Amended in Senate March 28, 2016

Senate BillNo. 1233


Introduced by Senator McGuire

(Coauthor: Senator Wolk)

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine and Wood)

February 18, 2016


An act tobegin delete amend Section 6586.7 of, and toend delete add Section 6588.8 to,begin insert and to repeal and amend Section 6586.7 of,end insert the Government Code, relating to water.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 1233, as amended, McGuire. Joint powers authorities: Water Bill Savings Act.

Existing law, the Marks-Roos Local Bond Pooling Act of 1985, authorizes joint powers authorities, among other powers, to issue bonds and loan the proceeds to local agencies to finance specified types of projects and programs.

This bill would enact the Water Bill Savings Act, which would authorize a joint powers authority to provide funding for a customer of a local agency or its publicly owned utility to acquire, install, or repair a water efficiency improvement on the customer’s property served by the local agency or its publicly owned utility. The bill would require the customer to repay the authority through an efficiency charge on the customer’s water bill to be imposed and collected by the local agency or its publicly owned utility on behalf of the authority pursuant to a servicing agreement. The bill would authorize the authority to issue bonds to fund the program.begin insert The bill would also make technical changes.end insert

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

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

P2    1

SECTION 1.  

The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:

3(a) Water conservation efforts are indispensable to combating
4the current and continuing drought conditions faced by the state
5and advancing the state’s greenhouse gas emission reduction goals.

6(b) The up-front cost of acquiring, installing, and repairing water
7efficiency improvements is often prohibitive and may prevent
8customers from using them on residential, commercial, industrial,
9agricultural, or other real property.

10(c) Increasing customer water efficiency is a core component
11of the provision of water utility service.

12

SEC. 2.  

(a) It is the intent of the Legislature to make water
13efficiency improvements more affordable and promote the
14acquisition, installation, and repair of those improvements by
15allowing local agencies to establish a mechanism by which they
16may help their water customers to acquire, install, and repair water
17efficiency improvements on privately owned customer properties.

18(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that this act authorize the
19development of a program to be established by a joint powers
20authority that would provide a water customer with an alternative
21and voluntary means to acquire, install, or repair water efficiency
22improvements. It is further the intent of the Legislature that the
23cost of this voluntarily acquired, installed, or repaired water
24efficiency improvement be repaid through an efficiency charge
25added to the water bill associated with the customer property upon
26which the water efficiency improvement is located.

begin delete
27

SEC. 3.  

Section 6586.7 of the Government Code, as added by
28Section 4 of Chapter 723 of the Statutes of 2000, is amended to
29read:

30

6586.7.  

(a) A copy of the resolution adopted by an authority
31authorizing bonds or any issuance of bonds, or accepting the benefit
32of any bonds or proceeds of bonds, except bonds issued or
33authorized pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500),
34or bonds issued for the purposes specified in subdivision (c) of
35Section 6586.5, shall be sent by certified mail to the Attorney
36General and the California Debt and Investment Advisory
37Commission not later than five days after adoption by the authority.

38(b) This section does not apply to bonds:

P3    1(1) Specified in subdivision (c) of Section 6586.5.

2(2) Issued pursuant to the Community Redevelopment Law,
3Part 1 (commencing with Section 33000) of Division 24 of the
4Health and Safety Code.

5(3) To finance transportation facilities and vehicles.

6(4) To finance a facility that is located within the boundaries of
7an authority, provided that the authority that issues those bonds
8consists of any of the following:

9(A) Local agencies with overlapping boundaries.

10(B) A county and a local agency or local agencies located
11entirely within that county.

12(C) A city and a local agency or local agencies located entirely
13within that city.

14(5) To finance a facility for which an authority has received an
15allocation from the California Debt Limit Allocation Committee.

16(6) Of an authority that consists of no less than 250 local
17agencies and the agreement that established that authority requires
18the governing body of the local agency that is a member of the
19authority in whose jurisdiction the facility will be located to
20approve the facility and the issuance of the bonds.

21(7) Issued pursuant to Section 6588.8.

end delete
22begin insert

begin insertSEC. 3.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 6586.7 of the end insertbegin insertGovernment Codeend insertbegin insert, as added by
23Section 4 of Chapter 723 of the Statutes of 2000, is repealed.end insert

begin delete
24

6586.7.  

(a) A copy of the resolution adopted by an authority
25authorizing bonds or any issuance of bonds, or accepting the benefit
26of any bonds or proceeds of bonds, except bonds issued or
27authorized pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500),
28or bonds issued for the purposes specified in subdivision (c) of
29Section 6586.5, shall be sent by certified mail to the Attorney
30General and the California Debt and Investment Advisory
31Commission not later than five days after adoption by the authority.

32(b) This section does not apply to bonds:

33(1) Specified in subdivision (c) of Section 6586.5.

34(2) Issued pursuant to the Community Redevelopment Law,
35Part 1 (commencing with Section 33000) of Division 24 of the
36Health and Safety Code.

37(3) To finance transportation facilities and vehicles.

38(4) To finance a facility that is located within the boundaries of
39an authority, provided that the authority that issues those bonds
40consists of any of the following:

P4    1(A) Local agencies with overlapping boundaries.

2(B) A county and a local agency or local agencies located
3entirely within that county.

4(C) A city and a local agency or local agencies located entirely
5within that city.

6(5) To finance a facility for which an authority has received an
7allocation from the California Debt Limit Allocation Committee.

8(6) Of an authority that consists of no less than 250 local
9agencies and the agreement that established that authority requires
10the governing body of the local agency that is a member of the
11authority in whose jurisdiction the facility will be located to
12approve the facility and the issuance of the bonds.

end delete
13begin insert

begin insertSEC. 4.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 6586.7 of the end insertbegin insertGovernment Codeend insertbegin insert, as added by
14Section 1 of Chapter 724 of the Statutes of 2000, is amended to
15read:end insert

16

6586.7.  

(a) A copy of the resolution adopted by an authority
17authorizing bonds or any issuance of bonds, or accepting the benefit
18of any bonds or proceeds of bonds, except bonds issued or
19authorized pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500),
20or bonds issued for the purposes specified in subdivision (c) of
21Section 6586.5, shall be sent by certified mail to the Attorney
22General and the California Debt and Investment Advisory
23Commission not later than five days after adoption by the authority.

24(b) This section does not apply to bonds:

25(1) Specified in subdivision (c) of Section 6586.5.

26(2) Issued pursuant to the Community Redevelopmentbegin delete Law,
27Partend delete
begin insert Law (Partend insert 1 (commencing with Section 33000) of Division
2824 of the Health and Safetybegin delete Code.end deletebegin insert Code).end insert

29(3) To finance transportation facilities and vehicles.

30(4) To finance a facility that is located within the boundaries of
31an authority, provided that the authority that issues those bonds
32consists of any of the following:

33(A) Local agencies with overlapping boundaries.

34(B) A county and a local agency or local agencies located
35entirely within that county.

36(C) A city and a local agency or local agencies located entirely
37within that city.

38(5) To finance a facility for which an authority has received an
39allocation from the California Debt Limit Allocation Committee.

P5    1(6) Of an authority that consists of no less than 100 local
2agencies and the agreement that established that authority requires
3the governing body of the local agency that is a member of the
4authority in whose jurisdiction the facility will be located to
5approve the facility and the issuance of the bonds.

begin insert

6
(7) Issued pursuant to Section 6588.8.

end insert
7

begin deleteSEC. 4.end delete
8
begin insertSEC. 5.end insert  

Section 6588.8 is added to the Government Code, to
9read:

10

6588.8.  

(a) This section shall be known and may be cited as
11the Water Bill Savings Act.

12(b) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the
13following meanings:

14(1) “Customer” means a person or entity that purchases water
15from a local agency or its publicly owned utility and is billed for
16the water by the local agency or its publicly owned utility.

17(2) “Customer property” means residential, commercial,
18industrial, agricultural, or other real property owned by the
19customer.

20(3) “Efficiency charge” means a charge on a customer’s water
21bill that is paid by the customer directly to the local agency or its
22publicly owned utility in order to pay for an efficiency
23improvement pursuant to this section.

24(4) “Efficiency improvement” means a water efficiency
25improvement, as defined by the authority.

26(5) “Financing costs” mean all of the following:

27(A) An interest and redemption premium payable on a bond.

28(B) The cost of retiring the principal of a bond, whether at
29maturity, including acceleration of maturity upon an event of
30default, or upon redemption, including sinking fund redemption.

31(C) A cost related to issuing or servicing bonds, including, but
32not limited to, a servicing fee, trustee fee, legal fee, administrative
33fee, bond counsel fee, bond placement or underwriting fee,
34remarketing fee, broker dealer fee, independent manager fee,
35municipal adviser fee, accounting report fee, engineering report
36fee, rating agency fee, and payment made under an interest rate
37swap agreement.

38(D) A payment or expense associated with a bond insurance
39policy, financial guaranty, or a contract, agreement, or other credit
P6    1enhancement for bonds or a contract, agreement, or other financial
2agreement entered into in connection with a bond.

3(E) The funding of one or more reserve accounts related to a
4bond.

5(6) “Local agency” means a “local government” as defined in
6subdivision (b) of Section 1 of Article XIII C of the California
7Constitution.

8(7) “Publicly owned utility” means a utility furnishing water
9service to customers that is owned and operated by a local agency
10or a department or other subdivision of a local agency and includes
11any successor to the powers and functions of the department or
12other subdivision.

13(8) “Servicing agreement” means an agreement between a local
14agency or its publicly owned utility and the authority for the
15collection of the efficiency charge, pursuant to which the local
16agency or its publicly owned utility acts as a servicing agent for
17purposes of collecting the efficiency charge for the authority.

18(c) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, if the requirements of
19paragraphs (2) and (3) are met, an authority may provide funding
20for a customer of a local agency or its publicly owned utility to
21acquire, install, or repair an efficiency improvement on a customer
22property served by the local agency or its publicly owned utility.

23(2) (A) The authority, by resolution, establishes or extends a
24program to provide funding for a customer of a local agency or its
25publicly owned utility to acquire, install, or repair an efficiency
26improvement on a customer property served by the local agency
27or its publicly owned utility. The resolution shall do all of the
28following:

29(i) Identify the geographic area in the state in which the authority
30intends to operate the program.

31(ii) Approve a standardized servicing agreement.

32(iii) Authorize one or more designated officials of the authority
33to execute and deliver the servicing agreement on behalf of the
34authority.

35(B) The authority acknowledges receipt of the resolution
36described inbegin insert subparagraph (C) ofend insert paragraph (3).

37 (C) The authority may determine that all proceedings were valid
38and in conformity with the requirements of this paragraph and that
39finding shall be final and conclusive.

P7    1(3) The legislative body of the local agency requests the
2authority to provide funding for its customers through a program
3established by the authority pursuant to this section by doing all
4of the following:

5(A) The legislative body adopts a resolution declaring its
6intention to request the authority to establish or extend a program
7to a customer represented by the legislative body, calling for a
8public hearing that shall be held at least 30 days later and directing
9the clerk or secretary of the legislative body to publish a notice of
10the hearing at least five days before the hearing in a newspaper of
11general circulation in the boundaries of the local agency. If the
12local agency wishes to pledge its water enterprise revenue as
13security for the payment of the principal of, and interest and
14redemption premium on, bonds issued by the authority in the event
15that efficiency charges are insufficient for those purposes pursuant
16to paragraph (4) of subdivision (f), the legislative body shall declare
17that intention in the resolution.

18(B) The legislative body conducts the noticed public hearing
19and, after considering the testimony of any interested person,
20concludes that the program and the proposed pledge of water
21enterprise revenue, if applicable, would provide significant public
22benefits in accordance with the criteria specified in Section 6586.

23(C) The legislative body adopts a resolution that does all of the
24following:

25(i) Authorizes the authority to establish or extend a program
26pursuant to this section within the boundaries of the local agency.

27(ii) Declares that the operation of the program by the authority
28in the local agency’s geographic boundaries would provide
29significant public benefits in accordance with the criteria specified
30in Section 6586.

31(iii) Approves the standardized servicing agreement and
32authorizes one or more designated officials of the local agency to
33execute and deliver the servicing agreement with the authority.

34(iv) If applicable, approves the pledge of water enterprise
35revenue as security for the payment of the principal of, and interest
36and redemption premium on, bonds issued by the authority in the
37event that efficiency charges are insufficient for those purposes.

38(v) If applicable, authorizes execution and delivery of one or
39more pledge agreements to evidence a pledge.

P8    1(vi) In the resolution, the legislative body may determine that
2all proceedings were valid and in conformity with the requirements
3of this section and that finding shall be final and conclusive.

4(d) (1) Subject to the requirements of Article XIII C or Article
5XIII D of the California Constitution, a customer shall repay the
6authority through an efficiency charge on the customer’s water
7bill that is imposed and collected by the local agency or its publicly
8owned utility. The imposition of the efficiency charge shall be
9made and evidenced by a written agreement between the customer,
10the authority, and the local agency or its publicly owned utility.
11The use of the proceeds of the efficiency charge to repay the costs
12of the efficiency improvement constitutes a “water” service, as
13defined in subdivision (m) of Section 53750.

14(2) The written agreement shall include all of the following:

15(A) An agreement by the customer to pay an efficiency charge
16for the period and in the amount specified in the agreement unless
17the efficiency charge is prepaid in the manner set forth in the
18agreement. The period designated for repayment shall not exceed
19the estimated useful life of the funded efficiency improvements.

20(B) A description of the financial calculation, formula, or other
21method that the authority used to determine the efficiency charge.
22The efficiency charge may include a component for reasonable
23administrative expenses incurred by the local agency or its publicly
24owned utility and the authority in connection with the program
25and the funding.

26(C) A description of the efficiency improvement funded with
27the efficiency charge. A determination in the agreement that an
28improvement is an efficiency improvement shall be final and
29conclusive.

30(D) A representation by the customer that the customer intends
31to acquire, install, or repair and use the efficiency improvement
32on the customer’s property for the useful life of the efficiency
33improvement. Any failure by the customer to acquire, install, or
34repair and use the efficiency improvement on the customer’s
35property for the useful life of the efficiency improvement shall not
36affect the customer’s obligation to pay the efficiency charge as set
37forth in the agreement.

38(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, an
39 efficiency charge shall not exceed the maximum rate permitted
40under Article XIII D of the California Constitution.

P9    1(4) The timely and complete payment of an efficiency charge
2by a customer that has agreed to pay an efficiency charge may be
3a condition of receiving water service from the local agency or its
4publicly owned utility, and a local agency and its publicly owned
5utility are authorized to use their established collection policies
6and all rights and remedies provided by law to enforce payment
7and collection of the efficiency charge. A person liable for an
8efficiency charge shall not be entitled or authorized to withhold
9payment, in whole or in part, of the efficiency charge for any
10reason.

11(5) A customer’s obligation to pay the efficiency charge shall
12run with title to the customer property on which the efficiency
13improvement is located until repaid in full. A local agency or its
14publicly owned utilitybegin delete mayend deletebegin insert shallend insert record notice of an efficiency
15charge in the records of the county recorder of the county in which
16the customer’s property is located and that notice shall impart
17notice of the efficiency charge to all persons. Any failure by the
18local agency or its publicly owned utility to record that notice shall
19not excuse an owner of the customer property, on which the funded
20improvement is located, from the obligation to pay the efficiency
21charge.

22(6) Because the efficiency charge is a voluntary charge that will
23be made pursuant to a written agreement between the customer,
24the authority, and the local agency or its publicly owned utility,
25the Legislature finds and declares that voluntary efficiency charges
26under this section are not taxes, assessments, fees, or charges for
27the purposes of Articles XIII C and XIII D of the California
28Constitution and therefore the provisions of Articles XIII C and
29XIII D and Article 4.6 (commencing with Section 53750) of
30Chapter 4 of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5begin delete of the Government
31Codeend delete
are not applicable to voluntary efficiency charges levied
32pursuant to this section. Furthermore, a program established
33pursuant to this section provides a “water” service, as defined in
34subdivision (m) of Section 53750.

35(e) (1) The authority and a local agency or its publicly owned
36utility shall enter into a servicing agreement for the collection of
37one or more efficiency charges and the local agency or its publicly
38owned utility shall act as a servicing agent for purposes of
39collecting the efficiency charge.

P10   1(2) Moneys collected as an efficiency charge by the local agency
2or its publicly owned utility, acting as a servicing agent on behalf
3of the authority, shall be held in trust for the exclusive benefit of
4the persons entitled to the financing costs to be paid, directly or
5indirectly, from the efficiency charge and shall not lose their
6character as revenues of the authority because the local agency or
7its publicly owned utility possesses them.

8(3) In the servicing agreement, the local agency or its publicly
9owned utility shall contract with the authority that the local agency
10or its publicly owned utility will continue to operate its publicly
11owned utility system to provide service to its customers, will, as
12servicer, collect the efficiency charge for the benefit and account
13of the authority and, if applicable, the beneficiaries of the pledge
14of the efficiency charge, and will account for and remit these
15amounts to, or for the account of, the authority.

16(4) The servicing agreement shall provide that the obligation to
17pay the efficiency charge shall run with title to the customer
18property on which the efficiency improvement is located until the
19authority is fully repaid. When the property is not owner occupied,
20the servicing agreement shall provide that the obligation to pay
21the efficiency charge appear in the terms through which the
22customer leases or licenses the property for occupancy.

23(5) In the servicing agreement, the local agency or its publicly
24owned utility may agree that the timely and complete payment of
25all efficiency charges by a customer that has agreed to pay an
26efficiency charge shall be a condition of receiving service from
27the publicly owned utility, and the local agency or its publicly
28owned utility shall use their established collection policies and all
29rights and remedies provided by law to enforce payment and
30collection of the efficiency charge.

31(6) In the servicing agreement, the local agency or its publicly
32owned utility shall agree that in the event of default by the local
33 agency or its publicly owned utility in payment of revenues arising
34with respect to the efficiency charge, the authority, upon the
35application by the beneficiaries of the authority’s pledge described
36in this section, and without limiting any other remedies available
37to the beneficiaries by reason of the default, shall order the
38sequestration and payment to the beneficiaries of revenues arising
39with respect to the efficiency charge.

P11   1(f) (1) The authority may issue one or more bonds for the
2purpose of providing funds for the acquisition, installation, and
3repair of an efficiency improvement on customer property pursuant
4to this section.

5(2) An authority issuing a bond shall include in its preliminary
6notice and final report for the bonds submitted to the California
7Debt and Investment Advisory Commission pursuant to Section
88855 a statement that the bond is being issued pursuant to this
9section.

10(3) (A) The authority may, pursuant to Section 5451, pledge
11one or more efficiency charges as security for the bonds issued
12pursuant to this section. Revenue from an efficiency charge shall
13be deemed special revenue of the authority and shall not constitute
14revenue of the local agency or its publicly owned utility for any
15purpose, including without limitation any dedication, commitment,
16or pledge of revenue, receipts, or other income that the local agency
17or its publicly owned utility has made or will make for the security
18of any of its obligations.

19(B) The validity and relative priority of a pledge created or
20authorized under this section is not defeated or adversely affected
21by the commingling of efficiency charge revenue with other
22moneys collected by a local agency or its publicly owned utility.

23(4) Subject to the requirements of Article XIII C or Article XIII
24D of the California Constitution, a local agency may pledge water
25enterprise revenue as security for the payment of the principal of,
26and interest and redemption premium on, bonds issued by the
27authority in the event that efficiency charges are insufficient for
28those purposes, and may execute one or more pledge agreements,
29which shall be made pursuant to Section 5451, for the benefit of
30the authority or for the exclusive benefit of the persons entitled to
31the financing costs to be paid from the efficiency charges.

32(g) If a local agency for which bonds have been issued and
33remain outstanding ceases to operate a water utility, either directly
34or through its publicly owned utility, references in this section to
35the local agency or to its publicly owned utility shall be deemed
36to refer to the entity providing water utility services in lieu of the
37local agency and that entity shall assume and perform all
38obligations of the local agency or its publicly owned utility required
39by this section and the servicing agreement with the authority while
40the bondsbegin delete remainsend deletebegin insert remainend insert outstanding.

P12   1(h) If the local agency, its publicly owned utility, and the
2authority have complied with the procedures set forth in this
3section, they shall not be required to comply with Section 6586.5.

4(i) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision
5of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall
6not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect
7without the invalid provision or application.



O

    98