SB 660,
as amended, begin deleteHuesoend deletebegin insertLenoend insert. Public Utilitiesbegin delete Commission: proceedings: ex parte communications.end deletebegin insert Commission.end insert
The
end delete
begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertTheend insert California Constitution establishes the Public Utilities Commission, with jurisdiction over all public utilities. The California Constitutionbegin delete authorizes the commission to establish rules for all public utilities, subject to control by the Legislature, and to establish its own procedures, subject to statutory limitations or directions and constitutional requirements of due process.end deletebegin insert
grants the commission certain general powers over all public utilities, subject to control by the Legislature, and authorizes the Legislature, unlimited by the other provisions of the California Constitution, to confer additional authority and jurisdiction upon the commission that is cognate and germane to the regulation of public utilities. 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 authorizes the executive director and the attorney to undertake certain actions if directed or authorized by the president, except as otherwise directed or authorized by vote of the commission.end insert
This bill would repeal the requirement that the president direct the executive director, the attorney, and other commission staff. The bill would delete the authority of the president to direct or authorize the executive director and attorney to undertake certain actions, and would instead require that they be directed or authorized to undertake those actions by the commission. The bill would authorize the commission to delegate specific management and internal oversight functions to committees composed of 2 commissioners. The bill would require the commission to vote in an open meeting on the assignment or reassignment of proceeding to one or more commissioners.
end insertbegin insert(2) Existing law requires the commission, upon initiating a hearing, to assign one or more commissioners to oversee the case and an administrative law judge, where appropriate. Existing law requires the assigned commissioner to prepare and issue, by order or ruling, a scoping memo that describes the issues to be considered and the applicable timetable for resolution. Existing law requires the commission, to adopt procedures on the disqualification of administrative law judges due to bias or prejudice similar to those of other state agencies and superior courts.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would require the commission to additionally adopt procedures on disqualification of commissioners due to bias or prejudice similar to those of other state agencies and superior courts. For ratesetting or adjudicatory proceedings, the bill would require a commissioner or an administrative law judge to be disqualified if there is an appearance of bias or prejudice based on specified criteria. The bill would prohibit commission procedures from authorizing a commissioner or administrative law judge from ruling on a motion made by a party to a proceeding to disqualify the commissioner or administrative law judge due to bias or prejudice.
end insertThe
end delete
begin insert(3)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertTheend insert Public Utilities Act 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. For these purposes, quasi-legislative cases are cases that establish policy rulemakings and investigations, which may
establish rules affecting an entire industry, adjudication cases are enforcement cases and complaints, except those challenging the reasonableness of any rates or charges, and ratesetting cases are cases in which rates are established for a specific company, including general rate cases, performance-based ratemaking, and other ratesetting mechanisms.begin delete Existing law requires the commission, upon initiating a hearing, to assign one or more commissioners to oversee the case and an administrative law judge, where appropriate.end delete
The act regulates communications in hearings before the commission and defines “ex parte communication” to mean any oral or written communication between a decisionmaker and a person with an interest in a matter before the commission concerning substantive, but not procedural, issues that does not occur in a public hearing, workshop, or other public proceeding, or on the official record of the proceeding on the matter.begin insert Existing law defines “person with an interest” to mean, among other things, a person with a financial interest in a matter before the commission, or an agent or employee of the person with a financial interest, or a person receiving consideration for representing the person with a financial interest.end insert Existing law requires the commission, by regulation, to adopt and publishbegin insert a definition of the
terms “decisionmaker” and “persons” for those purposes, along with anyend insert requirements for written reporting of ex parte communications and appropriate sanctions for noncompliance with any rule proscribing ex parte communications. The act provides that ex parte communications are prohibited in adjudication cases and are prohibited in ratesetting cases, with certain exceptions. The act requires that ex parte communications be permitted in quasi-legislative cases, without any restrictions. The commission’s Rules of Practice and Procedure define a “decisionmaker” as any commissioner, the Chief Administrative Law Judge, any Assistant Chief Administrative Law Judge, the assigned administrative law judge, or the Law and Motion Administrative Law Judge. The Rules of Practice and Procedure provide that communications with a commissioners’ personal advisors are subject to all of the restrictions on, and reporting requirements applicable to, ex parte communications, except that oral
communications with an advisor in ratesetting proceedings are permitted without the restrictions.
This bill wouldbegin insert delete the provision that an ex parte communication concerns a substantive, but not a procedural matter, and instead would provide that an ex parte communication concerns any matter that the commission has not specified as being a procedural matter that is an appropriate subject for ex parte communication. The bill would require the commission to specify those procedural matters that are appropriate subjects for ex parte communications in its Rules of Practice and Procedure. The bill would define a person involved in issuing credit ratings or advising entities or persons who may invest in the shares or operations of any party to a proceeding as a person with a financial interest. The bill wouldend insert require that the commission, by rule, adopt and
publish a definition of decisionmakers, that would be required to includebegin delete commissioners, each advisor to a commissioner, and an administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding, thereby making the restrictions on ex parte communications applicable to an advisor to a commissioner in a ratesetting proceeding.end deletebegin insert end insertbegin inserteach commissioner, the attorney for the commission, the executive director of the commission, the personal staff of each commissioner, including each advisor to a commissioner, the administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding, the director of the Energy Division, the director of the Communications Division, the director of the Water and Audits Division, and the director of the Safety and Enforcement Division.end insertbegin insert
The bill would require communications between a person with an interest who is not a party to a commission proceeding and a decisionmaker to be reported by the decisionmaker but would not require the communications to be reported by the person with an interest who is not a party to a commission proceeding.end insert
This bill would require that a decisionmaker who makes or receives a prohibited ex parte communication, or who learns that a permissible ex parte communication was not reported as required, to disclose the content of the communication in the record of the proceeding.begin insert The bill would require the commission to establish rules for how to handle prohibited ex parte communications, including rules requiring reporting the person initiating the communication and whether the person persisted in continuing the communication after being advised that the communication was prohibited. The bill would require that an ex parte communication not be part of the record of any proceeding and not be considered, or relied upon, for purposes of the commission’s resolution of contested issues.end insert
This bill would provide that ex parte communications are permitted in quasi-legislative proceedings, but would require that they be reported within 3 working days of the communication by filing a “Notice of Ex Parte Communication” with the commission in accordance with procedures established by the commission for the service of that notice.
begin insertThis bill would require the commission to additionally prohibit communications concerning procedural issues in adjudication cases between parties or persons with an interest and decisionmakers, except for the assigned administrative law judge.
end insertThe exceptions to the prohibition upon ex parte communications in ratesetting proceedings authorize a commissioner to permit oral ex parte communications if all interested parties are invited and given not less than 3 days’ notice. If an ex parte communication meeting is granted to any party, it is required that all other parties also be granted individual ex parte meetings of a substantially equal period of time and that all parties be sent a notice of that authorization at the time the request is granted, at least 3 days prior to the meeting. The exceptions authorize a commissioner to permit written ex parte communications by any party provided that copies of the communication are transmitted to all parties.
This bill would delete the requirement that if an ex parte communication meeting is granted to anybegin delete party,end deletebegin insert
party in a ratesetting proceeding,end insert that all other parties also be granted individual ex parte meetings of a substantially equal period of time and that all parties be sent a notice of that authorization at the time the request is granted, at least 3 days prior to the meeting. The bill would prohibit oral communications concerning procedural issues in ratesetting cases between parties or persons with an interest and decisionmakers other than the assigned administrative law judge, except that a commissioner would be authorized to permit an oral communication relative to procedural issues if all interested parties are invited and given not less than 3 days’ notice. The bill would prohibit written ex parte communications concerning procedural issues in ratesetting cases between parties or persons with an interest and decisionmakers other than the assigned administrative law judge, except that a commissioner would be authorized to permit a written communication relative to
procedural issues by any party provided that copies of the communication are transmitted to all parties on the same day.
This bill would make any violation of the ex parte communications requirements by any person punishable by an unspecified fine or by imprisonment, or by both that fine and imprisonment, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program by creating new crimes.
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 the 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 expanding the application of a 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:
begin insertSection 305 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is
2amended to read:end insert
The Governor shall designate a president of the
4commission from among the members of the commission. The
5presidentbegin delete shall direct the executive director, the attorney, and other
6staff of the commission, except for the staff of the division
7described in Section 309.5, in the performance of their duties, in
8accordance with commission policies and guidelines. The presidentend delete
9 shall preside at all meetings and sessions of the commission.
begin insertSection 305.5 is added to the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert, to
11read:end insert
(a) The commission shall direct the executive director,
13the attorney, and other staff of the commission, except for the staff
14of the Office of Ratepayer Advocates described in Section 309.5,
15in performance of their duties.
16(b) The commission may delegate specific management and
17internal oversight functions to committees composed of two
18commissioners. Committees shall meet regularly with staff and
19shall report to the commission for additional guidance or approval
20of decisions pertaining to the operations of the commission.
21(c) The commission shall vote in an open meeting on the
22assignment or reassignment of any proceeding to one or more
23
commissioners.
begin insertSection 307 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
25to read:end insert
(a) The commission may appoint as attorney to the
27commission an attorney at law of this state, who shall hold office
28during the pleasure of the commission.
29(b) The attorney shall represent and appear for the people of the
30State of California and the commission in all actions and
P7 1proceedings involving any question under this part or under any
2order or act of the commission. If directed to do so by thebegin delete president, commission, the
3except as otherwise directed by vote of theend delete
4attorney shall intervene, if possible, in any action or proceeding
5in which any such question is involved.
6(c) The attorney shall commence, prosecute, and expedite the
7final determination of all actions and proceedings directed or
8authorized bybegin delete the president, except as otherwise directed or the commission, advise the commission and
9authorized by vote ofend delete
10each commissioner, when so requested, in regard to all matters in
11connection with the powers and duties of the commission and the
12members thereof, and generally perform all duties and services as
13attorney to the commission thatbegin delete the president, or vote ofend delete the
14begin delete commission,end deletebegin insert commissionend insert may require ofbegin delete him.end deletebegin insert
him or her.end insert
begin insertSection 308 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
16to read:end insert
(a) The commission shall appoint an executive director,
18who shall hold office during its pleasure. The executive director
19shall be responsible for the commission’s executive and
20administrative duties and shall organize, coordinate, supervise,
21and direct the operations and affairs of the commission and
22expedite all matters within the commission’s jurisdiction.
23(b) The executive director shall keep a full and true record of
24all proceedings of the commission, issue all necessary process,
25writs, warrants, and notices, and performbegin delete suchend deletebegin insert anyend insert
other duties as
26thebegin delete president, or vote of the commission, prescribes. The presidentend delete
27begin insert
commission prescribes. The commissionend insert may authorize the
28executive director to dismiss complaints or applications when all
29parties are in agreement thereto, in accordance with rules that the
30commission may prescribe.
31(c) The commission may appoint assistant executive directors
32who may serve warrants and other process in any county or city
33and county of this state.
begin insertSection 309.6 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
35to read:end insert
(a) The commission shall adopt procedures on the
37disqualification ofbegin insert commissioners andend insert administrative law judges
38due to bias or prejudice similar to those of other state agencies and
39superior courts.
P8 1(b) (1) For ratesetting and adjudicatory proceedings, a
2commissioner or administrative law judge shall be disqualified if
3there is an appearance of bias or prejudice based on any of the
4following:
5(A) Actions taken during the proceeding.
end insertbegin insert
6(B) Private communications before the commencement of the
7proceeding to influence the request for relief sought by any party
8to the proceeding.
9(C) Actions demonstrating any commitment to provide relief to
10a party.
11(2) Past work experience by the commissioner or administrative
12law judge shall not be a sufficient basis for demonstrating an
13appearance of bias or prejudice pursuant to paragraph (1).
14(c) The commission procedures shall not authorize a
15commissioner or administrative law judge to rule on a motion
16made by a party to a proceeding to disqualify the commissioner
17or administrative law judge due to bias or prejudice.
18(b)
end delete
19begin insert(d)end insert The commission shall develop the procedures with the
20opportunity for public review and comment.
Section 1701.1 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
23to read:
(a) The commission, consistent with due process,
25public policy, and statutory requirements, shall determine whether
26a proceeding requires a hearing. The commission shall determine
27whether the matter requires a quasi-legislative, an adjudication,
28or a ratesetting hearing. The commission’s decision as to the nature
29of the proceeding shall be subject to a request for rehearing within
3010 days of the date of that decision. If that decision is not appealed
31to the commission within that time period it shall not be
32subsequently subject to judicial review. Only those parties who
33have requested a rehearing within that time period shall
34subsequently have standing for judicial review and that review
35shall only be available
at the conclusion of the proceeding. The
36commission shall render its decision regarding the rehearing within
3730 days. The commission shall establish rules regarding ex parte
38communication on case categorization issues.
39(b) The commission upon initiating a hearing shall assign one
40or more commissioners to oversee the case and an administrative
P9 1law judge where appropriate. The assigned commissioner shall
2schedule a prehearing conference. The assigned commissioner
3shall prepare and issue by order or ruling a scoping memo that
4describes the issues to be considered and the applicable timetable
5for resolution.
6(c) (1) Quasi-legislative cases, for purposes of this article, are
7cases that establish policy, including, but not limited to,
8rulemakings and
investigations which may establish rules affecting
9an entire industry.
10(2) Adjudication cases, for purposes of this article, are
11
enforcement cases and complaints except those challenging the
12reasonableness of any rates or charges as specified in Section 1702.
13(3) Ratesetting cases, for purposes of this article, are cases in
14which rates are established for a specific company, including, but
15not limited to, general rate cases, performance-based ratemaking,
16and other ratesetting mechanisms.
17(d) (1) “Ex parte communication,” for purposes of this article,
18means any oral or written communication between a decisionmaker
19and a person with an interest in a matter before the commission
20concerningbegin delete substantive, but not procedural issues,end deletebegin insert any matter
that
21the commission has not specified as being a procedural matter
22that is an appropriate subject for ex parte communication,end insert that
23does not occur in a public hearing, workshop, or other public
24proceeding, or on the official record of the proceeding on the
25matter.begin insert The commission shall specify those procedural matters
26that are appropriate subjects for ex parte communications in its
27Rules of Practice and Procedure.end insert “Person with an interest,” for
28purposes of this article, means any of the following:
29(A) Any applicant, an agent or an employee of the applicant,
30or a person receiving consideration for representing the applicant,
31or a participant in the proceeding on any matter before the
32commission.
33(B) Any person with a financial interest, as described in Article
341 (commencing with Section 87100) of Chapter 7 of Title 9 of the
35Government Code, in a matter before the commission, or an agent
36or employee of the person with a financial interest, or a person
37receiving consideration for representing the person with a financial
38interest.begin insert A person involved in issuing credit ratings or advising
39entities or persons who may invest in the shares or operations of
40any party to a proceeding is a person with a financial interest.end insert
P10 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.
5(2) The commission shall by rule adopt and publish a definition
6of decisionmakers and persons for purposes of this section, along
7with any requirements for written reporting of ex parte
8communications and appropriate sanctions for noncompliance with
9any rule proscribing ex parte communications.begin insert The definition of
10decisionmakers shall include, but is not limited to, each
11commissioner, the attorney for the commission, the executive
12director of the commission, the personal staff of each
13commissioner, including each advisor to aend insertbegin insert commissioner, the
14administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding, the director
15of the Energy Division, the director of the Communications
16Division, the director of the Water and Audits Division,
and the
17director of the Safety and Enforcement Division.end insert The rules shall
18provide that reportable communications shall be reported by the
19party, whether the communication was initiated by the party or
20the decisionmaker.begin delete The definition of decisionmakers shall include, begin insert end insertbegin insertHowever,
21but is not limited to, commissioners, each advisor to a
22commissioner appointed pursuant to Section 309.1, and an
23administrative law judge assigned to the proceeding.end delete
24communications between a person with an interest who is not a
25party to a commission proceeding and a decisionmaker shall be
26reported by the decisionmaker in accordance with procedures
27established pursuant to this
section and shall not be required to
28be reported by the person with an interest who is not a party to a
29commission proceeding.end insert Communications shall be reported within
30three working days of the communication by filing a “Notice of
31Ex Parte Communication” with the commission in accordance
32with the procedures established by the commission for the service
33of that notice. The notice shall include the following information:
34(A) The date, time, and location of the communication, whether
35it was oral, written, or a combination, and the communications
36medium utilized.
37(B) The identity of the recipient and the person initiating the
38communication, as well as the identity of any persons present
39during the communication.
P11 1(C) A
description of the party’s, but not the decisionmaker’s,
2communication and its content, to which shall be attached a copy
3of any written material or text used during the communication.
4(3) Any decisionmaker who makes or receives a prohibited ex
5parte communication, or who learns that a permissible ex parte
6communication was not reported pursuant to paragraph (2), shall
7disclose the content of the communication in the record of the
8proceeding.begin insert The commission shall establish rules for how to handle
9prohibited ex parte communications, including rules requiring
10reporting the person initiating the communication and whether
11the person persisted in continuing the communication after being
12advised that the communication was prohibited.end insert
13(4) An ex parte communication shall not be part of the record
14of any proceeding and shall not be considered, or relied upon, for
15purposes of the commission’s resolution of contested issues.
begin insertSection 1701.2 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is amended
17to read:end insert
(a) If the commission pursuant to Section 1701.1 has
19determined that an adjudication case requires a hearing, the
20procedures prescribed by this section shall be applicable. The
21assigned commissioner or the assigned administrative law judge
22shall hear the case in the manner described in the scoping memo.
23The scoping memo shall designate whether the assigned
24commissioner or the assigned administrative law judge shall preside
25in the case. The commission shall provide by rule for peremptory
26challenges and challenges for cause of the administrative law judge.
27Challenges for cause shall include, but not be limited to, financial
28interests and prejudice. The rule shall provide that all parties are
29entitled to one peremptory challenge of the assignment of the
30administrative law judge in all cases. All parties are entitled to
31
unlimited peremptory challenges in any case in which the
32administrative law judge has within the previous 12 months served
33in any capacity in an advocacy position at the commission, been
34employed by a regulated public utility, or has represented a party
35or has been a party of interest in the case. The assigned
36commissioner or the administrative law judge shall prepare and
37file a decision setting forth recommendations, findings, and
38conclusions. The decision shall be filed with the commission and
39served upon all parties to the action or proceeding without undue
40delay, not later than 60 days after the matter has been submitted
P12 1for decision. The decision of the assigned commissioner or the
2administrative law judge shall become the decision of the
3commission if no further action is taken within 30 days. Any
4interested party may appeal the decision to the commission,
5provided that the appeal is made within 30 days of the issuance of
6the decision. The commission may itself initiate a review of the
7proposed
decision on any grounds. The commission decision shall
8be based on the record developed by the assigned commissioner
9or the administrative law judge. A decision different from that of
10the assigned commissioner or the administrative law judge shall
11be accompanied by a written explanation of each of the changes
12made to the decision.
13(b) Notwithstanding Section 307, an officer, employee, or agent
14of the commission that is personally involved in the prosecution
15or in the supervision of the prosecution of an adjudication case
16before the commission shall not participate in the decision of the
17case, or in the decision of any factually related adjudicatory
18proceeding, including participation in or advising the commission
19as to findings of fact, conclusions of law, or orders. An officer,
20employee, or agent of the commission that is personally involved
21in the prosecution or in the supervision of the prosecution of an
22adjudication case may participate in
reaching a settlement of the
23case, but shall not participate in the decision of the commission to
24accept or reject the settlement, except as a witness or counsel in
25an open hearing or a hearing closed pursuant to subdivision (d).
26The Legislature finds that the commission performs both
27prosecutorial and adjudicatory functions in an adjudication case
28and declares its intent that an officer, employee, or agent of the
29commission, including its attorneys, may perform only one of
30those functions in any adjudication case or factually related
31adjudicatory proceeding.
32(c) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insertEx parte communications shall be prohibited in
33adjudication cases.
34(2) Any oral or written communications
concerning procedural
35issues in adjudication cases between parties or persons with an
36interest and decisionmakers, except the assigned administrative
37law judge, shall be prohibited.
38(d) Notwithstanding any other law, the commission may meet
39in a closed hearing to consider the decision that is being appealed.
P13 1The vote on the appeal shall be in a public meeting and shall be
2accompanied with an explanation of the appeal decision.
3(e) Adjudication cases shall be resolved within 12 months of
4initiation unless the commission makes findings why that deadline
5cannot be met and issues an order extending that deadline. In the
6event that a rehearing of an adjudication case is granted, the parties
7shall have an opportunity for final oral argument.
8(f) (1) The commission may
determine that the respondent
9lacks, or may lack, the ability to pay potential penalties or fines
10or to pay restitution that may be ordered by the commission.
11(2) If the commission determines that a respondent lacks, or
12may lack, the ability to pay, the commission may order the
13respondent to demonstrate, to the satisfaction of the commission,
14sufficient ability to pay potential penalties, fines, or restitution that
15may be ordered by the commission. The respondent shall
16demonstrate the ability to pay, or make other financial
17arrangements satisfactory to the commission, within seven days
18of the commission commencing an adjudication case. The
19commission may delegate to the attorney to the commission the
20determination of whether a sufficient showing has been made by
21the respondent of an ability to pay.
22(3) Within seven days of the commission’s determination of the
23respondent’s ability
to pay potential penalties, fines, or restitution,
24the respondent shall be entitled to an impartial review by an
25administrative law judge of the sufficiency of the showing made
26by the respondent of the respondent’s ability to pay. The review
27by an administrative law judge of the ability of the respondent to
28pay shall become part of the record of the adjudication and is
29subject to the commission’s consideration in its order resolving
30the adjudication case. The administrative law judge may enter
31temporary orders modifying any financial requirement made of
32the respondent pending the review by the administrative law judge.
33(4) A respondent that is a public utility regulated under a rate
34of return or rate of margin regulatory structure or that has gross
35annual revenues of more than one hundred million dollars
36($100,000,000) generated within California is presumed to be able
37to pay potential penalties or fines or to pay restitution that may be
38
ordered by the commission, and, therefore, paragraphs (1) to (3),
39inclusive, do not apply to that respondent.
Section 1701.3 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
3to read:
(a) If the commission pursuant to Section 1701.1 has
5determined that a ratesetting case requires a hearing, the procedures
6prescribed by this section shall be applicable. The assigned
7commissioner shall determine prior to the first hearing whether
8the commissioner or the assigned administrative law judge shall
9be designated as the principal hearing officer. The principal hearing
10officer shall be present for more than one-half of the hearing days.
11The decision of the principal hearing officer shall be the proposed
12decision. An alternate decision may be issued by the assigned
13commissioner or the assigned administrative law judge who is not
14the principal hearing officer. The commission shall establish a
15procedure
for any party to request the presence of a commissioner
16at a hearing. The assigned commissioner shall be present at the
17closing arguments of the case. The principal hearing officer shall
18present the proposed decision to the full commission in a public
19meeting. The alternate decision, if any, shall also be presented to
20the full commission at that public meeting. The alternate decision
21shall be filed with the commission and shall be served on all parties
22simultaneously with the proposed decision.
23The presentation to the full commission shall contain a record
24of the number of days of the hearing, the number of days that each
25commissioner was present, and whether the decision was completed
26on time.
27(b) The commission shall provide by regulation for peremptory
28challenges and challenges for cause of the
administrative law judge.
29Challenges for cause shall include, but not be limited to, financial
30interests and prejudice. All parties shall be entitled to unlimited
31peremptory challenges in any case in which the administrative law
32judge has within the previous 12 months served in any capacity
33in an advocacy position at the commission, been employed by a
34regulated public utility, or has represented a party or has been a
35party of interest in the case.
36(c) (1) Ex parte communications are prohibited in ratesetting
37cases. However, oral ex parte communications may be permitted
38at any time by any commissioner if all interested parties are invited
39and given not less than three days’ notice. Written ex parte
40communications may be permitted by any party provided that
P15 1copies of the communication are transmitted to all parties on the
2same
day.
3(2) Oral communications concerning procedural issues in
4ratesetting cases between parties or persons with an interest and
5decisionmakers, except the assigned administrative law judge, are
6prohibited, except that an oral communication may be permitted
7at any time by any commissioner if all interested parties are invited
8and given not less than three days’ notice.
9(3) Written communications concerning procedural issues in
10ratesetting cases between parties or persons with an interest and
11decisionmakers, except the assigned administrative law judge, are
12prohibited, except that a commissioner may permit a written
13communication by any party if copies of the communication are
14transmitted to all parties on the same day.
15(d) Any party has the right to present a final oral argument of
16its case before the commission. Those requests shall be scheduled
17in a timely manner. A quorum of the commission shall be present
18for the final oral arguments.
19(e) The commission may, in issuing its decision, adopt, modify,
20or set aside the proposed decision or any part of the decision based
21on evidence in the record. The final decision of the commission
22shall be issued not later than 60 days after the issuance of the
23proposed decision. Under extraordinary circumstances the
24commission may extend this date for a reasonable period. The
2560-day period shall be extended for 30 days if any alternate
26decision is proposed pursuant to Section 311.
Section 1701.4 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
29to read:
(a) If the commission pursuant to Section 1701.1 has
31determined that a quasi-legislative case requires a hearing, the
32procedures prescribed by this section shall be applicable. The
33assigned administrative law judge shall act as an assistant to the
34assigned commissioner in quasi-legislative cases. The assigned
35commissioner shall be present for formal hearings. The assigned
36commissioner shall prepare the proposed rule or order with the
37assistance of the administrative law judge. The assigned
38commissioner shall present the proposed rule or order to the full
39commission in a public meeting. The report shall include the
P16 1number of days of hearing and the number of days that the
2commissioner was present.
3(b) Ex parte communications shall be
permitted. Any ex parte
4communication shall be reported within three working days of the
5communication by filing a “Notice of Ex Parte Communication”
6with the commission in accordance with procedures established
7by the commission for the service of that notice.
8(c) Any party has the right to present a final oral argument of
9its case before the commission. Those requests shall be scheduled
10in a timely manner. A quorum of the commission shall be present
11for the final oral arguments.
12(d) The commission may, in issuing its rule or order, adopt,
13modify, or set aside the proposed decision or any part of the rule
14or order. The final rule or order of the commission shall be issued
15not later than 60 days after the issuance of the proposed rule or
16order. Under
extraordinary circumstances the commission may
17extend this date for a reasonable period. The 60-day period shall
18be extended for 30 days if any alternate rule or order is proposed
19pursuant to Section 311.
Section 1701.6 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
22to read:
A violation of the ex parte communications
24requirements of this article by any person is punishable by a fine
25not to exceed ____, or by imprisonment, or by both that fine and
26imprisonment.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
29Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
30the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
31district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
32infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
33for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
34the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
35the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
36Constitution.
O
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