Or. Admin. Code § 860-021-0408 - Arrearage and Disconnection Reporting Rule
(1) As used in this rule:
(a) "Administrative costs" means all
incremental expenses related to the management and operation of the bill
discount program. This includes, but is not limited to, incremental costs for
program design, staff salaries, data processing, customer outreach, eligibility
verification, compliance, reporting, and any other overhead or indirect costs
necessary to administer the program.
(b) "Applied credits" means the aggregate
dollar value of discounts applied to the utility bills of residential customers
that participate in the utility's bill discount program.
(c) "Arrearage balance" means any amount of
money that a customer owes to the utility company for services provided which
remain unpaid past the bill issuance date.
(d) "Average bill discount program
participant usage" means the average monthly usage of residential customers
enrolled in a utility-administered bill discount program.
(e) "Average bill of high-usage customer"
means the average monthly dollar amount the utility billed all high-usage
customers.
(f) "Average residential
bill" means the average monthly bill for residential utility services within a
utility's Oregon service territory.
(g) "Average residential usage" means the
average monthly amount of energy billed per residential meter within a
utility's Oregon service territory.
(h) "Average usage of high-usage customers"
means the average monthly energy consumption of all customers classified as
high usage.
(i) "Days in Arrears"
means the number of days from the original bill issuance date a customer's
arrearage balance remains unpaid. Days in arrears are divided into three
categories:
(A) "31-69 days in arrears" means
a customer's arrearage balance has been unpaid for a period of between 31 and
60 days from the original bill issuance date.
(B) "61-90 days in arrears" means a
customer's arrearage balance has been unpaid for a period of between 61 and 90
days from the original bill issuance date.
(C) "91+ days in arrears" means a customer's
arrearage balance has been unpaid for a period greater than 90 days from the
original bill issuance date.
(j) "Disconnection notice" means any written
or electronic notification issued by a utility to a customer in accordance with
OAR 860-021-0405.
(k) "Disenrollments" means active residential
customer who were enrolled in a utility's bill discount program as of the
previous reporting period but are no longer participating as of the current
reporting period. This includes customers who were removed from the program due
to ineligibility or non-compliance.
(l) "Energy assistance recipient" means a
residential customer who has received bill payment assistance with an energy
bill from any federal, state, customer-funded bill payment assistance fund or
program at least once within the past 12 months.
(m) "High-usage customer" means a residential
customer participating in a utility-administered bill discount program whose
energy consumption places them in the 90th percentile or above of all other
bill discount program participants within the utility's service area.
(n) "New enrollments" means residential
customer enrolled in a utility's bill discount program for the first time
within the current calendar year.
(o) "Post-discount average bill discount
program participant bill" means the average monthly utility bill amount for
bill discount program participants after the application of their respective
bill discount.
(p) "Pre-discount
average bill discount program participant bill" means the average monthly
utility bill amount for bill discount program participants before the
application of any bill discounts.
(q) "Residential customer" means any
individual or household that receives utility services for personal,
non-commercial use. This includes all customers being served on a utility's
residential service tariff.
(r)
"Service disconnection for non-payment" means instances where utility service
to a residential account was terminated due the customer's failure to pay their
utility bill.
(s) "Total arrears
balance of bill discount program participants" means the total dollar amount of
outstanding balances owed by residential customers enrolled in a
utility-administered bill discount program on their utility bills.
(t) "Total arrears balance of high-usage
customers" means the cumulative dollar amount of overdue balances of all
high-usage customers in arrears during the reporting period.
(u) "Total bill discount program costs" means
the total expenditure incurred by a utility in administering its bill discount
program for low-income residential customers.
(v) "Total dollars provided to bill discount
program participants" means the aggregate dollar value of discounts applied to
the utility bills of residential customer who participate in the utility's bill
discount program.
(w) "Total
residential arrearage balances" means the total dollar amount of outstanding
balances owed by residential customers on their utility bills.
(x) "Total residential usage" means the total
amount of energy billed for all residential customers within a utility's Oregon
service territory.
(2)
Each energy utility must submit electronic quarterly report containing the data
described in section (4) of this rule. Electronic reports must be submitted in
text-searchable Excel and PDF formats. Utilities shall include zip-code level
data within the accompanying Excel files.
(a)
For quarterly reporting purposes, the following four time periods apply:
January 1 to March 31, April 1 to June 30, July 1 to September 30, and October
1 to December 31.
(b) Each energy
utility must file its initial quarterly report following the first full quarter
after the effective date of this rule, unless an alternative initial reporting
date is set for the utility by Commission Staff.
(c) The energy utility must file a quarterly
report as required under this rule within 45 days of the end of each reporting
period.
(3) If errors or
omissions are discovered after a report has been submitted, utilities must
submit a revised report within 30 days of identifying the
discrepancy.
(4) The quarterly
report must provide the following data points for each month within the quarter
on an Oregon basis:
(a) Total number of
residential customers with arrearage balances segmented into three groups:
31-60 days in arrears, 61-90 days in arrears, and 91+days in arrears. Each
residential customer should only be counted in one group, based on their oldest
arrearage balance;
(b) Total
residential arrearage balances segmented into three groups: 31-60 days in
arrears, 61-90 days in arrears, and 91+ days in arrears;
(c) Total number of customers enrolled in
Time Payment Arrangements (TPA) or other extended payment plans. This includes
all residential customer who are actively enrolled in a TPA or any other
extended payment plan offered by the utility as of the reporting
period;
(d) Number of active
residential accounts;
(e) Number of
service disconnections for non-payment;
(f) Total number of disconnection notices
sent to residential customers;
(g)
Percentage of accounts with service disconnections for non-payment. This
includes the proportion of active residential accounts that experienced a
service disconnection for non-payment during the reporting period. This
percentage id determined by dividing the total number of service disconnections
for non-payment by the total number of active residential accounts and
multiplying by 100;
(h) Total
number of bill discount recipient service disconnections for
non-payment;
(i) Total number of
service disconnections for non-payment on energy assistance recipient
accounts;
(j) Total number of
service disconnections for non-payment on medical certificate holder
accounts;
(k) Number of service
reconnections following a disconnection for non-payment on the same day or next
calendar day following disconnection (Days 0-1), and;
(l) Number of service reconnections following
a disconnection for non-payment that occur more than one day and within 7
calendar days following disconnection (Days 2-7);
(m) Number of days on which the energy
utility was required to impose a moratorium on service disconnection for severe
weather per OAR 860-021-0407 (Severe Weather
Moratorium on Involuntary Disconnection of Residential Electric or Gas Utility
Service);
(n) Total residential
usage during the reporting period;
(o) Average residential usage during the
reporting period. This data point should be calculated by dividing the total
residential usage by the total number of residential customers billed during
the same reporting period;
(p)
Average residential bill during the reporting period. This data point should be
calculated by dividing the total amount billed to all residential customers by
the total number of residential customers billed during the same reporting
period.
(q) Total number of
residential customers that received a bill discount, by discount
tier;
(r) Total dollars provided to
bill discount program participants, by discount tier;
(s) Total bill discount program costs divided
into two distinct categories: incremental administrative costs and applied
credits;
(t) Total number of new
enrollments;
(u) Total number of
disenrollments;
(v) Average bill
discount program participant usage categorized by bill discount tier;
(w) Pre-discount average bill discount
program paricipant bill, cataegorized by bill discount by tier;
(x) Post-discount average bill discount
program participant bill, categorized by bill discount by tier;
(y) The number of bill discount program
participants with an arrearage balance segmented into three groups based on the
age of the arrearage: 31-60 days in arrears, 61-90 days in arrears, and 91+
days in arrears. Each program participant should only be counted in one group,
based on their oldest arrearage balance, and
(z) Total arrears balance of bill discount
program participants segmented into three groups: 31-60 days in arrears, 61-90
days in arrears, and 91+ days in arrears.
(5) For annual reporting purposes, the
following time period applies: January 1 to December 31.
(6) The energy utility must file an annual
report as required under this rule within 60 days of the end of each reporting
period.
(7) Each utility, in
addition to the quarterly reporting requirements, shall submit an annual
supplement report which provides the following information for each month
within the year:
(a) The number of high-usage
customers;
(b) Average usage of
high-usage customers;
(c) Average
bill of high-usage customers;
(d)
Number of high-usage customers with an arrearage balance at the end of each
month, segmented into three groups: 31-60 days in arrears, 61-90 days in
arrears, and 91+ days in arrears. Each residential customer should only be
counted in one group, based on their oldest arrearage balance;
(e) Total arrears balance of high-usage
customers at the end of each month, segmented into three groups: 31-60 days in
arrears, 61-90 days in arrears, and 91+ days in arrears; and
(f) Total number of high-usage customers who
experienced a service disconnection for non-payment.
(8) Each utility must provide the information
in section (4), subsections (a) - (m), (o) - (r), and (t) - (x) by zip
code.
(9) The Commission will
review the reporting metrics outlined in this rule every two years. In doing
so, the Commission may engage stakeholders to ensure the relevance of data for
addressing energy burden.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 756.060
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 756.040
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
(1) As used in this rule:
(a) "Energy assistance recipient" means a residential customer who has received bill payment assistance with an energy bill from any federal, state, ratepayer-funded, or utility -supported bill payment assistance fund or program at least once within the past 12 months.
(b) "Companywide" means the geographic area served by a particular energy utility within the state of Oregon.
(c) "Local service area" means a smaller geographic unit within an energy utility 's companywide service area, such as zip code, city, county, or other similar unit.
(2) Each energy utility must file a quarterly report with the Commission detailing the number of residential and small commercial disconnections for non-payment and subsequent reconnections as prescribed in this rule. An electronic report must be filed in a text-searchable Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, or .pdf (Adobe Acrobat) format.
(a) For quarterly reporting purposes, the following four time periods apply: February 1 to April 30, May 1 to July 31, August 1 to October 31, and November 1 to January 31.
(b) Each energy utility must file its initial quarterly report following the first full quarter after the effective date of this rule, unless an alternative initial reporting date is set for the utility by the Commission's Consumer Services Section.
(c) The energy utility must file a quarterly report as required under this rule within 20 days of the end of each reporting period.
(3) The quarterly report must provide the following information for each month within the quarter for an energy utility 's residential accounts:
(a) On a companywide basis:
(A) Number of active residential and small commercial accounts;
(B) Number of service disconnections for non-payment;
(C) Percentage of accounts with service disconnections for non-payment;
(D) Number of service disconnections for non-payment on energy assistance recipient accounts;
(E) Number of service disconnections for non-payment on medical certificate holder accounts;
(F) Number of service disconnections reported under both paragraph (D) and paragraph (E) above, i.e., disconnections for non-payment on medical certificate holder accounts that are also energy assistance recipient accounts;
(G) Number of service reconnections following a disconnection for non-payment on the same day or next calendar day following disconnection (Days 0-1); and
(H) Number of service reconnections following a disconnection for non-payment that occur more than one day and within 7 calendar days following disconnection (Days 2-7).
(b) For each local service area within the companywide area used for reporting:
(A) Number of active residential and small commercial accounts;
(B) Number of service disconnections for non-payment;
(C) Number of service disconnections for non-payment on energy assistance recipient accounts;
(D) Number of service disconnections for non-payment on emergency medical certificate holder accounts;
(E) Number of service disconnections reported under both paragraph (C) and paragraph (D) above, i.e., disconnections for non-payment on medical certificate holder accounts that are also energy assistance recipient accounts; and
(F) Number of days on which the energy utility was required to impose a moratorium on service disconnection for severe weather per OAR 860-021-0407.
(c) Zip codes must be used to identify a local service area unless a different unit is pre-approved by the Commission's Consumer Services Section for a utility 's use in its reporting under this rule.
(4) Upon request of the Commission's Consumer Services Section, when made within one year of the date a quarterly report is filed with the Commission, the energy utility must provide a breakdown by zip code of the of service disconnection data reported under section (3) of this rule.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 756.060
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 756.040