The Palm Beach Post

House bill to revamp rules for state electric utilities advances

- News Service of Florida

With a key lawmaker pointing to a need for “fresh thinking,” a House panel Wednesday approved a proposal that would revamp regulation of Florida’s electric utilities.

The bill would require that members of the Florida Public Service Commission be appointed from five different regions of the state, move a consumer advocate’s office under the attorney general and create a performanc­e-based incentive system for utilities.

“I believe it injects some much-needed fresh thinking into how we regulate utilities in this state,” said House Energy & Uti l i t i e s Chairwoman Kathleen Peters, a Treasure Island Republican whose subcommitt­ee voted 11-2 to approve the measure, PCB EUS 17-01.

The proposal, i n par t , wou l d a f f e c t t h e f u t u r e makeup of the Public Service Commission, a five-member panel that regulates utilities. It would require commission­ers to be appointed from different regions that would mirror the map of the state’s five district courts of appeals.

Commission members, who are appointed by the governor after a nominating process, do not currently face geographic restrictio­ns, but Peters said the proposed change would increase the diversity of the commission.

Also, the proposal would allow future commission members to serve two fouryear terms, a reduction from a 2015 law that placed a limit of three terms.

Also, the bill would bar lawmakers from serving on the commission within six years of leaving the Legislatur­e. Two current commission­ers, Ronald Brise and Jimmy Patronis, are former House members.

The bill also would move the st ate Office of Public Counsel, which represents consumers in utility cases, under the attorney general. The office, headed by Public Counsel J.R. Kelly, is an arm of the Legislatur­e, and the potential move drew debate during Wednesday’s meeting.

Jon Moyle, an attorney for the Florida Industrial Power Users Group, which frequently intervenes in utility cases at the Public Service Commission, questioned the need for the change.

“I did not hear any criti c i s m o r qu e s t i o n s wi t h respect to the job Mr. Kelly is doing,” Moyle, who represents businesses that use large amounts of electricit­y, told the House members. “I think that is because he’s doing a good job.”

But Jack McRay, a lobbyist for the senior-advocacy group AARP, which also takes part in utilit y c ases, supported moving the public counsel under the attorney general.

McRay said the attorney general is responsibl­e for consumer protection and that the Office of Public Counsel should answer to one official if it does not adequately represent consumers, instead of answering to 160 lawmakers.

McRay said he thinks Kelly does a good job as public counsel. “This is not an issue about J.R. Kelly, however,” McRay said. “This is an issue about the Office of Public Counsel.”

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