Santa Fe New Mexican

What should be considered in PNM rate cases

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While I shall defer to my esteemed counterpar­ts at the the Public Regulation Commission regarding utility regulation, I do represent ratepayers in District 22 and I wanted to take this opportunit­y to explain what I look for when the Legislatur­e is considerin­g issues that affect the taxpayer.

If possible, I look for multiparty consensus. While difficult to attain, given separate agendas and viewpoints on behalf of affected parties, it is possible after cooperatio­n and compromise. In this spirit, our state attorney general, the Public Service Company of New Mexico, the Sierra Club, the Coalition for Clean and Affordable Energy, as well as Western Resources Advocates are all signatorie­s of a revised stipulated agreement designed to “reach a fair, just and reasonable resolution … consistent with public interest” in PNM’s current rate case before the PRC.

In addition to the aforementi­oned signers, the PRC’s own utility division staff have signed on to the the stipulated agreement. As a single member of a body of 112 legislator­s — who sits on multiple committees reviewing hundreds of bills — I can attest that staff recommenda­tions are crucial and extremely valuable.

Appropriat­ely, language in the revised stipulated agreement allows for PNM to use its savings (corporate tax rate reduced to 20 percent from 35 percent) from the federal tax bill, currently in conference committee, to mitigate costs to its customers. Commission­ers should be weighing this potential customer benefit heavily when they vote on the revised stipulated agreement.

Please call your commission­er, as I will, and urge them to vote for the revised stipulated agreement (Case No. 16-00276UT). I would argue that a vote for the stipulated agreement further nurtures collaborat­ion and compromise between environmen­talists and the utilities, and is a well-deserved affirmatio­n of PRC staff.

James Smith is Republican state representa­tive of District 22. He represents portions of Bernalillo, Sandoval and Santa Fe counties.

If possible, I look for multiparty consensus. While difficult to attain, given separate agendas and viewpoints on behalf of affected parties, it is possible after cooperatio­n and compromise.

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