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Christopher Knight of HMS Discusses Insurance Regulatory Issues at PAMIC’s Market Regulation Seminar

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 10, 2017

On May 10, 2017, Christopher Knight of Hawke, McKeon & Sniscak, LLP participated for the third consecutive year as a speaker at the Pennsylvania Association of Mutual Insurance Companies’ Market Regulation Seminar, which took place at the Harrisburg Hilton.

Reflecting on recent decisions by the Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner, Mr. Knight tackled legal issues affecting umbrella and excess liability insurance policy cancellations, and participated in a panel discussion regarding recent Insurance Department enforcement actions.

In addition to Mr. Knight, the PAMIC Seminar also featured Chris Monahan, Deputy Commissioner for Market Regulation for the PA Insurance Department, as well as Jason Ernest, Deputy CEO and Counsel to the Insurance Agents & Brokers Association.

Founded on extensive experience in administrative law, Hawke, McKeon & Sniscak LLP specializes in legal issues affecting regulated industries.  For more information on the firm, please visit us at www.hmslegal.com.

 

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Hawke, McKeon & Sniscak, LLP

100 North 10th Street

Harrisburg, PA 17101

(717) 703-0804

http://www.hmslegal.com

First Energy Pays Price for Being First

The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (“PUC”) caused quite a stir with its August 16, 2012 Order[1] that partially approved the jointly filed default service plans of the four First Energy electric utility affiliates serving in Pennsylvania.

[1] Joint Petition of Metropolitan Edison Company, Pennsylvania Electric Company, Pennsylvania Power Company and West Penn Power Company for Approval of their Default Service Programs, Docket Nos. P-2011-2273650 et al.  (Order entered August 16, 2012)(“First Energy Order”) .

The First Energy Order, the result of a binding pole of the issues conducted at the PUC’s August 2, 2012 Public Meeting, made substantial changes to ALJ Elizabeth Barnes’ Recommended Decision which had been issued earlier in the summer.  Prominent among the modifications were the PUC’s changes to a Retail Opt-In (“ROI”) Auction program.  The ROI program is intended to encourage default service customers to shop by offering a discount off of the Price to Compare (“PTC”) and a $50 rebate to customers and has been the centerpiece of the PUC’s suite of proposed market enhancements.

First Energy had proposed the ROI in a form that largely reflected the PUC’s wishes for such programs as expressed in its Retail Markets Investigation Order,[1] and with a few exceptions, notably cost recovery, the ALJ had largely adopted First Energy’s proposal.  First Energy had proposed a 12 month ROI product with the discount set by a descending clock auction among participating electric generation suppliers (“EGS”).  The PUC rejected the descending clock auction, and the very concept of an auction, and replaced it with a ROI aggregation program in which any eligible supplier raising its hand can receive an assignment of a percentage of participating customers.  The PUC also modified the offer that would be provided to customers, replacing the 12 month fixed price with a four month offering at a fixed five percent (5%) discount off of the PTC at the time of the offer.  Customers will still receive a fifty dollar ($50) bonus payment if they stay with their assigned supplier for the initial four (4) month term.  In a new wrinkle, however, the PUC added an eight (8) month component to follow the initial 4 month term, but did not specify a price for the that component other than to say that the PUC would review the terms and conditions.  Importantly, the PUC deferred the issue of how to pay for the ROI to a collaborative process between First Energy and the supplier parties.  First Energy is required to make a compliance filing to the PUC within sixty (60) days — by October 15, 2012 that reflects a consensus proposal.

The uncertainty created by several aspects of the First Energy Order, and the ROI program in particular, provoked Petitions for Reconsideration by the Office of Consumer Advocate (“OCA”) and the Retail Energy Supply Association (“RESA”) among others (including First Energy).  Answers were filed by a number of parties.  In general, most agree agree that the PUC should have provided more specific direction for the eight (8) month component of the ROI product, and should have addressed cost recovery more definitively.

First Energy, in its Petition for Clarification, raised concerns about the finality of the First Energy Order with regard to its procurement plan — First Energy’s procurement plan has it beginning to purchase energy in October 2012.  In an apparent effort to emphasize its concern, on September 6, 2012 First Energy filed a revised Default Service Plan that made revisions to its procurement plan as required by the PUC’s Order.

At its September 13, 2012 Public Meeting, the PUC granted reconsideration of all six (6) Petitions for Reconsideration and/or Clarification that had been filed, pending further consideration on the merits.  The Commission’s action allows it to retain jurisdiction and effectively stops the appeals clock from ticking until the PUC enters an Order that clarifies and/or reconsiders its original Order.  The next Public Meeting is scheduled to be held on September 27th.

All of this drama has occurred while the Default Service Plans of the other three (3) large electric distribution companies, PECO, PPL and Duquesne Light Company, are pending.  A Recommended Decision on PECO’s plan already has been issued by ALJ Dennis Buckley, and Exceptions and Replies to Exceptions were filed by a number of parties.  Both PPL and Duquesne have been through the hearing phase and briefs are due in early October, with ALJ decisions expected in November or early December.

The First Energy Order has created palpable uncertainty, particularly concerning the PUC’s intention to use the Order as a model for the default service plans yet to come before it.  The uncertainty has caused parties in those other proceedings, which were at various stages of litigation, to introduce alternative proposals that address the potential for the PUC to use First Energy as the standard.  A rapid and decisive PUC decision that clarifies the First Energy Order will allow parties in those ongoing proceedings to have the benefit of that information; at least for PPL and Duquesne, where the briefs have yet to be written.

In other related developments, the PUC is expected to issue a Secretarial Letter seeking comments in the RMI proceeding in late September.  That Secretarial Letter is expected to outline the PUC’s vision of the “end state” of the electricity market, and seek comments of interested parties prior to issuing final guidance on the “end state” in late November or early December 2012.

[1]Investigation of Pennsylvania’s Retail Electricity Market; Intermediate Work Plan, Docket No. I-2011-2237952.  (Order entered March 2, 2012)(“IWP Order”).

Migration Riders for Electricity?

The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission will now decide whether migration riders will be permitted for electricity customers, at the same time it is moving forward with its Retail Markets Investigation and its notable efforts to make the electricity markets more competitive.

As of Friday, May 4, the Replies to Exceptions have been filed with the Commission  by the various parties, seeking to support or overturn the Recommended Decision of Administrative Law Judge Susan D. Colwell in the case that may well have a dramatic impact on the future direction of electricity competition in Pennsylvania.  The case, Petition of PPL Electric Utilities Corporation for Approval to Implement a Reconciliation Rider for Default Service Supply, Docket No. P-2011-2256365, involves PPL Electric’s request to implement a migration rider, labeled as a Reconciliation Rider (“RR”) and a competitive transition rider (“CTR”).

If approved, the RR will permit PPL Electric to charge customers for the costs of default service for up to a full year after customers switch to competitive supply.  Likewise, the RR would allow PPL Electric to not charge customers this same migration rider charge after they switch from competitive supply to default service supply.  This scheme, according to the suppliers in the case, provides incentives for customers to switch to, and stay on default service supply.  These types of migration riders are common in the natural gas industry in Pennsylvania and suppliers have argued that they are one of the primary reasons why natural gas markets are far less competitive than electricity markets.

In her Recommended Decision issued on April 4, 2012, ALJ Colwell recommended approval of the RR, brushing aside without analysis the claims of the suppliers and the Office of Consumer Advocate that the migration rider would have negative effects on competition.  The ALJ recommended rejection of the Company’s proposed CTR, however, which would also have allowed the Company to charge customers for the cost of default service after they had shopped.  The CTR would have allowed PPL to recover balances that accumulated after PPL’s rate caps expired in 2010.  The ALJ’s legal basis for rejecting the CTR is surprisingly similar to the legal theory proposed by the marketers for why the ALJ should have rejected both the RR and CTR.

The PUC must now decide whether it will continue with the trajectory that has been firmly established in its RMI proceeding, and accept the marketers’ view that the RR will damage the competitive markets, or accept PPL’s view that its migration rider is competitively neutral.  This will be a crucial decision for the Commission to show the depth of its support for further development of the competitive market in the electricity sector in Pennsylvania.  Stay tuned.

PUC Proposes Rules For Improving Competitiveness Of Electricity Markets

On December 15, 2011 the PUC issued two orders designed to make Pennsylvania’s retail electricity market fully competitive. Both orders are a product of the PUC’s ongoing Investigation of Pennsylvania’s Retail Electricity Market (“RMI”), Docket No. I-2011-2237952. The first order (“RMI Final Order”) addresses the desired features of soon-to-be-filed electric utility default service plans and programs that will be implemented as part of those plans. The second order (“RMI Work Plan Order”) provides granular detail on specific components, including consumer education, accelerating of switching time frames, customer referral programs, and retail opt-in auctions.