Or. Admin. Code § 860-082-0080 - Arbitration of Disputes
(1) An
interconnecting public utility or an interconnection applicant may petition the
Commission for arbitration of disputes arising during review of an application
to interconnect a small generator facility or during negotiation of an
interconnection agreement. If the public utility or the applicant petitions the
Commission to arbitrate their dispute, then the Commission will use an
administrative law judge (ALJ) as arbitrator unless workload constraints
necessitate the use of an outside arbitrator.
(2) A petition for arbitration of an
interconnection agreement must contain:
(a) A
statement of all unresolved issues;
(b) A description of each party's position on
the unresolved issues; and
(c) A
proposed agreement addressing all issues, including those on which the parties
have reached agreement and those that are in dispute.
(3) A petition for arbitration of a dispute
arising during review of an application to interconnect a small generator
facility must contain:
(a) A statement of all
unresolved issues;
(b) A
description of each party's position on the unresolved issues; and
(c) A proposed resolution for each unresolved
issue.
(4) Respondent
may file a response within 25 calendar days of the petition for arbitration. In
the response, the respondent must address each issue listed in the petition,
describe the respondent's position on those issues, and present any additional
issues for which the respondent seeks resolution.
(5) The filing of a petition for arbitration
of a dispute arising during review of an application to interconnect a small
generator facility does not affect the application's queue position.
(6) The arbitration is conducted in a manner
similar to a contested case proceeding, and the arbitrator has the same
authority to conduct the arbitration process as an ALJ has in conducting
hearings under the Commission's rules, but the arbitration process is
streamlined. The arbitrator holds an early conference to discuss processing of
the case. The arbitrator establishes the schedule and decides whether an oral
hearing is necessary. After the oral hearing or other procedures (for example,
rounds of comments), each party submits its final proposed interconnection
agreement or resolution of disputed issues. The arbitrator chooses between the
two final offers. If neither offer is consistent with applicable statutes,
Commission rules, and Commission policies, then the arbitrator will make a
decision that meets those requirements.
(7) The arbitrator may allow formal discovery
only to the extent deemed necessary. Parties are required to make good faith
attempts to exchange information relevant to any disputed issue in an informal,
voluntary, and prompt manner. Unresolved discovery disputes are resolved by the
arbitrator upon request of a party. The arbitrator will order a party to
provide information if the arbitrator determines the requesting party has a
reasonable need for the requested information and that the request is not
overly burdensome.
(8) Only the two
negotiating parties have full party status. The arbitrator may confer with
Commission staff for assistance throughout the arbitration process.
(9) To keep the process moving forward,
appeals to the Commission are not allowed during the arbitration process. An
arbitrator may certify a question to the Commission if the arbitrator believes
it is necessary.
(10) To
accommodate the need for flexibility, the arbitrator may use different
procedures so long as the procedures are fair, treat the parties equitably, and
substantially comply with the procedures listed here.
(11) The arbitrator must serve the
arbitration decision on the interconnecting public utility and the
interconnection applicant. The parties may file comments on the arbitration
decision with the Commission within 10 calendar days after service.
(12) The Commission must accept, reject, or
modify an arbitration decision within 30 calendar days after service of the
decision.
(13) Within 14 calendar
days after the Commission issues an order on a petition for arbitration of an
interconnection agreement, the petitioner must prepare an interconnection
agreement complying with the terms of the decision and serve it on respondent.
Respondent must either sign and file the interconnection agreement or file
objections to it within 10 calendar days of service of the agreement. If
objections are filed, respondent must state how the interconnection agreement
fails to comply with the Commission order and offer substitute language
complying with the decision. The Commission must approve or reject a filed
interconnection agreement within 20 calendar days of its filing or the
agreement is deemed approved.
(14)
If petitioner, without respondent's consent, fails to timely prepare and serve
an interconnection agreement on respondent, respondent may file a motion
requesting the Commission dismiss the petition for arbitration with prejudice.
The Commission may grant such motion if the petitioner's failure to timely
prepare and serve the interconnection agreement was the result of inexcusable
neglect on the part of petitioner.
(15) The public utility and the applicant may
agree to hire an outside arbitrator rather than file a petition with the
Commission. The public utility and the applicant must share equally the costs
of an outside arbitrator unless they mutually agree to a different payment
arrangement.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 756
Stats. Implemented: ORS 756.040 & 756.500
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