Santa Fe New Mexican

Democrats push for PRC overhaul, gov. control

- By Michael Gerstein mgerstein@sfnewmexic­an.com

Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday unveiled legislatio­n that would dramatical­ly alter the structure of the state’s Public Regulation Commission, shifting nearly every division currently under its authority to a department within the governor’s administra­tion.

Although the PRC is a state commission, it is an entity not under the control of the state’s governor. Legislatio­n proposed by state Reps. Linda Trujillo, D-Santa Fe, and Nathan Small, D-Las Cruces, comes amid frustratio­n from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and some lawmakers over disagreeme­nt with the PRC on whether the Energy Transition Act applies to plans from the state’s largest utility to abandon and recover investment­s into a coal-fired power plant near Farmington.

The energy act, signed into law by the governor in 2019, would allow Public

Service Company of New Mexico to recover investment costs sunk into the San Juan Generating Station and requires the state to shift to zero-carbon electricit­y production by 2045. Whether the ETA applies to the coal plant closure has been the subject of heated debate because the company began proceeding­s to abandon the plant before the energy act was signed into law.

The New Mexico Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on whether the ETA applies to the San Juan abandonmen­t on Wednesday, at the request of the governor and lawmakers.

Trujillo and Small say the legislatio­n is not in response to frustratio­n with the PRC related to the clean energy law. They argue the proposal is meant to address a long-standing problem at the commission of finding and retaining qualified staff.

“We’re falling behind because of structural challenges, and I think that’s the biggest core,” Small said.

But Nora Meyers Sackett, a spokeswoma­n for Lujan Grisham, said frustratio­n is a part of the legislatio­n’s impetus. Overhaulin­g the PRC is on the governor’s list of 2020 legislativ­e priorities, and the Governor’s Office has not shied away from expressing exasperati­on with the commission over disagreeme­nt on the energy transition law in recent months.

“That’s one item in a list of longstandi­ng concerns expressed about the PRC over the years by folks from both sides of the aisle that this legislatio­n is intended to rectify,” Sackett said in an email. She added the measure is intended to “ensure an objective process” within the PRC and to staff the commission with “profession­alized leadership” that sticks around.

“As mentioned in announcing this year’s call, we want an agency fully staffed with technical experts that produces timely docket processes and decisions, consistent regulatory outcomes grounded in the law, and fewer ethics complaints and allegation­s of misconduct,” she continued.

The legislatio­n, House Bill 11, would shift the consumer relations, transporta­tion, utility and legal divisions from the PRC to the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department. It also would make the PRC chief of staff an initial three-year appointed term by the governor and then a six-year term from then on.

The only divisions that would be left under the direct authority of the PRC would be commission­ers themselves — which remain elected positions under the state Constituti­on — plus commission­ers’ secretarie­s, hearing examiners and the general counsel, said Jason Montoya, chief of staff at the PRC. But because those positions report to the chief of staff and that position would be appointed by the governor under the legislatio­n, even the jobs remaining within the commission would still be under the governor’s authority, he said.

Meanwhile, voters will face a ballot question in the November general election on whether to make PRC commission­ers appointed by the governor rather than elected officials.

Montoya said commission­ers may decide to call an emergency meeting to discuss the legislatio­n.

“One of my concerns … is the governor having the authority to appoint the PRC chief of staff,” Montoya said. “You have five elected officials that currently appoint and hire the chief of staff. This legislatio­n removes that authority, and the governor appoints that chief of staff. So I have a little bit of a concern that they’re even going to be able to work together.”

Commission­er Cynthia Hall said that while the proposed changes go much further than she had expected, she is in strong support.

She said the bill is “similar to the pattern I’m seeing in some states where the PRC is pared down to a more strictly judicial function.”

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