Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 110

CourtMaryland Attorney General Reports
DecidedDecember 5, 2011
Docket96 OAG 110
StatusPublished

This text of Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 110 (Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 110) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Maryland Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 110, (Md. 2011).

Opinion

110 [96 Op. Att’y

PUBLIC UTILITIES

COUNTIES – CHARTER HOME RULE COUNTIES – WHETHER MONTGOMERY COUNTY HAS AUTHORITY TO CREATE A PUBLICLY CONTROLLED ELECTRIC COMPANY

December 5, 2011

Valerie Ervin, President Montgomery County Council

You have asked whether Montgomery County (“County”) has authority to create a publicly controlled electric company to distribute electricity to County customers in place of Potomac Electric Power Company (“PEPCO”).

In compliance with our policy on opinion requests from local governments, you provided the County Attorney’s opinion on various legal issues raised by your question. The County Attorney concluded that the County could not assign such a function to a County agency but would need to create a new entity under the State corporation law to distribute electricity; that such an entity might hold a franchise to distribute electricity, but could not exercise that franchise without the approval of the Public Service Commission (“PSC”); that the entity would have to obtain the consent of a municipality to lay or construct power lines in the municipality; and that neither the entity nor the County could condemn the infrastructure of an operating utility like PEPCO without the General Assembly’s express authorization to do so. A copy of that opinion is attached.

We concur with the County Attorney’s description of the legal prerequisites to the displacement of PEPCO by a County-controlled distributor of electricity. We elaborate only on the PSC approval process.

As the County Attorney indicated, a new entity would have to apply to the PSC for the right to exercise a franchise to distribute electricity to County customers. That process would concern not only the new entity’s ability to serve the County’s citizens, but also Gen. 110] 111

the modification of PEPCO’s service territory.1 PEPCO’s existing service territory in Maryland also extends to Prince George’s County and Howard County.2 The PSC has explained that “electric service boundaries should not be changed without strong clear evidence of need, equity, and practicality of the proposed change.” In re Choptank Electric Cooperative and St. Michaels Utilities Commission, PSC Case No. 9071, Order No. 81068, 2006 PSC LEXIS 23.3 We understand that the County has raised the prospect of modifying PEPCO’s service territory in a pending proceeding before the PSC. See In re Investigation into the Reliability and Quality of the Electric Distribution Service of Potomac Electric

1 As a practical matter, the success of such an application would likely depend at the outset on the new entity’s ability to acquire PEPCO’s distribution infrastructure by condemnation. See Town of Easton v. Public Service Commission, 379 Md. 21, 33, 838 A. 2d 1225 (2003) (PSC’s authority to designate where a company may exercise its franchise “enables it to assure the efficient and non-duplicative provision of service”). We agree with the County Attorney that the current law does not empower a new public service entity to condemn another public service company’s real property interests and other components of its infrastructure for the purpose of providing the same services. Given the extensive State regulation of electric companies and the cross- jurisdictional nature of PEPCO’s service territory, the delegation of such a power would be a matter for a State law, not a local ordinance. For a discussion of various legal issues raised by a local government’s attempt to take over the operations of a public utility, see S.R. Saxer, Government Power Unleashed: Using Eminent Domain to Acquire a Public Utility or Other Ongoing Enterprise, 38 Ind. L. Rev. 55 (2005). 2 PEPCO also provides service in Washington, D.C. 3 Choptank illustrates the difficulty of proving those three propositions. In that case, the PSC found the petitioner’s proof insufficient and declined to divide the service territory in question. First, the PSC found that “practicality cuts against carving up the [existing] service territory” because that change would “leave uncertain the future” of the territory left to the partially-ousted utility. 2006 PSC LEXIS at *54-55. Second, it found “no paramount or preeminent ‘need’ to serve [the existing territory]; that is, there is no service problem in either of the areas that would be fixed by awarding the territory to [the applicant],” Id. at *56-57. Finally, the PSC found that the petition was not “advanced by equity considerations,” because, “[e]ven assuming that fair value would be exchanged for the property being acquired,” the applicant had “offered no particular claim that a failure to grant its petition would be inequitable. . . .” Id. at *57. 112 [96 Op. Att’y

Power Company, Case #9240, Order No. 83526.4 In any event, the power to condemn PEPCO’s infrastructure, or, for that matter, a simple purchase of that infrastructure, would not by itself assure a new entity of PSC approval to modify PEPCO’s service territory.

Douglas F. Gansler Attorney General

Ann MacNeille Assistant Attorney General Robert N. McDonald Chief Counsel Opinions and Advice

County Opinion Follows

4 The County has intervened in that proceeding, asserting that [PEPCO] “has ... operat[ed] an unreliable electric system in Maryland since at least 2005,” and has asked the PSC to order PEPCO to take certain remedial actions. Reply Brief of Montgomery County, p. 23. The County has requested that, if PEPCO does not improve certain reliability statistics within two years of PSC’s issuance of an order in the case, the PSC “act ... to initiate a proceeding to modify [PEPCO’s] service territory to remove Montgomery County or revoke [PEPCO’s] authority to exercise its franchise to serve Montgomery County, so that the County can move toward obtaining highly reliable electric service from a replacement utility.” Id. at pp. 16-17; see also Initial Brief of Montgomery County at p. 30. Gen. 110] 113

OFFICE OF THE COUNTY ATTORNEY

Isiah Leggett Marc P. Hansen County Executive County Attorney

TO: Valerie Ervin, President County Council

Roger Berliner, Vice President County Council

FROM: Marc P. Hansen County Attorney DATE: September 6, 2011

RE: Public Electric Company – Creation

The Council has asked what steps Montgomery County would need to take in order to create a publicly controlled electric company to provide electric service to County customers in the place of Potomac Electric Power Company (PEPCO). The specific questions posed are:

! What changes, if any, would be required in state law to allow for our residents to be served by public power?

! What is the role of the Maryland Public Service Commission, if any, in reviewing or approving the transfer of PEPCO's franchise to a public power entity?

! What are the principal legal issues that arise when pursuing public power in the context of taking service over from an incumbent?

! If an eminent domain action were to be required to assume control of the electric distribution system, how would Montgomery County go about determining the value of the assets? 114 [96 Op. Att’y

Short Answer

In order for a publicly owned and controlled electric utility company to provide electric power to the residents of Montgomery County the following steps would need to be taken by the County:

1) Form a non-stock, non-profit corporation1 to operate an electric company under the Corporations and Associations Article of the Maryland Code;

2) Obtain the consent (i.e. a franchise) from the governing bodies of each municipality in the County to lay or construct power lines within the boundaries of the municipality in accordance with the Public Utilities Article of the Maryland Code;2

3) Obtain from the General Assembly the authority to acquire PEPCO's infrastructure by condemnation;3 and

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Bluebook (online)
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 96 OAG 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-attorney-general-opinion-96-oag-110-mdag-2011.