quality and reliability

 

standards.

 

     (13) (14) As used in this section, "jurisdictional utility" or

 

"jurisdictional entity" means jurisdictional regulated utility as

 

that term is defined in section 6q.

 

     Sec. 10r. (1) The commission shall establish minimum standards

 

for the form and content of all disclosures, explanations, or sales

 


information disseminated by a person selling electric service to

 

ensure that the person provides adequate, accurate, and

 

understandable information about the service that enables a

 

customer to make an informed decision relating to the source and

 

type of electric service purchased. The standards shall be

 

developed to do all of the following:

 

     (a) Not be unduly burdensome.

 

     (b) Not unnecessarily delay or inhibit the initiation and

 

development of competition for electric generation service in any

 

market.

 

     (c) Establish different requirements for disclosures,

 

explanations, or sales information relating to different services

 

or similar services to different classes of customers, whenever the

 

different requirements are appropriate to carry out the purposes of

 

this section.

 

     (2) The commission shall require that , starting January 1,

 

2002, all electric suppliers disclose in standardized, uniform

 

format on the customer's bill with a bill insert, on customer

 

contracts, or, for cooperatives, in periodicals issued by an

 

association of rural electric cooperatives, information about the

 

environmental characteristics of electricity products purchased by

 

the customer, including all of the following:

 

     (a) The average fuel mix, including categories for oil, gas,

 

coal, solar, hydroelectric, wind, biofuel, nuclear, solid waste

 

incineration, biomass, and other fuel sources. If a source fits

 

into the other category, the specific source must be disclosed. A

 

regional average, determined by the commission, may be used only

 


for that portion of the electricity purchased by the customer for

 

which the fuel mix cannot be discerned. For the purposes of As used

 

in this subdivision, "biomass" means dedicated crops grown for

 

energy production and organic waste.

 

     (b) The average emissions, in pounds per megawatt hour, sulfur

 

dioxide, carbon dioxide, and oxides of nitrogen. An emissions

 

default, determined by the commission, may be used if the regional

 

average fuel mix is being disclosed.

 

     (c) The average of the high-level nuclear waste generated in

 

pounds per megawatt hour.

 

     (d) The regional average fuel mix and emissions profile as

 

referenced in subdivisions (a), (b), and (c).

 

     (3) The information required by subsection (2) shall be

 

provided no more than twice annually, and be based on a rolling

 

annual average. Emissions factors will be based on annual publicly

 

available data by generation source.

 

     (4) All of the information required to be provided under

 

subsection (1) shall also be provided to the commission to be

 

included on the commission's internet site.

 

     (5) The commission shall establish the Michigan renewables

 

energy program. The program shall be designed to inform customers

 

in this state of the availability and value of using renewable

 

energy generation and the potential of reduced pollution. The

 

program shall also be designed to promote the use of existing

 

renewable energy sources and encourage the development of new

 

facilities.

 

     (6) Within 2 years of the effective date of the amendatory act

 


that added this subsection, the commission shall conduct a study

 

and report to the governor and the house and senate standing

 

committees with oversight of public utilities issues on the

 

advisability of separating electric distribution and generation

 

within electric utilities, taking into account the costs, benefits,

 

efficiencies to be gained or lost, effects on customers, effects on

 

reliability or quality of service, and other factors which the

 

commission determines are appropriate. The report shall include,

 

but is not limited to, the advisability of locating within separate

 

departments of the utility the personnel responsible for the day-

 

to-day management of electric distribution and generation and

 

maintaining separate books and records for electric distribution

 

and generation.

 

     (7) Two years after the effective date of the amendatory act

 

that added this subsection, the commission shall conduct a study

 

and report to the governor and the house and senate standing

 

committees with oversight of public utilities issues on whether the

 

state would benefit from the creation of a purchasing pool in which

 

electric generation in this state is purchased and then resold. The

 

report shall include, but is not limited to, whether the purchasing

 

pool shall be a separate entity from electric utilities, the impact

 

of such a pool on electric utilities' management of their

 

electrical generating assets, and whether ratepayers would benefit

 

from spreading the cost of new electric generation across all or a

 

portion of this state.

 

     (6) (8) Within 270 days of the effective date of the

 

amendatory act that added this subsection, By July 3, 2009, each

 


electric utility regulated by the commission shall file with the

 

commission a plan for utilizing dispatchable customer-owned

 

distributed generation within the context of its integrated

 

resource planning process. Included in the utility's filing shall

 

be proposals for enrolling and compensating customers for the

 

utility's right to dispatch at-will the distributed generation

 

assets owned by those customers and provisions requiring the

 

customer to maintain these assets in a dispatchable condition. If

 

an electric utility already has programs addressing the subject of

 

the filing required under this subsection, the utility may refer to

 

and take credit for those existing programs in its proposed plan.

 

     Sec. 10t. (1) An electric utility or alternative electric

 

supplier shall not shut off service to an eligible customer during

 

the heating season for nonpayment of a delinquent account if the

 

customer is an eligible senior citizen customer or if the customer

 

pays to the utility or supplier a monthly amount equal to 7% of the

 

estimated annual bill for the eligible customer and the eligible

 

customer demonstrates, within 14 days of requesting shutoff

 

protection, that he or she has applied for state or federal heating

 

assistance. If an arrearage exists at the time an eligible customer

 

applies for protection from shutoff of service during the heating

 

season, the utility or supplier shall permit the customer to pay

 

the arrearage in equal monthly installments between the date of

 

application and the start of the subsequent heating season.

 

     (2) An electric utility or alternative electric supplier may

 

shut off service to a customer as provided in part 7 of the clean

 

and efficient energy act, 2008 PA 295, MCL 460.1201 to 460.1211, or

 


to an eligible low-income customer who does not pay the monthly

 

amounts required under subsection (1) after giving notice in the

 

manner required by rules. The utility or supplier is not required

 

to offer a settlement agreement to an eligible low-income customer

 

who fails to make the monthly payments required under subsection

 

(1).

 

     (3) If a customer fails to comply with the terms and

 

conditions of this section, an electric utility may shut off

 

service on its own behalf or on behalf of an alternative electric

 

supplier after giving the customer a notice, by personal service or

 

first-class mail, that contains all of the following information:

 

     (a) That the customer has not paid the per-meter charge under

 

section 207 of the clean and efficient energy act, 2008 PA 295, MCL

 

460.1207, or the customer has defaulted on the winter protection

 

plan.

 

     (b) The nature of the default.

 

     (c) That unless the customer makes the payments that are past

 

due within 10 days of the date of mailing, the utility or supplier

 

may shut off service.

 

     (d) The date on or after which the utility or supplier may

 

shut off service, unless the customer takes appropriate action.

 

     (e) That the customer has the right to file a complaint

 

disputing the claim of the utility or supplier before the date of

 

the proposed shutoff of service.

 

     (f) That the customer has the right to request a hearing

 

before a hearing officer if the complaint cannot be otherwise

 

resolved and that the customer shall pay to the utility or supplier

 


that portion of the bill that is not in dispute within 3 days of

 

the date that the customer requests a hearing.

 

     (g) That the customer has the right to represent himself or

 

herself, to be represented by an attorney, or to be assisted by any

 

other person of his or her choice in the complaint process.

 

     (h) That the utility or supplier will not shut off service

 

pending the resolution of a complaint that is filed with the

 

utility in accordance with this section.

 

     (i) The telephone number and address of the utility or

 

supplier where the customer may make inquiry, enter into a

 

settlement agreement, or file a complaint.

 

     (j) That the customer should contact a social services agency

 

immediately if the customer believes he or she might be eligible

 

for emergency economic assistance.

 

     (k) That the utility or supplier will postpone shutoff of

 

service if a medical emergency exists at the customer's residence.

 

     (l) That the utility or supplier may require a deposit and

 

restoration charge if the supplier shuts off service for nonpayment

 

of a delinquent account.

 

     (4) An electric utility is not required to shut off service

 

under this section to an eligible customer for nonpayment to an

 

alternative electric supplier.

 

     (5) The commission shall establish an educational program to

 

ensure that eligible customers are informed of the requirements and

 

benefits of this section.

 

     (6) As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Eligible customer" means either an eligible low-income

 


customer or an eligible senior citizen customer.

 

     (b) "Eligible low-income customer" means a customer whose

 

household income does not exceed 150% of the poverty level, as

 

published by the United States department of health and human

 

services, or who receives any of the following:

 

     (i) Assistance from a state emergency relief program.

 

     (ii) Food stamps.

 

     (iii) Medicaid.

 

     (c) "Eligible senior citizen customer" means a utility or

 

supplier customer who is 65 years of age or older and who advises

 

the utility of his or her eligibility.

 

     Enacting section 1. Section 6e of 1939 PA 3, MCL 460.6e, is

 

repealed.

 

     Enacting section 2. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days

 

after the date it is enacted into law.