AB 2145, as amended, Bradford. Electricity: community choice aggregation.
Under existing law, the Public Utilities Commission has regulatory authority over public utilities, including electrical corporations, as defined. The Public Utilities Act authorizes a community choice aggregator, as defined, to aggregate the electrical load of interested electricity consumers within its boundaries and requires a community choice aggregator to file an implementation plan with the commission and requires that the plan include disclosures of certain information and describe other matter.begin delete The act requires the community choice aggregator to provide each customer an opportunity to opt out of his or her community’s aggregation program. The act provides that customer participation in the community choice aggregation program does not require a positive written declaration for participation, but each customer shall be informed of his or her right to opt out of the program. The
act provides that if no negative declaration is made by the customer regarding participation, the customer shall be served by the community choice aggregation program. The act requires an electrical corporation to cooperate fully with any community choice aggregator that investigates, pursues, or implements community choice aggregation programs, including providing appropriate billing and electrical load data. The act requires an electrical corporation, when requested by, and at the expense of, a community choice aggregator, to install, maintain, and calibrate metering devices at mutually agreeable locations within or adjacent to the community choice aggregator’s political boundaries.end delete The act requires a community choice aggregator to register with the commission, which may require additional information to ensure compliance with basic consumer protection rules and other procedural matters.begin insert Existing law requires that a
city, county, or city and county that elects to implement a community choice aggregation program within its jurisdiction do so by ordinance, but authorizes a city, county, or city and county to request, by affirmative resolution of its governing council or board, that another entity authorized to be a community choice aggregator act as the community choice aggregator on its behalf, in which case, that other entity is responsible for adopting the ordinance to implement the community choice aggregation program on behalf of the requesting city, county, or city and county.end insert
This bill wouldbegin delete instead provide that each customer be given an opportunity to opt in to his or her community’s aggregation program. The bill would require a positive declaration from a customer for participation in the community choice aggregation program and that each customer be informed of his or her right to opt in to the program. The bill would provide that a customer
shall be served by the community choice aggregation program if an affirmative declaration is made. The bill wouldend delete require solicitations of customers by a community choice aggregator contain, and communication by the community choice aggregator to the public or prospective and existing customers to be consistent with, specified information and wouldbegin delete require the implementation plan to include the disclosure of those specified information. The bill wouldend delete require that the implementation plan filed by a community choice aggregator completely describebegin delete otherend deletebegin insert
certainend insert matter required to be disclosed under existing law. The bill would authorize the commission to require that a community choice aggregator, when registering with the commission, provide additional information to ensure compliance with basic consumer protection and other rules and other procedural matters.begin insert If a city, county, or city and county requests another entity that is authorized to be a community choice aggregator to act as the community choice aggregator on its behalf, the bill would require that the entity that is to be the community choice aggregator be in a county that is contiguous to the requesting city, county, or city and county. The bill would provide that, beginning January 1, 2015, no entity may enact an ordinance to serve as the community choice aggregator in more than 3-contiguous-counties, but may serve as the community choice aggregator for any city, county, or
city and county that is outside a 3-contiguous-county area, for which it adopted an ordinance prior to January 1, 2015.end insert The bill would make other technical, nonsubstantive revisions to the community choice aggregator provisions.
The Joint Exercise of Powers Act authorizes the legislative or other governing bodies of 2 or more public agencies to jointly exercise by agreement any power common to the contracting parties, as specified. Existing law authorizes any group of cities, counties, or cities and counties whose governing boards have so elected to combine the loads of their programs as a community choice aggregator through the formation of a joint powers agency established pursuant to the Joint Exercise of Powers Act.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would prohibit a joint powers agency formed to provide electric service as a community choice aggregator from exceeding the geographical boundaries of 3-contiguous-counties, but would provide that this limitation does not apply where an ordinance authorizing community choice aggregation outside the 3-contiguous-counties was adopted prior to January 1, 2015.
end insertUnder 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 bill would impose requirements regardingbegin delete communication byend delete a community choice aggregator, a violation of which would be a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
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 331.1 of the end insertbegin insertPublic Utilities Codeend insertbegin insert is
2amended to read:end insert
For purposes of this chapter, “community choice
4aggregator” means any of the following entities, if that entity is
5not within the jurisdiction of a local publicly owned electric utility
6that provided electrical service as of January 1, 2003:
7(a) Any city, county, or city and county whose governing board
8elects to combine the loads of its residents, businesses, and
9municipal facilities in a communitywide electricity buyers’
10program.
11(b) begin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insertAny group of cities, counties, or cities and counties
12whose governing boards have elected to combine the loads of their
13programs, through the formation of
a joint powers agency
14established under Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 6500) of
15Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code.
16(2) A joint powers agency formed to provide electric service as
17a community choice aggregator shall not exceed the geographical
18boundaries of three contiguous counties. This limitation does not
19apply where an ordinance authorizing community choice
20aggregation outside the three contiguous counties was adopted
21prior to January 1, 2015. For purposes of this paragraph, a county
22is contiguous to another county if it shares a border with that
23county. A county need only share a border with one of the other
24two counties.
25(c) The Kings River Conservation District, the Sonoma County
26Water Agency, and any California public agency possessing
27statutory
authority to generate and deliver electricity at retail within
28its designated jurisdiction, provided the entity may only combine
29the loads of residences, businesses, and governmental facilities of
30cities and counties within, or contiguous to, its jurisdiction that
31have, by resolution exercised pursuant to paragraph (12) of
32subdivision (c) of Section 366.2, requested the agency to implement
33a community choice aggregation program.
Section 366.2 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
36to read:
(a) (1) Customers shall be entitled to aggregate their
2electric loads as members of their local community with
3community choice aggregators.
4(2) Customers may aggregate their loads through a public
5process with community choice aggregators, if each customer is
6given an opportunity to optbegin delete in toend deletebegin insert out ofend insert his or her community’s
7aggregation program.
8(3) If a customerbegin delete does not opt in toend deletebegin insert
opts out ofend insert a community
9choice aggregator’s program, or has no community choice
10aggregation program available, that customer shallbegin insert have the right
11toend insert continue to be served by the existing electrical corporation or
12its successor in interest.
13(4) The implementation of a community choice aggregation
14program shall not result in a shifting of costs between the customers
15of the community choice aggregator and the bundled service
16customers of an electrical corporation.
17(5) A community choice aggregator shall be solely responsible
18for all generation procurement activities on behalf of the
19community choice aggregator’s customers, except where other
20generation
procurement arrangements are expressly authorized by
21statute.
22(b) If a public agency seeks to serve as a community choice
23aggregator, it shall offer the opportunity to purchase electricity to
24all residential customers within its jurisdiction.
25(c) (1) Notwithstanding Section 366, a community choice
26aggregator is hereby authorized to aggregate the electrical load of
27interested electricity consumers within its boundaries to reduce
28transaction costs to consumers, provide consumer protection, and
29leverage the negotiation of contracts. However, the community
30choice aggregator may not aggregate electrical load if that load is
31served by a local publicly owned electric utility. A community
32choice aggregator may group retail electricity customers to solicit
33bids,
broker, and contract for electricity and energy services for
34those customers. The community choice aggregator may enter into
35agreements for services to facilitate the sale and purchase of
36electricity and other related services. Those service agreements
37may be entered into by an entity authorized to be a community
38choice aggregator, as defined in Section 331.1.
39(2) Under community choice aggregation, customer participation
40shallbegin insert notend insert require a positive written declaration and each customer
P6 1shall be informed of his or her right to optbegin delete in toend deletebegin insert out ofend insert the
2community choice aggregation program.
Ifbegin delete an affirmativeend deletebegin insert
no
3negativeend insert declaration is made by a customer, that customer shall
4be served through the community choice aggregation program. If
5an existing customer moves the location of his or her electric
6service within the jurisdiction of the community choice aggregator,
7the customer shall retain the same subscriber status as prior to the
8move, unless the customer affirmatively changes his or her
9subscriber status. If the customer is moving from outside to inside
10the jurisdiction of the community choice aggregator, customer
11participation shallbegin insert notend insert require a positive written declaration and
12the customer shall be informed of his or her right tobegin delete opt in toend deletebegin insert
elect
13not to receive service throughend insert the community choice aggregation
14program.
15(3) A community choice aggregator establishing electrical load
16aggregation pursuant to this section shall develop an
17implementation plan detailing the process and consequences of
18aggregation. The implementation plan, and any subsequent changes
19to it, shall be considered and adopted at a duly noticed public
20hearing. The implementation plan shall contain all of the following:
21(A) An organizational structure of the program, its operations,
22and its funding.
23(B) Ratesetting and other costs to participants.
24(C) Provisions for full disclosure of all information
specified
25in paragraph (15) and due process in setting rates and allocating
26costs among participants.
27(D) The methods for entering and terminating agreements with
28other entities.
29(E) The rights and responsibilities of program participants,
30including, but not limited to, consumer protection procedures,
31credit issues, and shutoff procedures.
32(F) Termination of the program.
33(G) A description of the third parties that will be supplying
34electricity under the program, including, but not limited to,
35complete information about financial, technical, and operational
36capabilities.
37(4) A
community choice aggregator establishing electrical load
38aggregation shall prepare a statement of intent with the
39implementation plan. Any community choice load aggregation
40established pursuant to this section shall provide for the following:
P7 1(A) Universal access.
2(B) Reliability.
3(C) Equitable treatment of all classes of customers.
4(D) Any requirements established by state law or by the
5commission concerning aggregated service, including, but not
6limited to, those rules adopted by the commission pursuant to
7paragraph (3) of subdivision (b) of Section 8341 for the application
8of the greenhouse gases emission performance standard to
9community choice aggregators.
10(5) In order to determine the cost-recovery mechanism to be
11imposed on the community choice aggregator pursuant to
12subdivisions (d), (e), and (f) that shall be paid by the customers of
13the community choice aggregator to prevent shifting of costs, the
14community choice aggregator shall file the implementation plan
15with the commission, and any other information requested by the
16commission that the commission determines is necessary to develop
17the cost-recovery mechanism in subdivisions (d), (e), and (f).
18(6) The commission shall notify any electrical corporation
19serving the customers proposed for aggregation that an
20implementation plan initiating community choice aggregation has
21been filed, within 10 days of the filing.
22(7) Within 90 days after the community choice aggregator
23establishing load aggregation files its implementation plan, the
24commission shall certify that it has received the implementation
25plan, including any additional information necessary to determine
26a cost-recovery mechanism. After certification of receipt of the
27
implementation plan and any additional information requested,
28the commission shall then provide the community choice
29aggregator with its findings regarding any cost recovery that must
30be paid by customers of the community choice aggregator to
31prevent a shifting of costs as provided for in subdivisions (d), (e),
32and (f).
33(8) No entity proposing community choice aggregation shall
34act to furnish electricity to electricity consumers within its
35boundaries until the commission determines the cost recovery that
36must be paid by the customers of that proposed community choice
37aggregation program, as provided for in subdivisions (d), (e), and
38(f). The commission shall designate the earliest possible effective
39date for implementation of a community choice aggregation
40program, taking into consideration the impact on any annual
P8 1procurement
plan of the electrical corporation that has been
2approved by the commission.
3(9) An electrical corporation shall cooperate fully with any
4community choice aggregators that investigate, pursue, or
5implement community choice aggregation programs. Cooperation
6shall include providing the entities with appropriate billing and
7electrical load data, including, but not limited to, electrical
8consumption data as defined in Section 8380 and other data
9detailing electricity needs and patterns of usage, as determined by
10the commission, and in accordance with procedures established
11by the commission. The commission shall exercise its authority
12
pursuant to Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 2100) to enforce
13the requirements of this paragraph when it finds that the
14requirements of this paragraph have been violated. Electrical
15corporations shall continue to provide all metering, billing,
16collection, and customer service to retail customers that participate
17in community choice aggregation programs. Bills sent by the
18electrical corporation to retail customers shall identify the
19community choice aggregator as providing the electrical energy
20component of the bill. The commission shall determine the terms
21and conditions under which the electrical corporation provides
22services to community choice aggregators and retail customers.
23(10) If the commission finds that an electrical corporation or
24community choice aggregator has violated this section, the
25commission shall order
appropriate corrective action.
26(11) The commission shall proactively expedite the complaint
27process for disputes regarding an electrical corporation’s or
28community choice aggregator’s violation of its obligations pursuant
29to this section in order to provide for timely resolution of
30
complaints, so that all complaints are resolved in no more than
31180 days following the filing of a complaint. This deadline may
32only be extended under either of the following circumstances:
33(A) Upon agreement of all of the parties to the complaint.
34(B) The commission makes a written determination that the
35deadline cannot be met, including findings for the reason for this
36determination, and issues an order extending the deadline. A single
37order pursuant to this subparagraph shall not extend the deadline
38for more than 60 days.
39(12) (A) An entity authorized to be a community choice
40aggregator, as defined in Section 331.1, that elects to implement
P9 1a community choice aggregation program within its
jurisdiction
2pursuant to this chapter, shall do so by ordinance. A city, county,
3or city and county may request, by affirmative resolution of its
4governing council or board, that another entitybegin insert in a contiguous
5county that isend insert authorized to be a community choice aggregator act
6as the community choice aggregator on its behalf. If a city, county,
7or city and county, by resolution, requests another authorized entity
8begin insert in a contiguous countyend insert be the community choice aggregator for
9the city, county, or city and county, that authorized entity shall be
10responsible for adopting the ordinance to implement the community
11choice aggregation program on behalf
of the city, county, or city
12and county.begin insert Beginning January 1, 2015, no entity may enact an
13ordinance to serve as the community choice aggregator in more
14than three contiguous counties, but may serve as the community
15choice aggregator for any city, county, or city and county that is
16outside a three contiguous county area, for which it adopted an
17ordinance pursuant to this subparagraph prior to January 1, 2015.end insert
18(B) Two or more entitiesbegin insert in contiguous counties that areend insert
19 authorized to be a community choice
aggregator, as defined in
20Section 331.1, may participate as a group in a community choice
21aggregation program pursuant to this chapter, through a joint
22powers agency established pursuant to Chapter 5 (commencing
23with Section 6500) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government
24Code, if each entity adopts an ordinance pursuant to subparagraph
25(A). Pursuant to Section 6508.1 of the Government Code, members
26of a joint powers agency that is a community choice aggregator
27may specify in their joint powers agreement that, unless otherwise
28agreed by the members of the agency, the debts, liabilities, and
29obligations of the agency shall not be the debts, liabilities, and
30obligations, either jointly or severally, of the members of the
31agency. The commission shall not, as a condition of registration
32or otherwise, require an agency’s members to voluntarily assume
33the debts, liabilities, and obligations
of the agency to the electrical
34corporation unless the commission finds that the agreement by the
35agency’s members is the only reasonable means by which the
36agency may establish its creditworthiness under the electrical
37corporation’s tariff to pay charges to the electrical corporation
38under the tariff.begin insert Except as provided in Section 331.1, a joint powers
39agency that is a community choice aggregator shall not exceed
40the geographical boundaries of three contiguous counties.end insert
P10 1(13) Following adoption of aggregation through the ordinance
2described in paragraph (12), the program shall allow any retail
3customer to optbegin delete in to the community choice aggregation program.end delete
4begin insert
out and to continue to be served as a bundled service customer by
5the existing electrical corporation, or its successor in interest.end insert
6 Delivery services shall be provided at the same rates, terms, and
7conditions, as approved by the commission, for community choice
8aggregation customers and customers that have entered into a direct
9transaction where applicable, as determined by the commission.
10Once enrolled in the aggregated entity, any ratepayer that chooses
11to opt out within 60 days or two billing cycles of the date of
12enrollment may do so without penalty and shall be entitled to
13receive default service pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision
14(a). Customers that return to the electrical corporation for
15procurement services shall be subject to the same terms and
16conditions as are applicable to other returning direct access
17customers from the same class, as determined by the
commission,
18as authorized by the commission pursuant to this code or any other
19provision of law, except that those customers shall be subject to
20no more than a 12-month stay requirement with the electrical
21corporation. Any reentry fees to be imposed after the opt-out period
22specified in this paragraph, shall be approved by the commission
23and shall reflect the cost of reentry. The commission shall exclude
24any amounts previously determined and paid pursuant to
25subdivisions (d), (e), and (f) from the cost of reentry.
26(14) Nothing in this section shall be construed as authorizing
27any city or any community choice retail load aggregator to restrict
28the ability of retail electricity customers to obtain or receive service
29from any authorized electric service provider in a manner consistent
30with law.
31(15) (A) The community choice aggregator shall fully inform
32participating customers at least twice within two calendar months,
33or 60 days, in advance of the date of commencing automatic
34enrollment. Notifications may occur concurrently with billing
35cycles. Following enrollment, the community choice aggregator
36shall fully inform participating customers for not less than two
37consecutive billing cycles. Notification may include, but is not
38limited to, direct mailings to customers, or inserts in water, sewer,
39or other utility bills. Any notification shall inform customers of
40both of the following:
P11 1(i) That they are to be automatically enrolled and that the
2customer has the right to opt out of the community choice
3aggregator without penalty.
4(ii) The terms and conditions of the services offered.
end insertbegin insert
5(B) Each notification shall also include a mechanism by which
6a ratepayer may opt out of community choice aggregated service.
7The opt out may take the form of a self-addressed return postcard
8indicating the customer’s election to remain with, or return to,
9electric service provided by the electrical corporation, or another
10 straightforward means by which the customer may elect to derive
11electric service through the electrical corporation providing service
12in the area.
13(15)
end delete
14begin insert(C)end insert Every solicitation of customers by a community choice
15aggregator shall contain, and
communication by the community
16choice aggregator to the public or to a prospective or existing
17customer shall be consistent with, the electric supply rate for the
18customer if the customer remains with the electrical corporation
19compared to the electric supply rate if the customer chooses to be
20served by the community choice aggregator. Rates shall be specific
21to the customer class of that customer and shall be provided for
22the next five years of service. The electrical corporation shall
23provide its projected electric supply rate to the community choice
24aggregator.
25(16) A community choice aggregator shall have an operating
26service agreement with the electrical corporation prior to furnishing
27electric service to consumers within its jurisdiction. The service
28agreement shall include performance standards that govern the
29business
and operational relationship between the community
30choice aggregator and the electrical corporation. The commission
31shall ensure that any service agreement between the community
32choice aggregator and the electrical corporation includes equitable
33responsibilities and remedies for all parties. The parties may
34negotiate specific terms of the service agreement, provided that
35the service agreement is consistent with this chapter.
36(17) The community choice aggregator shall register with the
37commission, which may require additional information to ensure
38compliance with basic consumer protection and other rules and
39other procedural matters.
P12 1(18) Once the community choice aggregator’s contract is signed,
2the community choice aggregator shall notify the applicable
3electrical corporation
that community choice service will
4commence within 30 days.
5(19) Once notified of a community choice aggregator program,
6the electrical corporation shall transfer all applicable accounts to
7the new supplier within a 30-day period from the date of the close
8of the electrical corporation’s normally scheduled monthly
9metering and billing process.
10(20) An electrical corporation shall recover from the community
11choice aggregator any costs reasonably attributable to the
12community choice aggregator, as determined by the commission,
13of implementing this section, including, but not limited to, all
14business and information system changes, except for
15transaction-based costs as described in this paragraph. Any costs
16not reasonably attributable to a community choice aggregator shall
17be
recovered from ratepayers, as determined by the commission.
18All reasonable transaction-based costs of notices, billing, metering,
19collections, and customer communications or other services
20provided to an aggregator or its customers shall be recovered from
21the aggregator or its customers on terms and at rates to be approved
22by the commission.
23(21) At the request and expense of any community choice
24aggregator, an electrical corporation shall install, maintain, and
25calibrate metering devices at mutually agreeable locations within
26or adjacent to the community choice aggregator’s political
27boundaries. The electrical corporation shall read the metering
28devices and provide the data collected to the community choice
29aggregator at the aggregator’s expense. To the extent that the
30community choice aggregator requests a metering location that
31would
require alteration or modification of a circuit, the electrical
32corporation shall only be required to alter or modify a circuit if
33that alteration or modification does not compromise the safety,
34reliability, or operational flexibility of the electrical corporation’s
35facilities. All costs incurred to modify circuits pursuant to this
36paragraph, shall be borne by the community choice aggregator.
37(d) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature that each retail end-use
38customer that has purchased power from an electrical corporation
39on or after February 1, 2001, should bear a fair share of the
40Department of Water Resources’ electricity purchase costs, as well
P13 1as electricity purchase contract obligations incurred as of the
2effective date of the act adding this section, that are recoverable
3from electrical corporation customers in
commission-approved
4rates. It is further the intent of the Legislature to prevent any
5shifting of recoverable costs between customers.
6(2) The Legislature finds and declares that this subdivision is
7consistent with the requirements of Division 27 (commencing with
8Section 80000) of the Water Code and Section 360.5 of this code,
9and is therefore declaratory of existing law.
10(e) A retail end-use customer that purchases electricity from a
11community choice aggregator pursuant to this section shall pay
12both of the following:
13(1) A charge equivalent to the charges that would otherwise be
14imposed on the customer by the commission to recover
15bond-related costs pursuant to any agreement between the
16commission and the
Department of Water Resources pursuant to
17Section 80110 of the Water Code, which charge shall be payable
18until any obligations of the Department of Water Resources
19pursuant to Division 27 (commencing with Section 80000) of the
20Water Code are fully paid or otherwise discharged.
21(2) Any additional costs of the Department of Water Resources,
22equal to the customer’s proportionate share of the Department of
23Water Resources’ estimated net unavoidable electricity purchase
24contract costs as determined by the commission, for the period
25commencing with the customer’s purchases of electricity from the
26community choice aggregator, through the expiration of all then
27existing electricity purchase contracts entered into by the
28Department of Water Resources.
29(f) A retail end-use customer
purchasing electricity from a
30community choice aggregator pursuant to this section shall
31reimburse the electrical corporation that previously served the
32customer for all of the following:
33(1) The electrical corporation’s unrecovered past
34undercollections for electricity purchases, including any financing
35costs, attributable to that customer, that the commission lawfully
36determines may be recovered in rates.
37(2) Any additional costs of the electrical corporation recoverable
38in commission-approved rates, equal to the share of the electrical
39corporation’s estimated net unavoidable electricity purchase
40contract costs attributable to the customer, as determined by the
P14 1commission, for the period commencing with the customer’s
2purchases of electricity from the community choice
aggregator,
3through the expiration of all then existing electricity purchase
4contracts entered into by the electrical corporation.
5(g) Estimated net unavoidable electricity costs paid by the
6customers of a community choice aggregator shall be reduced by
7the value of any benefits that remain with bundled service
8customers, unless the customers of the community choice
9aggregator are allocated a fair and equitable share of those benefits.
10(h) (1) Any charges imposed pursuant to subdivision (e) shall
11be the property of the Department of Water Resources. Any charges
12imposed pursuant to subdivision (f) shall be the property of the
13electrical corporation. The commission shall establish mechanisms,
14including agreements with, or orders with respect to, electrical
15corporations
necessary to ensure that charges payable pursuant to
16this section shall be promptly remitted to the party entitled to
17payment.
18(2) Charges imposed pursuant to subdivisions (d), (e), and (f)
19shall be nonbypassable.
20(i) The commission shall authorize community choice
21aggregation only if the commission imposes a cost-recovery
22mechanism pursuant to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (h). Except
23as provided by this subdivision, this section shall not alter the
24suspension by the commission of direct purchases of electricity
25from alternate providers other than by community choice
26aggregators, pursuant to Section 365.1.
27(j) (1) The commission shall not authorize community choice
28aggregation until it
implements a cost-recovery mechanism,
29consistent with subdivisions (d), (e), and (f), that is applicable to
30customers that elected to purchase electricity from an alternate
31provider between February 1, 2001, and January 1, 2003.
32(2) The commission shall not authorize community choice
33aggregation until it has adopted rules for implementing community
34choice aggregation.
35(k) (1) Except for nonbypassable charges imposed by the
36commission pursuant to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (h), and
37programs authorized by the commission to provide broader
38statewide or regional benefits to all customers, electric service
39customers of a community choice aggregator shall not be required
40to pay nonbypassable charges for goods, services, or programs
P15 1that do not benefit
either, or where applicable, both, the customer
2and the community choice aggregator serving the customer.
3(2) The commission, Energy Commission, electrical corporation,
4or third-party administrator shall administer any program funded
5through a nonbypassable charge on a nondiscriminatory basis so
6that the electric service customers of a community choice
7aggregator may participate in the program on an equal basis with
8the customers of an electrical corporation.
9(3) Nothing in this subdivision is intended to modify, or prohibit
10the use of, charges funding programs for the benefit of low-income
11customers.
12(l) (1) An electrical corporation shall not terminate the services
13of a community choice aggregator
unless authorized by a vote of
14the full commission. The commission shall ensure that prior to
15authorizing a termination of service, that the community choice
16aggregator has been provided adequate notice and a reasonable
17opportunity to be heard regarding any electrical corporation
18contentions in support of termination. If the contentions made by
19the electrical corporation in favor of termination include factual
20claims, the community choice aggregator shall be afforded an
21opportunity to address those claims in an evidentiary hearing.
22(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), if the Independent System
23Operator has transferred the community choice aggregator’s
24scheduling coordination responsibilities to the incumbent electrical
25corporation, an administrative law judge or assigned commissioner,
26after providing the aggregator with notice and an
opportunity to
27respond, may suspend the aggregator’s service to customers
28pending a full vote of the commission.
29(m) Any meeting of an entity authorized to be a community
30choice aggregator, as defined in Section 331.1, for the purpose of
31developing, implementing, or administering a program of
32community choice aggregation shall be conducted in the manner
33
prescribed by the Ralph M. Brown Act (Chapter 9 (commencing
34with Section 54950) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the
35Government Code).
36(n) Amendments to this section made by Assembly Bill 2145
37 of the 2013-14 Regular Session do not affect the enrollment status
38of a customer already enrolled in a community choice aggregation
39program prior to January 1, 2015.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
3Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
4the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
5district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
6infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
7for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
8the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
9the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
10Constitution.
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