Introduced by Senator Jones (Coauthors: Senators Dahle, Grove, Nguyen, Niello, Ochoa Bogh, Seyarto, and Wilk) |
February 16, 2024 |
(c)
(d)
(e)(1)For the purposes of this section and Section 739.1, the commission may authorize fixed charges
for any rate schedule applicable to a residential customer account. The fixed charge shall be established on an income-graduated basis with no fewer than three income thresholds so that a low-income ratepayer in each baseline territory would realize a lower average monthly bill without making any changes in usage. The commission shall, no later than July 1, 2024, authorize a fixed charge for default residential rates.
(2)For purposes of this subdivision, “income-graduated” means that low-income customers pay a smaller fixed charge than high-income customers.
(f)Notwithstanding the requirements of subdivision (d) of Section 739 and Section 739.7, the commission shall not apply the composite tier method to the treatment of any revenues resulting from any fixed charge adopted pursuant to this section.
(a)In regards to Section 739.9 of the Public Utilities Code, as amended by this act, the Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(1)The Public Utilities Commission has found that electrical corporation customers are facing two areas of increasing cost pressures: growing electric transmission and distribution infrastructure and operation costs, including wildfire mitigation costs, and equitable recovery of utility fixed costs.
(2)The majority of an electrical corporation’s revenue requirement, including funds for electric generation, transmission and distribution investments, and operations and maintenance work, is recovered from customers by a volumetric rate. However, only a portion of the electrical corporation’s costs directly vary based on how much electricity a customer consumes, while many infrastructure and operational costs do not.
(3)The current default residential customer rate structure in electrical corporation territories leads to a situation in which rates must rise to recover sufficient revenue to support certain fixed utility costs and can lead to year-to-year rate increase volatility, especially with declines in electricity sales that result from greater adoption of distributed energy resources.
(4)The disparity between volumetric revenue recovery and fixed costs that do not vary with electricity consumption also contributes to potential inequities among customers.
(b)In regards to Section 739.9 of the Public Utilities Code, as amended by this act, it is the intent of the Legislature to do both of the following:
(1)Authorize the Public Utilities Commission to establish reasonable fixed charges on default residential customer rates to help stabilize rates and equitably allocate and recover costs among residential customers in each electrical corporation’s service territory.
(2)If the Public Utilities Commission establishes fixed charges on default residential customer rates, ensure that the fixed charges are established to more fairly distribute the burden of supporting the electric system and achieving California’s climate change goals through the fixed charge.