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CHAPTER 283*
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC UTILITY CONTROL:
TELEGRAPH, TELEPHONE, ILLUMINATING,
POWER AND WATER COMPANIES

*Cited. 12 CA 499, 504.

Table of Contents

Sec. 16-228. Telegraph and telephone lines.
Sec. 16-229. Excavation in highway.
Sec. 16-230. Bond requirement.
Sec. 16-231. Appeal.
Sec. 16-232. Rights of companies organized under general law.
Sec. 16-233. Municipal and state signal wires.
Sec. 16-234. Rights of adjoining proprietors.
Sec. 16-235. Control by local authorities. Orders. Appeals.
Sec. 16-236. Appraisal of damages; costs.
Sec. 16-237. No prescriptive right.
Sec. 16-238. Wires may be cut; notice.
Sec. 16-239. Dispatches transmitted in order. Exceptions.
Sec. 16-240. Delivery of messages.
Sec. 16-241. Mortgage by telegraph company.
Sec. 16-242. Telephone service to telegraph companies.
Sec. 16-243. Jurisdiction of department over electricity transmission lines.
Sec. 16-243a. Private power producers. Purchase and sale of electricity. Avoided costs. Small renewable power projects.
Sec. 16-243b. Definitions. Jurisdiction.
Sec. 16-243c. Electricity transmission and distribution services for electric cooperatives utilizing cogeneration technology and renewable energy resources.
Sec. 16-243d. Project by private power producer deemed "industrial project".
Sec. 16-243e. Electric company purchase of electricity generated by municipal resources recovery facilities.
Sec. 16-243f. Private power providers. Regulations concerning the purchase and sale of electricity.
Sec. 16-243g. Assignment of electricity purchase agreements.
Sec. 16-243h. Credit to residential customers who generate electricity; metering.
Sec. 16-244. Electric deregulation; findings and declarations.
Sec. 16-244a. Rate freeze for electric service.
Sec. 16-244b. Electric customers to choose electric suppliers. Phase-in of electric deregulation.
Sec. 16-244c. Standard offer. Rates of standard offer established by department; duration; adjustments; eligibility. Duties of electric distribution company to provide default and back-up generation services; procedures.
Sec. 16-244d. Education outreach program for electric deregulation, scope. Hiring of consultant to implement program. Consumer Education Advisory Council established. Determination of environmental costs and benefits of energy sources.
Sec. 16-244e. Unbundling by electric companies of generation functions from transmission and distribution functions. Plan.
Sec. 16-244f. Divestiture of nonnuclear electric generation facilities. Plan. Approval of sale by department.
Sec. 16-244g. Divestiture of nuclear electric generation facilities. Plan. Approval of sale by department.
Sec. 16-244h. Code of conduct for electric distribution companies, generation entities or affiliates and electric suppliers. Contents of code. Penalties, damages.
Sec. 16-244i. Duties of electric distribution companies.
Sec. 16-244j. Electric transmission lines from Bethel to Norwalk. Moratorium. Working group and comprehensive assessment.
Sec. 16-245. Licensing of electric suppliers. Procedures. Penalties.
Sec. 16-245a. Portfolio standards for electric suppliers; electricity generated from renewable energy sources.
Sec. 16-245b. Municipalities and regional water authorities acting as electric aggregators; registration with department.
Sec. 16-245c. Municipal electric utilities participating in deregulated environment. Authority to provide generation services outside service area.
Sec. 16-245d. Billing of electric service; standard format; contents.
Sec. 16-245e. Stranded costs of electric companies. Definitions. Calculation by department, procedures, adjustments. Mitigation.
Sec. 16-245f. Funding of stranded costs through rate reduction bonds, restrictions.
Sec. 16-245g. Competitive transition assessment. Determination by department of amount and how applied to electric customers. Duration.
Sec. 16-245h. Transition property. Surplus competitive transition assessment. Restrictions on use of transition property by electric or electric distribution companies.
Sec. 16-245i. Department to issue financing orders for recovery of stranded costs.
Sec. 16-245j. Rate reduction bonds; terms.
Sec. 16-245k. Security interest in transition property described; creation; perfection. Transferring transition property. Duration of department's authority to issue financing orders.
Sec. 16-245l. *(See end of section for amended version of subsection (a) and effective date.) Systems benefits charge. Determination by department of amount and how applied to customers.
Sec. 16-245m. Conservation and load management program; charge assessed against electric customers to fund program; scope and purpose of program.
Sec. 16-245n. Renewable Energy Investment Fund created; charge assessed against electric customers to fund Investment Fund; purpose.
Sec. 16-245o. Restrictions on use of customer information for marketing. Promotional inserts in electric bills prohibited. Procedures for entering and terminating service contracts. Penalties.
Sec. 16-245p. Information re electric supplier to be provided to customers; quarterly reports.
Sec. 16-245q. Changing electric suppliers.
Sec. 16-245r. Discrimination by electric suppliers prohibited.
Sec. 16-245s. Switching electric suppliers; procedures; penalties.
Sec. 16-245t. Complaints to department re electric suppliers; procedures; remedies.
Sec. 16-245u. Unfair and discriminatory conduct and unfair trade practices in electric market prohibited. Investigations.
Sec. 16-245v. List of displaced electric utility employees to be provided to distribution companies and electric suppliers.
Sec. 16-245w. Fee to be paid by self-generation facilities in lieu of certain assessments; study by department.
Sec. 16-245x. Monitoring and reporting by department of electric rates of each customer class. Action to minimize rate differential.
Sec. 16-245y. Annual reporting re status of electric deregulation.
Sec. 16-246. Other companies which may sell electricity.
Sec. 16-246a. Definitions.
Sec. 16-246b. Area within which domestic company may generate and transmit electric energy.
Sec. 16-246c. Area within which foreign electric company may generate and transmit electric energy.
Sec. 16-246d. Joint ownership of facility. Waiver of right to partition.
Sec. 16-246e. Procurement and sale by department of electric power capacity and power output from out-of-state producers. Approval by Governor.
Sec. 16-246f. Electric company emergency assistance.
Sec. 16-247. Foreign telephone companies.
Sec. 16-247a. Goals of the state. Definitions.
Sec. 16-247b. Unbundling of telephone company's network, services and functions. Access to telephone company's telecommunications services, functions and unbundled network elements. Rates for competitive or emerging competitive service. Subsidization prohibited.
Sec. 16-247c. Provision of intrastate telecommunications services. Civil penalty. Competition.
Sec. 16-247d. Biennial reports on competition for intrastate interexchange telecommunications service. Plan for implementing competition. General Assembly approval required.
Sec. 16-247e. Basic telecommunications services. Lifeline and telecommunications relay service programs. Universal service program.
Sec. 16-247f. Regulation of telecommunications services: Initial classifications, reclassifications, tariffs.
Sec. 16-247g. Certificate of public convenience and necessity for intrastate telecommunications services: Application, requirements, suspension, revocation. Fees. Obligation to serve.
Sec. 16-247h. Use of public right-of-way for provision of intrastate telecommunications service.
Sec. 16-247i. Telecommunications service and regulation status report.
Sec. 16-247j. Regulations.
Sec. 16-247k. Alternative forms of regulation for telephone companies: Plan requirements, monitoring period, modification.
Sec. 16-247l. Access by certified telecommunications providers to occupied buildings: Service, wiring, compensation, regulations, civil penalty.
Sec. 16-247m. Withdrawal by telephone company of retail telecommunications service. Applications.
Sec. 16-247n. Certification of telephone company's operations support systems interface. Rates. Proceedings.
Sec. 16-247o. Consultant to test operations support systems interface.
Sec. 16-247p. Quality-of-service standards. Performance Standards.
Sec. 16-247q. Education outreach program for telecommunications competition, scope. Consumer Education Advisory Council established.
Sec. 16-247r. Discrimination by telephone companies and certified telecommunications providers prohibited.
Sec. 16-247s. Directory assistance database.
Sec. 16-248. Rights of telephone company in operation May 23, 1985.
Sec. 16-249. Department to authorize extension of operations of telephone companies.
Sec. 16-250. Determination of public convenience and necessity for extension.
Sec. 16-250a. Reselling or sharing of line purchased or leased from telephone company.
Sec. 16-250b. Cellular mobile telephone service. Department jurisdiction over. Regulations.
Sec. 16-251. Bonds of telephone company.
Sec. 16-252. Bonds may be secured by mortgage.
Sec. 16-253. Amount of capital to be paid in.
Sec. 16-254. Subscriptions for cash.
Sec. 16-255. General powers.
Secs. 16-255a to 16-255i. Acquisition of control of domestic telephone companies limited; statement; expenses of department. Form of statement. Hearing re department approval of acquisition; standard of review. Nonvotable securities; injunctive relief. Regulations. Appeals. Remedial and penal provisions. Exemptions. Severability.
Sec. 16-256. Notice of offense in party line usage in telephone directory.
Sec. 16-256a. Directory assistance charge prohibited.
Sec. 16-256b. Special telecommunications equipment for deaf and hearing impaired persons. Fund. Amplification controls for coin and coinless telephones installed for public or semipublic use.
Sec. 16-256c. Extended local calling criteria. Calling volume. Subscriber survey and vote. Petitions.
Sec. 16-256d. Itemized telephone bills for business customers.
Sec. 16-256e. Recorded telephone message devices prohibited.
Sec. 16-256f. Blocking service available to customers.
Sec. 16-256g. Proceeding to determine monthly subscriber fee. Assessment of subscribers for Enhanced 9-1-1 Telecommunications Fund.
Sec. 16-256h. Business to residential pricing ratio for basic exchange service.
Sec. 16-256i. Primary local or intrastate interexchange carrier orders. Unauthorized switching. Penalty.
Sec. 16-256j. Billing for telecommunications services. Information re carriers, basic, local service and taxes.
Sec. 16-256k. Disclosure for removal or change in telecommunications service. Disclosure for promotional offerings.
Sec. 16-257. Recording of agreement of consolidation or merger of electric and gas companies.
Sec. 16-258. Standards concerning electricity and gas.
Sec. 16-258a. Registration of natural gas sellers. Procedures. Penalties.
Sec. 16-258b. Registration of electric generating facilities.
Sec. 16-259. Inspection of meters.
Sec. 16-259a. Inaccurate billing. Financial liability of customer. Payment plan.
Sec. 16-260. Water meters may be required.
Sec. 16-261. Extension of electric lines to unserved areas. Determination of rates.
Sec. 16-261a. Interagency electric and magnetic fields task force; composition; study. Assessment of electric public service companies for specified expenses of task force.
Sec. 16-262. Gas companies authorized to deal in natural gas.
Sec. 16-262a. Water company to have area resident as director or advisory council of area residents.
Sec. 16-262b. Notice of discharge of explosives or highway excavation to gas companies.
Sec. 16-262c. Termination of utility service for nonpayment, when prohibited. Amortization agreements. Moneys allowed to be deducted from customers' accounts and moneys to be included in rates as an operating expense. Hardship cases. Notice. Regulations. Annual reports. Privacy of individual customer utility usage and billing information.
Sec. 16-262d. Termination of residential utility service on account of nonpayment. Notice. Nontermination in event of illness during pendency of customer complaint or investigation. Amortization agreement. Appeal. Notice re credit rating information.
Sec. 16-262e. Notice furnished tenants re intended termination of utility service. Assumption by tenants of liability for future service. Liability of landlords for certain utility services. Deduction from rent.
Sec. 16-262f. Action for receivership of rents and common expenses by electric, electric distribution, gas and telephone companies; petition; hearing; appointment; duties; termination.
Sec. 16-262g. Penalty.
Sec. 16-262h. Nonexclusivity of remedy.
Sec. 16-262i. Regulations.
Sec. 16-262j. Refusal of residential utility service. Regulations. Refusal of telecommunications service to a candidate or committee. Interest on customer security deposits. Deposit index.
Sec. 16-262k. Interconnection of public water supply systems to relieve site-specific water shortages.
Sec. 16-262l. Receivership of water companies for failure to provide adequate service. Personal liability of directors, officers and managers.
Sec. 16-262m. Construction specifications for water companies.
Sec. 16-262n. Definition. Economic viability of water companies. Reviews. Failure to comply with orders. Hearings.
Sec. 16-262o. Acquisition of water company ordered by department. Rates and charges. Recovery of acquisition costs.
Sec. 16-262p. Improvements by acquiring entity.
Sec. 16-262q. Compensation for acquisition of water company.
Sec. 16-262r. Satellite management of water companies. Expedited rate proceedings.
Sec. 16-262s. Voluntary acquisition of water company. Surcharges.
Sec. 16-262t. Action for receivership of rent and common expenses by water companies; petition; hearing; appointment; duties; termination.

Each telegraph company may maintain and construct telegraph lines, and, subject to the restrictions of sections 16-18, 16- 248, 16-249 and 16-250, each telephone company may construct and maintain telephone lines, upon any highway or across any waters in this state, by the erection and maintenance of the necessary fixtures, including posts, piers or abutments, for sustaining wires; but the same shall not be so constructed as to incommode public travel or navigation or injure any tree without the consent of the owner, nor shall such company construct any bridge across any waters. Such lines shall be personal property.
(1949 Rev., S. 5639; P.A. 85-187, S. 9, 15.)
History: P.A. 85-187 deleted obsolete reference to Sec. 16-247.
See Sec. 16-236 re appraisal of damages and assessment of costs.
Selectmen's permission does not justify telephone company in cutting trees on highway. 66 C. 559. Right of nonresident telegraph company to enter state and use highways. 91 C. 38. Cited. 235 C. 408, 410.
Cited. 44 CS 45, 47.
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Any public service company incorporated under the provisions of the statutes or by special act for the purpose of transmitting or distributing gas, water or electricity or for telephone purposes, desiring to open or make any excavation in a portion of any public highway for the carrying out of any purpose for which it may be organized other than the placing or replacing of a pole or of a curb box, shall, if required by the authority having jurisdiction over the maintenance of such highway, make application to such authority, which may, in writing, grant a permit for such opening or excavation upon such terms and conditions as to the manner in which such work shall be carried on as may be reasonable.
(1949 Rev., S. 5640; 1959, P.A. 262.)
History: 1959 act added water companies to scope of section.
Cited. 162 C. 53.
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Before any such public service company makes any such application, it shall file with the Secretary of the State a bond, with surety, in form and amount satisfactory to and approved by him, to save harmless any person or corporation which may be injured by the negligent carrying on of such work, which bond may be a continuing bond to cover all of such work conducted by such public service company in this state during the term of such bond, but said Secretary may dispense with the filing of any such bond upon the furnishing to him of satisfactory proof of the solvency and the financial ability of such public service company to pay any damages resulting from such negligent carrying on of such work, and said Secretary shall issue to such company his certificate that such bond has been filed or proof of solvency furnished. No such bond or further proof of solvency and financial ability shall be required by the Secretary of the State, or by any other authority, of any such public service company which has, within the preceding twelve months, filed with the Secretary of the State a certification, attested by the secretary of such company, that the combined paid-in capital and surplus of such company is not less than five hundred thousand dollars.
(1949 Rev., S. 5641; 1957, P.A. 85; 1971, P.A. 367.)
History: 1971 act made waiver of bond applicable to companies with capital and surplus of five hundred thousand dollars or more rather than one hundred fifty thousand dollars or more.
Cited. 162 C. 53.
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Any such company aggrieved by the neglect or refusal of the authority having such jurisdiction to grant such permit, or by the terms and conditions therein imposed, may appeal to the Department of Public Utility Control, which may, upon giving reasonable notice of such appeal and of the time and place where it will be heard, determine whether such permit ought to be granted, or such terms and conditions altered, and may, subject to such right of appeal to the Superior Court as provided in the case of other orders, authorizations and decisions of the department, grant such permit in writing upon such terms and conditions as to the carrying on of such work as it finds just and reasonable.
(1949 Rev., S. 5642; P.A. 75-486, S. 1, 69; P.A. 77-614, S. 162, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 100, 348.)
History: P.A. 75-486 replaced public utilities commission with public utilities control authority; P.A. 77-614 replaced public utilities control authority with division of public utility control within the department of business regulation, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 made division an independent department and deleted reference to abolished department of business regulation.
Cited. 162 C. 53.
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No electric light or electric power company organized under any former joint stock law of this state shall use or occupy any highway or public grounds or be entitled to the powers or privileges enumerated in this chapter, without special authority from the General Assembly.
(1949 Rev., S. 5643.)
Electric light and power company is a public service corporation. 84 C. 312.
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Each town, city, borough, fire district or the Department of Transportation shall have the right to occupy and use for municipal and state signal wires, without payment therefor, one gain upon each public utility pole or in each underground communications duct system installed by a public service company within the limits of any such town, city, borough or district. The location or relocation of any such gain shall be prescribed by the Department of Public Utility Control. Any such gain shall be reserved for use by the town, city, borough, fire district or the Department of Transportation.
(1949 Rev., S. 5644; P.A. 75-486, S. 1, 69; P.A. 77-614, S. 162, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 101, 348; P.A. 94-188, S. 14.)
History: P.A. 75-486 replaced public utilities commission with public utilities control authority; P.A. 77-614 replaced public utilities control authority with division of public utility control within the department of business regulation, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 made division an independent department and deleted reference to abolished department of business regulation; P.A. 94-188 granted the department of transportation the right to occupy and use for state signal wires, without payment therefor, one gain upon each public utility pole or in each underground communications duct system installed by a public service company and added a provision that any such gain would be reserved for use by the town, city, borough, fire district or the department of transportation.
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No telegraph, telephone or electric light company or association, nor any company or association engaged in distributing electricity by wires or similar conductors or in using an electric wire or conductor for any purpose, shall exercise any powers which may have been conferred upon it to change the location of, or to erect or place, wires, conductors, fixtures, structures or apparatus of any kind over, on or under any highway or public ground, without the consent of the adjoining proprietors, or, if such company or association is unable to obtain such consent, without the approval of the Department of Public Utility Control, which shall be given only after a hearing upon notice to such proprietors; or to cut or trim any tree on or overhanging any highway or public ground, without the consent of the owner thereof, or, if such company or association is unable to obtain such consent, without the approval of the tree warden or the consent of the department, which consent shall be given only after a hearing upon notice to such owner; but the department may, if it finds that public convenience and necessity require, authorize the changing of the location of, or the erection or placing of, such wires, conductors, fixtures, structures or apparatus over, on or under such highway or public ground; and the tree warden in any town or the department may, if he or it finds that public convenience and necessity require, authorize the cutting and trimming and the keeping trimmed of any brush or tree in such town on or overhanging such highway or public ground, which action shall be taken only after notice and hearing as aforesaid, which hearing shall be held within a reasonable time after the application therefor.
(1949 Rev., S. 5645; P.A. 75-486, S. 1, 69; P.A. 77-614, S. 162, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 102, 348.)
History: P.A. 75-486 replaced public utilities commission with public utilities control authority; P.A. 77-614 replaced public utilities control authority with division of public utility control within the department of business regulation, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 made division an independent department and deleted reference to abolished department of business regulation.
See Secs. 16-11 and 16-18 re powers of Department of Public Utility Control.
See Sec. 16-236 re appraisal of damages and assessment of costs.
See Sec. 23-65 re defacement, pruning or removal of trees.
In use of public streets for transmission of electric currents, high degree of care is required. 67 C. 445; 70 C. 65; 75 C. 548; 80 C. 470. See 91 C. 563. Right of telephone company in street; effect of consent by abutting owners; mere maintenance of line illegally would not justify injunctive relief. 90 C. 182; 92 C. 635. Cited. 161 C. 430. Cited. 162 C. 93. A railroad's right-of-way is not a "highway" as contemplated by this section. 168 C. 478. The term "adjoining proprietors" as used in this section means owners of property contiguous to the highway or public ground over, on or under which the transmission line or other facility in question is erected or placed. 168 C. 478.
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Except as provided in section 16-243, the selectmen of any town, the common council of any city and the warden and burgesses of any borough shall, subject to the provisions of section 16-234, within their respective jurisdictions, have full direction and control over the placing, erection and maintenance of any such wires, conductors, fixtures, structures or apparatus, including the relocation or removal of the same and the power of designating the kind, quality and finish thereof, but no authority granted to any city or borough or a town planning, zoning, inland wetland, historic district, building, gas, water or electrical board, commission or committee created under authority of the general statutes or by virtue of any special act, shall be construed to apply to so much of the operations, plant, building, structures or equipment of any public service company as is under the jurisdiction of the Department of Public Utility Control, or the Connecticut Siting Council, but zoning commissions and inland wetland agencies may, within their respective municipalities, regulate and restrict the proposed location of any steam plant, gas plant, gas tank or holder, water tank, electric substation, antenna, tower or earth station receiver of any public service company not subject to the jurisdiction of the Connecticut Siting Council. Any local body mentioned in this section and the appellate body, if any, may make all orders necessary to the exercise of such power, direction or control, which orders shall be made within thirty days of any application and shall be in writing and recorded in the records of their respective communities, and written notice of any order shall be given to each party affected thereby. Each such order shall be subject to the right of appeal within thirty days from the giving of such notice by any party aggrieved to the Department of Public Utility Control, which, after rehearing, upon notice to all parties in interest, shall as speedily as possible determine the matter in question and shall have jurisdiction to affirm or modify or revoke such orders or make any orders in substitution thereof.
(1949 Rev., S. 5646; 1971, P.A. 575, S. 12; P.A. 73-458, S. 13; P.A. 75-375, S. 10, 12; 75-486, S. 1, 69; P.A. 77-614, S. 162, 610; P.A. 79-251; P.A. 80-482, S. 103, 348; P.A. 86-187, S. 7, 10; P.A. 87-589, S. 6, 30, 87.)
History: 1971 act added references to power facility evaluation council; P.A. 73-458 clarified jurisdiction of local boards, commissions etc. over companies "not subject to ... the power facility evaluation council"; P.A. 75-375 included references to inland wetland and historic district commissions and gave these two types of commission jurisdiction over companies not subject to power facility evaluation council rather than boards, commissions etc. having power to regulate location of structures, trades, industries and business; P.A. 75-486 replaced public utilities commission with public utilities control authority; P.A. 77-614 replaced authority with division of public utility control within the department of business regulation, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 79-251 allowed regulation of antennas, towers and earth station receivers; P.A. 80-482 made division of public utility control an independent department and deleted reference to abolished department of business regulation; P.A. 86-187 replaced power facility evaluation council with Connecticut siting council; P.A. 87- 589 made technical change, substituting Connecticut siting council for power facility evaluation council.
Telephone and railway companies may use the same pole for wires. 70 C. 54. Consent of adjoining proprietors need not precede action by municipal authorities; whether action by municipal authority on petition is mandatory, quaere. 71 C. 381. Charter power to construct underground conduits held to leave power of regulation with local authorities. 71 C. 657. Contract permitting telephone company to use poles belonging to city construed. 74 C. 326. Power of municipalities to regulate wires and fixtures of street railway; appeal. 80 C. 623. Zoning commission acts as special agency of the state and is empowered to issue orders regulating and restricting subject to appeal to public utilities commission. Constitutionality upheld. 140 C. 650; 145 C. 243. If order is on records of zoning commission, it is properly recorded. 145 C. 243. Personal service need only be made on those under duty to comply with order. Id. Provisions re recording and notice of order are directory. Id. Standard used by zoning commission should be that used in public utility regulation. Contract commitments of public utility outside franchise area held valid consideration for public utility commission's finding. Id. Zoning board of appeals may hear request of public service company for extension of nonconforming use and in such capacity acts as special agency of state. 147 C. 229. Cited. 149 C. 101, 104. This is not a condemnation statute. 152 C. 688. Claim that, for the purposes of section 16-236, phrase "anything done" under this section is restricted to case where there has been a physical invasion of plaintiff's property is without merit. Id., 690. Boards of zoning or selectmen do not have power to regulate power transmission lines over private property. 161 C. 430. Cited. 162 C. 53. Jurisdiction of water resources commission over transmission lines above rivers. 162 C. 89. Cited. 162 C. 93. Cited. 206 C. 65, 70.
Cited. 20 CA 474, 486.
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Any judge of the Superior Court may, upon the application of any party interested, and after notice, unless the application has been unreasonably delayed, appoint three disinterested persons to make a written appraisal of all damages due any person by reason of anything done under any provision of section 16-228 or 16-234 or which is in violation of any order made under section 16-235. Such appraisal, when approved by such judge, shall be returned to and recorded by the clerk of the superior court for the judicial district where the cause of action arose, and thereupon the sum specified therein shall be paid immediately by the company to the party entitled to the same, or the judge may order the same to be paid immediately into the hands of such clerk, to be delivered by him on demand to such party. The costs of such proceedings shall be taxed by such judge and paid by such company, and he may issue execution therefor and for such damages.
(1949 Rev., S. 5647; 1963, P.A. 349; P.A. 78-280, S. 2, 127.)
History: 1963 act added "violations of orders under" Sec. 16-235 to first sentence; P.A. 78-280 substituted "judicial district" for "county".
Section valid; taking of land is not for private purpose. 90 C. 179; 92 C. 635. Cited. 149 C. 100. Legislative history. Id., 102. Indicates legislative intent to depart from strict eminent domain principles as basis for damages and to provide for payment, to any party interested, of damages for anything done under or by authority of section 16-235. Id., 104. Claim that plaintiff asking for damages under this section is required first to appeal to public utilities commission from the granting of the permit is without merit. 152 C. 690. Claim that phrase "anything done" under section 16-235 is restricted to case where there has been a physical invasion of plaintiff's property is without merit. Id. Whether plaintiff's application has been "unreasonably delayed" is an issue of fact, dependent upon the surrounding circumstances. Id., 691.
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No person or corporation building and maintaining telegraph, telephone or electric light or power wires or fixtures, or electrical wires, conductors or fixtures of any kind shall, by reason of any occupation or use of any buildings or lands for the support of the wires of such person or corporation, or by reason of such wires passing over or through any buildings or lands, acquire by the continuance of such use or occupation any prescriptive right to so occupy or use the same. No length of possession, user or occupancy of any buildings or land, or adverse to any easement therein or right thereto belonging to a telegraph, telephone or electric light or power corporation, and used or acquired for use for its corporate purposes, shall create or continue any right in or to such land, or adverse to any such easement.
(1949 Rev., S. 5648.)
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When it is deemed necessary to cut or otherwise disconnect the wires or fixtures of any telegraph, telephone, electric light or power company or other company or association hereinbefore referred to, or to remove such wires from the poles or fixtures to which they are attached, for the transportation of any object on the highway or upon any waterway, any person or corporation may do so, exercising reasonable care therein, after obtaining written consent of the municipality or other authority having control over such highway or waterway and the public service company or companies affected, which consent may be granted under such reasonable conditions as such municipality or other authority having such control and such company or companies may impose. If such consent cannot be secured, or if any of such conditions is not acceptable to the person or corporation seeking such consent, the Department of Public Utility Control shall, upon written application by such person or corporation and after notice to all parties affected, determine the necessity of such disconnection or removal and order the terms and conditions under which it shall be made.
(1949 Rev., S. 5649; P.A. 75-486, S. 1, 69; P.A. 77-614, S. 162, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 104, 348.)
History: P.A. 75-486 replaced public utilities commission with public utilities control authority; P.A. 77-614 replaced public utilities control authority with division of public utility control within the department of business regulation, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 made division an independent department and deleted reference to abolished department of business regulation.
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Section 16-239 is repealed.
(1949 Rev., S. 5651; P.A. 88-220, S. 8, 11.)
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Each telegraph company, engaged in the business of dispatching messages for the public, shall, in towns where no free delivery is maintained, deliver all dispatches to the persons to whom the same are addressed, or their agents, by messenger, upon prepayment by the person sending such dispatch of any proper charge for such delivery, provided such persons addressed, or their agents, reside within one mile of the telegraph station to which the dispatch is sent. For each failure to deliver a dispatch as required by this section, the person to whom the dispatch should have been delivered may recover of such company twenty dollars in an action on this section.
(1949 Rev., S. 5652.)
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The mortgage by any telegraph company, to secure its bonds or other evidences of indebtedness, of all or any part of its lines, appliances, machines or machinery, whether owned by it at the date of such mortgage, or thereafter to be acquired by it, or both, shall be valid and effectual as respects all the property therein included and may be foreclosed in the same manner as mortgages of real estate; and the record thereof in the office of the Secretary of the State shall be a sufficient record and notice to protect the title under the mortgage, notwithstanding such company may remain in possession of all or any part of the mortgaged property.
(1949 Rev., S. 5653.)
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Each person or corporation owning, controlling or operating a telephone exchange or service in this state shall, on application of any telegraph company, furnish such company with the use of a telephone or telephones and telephone service and connection with their respective exchanges and the subscribers thereto, without discrimination between telegraph companies as to such connections, service or use of instruments furnished, or charges therefor, for the same class of service. Any court in this state having equity jurisdiction shall, upon petition of any party in interest, enforce the provisions of this section by any suitable process or decree in equity.
(1949 Rev., S. 5654.)
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The Department of Public Utility Control shall have exclusive jurisdiction and direction over the method of construction or reconstruction in whole or in part of each system used for the transmission or distribution of electricity, with the kind, quality and finish of all materials, wires, poles, conductors and fixtures to be used in the construction and operation thereof, and the method of their use, including all plants and apparatus used for generating electricity located upon private property upon which there are conductors capable of transmitting electricity to other premises in such manner as to endanger any person or property. The department may make any order necessary to the exercise of such power and direction, which order shall be in writing and entered in the records of the department. Each person or corporation operating any such system or generating plant shall, at its expense, comply with such order. Any person violating any provision of any such order shall be subject to the penalty prescribed in section 16-41.
(1949 Rev., S. 5655; P.A. 75-486, S. 1, 69; P.A. 77-614, S. 162, 610; P.A. 80-482, S. 105, 348; P.A. 98-28, S. 101, 117.)
History: P.A. 75-486 replaced public utilities commission with public utilities control authority; P.A. 77-614 replaced public utilities control authority with division of public utility control within the department of business regulation, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 80-482 made division an independent department and deleted reference to abolished department of business regulation; P.A. 98-28 added the distribution of electricity, effective July 1, 1998.
See Sec. 16-235 re control of placing, erection and maintenance of wires and other fixtures by local authorities.
Cited. 140 C. 650. Exclusive jurisdiction over direction of power line on private land is within the public utilities commission. 161 C. 430. Cited. 162 C. 89. Contains constitutionally adequate standards. 165 C. 687. Cited. 168 C. 478.
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Sec. 16-243a. Private power producers. Purchase and sale of electricity. Avoided costs. Small renewable power projects. (a) As used in this section, "avoided costs" means the incremental costs to an electric public service company, municipal electric energy cooperative organized under chapter 101a or municipal electric utility organized under chapter 101, of electric energy or capacity or both which, but for the purchase from a private power producer, as defined in section 16-243b, such company, cooperative or utility would generate itself or purchase from another source.
(b) Each electric public service company, municipal electric energy cooperative and municipal electric utility shall: (1) Purchase any electrical energy and capacity made available, directly by a private power producer or indirectly under subdivision (4) of this subsection; (2) sell backup electricity to any private power producer in its service territory; (3) make such interconnections necessary to accomplish such purchases and sales; (4) upon approval by the Department of Public Utility Control of an application filed by a willing private power producer, transmit energy or capacity from the private power producer to any other such company, cooperative or utility or to another facility operated by the private power producer; and (5) offer to operate in parallel with a private power producer. In making a decision on an application filed under subdivision (4) of this subsection, the department shall consider whether such transmission would (A) adversely impact the customers of the company, cooperative or utility which would transmit energy or capacity to the private power producer, (B) result in an uncompensated loss for, or unduly burden, such company, cooperative, utility or private power producer, (C) impair the reliability of service of such company, cooperative or utility or (D) impair the ability of the company, cooperative or utility to provide adequate service to its customers. The department shall issue a decision on such an application not later than one hundred twenty days after the application is filed, provided, the department may, before the end of such period and upon notifying all parties and intervenors to the proceeding, extend the period by thirty days. If the department does not issue a decision within one hundred twenty days after receiving such an application, or within one hundred fifty days if the department extends the period in accordance with the provisions of this subsection, the application shall be deemed to have been approved. The requirements under subdivisions (3), (4) and (5) of this subsection shall be subject to reasonable standards for operating safety and reliability and the nondiscriminatory assessment of costs against private power producers, approved by the Department of Public Utility Control with respect to electric public service companies or determined by municipal electric energy cooperatives and municipal electric utilities.
(c) The Department of Public Utility Control, with respect to electric public service companies, and each municipal electric energy cooperative and municipal electric utility shall establish rates and conditions of service for: (1) The purchase of electrical energy and capacity made available by a private power producer and (2) the sale of backup electricity to a private power producer. The rates for electricity purchased from a private power producer shall be based on the full avoided costs of the electric public service company, municipal electric energy cooperative or municipal electric utility, regardless of whether the purchaser is simultaneously making sales to the private power producer. Payment for energy and capacity purchased from a private power producer by any such company, cooperative or utility shall be pursuant to such rates and conditions or the terms of a contract between the parties. The rates and conditions of service for the purchase of energy and capacity established by the department pursuant to this subsection shall include specific schedules for pricing in long-term contracts for the sale of electricity from small renewable power projects to electric public service companies by private power producers. Such schedules shall not exceed the present worth of the projected avoided costs of the electric public service company over the term of the contract. The department shall apply to a proposed contract filed with the department after January 1, 1992, by a private power producer for a small renewable power project the rates and conditions of service, including the pricing schedule, in effect on the date the private power producer submits its proposed contract to the department, regardless of the subsequent creation of differing schedules or the subsequent amendment of existing schedules.
(d) When any person, firm or corporation proposes to enter into a contract to sell energy and capacity as a private power producer, an electric public service company, municipal electric energy cooperative or municipal electric utility shall respond promptly to all requests and offers and negotiate in good faith to arrive at a contract which fairly reflects the provisions of this section and the anticipated avoided costs over the life of the contract. Upon application by a private power producer, the department may approve a contract which provides for payment of less than the anticipated avoided costs if, considering all of the provisions, the contract is at least as favorable to the private power producer as a contract providing for the full avoided costs. The contract may extend for a period of not more than thirty years at the option of the private power producer if it has a generating facility with a capacity of at least one hundred kilowatts.
(e) The department shall consider generating capacity available from cogeneration technology and renewable energy resources in its periodic reviews of electric public service companies and shall require the companies to include the availability of such capacity in applications for rate relief filed in accordance with section 16-19a.
(f) If a private power producer believes that an electric company has violated any provision of this section it may submit a written petition alleging such violation to the department. Upon receipt of the petition, the department shall fix a time and place for a hearing and mail notice of the hearing to the parties in interest at least one week in advance. Upon the hearing, the department may, if it finds the company has violated any such provision, prescribe the manner in which it shall comply.
(g) After January 1, 1992, the department shall approve each proposed contract submitted by a private power producer for a small renewable power project, with any modifications agreed to by the parties to the contract, if the filing meets the standards for exemption from the proposal process and for an approvable contract established pursuant to section 16-6b, and is consistent with the pricing schedules adopted pursuant to subsection (c) of this section. Nothing in this section shall preclude a modification of such a contract if the parties to the contract agree to the modification. Any such modification shall be approved by the department. The department shall reconsider each decision issued pursuant to this section between January 1, 1992, and June 29, 1993, regarding such contracts and shall make any modifications to each such decision necessary to ensure that each such decision conforms with the provisions of this section.
(P.A. 79-214, S. 2; P.A. 80-167, S. 2; 80-482, S. 4, 40, 345, 348; P.A. 81-439, S. 6, 14; P.A. 82-164; P.A. 85-534, S. 4, 5; P.A. 86-289, S. 2, 5; 86-403, S. 111, 132; P.A. 89-43, S. 1, 2; P.A. 93-299, S. 1, 3.)
History: P.A. 80-167 included municipal electric energy cooperatives under provisions of section; P.A. 80-482 made division of public utility control an independent department and abolished department of business regulation; P.A. 81-439 repealed Subsecs. (a) and (b) and amended and relettered Subsecs. (c) and (d) to make rates and conditions of service applicable to all electricity generated by private power producer, rather than to excess electricity generated by producer of more than one megawatt by cogeneration or use of renewable resources, and to all electricity generated by producer of one megawatt or less by such methods; P.A. 82-164 substantially amended the section, adding provisions concerning avoided costs, interconnections, wheeling, parallel operations, contracting, and petitioning department of public utility control; P.A. 85-534 extended, from twenty to thirty years, the maximum contract period where a private power producer has a generating facility with a capacity of at least one hundred kilowatts; P.A. 86-289 made requirement under Subdiv. (4) of Subsec. (b) subject to department approval, set forth department considerations and deadlines for such approval proceedings and made technical revisions, effective June 5, 1986, but not applicable to applications filed under the section with the public utility control department before March 1, 1986; P.A. 86-403 changed applicable date in effective date of P.A. 86-289 from March 1 to May 7, 1986; P.A. 89-43 added provision in Subsec. (c) for specific schedules for pricing in long-term contracts; P.A. 93-299 amended Subsec. (c) by adding provision regarding rates and conditions to be applied to proposed contracts for small renewable power projects, deleting reference to producers with a capacity of five megawatts or less and added new Subsec. (g) regarding approval and modification of proposed contracts for small renewable power projects, effective June 29, 1993.
Cited. 210 C. 349, 357, 359.
Subsec. (a):
Cited. 210 C. 349, 354.
Subsec. (b):
Cited. 210 C. 349, 355, 358.
Subsec. (c):
Cited. 210 C. 349, 351. Subdiv. (2) cited. Id., 349, 355, 358.
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(a) As used in this title:
(1) "Private power production facility" means a facility which generates electricity in the state (A) solely through the use of cogeneration technology, provided the average useful thermal energy output of the facility is at least twenty per cent of the total energy output of the facility, (B) solely through the use of renewable energy sources or (C) through both only;
(2) "Useful thermal energy output" means the thermal energy made available for use in any industrial or commercial process, or used in any heating or cooling application;
(3) "Private power producer" means (A) a subsidiary of a gas public service company which is not affiliated with an electric public service company, or a subsidiary of a holding company controlling, directly or indirectly, a gas public service company but not an electric public service company, which generates electricity solely through ownership of fifty per cent or less of a private power production facility or, with the approval of the Department of Public Utility Control, through ownership of one hundred per cent of a private power production facility which (i) uses a source of energy other than gas as the primary energy source of the facility or (ii) uses gas as the primary energy source of the facility and uses an improved and innovative technology which furthers the state energy policy as set forth in section 16a-35k, (B) a subsidiary of any other public service company or a subsidiary of a holding company controlling, directly or indirectly, such a public service company, which generates electricity solely through ownership of fifty per cent or less of a private power production facility or (C) the state, a political subdivision of the state or any other person, firm or corporation other than a public service company or any corporation which was a public service company, prior to July 1, 1981, and which consents to be regulated as a public service company or a holding company for a public service company, which generates electricity solely through ownership of one hundred per cent or less of a private power production facility or (D) any combination thereof;
(4) "Private power provider" means any person, firm, corporation, nonprofit corporation, limited liability company, governmental entity, or other entity, including any public service company, holding company, or subsidiary, which provides energy conservation or demand management measures pursuant to section 16-243f and regulations and orders issued hereunder, which replace the need for electricity generating capacity that electric public service companies would otherwise require;
(5) "Electricity conservation or demand management measures" means the provision pursuant to this section and section 16-243f and regulations and orders adopted hereunder by a private power provider to an electric public service company or its customers of equipment or services or both designed to conserve electricity or to manage electricity load; and
(6) "Small renewable power project" means any private power production facility which has a capacity of five megawatts or less and is fueled by a renewable resource, as defined in section 16a-2, other than wood.
(b) No provision of this section shall limit the jurisdiction of the Department of Public Utility Control with regard to the effects on a public service company of a private power producer which is an affiliate or a subsidiary of the public service company.
(P.A. 81-439, S. 1, 14; P.A. 85-534, S. 1, 5; P.A. 86-289, S. 1, 5; 86-403, S. 110, 111, 132; P.A. 88-195, S. 1, 3; P.A. 93-299, S. 2, 3; P.A. 95-79, S. 51, 189.)
History: P.A. 85-534 added Subsec. (b), enabling utilities to be deemed to be private power producers on limited basis; P.A. 86-289 replaced entire section with new provisions, effective June 5, 1986, but not applicable to applications filed under the section with the public utility control department before March 1, 1986; P.A. 86-403 made technical changes in definition of "private power production facility" enacted by P.A. 86-289 and changed applicable date in effective date from March 1 to May 7, 1986; P.A. 88-195 redefined "private power producer" to include any corporation which was a public service company before 1981 and which consents to be regulated and added definitions of "private power provider" and "electricity conservation or demand management measures"; P.A. 93-299 amended Subsec. (a) by adding Subdiv. (6) defining "small renewable power project", effective June 29, 1993; P.A. 95-79 redefined "private power provider" to include a limited liability company, effective May 31, 1995.
Subsec. (a):
Subdiv. (1) cited. 210 C. 349, 354. Subdiv. (3) cited. Id., 349, 355.
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The Department of Public Utility Control may issue orders requiring electric companies to provide, within their service areas, electricity transmission and distribution services between a generating facility operated by an electric cooperative under subsection (b) of section 33-219 and those members of the cooperative operating the facility to whom the cooperative is authorized to furnish electricity under subsection (d) of section 33- 221 and governing the rates for the service. The department may not issue any order under this subsection which would significantly impair the ability of an electric company to perform its responsibilities to the public or would otherwise be contrary to the purposes of this title.
(P.A. 81-439, S. 11, 14; P.A. 84-512, S. 15, 30.)
History: P.A. 84-512 deleted reference to repealed Sec. 16a-35.
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A project to be used for the production of electricity by a private power producer, as defined in section 16-243b, shall be deemed an "industrial project" under chapter 579, provided that a portion of such electricity is produced for sale to other persons.
(P.A. 81-439, S. 12, 14.)
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Sec. 16-243e. Electric company purchase of electricity generated by municipal resources recovery facilities. (a) Any electric company, as defined in section 16-1, purchasing electricity generated by a resources recovery facility, as defined in section 22a-260, owned by, or operated by or for the benefit of, a municipality or municipalities, shall enter into a contract with the owner of such facility requiring the electric company to purchase all of the electricity generated at such facility from waste which originated in the franchise area of the electric company, for a period beginning on the date that the facility begins generating electricity and having a duration of not less than twenty years, at the same rate that the electric company charges the municipality or municipalities for electricity.
(b) Not later than April 1, 2000, the department shall determine the rate paid for electricity generated at the facility from waste that originated within the electric company's franchise area and that was purchased under each contract entered into pursuant to subsection (a) of this section during calendar year 1999. Not later than October 1, 2000, and annually thereafter, the department shall calculate the difference between the amount paid by the successor electric distribution company pursuant to each such contract in effect during the preceding fiscal year for electricity generated at the facility from waste that originated within such franchise area and the amount that would have been paid had the company been obligated to pay the rate in effect during calendar year 1999, as determined by the department. The difference, if positive, shall be recovered through the systems benefits charge established under section 16-245l and remitted to the regional resource recovery authority acting on behalf of member municipalities.
(P.A. 83-529, S. 1; P.A. 85-297, S. 3, 4; P.A. 94-92, S. 1; P.A. 98-28, S. 61, 117.)
History: P.A. 85-297 required electricity to be purchased by contract where previously electric companies were required to compensate municipalities for electricity produced by recovery facilities; P.A. 94-92 required purchase of all electricity generated at such facility from waste which originated in the franchise area of the electric company; P.A. 98-28 designated existing provisions as Subsec. (a) and added new Subsec. (b) re the maintenance of municipal rates at rate in effect during calendar year 1999, effective July 1, 1998.
Does not require purchase of all electrical output of Southeastern Conn. Regional Resources Recovery Authority at "municipal rate". 210 C. 349, 351, 352, 354—359. Provides for exclusive use of the "municipal rate" for purchase by an electric company from a resource recovery facility of electrical output attributable to franchise waste and that the parties' agreement unambiguously requires payment of the "municipal rate" for the entire output so attributed. 244 C. 280.
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Sec. 16-243f. Private power providers. Regulations concerning the purchase and sale of electricity. (a) The Department of Public Utility Control shall adopt regulations, in accordance with chapter 54, which establish procedures to determine the manner in which capacity needs of electric public service companies may be met through the provision of electricity conservation and demand management measures by private power providers, in addition to or in lieu of electricity generation facilities and to determine the monitoring and evaluation plans to be employed in documenting the demand and energy savings achieved, including, where practicable and cost-effective, impact measurement methods implemented through metering arrangements, with appropriate adjustment for weather normalization and other factors influencing usage levels. In adopting and implementing said regulations, the department shall take into account state energy policy, pursuant to section 16a-35k.
(b) A private power provider may offer to provide electricity conservation or demand management measures to an electric public service company pursuant to section 16-243b and this section and the regulations adopted under subsection (a) of this section. The department shall review and evaluate such proposals based on the factors specified in said regulations, and after notice and a hearing, render a determination as to the feasibility of the proposed electricity conservation and demand management measures. The department may, in accordance with such regulations, order an electric public service company to enter into an agreement with a private power provider where the private power provider would furnish electricity conservation or demand management measures to the electric public service company or its customers.
(P.A. 88-195, S. 2, 3; P.A. 92-122, S. 2.)
History: P.A. 92-122 amended Subsec. (a) to require department to include in its regulations the determination of monitoring and evaluation plans to be employed in documenting savings.
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Notwithstanding any provision of the general statutes or of any special act to the contrary, no electric company, as defined in section 16-1, municipal electric energy cooperative established under chapter 101a or municipal electric utility established under chapter 101 which has entered into a contract to purchase electricity from a private power producer, as defined in section 16-243b, shall refuse or neglect to execute an assignment of an electricity purchase agreement or contract to a trustee as security for or protection of bonds issued to refinance outstanding bonds originally issued or reissued to finance the major portion of the costs of the acquisition, construction and installation of a private power production facility, as defined in section 16-243b.
(P.A. 94-92, S. 2.)
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On and after January 1, 2000, each electric supplier, as defined in section 16-1, shall give a credit for any electricity generated by a residential customer from a Class I renewable energy source or a hydropower facility as described in subdivision (27) of section 16-1. The electric distribution company providing electric distribution services to such a customer shall make such interconnections necessary to accomplish such purpose. An electric distribution company, at the request of any residential customer served by such company and if necessary to implement the provisions of this section, shall provide for the installation of metering equipment that (1) measures electricity consumed by such customer from the facilities of the electric distribution company, (2) deducts from the measurement the amount of electricity produced by the customer and not consumed by the customer, and (3) registers, for each billing period, the net amount of electricity either (i) consumed and produced by the customer, or (ii) the net amount of electricity produced by the customer. A residential customer who generates electricity pursuant to the provisions of this section shall be assessed for the competitive transition assessment, pursuant to section 16-245g and the systems benefits charge, pursuant to section 16-245l based on the amount of electricity consumed by the customer from the facilities of the electric distribution company without netting any electricity produced by the customer. For purposes of this section, "residential customer" means a customer of a single-family dwelling or multifamily dwelling consisting of two to four units.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 43, 117.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective July 1, 1998 (Revisor's note: In codifying this section, incorrect references to "section 11 of this act" and "section 16 of this act" were deemed by the Revisors to be references to "section 10" and "section 18" and codified as section 16-245g and section 16-245l, respectively).
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The General Assembly finds and declares that:
(1) The provision of affordable, safe and reliable electricity is key to the continuing growth of this state and to the health, safety and general welfare of its residents;
(2) Rates for electricity in this state and in the region are higher than the national average;
(3) Changes in generating technology now enable the provision of electric service at much lower rates than are currently being charged in Connecticut and competitive market forces can play a role in the reduction of Connecticut rates;
(4) It is in the best interest of the state to reduce rates for electricity to all customer classes, to prevent cross subsidization among customer classes and to allow for the competitive generation of electricity while retaining a regulated distribution system to ensure reliability;
(5) A competitive generation market should allow customers to choose among alternative generation services and allow customers a reasonable and fair opportunity to self- generate and interconnect;
(6) Those public policy measures under current law, including, but not limited to, those protecting customers under the winter moratorium and hardship provisions as well as conservation measures and incentives for using renewable energy sources, should be preserved;
(7) State regulations should encourage and allow for a sufficient number of in-state generating facilities to ensure an adequate and reliable power supply within the state and ensure development of a truly competitive generation market;
(8) The assurance of safe, reliable and available electric service to all customers in a uniform and equitable manner is an essential governmental objective and a restructured electric market must provide adequate safeguards to assure universal service and customer service protections;
(9) The generation of electricity must be achieved in a manner that does not endanger the public health or safety and that minimizes negative environmental impacts;
(10) The restructuring of the electric industry may result in a reduction in staffing levels at Connecticut generation facilities and those workers adversely affected by such restructuring should be protected;
(11) The current method of providing electric service has involved a balancing of costs, risks and rewards for electric utilities and their customers, and therefore the transition to a competitive generation market, including the determination of stranded costs, should be based on the principles of fairness and reasonableness and the result of a balance of the interests of electric customers, electric utilities and the public at large; and
(12) It is in the best interest of the state for all customers to use electricity as efficiently as possible.
(1949 Rev., S. 5656; P.A. 98-28, S. 2.)
History: P.A. 98-28 replaced existing provisions re authority of corporations to sell, transmit, convey and deliver electricity with declarations concerning deregulation of electric industry, effective July 1, 1998.
Cited. 145 C. 243.
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(a) For purposes of this section, "base rates" means the total amount charged by an electric company to each end use customer class, as defined in its rate order in effect on July 1, 1998, for the fully bundled costs of electricity, including any customer service charge and any demand charge.
(b) Notwithstanding sections 16-19 and 16-19a for the period from July 1, 1998, until December 31, 1999, the base rates paid to an electric company by any customer in the state for electric services, other than a customer receiving electric services under a special contract, shall not exceed the base rates that have been approved by the Department of Public Utility Control for that electric company as of December 31, 1996. Base rates shall be adjusted to the extent of any increase or decrease in state taxes attributable to sections 12-264 and 12-265 and any other increase or decrease in state or federal taxes resulting from a change in state or federal law and shall continue to be adjusted during such period pursuant to section 16-19b. Base rates may be adjusted, by an increase or decrease, to the extent approved by the department, in the event that the revenue requirements of the company are affected as the result of changes in legislative enactments other than public act 98-28*, administrative requirements or accounting standards occurring after July 1, 1998, provided such accounting standards are adopted by entities independent of the company that have authority to issue such standards. Savings attributable to a reduction in taxes shall not be shifted between customer classes. The calculation of base rates for purposes of this section shall not be affected by the change in billing format provided in subsection (b) of section 16-244e.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 3, 117.)
*Public act 98-28 is entitled "An Act Concerning Electric Restructuring". (See Reference Table captioned "Public Acts of 1998" in Volume 16 which lists the sections amended, created or repealed by the act.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective July 1, 1998.
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All customers of electric distribution companies, as defined in section 16-1, shall have the opportunity to purchase electric generation services from their choice of electric suppliers, as defined in said section 16-1, in a competitive generation market in accordance with the schedule provided in this section. On and after January 1, 2000, up to thirty-five per cent of the peak load of each rate class of an electric company or electric distribution company, as the case may be, may choose an electric supplier to provide their electric generation services, provided such customers shall be located in distressed municipalities, as defined in section 32-9p. In the event that the number of customers exceeds thirty-five per cent of such load, preference shall be given to customers located in distressed municipalities with a population greater than one hundred thousand persons. Participation shall be determined on a first-come, first-served basis. As of July 1, 2000, all customers shall have the opportunity to choose an electric supplier. On and after January 1, 2000, electric generation services shall be provided in accordance with section 16-244c to any customer who has not chosen an electric supplier or has declined, failed or been unable to enter into or maintain a contract for electric generation services with an electric supplier. The Department of Public Utility Control may adopt regulations in accordance with chapter 54 to implement the phase- in schedule provided in this subsection.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 4, 117.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective July 1, 1998.
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Sec. 16-244c. Standard offer. Rates of standard offer established by department; duration; adjustments; eligibility. Duties of electric distribution company to provide default and back-up generation services; procedures. (a) (1) On and after January 1, 2000, each electric distribution company, as defined in section 16-1, shall make available to all customers in its service area, the provision of electric generation and distribution services through a standard offer. Under the standard offer, a customer shall receive electric services at a rate established by the Department of Public Utility Control pursuant to subdivision (2) of this subsection. Each electric distribution company shall provide electric generation services in accordance with such option to any customer who affirmatively chooses to receive electric generation services pursuant to the standard offer or does not or is unable to arrange for or maintain electric generation services with an electric supplier, as defined in said section 16-1. The standard offer shall automatically terminate on January 1, 2004, unless extended by the General Assembly pursuant to section 74 of public act 98-28*. While providing electric generation services under the standard offer, an electric distribution company may provide electric generation services through any of its generation entities or affiliates, provided such entities or affiliates are licensed pursuant to section 16-245.
(2) Not later than October 1, 1999, the Department of Public Utility Control shall establish the standard offer for each electric distribution company, effective January 1, 2000, which shall allocate the costs of such company among electric transmission and distribution services, electric generation services, the competitive transition assessment and the systems benefits charge. The department shall hold a hearing that shall be conducted as a contested case in accordance with chapter 54 to establish the standard offer. The standard offer shall provide that the total rate charged under the standard offer, including electric transmission and distribution services, the conservation and load management program charge described in section 16-245m, the renewable energy investment charge described in section 16-245n, electric generation services, the competitive transition assessment and the systems benefits charge shall be at least ten per cent less than the base rates, as defined in section 16-244a, in effect on December 31, 1996. The standard offer shall be adjusted to the extent of any increase or decrease in state taxes attributable to sections 12-264 and 12-265 and any other increase or decrease in state or federal taxes resulting from a change in state or federal law and shall continue to be adjusted during such period pursuant to section 16-19b. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 16-19b, the provisions of said section 16-19b shall apply to electric distribution companies. The standard offer may be adjusted, by an increase or decrease, to the extent approved by the department, in the event that (A) the revenue requirements of the company are affected as the result of changes in legislative enactments other than public act 98-28**, administrative requirements or accounting standards occurring after July 1, 1998, provided such accounting standards are adopted by entities independent of the company that have authority to issue such standards, or (B) an electric distribution company incurs extraordinary and unanticipated expenses required for the provision of safe and reliable electric service to the extent necessary to provide such service. Savings attributable to a reduction in taxes shall not be shifted between customer classes.
(3) The price reduction provided in subdivision (2) of this subsection shall not apply to customers who, on or after July 1, 1998, are purchasing electric services from an electric company or electric distribution company, as the case may be, under a special contract or flexible rate tariff, and the company's filed standard offer tariffs shall reflect that such customers shall not receive the standard offer price reduction.
(b) On and after January 1, 2004, each electric distribution company shall serve any customer who does not or is unable to arrange for or maintain electric generation services with an electric supplier. The electric distribution company shall procure electric generation services for such customers through a competitive bidding process. An electric distribution company may procure electric generation services through any of its generation entities or affiliates, provided such entity or affiliate is the lowest qualified bidder and provided further any such entity or affiliate is licensed pursuant to section 16-245.
(c) On and after January 1, 2000, and until such time the regional independent system operator implements procedures for the provision of back-up power to the satisfaction of the Department of Public Utility Control, each electric distribution company shall provide electric generation services to any customer who has entered into a service contract with an electric supplier that fails to provide electric generation services for reasons other than the customer's failure to pay for such services. Between January 1, 2000, and December 31, 2003, an electric distribution company may procure electric generation services through a competitive bidding process or through any of its generation entities or affiliates. On and after January 1, 2004, such company shall procure electric generation services through a competitive bidding process. Such company may procure electric generation services through any of its generation entities or affiliates, provided such entity or affiliate is the lowest qualified bidder and provided further any such entity or affiliate is licensed pursuant to section 16-245.
(d) An electric distribution company is not required to be licensed pursuant to section 16-245 to provide standard offer electric generation services in accordance with subsection (a) of this section or back-up electric generation services prior to January 1, 2004, in accordance with subsection (c) of this section.
(e) The electric distribution company shall be entitled to recover reasonable costs incurred as a result of providing standard offer electric generation services pursuant to the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, the default service pursuant to subsection (b) of this section or the back-up electric generation services pursuant to subsection (c) of this section. The provisions of this section and section 16-244a shall satisfy the requirements of section 16-19a until January 1, 2004.
(f) The Department of Public Utility Control shall establish, by regulations adopted pursuant to chapter 54, standards or procedures for an electric distribution company's procuring power and competitive bidding for purposes of subsections (b) and (c) of this section in a commercially reasonable manner and procedures for when and how a customer is notified that his electric supplier has defaulted and of the need for the customer to choose a new electric supplier within a reasonable period of time.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 20, 117.)
*Note: Section 74 of public act 98-28 is special in nature and therefore has not been codified but remains in full force and effect according to its terms.
**Note: Public act 98-28 is entitled "An Act Concerning Electric Restructuring". (See Reference Table captioned "Public Acts of 1998 in Volume 16 which lists the sections amended, created or repealed by the act.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective July 1, 1998.
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Sec. 16-244d. Education outreach program for electric deregulation, scope. Hiring of consultant to implement program. Consumer Education Advisory Council established. Determination of environmental costs and benefits of energy sources. (a) Not later than December 1, 1998, the Department of Public Utility Control shall develop a comprehensive public education outreach program to educate customers about the implementation of retail competition among electric suppliers, as defined in section 16-1. The goals of the program shall be to maximize public information, minimize customer confusion and equip all customers to participate in a restructured generation market. The program shall include, but not be limited to: (1) The dissemination of information through mass media, interactive approaches and written materials with the goal of reaching every electric customer; (2) the conduct of public forums in different geographical areas of the state to foster public input and provide opportunities for an exchange of questions and answers; (3) involvement of community-based organizations in developing messages and in devising and implementing education strategies; (4) targeted efforts to reach rural, low income, elderly, foreign language, disabled, ethnic minority and other traditionally underserved populations; and (5) periodic evaluations of the effectiveness of educational efforts. The department shall assign one individual within the department to coordinate the outreach program and oversee the education process. The department shall begin to implement the outreach program not later than January 1, 1999.
(b) There shall be established a Consumer Education Advisory Council which shall advise the outreach program coordinator on the development and implementation of the outreach program until the termination of the standard offer under section 16-244c. Membership of the advisory council shall be established by the Consumer Counsel not later than December 1, 1998, and shall include, but not be limited to, representatives of the Department of Public Utility Control, the Office of Consumer Counsel, the Office of the Attorney General, the Office of Policy and Management, the Department of Environmental Protection, community and business organizations, consumer groups, including, but not limited to, a group that represents hardship customers, as defined in section 16-262c, electric distribution companies and electric suppliers. The advisory council shall determine the information to be distributed to customers as part of the education effort such as customers' rights and obligations in a restructured environment, how customers can exercise their right to participate in retail access, the types of electric suppliers expected to be licensed including the possibility of load aggregation, electric generation services options that will be available, the environmental characteristics of different types of generation facilities and other information determined by the advisory council to be necessary for customers. The advisory council shall advise the outreach program coordinator on the methods of distributing information in accordance with subsection (a) of this section and the timing of such distribution. The advisory council shall meet on a regular basis and report to the outreach program coordinator as it deems appropriate until termination of the advisory council's role upon the termination of the standard offer under section 16-244c.
(c) Not later than December 1, 1998, the Department of Public Utility Control shall submit a report to the joint standing committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to energy, outlining the scope of the education outreach program developed by the department and identifying the individual acting as outreach program coordinator and the membership of the advisory council.
(d) The department may retain a consultant in accordance with section 16-18a to assist in developing and implementing the public education outreach program, provided the authorization to retain such consultant shall expire December 31, 2005. The reasonable and proper expenses for retaining the consultant and implementing the outreach program shall be reimbursed through the systems benefits charge as provided in subsection (b) of said section 16-18a.
(e) The advisory council shall, in consultation with the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering and the New England Conference of Public Utility Commissioners, analyze the environmental costs and benefits of the following categories of energy sources: (1) Class I renewable energy sources by type; (2) Class II renewable energy sources by type; (3) facilities using coal, natural gas, oil or other petroleum products as fuel which facilities are subject to the New Source Performance Standards in the federal Clean Air Act for such facilities; (4) facilities using coal, natural gas, oil or other petroleum products as fuel which facilities are not subject to the New Source Performance Standards; (5) nuclear power generating facilities; and (6) hydropower that does not meet the criteria for a Class II renewable energy source. The advisory council shall establish uniform standards for the disclosure of information to allow customers to easily compare rates of air pollutant emissions and the resource mix of various energy sources of electric suppliers.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 17, 117; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-9, S. 18, 131.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective July 1, 1998; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-9 extended the authority of the Department of Public Utility Control to retain consultants for implementing the public education outreach program from December 31, 2000, to December 31, 2005, effective July 1, 2001.
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Sec. 16-244e. Unbundling by electric companies of generation functions from transmission and distribution functions. Plan. (a) (1) Not later than October 1, 1998, each electric company shall submit an unbundling plan to the department to unbundle and separate, by October 1, 1999, all the company's generation assets that (A) prior to the date when the department approves a divestiture plan pursuant to section 16-244f or 16-244g, are not sold in accordance with section 16-43, and (B) on and after the date when the department approves such plan, will not be divested as of January 1, 2000, in accordance with sections 16-244f and 16-244g.
(2) For any nonnuclear generation asset that will not be divested by January 1, 2000, unbundling and separation shall occur by transfer on a functional basis to one or more corporate affiliates that are legally separate from the company's transmission and distribution assets and all related operations and functions, in which case, no stranded costs shall be recovered.
(3) For any nuclear generation asset that will not be sold by January 1, 2000, unbundling and separation shall occur by (A) divestiture pursuant to section 16-244g, (B) transfer on a functional basis to one or more corporate affiliates that are legally separate from the company's transmission and distribution assets and all related operations and functions, or (C) if required to comply with rules, regulations or licensing requirements of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, transfer on a functional basis to one or more divisions that are structurally separate from the electric distribution company.
(4) The unbundling plan and order shall provide for the allocation of the rights and responsibilities pursuant to sections 16-245e to 16-245k, inclusive, between the electric distribution company and any generation entities or affiliates and shall provide for the allocation of revenue under a special contract among those components of a customer's bill specified in subdivision (1) of subsection (a) of section 16-245d. Such plan shall include a proposed modification or elimination to the adjustment pursuant to section 16- 19b. Such plan shall not allow the transfer of assets or liabilities allocable or belonging to transmission or distribution functions or facilities to the generation entity or affiliate of an electric company, nor allow the transfer of assets or liabilities, other than financial assets or liabilities to be funded by the competitive transition assessment pursuant to section 16-245g or the systems benefits charge pursuant to section 16-245l, allocable or belonging to generation functions or facilities to the electric distribution company, as defined in section 16-1, unless federal law or regulation requires such a transfer with regard to nuclear generation assets. All entitlements and obligations from any purchased power contract or independent power producer contract entered into before July 1, 1998, by the predecessor electric company which are not bought out shall succeed to the electric distribution company. Such plan shall include a discussion of the impacts of the proposed plan on the company's employees and plans for mitigating such impact.
(5) The department shall hold a hearing and issue a final order approving or modifying the plan in a time frame that will allow unbundling to be accomplished by October 1, 1999. Any hearing shall be conducted as a contested case in accordance with chapter 54. Such plan shall be submitted and such order issued consistent with the determination and implementation of the competitive transition assessment, as provided in section 16-245g.
(6) Once unbundling is completed to the satisfaction of the department and consistent with the provisions of section 16-244, any corporate affiliate or separate division that provides electric generation services as a result of unbundling pursuant to this subsection shall be considered a generation entity or affiliate of the electric company, and the division or corporate affiliate of the electric company that provides transmission and distribution services shall be considered an electric distribution company.
(b) Not later than August 1, 1998, the Department of Public Utility Control shall hold a hearing and issue a final order that unbundles prices or rates for electric generation services for each electric company from all other charges. Any hearing shall be conducted as a contested case in accordance with chapter 54. On and after July 1, 1999, each electric company or electric distribution company, as the case may be, shall provide all customers with a bill that separates the electric generation services component of those charges. Any unbundling of charges for electric generation services under this subsection shall not affect the calculation of base rates under section 16-244a.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 5, 117.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective July 1, 1998.
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(a) As used in this section:
(1) "Generation assets" means electric generation facilities and generation-related operations and functions owned by an electric company and includes associated contractual obligations for energy or capacity from such generation assets; and
(2) "Net proceeds" means the book income from the sale or divestiture of assets, consisting of sales price less reasonable expenses of sale, related income and other taxes.
(b) (1) No electric company shall be eligible to claim any stranded costs as provided in sections 16-245e to 16-245k, inclusive, unless the electric company (A) prior to the date when the department approves a divestiture plan, has sold its nonnuclear generation assets in accordance with section 16-43, and (B) on and after the date when the department approves such plan, has submitted all of its nonnuclear generation assets owned or held as of April 29, 1998, to a public auction held in a commercially reasonable manner in accordance with this subsection.
(2) Each electric company that elects to divest itself of nonnuclear generation assets shall, not later than October 1, 1998, submit a divestiture plan to the Department of Public Utility Control. The divestiture plan shall include (A) any documentation the department determines is reasonably necessary to approve the auction procedure, including a copy of the request for proposal and a description of the solicitation process, (B) a detailed description of the process for the sale and transfer of nonnuclear generation assets, and (C) the book value of all assets the electric company intends to make available for sale. In structuring the divestiture plan, the electric company shall take into account the findings set forth in section 16-244. The department shall issue a final order approving or modifying the plan in a time frame that will allow divestiture to be accomplished by January 1, 2000. The department shall, after consultation with the Office of Consumer Counsel, appoint a consultant who shall be an entity unrelated to said company that meets qualifications set by the department, to conduct the auction process.
(3) The department shall not approve a sale unless (A) the sale price of an asset or assets equals or exceeds book value for the asset or assets, except for any dual-fueled nonnuclear generation unit that began operation between 1974 and 1976 and has a capacity of not less than four hundred twenty megawatts, in which case the sale price for that specific unit equals or exceeds the minimum bid established by the department for the unit, (B) the department determines the bidder meets all applicable qualifications established by federal law and regulation, (C) the sale is conducted in accordance with the divestiture plan as approved by the department, (D) the bidder proves to the satisfaction of the department that the bidder will preserve labor agreements in effect at the time of the sale, and (E) the sale will result in a net benefit to ratepayers, as determined by the department. Transfer in ownership of any asset shall not occur until the department determines the purchaser is fully qualified to provide electric generation services pursuant to section 16-245 or pursuant to applicable federal law and regulation. If the department approves a sale in accordance with the provisions of this section, no further proceedings under section 16-43 shall be required.
(4) The department shall determine the minimum bid price for a dual-fueled nonnuclear generation unit that began operation between 1974 and 1976 and has a capacity of not less than four hundred twenty megawatts, by determining the future net cash flow that a nonnuclear generation unit of comparable size, age and technical characteristics that is prudently and efficiently managed would be expected to produce over its expected remaining useful life, discounted to a present value.
(5) A generation entity or affiliate of an electric company may bid on any nonnuclear generation asset, provided such entity or affiliate is qualified to bid, as provided in this subsection.
(6) All net proceeds realized by an electric company from the sale of assets pursuant to this subsection that exceed the total book value of all the assets sold pursuant to this section shall be netted against the amount of stranded costs as provided in subdivision (4) of subsection (h) and subsection (i) of section 16-245e.
(7) If an electric company complies with the provisions of this subsection but does not receive any bids for an asset by a qualified bidder that equal or exceed the minimum bid as provided in this subsection, the department shall calculate the value of stranded costs for each such asset in accordance with the provisions of subsection (g) of section 16-245e.
(P.A. 98-28, S. 6, 117.)
History: P.A. 98-28 effective April 29, 1998.
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(a) As used in this section, "generation assets" means "generation assets", as defined in section 16-244f, and "net proceeds" means "net proceeds", as defined in section 16-244f.
(b) Not later than January 1, 2004, each electric distribution company shall either (1) submit its nuclear generation assets to a public auction held in a commercially reasonable manner, in accordance with subsection (c) of this section in order to divest itself of remaining nuclear generation assets, or (2) transfer remaining nuclear generation assets to one or more legally separate corporate affiliates at their book value, in which case no stranded costs shall be recovered.
(c) (1) Each electric distribution company that elects to divest itself of its nuclear generation assets shall, in a time frame that will allow divestiture to occur by January 1, 2004, submit a divestiture plan to the Department of Public Utility Control. The divestiture plan shall include (A) any documentation the department determines is reasonably necessary to approve the auction procedure, including a copy of the request for proposal and a description of the solicitation process, (B) a detailed description of the process for the sale and transfer of nuclear generation assets, and (C) information the department determines is necessary for the department to determine the value of the minimum bid for each nuclear generation asset, as provided in subdivision (3) of this subsection. The department shall hold a hearing and issue a final order approving or modifying the plan in a time frame that will allow divestiture to be accomplished by January 1, 2004. Any hearing shall be conducted as a contested case in accordance with chapter 54. The department shall, after consultation with the Office of Consumer Counsel, appoint a consultant who shall be an entity unrelated to the said company that meets qualifications set by the department, to conduct the auction process.
(2) The department shall not approve a sale unless (A) the sale price equals or exceeds the minimum bid established by the department for the asset, (B) the department determines the bidder meets all applicable qualifications established by federal law and regulation, (C) the sale is conducted in accordance with the divestiture plan as approved by the department, (D) the bidder proves to the