THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
1201 |
THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 |
S.D. 1 |
|
STATE OF HAWAII |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO WILDFIRES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The
legislature finds that as the risk of catastrophic wildfires in the State has
increased, so has the threat of property damage from these fires. The legislature further finds that the public
interest is served by providing a rapid, efficient, and low-cost process for
property owners, renters, businesses, and
their insurers to obtain compensation if a regulated utility is alleged to have
caused or contributed to the damage resulting from a catastrophic
wildfire. The legislature also finds that
under existing law, individuals and businesses must pursue civil litigation,
which is a lengthy, costly, and contentious process.
This Act would help individuals and businesses recover by giving
them the option to obtain payment quickly
through an administrative claims process similar to the One Ohana Fund, also
known as the Maui Wildfires Compensation Fund.
The administrative claims process will begin based on a preliminary
determination that a utility was involved, without waiting for the conclusion
of a comprehensive investigation of the origin and cause of a catastrophic
wildfire. Claimants are not required to prove that the regulated utility was negligent in order to receive
payment through the administrative claims process.
This Act:
(1) Preserves claimants' right to pursue litigation if they choose to reject the amount offered through the administrative claims process;
(2) Limits the total amount that can be paid for property damage through both the administrative claims process and litigation, balancing the interests of those affected by a catastrophic fire in obtaining compensation and the interests of the public utilities in mitigating the risk of financial instability that can result from unlimited liability;
(3) Requires the public utilities commission to review the conduct of the public utility and to order the utility to replenish the fund, up to a cap, if it finds that the utility acted imprudently; and
(4) Provides for the legislature to re-evaluate the risk of catastrophic wildfires in 2035 and to refund to customers the amounts they contributed, plus earnings on those funds, to the extent the legislature concludes that the size of the fund can be reduced based on actions taken to reduce risk.
The legislature also finds that the public interest is served by
establishing a compensation mechanism that does not expose regulated utilities
to the financial instability that can result from the existing litigation
process. Regulated utilities that may be
alleged to have caused a catastrophic wildfire face massive costs from
litigation. Those costs can overwhelm
those utilities, undermining their ability to make investments that the State
needs. Indeed, even the possibility of
litigation regarding a future catastrophic
wildfire can create a cloud of uncertainty that can impair a utility's ability
to attract capital on reasonable terms.
These costs and uncertainties result in increased rates paid by
customers and may reduce the utilities' ability to make investments in wildfire
prevention and resilience initiatives, among other priorities that may affect
the health and safety of the State's residents.
The legislature additionally finds that securitization may be
the most efficient, least costly way for a utility to finance the contributions
to the wildfire recovery fund. Utility
securitization transactions have an extensive track record of success.
Therefore, the purpose of this Act is to serve the public
interest by establishing a mechanism to provide efficient compensation for
property damage resulting from a future catastrophic wildfire allegedly caused
by a regulated utility, while also protecting the financial integrity of
Hawaii's regulated utilities.
SECTION
2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is
amended by adding two new chapters to be appropriately designated and to read
as follows:
"CHAPTER
A
WILDFIRE
RECOVERY FUND
§A-1 Definitions. As used in this
chapter:
"Catastrophic
wildfire" means a wildfire occurring in the State on or after the
operation date that:
(1) Destroys more than five hundred commercial structures or residential structures designed for habitation; or
(2) For an electric cooperative with less than fifty thousand residential members, meets a threshold dollar amount of potential claims to be determined by the executive director.
"Commission" means the public utilities commission.
"Contributor" means a public utility that satisfies all requirements to participate in the wildfire recovery fund.
"Covered catastrophic
wildfire" means a catastrophic wildfire that may have been caused, or
whose severity may have been increased, by a contributor's facilities or
actions.
"Electric
cooperative" means an electric utility that satisfies the requirements
under section 269-31(c).
"Electric
utility" means a public utility that exists
for the furnishing of electrical power.
"Executive
director" means the executive director of the wildfire recovery fund.
"Government entity" means any government agency, department, division, subdivision, unit, component, bureau, commission, office, board, or instrumentality of any kind, including federal, state, and municipal entities.
"Investor-owned
utility" means a public utility that is owned by shareholders and overseen
by a board of directors elected by shareholders.
"Operation date" means the first date for contributors to elect to participate in the wildfire recovery fund under section A-3(a) and the rules adopted to implement it.
"Property insurer" means a person or entity that indemnifies another by a contract of insurance for loss of or damage to real or personal property in the State.
"Property owner"
means an owner of real property in the State.
"Public utility" has the same meaning as defined in section 269-1.
"Qualified claimant" means any property owner, property insurer, or tenant who alleges any qualifying damages.
"Qualifying action" means a civil action by a qualifying claimant to recover qualifying damages.
"Qualifying damages" means damages arising out of the loss of or damage to real or personal property from a covered catastrophic wildfire.
"Tenant" means a person or entity lawfully entitled to occupy real property that the person or entity does not own in the State.
"Wildfire mitigation plan compliance report" means an annual report reviewed and approved by the commission that documents utility compliance with an approved or accepted wildfire risk mitigation plan. "Wildfire mitigation plan compliance report" includes a quantitative analysis of wildfire risk reduction implemented by the electric utility in each year.
"Wildfire recovery fund" means the wildfire recovery fund established by section A-2.
"Wildfire
risk mitigation plan" means a plan, which may include a natural hazard
mitigation report, in which a public utility addresses how it will mitigate the
risk of its equipment in causing or exacerbating a wildfire.
§A-2 Wildfire recovery
fund; establishment; executive director. (a) There is established outside the state
treasury a wildfire recovery fund and any accounts thereunder to carry out the
purposes of this chapter. All moneys in
the wildfire recovery fund shall be expended exclusively for the uses and
purposes set forth in this chapter. The
wildfire recovery fund shall not be subject to chapter 431. The moneys in the wildfire recovery fund not
required for immediate use shall be invested by the
executive director for the benefit of the wildfire recovery fund; provided that
no assets of the program shall be transferred to the general fund of the State
or to any other fund of the State or otherwise encumbered or used for any
purpose other than those specified for the wildfire recovery fund.
(b)
The wildfire
recovery fund shall be placed within the department of commerce and consumer affairs for administrative
purposes. The fund shall be a public
body corporate and politic.
(c) The governor shall appoint an executive
director of the wildfire recovery fund, who shall be exempt from chapter 76,
and shall fix the executive director's compensation. The executive director may be removed only by
the governor.
(d) The executive director shall be
responsible for the day-to-day operations and management of the wildfire
recovery fund and shall perform all functions necessary to implement this
chapter, including entering into contracts and other obligations related to the
operation, management, and administration of the wildfire recovery fund.
(e) The executive director
may retain, employ, or contract with officers; experts; employees; accountants;
actuaries; financial professionals; and other advisers, consultants, attorneys,
and professionals, as may be necessary in the executive director's judgment,
for the efficient operation, management, and administration of the wildfire
recovery fund.
(f)
The executive
director shall have the power to issue revenue bonds, from time to time, in
such principal amounts as the executive director may deem advisable for the
purpose of this chapter, backed by future payments to the wildfire recovery
fund that contributors have committed to make.
These bonds shall be issued pursuant to part III of chapter 39, except
as provided in this chapter.
(g) The executive director shall
adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to implement this chapter.
§A-3 Wildfire recovery
fund; eligibility for participation as a contributor; contributions. (a) To be eligible to participate as
a contributor, a person or entity shall:
(1) Be a public utility that has a wildfire risk mitigation plan that has been approved or accepted by the commission;
(2) Notify the executive director, in the year before the person or entity becomes a contributor, that it intends to participate in the wildfire recovery fund; and
(3) Agree to make an initial contribution, the payment of which is thereafter a binding commitment enforceable by the executive director.
(b) The initial contributions from investor-owned
electric utilities collectively shall be:
(1) $ plus interest as provided in subsection (c) for amounts not securitized, which amounts shall be recovered from its customers in nonbypassable rates; and
(2) $ which amount shall be funded by shareholders of those investor-owned electric utilities.
(c) The investor-owned
electric utilities may elect to make the initial contributions set forth in
subsection (b)(1), to the degree not paid for through securitization pursuant
to chapter B, over a period not to exceed five years; provided that interest
shall be added to any amounts paid after the first year, at an interest rate
equal to the investor-owned electric utilities' incremental cost of long-term
debt, with such interest recovered from customers in rates.
(d) The executive director shall determine the
initial contributions from other public utilities based on an actuarial
assessment of the risk of potential payments by the wildfire recovery fund resulting
from covered catastrophic wildfires created by the public utility.
(e) The executive director may propose
supplemental contributions to the wildfire recovery fund by
participating public utilities.
(f) If a contributor fails to pay any part of an
initial contribution or a supplemental contribution that
it agreed to make, or elects not to agree to make a supplemental contribution,
that contributor will no longer be a contributor as of the date on which the
payment was due, and the contributor shall not receive any refund of payments previously
made; provided that a contributor that elects not to make a supplemental
contribution shall be a contributor as to any catastrophic wildfire that occurs
prior to the election date. After
failing to, or electing not to, make a payment, a public utility may rejoin the
wildfire recovery fund as a contributor on a prospective basis if it makes owed
payments with interest.
(g) The executive director shall adopt rules
pursuant to chapter 91 regarding the timing of initial and supplemental
contributions, which may include upfront, annual, and retrospective payments
(i.e., payments made after a wildfire occurs).
(h) Initial and supplemental
contributions of investor-owned electric utilities shall constitute
"wildfire recovery costs" as defined in section B-1.
§A-4 Determination of a
covered catastrophic wildfire. The
executive director shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 regarding how to
determine whether a wildfire is a covered catastrophic wildfire. These rules shall include a requirement that
a wildfire shall be determined to be a covered catastrophic wildfire if a party
makes non-frivolous allegations in a legal action that a contributor's
facilities caused or contributed to the severity of a catastrophic wildfire.
§A-5 Replenishment of the
wildfire recovery fund. (a) If the wildfire recovery fund has made
payments with respect to a covered catastrophic wildfire and after
resolution of substantially all third-party liability claims that were brought
or could be brought against contributors arising from that covered catastrophic
wildfire, each contributor whose facilities were implicated in the covered catastrophic
wildfire shall initiate a proceeding before the commission to review the
prudence of the public utility's conduct leading to the catastrophic wildfire.
(b) The commission shall determine whether the
contributor acted prudently:
(1) Considering only acts that may have caused the occurrence or contributed to the severity of the covered catastrophic wildfire; and
(2) Evaluating the contributor's actions in the context of its overall systems, processes, and programs, such that an error by a contributor's employee would not be a basis for a finding of imprudence, unless that error resulted from an imprudent system, process, or program.
(c) If the commission determines that imprudent
conduct by the contributor caused the occurrence or contributed to the severity
of a covered catastrophic wildfire, the commission
shall determine whether to order the contributor to replenish the wildfire
recovery fund in whole or in part for payments from the wildfire recovery fund
in connection with the catastrophic wildfire.
In determining the amount of replenishment, if any, the commission shall
consider the extent and severity of the contributor's imprudence and factors
within and beyond the contributor's control that may have led to or exacerbated
the costs from the covered catastrophic wildfire, including but not limited to
humidity, temperature, winds, fuel, merged wildfires with independent ignitions,
third-party actions that affected the spread of the wildfire, and fire
suppression activities.
(d) Over any three-year period, the
commission shall not order the contributor to reimburse the wildfire recovery
fund in an amount that exceeds twenty per cent of the contributor's
transmission and distribution equity rate base.
(e) A contributor shall not recover in regulated
rates any amount that the commission orders it to
pay to the wildfire recovery fund as a replenishment under this section.
§A-6
Claims for payment by qualified claimants; presentment requirement. (a) The executive director shall adopt rules
pursuant to chapter 91 to create a process through which a qualified claimant
that is not a government entity may submit to the wildfire recovery fund a
claim for payment of economic damages arising out of property damage resulting
from a covered catastrophic wildfire, including a deadline to submit claims.
(b) A qualified claimant
shall file a claim for payment for economic damages arising out of the loss of
or damage to real or personal property from a covered catastrophic wildfire
pursuant to this section. The claim of a
qualified claimant that is not a property insurer shall be limited to uninsured
economic damages. A qualified claimant
shall not file or maintain a civil action against a contributor unless and
until it rejects an offer of settlement from the wildfire recovery fund.
(c) The executive
director shall make an offer to settle each claim submitted, which the claimant may accept or reject.
In determining the amount of each offer, the executive director shall
consider, at a minimum:
(1) The economic damages sought by all qualified claimants in the aggregate;
(2) The amount available to the wildfire recovery fund relative to the amount under paragraph (1);
(3) The strength of any evidence of contributor liability; and
(4) The strength of any evidence of involvement of non-contributor third-parties.
§A-7
Claims for payment by contributors.
The executive director shall
adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to create a process through which a
contributor may obtain payment from the wildfire recovery fund to satisfy
settled or finally adjudicated claims for recovery of qualifying damages after exhausting the contributor's available
insurance. The rules shall establish the
standard for approving any settlement.
To the extent that the wildfire recovery fund lacks sufficient funds to
make a payment to a participating utility when sought, the wildfire recovery
fund shall make such payment upon receipt of contributions
that contributors are obligated to make to the wildfire recovery fund under
payment schedules.
§A-8
Limitations on claims. (a) No qualifying action
may be instituted or maintained by a qualified claimant against contributors or
their affiliates, employees, agents, or insurers if the qualified claimant
accepts an offer under section A-6; provided that the rights of a property
insurer to sue as a subrogee of its policyholder shall not be affected by a
property owner's or tenant's acceptance of an offer under section A-6 and the
subrogation rights shall be affected only if the property insurer elects to
accept an offer under section A-6.
(b) No suit, claim,
arbitration, or other civil legal action for indemnity or contribution for
amounts paid, or that may be paid, as a result of a covered catastrophic
wildfire, may be instituted or maintained by any
persons or entities against contributors or their affiliates, employees,
agents, or insurers for qualifying damages.
§A-9 Several
liability. Any law to the contrary
notwithstanding, joint and several liability is abolished for any qualifying
damages. Any
person or entity that is sued for qualifying damages may argue for
apportionment of fault to any other person or entity regardless of whether that
person or entity is a party to the action.
§A-10 Reporting; refunds
authorized by legislature. (a) The executive director
shall submit to the legislature an annual report regarding the wildfire
recovery fund no later than ninety days prior to the beginning of each regular session until 2034. The
annual report submitted by the executive director shall include an update on
the activities of the wildfire recovery fund.
(b) No later than ninety days prior to the
regular session of 2035, the executive director shall submit a report regarding
the financial status and resources of the wildfire
recovery fund relative to the then-current assessment of actuarial risk of a
catastrophic wildfire.
(c) Based on the report in subsection (b), the
legislature may determine that the wildfire
recovery fund is overfunded and direct the executive director to return
contributions, in whole or in part, with associated investment earnings, to
contributors. Any payments made to the
wildfire recovery fund that were recovered in regulated rates from customers,
and any investment earnings associated with those payments, shall, in the event
that the legislature orders a refund, be returned to those customers.
§A-11 Inadmissible evidence. Any findings made or evidence submitted for purposes of proceedings under sections A-4, A-6, and A-7 shall be subject to the limits on admissibility under rule 408, section 626-1.
CHAPTER
B
SECURITIZATION
§B-1 Definitions. As used in this chapter, unless the context
otherwise requires:
"Ancillary
agreement" means a bond insurance policy, letter of credit, reserve
account, surety bond, swap arrangement, hedging arrangement, liquidity or
credit support arrangement, or other similar agreement or arrangement entered
into in connection with the issuance of bonds that is designed to promote the
credit quality and marketability of the bonds or to mitigate the risk of an
increase in interest rates.
"Assignee"
means a legally recognized entity to which an electric utility assigns, sells,
or transfers, other than as security, all or a portion of the electric
utility's interest in or right to wildfire recovery property. "Assignee" includes a corporation,
limited liability company, general partnership or limited partnership, public
authority, trust, financing entity, or any other legal entity to which an
assignee assigns, sells, or transfers, other than as security, its interest in
or right to wildfire recovery property.
"Bond"
means any bond, note, certificate of participation or beneficial interest, or
other evidence of indebtedness or ownership that is issued by the financing
entity under a financing order, the proceeds of which are used directly or
indirectly to recover, finance, or refinance financing costs of any wildfire
recovery costs, and that are directly or indirectly secured by or payable from
wildfire recovery property.
"Commission"
means the public utilities commission.
"Consumer"
means any individual, governmental body, trust, business entity, or nonprofit
organization that consumes electricity that has been transmitted or distributed
by means of electric transmission or distribution facilities, whether those
electric transmission or distribution facilities are owned by the consumer, the
electric utility, or any other party.
"Electric
cooperative" means an electric utility that satisfies the requirements
under section 269-31(c).
"Electric
cooperative wildfire claims costs" means costs incurred by an electric
cooperative to resolve third-party liability claims arising from any wildfire
occurring in the State that are not covered by insurance and that the
commission finds to be just and reasonable.
"Electric cooperative wildfire claims costs" do not include
costs incurred by an investor-owned electric utility.
"Electric
utility" means a public utility that exists for the furnishing of
electrical power.
"Executive
officer" means any person who performs policy making functions and is
employed by an electric utility subject to the approval of the board of
directors, and includes the president, secretary, treasurer, and any vice
president in charge of a principal business unit, division, or function of the
electric utility.
"Financing
costs" means the costs to issue, service, repay, or refinance bonds,
whether incurred or paid upon issuance of the bonds or over the life of the
bonds, if they are approved for recovery by the commission in a financing
order. "Financing costs" may
include any of the following:
(1) Principal, interest, and redemption premiums that are payable on bonds;
(2) A payment required under an ancillary agreement;
(3) An amount required to fund or replenish reserve accounts or other accounts established under an indenture, ancillary agreement, or other financing document related to the bonds;
(4) Taxes, franchise fees, or license fees imposed on a financing entity as a result of the issuance of the financing order; the assignment, sale, or transfer of any wildfire recovery property; or the sale of the bonds, or imposed on the wildfire recovery charges, or otherwise resulting from the collection of the wildfire recovery charge, in any such case whether paid, payable, or accrued;
(5) Costs related to issuing and servicing bonds or the application for a financing order, including without limitation servicing fees and expenses, trustee fees and expenses, legal fees and expenses, accounting fees, administrative fees, underwriting and placement fees, financial advisory fees, original issue discount, capitalized interest, rating agency fees, and any other related costs that are approved for recovery in the financing order; and
(6) Other costs as specifically authorized by a financing order.
"Financing
entity" means an electric utility or an entity to which an electric
utility or an affiliate of an electric utility sells, assigns, or pledges all
or a portion of the electric utility's interest in wildfire recovery property,
including an affiliate of the electric utility or any unaffiliated entity, in
each case as approved by the commission in a financing order.
Subject
to section B-6(c), an entity to which an electric utility sells, assigns, or
pledges all or a portion of the electric utility's interest in wildfire
recovery property may include any governmental entity that is able to issue
bonds that are exempt from federal tax pursuant to section 103 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, including the State or a political
subdivision thereof or any department, agency, or instrumentality of the State
or political subdivision; provided that the bonds issued shall not constitute a
general obligation of the State or any political subdivision thereof or any
department, agency, or instrumentality of the State or political subdivision
and shall not constitute a pledge of the full faith and credit of the entity or
of the State or any political subdivision thereof, but shall be payable solely
from the funds provided under this chapter.
"Financing
order" means an order of the commission under this chapter that has become
final and no longer subject to appeal as provided by law and that authorizes
the issuance of bonds and the imposition, adjustment from time to time, and
collection of wildfire recovery charges, and that shall include a procedure to
require the expeditious approval by the commission of periodic adjustments to
wildfire recovery charges and to any associated fixed recovery tax amounts
included in that financing order to ensure recovery of all wildfire recovery
costs and the costs associated with the proposed recovery, financing, or
refinancing thereof, including the costs of servicing and retiring the bonds
contemplated by the financing order.
"Financing
party" means any holder of the bonds; any party to or beneficiary of an
ancillary agreement; and any trustee, collateral agent, or other person acting
for the benefit of any of the foregoing.
"Fixed
recovery tax amounts" means those nonbypassable rates and other charges,
including but not limited to distribution, connection, disconnection, and
termination rates and charges, that are needed to recover federal and state
taxes associated with wildfire recovery charges authorized by the commission in
a financing order, but are not approved as financing costs financed from
proceeds of bonds.
"Investor-owned
utility" means a public utility that is owned by shareholders and overseen
by a board of directors elected by shareholders.
"Public
utility" has the same meaning as defined in section 269-1.
"True-up
adjustment" means a formulaic adjustment to the wildfire recovery charges
as they appear on consumer bills that is necessary to correct for any
overcollection or undercollection of the wildfire recovery charges authorized
by a financing order and to otherwise ensure the timely and complete payment
and recovery of wildfire recovery costs over the authorized repayment term.
"Wildfire
recovery charges" means the nonbypassable charges, including but not
limited to distribution, connection, disconnection, and termination rates and
charges, that are authorized by section B-2 and in a financing order authorized
under this chapter to be imposed on and collected from all existing and future
consumers of a financing entity or any successor to recover principal,
interest, and other financing costs relating to the bonds.
"Wildfire
recovery costs" means an investor-owned electric utility's contributions
to the wildfire recovery fund, as set forth in section A-3, and electric
cooperative wildfire claims costs.
"Wildfire
recovery fund" means the wildfire recovery fund established by chapter A.
"Wildfire
recovery property" means the property right created pursuant to this
chapter, including without limitation the right, title, and interest of the
electric utility, financing entity, or its assignee:
(1) In and to the wildfire recovery charge established pursuant to a financing order, including the right to impose, bill, collect, and receive such wildfire recovery charges under the financing order and all rights to obtain adjustments to the wildfire recovery charge in accordance with section B-3 and the financing order; and
(2) To be paid the amount that is determined in a financing order to be the amount that the electric utility or its assignee is lawfully entitled to receive pursuant to this chapter and the proceeds thereof, and in and to all revenues, collections, claims, payments, moneys, or proceeds of, or arising from, the wildfire recovery charge that is the subject of a financing order.
"Wildfire recovery property"
does not include a right to be paid fixed recovery tax amounts. "Wildfire recovery property" shall
constitute a current property right, notwithstanding the fact that the value of
the property right will depend on consumers using electricity or, in those
instances where consumers are customers of the electric utility, the electric
utility performing certain services.
§B-2 Applications to issue bonds and authorize
wildfire recovery charges. (a) An electric utility may apply to the
commission for one or more financing orders to issue bonds to recover any
wildfire recovery costs, each of which authorizes the following:
(1) The imposition, charging, and collection of a wildfire recovery charge, to become effective upon the issuance of the bonds, and an adjustment of any such wildfire recovery charge in accordance with a true-up adjustment mechanism under this chapter in amounts sufficient to pay the principal and interest on the bonds and all other associated financing costs on a timely basis;
(2) The creation of wildfire recovery property under the financing order; and
(3) The imposition, charging, and collection of fixed recovery tax amounts to recover any portion of the electric utility's federal and state taxes associated with those wildfire recovery charges and not financed from the proceeds of bonds.
(b) The application shall include all of the
following:
(1) The wildfire recovery costs to be financed through the issuance of bonds;
(2) The principal amount of the bonds proposed to be issued and the selection of a financing entity;
(3) An estimate of the date on which each series of bonds is expected to be issued;
(4) The scheduled final payment date, which shall not exceed thirty years, and a legal final maturity date, which may be longer, subject to rating agency and market considerations, during which term the wildfire recovery charge associated with the issuance of each series of bonds is expected to be imposed and collected;
(5) An estimate of the financing costs associated with the issuance of each series of bonds;
(6) An estimate of the amount of the wildfire recovery charge revenues necessary to pay principal and interest on the bonds and all other associated financing costs as set forth in the application and the calculation for that estimate;
(7) A proposed design of the wildfire recovery charge and a proposed methodology for allocating the wildfire recovery charge among customer classes within the electric utility's service territory;
(8) A description of the financing entity selected by the electric utility;
(9) A description of a proposed true-up adjustment mechanism for the adjustment of the wildfire recovery charge to correct for any overcollection or undercollection of the wildfire recovery charge, and to otherwise ensure the timely payment of principal and interest on the bonds and all other associated financing costs; and
(10) Any other information required by the commission.
(c) An electric utility may file an application
for a financing order, or as a joint applicant with one or more affiliate
electric utilities, to issue bonds to recover wildfire recovery costs. The application shall include a description
of:
(1) How the wildfire recovery charges will be allocated among the applicant electric utilities in a manner that is equitable and that need not correspond to the incurrence of wildfire recovery costs by each electric utility; and
(2) Whether and how the consumers of any of the applicant electric utilities will be responsible for the payment of wildfire recovery charges allocated to consumers of affiliate electric utilities.
In
the alternative, an electric utility may apply for a financing order to issue
bonds to recover wildfire recovery costs, including wildfire recovery costs
incurred, or to be incurred, by the applicant and one or more of its affiliate
electric utilities. In connection with
the issuance of a financing order pursuant to this subsection, the commission
shall issue a concurrent order to the affiliate electric utility or electric
utilities directing the affiliate electric utility or electric utilities to
impose rates on its or their consumers designed to generate revenue sufficient
to pay credits over the life of the bonds to the applicant electric utility in the
amount as the commission determines is equitable, just, and reasonable. The application shall describe the allocation
method and adjustment mechanism for the affiliate electric utility credit
payments proposed to be subject to the concurrent commission order.
(d) The commission shall issue an approval or
denial of any application for a financing order filed pursuant to this section
within ninety days of the last filing in the applicable docket but no later
than one year after the application is filed.
(e) In exercising its duties under this section,
the commission shall consider:
(1) Whether the recovery of such costs is consistent with the public interest;
(2) Whether the structuring, marketing, and pricing of the bonds are expected to result in the lowest wildfire recovery charges consistent with market conditions at the time at which the bonds are priced and the terms of the financing order;
(3) Whether the terms and conditions of any bonds to be issued are just and reasonable;
(4) With respect to an application by an investor-owned utility, whether the recovery of wildfire recovery costs through the designation of the wildfire recovery charges and any associated fixed recovery tax amounts, and the issuance of bonds in connection with the wildfire recovery charges, would result in net savings or mitigate rate impacts to consumers, as compared to rate recovery without securitization; and
(5) Any other factors that the commission deems reasonable and in the public interest.
If the commission makes the
determination specified in this section, the commission shall establish, as
part of the financing order, a procedure for the electric utility to submit
applications from time to time to request the issuance of additional financing
orders designating wildfire recovery charges and any associated fixed recovery
tax amounts as recoverable.
At
the option of the electric utility, the electric utility may include in its
application for a financing order a request for authorization to sell,
transfer, assign, or pledge wildfire recovery property to a governmental entity
if the electric utility expects bonds issued by a governmental entity would
result in a more cost-efficient means, taking into account all financing costs
related to the bonds, than using another financing entity to issue bonds to
finance the same wildfire recovery costs, taking into account the costs of
issuing the other financing entity's bonds.
(f) Wildfire recovery charges and any associated
fixed recovery tax amounts shall be imposed only on existing and future
consumers in the utility service territory.
Consumers within the utility service territory of the electric utility
that are subject to the financing order shall continue to pay wildfire recovery
charges and any associated fixed recovery tax amounts until the bonds and
associated financing costs are paid in full by the financing entity.
§B-3 Wildfire recovery financing order. (a) A
financing order shall remain in effect until the bonds issued under the
financing order and all financing costs related to the bonds have been paid in
full or defeased by their terms.
A
financing order shall remain in effect and unabated notwithstanding the
bankruptcy, reorganization, or insolvency of the electric utility or the
commencement of any judicial or nonjudicial proceeding on the financing order.
(b) Notwithstanding any other law to the
contrary, with respect to wildfire recovery property that has been made the
basis for the issuance of bonds and with respect to any associated fixed
recovery tax amounts, the financing order, the wildfire recovery charges, and
any associated fixed recovery tax amounts shall be irrevocable. The State and its agencies, including the
commission, pledge and agree with bondholders, the owners and assignees of the
wildfire recovery property, and other financing parties that the State and its
agencies shall not take any action listed in this subsection. This subsection shall not preclude an action
if the action would not adversely affect the interests of the electric utility
and of assignees of the wildfire recovery property. The prohibited actions shall be the
following:
(1) Alter the provisions of this chapter, which authorize the commission to create an irrevocable contract right or choice in action by the issuance of a financing order, to create wildfire recovery property and make the wildfire recovery charges imposed by a financing order irrevocable, binding, nonbypassable charges for all existing and future consumers;
(2) Take or permit any action that impairs or would impair the value of wildfire recovery property or the security for the bonds or revise the wildfire recovery costs for which recovery is authorized;
(3) In any way impair the rights and remedies of the bondholders, assignees, and other financing parties;
(4) Except for changes made pursuant to the formula-based true-up mechanism authorized under subsection (d), reduce, alter, or impair wildfire recovery charges that are to be imposed, billed, charged, collected, and remitted for the benefit of the bondholders, any assignee, and any other financing parties until any and all principal, interest, premium, financing costs, and other fees, expenses, or charges incurred, and any contracts to be performed, in connection with the related bonds have been paid and performed in full.
The
financing entity is authorized to include this pledge in the bonds.
(c) Under a financing order, the electric utility
shall retain sole discretion to select the financing entity and to cause bonds
to be issued, including the right to defer or postpone the issuance,
assignment, sale, or transfer of wildfire recovery property.
(d) The commission may create, pursuant to an
application from an electric utility, a nonbypassable charge referred to as a
wildfire recovery charge, which shall be applied to recover principal,
interest, and other financing costs relating to the bonds. The wildfire recovery charge shall be a
dedicated, discrete tariff rider.
The
commission shall, in any financing order, establish a procedure for periodic
true-up adjustments to wildfire recovery charges, which shall be made at least
annually and may be made more frequently.
Within thirty days after receiving an electric utility's filing of a
true-up adjustment, the commission's review of the filing shall be limited to
mathematical or clerical errors as determined in accordance with any true-up
adjustment formulas set forth in the applicable financing order.
The
commission shall either approve the filing or inform the electric utility of
any mathematical or clerical errors in its calculation. If the commission informs the electric
utility of mathematical or clerical errors in its calculation, the electric
utility shall correct its error and refile its true-up adjustment. The timeframes previously described in this
subsection shall apply to a refiled true-up adjustment.
(e) Neither financing orders nor bonds issued
under this chapter shall constitute a general obligation of the State or any of
its political subdivisions, nor shall they constitute a pledge of the full
faith and credit of the State or any of its political subdivisions, but shall
be payable solely from the wildfire recovery property provided under this
chapter.
All
bonds shall contain on the face thereof a statement to the following
effect: "Neither the full faith and
credit nor the taxing power of the State of Hawaii is pledged to the payment of
the principal of, or interest and premium on, this bond."
The
issuance of bonds under this chapter shall not directly, indirectly, or
contingently obligate the State or any of its political subdivisions to levy or
pledge any form of taxation or to make any appropriation for their payment.
(f) Wildfire recovery charges are wildfire
recovery property when, and to the extent that, a financing order authorizing
the wildfire recovery charges has become effective in accordance with this
chapter, and the wildfire recovery property shall thereafter continuously exist
as property for all purposes, and all of the rights and privileges relating to
that property shall continuously exist for the period and to the extent
provided in the financing order, but in any event until the bonds, including
all principal; premiums, if any; interest with respect to the bonds; and all
other financing costs are paid in full.
A financing order may provide that the creation of wildfire recovery
property shall be simultaneous with the sale of the wildfire recovery property
to an assignee as provided in the application of the pledge of the wildfire
recovery property to secure the bonds.
(g) Any successor to a financing entity shall be
bound by the requirements of this chapter and shall perform and satisfy all
obligations of and have the same rights under a financing order as, and to the
same extent as, the financing entity.
(h) No electric utility approved for a financing order shall increase compensation for its executive officers unless the utility's wildfire mitigation plan compliance reports have been approved by the commission for five consecutive years; provided that the commission may consider an alternative symmetric performance incentive mechanism, if the commission deems appropriate. For the purposes of this subsection, "wildfire mitigation plan compliance report" has the same meaning as defined in section A-1.
§B-4
Bonds; issuance; wildfire recovery
property interests. (a) The electric utility may sell and assign all
or portions of its interest in wildfire recovery property to one or more
financing entities that make that wildfire recovery property the basis for
issuance of bonds, to the extent approved in a financing order. The electric utility or financing entity may
pledge wildfire recovery property as collateral, directly or indirectly, for
bonds to the extent approved in the pertinent financing orders providing for a
security interest in the wildfire recovery property, in the manner set forth in
this section. In addition, wildfire
recovery property may be sold or assigned by either of the following:
(1) The financing entity or a trustee for the holders of bonds or the holders of an ancillary agreement in connection with the exercise of remedies upon a default under the terms of the bonds; or
(2) Any person acquiring the wildfire recovery property after a sale or assignment pursuant to this chapter.
(b) To the extent that any interest in wildfire
recovery property is sold, assigned, or is pledged as collateral pursuant to
subsection (a), the commission may authorize the electric utility to contract
with the financing entity or its assignees that the electric utility will:
(1) Continue to operate its system to provide service to consumers within its service territory;
(2) Collect amounts in respect of the wildfire recovery charges for the benefit and account of the financing entity or its assignees; and
(3) Account for and remit these amounts to or for the account of the financing entity or its assignees.
Contracting with the financing entity
or its assignees in accordance with that authorization shall not impair or
negate the characterization of the sale, assignment, or pledge as an absolute
transfer, a true sale, or a security interest, as applicable. To the extent that billing, collection, and
other related services with respect to the provision of the electric utility's
services are provided to a consumer by any person or entity other than the
electric utility in whose service territory the consumer is located, that
person or entity shall collect the wildfire recovery charges and any associated
fixed recovery tax amounts from the consumer for the benefit and account of the
electric utility, financing entity, or assignees with the associated revenues
remitted solely for the person's benefit as a condition to the provision of
electric service to that consumer.
Each
financing order shall impose terms and conditions, consistent with the purposes
and objectives of this chapter, on any person or entity responsible for
billing, collection, and other related services, including without limitation
collection of the wildfire recovery charges and any associated fixed recovery
tax amounts, that are the subject of the financing order.
(c) The financing entity may issue bonds upon
approval by the commission in a financing order. Bonds shall be nonrecourse to the credit or
any assets of the electric utility, other than the wildfire recovery property
as specified in that financing order.
(d) Wildfire recovery property that is specified
in a financing order shall constitute an existing, present property right,
notwithstanding the fact that the imposition and collection of wildfire
recovery charges depend on the electric utility's continuing to provide
services or continuing to perform its servicing functions relating to the
collection of wildfire recovery charges or on the level of future service
consumption (e.g., electricity consumption).
Wildfire recovery property shall exist whether or not the wildfire
recovery charges have been billed, have accrued, or have been collected and
notwithstanding the fact that the value for a security interest in the wildfire
recovery property, or amount of the wildfire recovery property, is dependent on
the future provision of service to consumers.
All wildfire recovery property specified in a financing order shall
continue to exist until the bonds issued pursuant to a financing order and all
associated financing costs are paid in full.
(e) Wildfire recovery property; wildfire recovery
charges; and the interests of an assignee, bondholder, or financing entity, or
any pledgee in wildfire recovery property and wildfire recovery charges shall
not be subject to setoff, counterclaim, surcharge, recoupment, or defense by
the electric utility or any other person or in connection with the bankruptcy,
reorganization, or other insolvency proceeding of the electric utility, any
affiliate of the electric utility, or any other entity.
(f) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, any
requirement under this chapter or a financing order that the commission acts
upon shall be binding upon the commission, as it may be constituted from time
to time, and any successor agency exercising functions similar to the
commission, and the commission shall have no authority to rescind, alter, or
amend that requirement in a financing order.
§B-5 Wildfire recovery charge. (a)
The wildfire recovery charge created pursuant to a financing order
approved pursuant to section B-2 shall be a nonbypassable charge of a financing
entity that shall be applied to the repayment of bonds and related financing
costs as described in this chapter. The
wildfire recovery charge and any associated fixed recovery tax amounts may be a
usage-based charge, a flat user charge, or a charge based upon customer
revenues as determined by the commission for each consumer class in any
financing order.
(b) As long as any bonds are outstanding and any
financing costs have not been paid in full, any wildfire recovery charge and
any associated fixed recovery tax amounts authorized under a financing order
shall be nonbypassable. Subject to any
exceptions provided in a financing order, a wildfire recovery charge and any
associated fixed recovery tax amounts shall be paid by all existing and future
consumers within the utility service territory.
(c) The wildfire recovery charge shall be
collected by an electric utility or its successors, in accordance with section
B-8(a), in full through a charge that is separate and apart from the electric
utility's rates.
(d) An electric utility may exercise the same
rights and remedies under its tariff and applicable law and regulation based on
a consumer's nonpayment of the wildfire recovery charge as it could for a
consumer's failure to pay any other charge payable to that electric utility.
§B-6 Security interests in wildfire recovery
property; financing statements.
(a) A security interest in
wildfire recovery property is valid and enforceable against the pledgor and
third parties, subject to the rights of any third parties holding security
interests in the wildfire recovery property perfected in the manner described
in this section, and attaches when all of the following have occurred:
(1) The commission has issued a financing order authorizing the wildfire recovery charge to be included in the wildfire recovery property;
(2) Value has been given by the pledgees of the wildfire recovery property; and
(3) The pledgor has signed a security agreement covering the wildfire recovery property.
(b) A valid and enforceable security interest in
wildfire recovery property is perfected when it has
attached and when a financing statement has been filed with the bureau of
conveyances of the State of Hawaii naming the pledgor of the wildfire recovery
property as "debtor" and identifying the wildfire recovery
property.
Any
description of the wildfire recovery property shall be
sufficient if it refers to the financing order creating the wildfire recovery
property. A copy of the financing
statement shall be filed with the commission by the electric utility that is
the pledgor or transferor of the wildfire recovery property. The commission may require the electric
utility to make other filings with respect to the security interest in
accordance with procedures that the commission may establish; provided that the
filings shall not affect the perfection of the security interest.
(c) A perfected security interest in wildfire recovery
property shall be a continuously perfected security interest in all
wildfire recovery property revenues and proceeds
arising with respect thereto, whether or not the revenues or proceeds have
accrued. Conflicting security interests
shall rank according to priority in time of perfection. Wildfire recovery property
shall constitute property for all purposes, including for contracts securing
bonds, whether or not the wildfire recovery property
revenues and proceeds have accrued.
(d) Subject to the terms of the security
agreement covering the wildfire recovery property and the rights of
any third parties holding security interests in the wildfire recovery
property, perfected in the manner described in this section, the
validity and relative priority of a security interest created under this
section shall not be defeated or adversely affected by the commingling of
revenues arising with respect to the wildfire recovery property
with other funds of the electric utility that is the pledgor or transferor of
the wildfire recovery property, or by any security
interest in a deposit account of that electric utility perfected under article
9 of chapter 490, into which the revenues are deposited.
Subject
to the terms of the security agreement, upon compliance with the requirements
of section 490:9-312(b)(1), the pledgees of the wildfire recovery
property shall have a perfected security interest in all cash and
deposit accounts of the electric utility in which wildfire recovery
property revenues have been commingled with other funds.
(e) If default occurs under the security
agreement covering the wildfire recovery property, the pledgees of
the wildfire recovery property, subject to the terms of
the security agreement, shall have all rights and remedies of a secured party
upon default under article 9 of chapter 490 and shall be entitled to foreclose
or otherwise enforce their security interest in the wildfire recovery
property, subject to the rights of any third parties holding prior
security interests in the wildfire recovery property
perfected in the manner provided in this section.
In
addition, the commission may require in the financing order creating the
wildfire recovery property that in the event of
default by the electric utility in payment of wildfire recovery property
revenues, the commission and any successor thereto, upon the application by the
pledgees or assignees, including assignees under section B-5 of the wildfire recovery
property, and without limiting any other remedies available to the
pledgees or assignees by reason of the default, shall order the sequestration
and payment to the pledgees or assignees of wildfire recovery property
revenues. Any financing order shall
remain in full force and effect notwithstanding any bankruptcy, reorganization,
or other insolvency proceedings with respect to the debtor, pledgor, or
transferor of the wildfire recovery property. Any surplus in excess of amounts necessary to
pay principal; premiums, if any; interest, costs, and arrearages on the bonds;
and associated financing costs arising under the security agreement, shall be
remitted to the debtor, pledgor, or transferor, for the purpose of remitting
such amounts to customers via the electric utility.
(f) Sections 490:9-204 and 490:9-205 shall apply
to a pledge of wildfire recovery property by the electric
utility, an affiliate of the electric utility, or a financing entity.
§B-7 Transfers of wildfire recovery property. (a) A
transfer or assignment of wildfire recovery property by the electric utility to
an assignee or to a financing entity, or by an assignee of the electric utility
or a financing entity to another financing entity, which the parties in the
governing documentation have expressly stated to be a sale or other absolute
transfer, in a transaction approved in a financing order, shall be treated as
an absolute transfer of all of the transferor's right, title, and interest, as
in a true sale, and not as a pledge or other financing, of the wildfire recovery
property, other than for federal and state income and franchise tax
purposes.
(b) The characterization of the sale, assignment,
or transfer as an absolute transfer and true sale and the corresponding
characterization of the property interest of the assignee shall not be affected
or impaired by, among other things, the occurrence of any of the following:
(1) Commingling of wildfire recovery charge revenues with other amounts;
(2) The retention by the seller of either of the following:
(A) A partial or residual interest, including an equity interest, in the financing entity or the wildfire recovery property, whether direct or indirect, subordinate or otherwise; or
(B) The right to recover costs associated with taxes, franchise fees, or license fees imposed on the collection of wildfire recovery charge;
(3) Any recourse that an assignee may have against the seller;
(4) Any indemnification rights, obligations, or repurchase rights made or provided by the seller;
(5) The obligation of the seller to collect wildfire recovery charges on behalf of an assignee;
(6) The treatment of the sale, assignment, or transfer for tax, financial reporting, or other purpose; or
(7) Any true-up adjustment of the wildfire recovery charge as provided in the financing order.
(c) A transfer of wildfire recovery property
shall be deemed perfected against third parties when:
(1) The commission issues the financing order authorizing the wildfire recovery charge included in the wildfire recovery property; and
(2) An assignment of the wildfire recovery property in writing has been executed and delivered to the assignee.
(d) As between bona fide assignees of the same
right for value without notice, the assignee first filing a financing statement
with the bureau of conveyances of the State of Hawaii in accordance with part 5
of article 9 of chapter 490, naming the assignor of the wildfire recovery
property as debtor and identifying the wildfire recovery property, shall have
priority. Any description of the
wildfire recovery property shall be sufficient if it refers to the financing
order creating the wildfire recovery property.
A copy of the financing statement shall be filed by the assignee with
the commission, and the commission may require the assignor or the assignee to
make other filings with respect to the transfer in accordance with procedures
the commission may establish; provided that these filings shall not affect the
perfection of the transfer.
§B-8 Financing entity successor requirements;
default of financing entity.
(a) Any successor to an electric
utility subject to a financing order, whether pursuant to any bankruptcy,
reorganization, or other insolvency proceeding, or pursuant to any merger,
sale, or transfer, by operation of law, or otherwise, shall be bound by the
requirements of this chapter. The
successor of the electric utility shall perform and satisfy all obligations of
the electric utility under the financing order in the same manner and to the
same extent as the electric utility, including the obligation to collect and
pay the wildfire recovery charge to any financing party as required by a
financing order or any assignee. Any
successor to the electric utility shall be entitled to receive any fixed
recovery tax amounts otherwise payable to the electric utility.
(b) The commission may require in a financing
order that, if a default by the electric utility in remittance of the wildfire
recovery charge collected arising with respect to wildfire recovery property
occurs, the commission, without limiting any other remedies available to any
financing party by reason of the default, shall order the sequestration and
payment to the beneficiaries of the wildfire recovery charge collected arising
with respect to the wildfire recovery property.
Any order shall remain in full force and effect notwithstanding any
bankruptcy, reorganization, or other insolvency proceedings with respect to the
electric utility.
§B-9 Severability. If any provision of this chapter is held to
be invalid or is superseded, replaced, repealed, or expires for any reason:
(1) That occurrence shall not affect any action allowed under this chapter that is taken prior to that occurrence by the commission, a financing entity, a bondholder, or any financing party, and any such action shall remain in full force and effect; and
(2) The validity and enforceability of the rest of this chapter shall remain unaffected."
SECTION 3. Chapter 269, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§269- Electric cooperative cost recovery for wildfire mitigation; repair and restoration costs. An electric cooperative shall be authorized to recover commission approved wildfire mitigation, repair, and restoration costs through an automatic rate adjustment clause or other tariff recovery mechanism to be established by the commission."
SECTION 4. Section 76-16, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
(1) Commissioned and enlisted personnel of the Hawaii National Guard and positions in the Hawaii National Guard that are required by state or federal laws or regulations or orders of the National Guard to be filled from those commissioned or enlisted personnel;
(2) Positions filled by persons employed by contract where the director of human resources development has certified that the service is special or unique or is essential to the public interest and that, because of circumstances surrounding its fulfillment, personnel to perform the service cannot be obtained through normal civil service recruitment procedures. Any contract may be for any period not exceeding one year;
(3) Positions that must be filled without delay to comply with a court order or decree if the director determines that recruitment through normal recruitment civil service procedures would result in delay or noncompliance, such as the Felix-Cayetano consent decree;
(4) Positions filled by the legislature or by either house or any committee thereof;
(5) Employees in the office of the governor and office of the lieutenant governor, and household employees at Washington Place;
(6) Positions filled by popular vote;
(7) Department heads, officers, and members of any board, commission, or other state agency whose appointments are made by the governor or are required by law to be confirmed by the senate;
(8) Judges, referees, receivers, masters, jurors, notaries public, land court examiners, court commissioners, and attorneys appointed by a state court for a special temporary service;
(9) One bailiff for the chief justice of the supreme court who shall have the powers and duties of a court officer and bailiff under section 606-14; one secretary or clerk for each justice of the supreme court, each judge of the intermediate appellate court, and each judge of the circuit court; one secretary for the judicial council; one deputy administrative director of the courts; three law clerks for the chief justice of the supreme court, two law clerks for each associate justice of the supreme court and each judge of the intermediate appellate court, one law clerk for each judge of the circuit court, two additional law clerks for the civil administrative judge of the circuit court of the first circuit, two additional law clerks for the criminal administrative judge of the circuit court of the first circuit, one additional law clerk for the senior judge of the family court of the first circuit, two additional law clerks for the civil motions judge of the circuit court of the first circuit, two additional law clerks for the criminal motions judge of the circuit court of the first circuit, and two law clerks for the administrative judge of the district court of the first circuit; and one private secretary for the administrative director of the courts, the deputy administrative director of the courts, each department head, each deputy or first assistant, and each additional deputy, or assistant deputy, or assistant defined in paragraph (16);
(10) First deputy and deputy attorneys general, the administrative services manager of the department of the attorney general, one secretary for the administrative services manager, an administrator and any support staff for the criminal and juvenile justice resources coordination functions, and law clerks;
(11) (A) Teachers, principals, vice-principals, complex area superintendents, deputy and assistant superintendents, other certificated personnel, and no more than twenty noncertificated administrative, professional, and technical personnel not engaged in instructional work;
(B) Effective July 1, 2003, teaching assistants, educational assistants, bilingual or bicultural school-home assistants, school psychologists, psychological examiners, speech pathologists, athletic health care trainers, alternative school work study assistants, alternative school educational or supportive services specialists, alternative school project coordinators, and communications aides in the department of education;
(C) The special assistant to the state librarian and one secretary for the special assistant to the state librarian; and
(D) Members of the faculty of the University of Hawaii, including research workers, extension agents, personnel engaged in instructional work, and administrative, professional, and technical personnel of the university;
(12) Employees engaged in special, research, or demonstration projects approved by the governor;
(13) (A) Positions filled by inmates, patients of state institutions, and persons with severe physical or mental disabilities participating in the work experience training programs;
(B) Positions filled with students in accordance with guidelines for established state employment programs; and
(C) Positions that provide work experience training or temporary public service employment that are filled by persons entering the workforce or persons transitioning into other careers under programs such as the federal Workforce Investment Act of 1998, as amended, or the Senior Community Service Employment Program of the Employment and Training Administration of the United States Department of Labor, or under other similar state programs;
(14) A custodian or guide at Iolani Palace, the Royal Mausoleum, and Hulihee Palace;
(15) Positions filled by persons employed on
a fee, contract, or piecework basis, who may lawfully perform their duties
concurrently with their private business or profession or other private
employment and whose duties require only a portion of their time, if it is
impracticable to ascertain or anticipate the portion of time to be devoted to
the service of the State;
(16) Positions
of first deputies or first assistants of each department head appointed under
or in the manner provided in section 6, article V, of the Hawaii State
Constitution; three additional deputies or assistants either in charge of the
highways, harbors, and airports divisions or other functions within the
department of transportation as may be assigned by the director of
transportation, with the approval of the governor; one additional deputy
in the department of human services either in charge of welfare or other
functions within the department as may be assigned by the director of human
services;
four additional deputies in the department of health, each in charge of one of
the following: behavioral health,
environmental health, hospitals, and health resources administration, including
other functions within the department as may be assigned by the director of
health, with the approval of the governor; two additional deputies in charge of
the law enforcement programs, administration, or other functions within the
department of law enforcement as may be assigned by the director of law
enforcement, with the approval of the governor; three additional deputies each
in charge of the correctional institutions, rehabilitation services and
programs, and administration or other functions within the department of
corrections and rehabilitation as may be assigned by the director of
corrections and rehabilitation, with the approval of the governor; two
administrative assistants to the state librarian; and an administrative
assistant to the superintendent of education;
(17) Positions specifically exempted from this part by any other law; provided that:
(A) Any exemption created after July 1, 2014, shall expire three years after its enactment unless affirmatively extended by an act of the legislature; and
(B) All of the positions defined by paragraph (9) shall be included in the position classification plan;
(18) Positions in the state foster grandparent program and positions for temporary employment of senior citizens in occupations in which there is a severe personnel shortage or in special projects;
(19) Household employees at the official residence of the president of the University of Hawaii;
(20) Employees in the department of education engaged in the supervision of students during meal periods in the distribution, collection, and counting of meal tickets, and in the cleaning of classrooms after school hours on a less than half-time basis;
(21) Employees hired under the tenant hire program of the Hawaii public housing authority; provided that no more than twenty-six per cent of the authority's workforce in any housing project maintained or operated by the authority shall be hired under the tenant hire program;
(22) Positions of the federally funded expanded food and nutrition program of the University of Hawaii that require the hiring of nutrition program assistants who live in the areas they serve;
(23) Positions filled by persons with severe disabilities who are certified by the state vocational rehabilitation office that they are able to perform safely the duties of the positions;
(24) The sheriff;
(25) A gender and other fairness coordinator hired by the judiciary;
(26) Positions in the Hawaii National Guard youth and adult education programs;
(27) In the Hawaii state energy office in the department of business, economic development, and tourism, all energy program managers, energy program specialists, energy program assistants, and energy analysts;
(28) Administrative appeals hearing officers in the department of human services;
(29) In the Med-QUEST division of the
department of human services, the division administrator, finance officer,
health care services branch administrator, medical director, and clinical
standards administrator;
(30) In
the director's office of the department of human services, the enterprise
officer, information security and privacy compliance officer, security and
privacy compliance engineer, security and privacy compliance analyst, information technology implementation manager, assistant
information technology implementation manager, resource manager, community or
project development director, policy director, special assistant to the
director, and limited English proficiency project manager or coordinator;
(31) The Alzheimer's disease and related
dementia services coordinator in the executive office on aging;
(32) In the Hawaii emergency management agency, the executive officer, public information officer, civil defense administrative officer, branch chiefs, and emergency operations center state warning point personnel; provided that for state warning point personnel, the director shall determine that recruitment through normal civil service recruitment procedures would result in delay or noncompliance;
(33) The executive director and seven full-time administrative positions of the school facilities authority;
(34) Positions in the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority;
(35) In the office of homeland security of
the department of law enforcement, the statewide interoperable communications
coordinator;
(36) In the social services division of the department of human services, the business technology analyst;
(37) The executive director and staff of the 911 board;
[[](38)[]]Senior
software developers in the department of taxation;
[[](39)[]]In the department of law
enforcement, five Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies,
Inc., coordinator positions;
[[](40)[]]The
state fire marshal; [and
[](41)[]]The
administrator for the law enforcement standards board[.]; and
(42) The executive director of the
wildfire recovery fund.
The director shall determine the
applicability of this section to specific positions.
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to
affect the civil service status of any incumbent as it existed on July 1, 1955."
SECTION 5. Section 269-17, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§269-17 Issuance of securities. A public utility corporation may, on securing
the prior approval of the public utilities commission, and not otherwise, except
as provided in section B-4, issue stocks and
stock certificates, bonds, notes, and other evidences of indebtedness, payable
at periods of more than twelve months after the date thereof, for the following
purposes and no other, namely: for the acquisition
of property or for the construction, completion, extension, or improvement of
or addition to its facilities or service, or for the discharge or lawful
refunding of its obligations or for the reimbursement of moneys actually
expended from income or from any other moneys in its treasury not secured by or
obtained from the issue of its stocks or stock certificates, or bonds, notes,
or other evidences of indebtedness, for any of the aforesaid purposes except
maintenance of service, replacements, and substitutions not constituting
capital expenditure in cases where the corporation has kept its accounts for [such]
expenditures in [such] a manner [as to enable] that
enables the commission to ascertain the amount of moneys so expended and
the purposes for which the expenditures were made, and the sources of the funds
in its treasury applied to the expenditures.
As used [herein,] in this section, "property"
and "facilities"[,] mean property and facilities used in all
operations of a public utility corporation whether or not included in its
public utility operations or rate base.
A public utility corporation may not issue securities to acquire
property or to construct, complete, extend or improve or add to its facilities
or service if the commission determines that the proposed purpose will have a
material adverse effect on its public utility operations.
All stock and every stock
certificate, and every bond, note, or other evidence of indebtedness of a
public utility corporation not payable within twelve months, issued without an
order of the commission authorizing the same, then in effect, shall be void."
SECTION 6. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 7. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
Report Title:
Wildfire Recovery Fund; Securitization
Description:
Establishes the Wildfire Recovery Fund. Allows securitization for electric utilities. Effective 7/1/2050. (SD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.