OAR 860-038-0480
Public Purposes


(1)

Each electric company that offers direct access to its retail electricity consumers and each electricity service supplier that provides electricity services to direct access consumers in the electric company’s service territory will collect a public purpose charge from its retail electricity consumers until January 1, 2026.

(2)

Except as provided in section (6) of this rule, electric companies and electricity service suppliers will bill and collect from each of their retail electricity consumers a public purpose charge equal to 3 percent of the total revenues billed to those consumers for electricity services, distribution, ancillary services, metering and billing, transition charges, and other types of costs that were included in electric rates on July 23, 1999.

(3)

The electricity service suppliers will remit monthly to each electric company the public purpose charges they collect from the customers of each electric company.

(4)

The electricity service suppliers will remit monthly the public purpose charges collected from direct service industrial consumers they serve to the electric company in whose service territory the direct service industrial site is located.

(5)

The electric company whose territory abuts the greatest percentage of the site of an aluminum plant that averages more than 100 average megawatts of electricity use per year will collect monthly from the aluminum company a public purpose charge. The aluminum company will remit to the appropriate electric company a public purpose charge equal to 1 percent of the total revenue from the sale of electricity services to the aluminum plant from any source. Annually, the aluminum company will submit to the electric company an affidavit from a certified public accountant verifying that the costs for electricity services at the site of the aluminum plant and the remittance of the public purpose charges are accurate for the previous calendar year.

(6)

A retail electricity consumer, including an aluminum plant as described in section (5) of this rule, may receive credits against its public purpose charges for qualifying expenditures incurred for new energy conservation and the above-market costs of new renewable energy resources at any site if the following qualifications for becoming a self-directing consumer are met:

(a)

The consumer has used more than one average megawatt of electricity at any such site in the prior calendar year; and

(b)

The consumer has received final certification from the Oregon Department of Energy for expenditures for new energy conservation and/or new renewable energy resources.

(7)

Self-directing consumers may not claim a public purpose credit for energy conservation measures that were started prior to July 23, 1999. For energy conservation measures that were started on or after July 23, 1999, but prior to the implementation of direct access, a self-directing consumer may claim a public purpose credit if either of the following conditions is met:

(a)

The energy conservation measure did not receive funding from an electric company conservation program and was certified by the Oregon Department of Energy after July 23, 1999; or

(b)

The energy conservation measure did receive funding from an electric company conservation program and was certified by the Oregon Department of Energy after July 23, 1999, but the self-directing consumer repaid the amount of such funding (cost of audit and incentives plus interest) no later than 90 days following the implementation of direct access; provided that, a self-directing consumer shall not be required to repay the amount of any energy conservation audit related to a conservation measure if the audit was completed prior to January 1, 2000. The cost of an audit that identifies multiple energy conservation measures shall be prorated among such measures.

(c)

For purposes of this subsection, “started” means that a contract has been executed to install or implement an energy conservation measure.

(8)

The Oregon Department of Energy will establish specific rules and procedures that are consistent with these rules for qualifying a self-directing consumer’s expenditures.

(9)

The electric company will apply the self-direction credit, determined by the Oregon Department of Energy, toward the consumer’s public purpose obligation.

(10)

Each electric company will establish five separate accounts for the public purpose charges to be funded from its collections of public purpose charges as follows:

(a)

Energy conservation in schools;

(b)

New cost-effective local energy conservation and new market transformation;

(c)

Above-market costs of new renewable energy resources;

(d)

New low-income weatherization; and

(e)

Construction and rehabilitation of low-income housing.

(11)

Each electric company will allocate the public purpose funds it collects (billed less uncollectible amounts) from electricity service suppliers and consumers to the five public purpose accounts as follows:

(a)

Energy conservation in schools — 10.0 percent;

(b)

Local and market transformation conservation — 56.7 percent;

(c)

Above market costs of new renewable energy resources — 17.1 percent;

(d)

Low-income weatherization — 11.7 percent; and

(e)

Low-income housing — 4.5 percent.

(12)

Each electric company will adjust the local and market transformation conservation and above market costs of new renewable energy resources accounts specified in subsections 11(b) and (c) of this rule for the credits returned to self-directing customers for conservation or renewable resource expenditures certified by the Oregon Department of Energy.

(13)

Each electric company will distribute funds from the public purpose accounts at least monthly as follows:

(a)

The funds for conservation in schools to the school districts located in its service territory;

(b)

The funds for local and market transformation conservation as directed by the Commission;

(c)

The funds for renewable energy resources as directed by the Commission;

(d)

The funds for low-income weatherization to the Housing and Community Services Department; and

(e)

The funds for low-income housing to the Housing and Community Services Department Revolving Account.

(14)

Should the Oregon Department of Energy request reimbursement for costs of administering public purpose funds in accordance with its responsibilities under ORS 757.612 (Requirements for public purpose expenditures)(3)(e), the electric companies must, within 30 days, provide reimbursement as provided in ORS 757.612 (Requirements for public purpose expenditures)(3)(c). The Oregon Department of Energy’s reimbursement request must be limited to activities related to implementing public purpose programs and be consistent with its legislatively approved budget limitation allotted to administer the schools program. On March 1 of each year, the Oregon Department of Energy must provide to the Commission an accounting of the reimbursements received the preceding calendar year for administrative activities performed under ORS 757.612 (Requirements for public purpose expenditures)(3)(e).

(15)

Each electric company will coordinate with the Oregon Department of Energy to determine, by January 1 of each year, the allocation of public purpose funds for schools to the school districts according to the following methodology:

(a)

From the Department of Education, collect current total weighted average daily membership (ADMw) as defined in ORS 327.013 (State School Fund distribution computations for school districts) and average daily membership (ADM) for each school district that contains schools served by the electric company;

(b)

For each of the school districts, compute the ratio of ADM in schools served by the electric company to total ADM;

(c)

For each school district, multiply its total ADMw by the ratio of ADM in schools served by the electric company to total ADM. The result is an estimate of ADMw in schools served by the electric company;

(d)

Add the estimates of ADMw for each school district; and

(e)

Compute the percentage of the total ADMw represented by each school district. These are the percentages that will be used to allocate the public purpose funds for schools to school districts for the 12-month period beginning on January 1 of each year.

(16)

The electric company may be reimbursed for the reasonable administrative costs it incurs to collect and distribute the public purpose funds. Those administrative costs will be deducted from the total amount of public purpose funds collected by the electric company before the funds are allocated to the five public purpose accounts. The electric company will also pay from the total public purpose funds collected or from a specific fund any other administrative costs the Commission directs to be paid for implementation of the public purpose requirements. The entities responsible for administering the public purpose funds will pay for their costs of implementing the public purpose requirements from the public purpose funds they receive from the electric company.

(17)

The electric companies and the administrators of the public purpose funds will collect sufficient information so that biennial reports can be made to the Legislature on what has been accomplished with the public purpose funds and how those funds have benefited the consumers of each electric company. Specifically, information must be collected so that the reporting requirements of ORS 757.617 (Report to Legislative Assembly on public purpose expenditures) can be fulfilled.

(a)

Each electric company must report the total funds collected by source (that is, electric company customers, electricity service suppliers and self-directing consumers) for public purposes, the amounts distributed to the administrators of each public purpose fund, and its administrative costs;

(b)

Each administrator of public purpose funds must report, at a minimum:

(A)

The amount of funds received;

(B)

The amount of funds spent;

(C)

Its administrative costs; and

(D)

Its results, for example, measures installed, projects funded, energy saved, homes weatherized, and low-income homes built/rehabilitated.
860‑038‑0001
Scope and Applicability of Rules
860‑038‑0005
Definitions for Direct Access Regulation
860‑038‑0080
Resource Policies and Plans
860‑038‑0100
Auction Process
860‑038‑0140
Ongoing Valuation
860‑038‑0160
Transition Costs and Credits
860‑038‑0200
Unbundling
860‑038‑0220
Portfolio Options
860‑038‑0240
Cost-of-Service Rate
860‑038‑0250
Nonresidential Standard Offer
860‑038‑0260
Direct Access
860‑038‑0275
Direct Access Annual Announcement and Election Period
860‑038‑0280
Default Supply
860‑038‑0300
Electric Company and Electricity Service Suppliers Labeling Requirements
860‑038‑0340
Electric Company Ancillary Services
860‑038‑0360
Electric Company Customer Metering Requirements
860‑038‑0380
Aggregation
860‑038‑0400
Electricity Service Supplier Certification Requirements
860‑038‑0410
Scheduling
860‑038‑0420
Electricity Service Supplier Consumer Protection
860‑038‑0445
Coordination of Supplier Changes and Billing
860‑038‑0450
Location of Underground Facilities
860‑038‑0460
Construction, Safety, and Reporting Standards for Electricity Service Suppliers
860‑038‑0470
Attachments to Poles and Conduits Owned by Public, Telecommunications, and Consumer-Owned Utilities
860‑038‑0480
Public Purposes
860‑038‑0500
Code of Conduct Purpose
860‑038‑0520
Electric Company Name and Logo
860‑038‑0560
Treatment of Competitors
860‑038‑0580
Prevention of Cross-subsidization Between Competitive Operations and Regulated Operations
860‑038‑0590
Transmission and Distribution Access
860‑038‑0600
Joint Marketing and Referral Arrangements
860‑038‑0620
Access to Books and Records
860‑038‑0640
Compliance Filings
860‑038‑0700
Definitions for New Large Load Direct Access Program
860‑038‑0710
Requirement to Enable a New Large Load Direct Access Program
860‑038‑0720
Nonresidential Standard Offer, Default Supply, and Return to Cost of Service
860‑038‑0730
New Large Load Eligibility Requirements
860‑038‑0740
New Large Load Program Enrollment and Rates
860‑038‑0750
De-Enrollment Due to Failure to Meet Load Standard
860‑038‑0760
Reporting
Last Updated

Jun. 8, 2021

Rule 860-038-0480’s source at or​.us