In these consolidated cases, appellants, the Association of Businesses Advocating Tariff Equity (ABATE) and the Michigan Attorney General, appeal as of right an order of the Michigan Public Service Commission (PSC) that allowed petitioner, Michigan Consolidated Gas Company (Mich Con), to include through charges applied to its ratepayers more than $5 million in funding for the Low-Income and Energy Efficiency Fund (LIEEF). The Attorney General additionally appeals that part of the order that allowed Mich Con to continue to use an uncollectible expense true-up, or tracking, mechanism (UETM) as a way to reconcile recovery of estimated and actual losses stemming from customers who fail to pay their bills. We affirm the PSC’s decision to allow Mich Con to continue using its UETM, but reverse the PSC’s decision to allow Mich Con to charge its ratepayers for funding of the Low-Income and Energy Efficiency Fund.
The PSC’s opinion and order in this case contains the following concise statement of the facts:
On June 9, 2009, Michigan Consolidated Gas Company (Mich Con) filed an application requesting a $192.639 million rate increase on an annual basis, and other relief based on the use of a 2010 projected test year. The other forms of regulatory relief initially sought by Mich Con included continuation of authority to use its existing uncollectible expense true-up mechanism (UETM) with modifications .... In addition, Mich Con sought confirmation from the Commission that the company had satisfied directives set forth in the Commission’s orders in Case Nos. U-13898, U-13899, and U-15479. These directives included ... the obligation to propose a Low-income and Energy Efficiency Fund (LIEEF) contribution as part of its next general rate case filing.
... At the prehearing conference, the ALJ granted petitions for leave to intervene filed by the Association of Businesses Advocating Tariff Equity (ABATE), Attorney General Michael A. Cox (Attorney General)... [and] the Utility Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO, Local 223 (Local 223), [among others.] The Commission Staff (Staff) also participated in the proceedings.
... In the absence of a Commission order directing it to do otherwise, on January 1, 2010, Mich Con self-implemented a $170 million increase in its gas rates that was applied on an equal percentage basis for all customer classes.
Evidentiary hearings concerning the remainder of Mich Con’s general rate case took place on January 11, 12, and 14, 2010. The company presented the testimony and exhibits of an additional 22 witnesses, and the Staff offered*364 testimony and exhibits from 13 witnesses.. .. The record of this proceeding consists of 1,866 pages of transcript and 112 exhibits that were received into evidence.[1]
The PSC approved the continued use of the UETM intended to adjust future rates to make up for 80 percent of the difference between Mich Con’s estimated and actual burdens in connection with customers from whom it could not collect amounts due on their bills, approved a base level of uncollectible expenses of $69.9 million, and rejected the Attorney General’s objections that such tracking mechanisms are not statutorily authorized. The PSC also approved $5,069,000 in test-year funding for the LIEEF and rejected appellants’ objections that the Legislature had repealed the legislation authorizing such funding in the first instance.
This appeal followed.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
All rates, fares, charges, classifications, joint rates, regulations, practices, and services prescribed by the PSC are presumed prima facie to be lawful and reasonable. MCL 462.25; see also Mich Consol Gas Co v Pub Serv Comm,
Issues of statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo. In re Rovas Complaint Against SBC Mich,
Whether the PSC exceeded the scope of its authority is a question of law that is reviewed de novo. In re Pelland Complaint Against Ameritech Mich,
III. UNCOLLECTIBLE EXPENSE TRUE-UP MECHANISM
The UETM addresses the utility’s burden in supplying power to customers from whom it cannot collect.
Retroactive ratemaking in utility cases is prohibited, absent statutory authorization. Mich Bell Tel Co v Pub Serv Comm,
This Court recently reiterated its approval of the PSC’s use of the accounting convention whereby certain expenses dating from one year are characterized as expenses incurred in a subsequent year to which they are then deferred. In re Consumers Energy Co Application for Rate Increase,
This Court has specifically approved Mich Con’s use of a UETM on the ground that
the UETM, designed to defer . .. the difference between the initially projected and the actual uncollectible expenses for a given period to a future year, does not involve retroactive ratemaking because the deferred expense is deemed an expense of the year to which it is deferred and,*367 thus, is recovered on a prospective basis. [In re Mich Consol Gas Co Application,281 Mich App 545 , 549;761 NW2d 482 (2008).]
This weight of authority compels affirmance of the PSC’s approval of Mich Con’s use of the UETM.
IV THE LOW-INCOME AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY FUND
The Customer Choice and Electricity Reliability Act, MCL 460.10 et seq., was enacted by
As originally enacted, MCL 460.10d(6) — redesignated as MCL 460.10d(7) by
Yet MCL 460.9p(3), added by
If this recent legislative activity indicates the Legislature’s intention that the LIEEF continue to exist, and that the PSC retain some role in managing it, the deletion of all references to the LIEEF from the Customer Choice and Electricity Reliability Act — whose now-deleted provisions were recognized as the fund’s enabling legislation in the first instance, see Consumers Energy,
Moreover, while MCL 460.6a(2) grants the PSC authority to establish procedures for considering and deciding petitions from regulated utilities and allow a utility to recover its reasonably and prudently incurred costs, it does not grant the PSC authority to approve a utility’s collecting funds from its ratepayers in general to fund a program designed to offer some protection against interruptions in services, or other such relief, to distressed ratepayers. That activity has less to do with regulating a utility than with helping the poor. Similarly, a program to promote energy efficiency in general has more to do with environmentalism and conservation than with assessing a utility’s reasonably and prudently incurred costs.
For these reasons, we hold that administration of a LIEEF does not fall within the scope of the PSC’s general statutory powers, but depends in every instance on specific statutory authorization. Accordingly, we reverse the PSC’s order below insofar as it approved more than $5 million in LIEEF funding to come from Mich Con’s ratepayers and remand this case to the PSC for appropriate proceedings consistent with this opinion with respect to the LIEEF, and any remaining implementation regarding the UETM adjustment.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings. We do not retain jurisdiction. Because no party has prevailed in full, we do not award costs pursuant to MCR 7.219.
Notes
1 In re Application of Michigan Consolidated Gas Co to Increase Rates, order of the Public Service Comm, entered June 3, 2010 (Case No. U-15985), pp 1-4.
See In re Mich Consol Gas Co Application,
