N.J. Admin. Code § 14:9-10.4 - DSIC Foundational Filing
(a) The Board shall
authorize the implementation of a DSIC by a water utility. Under the DSIC, the
Board shall authorize a water utility to recover costs associated with
DSIC-eligible projects through an approved DSIC rate.
(b) To obtain authorization to implement a
DSIC, the water utility shall submit a Foundational Filing to the Board.
Whether filed separately or concurrently with a base rate case, the water
utility shall submit with the Foundational Filing, certain information,
described below:
1. An engineering evaluation
report of the water utility's distribution system that:
i. Identifies the rationale for the work
needed to be accelerated for the water utility to properly sustain its water
distribution network;
ii.
Demonstrates that the plan proposed to accelerate the renewal of the
distribution network is the most cost effective plan;
iii. To the extent that elements of the
distribution network are failing, identifies what mechanisms are causing the
failures; and
iv. Identifies what
is being done to extend the life of the water utility's distribution network
assets;
2. DSIC project
information for the upcoming DSIC period that includes the following:
i. A list of projects, DSIC-eligible asset
class, or category;
ii. A list of
projects that were initiated under a prior Foundational Filing that were
in-service, but not recovered in base rates as an eligible DSIC project or were
not in-service at the time the DSIC rates were reset to zero pursuant to
N.J.A.C.
14:9-10.6(c) and to which
the utility will seek recovery of DSIC-eligible expenses under the new
Foundational Filing;
iii. A list of
projects placed in-service during a prior Foundational Filing and where
previously unrecovered restoration costs may be sought in a current
Foundational Filing;
iv. The
nature, location, estimated duration of project work (including estimated
in-service dates), and a description and reason for project
necessity;
v. Aggregate information
capturing blanket-type, DSIC-eligible infrastructure, to be rehabilitated or
replaced (that is, number of valves, hydrants, or service lines) and the
estimated annual cost of such blanket-type replacement programs;
vi. Vintage, condition, or other similarly
relevant, reasonably available information about the eligible infrastructure
that is being rehabilitated or replaced;
vii. Estimated project costs;
viii. Project identification numbers, so DSIC
projects can be easily tracked; and
ix. Other such information, as is relevant
and appropriate, in order to provide adequate information to make an informed
decision regarding any given project; and
3. The expected amount of base spending for
the water utility, including underlying detail adequate to document that the
base spending has been made on the appropriate types of infrastructure
including, a proposed DSIC assessment, calculated in accordance with
N.J.A.C.
14:9-10.9 and work papers showing the
detailed calculations supporting the proposed assessment schedule.
4. A public notice and hearing, at a minimum,
are required in the DSIC Foundational Filing. The hearing notice shall include
the maximum dollar amount allowable for recovery between rate cases, as well as
an estimated rate impact for the entire period on customers.
5. After a Foundational Filing has been
approved by the Board, a water utility may request that a different
DSIC-eligible project be substituted for one already approved by the Board. The
water utility shall submit written notice to the Board and the Division of Rate
Counsel, identifying the project and detailing the reason(s) for the requested
change, for approval prior to the planned initiation of the project through: a
semi-annual DSIC filing or, if necessary, with at least 30 days prior notice.
Unreimbursed utility relocation costs associated with relocations required by
governmental entities, the details of which are not known or knowable at the
time of the Foundational Filing shall be submitted as a substitution
project.
6. A Foundational Filing
may be filed concurrently with a base rate proceeding.
(c) No DSIC Foundational Filing shall be
approved unless a water utility has had its base rates set by the Board within
the past three years and any prior DSIC rate was reset to zero through the
current, or prior, base rate case. A DSIC Foundational Filing may be approved
concurrently with the setting of base rates. The Board has 120 days from the
date of a complete filing or, if filed concurrent with a base rate case or
during the pendency of a base rate case, until the effective date of the
Board's approval of a base rate case, whichever is later, to act on the
proposed DSIC Foundational Filing petition.
(d) When a water utility has its DSIC rate
reset to zero, a new Foundational Filing must be approved before new DSIC
investments and DSIC Rate recovery may occur.
(e) If within three years after the effective
date of a Foundational Filing, a water utility has not filed a petition in
accordance with the Board's rules for the setting of its base rates, all
interim charges collected under the DSIC rate shall be deemed an over-recovery,
and shall be credited to customers in accordance with this subchapter. A water
utility may seek recovery of such projects in the ordinary course through its
next base rate case. Notwithstanding the above, a water utility may continue to
collect a DSIC charge during a pending rate case filed in accordance with this
section.
Notes
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