Public Act 099-0107 Public Act 0107 99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 099-0107 | SB1312 Enrolled | LRB099 06843 HAF 26917 b |
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| AN ACT concerning utilities.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing | Section 4-304 as follows:
| (220 ILCS 5/4-304) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 4-304)
| Sec. 4-304.
Beginning in 1986, the Commission shall prepare | an
annual report which shall be filed by January 31 of each | year with the Joint
Committee on Legislative Support Services | of the General Assembly , the
Public Counsel and the Governor | and which shall be publicly available. Such
report shall | include:
| (1) A general review of agency activities and changes, | including:
| (a) a review of significant decisions and other | regulatory actions for
the preceding year, and pending | cases, and an analysis of the impact of
such decisions and | actions, and potential impact of any significant pending
| cases;
| (b) for each significant decision, regulatory action | and pending
case, a description of the positions advocated | by major parties, including
Commission staff, and for each | such decision rendered or action taken, the
position |
| adopted by the Commission and reason therefor;
| (c) a description of the Commission's budget, | caseload, and staff
levels, including specifically:
| (i) a breakdown by type of case of the cases | resolved and filed during
the year and of pending | cases;
| (ii) a description of the allocation of the | Commission's budget,
identifying amounts budgeted for | each significant regulatory function or
activity and | for each department, bureau, section, division or | office of
the Commission and its employees;
| (iii) a description of current employee levels, | identifying any change
occurring during the year in the | number of employees, personnel policies
and practices | or compensation levels; and identifying the number and | type
of employees assigned to each Commission | regulatory function and to each
department, bureau, | section, division or office of the Commission;
| (d) a description of any significant changes in | Commission policies,
programs or practices with respect to | agency organization and
administration, hearings and | procedures or substantive regulatory
activity.
| (2) A discussion and analysis of the state of each utility | industry
regulated by the Commission and significant changes, | trends and developments
therein, including the number and types | of firms offering each utility
service, existing, new and |
| prospective technologies, variations in the
quality, | availability and price for utility services in different
| geographic areas of the State, and any other industry factors | or
circumstances which may affect the public interest or the | regulation of such
industries.
| (3) A specific discussion of the energy planning | responsibilities and
activities of the Commission and energy | utilities, including:
| (a) the extent to which conservation, cogeneration, | renewable energy
technologies and improvements in energy | efficiency are being utilized by energy
consumers, the | extent to which additional potential exists for the | economical
utilization of such supplies, and a description | of existing and proposed
programs and policies designed to | promote and encourage such utilization;
| (b) a description of each energy plan filed with the | Commission pursuant
to the provisions of this Act, and a | copy, or detailed summary of the most
recent energy plans | adopted by the Commission; and
| (c) a discussion of the powers by which the Commission | is implementing
the planning responsibilities of Article | VIII, including a description of
the staff and budget | assigned to such function, the procedures by which
| Commission staff reviews and analyzes energy plans | submitted by the utilities,
the Department of Natural | Resources, and any other person or
party ; and .
|
| (d) a summary of the adoption of solar photovoltaic | systems by residential and small business consumers in | Illinois and a description of any and all barriers to | residential and small business consumers' financing, | installation, and valuation of energy produced by solar | photovoltaic systems; electric utilities, alternative | retail electric suppliers, and installers of distributed | generation shall provide all information requested by the | Commission or its staff necessary to complete the analysis | required by this paragraph (d). | (4) A discussion of the extent to which utility services | are available
to all Illinois citizens including:
| (a) the percentage and number of persons or households | requiring each
such service who are not receiving such | service, and the reasons therefore,
including specifically | the number of such persons or households who are
unable to | afford such service;
| (b) a critical analysis of existing programs designed | to promote and
preserve the availability and affordability | of utility services; and
| (c) an analysis of the financial impact on utilities | and other
ratepayers of the inability of some customers or | potential customers to
afford utility service, including | the number of service disconnections and
reconnections, | and cost thereof and the dollar amount of uncollectible
| accounts recovered through rates.
|
| (5) A detailed description of the means by which the | Commission is
implementing its new statutory responsibilities | under this Act, and the
status of such implementation, | including specifically:
| (a) Commission reorganization resulting from the | addition of an
Executive Director and hearing examiner | qualifications and review;
| (b) Commission responsibilities for construction and | rate supervision,
including construction cost audits, | management audits, excess capacity
adjustments, phase-ins | of new plant and the means and capability for monitoring
| and reevaluating existing or future construction projects;
| (c) promulgation and application of rules concerning | ex parte
communications, circulation of recommended orders | and transcription of closed
meetings.
| (6) A description of all appeals taken from Commission | orders, findings
or decisions and the status and outcome of | such appeals.
| (7) A description of the status of all studies and | investigations
required by this Act, including those ordered | pursuant to Sections 8-304,
9-242, 9-244 and 13-301 and all
| such subsequently ordered studies or investigations.
| (8) A discussion of new or potential developments in | federal
legislation, and federal agency and judicial decisions | relevant to State
regulation of utility services.
| (9) All recommendations for appropriate legislative action |
| by the General
Assembly.
| The Commission may include such other information as it | deems to be
necessary or beneficial in describing or explaining | its activities or
regulatory responsibilities. The report | required by this Section shall be
adopted by a vote of the full | Commission prior to filing.
| (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
| Section 10. If and only if House Bill 3766 of the 99th | General Assembly becomes law in the form in which it passed | both houses on May 26, 2015, then the Public Utilities Act is | amended by changing Section 16-119 as follows:
| (220 ILCS 5/16-119)
| Sec. 16-119. Switching suppliers. An electric utility or an | alternative retail electric
supplier may establish a term of | service, notice period for
terminating service and provisions | governing early termination
through a tariff or contract. A | customer may change its
supplier subject to tariff or contract | terms and conditions.
Any notice provisions; or provision for a | fee, charge or
penalty with early termination of a contract; | shall be
conspicuously disclosed in any tariff or contract. Any | tariff filed or contract renewed or entered into on and after | the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General | Assembly that contains an early termination clause shall | disclose the amount of the early termination fee or penalty , |
| provided that any early termination fee or penalty shall not | exceed $50 total for residential customers and $150 for small | commercial retail customers as defined in Section 16-102 of | this Act, regardless of whether or not the tariff or contract | is a multiyear tariff or contract. A customer
shall remain | responsible for any unpaid charges owed to an
electric utility | or alternative retail electric supplier at
the time it switches | to another provider.
| The caps on early termination fees and penalties under this | Section shall apply only to early termination fees and | penalties for early termination of electric service. The caps | shall not apply to charges or fees for devices, equipment, or | other services provided by the utility or alternative retail | electric supplier. | (Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97; 09900HB3766enr.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Section takes effect upon | becoming law. Section 10 takes effect upon becoming law or on | the date House Bill 3766 of the 99th General Assembly takes | effect, whichever is later.
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Effective Date: 07/22/2015
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