ACA 11, as amended, Gatto. Public Utilities Commission.
The California Constitution establishes the Public Utilities Commission, with jurisdiction over all public utilities. The California Constitution grants the commission certain general powers over all public utilities, subject to control by the Legislature, and, among other things, authorizes the Legislature, unlimited by the other provisions of the Constitution, to confer additional authority and jurisdiction upon the commission that is cognate and germane to the regulation of public utilities, to establish the manner and scope of review of commission action in a court of record, and to enable the commission to fix just compensation for utility property taken by eminent domain. The Public Utilities Act and other provisions of the Public Utilities Code set forth the structure, funding, and responsibilities of the commission.
This measure would authorize the Legislature to reallocate or reassign all or a portion of the functions of the commission to other state agencies, departments, boards, or other entities, consistent with specified purposes. The measure would direct the Legislature to adopt appropriate structures to provide greater accountability for the public utilities of the state and provide the necessary guidance to the commission to focus its regulatory efforts on safety, reliability, and ratesetting and to implement statutorily authorized programs for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases.
This measure would repeal the provisions of the California Constitution pertaining to the commission effective January 1, 2019, while specifying that a statute that was valid at the time the statute was enacted is not invalid by virtue of the repeal of those constitutional provisions.
Vote: 2⁄3. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
P2 1WHEREAS, The 21st century has brought about many changes
2to technology and to the delivery of services and necessities that
3were unforeseeable in 1911 when the “Railroad Commission” was
4enshrined in the California Constitution; and
5WHEREAS, The 1946 constitutional amendment that renamed
6the Railroad Commission as the Public Utilities Commission, and
7gave it added authority over our natural gas, electrical, telephone,
8and water companies, was also the product of a different era, when
9these utilities and common carriers were grouped together in the
10hopes that one regulatory body could best regulate services used
11by the public on a daily basis; and
12WHEREAS, The commission has taken the position that its
13authority can only be expanded, which has resulted in an
14ever-growing bureaucracy that now has jurisdiction over not only
15gas, electrical, telecommunications, water utilities, and railroads,
16but alsobegin delete hot-air balloons, moving companies,end deletebegin insert moving companiesend insert
17 and ride-sharing applications; and
18WHEREAS, In the over one hundred years since its
19establishment, the industries under the oversight of the commission
20have grown and evolved in ways that have rendered the current
21structure of the commission inefficient and obsolete, leaving
22Californians without the oversight and regulatory protections that
P3 1we need, particularly in matters involving workforce and public
2safety; and
3WHEREAS, Recent events have caused grave concern around
4our state and have highlighted the ineffectiveness of the current
5system, specifically, in the Bay Area, the tragic San Bruno pipeline
6explosion, which took many lives; in the Central Valley and
7Sacramento, the significant concerns about the oil trains that
8traverse those regions; in San Diego and Orange County, the
9serious concerns about San Onofre and nuclear waste storage; and
10in Los Angeles County, the fact that thousands of residents had to
11flee their homes because of a gas leak of unprecedented size, which
12greatly polluted our state’s air and caused many to worry about
13the efficacy of the safety and inspection programs designed to stop
14catastrophes like it; and
15WHEREAS, Despite these failures to protect the public, our
16electrical, gas, water, and telephone rates have continued to rise;
17and
18WHEREAS, The commission has also suffered from ethical
19lapses, notably the failure to report ex parte communications, and
20the closeness of commission personnel to the entities they are
21supposed to regulate; and
22WHEREAS, The people of California would be better served
23with more nimble, focused, and specialized regulators, whose
24actions would result in far greater accountability; and
25WHEREAS, The Legislature should be forced to rethink the
26manner in which utilities, common carriers, and other related
27entities are regulated, and to create new structures that would
28enable regulators to focus on safety, reliability, and affordability
29of essential services, consumer protections for nonessential
30services, and protecting and preserving our environment; now,
31therefore, be it
32Resolved by the Assembly, the Senate concurring, That the
33Legislature of the State of California at its 2015-16 Regular
34Session commencing on the first day of December 2014, two-thirds
35of the membership of each house concurring, hereby proposes to
36the people of the State of California that the Constitution of the
37State be amended as follows:
This measure shall be known and may be cited as the
39Public Utility Reform Act of 2016.
That Section 10 is added to Article XII thereof, to
2read:
(a) (1) Notwithstanding Section 4, after the date the
4measure adding this section is enacted, the Legislature has the
5power and authority to reallocate or reassign all or a portion of the
6functions of the Public Utilities Commission to other state agencies,
7departments, boards, or other entities it may create.
8(2) The Legislature’s reallocation or reassignment of these
9functions shall be in furtherance of consumer protection, public
10health, environmental protection, increased transparency, public
11access, and preserving the ability of third parties to advocate for
12and intervene on behalf of those that need their advocacy.
13(b) The Legislature shall adopt appropriate structures to provide
14greater accountability for the public utilities of this state and shall
15provide the necessary guidance to focus regulatory efforts on
16safety, reliability, and ratesetting and to implement statutorily
17authorized programs for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases.
That Article XII is repealed effective January 1, 2019.
That Article XII is added thereto, effective January
201, 2019, to read:
21
A statute that was valid at the time of its
26enactment is not invalid by virtue of the repeal of the former Article
27XII by the measure that added this article.
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