Daily Press (Sunday)

Dominion Energy-backed rates bill whittled down in House committee

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — Dominion Energy’s ongoing push for yet another year of legislativ­e tinkering with the way rates are regulated took a surprise turn last week, when a Virginia House committee whittled down a company-backed bill ratepayer advocates have fiercely opposed.

The vote Thursday afternoon came after Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administra­tion and the House speaker’s office got involved behind the scenes before the administra­tion weighed in publicly for the first time on the dispute, which has simmered since before this year’s legislativ­e session officially kicked off.

Del. Terry Kilgore, the sponsor of the House version of the legislatio­n, put forward a new, strippeddo­wn substitute Thursday, which no longer included a provision that would have increased Dominion’s return on equity, a measure of profitabil­ity.

“It’s a simple bill — a lot simpler than it started,” said Kilgore, a longtime ally of Dominion, the parent company of the state’s largest electric utility and Virginia’s largest corporate donor.

Kilgore told the House Commerce and Energy Committee his bill would increase the frequency of Dominion’s rate cases before the State Corporatio­n Commission, moving them from every three years to every two, and would give the commission additional discretion to adjust rates as they see fit.

Kilgore’s bill, like a companion Senate version, initially contained provisions that effectivel­y would have bumped up the return on equity, which is set by the SCC. Dominion has said the change it was seeking was reasonable and would help keep the company competitiv­e as it seeks to raise money for the billions worth of renewable energy projects it has committed to building.

But that proposal drew a backlash from ratepayer advocates and others, who said the legislatio­n was just the latest example of the company trying to use the legislatur­e to meddle with the job of regulators.

The way rates are set for the utility, Dominion Energy Virginia, as well as the authority regulators have to adjust them is a perennial issue at the General Assembly. In recent years, the company has pushed through legislatio­n that minimized the chances it would have to lower its rates. That’s despite regulators having routinely found that the utility’s rates provide excessive profit.

“We have monopolies in Virginia. The role of monopoly regulators is to make sure that power prices are fair. And when the monopoly utility gets to dictate its own profit margins, that takes away the regulators’ power to ensure that customers are treated fairly,” Will Cleveland, an attorney for the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center, said last week.

The law center is among a coalition of environmen­tal groups, big businesses and ratemaking reform groups have been opposing the legislatio­n. A council of the AFL-CIO has joined Dominion in backing the bill.

Also gone from Kilgore’s latest bill is a provision that involved rolling $300 million worth of charges in what are called rate adjustment clauses, or riders, into base rates. The company had pitched doing so as a way to lower customers’ monthly bills.

Travis Voyles, Youngkin’s acting secretary for natural and historic resources, said Kilgore’s amended measure and two separate rate-related measures intended to shore up the State Corporatio­n Commission’s authority that advanced Thursday were priorities for the governor.

Altogether, the bills “present straightfo­rward, foundation­al and commonsens­e ways to move the conversati­on on energy forward and target processes to improve predictabi­lity, accountabi­lity and the restoratio­n of the SCC’s independen­t authority. An appropriat­e balance is needed,” Voyles said.

A representa­tive of Attorney General Jason Miyares, whose office represents the interests of consumers in SCC proceeding­s, also backed Kilgore’s amended bill.

A Dominion lobbyist, Katharine Bond, said of the amended Kilgore bill the company was “supportive of it moving through this process” and urged its passage.

Longtime observers of energy policy said the moment marked a stark departure for a committee where Dominion-backed measures typically sail through.

“From what Dominion asked for at the beginning to what it appears they’re going to get, I’m not sure we’ve ever seen a move like that, certainly not in my time in energy policy or in the General Assembly,” said Greg Habeeb, a former Republican House member and now a lobbyist whose firm represents a variety of clients who opposed the legislatio­n as it was introduced.

The focus now turns to the Democrat-controlled Senate, where that chamber’s version cleared a committee last week after about 15 minutes of discussion but has been stalling on the floor for several days rather than being advanced to a final vote. That could now could happen early next week.

Another powerful Dominion ally, Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw, is carrying his chamber’s version.

Saslaw’s bill has been through some amendments but is closer to the versions he and Kilgore introduced than the current House bill.

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