Amended in Senate June 18, 2015

Amended in Assembly June 1, 2015

Amended in Assembly May 14, 2015

Amended in Assembly April 20, 2015

California Legislature—2015–16 Regular Session

Assembly BillNo. 825


Introduced by Assembly Members Rendon and Mark Stone

February 26, 2015


An act to amend Sectionsbegin delete 314.5 and 583end deletebegin insert 306, 311.5, 314.5, 583, 1701.1, and 1701.2end insert of, to amend, renumber, and add Section 309.1 of, to add Sections 309.2 and 468 to, and to add Article 1.5 (commencing with Section 720) to Chapter 4 of Part 1 of Division 1 of, the Public Utilities Code, relating to the Public Utilities Commission.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 825, as amended, Rendon. Public Utilities Commission.

(1) Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations, gas corporations, heat corporations, telegraph corporations, telephone corporations, and water corporations. Existing law requires the Governor to designate the president of the commission from among its members and requires the president to direct the executive director, the attorney, and other staff of the commission, except for the Office of Ratepayer Advocates. Existing law requires the commission to appoint an executive director who is responsible for the commission’s executive and administrative duties and to organize, coordinate, supervise, and direct the operations and affairs of the commission and expedite all matters within the commission’s jurisdiction. Existing law authorizes the executive director to employ those officers, administrative law judges, experts, engineers, statisticians, accountants, inspectors, clerks, and employees as the executive director deems necessary to carry out the provisions of the Public Utilities Act or to perform the duties and exercise the powers conferred upon the commission by law.

This bill would prohibit the commission from reassigning any staff member from a duty or activity authorized by statute to another duty or activity unless the Legislature has authorized personnel for that duty or activity. The bill would require the commission’s internal auditor to report directly to the commission.

begin insert

(2) The Public Utilities Act provides that the office of the commission be in the City and County of San Francisco, that the office always be open, legal holidays and nonjudicial days excepted, that the commission hold its sessions at least once in each calendar month in the City and County of San Francisco, and authorizes the commission to also meet at those other times and places as may be expedient and necessary for the proper performance of its duties. The Public Utilities Act requires that meetings of the commission be open and public in accordance with the provisions of a specified state open meeting law.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would require that each commissioner hold office hours and be available to meet with members of the public at least once a month in San Francisco or Los Angeles.

end insert
begin delete

(2)

end delete

begin insert(3)end insert The California Constitution authorizes the commission to establish rules, examine records, and prescribe a uniform system of accounts for all public utilities. The Public Utilities Act requires the commission to inspect and audit the books and records of electrical corporations, gas corporations, heat corporations, telegraph corporations, telephone corporations, and water corporations for regulatory and tax purposes. An inspection and audit is required to be done at least every 3 years if the utility has over 1,000 customers and at least every 5 years if the utility has 1,000 or fewer customers. The act requires that reports of the inspections and audit and other pertinent information be furnished to the State Board of Equalization for use in the assessment of the public utilities.

This bill would delete the requirement that the reports of the inspections and audit and other pertinent information be furnished to the State Board of Equalization for use in the assessment of the public utilities and instead require that the inspections and audit and other pertinent information be posted on the commission’s Internet Web site.

begin delete

(3)

end delete

begin insert(4)end insert Existing law authorizes the commission to fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable. Existing law, with certain exceptions, prohibits a public utility from changing any rate, except upon a showing before the commission and a finding by the commission that the new rate is justified. With certain exceptions, whenever any electrical, gas, heat, telephone, water, or sewer system corporation files an application to change any rate for the services or commodities furnished by it, existing law requires that the corporation furnish its customers notice of its application to the commission for approval of the new rate. This notice requirement does not apply to any rate change proposed by a corporation pursuant to an advice letter submitted to the commission filed pursuant to commission-established procedures for advice letters.

This bill would require each public utility that submits an application to change its rates to include in its application a summary of the application that can be understood by the utility’s ratepayers. The bill would require that this summary and the application be posted on the commission’s Internet Web site and, if the utility has an Internet Web site, to be posted on the utility’s Internet Web site. Each public utility that maintains an Internet Web site would additionally be required to include on that site contact information for a utility official who can discuss the nature of the rate application.

begin delete

(4)

end delete

begin insert(5)end insert Every public utility is required by existing law to furnish such reports as the commission may require. No information furnished to the commission by a public utility, except those matters specifically required to be open to public inspection, are open to public inspection or made public except by order of the commission or a commissioner in the course of a hearing or proceeding. Any present or former officer or employee of the commission who divulges any information in violation of these provisions is guilty of a misdemeanor.

This bill would provide that if in a proceeding before the commission, a public utility, or subsidiary, affiliate, or holding company, seeks to file a pleading, report, or other document with the commission that preserves the confidentiality of information contained therein, it would be required to file a public version of the pleading, report, or other document that contains sufficient information for any other party to the proceeding to understand the nature of its contents. The bill would authorize any party to the proceeding to file a motion to make public a pleading, report, or other document filed under a claim of confidentiality. The bill would require an administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding or the assigned commissioner to hold a hearing on the motion and determine whether the pleading, report, or other document should be made public.begin delete The bill would provide that specified information is by its nature public information and is not to be treated as confidential.end delete

begin delete

(5)

end delete

begin insert(6)end insert Existing law requires the commission to publish and maintain certain documents and information, including making available on the commission’s Internet Web site, the commission’s annual work plan, general orders, and Rules of Practice and Procedure, the proposed and alternate proposed decisions and resolutions, the agenda, agenda item documents, rulings of the commission, and adopted decisions and resolutions of the commission.begin insert Included in the materials that the commission is required to publish and maintain on its Internet Web site are docket cards that list by title and date of filing or issuance all documents filed and all decisions or rulings issued in those proceedings.end insert

begin insert

This bill would require that each document that the commission distributes to any service-of-process list be docketed and identified on the commission’s Internet Web site.

end insert
begin insert

(7) The Public Utilities Act requires that the commission include in its notice of meetings the agenda of business to be transacted at a meeting, and prohibits any item of business from being added to the agenda subsequent to the notice in the absence of an unforeseen emergency situation. The act additionally requires, prior to commencement of any meeting at which commissioners vote on items on the public agenda, that the commission make available to the public copies of the agenda, and upon request, any agenda item documents that are proposed to be considered by the commission for action or decision at a commission meeting.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would require that the commission provide an opportunity for members of the public to comment on a specific agenda item during the time that the commission considers the item.

end insert
begin delete

Existing

end delete

begin insert(8)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertExisting end insertlaw requires the commission to establish an office of the public advisor and to appoint a public advisor. Existing law requires the office of the public advisor to assist members of the public and ratepayers who desire to testify before or present information to the commission in any hearing or proceeding of the commission.

This bill would add legislative findings and declarations relative to improving the transparency of commission regulatory activities. The bill would require the public advisor to be responsible for ensuring that the activities of the commission are transparent to the public consistent with these legislative findings and directions, the California Public Records Act, the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act, and other specified matter. The bill would require the public advisor to have independent responsibility for overseeing the commission’s Internet Web site and would require the commission to post on its Internet Web site a summary, as specified, of all electricity procurement contracts entered into by an electrical corporation during the previous 3 years, the expenses of which the commission has approved as being just and reasonable, a list of all proceedings involving public utilities then pending before the commission with information, in summary form, as to the amount of any rate increase being sought, both in cumulative amount and by unit or other means billed to ratepayers, transcripts and available summaries of documents, evidence, testimony and proceedings before the commission or its administration law judges that are not subject to confidentiality, a list of all requests submitted to the commission pursuant to the California Public Records Act, and all advice letters approved by the commission.begin insert The bill would require the public advisor to update, maintain, and post the commission’s service-of-process lists on the commission’s Internet Web site in an electronic form that may be used by any party to complete service of process.end insert The bill would require the commission to open a proceeding to reexamine a specified decision relative to confidentiality of electric procurement data. The bill would require the California State Auditor to appoint an inspector general for the commission who would be authorized to audit and investigate the commission’s activities and report any finding to the Legislature.

begin insert

(9) Existing law requires the commission to determine whether a proceeding requires a hearing and, if so, to determine whether the matter requires a quasi-legislative, an adjudication, or a ratesetting hearing. Upon initiating a hearing, the commission is required to assign one or more commissioners to oversee the case and an administrative law judge where appropriate. Existing law requires the assigned commissioner to schedule a prehearing conference and to issue, by order or ruling, a scoping memo that describes the issues to be considered and the applicable timetable for resolution.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would require the assigned commissioner to convene an all-parties meeting as soon as practicable after the parties in a proceeding are known to discuss the substantive matter to be decided in the proceeding and prospects for resolving issues that would otherwise be litigated. The bill would require an assigned commissioner to attend all hearings in a proceeding.

end insert
begin insert

(10) Existing law prohibits an officer, employee, or agent of the commission that is personally involved in the prosecution, or in the supervision of the prosecution, of an adjudication case from participating in the decision of the case or in the decision of any factually related adjudicatory proceeding. Existing law permits an officer, employee, or agent of the commission that is personally involved in the prosecution, or in the supervision of the prosecution, of an adjudication case to participate in reaching a settlement of the case, but prohibits the officer, employee, or agent from participating in the decision of the commission to accept or reject the settlement, except as a witness or counsel in an open hearing or a specified closed hearing.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would prohibit an attorney that is prosecuting a matter before the commission from meeting with any commissioner regarding the matter that the attorney is prosecuting unless all parties are present.

end insert
begin delete

(6)

end delete

begin insert(11)end insert Under existing law, a violation of the Public Utilities Act or any order, decision, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the commission is a crime.

Because certain provisions of this bill would be a part of the act and because a violation of an order or decision of the commission implementing its requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program by creating a new crime.

The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P7    1begin insert

begin insertSECTION end insertbegin insert1.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 306 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is
2amended to read:end insert

3

306.  

(a) The office of the commission shall be in the City and
4County of San Francisco. The office shall always be open, legal
5holidays and nonjudicial days excepted. The commission shall
6hold its sessions at least once in each calendar month in the City
7and County of San Francisco. The commission may also meet at
8such other times and in such other places as may be expedient and
9necessary for the proper performance of its duties, and for that
10purpose may rent quarters or offices.

11(b) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insertend insert The meetings of the commission shall be open and
12public in accordance with the provisions of Article 9 (commencing
13with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title
142 of the Government Code.

begin delete

15In

end delete

16begin insert(2)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertIn end insertaddition to the requirements of Section 11125 of the
17Government Code, the commission shall include in its notice of
18meetings the agenda of business to be transacted, and no item of
19business shall be added to the agenda subsequent to the notice in
20the absence of an unforeseen emergency situation. A rate increase
21shall not constitute an unforeseen emergency situation. As used
22in this subdivision, “meeting” shall include all investigations,
23proceedings, and showings required by law to be open and public.

begin insert

24(3) In addition to scheduled meetings that are open to the public,
25each commissioner shall hold office hours and be available to
26meet with members of the public at least once a month in San
27Francisco or Los Angeles.

end insert

28(c) The commission shall have a seal, bearing the inscription
29“Public Utilities Commission State of California.” The seal shall
30be affixed to all writs and authentications of copies of records and
31to such other instruments as the commission shall direct.

32(d) The commission may procure all necessary books, maps,
33charts, stationery, instruments, office furniture, apparatus, and
34appliances.

35

begin deleteSECTION 1.end delete
36begin insertSEC. 2.end insert  

Section 309.1 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
37and renumbered to read:

P8    1

305.5.  

The Governor may appoint one adviser for each member
2of the commission upon the request of the commission member.
3Each adviser shall receive a salary fixed by the commission with
4the approval of the Department of Human Resources. The total
5number of advisers exempt from civil service shall not exceed
6five.

7

begin deleteSEC. 2.end delete
8begin insertSEC. 3.end insert  

Section 309.1 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
9read:

10

309.1.  

The commission shall not reassign any staff member
11from a duty or activity authorized by statute to another duty or
12activity unless the Legislature has authorized personnel for that
13duty or activity.

14

begin deleteSEC. 3.end delete
15begin insertSEC. 4.end insert  

Section 309.2 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
16read:

17

309.2.  

The commission’s internal auditor shall report directly
18to the commission.

19begin insert

begin insertSEC. 5.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 311.5 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
20to read:end insert

21

311.5.  

(a) (1) Prior to commencement of any meeting at which
22commissioners vote on items on the public agenda the commission
23shall make available to the public copies of the agenda, and upon
24request, any agenda item documents that are proposed to be
25considered by the commission for action or decision at a
26commission meeting.

27(2) In addition, the commission shall publish the agenda, agenda
28item documents, and adopted decisions in a manner that makes
29copies of them easily available to the public, including publishing
30those documents on the Internet. Publication of the agenda and
31agenda item documents shall occur on the Internet at the same
32time as the written agenda and agenda item documents are made
33 available to the public.

begin insert

34(3) The commission shall provide an opportunity for members
35of the public to comment on a specific agenda item during the time
36that the commission considers the item.

end insert

37(b) The commission shall publish and maintain the following
38documents on the Internet:

P9    1(1) Each of the commission’s proposed and alternate proposed
2decisions and resolutions, until the decision or resolution is adopted
3and published.

4(2) Each of the commission’s adopted decisions and resolutions.
5The publication shall occur within 10 days of the adoption of each
6decision or resolution by the commission.

7(3) The then-current version of the commission’s general orders
8and Rules of Practice and Procedure.

9(4) Each of the commission’s rulings. The commission shall
10maintain those rulings on its Internet Web site until final
11disposition, including disposition of any judicial appeals, of the
12respective proceedings in which the rulings were issued.

13(5) A docket card that lists, by title and date of filing or issuance,
14all documents filed and all decisions or rulings issued in those
15proceedings. The commission shall maintain the docket card until
16final disposition, including disposition of any judicial appeals, of
17the corresponding proceedings.begin insert Each document that the commission
18distributes to any serviceend insert
begin insert-ofend insertbegin insert-process list shall be docketed and
19identified on the commission’s Internet Web site.end insert

20

begin deleteSEC. 4.end delete
21begin insertSEC. 6.end insert  

Section 314.5 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
22to read:

23

314.5.  

The commission shall inspect and audit the books and
24records for regulatory and tax purposes (a) at least once in every
25three years in the case of every electrical, gas, heat, telegraph,
26telephone, and water corporation serving over 1,000 customers,
27and (b) at least once in every five years in the case of every
28electrical, gas, heat, telegraph, telephone, and water corporation
29serving 1,000 or fewer customers. An audit conducted in
30connection with a rate proceeding shall be deemed to fulfill the
31requirements of this section. Reports of the inspections and audits
32and other pertinent information shall be posted on the commission’s
33Internet Web site.

34

begin deleteSEC. 5.end delete
35begin insertSEC. 7.end insert  

Section 468 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
36read:

37

468.  

(a) Each public utility that submits an application to
38change its rates shall include in its application a summary of the
39application that can be understood by the utility’s ratepayers. This
40summary and the application shall be posted on the commission’s
P10   1Internet Web site and, if the utility has an Internet Web site, shall
2be posted on the utility’s Internet Web site.

3(b) Each public utility that maintains an Internet Web site shall
4include on that site contact information for a utility official who
5can discuss the nature of the rate application. If the rate application
6includes different rates depending upon the utility’s service
7territory, the contact information shall identify a utility official
8who can discuss the nature of the rate application for each separate
9 service territory. The utility official shall also be qualified to
10discuss, in general terms, the operation of the utility in each service
11territory.

12

begin deleteSEC. 6.end delete
13begin insertSEC. 8.end insert  

Section 583 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
14to read:

15

583.  

(a) No information furnished to the commission by a
16public utility, or any business that is a subsidiary or affiliate of a
17public utility, or a corporation that holds a controlling interest in
18a public utility, except those matters specifically required to be
19open to public inspection by this part, shall be open to public
20inspection or made public except on order of the commission, or
21by the commission or a commissioner in the course of a hearing
22or proceeding. Any present or former officer or employee of the
23commission who divulges that information is guilty of a
24misdemeanor.

25(b) If in a proceeding before the commission, a public utility,
26or any business that is a subsidiary or affiliate of a public utility,
27or a corporation that holds a controlling interest in a public utility,
28seeks to file a pleading, report, or other document with the
29commission that preserves the confidentiality of information
30contained therein, it shall file a public version of the pleading,
31report, or other document that contains sufficient information for
32any other party to the proceeding to understand the nature of its
33contents. An administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding,
34the assigned commissioner, or the commission may determine the
35sufficiency of the information contained in the public version of
36the pleading, report, or other document.

37(c) Any party to a proceeding before the commission may file
38a motion to make public a pleading, report, or other document filed
39by a public utility, or any business that is a subsidiary or affiliate
40of a public utility, or a corporation that holds a controlling interest
P11   1in a public utility, under a claim of confidentiality. An
2administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding or the assigned
3commissioner shall hold a hearing on the motion and determine
4whether the pleading, report, or other document should be made
5public. In determining the motion, the administrative law judge or
6assigned commissioner shall make written findings and
7conclusions.

8(d) At any public hearing, an assigned administrative law judge
9may provide direction to the parties in a proceeding as to what
10types of information may be filed with the commission under a
11claim of confidentiality.

begin delete

12(e) The following information is by its nature public information
13and shall not be treated as confidential pursuant to this section:

14(1) Information submitted to any local, state, or federal entity
15that is available to the public from that entity.

16(2) Information regarding a public utility’s interactions with a
17public entity that is available to the public, including information
18related to payments or subsidies from a public entity.

19(3) Contracts for goods or services executed by the commission
20or by any entity created by the commission.

21(4) Any document that is defined as a public record pursuant to
22the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
23Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code).

end delete
24

begin deleteSEC. 7.end delete
25begin insertSEC. 9.end insert  

Article 1.5 (commencing with Section 720) is added
26to Chapter 4 of Part 1 of Division 1 of the Public Utilities Code,
27to read:

28 

29Article 1.5.  Transparency of Commission Regulatory Activities
30

 

31

720.  

The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:

32(a) Transparency in how the commission operates and makes
33its decisions is critical to gaining and retaining the confidence of
34the public at large and serving the public utility ratepayers affected
35by the commission’s decisions.

36(b) The activities of private entities that provide essential
37services to the public and that have dedicated their property to the
38service of the public are defined as public utilities in the California
39Constitution, subject to the control by the Legislature.

P12   1(c) The services provided by public utilities are essential to the
2proper operation of our economy and fundamentally affect every
3California family and business.

4(d) Under the California Constitution, the commission is granted
5authority to establish its own procedures subject to statute and due
6process and to establish rules for public utilities, and the Legislature
7has plenary authority to confer additional authority and jurisdiction
8upon the commission and to establish the manner and scope of
9review of commission action in a court of record.

10(e) Because the California Constitution provides special
11consideration to public utilities and to the commission that
12regulates those public utilities, it is essential to give the public the
13ability to monitor the functioning of the commission and its actions.

14(f) The greater and more unfettered the public official’s power,
15the greater the public’s interest in monitoring the exercise of that
16power.

17(g) Access to information concerning the conduct of the public’s
18business by the commission is a fundamental and necessary right
19for every person in the state.

20(h) Information concerning services provided by public utilities
21is of the highest public interest, including information about quality
22and reliability of service to the public and information about costs
23and profits.

24(i) While confidentiality of information submitted by a public
25utility may be necessary in some cases, as provided in Section 583,
26the activities and decisions of the commission should remain as
27transparent as reasonably possible.

28

721.  

The commission shall open a proceeding tobegin delete reexamineend delete
29begin insert reexamine, consistent with the findings of Section 720 and the
30requirements of Section 724,end insert
Decision 06-06-066 (June 29, 2006)
31Interim Opinion Implementing Senate Bill 1488, Relating to
32Confidentiality of Electric Procurement Data Submitted to the
33Commission, as modified by Decision 07-05-032 (May 3, 2007),
34Order Modifying Decision (D.) 06-06-066 and Denying Rehearing
35of the Decision, as Modified.begin delete The commission shall narrow the
36definitions of confidential data types consistent with Sections 583
37and 720.end delete

38

722.  

(a) The public advisor of the commission, appointed
39pursuant to Section 321, shall have responsibility for ensuring that
40the activities of the commission are transparent to the public as
P13   1provided by law, including, but not limited to, the California Public
2Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of
3Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code), the Bagley-Keene
4Open Meeting Act (Article 9 (commencing with Section 11120)
5of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
6Code), and this article.

7(b) The commission shall provide funding for the costs of the
8office of the public advisor from reimbursement fees paid pursuant
9to Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 401).

10(c) The public advisor shall develop and make available
11easy-to-understand guides for the public to participate in
12commission proceedings.

begin insert

13(d) The public advisor shall update, maintain, and post the
14commission’s service-of-process lists on the commission’s Internet
15Web site in an electronic form that may be used by any party to
16complete service of process.

end insert
17

723.  

The California State Auditor shall appoint to the staff of
18the California State Auditor’s Office an inspector general for the
19commission, which shall report any findings to the Legislature.
20The inspector general shall have authority, including the authorities
21of the California State Auditor, to audit and investigate the
22commission’s activities based on information it receives. The
23California State Auditor may recover the costs for the inspector
24general’s activities from reimbursement fees paid pursuant to
25Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 401).

26

724.  

(a) The public advisor of the commission shall have
27independent responsibility for overseeing the commission’s Internet
28Web site, in order to ensure adequate transparency in the
29information provided to the public.

30(b) The commission shall make available to the public on its
31Internet Web site all of the following information:

32(1) A summary of all electricity procurement contracts entered
33into by an electrical corporation during the previous three years,
34the expenses of which the commission has approved as being just
35and reasonable. The summary shall include information as to the
36name of the generating facility, its location, the electricity or
37electricity products procured, the fuel or energy source used to
38generate the electricity, the estimated total expense that the
39electrical corporation will incur pursuant to the contract, the
40estimated cost by unit of energy that the electrical corporation will
P14   1incur pursuant to the contract, when the contract was approved by
2the commission, and, if applicable, the decision or resolution
3approving the contract. Information on costs of the contract shall
4not be posted until the electrical corporation has completed the
5legal transactions required to acquire the electricity or electricity
6products.

7(2) A list of all proceedings involving public utilities then
8pending before the commission with information, in summary
9form, as to the amount of any rate increase being sought, both in
10cumulative amount and by unit or other means billed to ratepayers.

11(3) Transcripts and available summaries of documents, evidence,
12 testimony, and proceedings before the commission or its
13administrative law judges that are not subject to confidentiality
14pursuant to Sectionbegin delete 583.end deletebegin insert 583, or with confidential portions
15redacted.end insert

16(4) A list of all requests submitted to the commission pursuant
17to the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing
18with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government
19Code).

20(5) Advice letters approved by the commission.

21begin insert

begin insertSEC. 10.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 1701.1 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
22to read:end insert

23

1701.1.  

(a) The commission, consistent with due process,
24public policy, and statutory requirements, shall determine whether
25a proceeding requires a hearing. The commission shall determine
26whether the matter requires a quasi-legislative, an adjudication,
27or a ratesetting hearing. The commission’s decision as to the nature
28of the proceeding shall be subject to a request for rehearing within
2910 days of the date of that decision. If that decision is not appealed
30to the commission within that time period it shall not be
31subsequently subject to judicial review. Only those parties who
32have requested a rehearing within that time period shall
33subsequently have standing for judicial review and that review
34shall only be available at the conclusion of the proceeding. The
35commission shall render its decision regarding the rehearing within
3630 days. The commission shall establish regulations regarding ex
37parte communication on case categorization issues.

38(b) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insertend insert The commission upon initiating a hearing shall assign
39one or more commissioners to oversee the case and an
40administrative law judge where appropriate. The assigned
P15   1commissioner shall schedule a prehearing conference. The assigned
2commissioner shall prepare and issue by order or ruling a scoping
3memo that describes the issues to be considered and the applicable
4timetable for resolution.

begin insert

5(2) The assigned commissioner shall convene an all-parties
6meeting as soon as practicable after the parties in the proceeding
7are known to discuss the substantive matter to be decided in the
8proceeding and prospects for resolving issues that would otherwise
9be litigated.

end insert
begin insert

10(3) The assigned commissioner shall attend all hearings in a
11proceeding.

end insert

12(c) (1) Quasi-legislative cases, for purposes of this article, are
13cases that establish policy, including, but not limited to,
14rulemakings and investigations which may establish rules affecting
15an entire industry.

16(2) Adjudication cases, for purposes of this article, are
17enforcement cases and complaints except those challenging the
18 reasonableness of any rates or charges as specified in Section 1702.

19(3) Ratesetting cases, for purposes of this article, are cases in
20which rates are established for a specific company, including, but
21not limited to, general rate cases, performance-based ratemaking,
22and other ratesetting mechanisms.

23(4) “Ex parte communication,” for purposes of this article,
24means any oral or written communication between a decisionmaker
25and a person with an interest in a matter before the commission
26concerning substantive, but not procedural issues, that does not
27occur in a public hearing, workshop, or other public proceeding,
28or on the official record of the proceeding on the matter. “Person
29with an interest,” for purposes of this article, means any of the
30following:

31(A) Any applicant, an agent or an employee of the applicant,
32or a person receiving consideration for representing the applicant,
33or a participant in the proceeding on any matter before the
34commission.

35(B) Any person with a financial interest, as described in Article
361 (commencing with Section 87100) of Chapter 7 of Title 9 of the
37Government Code, in a matter before the commission, or an agent
38or employee of the person with a financial interest, or a person
39receiving consideration for representing the person with a financial
40interest.

P16   1(C) A representative acting on behalf of any civic,
2environmental, neighborhood, business, labor, trade, or similar
3organization who intends to influence the decision of a commission
4member on a matter before the commission.

5The commission shall by regulation adopt and publish a
6definition of decisionmakers and persons for purposes of this
7section, along with any requirements for written reporting of ex
8parte communications and appropriate sanctions for noncompliance
9with any rule proscribing ex parte communications. The regulation
10shall provide that reportable communications shall be reported by
11the party, whether the communication was initiated by the party
12or the decisionmaker. Communications shall be reported within
13three working days of the communication by filing a “Notice of
14Ex Parte Communication” with the commission in accordance
15with the procedures established by the commission for the service
16of that notice. The notice shall include the following information:

17(i) The date, time, and location of the communication, and
18whether it was oral, written, or a combination.

19(ii) The identity of the recipient and the person initiating the
20communication, as well as the identity of any persons present
21during the communication.

22(iii) A description of the party’s, but not the decisionmaker’s,
23communication and its content, to which shall be attached a copy
24of any written material or text used during the communication.

25begin insert

begin insertSEC. 11.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 1701.2 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
26to read:end insert

27

1701.2.  

(a) If the commission pursuant to Section 1701.1 has
28determined that an adjudication case requires a hearing, the
29procedures prescribed by this section shall be applicable. The
30assigned commissioner or the assigned administrative law judge
31shall hear the case in the manner described in the scoping memo.
32The scoping memo shall designate whether the assigned
33commissioner or the assigned administrative law judge shall preside
34in the case. The commission shall provide by rule for peremptory
35challenges and challenges for cause of the administrative law judge.
36Challenges for cause shall include, but not be limited to, financial
37interests and prejudice. The rule shall provide that all parties are
38entitled to one peremptory challenge of the assignment of the
39administrative law judge in all cases. All parties are entitled to
40 unlimited peremptory challenges in any case in which the
P17   1administrative law judge has within the previous 12 months served
2in any capacity in an advocacy position at the commission, been
3employed by a regulated public utility, or has represented a party
4or has been a party of interest in the case. The assigned
5commissioner or the administrative law judge shall prepare and
6file a decision setting forth recommendations, findings, and
7conclusions. The decision shall be filed with the commission and
8served upon all parties to the action or proceeding without undue
9delay, not later than 60 days after the matter has been submitted
10for decision. The decision of the assigned commissioner or the
11administrative law judge shall become the decision of the
12commission if no further action is taken within 30 days. Any
13interested party may appeal the decision to the commission,
14provided that the appeal is made within 30 days of the issuance of
15the decision. The commission may itself initiate a review of the
16proposed decision on any grounds. The commission decision shall
17be based on the record developed by the assigned commissioner
18or the administrative law judge. A decision different from that of
19the assigned commissioner or the administrative law judge shall
20be accompanied by a written explanation of each of the changes
21made to the decision.

22(b) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insertend insert Notwithstanding Section 307, an officer, employee, or
23agent of the commission that is personally involved in the
24prosecution or in the supervision of the prosecution of an
25adjudication case before the commission shall not participate in
26the decision of the case, or in the decision of any factually related
27adjudicatory proceeding, including participation in or advising the
28 commission as to findings of fact, conclusions of law, or orders.
29An officer, employee, or agent of the commission that is personally
30involved in the prosecution or in the supervision of the prosecution
31of an adjudication case may participate in reaching a settlement
32of the case, but shall not participate in the decision of the
33commission to accept or reject the settlement, except as a witness
34or counsel in an open hearing or a hearing closed pursuant to
35subdivision (d). The Legislature finds that the commission performs
36both prosecutorial and adjudicatory functions in an adjudication
37case and declares its intent that an officer, employee, or agent of
38the commission, including its attorneys, may perform only one of
39those functions in any adjudication case or factually related
40adjudicatory proceeding.

begin insert

P18   1(2) An attorney that is prosecuting a matter before the
2 commission shall not meet with any commissioner regarding the
3matter that the attorney is prosecuting unless all parties are
4present.

end insert

5(c) Ex parte communications shall be prohibited in adjudication
6cases.

7(d) Notwithstanding any other law, the commission may meet
8in a closed hearing to consider the decision that is being appealed.
9The vote on the appeal shall be in a public meeting and shall be
10accompanied with an explanation of the appeal decision.

11(e) Adjudication cases shall be resolved within 12 months of
12initiation unless the commission makes findings why that deadline
13cannot be met and issues an order extending that deadline. In the
14event that a rehearing of an adjudication case is granted, the parties
15shall have an opportunity for final oral argument.

16(f) (1) The commission may determine that the respondent
17lacks, or may lack, the ability to pay potential penalties or fines
18or to pay restitution that may be ordered by the commission.

19(2) If the commission determines that a respondent lacks, or
20may lack, the ability to pay, the commission may order the
21respondent to demonstrate, to the satisfaction of the commission,
22sufficient ability to pay potential penalties, fines, or restitution that
23may be ordered by the commission. The respondent shall
24demonstrate the ability to pay, or make other financial
25arrangements satisfactory to the commission, within seven days
26of the commission commencing an adjudication case. The
27commission may delegate to the attorney to the commission the
28determination of whether a sufficient showing has been made by
29the respondent of an ability to pay.

30(3) Within seven days of the commission’s determination of the
31respondent’s ability to pay potential penalties, fines, or restitution,
32the respondent shall be entitled to an impartial review by an
33administrative law judge of the sufficiency of the showing made
34by the respondent of the respondent’s ability to pay. The review
35by an administrative law judge of the ability of the respondent to
36pay shall become part of the record of the adjudication and is
37subject to the commission’s consideration in its order resolving
38the adjudication case. The administrative law judge may enter
39temporary orders modifying any financial requirement made of
40the respondent pending the review by the administrative law judge.

P19   1(4) A respondent that is a public utility regulated under a rate
2of return or rate of margin regulatory structure or that has gross
3annual revenues of more than one hundred million dollars
4($100,000,000) generated within California is presumed to be able
5to pay potential penalties or fines or to pay restitution that may be
6ordered by the commission, and, therefore, paragraphs (1) to (3),
7inclusive, do not apply to that respondent.

8

begin deleteSEC. 8.end delete
9begin insertSEC. 12.end insert  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
10Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
11the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
12district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
13infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
14for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
15the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
16the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
17Constitution.



O

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