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 established 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. The bill would also make technical changes.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
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(d) The conservation to be accomplished by efficiency
13improvements is a core component of water utility service and
14makes existing water supplies available for all water customers
15by displacing demand for those supplies. Accordingly, a pledge
16pursuant to paragraphbegin delete (4)end deletebegin insert (5)end insert of subdivision (f) of Section 6588.8
17of the Government Code of water enterprise revenue as security
18for bonds an authority has secured with a pledge of, and intends
19to pay from, efficiency charges is an appropriate use of water
20enterprise revenues as explained in Capistrano Taxpayers
21Association, Inc. v. City of San Juan Capistrano (2015) 235
22Cal.App.4th
1493, 1501-1504.
(a) It is the intent of the Legislature to make water
24efficiency improvements more affordable and promote the
25acquisition, installation, and repair of those improvements by
26allowing local agencies to establish a mechanism by which they
27may help their water customers to acquire, install, and repair water
28efficiency improvements on privately owned customer properties.
29(b) It is the intent of the Legislature that this act authorize the
30development of a program to be established by a joint powers
31authority that would provide a water customer with an alternative
32and voluntary means to acquire, install, or repair water efficiency
33improvements.
It is further the intent of the Legislature that the
P3 1cost of this voluntarily acquired, installed, or repaired water
2efficiency improvement be repaid through an efficiency charge
3added to the water bill associated with the customer property upon
4which the water efficiency improvement is located.
Section 6586.7 of the Government Code, as added by
6Section 4 of Chapter 723 of the Statutes of 2000, is repealed.
Section 6586.7 of the Government Code, as added by
8Section 1 of Chapter 724 of the Statutes of 2000, is amended to
9read:
(a) A copy of the resolution adopted by an authority
11authorizing bonds or any issuance of bonds, or accepting the benefit
12of any bonds or proceeds of bonds, except bonds issued or
13authorized pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500),
14or bonds issued for the purposes specified in subdivision (c) of
15Section 6586.5, shall be sent by certified mail to the Attorney
16General and the California Debt and Investment Advisory
17Commission not later than five days after adoption by the authority.
18(b) This section does not apply to bonds:
19(1) Specified in subdivision (c) of Section 6586.5.
20(2) Issued pursuant to the Community Redevelopment Law
21(Part 1 (commencing with Section 33000) of Division 24 of the
22Health and Safety Code).
23(3) To finance transportation facilities and vehicles.
24(4) To finance a facility that is located within the boundaries of
25an authority, provided that the authority that issues those bonds
26consists of any of the following:
27(A) Local agencies with overlapping boundaries.
28(B) A county and a local agency or local agencies located
29entirely within that county.
30(C) A city and a local agency or local agencies
located entirely
31within that city.
32(5) To finance a facility for which an authority has received an
33allocation from the California Debt Limit Allocation Committee.
34(6) Of an authority that consists of no less than 100 local
35agencies and the agreement that established that authority requires
36the governing body of the local agency that is a member of the
37authority in whose jurisdiction the facility will be located to
38approve the facility and the issuance of the bonds.
39(7) Issued pursuant to Section 6588.8.
Section 6588.8 is added to the Government Code, to
2read:
(a) This section shall be known and may be cited as
4the Water Bill Savings Act.
5(b) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the
6following meanings:
7(1) “Customer” means a person or entity that purchases water
8from a local agency or its publicly owned utility and is billed for
9the water by the local agency or its publicly owned utility.
10(2) “Customer property” means residential, commercial,
11industrial, agricultural, or other real property owned by the
12customer.
13(3) “Efficiency charge” means a charge on a customer’s water
14bill that is paid by the customer directly to the local agency or its
15publicly owned utility in order to pay for an efficiency
16improvement pursuant to this section.
17(4) “Efficiency improvement” means a water efficiency
18improvement, as defined by the authority.begin insert An efficiency
19improvement shall not include living vegetation.end insert
20(5) “Financing costs” mean all of the following:
21(A) An interest and redemption premium payable on a bond.
22(B) The cost of retiring the principal of a bond, whether at
23maturity,
including acceleration of maturity upon an event of
24default, or upon redemption, including sinking fund redemption.
25(C) A cost related to issuing or servicing bonds, including, but
26not limited to, a servicing fee, trustee fee, legal fee, administrative
27fee, bond counsel fee, bond placement or underwriting fee,
28remarketing fee, broker dealer fee, independent manager fee,
29municipal adviser fee, accounting report fee, engineering report
30fee, rating agency fee, and payment made under an interest rate
31swap agreement.
32(D) A payment or expense associated with a bond insurance
33policy, financial guaranty, or a contract, agreement, or other credit
34enhancement for bonds or a contract, agreement, or other financial
35agreement entered into in connection with a bond.
36(E) The funding of one or more reserve accounts related to a
37bond.
38(6) “Local agency” means a “local government” as defined in
39subdivision (b) of Section 1 of Article XIII C of the California
40Constitution.
P5 1(7) “Publicly owned utility” means a utility furnishing water
2service to customers that is owned and operated by a local agency
3or a department or other subdivision of a local agency and includes
4any successor to the powers and functions of the department or
5 other subdivision.
6(8) “Servicing agreement” means an agreement between a local
7agency or its publicly owned utility and the authority for the
8collection of the efficiency charge, pursuant to
which the local
9agency or its publicly owned utility acts as a servicing agent for
10purposes of collecting the efficiency charge for the authority.
11(c) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, if the requirements of
12paragraphs (2) and (3) are met, an authority may provide funding
13for a customer of a local agency or its publicly owned utility to
14acquire, install, or repair an efficiency improvement on a customer
15property served by the local agency or its publicly owned utility.
16(2) (A) The authority, by resolution, establishes or extends a
17program to provide funding for a customer of a local agency or its
18publicly owned utility to acquire, install, or repair an efficiency
19improvement on a customer property served by the local agency
20or its publicly owned
utility. The resolution shall do all of the
21following:
22(i) Identify the geographic area in the state in which the authority
23intends to operate the program.
24(ii) Approve a standardized servicing agreement.
25(iii) Authorize one or more designated officials of the authority
26to execute and deliver the servicing agreement on behalf of the
27authority.
28(B) The authority acknowledges receipt of the resolution
29described in subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3).
30 (C) The authority may determine that all proceedings were valid
31and in conformity with the requirements of this paragraph and that
32finding shall be
final and conclusive.
33(3) The legislative body of the local agency requests the
34authority to provide funding for its customers through a program
35established by the authority pursuant to this section by doing all
36of the following:
37(A) The legislative body adopts a resolution declaring its
38intention to request the authority to establish or extend a program
39to a customer represented by the legislative body, calling for a
40public hearing that shall be held at least 30 days later and directing
P6 1the clerk or secretary of the legislative body to publish a notice of
2the hearing at least five days before the hearing in a newspaper of
3general circulation in the boundaries of the local agency. If the
4local agency wishes to pledge its water enterprise revenue as
5security for the payment
of the principal of, and interest and
6redemption premium on, bonds issued by the authority in the event
7that efficiency charges are insufficient for those purposes pursuant
8to paragraphbegin delete (4)end deletebegin insert (5),end insert of subdivision (f), the legislative body shall
9declare that intention in the resolution.
10(B) The legislative body conducts the noticed public hearing
11and, after considering the testimony of any interested person,
12concludes that the program and the proposed pledge of water
13enterprise revenue, if applicable, would provide significant public
14benefits in accordance with the criteria specified in Section 6586.
15(C) The legislative body
adopts a resolution that does all of the
16following:
17(i) Authorizes the authority to establish or extend a program
18pursuant to this section within the boundaries of the local agency.
19(ii) Declares that the operation of the program by the authority
20in the local agency’s geographic boundaries would provide
21significant public benefits in accordance with the criteria specified
22in Section 6586.
23(iii) Approves the standardized servicing agreement and
24authorizes one or more designated officials of the local agency to
25execute and deliver the servicing agreement with the authority.
26(iv) If applicable, approves the pledge of water enterprise
27revenue as security for the
payment of the principal of, and interest
28and redemption premium on, bonds issued by the authority in the
29event that efficiency charges are insufficient for those purposes.
30(v) If applicable, authorizes execution and delivery of one or
31more pledge agreements to evidence a pledge.
32(vi) In the resolution, the legislative body may determine that
33all proceedings were valid and in conformity with the requirements
34of this section and that finding shall be final and conclusive.
35(d) (1) A customer shall repay the authority through an
36efficiency charge on the customer’s water billbegin insert that isend insert
established
37and collected by the local agency or its publicly ownedbegin delete utility.end delete
38begin insert utility upon verification that the efficiency improvement has been
39installed.end insert The duty to pay the efficiency charge shall arise from
40and be evidenced by a written agreement among thebegin delete customer,end delete
P7 1begin insert customer; the property owner, if different than the customer;end insert the
2begin delete authority,end deletebegin insert authority;end insert and the local agency or its publicly
owned
3utility.
4(2) The written agreement shall include all of the following:
5(A) An agreement by the customer to pay an efficiency charge
6for the period and in the amount specified in the agreement unless
7the efficiency charge is prepaid in the manner set forth in the
8agreement. The period designated for repayment shall not exceed
9the estimated useful life of the funded efficiency improvements.
10(B) A description of the financial calculation, formula, or other
11method that the authority used to determine the efficiency charge.
12The efficiency charge may include a component for reasonable
13administrative expenses incurred by the local agency or its publicly
14owned utility and the authority in connection with the program
15and the
funding.
16(C) A description of the efficiency improvement funded with
17the efficiency charge. A determination in the agreement that an
18improvement is an efficiency improvement shall be final and
19conclusive.
20(D) A representation by the customer that the customer intends
21to acquire, install, or repair and use the efficiency improvement
22on the customer’s property for the useful life of the efficiency
23improvement. Any failurebegin delete byend deletebegin insert of the efficiency improvement by
24damage, removal, or other fault ofend insert the customerbegin delete to acquire, install, begin insert
duringend insert the useful life of the efficiency improvement
25or repair and use the efficiency improvement on the customer’s
26property forend delete
27shall not affect the customer’s obligation to pay the efficiency
28charge as set forth in the agreement.
29(3) The timely and complete payment of an efficiency charge
30by a customer that has agreed to pay an efficiency charge may be
31a condition of receiving water service from the local agency or its
32publicly owned utility, and a local agency and its publicly owned
33utility are authorized to use their established collection policies
34and all rights and remedies provided by law to enforce payment
35and collection of the efficiency charge. A person liable for an
36efficiency charge shall not be entitled or authorized to withhold
37payment, in whole or in part, of the efficiency charge for any
38reason.
39(4) A customer’s obligation to pay the efficiency charge shall
40begin delete run with title to the customer property on which the efficiency begin insert remain until the efficiency charge
P8 1improvement is located untilend delete
2related to the efficiency improvement has beenend insert repaid inbegin delete full.end deletebegin insert full
3or the efficiency charge has been transferred to a subsequent
4customer who assumes responsibility for the remainder of the
5obligation.end insert A local agency or its publicly owned utility shallbegin delete recordend delete
6begin insert
record, no later than 10 days after funding an efficiency
7improvement, aend insert notice ofbegin delete anend deletebegin insert theend insert efficiency charge in the records
8of the county recorder of the county in which the customer’s
9property isbegin delete located and that notice shall impart notice of the
10efficiency charge to all persons. Any failure by the local agency
11or its publicly owned utility to record that notice shall not excuse
12
an owner of the customer property, on which the funded
13improvement is located, from the obligation to pay the efficiency
14charge.end delete
15OF EFFICIENCY CHARGE” and shall provide contact
16information for the person or entity authorized to provide a prompt
17and accurate written statement of the outstanding charges and
18payoff amounts related to the efficiency charge for which the notice
19of efficiency charge was recorded.end insert
20
(5) Within 10 days of full repayment of the outstanding charges
21related to the recorded notice of the efficiency charge, the entity
22responsible for the collection and servicing of the charge shall
23record a notice of the full repayment of the efficiency charge in
24
the records of the county recorder of the county in which the
25customer’s property is located. The notice of the full repayment
26of the efficiency charge shall include a reference to the recorded
27notice of the efficiency charge.
28(5)
end delete
29begin insert(6end insertbegin insert)end insert Because the efficiency charge is a voluntary charge that will
30be made pursuant to a written agreement between the customer,
31the authority, and the local agency or its publicly owned utility,
32the Legislature finds and declares that voluntary efficiency charges
33under
this section are not taxes, assessments, fees, or charges for
34the purposes of Articles XIII C and XIII D of the California
35Constitution and therefore the provisions of Articles XIII C and
36XIII D and Article 4.6 (commencing with Section 53750) of
37Chapter 4 of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 are not applicable to
38voluntary efficiency charges levied pursuant to this section.
39Furthermore, a program established pursuant to this section
P9 1provides a “water” service, as defined in subdivision (m) of Section
253750.
3(e) (1) The authority and a local agency or its publicly owned
4utility shall enter into a servicing agreement for the collection of
5one or more efficiency charges and the local agency or its publicly
6owned utility shall act as a servicing agent for purposes of
7collecting the efficiency charge.
8(2) Moneys collected as an efficiency charge by the local agency
9or its publicly owned utility, acting as a servicing agent on behalf
10of the authority, shall be held in trust for the exclusive benefit of
11the persons entitled to the financing costs to be paid, directly or
12indirectly, from the efficiency charge and shall not lose their
13character as revenues of the authority because the local agency or
14its publicly owned utility possesses them.
15(3) In the servicing agreement, the local agency or its publicly
16owned utility shall contract with the authority that the local agency
17or its publicly owned utility will continue to operate its publicly
18owned utility system to provide service to its customers, will, as
19servicer, collect the efficiency charge for the benefit and account
20of
the authority and, if applicable, the beneficiaries of the pledge
21of the efficiency charge, and will account for and remit these
22amounts to, or for the account of, the authority.
23(4) The servicing agreement shall provide that the obligation to
24pay the efficiency charge shall run with title to the customer
25property on which the efficiency improvement is located until the
26authority is fully repaid. When the property is not owner occupied,
27the servicing agreement shall provide that the obligation to pay
28the efficiency charge appear in the terms through which the
29customer leases or licenses the property for occupancy.
30(5) In the servicing agreement, the local agency or its publicly
31owned utility may agree that the timely and complete payment of
32all efficiency charges by a customer that has
agreed to pay an
33efficiency charge shall be a condition of receiving service from
34the publicly owned utility, and the local agency or its publicly
35owned utility shall use their established collection policies and all
36rights and remedies provided by law to enforce payment and
37collection of the efficiency charge.
38(6) In the servicing agreement, the local agency or its publicly
39owned utility shall agree that in the event of default by the local
40
agency or its publicly owned utility in payment of revenues arising
P10 1with respect to the efficiency charge, the authority, upon the
2application by the beneficiaries of the authority’s pledge described
3in this section, and without limiting any other remedies available
4to the beneficiaries by reason of the default, shall order the
5sequestration and payment to the beneficiaries of revenues arising
6with respect to the efficiency charge.
7(f) (1) The authority may issue one or more bonds for the
8purpose of providing funds for the acquisition, installation, and
9repair of an efficiency improvement on customer property pursuant
10to this section.
11(2) An authority issuing a bond shall include in its preliminary
12notice and final report for the bonds submitted
to the California
13Debt and Investment Advisory Commission pursuant to Section
148855 a statement that the bond is being issued pursuant to this
15section.
16
(3) An authority that issues a bond pursuant to this section shall
17establish a debt service reserve fund for the bond to the extent
18required by the purchaser of the bond.
19(3)
end delete
20begin insert(4)end insert (A) The authority may, pursuant to Section 5451, pledge
21one or more efficiency charges as security
for the bonds issued
22pursuant to this section. Revenue from an efficiency charge shall
23be deemed special revenue of the authority and shall not constitute
24revenue of the local agency or its publicly owned utility for any
25purpose, including without limitation any dedication, commitment,
26or pledge of revenue, receipts, or other income that the local agency
27or its publicly owned utility has made or will make for the security
28of any of its obligations.
29(B) The validity and relative priority of a pledge created or
30authorized under this section is not defeated or adversely affected
31by the commingling of efficiency charge revenue with other
32moneys collected by a local agency or its publicly owned utility.
33(4)
end delete
34begin insert(5)end insert A local agency may pledge water enterprise revenue as
35security for the payment of the principal of, and interest and
36redemption premium on, bonds issued by the authority if efficiency
37charges are insufficient for that purpose, and may execute one or
38more pledge agreements pursuant to Section 5451 for the benefit
39of the authority or for the exclusive benefit of the persons entitled
40to the financing costs to be paid from the efficiency charges.
P11 1
(6) A local agency that pledges water enterprise revenues as
2security for the payment of the principal of, and interest and
3redemption premium on, a bond issued by the authority
shall
4establish a debt service reserve fund for the bond to the extent
5required by the purchaser of the bond.
6(g) If a local agency for which bonds have been issued and
7remain outstanding ceases to operate a water utility, either directly
8or through its publicly owned utility, references in this section to
9the local agency or to its publicly owned utility shall be deemed
10to refer to the entity providing water utility services in lieu of the
11local agency and that entity shall assume and perform all
12obligations of the local agency or its publicly owned utility required
13by this section and the servicing agreement with the authority while
14the bonds remain outstanding.
15(h) If the local agency, its publicly owned utility, and the
16authority have complied with the procedures
set forth in this
17section, they shall not be required to comply with Section 6586.5.
18(i) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision
19of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall
20not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect
21without the invalid provision or application.
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