Missouri Public Service Commission v. Office of Public Counsel

526 S.W.3d 253, 2017 WL 2333056, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 531
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 2017
DocketWD 79988
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 526 S.W.3d 253 (Missouri Public Service Commission v. Office of Public Counsel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Public Service Commission v. Office of Public Counsel, 526 S.W.3d 253, 2017 WL 2333056, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 531 (Mo. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Cynthia L. Martin, Judge

The Office of Public Counsel (“OPC”) appeals from the Public Service Commission’s (“Commission”) report and order that consolidated Missouri-American Water Company’s (“MAWC”) water systems into three districts for the purpose of setting rates. OPC argues on appeal that the Commission erred in two respects. First, OPC asserts that the Commission’s report and order is unlawful in that its creation of three water districts violates the statutory prohibition against providing an undue or unreasonable preference, prejudice, or disadvantage to one locality of the state over another. Second, OPC claims that the Commission's report and order is unreasonable in that the Commission made six findings of fact that are not supported by the record. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural History

MAWC is a public utility and water corporation, as those terms are defined in section 386.020(43) and (59),1 subject to regulation by the Commission as provided in Chapters 386 and 393. MAWC provides water service to nineteen distinct water systems, serving 459,439 customers in the state.2 MAWC’s water systems are spread throughout the state so that none are physically interconnected.

The Legislature created the Commission to serve as the state administrative agency responsible for the regulation of public utilities, including water corporations, in Missouri. Section 386.040; section 386.250(3). The Commission employs technical experts (“PSC Staff’) who are responsible for representing the Commission and the State of Missouri in all Commission investigations, contested cases, and other proceeding unless PSC Staff timely files a notice of its intention not to participate. OPC is separate from the Commission and PSC Staff. Section 386.710 gives OPC the authority to represent and protect the interests of the public in any proceeding before the Commission or any appeal from an order by the Commission.

On July 31, 2015, MAWC filed proposed tariff sheets seeking a revised rate to generate an additional $51 million in gross annual revenue. In addition to requesting a revised rate, MAWC asked the Commission to approve its proposal to combine its nineteen water systems into three water districts for the purpose of moving toward [257]*257consolidated tariff pricing. MAWC’s proposed tariff sheets had an effective date of August 30, 2015. The Commission suspended the proposed tariff sheets until June 28, 2016, so as to allow time to study the proposed tariff sheets and to determine if the rates resulting therefrom were just, reasonable, and in the public interest.

The Commission received requests to intervene from: the Missouri Industrial Energy Consumers (“MIEC”); the Missouri Department of Economic Development—Division of Energy (“MO Division of Energy”); Triumph Foods, LLC; the City ofWarrensburg, Missouri; the City of St. Joseph, Missouri; the City of Joplin, Missouri; Public Water Supply District Nos. 1 and 2 of Andrew County, Missouri; the City of Riverside, Missouri; the City of Brunswick, Missouri; Stonebridge Village Property Owners Association; and the Utility Workers Union of America Local 335. The Commission granted all requests to intervene.

The Commission held public hearings across the state in January 2016. Following those public hearings, MAWC, PSC Staff, OPC, MIEC, and the MO Division of Energy submitted a non-unanimous stipulation and agreement to increase MAWC’s revenue by $30.6 million to the Commission. No party objected to the non-unanimous stipulation and agreement. The Commission approved this non-unanimous stipulation and agreement as well as a second non-unanimous stipulation and agreement. An evidentiary hearing was held regarding the remaining issues on March 21-23, 2016.

While the Commission heard evidence as to the remaining issues, the only issue that is relevant to this appeal was determining how to allocate the cost of providing service to the various water systems for the purpose of developing the rates that the customers served' by those systems must pay. In other words, the Commission considered MAWC’s request to consolidate its nineteen water systems into three water districts for the purpose of moving toward consolidated tariff pricing. MAWC’s costs of service include those costs that can be directly assigned to a particular water system—e.g., the cost of a treatment facility or the mains and pipes that service that system—as well as costs that are applicable to every water system—e.g., a customer call center, billing services, and other corporate services.

The Commission took testimony about methods for allocating costs to water systems. First is district-specific pricing, which takes all of the costs of providing service to each individual water system and develops rates based upon that water system’s cost of service. Under district-specific pricing, the customers in each water system pay a rate based only on the costs associated with providing service to that water system. Second is .single-tariff pricing, in which all costs from the utility are combined and rates are developed on a utility-wide basis so that all customers pay the same rate based on the combined service costs of all water systems. Under single-tariff pricing, every customer in every water system operated by a particular water utility pays the same rate. District-specific pricing and single-tariff pricing are the extremes on the spectrum of possible methods of allocating service costs and determining rates. A third method for allocating costs is consolidated tariff pricing, in which several water systems are consolidated into a larger district for the purpose of allocating costs and determining rates. Under consolidated tariff pricing, all customers within a consolidated district pay the same rate based on the combined service costs of the water systems within that consolidated district. Effectively, consolidated tariff pricing implements single-tar[258]*258iff pricing amongst consolidated subsets of .water systems operated by a particular water utility.

In a 2000 rate case, .the Commission directed MAWC to move away from its then-existing single-tariff pricing method toward district-specific pricing. By the time MAWC filed the instant proposed tariff sheets, MAWC’s service costs were allocated amongst the various water systems it operated using a hybrid of both methods.. The seven largest water systems MAWC operated had rates that were designed based on their respective cost of service (district-specific pricing). The remaining water systems MAWC operated were consolidated into “District 8,” which was then broken into additional sub-districts for the purpose of allocating costs and determining rates (single-tariff pricing).

In 2010, the General Assembly enacted section 393.320, which addresses the acquisition of smaller water utilities by larger water utilities, and which directed a method whereby upon acquisition, the smaller utility would be consolidated into the larger utility for ratemaking purposes. Though the impetus for enactment of section 393.320 is not certain, the parties agree that earlier Commission directives to water utilities to move toward district-specific pricing (as had been the case with MAWC’s 2000 rate case) were in direct opposition to the concept of consolidation for ratemaking purposes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.3d 253, 2017 WL 2333056, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-public-service-commission-v-office-of-public-counsel-moctapp-2017.