Office of the Public Advocate v. Public Utilities Commission , 2015 Me. LEXIS 123 ( 2015 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                          Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2015 ME 113
    Docket:   PUC-14-414
    Argued:   June 18, 2015
    Decided:  August 13, 2015
    Panel:       SAUFLEY, C.J., and MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HJELM, JJ.
    OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC ADVOCATE et al.
    v.
    PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION et al.
    JABAR, J.
    [¶1] The Maine Office of the Public Advocate (OPA) and Bucksport Mill,
    LLC, appeal from an order of the Maine Public Utilities Commission approving an
    alternative rate plan (ARP) for Bangor Gas Company, LLC. They argue that the
    Commission erred by (1) calculating the ARP initial rate base by utilizing an
    unimpaired, “original cost” valuation of Bangor Gas’s assets rather than the
    impaired “acquisition cost” incurred by Bangor Gas’s parent company; and
    (2) including in its calculation of Bangor Gas’s revenue requirement a portion of
    the utility’s regulatory proceeding expenses amortized over five years. We affirm
    the Commission’s order.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] The following facts were found by the Commission and are supported
    by the record. Bangor Gas is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Penobscot Natural Gas
    2
    Company, Inc. (Penobscot), which in turn is currently owned by Energy West, Inc.
    Bangor Gas provides residential, commercial, and industrial gas service to
    approximately 4,000 customers in Bangor, Brewer, Old Town, Veazie, Bucksport,
    Herman, and Orono. It is also the sole natural gas service provider for Bucksport
    Mill, formerly known as Verso Bucksport, LLC., and Verso Corporation.1
    [¶3] Bangor Gas was first authorized to provide service to the greater
    Bangor area as a start-up gas utility in 1998. At that time, Bangor Gas and its
    parent company, Penobscot, were owned by Sempra Energy, LLC (Sempra).
    Recognizing that the utility was a start-up with large front-end expenses and
    entering a highly competitive market, the Commission approved Bangor Gas’s
    original alternative rate plan (ARP) for a term of ten years. The utility’s rates were
    established by reference to the cost of alternative fuels at the time and to other
    utilities’ rates. The rate plan included an earnings-sharing mechanism, which
    required Bangor Gas to return to ratepayers fifty percent of any earnings in excess
    of fifteen percent of the utility’s cumulative return on equity. The earnings-sharing
    mechanism was imposed to ensure that Bangor Gas would not realize excessive
    earnings over the course of the ten-year rate plan.
    1
    Verso Corporation was originally a named party in this matter. By our order dated February 18,
    2015, Verso Bucksport, LLC was substituted as a party in place of Verso Corporation, and Verso
    Bucksport later changed its name to Bucksport Mill, LLC.
    3
    [¶4]     Much of Bangor Gas’s service infrastructure, including its gas
    transmission and distribution system, was installed before 2007, when Sempra
    owned the utility. Sempra made substantial capital investments in Bangor Gas’s
    plant through the end of 2006. However, Bangor Gas was not profitable and, after
    it lost one of its largest customers, Sempra sought to sell it.
    [¶5] In December 2006, Energy West offered to acquire Penobscot and
    Bangor Gas from Sempra by purchasing Penobscot’s stock for approximately
    $500,000.       The pending sale, as well as Bangor Gas’s lack of profitability,
    triggered an internal “impairment analysis” of Bangor Gas’s assets.2 Pursuant to
    generally accepted accounting principles, Bangor Gas considered Energy West’s
    $500,000 offer to represent the fair value of Bangor Gas’s assets. This analysis
    resulted in Bangor Gas “writing down” the book value of its assets to zero in
    December 2006 and recording, for accounting purposes, an impairment loss3 of
    approximately $38 million.
    [¶6] Sempra formally accepted Energy West’s offer in January 2007. The
    Commission approved the sale and reorganization by order dated November 21,
    2
    Pursuant to Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 144, an “impairment analysis” is a
    method whereby an entity routinely reviews its own long-lived assets to determine the value of those
    assets for the purposes of the company’s internal balance sheet. As occurred in this case, a pending sale
    may also trigger “special impairment testing.”
    3
    When an impairment analysis indicates that the company’s asset is worth less than the value
    recorded on the company’s balance sheet, the company records an impairment loss by writing down the
    value of that asset on the balance sheet to the lower market value.
    4
    2007. At the same time, the Commission extended Bangor Gas’s ARP for three
    years, but increased the earnings-sharing trigger to a thirty percent cumulative rate
    of return, to be calculated from the date of sale so that any losses or profits under
    Sempra’s ownership would be ignored.
    [¶7] At the time of Energy West’s acquisition of Bangor Gas, several
    sections of the utility’s pipelines had not yet been connected to supply sources, and
    thus were not in service supplying natural gas to customers. After Energy West’s
    acquisition, Bangor Gas put those sections into service, added to its infrastructure,
    and grew its customer base.
    [¶8] On December 26, 2012, Bangor Gas filed a petition to renew its ARP
    for a period of ten years.4 OPA and Bucksport Mill filed petitions to intervene,
    which the Commission granted.5                   Over the course of several months, the
    Commission held numerous technical conferences and hearings, and the parties
    filed data disclosures and direct and rebuttal testimony. Bangor Gas presented
    evidence that its then-current rates were among the lowest gas utility rates in
    Maine, and that with those rates and its retained earnings, the company could not
    4
    In its petition, Bangor Gas requested that the Commission continue its then-current rate plan pending
    consideration of the petition. The Commission denied Bangor Gas’s request, finding that, pursuant to
    35-A M.R.S. § 4706 (2014), it had to conduct a revenue requirement and earnings analysis before
    renewing the rate plan.
    5
    The Commission also granted petitions to intervene filed by several towns and the University of
    Maine, none of which are participating in this appeal.
    5
    grow or attract new capital. It also presented evidence that it has “significant
    growth potential if [it] continue[s] to be positioned as a start-up . . . operating
    under an [ARP].”
    [¶9] Bangor Gas did not initially file a revenue requirement calculation with
    the Commission, nor did it request regulatory proceeding expenses in its initial
    petition.      It did, however, request regulatory proceeding expenses in its
    February 2014 rebuttal testimony, proposing that the expenses be amortized at
    $147,424 annually.
    [¶10]      The Commission conducted a cost-of-service and revenue
    requirement analysis pursuant to a traditional rate-setting methodology in order to
    evaluate the reasonableness of the ARP’s starting point rates, see 35-A M.R.S.
    § 4706(3) (2014), and, on September 8, 2014, it issued an order authorizing Bangor
    Gas’s ARP for a term of seven years with no change in its then-existing rates.
    [¶11] The Commission rejected OPA’s argument that the rate base should
    reflect the impaired value of Bangor Gas’s assets—the $500,000 for which Energy
    West acquired the company in 2007—finding that this impaired “book value”
    “would not accurately reflect the current use of the utility’s assets.” Instead, the
    Commission found that Bangor Gas’s rate base was properly calculated utilizing
    6
    the asset’s original cost of approximately $38 million.6 The Commission further
    found that the rate base calculation proposed by OPA and Bucksport Mill “would
    open the door to wide fluctuations in the value of utility assets driven by market
    changes, with corresponding fluctuations in rates.” It determined that Bangor
    Gas’s rates were just and reasonable; would “continue to contribute to [Bangor
    Gas’s] success in attracting new customers”; would allow it to continue investing
    in its infrastructure; and would provide stable rates for natural gas customers.
    [¶12]       Regarding regulatory proceeding expenses, the Commission
    acknowledged in its order that Bangor Gas did not comply with the filing
    requirements of 
    9 C.M.R. 65
    407 850-1 to -3 §§ 1-3 (1999), but allowed “50% of
    Bangor Gas’s rate case expense to be included in the revenue requirement,
    normalized over a five-year period, which results in an annual expense of
    $40,000.”
    [¶13] OPA and Bucksport Mill appeal from the Commission’s order. See
    35-A M.R.S. § 1320 (2014); M.R. App. P. 2(b)(3).
    6
    The Commission calculated Bangor Gas’s rate base, utilizing the depreciated original cost value of
    the utility’s assets, to be $36,243,901. It calculated Bangor Gas’s revenue requirement to be $8,702,104.
    The Commission further found that its revenue requirement calculation, utilizing the depreciated cost of
    Bangor Gas’s plant when first put into service, indicated a revenue shortfall that would support increasing
    the utility’s rates—an outcome, the Commission noted, that no party had sought.
    7
    II. DISCUSSION
    A.    Property Valuation
    [¶14] OPA and Bucksport Mill contend that the Commission exceeded its
    statutory authority by valuing Bangor Gas’s assets based on Sempra’s original
    investment of $38 million, rather than on Energy West’s acquisition cost of
    $500,000, and that the valuation error caused it to erroneously determine that the
    ARP base rate was just and reasonable. See 35-A M.R.S. §§ 303, 4706 (2014).
    The Commission and Bangor Gas argue that the Commission properly determined
    that the ARP rates were just and reasonable by reference to the original cost of
    Bangor Gas’s assets that are used or required to be used in providing natural gas
    service to the public. See 35-A M.R.S. § 303.
    [¶15]   We review decisions of the Commission deferentially, and will
    disturb a decision “only when the Commission abuses the discretion entrusted to it,
    or fails to follow the mandate of the legislature, or to be bound by the prohibitions
    of the constitution.” Houlton Water Co. v. PUC, 
    2014 ME 38
    , ¶ 24, 
    87 A.3d 749
    (quotation marks omitted); Office of the Pub. Advocate v. PUC, 
    2003 ME 23
    , ¶ 19,
    
    816 A.2d 833
    (“Although the Commission’s interpretation of a statute that it
    administers is not conclusive or binding on us, such an interpretation is entitled to
    deference and should be upheld unless the statute plainly compels a contrary
    result.”) (quotation marks omitted); New England Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Pub. Utils.
    8
    Comm’n, 
    390 A.2d 8
    , 15 (Me. 1978) (explaining that we defer to the
    Commission’s technical expertise and do not “review the Commission’s findings
    of fact and seek to determine what rates are reasonable and just,” but intervene
    only on questions of law).
    [¶16] Pursuant to 35-A M.R.S. § 4706(1), the Commission may authorize
    an ARP for a gas utility in order “to promote efficiency in operations, create
    appropriate financial incentives, promote rate stability and promote equitable cost
    recovery” for the utility. When authorizing an ARP, the Commission has the
    statutory obligation to ensure that the rates resulting from the ARP are “just and
    reasonable.” 
    Id. § 4706(3).
    Thus, “[p]rior to the adoption of a new or replacement
    alternative rate plan or renewal of any existing alternative rate plan, the
    commission shall, in order to ensure that rates at the starting point of the plan are
    just and reasonable, conduct a revenue requirement and earnings review pursuant
    to the standards of [35-A M.R.S. § 301 (2014)].” 
    Id. In determining
    a just and
    reasonable rate base pursuant to section 301, the Commission must “provide such
    revenues to the utility as may be required to perform its public service and to
    attract necessary capital on just and reasonable terms.” 35-A M.R.S. § 301(4)(A).
    [¶17]   In establishing a utility’s rate base, the Commission must fix a
    “reasonable value” upon all of the utility’s property that “is used or required to be
    9
    used in its service to the public,” in order to ensure a “fair return on that property.”
    35-A M.R.S. § 303. Section 303 further provides:
    In fixing a reasonable value, the commission shall give due
    consideration to evidence of the cost of the property when first
    devoted to public use and the prudent acquisition cost to the utility,
    less depreciation on each, and any other material and relevant factors
    or evidence, but the other factors shall not include current value.
    (Emphasis added.)
    [¶18] In its property value determination, the Commission was statutorily
    required to give due consideration to the factors set out in section 303. However,
    the statute plainly does not mandate one valuation methodology over another. See
    Trask v. PUC, 
    1999 ME 93
    , ¶ 7, 
    731 A.2d 430
    (“When we construe a statute, we
    give effect to the Legislature’s intent[,] [which] is ordinarily gleaned from the plain
    language of the statute itself. Such plain meaning will be applied so long as it does
    not lead to an absurd, illogical, or inconsistent result.”) (quotation marks omitted)
    (citation omitted). Further, the statute gives the Commission broad discretion to
    consider “any other material and relevant factors or evidence,” except current
    value, in setting a reasonable value for the utility’s assets for ratemaking purposes.
    [¶19] In Central Me. Power Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 
    150 Me. 257
    , 262
    (1954), we explained the requirement that the Commission give “due
    consideration” to the applicable statutory factors in determining the fair value of
    property for ratemaking purposes as follows:
    10
    The requirement that the Commission give “due consideration” to
    evidence tending to establish any factor of fair value does not mean
    that the Commission is not the judge of the weight to be given to the
    proffered evidence. Nor does it mean that equal weight must be given
    to each factor proven. The Commission may not proceed with a closed
    mind and no disposition to be convinced by unimpeachable evidence.
    “Due consideration” requires at least reasonable and fair
    consideration, and once a factor is well proven, not only must the
    Commission give consideration to it, but such factor must find
    reflection in the finding of value . . . . [A]rbitrary and capricious
    disregard by the Commission of a factor established by legislative
    mandate, or of evidence tending to prove such a factor, is reversible
    error.
    (Quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted). We held that the Commission’s
    statement that it gave “very little consideration to [acquisition cost] in the rate
    base” did not mean that the Commission failed to give due consideration to that
    factor as required by the statute. 
    Id. at 267.
    Rather, we held that the Commission
    exercised its discretion in giving the factor little weight in its value determination
    because it found that the acquired property had since been “substantially retired.”
    
    Id. [¶20] Further,
    we explained that “original cost” is “the depreciated original
    cost of property now existing and devoted to the public use[,] . . . taken as of the
    time when the property was first devoted to the public use, whether that event
    occurred when it was in the hands of this Company or a former owner.” 
    Id. at 264
    (emphasis added). “Prudent acquisition cost,” we explained, is “the difference,
    most often an excess, between the original cost when first devoted to public service
    11
    and the amount invested upon acquisition. This factor brings into focus what the
    Company prudently invested in the property and takes into account that [business]
    property . . . often demands a higher price than its original cost.” 
    Id. at 266.
    [¶21] Here, the Commission gave due consideration in its order both to
    evidence of Energy West’s prudent acquisition costs and to evidence of the cost of
    Bangor Gas’s property when Sempra first devoted the property to public use.
    Consistent with its statutory authority, the Commission rejected the acquisition
    cost factor and accepted the original cost factor as the more reasonable value on
    which to base Bangor Gas’s base rates and resulting return on equity. In so
    concluding, the Commission gave careful consideration to Bangor Gas’s
    productivity and its ability to attract capital and realize a fair return on equity, and
    to policy concerns for rate stability.
    [¶22] OPA and Bucksport Mill argue that the Commission erroneously
    considered the “current value” of Bangor Gas’s assets in direct contravention of
    section 303, citing the order’s references to the current use and revenue producing
    abilities of the utility’s assets.       Contrary to the appellants’ contention, the
    Commission did not discuss Bangor Gas’s facilities in order to determine their
    current or fair market value; rather, consistent with the statutory mandate, it set out
    to determine a reasonable value for Bangor Gas’s property that would allow the
    utility to realize a fair return on equity in light of its current operations and service
    12
    capacity. After considering all the evidence and relevant statutory factors, the
    Commission determined that the original cost valuation more accurately reflected
    the reasonable value of the property that Bangor Gas uses in providing its
    customers natural gas, and therefore the property on which it is entitled a fair
    return.7    The Commission did not abuse its discretion or exceed its statutory
    authority in accepting that valuation for Bangor Gas’s property.
    B.       Regulatory Proceeding Expenses
    [¶23]    OPA also argues that the Commission abused its discretion by
    including in its revenue requirement calculation fifty percent of Bangor Gas’s
    regulatory proceeding expenses because there was insufficient evidence supporting
    the expense calculation.8 However, because the Commission’s decision to include
    the regulatory proceeding expenses in its revenue requirement analysis had no
    impact on its decision to approve the ARP, we need not address the merits of that
    decision.
    7
    Indeed, the valuation method proposed by OPA and Bucksport Mill—Energy West’s
    2007 acquisition cost of $500,000—might more closely reflect a “current value” assessment than does the
    original cost valuation; the purchase price paid in 2007 reflects a snapshot market value of the company’s
    assets at that time.
    8
    OPA also contends that the Commission improperly “amortized” these expenses rather than
    “normalizing” them. Contrary to OPA’s argument, the Commission’s analysis is consistent with
    normalization and reflects the Commission’s effort to normalize Bangor Gas’s expenses despite an
    infrequent regulatory history. See Pine Tree Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 
    634 A.2d 1302
    , 1304
    (Me. 1993) (explaining the normalization analysis).
    13
    [¶24] Although, as the Commission concedes, Bangor Gas did not strictly
    comply with the filing requirements for regulatory proceeding expenses, the
    utility’s overall revenue requirement was otherwise fully litigated and the
    Commission considered “a wide array of possible rate base calculations” as
    supported by each parties’ filings, rebuttal filings, and data request responses.
    Significantly, because the ARP that the Commission adopted for Bangor Gas did
    not change the utility’s starting point rates from then-current levels, the
    Commission’s decision to normalize a portion of Bangor Gas’s regulatory
    proceeding expenses in its revenue requirement analysis had no impact on the
    ARP’s ultimate starting point rates. In other words, because the Commission
    decided to maintain starting point rates at then-current levels, it did not set the rate
    that Bangor Gas’s customers would pay based on the revenue requirement figures
    presented by either Bangor Gas or OPA. Rather, it considered each parties’ filings
    in determining what revenue the utility would require and thus what rate could
    justly be charged to the utility’s customers pursuant to a traditional rate-making
    methodology, and then compared that rate to the ARP starting point rates to
    determine whether the ARP rates were just and reasonable. See 35-A M.R.S.
    §§ 301(4), 4706(3).
    [¶25] In its order, the Commission noted that the revenue requirement
    figures proposed by Bangor Gas would indicate a revenue shortfall that would
    14
    justify a rate increase, and the figures proposed by OPA would indicate a windfall
    that would require a rate decrease—the primary reason for the difference between
    the two approaches being the different property valuations in determining the rate
    base. The Commission took neither route, and instead found that Bangor Gas’s
    then-existing rates were reasonable starting point rates and did not need to be
    changed. It is safe to say that this dispute over an expense item representing an
    insignificant portion of the revenue requirements presented by each party,9 neither
    of which were used to set the utility’s rates, did not affect the Commission’s
    decision to adopt the ARP.
    The entry is:
    Judgment affirmed.
    On the briefs:
    Timothy R. Schneider, Esq., and William C. Black, Esq., Maine
    Office of the Public Advocate, Augusta, for appellant Office of
    the Public Advocate
    Todd J. Griset, Esq., and Andrew Landry, Esq., Preti Flaherty
    Beliveau & Pachios LLP, Augusta, and Linda M. Glover, Esq.,
    Winstead PC, Houston, Texas, for appellant Bucksport Mill,
    LLC
    9
    The additional $40,000 regulatory proceeding expense accounts for an approximate one-half-percent
    increase in Bangor Gas’s approximately $8 million revenue requirement.
    15
    Matthew Kaply, Esq., Carol MacLennan, Esq., and Mitchell
    Tannenbaum, Esq., Maine Public Utilities Commission,
    Augusta, for appellee Public Utilities Commission
    Alan G. Stone, Esq., and Benjamin J. Smith, Esq., Skelton,
    Taintor & Abbott, Auburn, for appellee Bangor Gas Company,
    LLC
    At oral argument:
    Timothy R. Schneider, Esq., for appellant Office of the Public
    Advocate
    Andrew S. Hagler, Esq., for appellee Public Utilities
    Commission
    Alan G. Stone, Esq., for appellee Bangor Gas Company, LLC
    Public Utilities Commission case number 2012-598
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY