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Is the PUC Preparing to Address Utility Rates in Light of the Recent Tax Cut?

Most US taxpayers are by now conscious of the passage of President Trump’s signature tax legislation which dramatically reduces the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%.  What many folks may not know is that the rates they pay to their local utility include recovery for the income tax expense of those utilities.  This raises the question that some states, notably Kentucky and Oklahoma, have already begun to address: “How do regulators make sure that utility rates promptly reflect the substantial reduction in tax liability?”  In Oklahoma, the Attorney General has called upon the Oklahoma Corporation Commission to address the tax savings issue which he estimates to total $100 million statewide.  The Kentucky Public Service Commission already has ordered utilities to track their savings due to the tax change and to timely pass these savings on to customers.  Montana and Michigan are taking similar actions.

It appears that the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (“PUC”) is preparing to address the issue as well.  On January 5, 2018, the PUC opened Docket Number M-2018-2641242, with a case description of “THE TAX CUTS AND JOBS ACT: TAX REFORM BILL SIGNED INTO LAW ON DECEMBER 22, 2017”.  The matter has been assigned to the Bureau of Technical Utility Services (“TUS”).  So far there is no indication of the priority of this effort or what direction the PUC might take.  It is clear, however, that the legal landscape in Pennsylvania, as it relates to utility ratemaking, may provide more of a challenge than regulators face in other states.  In Pennsylvania, with few exceptions, utility rates are set prospectively and must always avoid the pitfall of “single issue ratemaking.”  Single issue ratemaking is where a utility, or a customer, seeks to adjust rates based upon a change, often a dramatic change, that impacts an isolated cost center, without subjecting the whole of expenses, revenues, and allowed percentage of return on investment, to scrutiny and/or adjustment.  The PUC and courts have consistently rejected this approach and instead have required utility rates to be set in consideration of all expenses, revenues, and authorized return.  Consequently, it may prove to be a challenge for the PUC to reach the goal of having rates promptly reflect the reduced tax rate, while avoiding on one hand a claim of single issue ratemaking and on the other hand the time-consuming and costly process of adjusting each utility’s rates through either a PUC-initiated or utility-initiated general rate proceeding.

A utility’s costs of setting new rates are generally borne by ratepayers and are thus “baked into” the new rates, and so any plan to change rate should include a cost-benefit analysis of making a utility go through the process on a single ratemaking issue versus making a utility adjust rates to include not only new tax rates but all other changes to revenues, expenses and allowed return/profit. For small and mid-sized utilities, the cost of the ratemaking process—which can involve multiple parties, voluminous discovery, PUC staff data requests, expert witnesses, and potential hearings, often approaches, and sometimes exceeds, the amount of the dollar adjustment to rates: upward or downward.  What is clear is that the PUC will have much to consider in determining the best way to approach the issue.

Columbia Gas Files for $37.8 million Rate Increase

After only a few months of collecting the newly increased rates from its 2010 Rate Case, Columbia Gas of Pennsylvania is back before the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission seeking an additional $37.8 million in annual revenue.

Columbia’s January 14, 2011 filing is notable for more than the timing of the filing, however.  Columbia has proposed a distribution system improvement charge, often referred-to as a “DSIC”.  The DSIC, which has been held to be unavailable to natural gas utilities under 66 Pa C.S. § 1307(a), would allow Columbia to collected a return of and a return on its investment in plant–between base rate cases–by means of a surcharge mechanism.  Columbia also has proposed a levelized distribution charge that would allow it to collect the costs of operating its system on a non-volumetric basis.  This concept is known as de-coupling.  Columbia argues in its filing that without decoupling, its revenue stream is tied to volumes of gas delivered, which are subject to variance for reasons beyond the control of the Company; while at the same time, its operating costs are unrelated to the volume of gas delivered. Columbia argues that the current rate methodology puts the company at risk, and therefore, Columbia seeks to de-couple its revenue stream from the volume delivered, providing it with far more stable revenues.  Rate requests of this magnitude are nearly always  suspended and investigated  for seven months by an order of the Commission issued under, 66 Pa. C.S. § 1308(d), and this case will most likely be assigned to an Administrative Law Judge for hearings.