Campbell switches energy bills
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Paul Clinton
Almost a month after introducing a bill that would restore the terms
of a contract between larger power users and the utility companies,
Assemblyman John Campbell (R-Irvine) has pulled his bill off the table.
In a nearly continuous motion, Campbell, whose district includes
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, yanked the bill and replaced it with a
similar piece of legislation.
Campbell introduced the earlier bill Jan. 29 to nullify a Public
Utilities Commission decision to freeze big power users from exiting
their rate plans.
Many of the state’s heaviest consumers of power had entered into the
I-6 plan, in which they could take a 15% discount on power in exchange
for a promise to shut down their operations when called upon to do so.
The utilities had also included an “opt-out” clause, which the
utilities commission froze, forcing the companies to remain in the
program and incur hefty fines when they refused to shut off the lights.
Newport Beach semiconductor maker Conexant Systems, for example,
racked up $3 million in penalties during January.
Campbell’s new bill, which the assemblyman is hoping to have heard in
a policy committee meeting today, would cancel the fines and require the
I-6 users to return their discounts.
Campbell also included provisions that would require Southern
California Edison to provide a 30-minute notice before asking for a
shutdown and limit calls the utility could make to an I-6 user to one a
day.
Irked about the commission’s intervention in the contract, Campbell
said his bill would restore the terms of the initial rate agreement.
“I think the bill is pretty cemented,” Campbell said Friday. “It will
make it so, in the future, that you can’t change the rules of the game
halfway through the game.”
Since the introduction of Campbell’s earlier bill, the commission
moved to waive the penalties. But Campbell has said the commission’s Jan.
26 ruling left some questions unanswered.
Campbell’s bill, known as AB52X and also introduced in the special
energy session, will complement another I-6-related bill expected to come
out of the office of Assemblyman Rod Wright (D-Los Angeles).
A spokeswoman at Conexant Systems declined to comment on either
proposal.
Campbell’s bill may not be necessary if the commission intervenes
again to resolve complaints from businesses that say they’ve been held
hostage, said Julie Puentes from the Orange County Business Council.
“I think the value of having a bill like that is that it’s leverage
for the PUC to work with our companies,” Puentes said.
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