Rate
Making
THE
RATE MAKING PROCESS
The rates charged by Arizona's
investor-owned utilities are established by the Arizona Corporation
Commission ("ACC" or "Commission"). The Commission authorizes a utility to
charge rates which will recover expenditures which are appropriate
and prudently incurred, and which provide an opportunity to earn a fair return on the utility's capital investment. A utility initiates the process to
obtain a rate increase by filing an application with the
Commission. The application must be based on a "test year" of
actual expenses and investments during a recent twelve-month
period. All of the utility's cost data are drawn from its own
records. The Commission requires that the utilities follow a
standardized system of accounting procedures that assures that the
data can be easily reviewed and verified by the Commission, RUCO and
others.
In its application, a utility may
propose certain adjustments to its actual test year costs and
investment. Historical costs and investment may be adjusted by
annualizing changes which occurred during the test year, such as
payroll increases or tax changes, making them appear as if they had
been in effect for the entire year. In addition, historical costs
may be normalized to eliminate the effects of abnormal variations
that actually occurred during the test year, such as weather-related
changes in consumption. Other adjustments may be proposed to
include the effects of known and measurable changes that occurred
after the end of the test year, such as wage increases and certain
costs related to recently completed construction projects.
Upon receiving the utility's application
and written summary or testimony, the Commission's staff reviews the
application to confirm that it contains all the necessary accounting
information. If the application is complete, the Commission's staff
prepares a letter of sufficiency, and a docket number is assigned to
the case. The determination of sufficiency triggers the
Commission's "timeclock" rule, which establishes a deadline by which
the Commission staff must file its Staff Report or testimony on the
application, and a deadline by which the Commission must issue a
final order on the application. A hearing date is fixed for an
application that requires a hearing.
After the application is determined
sufficient, RUCO and other interested parties are permitted to
intervene in the case. As intervenors, parties have the right to
obtain additional information from the utility to assist in their
review of the application. In addition, intervenors may present
evidence of their own or on the application and may have attorneys
cross-examine other parties' witnesses and submit written briefs,
which present their positions on the issues in the case.
When the Commission staff has completed its
investigation, it issues a recommendation in a Staff Report or
written testimony. Intervenors also provide their recommendations
in the form of written testimony prepared by their analysts or
consultants. The utility has the opportunity to respond through the
filing of additional written testimony of its own.
In many cases, prior to the hearing on the
application, the Commission holds public comment sessions in the
service territory if the utility. These meetings are intended to
allow customers to express their opinions about the rate request and
to provide the Commission with information that the customers feel
is relevant to the case. It is not required, nor is it expected,
that customers making comments at these meetings be represented by
legal counsel.
The Commission then holds a formal hearing on
applications which require hearings. At the hearing, the utility,
the Commission staff, RUCO, and other intervenors present witnesses,
offer evidence, and conduct cross-examination of other parties'
witnesses on the issues raised in the filed reports and testimony.
Issues commonly disputed in rate cases include: which expenses
should be charged in rates to ratepayers; what a normal or prudent
level of expenses should be; whether all of the utility's
investments in physical facilities were prudently made and whether
the facilities are needed for the provision of utility services; how
much of a return the utility's shareholders should be allowed to
earn on their investment; and how the cost of providing service
should be allocated to, and recovered from, the utility's various
classes of customers.
After the hearing
is concluded, the Commission's administrative law judge reviews the
evidence and the parties' arguments and issues a Recommended Order.
The Recommended Order sets forth a recommended decision on all
contested issues and recommends how much of a rate increase, if any,
the utility should receive. The parties are permitted to file
exceptions to the Recommended Order, asking the Commission to
disregard the conclusions of the Recommended Order and suggesting an alternate resolution. At a
public meeting, the Commission considers the administrative law
judge's order, and the exceptions to it. The Commission can adopt
the Order as originally written, incorporate any of the suggested
exceptions, or make its own amendments.
After the Commission issues its final decision,
the parties have 20 days to request the Commission to reconsider its
decision. If the Commission declines to grant a rehearing, the
parties may appeal the decision to the Arizona Court of Appeals.
Decisions of the Court of Appeals may be appealed to the Arizona
Supreme Court. Filing an appeal does not prevent the rates approved
by the Commission from taking effect.
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