The Association of Businesses Ad *573 vocating Tariff Equity (abate) appeals as of right a February 22, 1991, decision of the Michigan Public Service Commission (psc) in psc Docket No. U-9556 approving a settlement agreement regarding surcharges to be imposed on virtually all ratepayers and denying abate’s motion to dismiss. We affirm.
This matter concerns costs related to Energy Assistance Programs (eaps) designed to help poor persons who are recipients of services provided by the Department of Social Services (dss). Under one part of an eap, the dss makes direct payments on a portion of a dss recipient’s utility bill to the utility provider.
Sections 801 through 817 of the act covered aid to families with dependent children (afdc). While some of these sections governed rent vendoring programs and special needs allowances, several sections were devoted to energy programs. Section 810 permitted the dss to enter into agreements with energy providers that would authorize the dss to make direct payments to the energy provider on behalf of general assistance recipients and afdc recipients. Section 814 was particularly relevant and provided in relevant part:
A provider utility shall be entitled to recover in its rates all qualifying costs incurred pursuant to an agreement between the provider utility and the department for the payment of all or part of assisted households’ heating and electric service bills and for costs incurred for energy conservation *574 programs as prescribed in section 810(k). Qualifying costs shall include amounts forgiven for assisted households, prudently incurred energy conservation program costs, the conservation incentive credits and the cost of capital incurred for preenrollment arrearages and energy conservation programs for program years October 1, 1989 through September 30, 1991. . . . All such qualifying costs incurred for program years beginning after October 1, 1989 and ending September 30, 1991 shall be subject to deferred accounting and recovery through a general rate case application or shall be subject to timely recovery through separate limited purpose rate proceedings.
Consumers Power Company voluntarily entered eaps pursuant to §810 of
We first discuss the procedural issues raised by
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Consumers and the psc. We agree with the psc that it had authority independent of
We also find that the psc properly recognized that it does not have the power to determine constitutional questions or to hold statutes unconstitutional.
Wikman v Novi,
Abate contends that § 814 of the act imposes a tax by permitting recovery of qualifying costs by charging ratepayers. Abate claims that this tax violates the Headlee Amendment, Const 1963, art 9, §§25 and 26, because it represents a tax that has not been voted upon. We disagree. The surcharges were intended to benefit utilities that participate in eaps. They were not imposed for the benefit of the public in general. See
Bray v Dep’t of State,
We further find no merit in abate’s argument that the act violates the title-object provision of the Michigan Constitution. The Title-Object Clause, Const 1963, art 4, § 24, provides:
No law shall embrace more than one object, which shall be expressed in its title. No bill shall be altered or amended on its passage through either house so as to change its original purpose as determined by its total content and not alone by its title.
The purpose of the Title-Object Clause is to
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prevent the Legislature from passing laws not fully understood and to avoid bringing into one bill subjects diverse in their nature and having no necessary connection.
Ace Tex Corp v Detroit;
The title of
an act to make appropriations for the department of social services and certain state purposes related to public welfare services for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1990; to provide for the expenditure of the appropriations; to create funds; to provide for the imposition of fees; to provide for reports; to provide for the disposition of fees and other income received by the state agency; to provide for the powers and duties of certain state departments, agencies, and officers; and to repeal certain acts and parts of acts.
Although the title of the act does not say anything about eaps or surcharges in utility rates, the eaps are clearly "related to public welfare services.” The general object of the act is the appropriation of funds and control of expenditures for welfare. All of the matters contained in the act are germane to its object, and the provisions directly relate to, carry out, or implement the principal object.
Livonia v Dep’t of Social Services,
Abate next argues that the act unconstitutionally delegated to utilities the power to decide *578 whether to implement a governmental program and whether to tax ratepayers accordingly. Abate further argues that the act unconstitutionally delegated to private entities the power to provide an eap to dss recipients, to provide for conservation services, and to distribute the costs of such programs among all ratepayers through a tax regardless of use by the ratepayers of the services provided.
We reject abate’s contentions for two reasons. First, the act authorized the dss, and not the utilities, to participate in eaps. Because § 810 states that the dss shall enter into agreements "as it determines is appropriate,” the dss was not required to enter into eaps with utility providers, and utilities could not force the dss to enter into eaps. To the extent the Legislature has delegated some of its authority to the dss, the delegation was pursuant to fairly strict guidelines, see e.g., § 810(a)-(n), that were as reasonably precise as the subject matter requires.
Dep’t of Natural Resources v Seaman,
Finally, abate argues that the act created subsidized utility rates for certain persons, thereby forcing the psc to approve discriminatory rates without an express grant of authority to do so. However, the Legislature expressly recognized that the psc could permit utilities to recover certain costs incurred in eaps. Therefore, the act plainly granted the psc the authority to do what it did in the instant case.
Mason Co Civic Research Counsel v Mason Co,
Affirmed.
