1 1 BEFORE THE FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 2 3 In the Matter of: 4 DOCKET NO. 090368-EI 5 REVIEW OF THE CONTINUING NEED AND COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TAMPA 6 ELECTRIC COMPANY'S 5 COMBUSTION TURBINES AND BIG BEND RAIL 7 FACILITY. _________________________________/ 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 PROCEEDINGS: AGENDA CONFERENCE 15 ITEM NO. 18 16 COMMISSIONERS PARTICIPATING: CHAIRMAN MATTHEW M. CARTER, II 17 COMMISSIONER LISA POLAK EDGAR COMMISSIONER NANCY ARGENZIANO 18 COMMISSIONER NATHAN A. SKOP COMMISSIONER DAVID E. KLEMENT 19 20 DATE: Tuesday, December 1, 2009 21 PLACE: Betty Easley Conference Center 22 Room 148 4075 Esplanade Way 23 Tallahassee, Florida 24 REPORTED BY: JANE FAUROT, RPR Official FPSC Reporter 25 (850) 413-6732 FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 2 1 P R O C E E D I N G S 2 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioners, we are 3 now on Item 18, and staff does have an oral 4 modification. 5 Staff, you're recognized. 6 MS. CHASE: Thank you. 7 Commissioners, my name is Joanne Chase. 8 I'm with ECR staff. Item 18 is staff's 9 recommendation regarding TECO's request for a step 10 increase pursuant to the final order in TECO's last 11 rate case to recover the costs to construct five 12 combustion turbines during 2009 and a new rail 13 unloading facility at the Big Bend Station to be 14 placed in service in 2009. Staff's recommendation 15 is to set the matter directly for hearing and to 16 allow TECO to implement a revised step increase 17 effective January 1 of $25,742,209 subject to refund 18 with interest pending the outcome of the hearing. 19 Mr. Slemkewicz has a revision to the 20 recommendation regarding the amount of the 21 recommended step increase that he would like to 22 explain, and also here to speak to the Commission 23 today -- this is a PAA item -- are representatives 24 from TECO, the Office of Public Counsel, and FIPUG. 25 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Mr. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 3 1 Slemkewicz, you're recognized. 2 MR. SLEMKEWICZ: Staff had originally 3 recommended that a revised step rate increase of 4 $26,735,801 be authorized subject to refund during 5 the pendency of the recommended hearing. Staff 6 subsequently identified a calculation error on 7 Schedule 1 attached to the recommendation. In that 8 schedule an amount was added rather than subtracted. 9 As a result, the recommended step rate increase 10 should be corrected to the $25,742,209. And 11 wherever that $26 million figure appears on Pages 3, 12 6, 7, and on Schedule 1, it should be revised to the 13 $25 million figure. 14 And, in addition, the 2.8 percent on Page 15 7 should be corrected to 2.7 percent. And on 16 Schedule 1, the $8,527,329 for the May 2009 CTs 17 should be corrected to $7,533,737. 18 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Did you give this 19 information to the parties? Do they have this? 20 MR. SLEMKEWICZ: It's available on-line 21 and it was handed to the Commissioners, but we do 22 have it available. 23 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Do you guys need to look 24 at it for a moment before you make your comments? 25 No? Okay. What order do you want to go in? Do you FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 4 1 want to start with the company or do you want to 2 start? OPC? Okay. Let's start with the company. 3 You're recognized. 4 MR. BEASLEY: Yes, sir. Mr. Chairman, 5 Commissioners, good afternoon and thank you. I'm 6 James D. Beasley for Tampa Electric Company. With 7 me today seated behind me is Ms. Denise Jordan, 8 who's Tampa Electric Company's Managing Director of 9 Regulatory Affairs. 10 We accept the staff's recommendation with 11 the change that has been made here today and support 12 your approval of it. We think the procedural 13 approach the staff has laid out before you is fair 14 and would be an efficient means of implementing the 15 step increase approved in the company's recently 16 concluded rate case, and at the same time give all 17 parties a full opportunity for due process in a 18 hearing to address the conditions that accompanied 19 that decision. 20 Tampa Electric commits to you and has 21 committed in its petition that all revenues 22 associated with the step increase would be collected 23 subject to refund with interest pending the outcome 24 of that hearing. All five of the CTs in question 25 are up and running, serving load, providing FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 5 1 customers with savings, and the rail facility has 2 been constructed. We have a train on-site currently 3 that is scheduled to commence unloading at the new 4 unloading facility tomorrow as we speak. So we look 5 forward to an opportunity at the hearing to tell you 6 about all of the benefits that our customers are 7 already receiving and will continue to receive as a 8 result, a direct result of the addition of these 9 five combustion turbines and the rail unloading 10 facility. Thank you. 11 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Beasley. 12 Ms. Bradley. 13 MS. BRADLEY: I think we'll start down at 14 the other end. 15 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. You're 16 recognized. Let's hear from OPC. 17 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Good morning. Or good 18 afternoon, Commissioners. Patty Christensen with 19 the Office of Public Counsel. 20 As you are aware, this docket was 21 established pursuant to the final order that was 22 issued in the TECO rate case. And in that final 23 order the Commission approved a step increase, and 24 it set forth the criteria on which that final -- 25 where the step increase was to be judged. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 6 1 The first matter of business that I'd like 2 to addressed today is the fact that, as you may be 3 aware, that step increase is subject to an appeal. 4 And I would request that this Commission consider 5 holding this matter in abeyance until there is the 6 opportunity for the court to rule on whether or not 7 it was appropriate for the step increase to be 8 granted in the first place. 9 Short of that, and I am aware that the 10 company has submitted a petition and they have filed 11 a tariff, and their request purports to move forward 12 under a tariff filing under the file and suspend 13 rule. My reading of the statute would suggest that 14 they have not complied with what would be necessary 15 to move forward under a file and suspend. And in 16 that case they would have had to file MFRs and 17 proceed as you would for a normal base rate case. 18 It's our position that this is really 19 moving forward as a genesis of the Commission's 20 decision in the final order. And what I would 21 suggest is that in the final order the Commission 22 stated that they were allowing the step increase to 23 avoid a limited proceeding. We filed a motion for 24 reconsideration, and in that motion for 25 reconsideration the Commission recognized that we FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 7 1 had to have a point of entry, and that this was 2 going to move forward as a PAA. And in your current 3 recommendation now it is being set for a final 4 hearing. We think that that may create a problem 5 because anything that gets protested in a PAA 6 becomes null and void. 7 The other problem is the one criteria that 8 was set forth in the step increase was whether or 9 not these were needed for load requirement, and 10 according to the recommendation they are not. The 11 recommendation clearly states that these exceed the 12 20 percent reserve margin, and that's the only 13 criteria that the Commission is supposed to be 14 judging whether or not they should allow for any 15 step increase. And whether or not it provides any 16 other benefits is irrelevant to the criteria that 17 was established by the Commission in its final 18 order. 19 And what I would suggest is that if the 20 Commission were to deny holding this motion in 21 abeyance and move forward, it should go ahead and 22 deny staff's recommendation, find that the CTs were 23 unnecessary to meet load requirement, issue a PAA 24 order, and allow TECO then to protest it if they 25 wish. And I would suggest that that is how this FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 8 1 should proceed. 2 I would note that the Commission should 3 not consider any additional criteria in this 4 recommendation. If it's based on the final order, 5 then it should be based on the criteria that was set 6 forth in the final order. No additional criteria 7 should be considered because that, in essence, would 8 be amending your final order, which is not the 9 subject of this recommendation or proceeding. 10 If the Commission intends to proceed as a 11 new proceeding and allow it to go forward as some 12 sort of limited petition or limited proceeding, then 13 we need to define how we would move forward and what 14 issues would be on the table, because I think as we 15 had mentioned in argument in the base rate case, 16 that we believe that this would be more 17 appropriately addressed as a limited petition with 18 the company coming forward and having the burden to 19 show that it needed the money. In other words, that 20 it was earning outside of its authorized range and 21 that it was entitled to a separate recovery through 22 a separate limited proceeding. And what I'm seeing 23 here today through this recommendation appears to be 24 an attempt to create some sort of hybrid process 25 where you have a petition that purports to move FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 9 1 forward under a tariff filing under the file and 2 suspend statute, but yet also purports to try and 3 move forward under your final order, and I think 4 those two tracks are incongruent. 5 So I would urge the Commission to go ahead 6 and hold this in abeyance, suspend the tariff, 7 although I'm not sure that a tariff filing was 8 appropriate at this point, and deny any sort of 9 interim rate increase for a couple of reasons. One, 10 because your own recommendation says and strongly 11 suggests that these CTs were not needed for load. 12 Therefore, it's very likely that they cannot prove 13 that they were necessary to meet load requirement 14 and, therefore, they cannot sustain their burden 15 under the final order. 16 Two, there appears to be no statutory 17 authority to authorize this type of interim rate 18 increase. There's a very specific statutory 19 provision that allows for interim rate increases in 20 a base rate type of proceeding, and that requires a 21 showing that they are earning outside their 22 authorized range. We have no such showing in this 23 petition, and they have not attempted to allege that 24 putting these CTs into service and requiring them to 25 absorb the cost of these CTs would cause them to FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 10 1 earn outside their authorized range that was 2 authorized in the last base rate case. 3 Thank you, and I will hand it over to my 4 colleagues. 5 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. I was about 6 to pull out my lights on you. Ms. Kaufman, you're 7 recognized. 8 MS. KAUFMAN: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I 9 noticed the lights were missing. Uh-oh. 10 (Laughter.) My comments are very brief. 11 I am Vicki Gordon Kaufman. I am with the 12 law firm of Keefe Anchors Gordon and Moyle, and I'm 13 here on behalf of the Florida Industrial Power Users 14 Group. As you are aware, we were an intervenor and 15 we were an active participant in the Tampa Electric 16 rate case when it was before the Commission, and we 17 are also a party now to the appeal before the 18 Supreme Court regarding the proprietary of the step 19 increase that you are talking about today. And I 20 just have three brief points that I want to make. 21 The first one was discussed by Ms. 22 Christensen, and that's the fact that the elephant 23 in the room, or the main issue of whether or not the 24 step increase was appropriate is on appeal before 25 the Florida Supreme Court right now. That's a FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 11 1 substantive issue that is inextricably intertwined 2 with the petition that's before you today and we 3 agree that the most prudent course is to take no 4 further action until we hear what the court has to 5 say. 6 As I understand your staff, they are 7 recommending that we have a hearing. We certainly 8 think that would be appropriate, but there's a lot 9 of duplication of effort that is going to go into a 10 hearing if the court ultimately agrees with our 11 appeal, which is that that increase is not 12 authorized at all. However, if you decide to go 13 forward and not wait for the court's judgment, we 14 agree with Ms. Christensen, as well, that this is a 15 PAA. This is not a tariff filing, and it's not 16 subject to the file and suspend law. Simply because 17 Tampa Electric attached a tariff to its filing 18 doesn't bring it under the file and suspend 19 provisions. 20 We would suggest to you that Tampa 21 Electric is trying to put the cart before the horse. 22 The first thing you have to do if you don't wait for 23 the appeal is make some substantive decisions about 24 this case and about Tampa Electric's alleged facts 25 and give the parties an opportunity to put on FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 12 1 evidence in regard to that. And even in your motion 2 on reconsideration you say at Page 12 in regard to 3 the step increase, parties who may be substantially 4 affected will have an opportunity to protest our 5 decision on staff's future recommendation, which is 6 the one that we're talking about today. 7 And I know it sounds like I'm talking 8 about a lot of process, but process is significant 9 because regardless of which way you were to vote out 10 the recommendation, a substantially affected party 11 has the opportunity to protest it, and that makes 12 your order null and void, then you go to a hearing. 13 That is what happens under Chapter 120, and that's 14 the process that you ought to follow in this case. 15 And my last point has to do with the rail 16 facility, and that is I don't think there is any 17 disagreement, even Tampa Electric says that that 18 rail facility is not in commercial operation even as 19 we sit here today. Again, we've got the cart before 20 the horse. We've got them saying, and your staff, 21 well, we think it is going to be in commercial 22 operation. Most of it is done, but it's not in 23 commercial operation, so it doesn't comply with the 24 clear requirements of your order. And I know the 25 issue will come up that, well, it is subject to FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 13 1 refund, so, no harm, no foul. Ratepayers have 2 already felt the effects of Tampa Electric's rate 3 increase. I think there's going to be some impacts 4 on them from the decision you just made in the prior 5 item, and we have all heard the distressing economic 6 times that we're in. This is more money that's 7 going to come out of ratepayers' pockets. And even 8 they get it refunded at the end of the day it's 9 still money that they don't have today. It's money 10 that my clients don't have to grow their businesses 11 to employ people. 12 So I think the idea that because it is 13 subject to refund means that there's really not a 14 problem doesn't accurately look at our economic 15 reality. So we would ask you to deny your staff's 16 recommendation. But if you go forward, to treat 17 this as it should be, as a PAA, and let the 18 substantial parties protest it if it's appropriate. 19 Thank you. 20 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Mr. Wright. 21 MR. WRIGHT: Thank you, Mr. Chairman and 22 Commissioners. Schef Wright representing the 23 Florida Retail Federation, and I will be very brief. 24 Fundamentally, we agree with the comments 25 made by Ms. Christensen and Ms. Kaufman. I think FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 14 1 you have got sort of a fish or fowl situation here. 2 The question it seems to me is is this going forward 3 as a step increase under the order. If so, on its 4 face it appears that they have not satisfied the 5 criteria required in the order that the units would 6 be necessary to meet load requirements. That's what 7 the staff's recommendation appears to say. 8 On the other hand, if the company is 9 purporting to go forward under the file and suspend 10 law, that essentially puts this in the context of 11 being a new rate case and a new rate increase. And 12 Tampa Electric therein would bear the burden of 13 having to prove that it needs additional revenues in 14 order to have the opportunity to cover all of its 15 legitimate costs and earn a reasonable return on its 16 investment in 2010 based on its total costs in 2010, 17 and based on its total projected revenues in 2010. 18 We would agree with the recommendations 19 proposed by Public Counsel, the Citizens, and by 20 FIPUG that you should deny the staff recommendation. 21 If you do go forward, let it go forward as a PAA and 22 whoever is adversely affected by whatever vote you 23 would make can protest, if necessary. Thank you. 24 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Wright. 25 Ms. Bradley. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 15 1 MS. BRADLEY: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. 2 Cecilia Bradley, Office of the Attorney General on 3 behalf of the citizens. We're here today in support 4 of Office of Public Counsel and the other consumer 5 parties and certainly adopt what they have said and 6 agree with that, and I would just add that this case 7 should be stayed. You know, we would ask that you 8 respect the position and the judgment of the Supreme 9 Court and let them proceed with their proceedings 10 and then we can handle whatever is necessary after 11 that. 12 But if we go forward in the way that has 13 been recommended, that is the type situation that 14 just really creates a mess to have two different 15 groups going at it in different ways and dealing 16 with the same thing. So we would respectfully ask 17 that you stay this and let the court go ahead and 18 address this, and then we can finish dealing with 19 it. Thank you. 20 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Briefly, 21 Mr. Beasley. 22 MR. BEASLEY: Yes, Mr. Chairman. Just in 23 response, this is not a new case, a new rate case. 24 It is a docket to implement a decision that the 25 Commission made as a matter of final agency action FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 16 1 and reaffirmed on your order on reconsideration to 2 place the step increase into effect January 1, 2010, 3 subject to our demonstrating that the conditions 4 attached in that order have been met. We are 5 prepared to do that. 6 What staff has recommended will save time 7 because it's pretty obvious if it went forward as a 8 PAA it would be protested by the various parties who 9 are here today. What staff has suggested is to save 10 the time involved in that process and go ahead and 11 set this matter for hearing and let everyone have 12 their full due process opportunity to address the 13 conditions and the extent to which they have been 14 met. We are fully confident we will meet that 15 requirement, and the way staff has proposed this to 16 implement it subject to refund plus interest pending 17 the outcome of that hearing is fair for everyone. 18 It's fair for the ratepayers, it's fair for the 19 shareholders, and in the meantime they get the 20 benefit of the facilities that we have constructed 21 pursuant to what we indicated to you we were doing 22 in the rate case. 23 So we would urge that you recognize 24 staff's recommendation as a reasonable procedural 25 alternative for moving forward, and we look forward FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 17 1 to the opportunity to present this evidence to you 2 regarding these new facilities. 3 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. 4 Commissioners? Commissioner Skop, you're 5 recognized. 6 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you, Mr. 7 Chairman. 8 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Then Commissioner 9 Argenziano. 10 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Just a quick question 11 to, I guess, Ms. Christensen on behalf of Public 12 Counsel. If I heard you correctly, or the 13 intervenors correctly, it seems as if in lieu of 14 adopting the staff recommendation they would seek to 15 abate this PAA item pending appellate review of the 16 Commission's approval of the step increase for the 17 five CTs and the rail facility. Is that correct? 18 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Yes. And I think for 19 some of the reasons that my colleagues alluded to, 20 which is we would have to move forward with a 21 hearing, which means that we would have to incur the 22 cost of getting experts to testify at hearing. 23 Ultimately it may be found that it wasn't 24 appropriate to go forward with a hearing, so we will 25 incur some costs if not a no harm, no foul type of FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 18 1 situation where you incur revenue and subject to 2 refund, because there will be a cost that will have 3 to be incurred to defend against the case as it 4 purports to go forward. 5 And although I don't think there's a 6 requirement of an automatic stay, and we're not 7 suggesting that an automatic stay is required under 8 the appellate rules, it certainly is within the 9 discretion of the lower tribunal to issue a stay. I 10 mean, that's within your discretion. And I think 11 for reasons of judicial economy it would be 12 appropriate to hold this in abeyance until that is 13 decided. 14 COMMISSIONER SKOP: So if I understand you 15 correctly, because the step increase previously 16 approved by the Commission is currently in appellate 17 review, you're saying that going forward with a 18 hearing would cost unnecessary costs, or cost OPC, 19 Public Counsel, and others to incur unnecessary 20 costs in anticipation of moving forward with a 21 hearing, whereas if the court were to rule in your 22 favor and against the Commission, then it would be a 23 whole do over and that the hearing would be at that 24 point sunk costs, if you will. Is that generally 25 correct? FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 19 1 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Correct. 2 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. Let me ask a 3 few variations of that, because I'm trying to get a 4 better understanding of your position, the position 5 of staff, and the position of the parties in light 6 of what the Commission previously approved. 7 If the issue is one of due process and 8 ultimately the prudency of the five CTs and the cost 9 of putting those into service, would a hearing of 10 some sort, whether it be what staff proposed or in 11 the future be the appropriate mechanism to afford 12 the parties due process to vet those issues? 13 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Assuming for sake of 14 argument that the court upholds the step increase, 15 and given that the Commission has made a decision in 16 the order on reconsideration that parties would have 17 the opportunity to protest, then pursuant to the 18 Commission's normal PAA process, we can, at that 19 point, protest and set it for hearing. And, of 20 course, that may depend. If we're talking about 21 something in the future, some six months to a year 22 from now depending on how long it takes the court to 23 make its decision, facts and circumstances may 24 change. And I would hesitate to guess what our 25 position would be at that in the future, because I FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 20 1 don't know economically or situationally how that 2 will be. 3 As we sit here today, I can tell you from 4 reading your staff's recommendation and based on 5 what was in the final order, it appears to me today 6 that if you are proceeding under the final order and 7 judging it by the criteria that was set forth in 8 that final order, that you would make the 9 decision -- or we would suggest that the decision 10 that is appropriate to be made is that they have not 11 met the requirement that those CTs were needed for 12 load. 13 And I'm not addressing the Big Bend rail 14 facility, because as of the writing of the 15 recommendation they had not been put into service, 16 and my understanding from Mr. Beasley is that they 17 are ready to start service, but, you know, we would 18 have to address that when it actually starts 19 unloading or loading coal and come into service at a 20 future point. 21 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. Just two 22 follow-up questions, and then a quick follow up with 23 staff. Would there be -- well, let me ask this. 24 It's going through appellate review now. And say, 25 for instance, that the Commission were to stay this FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 21 1 proceeding, which requests the ability to implement 2 the new rates subject to refund with interest, so, 3 you know, there is some adequate protection there. 4 But what would happen if this proceeding 5 were stayed pending appellate review, and then the 6 court ultimately upheld the Commission's prior 7 decision to grant the step increase. What posture 8 would that leave the Commission in to grant any 9 additional increase? I mean, where I'm getting to 10 is here if the increase were granted by virtue of 11 this item before us, it would be subject to refund 12 with interest. But if you stay it in the converse 13 of that and you come back and, say, a year lapses 14 and the court upholds the prior decision of the 15 Commission, then the company comes back in for 16 rates, are those rates also going to be with 17 interest, or is there going to be just the rates? I 18 guess I'm trying to figure out where we are at and 19 figure out a way that we can address all the 20 parties' concerns. 21 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Well, I think you've got 22 two different things going on. I think if you issue 23 the stay, whatever proceeds in the future, there is 24 no retroactive ratemaking. I mean, that's a clear 25 policy. Well, not a policy, but it's clear from the FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 22 1 Supreme Court you can't have retroactive ratemaking. 2 So if you grant the stay, you couldn't go 3 back and grant the step increase with interest, I 4 don't believe, and my colleagues can correct me if 5 I'm wrong, but I don't I think that that would 6 happen. 7 However, to address your -- I think the 8 underlying concern is what happens if the company 9 finds themselves in a position where they are 10 earning below their authorized rate of return. I 11 think they would, even if you stayed this particular 12 proceeding, if they found themselves in a position 13 where they are underearning at any point in the 14 future they are not precluded from filing a rate 15 case. They always have that. And if they filed a 16 future rate case they could, as they would with any 17 plant, include this as part of their plant and have 18 to prove whether or not it was entitled to recovery. 19 So they are not placed in a position where they are 20 going to suffer financial harm without redress. I 21 think there's statutory provisions under the -- you 22 know, base ratemaking statute that they could come 23 in. 24 I think also that -- I think, based on 25 what the recommendation is right now, I think what FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 23 1 posture you would be in in six months from now is 2 whether or not the company has met the criteria that 3 you set out in the order, which is whether or not 4 those CTs were needed to meet load requirement in 5 2009 and 2010. And I think based on what your 6 staff's recommendation is telling you as of today 7 the answer is no. And, therefore, I don't think 8 that -- you know, I think essentially customers are 9 going to have to -- if you grant the interim rate 10 increase, which as we had mentioned before we don't 11 think there is a statutory provision that allows for 12 that outside of the normal base rate case 13 proceeding, I mean, there is an interim statute that 14 sets forth specific criteria. 15 That has not been met in here and they 16 haven't attempted to make a showing that they are 17 entitled to any sort of interim. So I have to 18 assume that we are moving solely under the final 19 order, and the only way to move forward under the 20 final order is to establish that they have met the 21 criteria, and from my reading of your staff 22 recommendation they haven't. 23 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Let me -- that's a 24 little bit longer explanation. I guess my concern 25 was trying to gain a better appreciation for if the FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 24 1 company were to place the assets in service, being 2 the five CTs, which I believe they are all in 3 service now or will be shortly, plus the rail 4 facility, and that the appellate review is underway 5 and that takes a year, and assuming for the sake of 6 discussion this proceeding is stayed pending that 7 appellate review. 8 So in that interim time of a year they 9 have already placed assets in service, and I'm 10 trying to rationalize should the court ultimately 11 rule one way or another, but say it upholds the 12 Commission's decision, then you raise an excellent 13 point about retroactive ratemaking, but then I'm 14 also trying to balance the prejudicial effect, if 15 any, of placing assets in service and not being able 16 to recover for those. 17 And I think if I understand you correctly 18 that your point is well taken that they may have -- 19 the check and balance to that should be that they 20 may have the ability to absorb that within existing 21 rates and not have a problem with it. But if they 22 were not able to absorb it, then they certainly 23 would have recourse to come in to petition for any 24 rate increase as a result of that. Is that 25 generally correct? FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 25 1 MS. CHRISTENSEN: I believe you've 2 perfectly stated what my position was on that. 3 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. And then just 4 one follow-up question. Given that staff -- and I 5 think I need to correct myself, I think this is a 6 regular agenda item instead of a PAA, is that 7 correct? So any action here would be final agency 8 action not subject to protest. 9 MS. BRUBAKER: It would be procedural in 10 nature. 11 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. Fine. I guess 12 with the fact that staff has proposed setting this 13 for hearing, and obviously there's contention here 14 over the need for it, and the manner in which it was 15 done. And, you know, my perspective is the things 16 that we are talking about are pretty finite and well 17 qualified in terms of cost, like a CT, it's pretty 18 much going to Publix -- you know what a box of 19 cereal is going to cost, and it is kind of like the 20 same thing when you get down to CTs and some other 21 projects. It's not like trying to build, you know, 22 a space station or something like that. You have a 23 good idea of what the costs are. 24 That part doesn't give me a whole lot of 25 concern. I mean, I think because, again, recency FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 26 1 and then the cost is well constrained subject to 2 being reviewed for prudency. Since staff has 3 recommended that this be set for hearing, would 4 there be any benefit or expediency in terms of 5 resolving this issue more expeditiously by 6 withdrawing the appellate review and going directly 7 to hearing on this? 8 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Well, in short answer, 9 no. And I think the reasoning is I think we have 10 issues with the way the step increase was done in 11 the base rate case which I think are fundamental. 12 And I'm not even sure that if we get to the final 13 conclusion of the hearing that will resolve the 14 issues that are currently on appeal. And I would 15 certainly have to take more time to think about it, 16 but I think there were so many issues arising of out 17 of what was done and how it was done in the base 18 rate proceeding that those issues may stand alone -- 19 stand up alone as opposed to the, you know, what the 20 ultimate cost and whether or not they were needed 21 for future proceedings. 22 COMMISSIONER SKOP: So if I understand 23 correctly, the purpose of the appellate review is to 24 ascertain the controlling case law as to the 25 Commission's inherent authority to grant a step FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 27 1 increase in the manner -- 2 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Yes. I mean, I think 3 that is fundamentally what is on appeal along with 4 certain -- you know, the aspects of how we got there 5 which we are not attempting to address today. I 6 think we've raised those issues in our motion on 7 reconsideration and the Commission had an 8 opportunity to look at it at that point. And those 9 are the issues that will be pursued on appeal. 10 COMMISSIONER SKOP: And thank you for 11 that. I was just trying to gain a better 12 appreciation for what the concerns were in relation 13 to the staff's recommendation, and I'll yield back 14 to the Chair and he will hear from my colleagues. 15 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Commissioner 16 Argenziano, you're recognized. 17 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Thank you. 18 To staff, is there a requirement that the 19 rail facility be complete and that the CTs meet the 20 load requirement? 21 MS. CHASE: Yes, Commissioner. The order 22 is clear they have to be completed by the end of 23 2009. 24 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: And we do know 25 that that is going to happen? FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 28 1 MS. CHASE: We do not know for certain. 2 We certainly have indications that it will, and I 3 think if the -- they will be putting -- if approved, 4 they will be putting the rate increase in effect 5 January 1 and subject to them putting that portion 6 in effect, they would have to provide an affidavit 7 or some documentation that it is actually in 8 operation. I think that's something we can take 9 care of. 10 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Okay. But it is 11 not in operation as of today? 12 MS. CHASE: That's correct. 13 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Okay. Thank 14 you. 15 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Skop. 16 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you, Mr. Chair. 17 Just a quick intervening question to Commissioner 18 Argenziano's point. 19 With respect to TECO's proposal to 20 implement rates effective January 1st, has TECO 21 provided notice of those rates yet? Because, I 22 mean, it takes usually a month or two to implement 23 rates. Here we are 1 December, and obviously 24 billing systems don't work, so I'm wondering whether 25 there's some inherent flex time from the Commission FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 29 1 as to the point of whether they have noticed these 2 rates yet. Because if not, I don't believe they 3 could implement them on January 1st. 4 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Mr. Beasley. 5 MR. BEASLEY: Perhaps I can answer that 6 question. We have notified our customers that the 7 rate would be placed into effect January 1, 2010, 8 pursuant to the final order and order on 9 reconsideration. They are fully apprised of that 10 and have been for some time. 11 The key point I want to respond to is the 12 suggestion that delay is not harmful. I think 13 because of the doctrine of retroactive ratemaking, 14 any delay beyond that date that's the date that was 15 finalized in an order that's on appeal, but with 16 respect to which no party has asked for any type of 17 stay of that order. Delay would cause irretrievable 18 harm to the people who have their money invested in 19 Tampa Electric Company because the money that would 20 not be collected during the period of any such delay 21 would be gone forever. 22 What staff has suggested, though, is 23 something that protects everyone. It protects the 24 shareholders of Tampa Electric from irretrievably 25 losing revenues that the final order says they're FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 30 1 entitled to, and at the same time fully protects the 2 customers of Tampa Electric Company because those 3 funds are not going to be kept until they have shown 4 to be justified. And we are prepared to do that, 5 and we think that is why the staff's approach is the 6 fairest for all parties. 7 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. 8 Commissioner Edgar and then Commissioner 9 Argenziano. 10 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Okay. Two quick 11 questions and there may be some more later. The 12 first is, and I think Mr. Beasley may have just 13 touched on this, but to the intervenors, was a stay 14 requested as part of the appeal? 15 MS. CHRISTENSEN: We filed a notice of 16 appeal. We did not file a motion for stay up in the 17 appellate court because the appropriate vehicle is 18 to come to the lower tribunal and ask for a stay. 19 And I would -- a stay, we are here today on this 20 item asking for a stay of this item today. 21 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: I'm a little 22 confused, and I guess your point about that you are 23 asking for a stay. I thought I heard you say that 24 you are asking for us to hold it in abeyance. First 25 of all, I don't remember hearing you say that you FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 31 1 were requesting a stay in this forum for this body 2 today. And I'm not sure about the rules of 3 procedure that say that a stay would be more 4 properly requested here than as part of the appeal. 5 MS. CHRISTENSEN: I guess part of the 6 problem we have is that the appeal is being taken in 7 the base rate case. This is proceeding under a 8 different docket number, so there was nothing to ask 9 to essentially stay in the base rate case because 10 this docket was opened up as an audit, and then 11 there was a petition filed. And until this 12 recommendation came out, there was no action to 13 request it be held in abeyance, or stayed, or asking 14 the Commission to hold off on moving forward with 15 something. 16 So until the recommendation came forward 17 and purported to set up a process of moving forward, 18 there was nothing to be requested that you stay your 19 hand from while the appeal was going on. So I guess 20 that would be my answer. And because we're 21 proceeding under two separate dockets, you wouldn't 22 necessarily file a stay in the base rate case 23 proceeding. For this docket, I think the 24 appropriate mechanism is to ask you to abate 25 whatever action you're purporting to take with FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 32 1 implementing the final step increase into rates. 2 And then if it's appropriate we would have to make 3 that determination if it was denied whether or not 4 we would seek to somehow bring that to the attention 5 of the appellate court. And it's a little bit 6 unusual because we have got two separate dockets 7 going. If this was proceeding forward under the 8 base rate case, then I think we would have a clearer 9 path. 10 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner, hang on. 11 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Perhaps clearer, but 12 I'm not sure. Candidly, I'm not sure I agree. 13 Well, actually I'm sure. I don't agree. 14 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner, will you 15 yield for a moment? 16 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: With that procedural 17 description of the options. But be that as it may, 18 my second question was what is the status of the 19 case on appeal today? 20 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Currently we are 21 awaiting the initial briefs to be filed as of 22 February 4th, 2010. 23 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: And am I correct that 24 the intervenors or the -- the intervenors here, but 25 the requesters of the appeal, shall I say, requested FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 33 1 an extension as far as the dates to file briefs? 2 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Yes. It was an 3 unopposed request to extend the time for the initial 4 brief. Given that the initial brief was due within 5 70 days of filing the notice of appeal and the 6 actual record would not be prepared until 110, and 7 given the length of the transcript and the record, 8 we felt it was appropriate to ask for the additional 9 time and to go ahead and ask for significant time -- 10 you know, sufficient to get it completed. Because 11 as the court stated in their order, there will be no 12 more extensions granted. So we believe that we are 13 on schedule and set to file that initial brief, and 14 we don't believe that we would even need an 15 extension, and we're ready to move forward with the 16 appeal. 17 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Okay. And just a 18 comment. I have said this many times. Whenever I 19 can and somebody asks for more time, or an 20 extension, or whatever, I try to support that 21 because there are many times I need more time. I 22 always need more time. But I do have a little bit 23 of a concern with, you know, delays in an appellate 24 forum and as part of the larger, the entire process 25 for this forum to be requested to delay FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 34 1 implementation of an order. And I may have more 2 questions later, Mr. Chairman. 3 CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'll come back to you. 4 I just wanted to yield for one moment. I'll come 5 back to you. 6 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Absolutely. 7 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Ms. Helton, you're 8 recognized. 9 MS. HELTON: I have consulted with our 10 appellate expert, Ms. Cibula, and my understanding 11 of the appellate rules with respect to stays is that 12 the request needs to be made in writing, and there's 13 specific showings that need to be made when you do 14 ask for a stay, and I have to go too far back in the 15 recesses of my mind to remember what those are, but 16 I'm not sure that we have met the requirements today 17 to actually ask for a stay. 18 And if I could address, if you don't mind, 19 a couple of the other points that have been raised. 20 I think that it's -- I'm not stepping out of school 21 here to say that one of the reasons why staff has 22 made this recommendation today is because of its 23 concern that if the Commission's order is upheld, 24 which we believe that it will be, and we have not 25 implemented the final order and allowed TECO to FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 35 1 start charging the step increase the beginning of 2 next year, that there is the possibility that 3 customers could be surcharged, that there may be a 4 requirement for surcharges. 5 So by recommending to you today that TECO 6 be allowed to start collecting that money at the 7 beginning of the year subject to refund, we're 8 trying to avoid that prospect. And I say that to 9 you based on GTE versus Clark, which is a Supreme 10 Court decision that was entered back in 1996 when 11 the Commission had disallowed some affiliate 12 expenses and remanded the decision back to the 13 court, or remanded the case back to the court -- I'm 14 sorry, I didn't eat lunch today and I can feel it 15 now -- remanded the decision back to the Commission 16 to implement the disallowance. The Commission did 17 so on a going-forward basis and did not allow 18 recovery for the time period between what the court 19 called an erroneous final order and when it was 20 remanded back to the Commission. 21 And the court said, no, you would have 22 refunded that money back to the customers if it was 23 appropriate to disallow it, and you allowed -- and 24 the company had collected it. Here there's fairness 25 involved between the ratepayers and the utility, and FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 36 1 the company was entitled to that money, and you 2 should collect it or allow recovery of it by way of 3 a surcharge. 4 So that is our concern here. The court 5 also said that in allowing that surcharge that that 6 was not retroactive ratemaking. That was one of the 7 arguments that the Commission had made and they 8 disagreed with the Commission. And as far as the 9 argument with respect to we're not doing this as a 10 Proposed Agency Action process, I think of tariff 11 filings as a subset of Proposed Agency Action. When 12 you approve a tariff filing, you do so -- or you 13 deny a tariff filing, you do so given a point of 14 entry of 21 days allowing someone to protest that. 15 And our typical practice is if there is a 16 protest of that tariff filing that the money that 17 would be collected under the tariff be collected 18 subject to refund. I think the staff here is just 19 trying to avoid that process because in their mind 20 they thought that there would be a protest anyway 21 and we were just trying to be more administratively 22 efficient. 23 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Commissioner 24 Edgar, anything further? 25 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Not right now. Thank FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 37 1 you, Mr. Chairman. 2 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Argenziano. 3 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Thank you. Just 4 a couple of things. Mary Anne, you had mentioned 5 that there was a requirement to -- if a stay was 6 desired, that it be in writing. 7 MS. HELTON: Yes, ma'am, that's my 8 understanding. 9 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Okay. And to 10 OPC and the intervenors, you have been around a long 11 time, do you know of that requirement? 12 MS. KAUFMAN: Well, I was just going to 13 reiterate I think what Ms. Christensen said. We 14 haven't had anything to stay. And the process of 15 treating this as though it is a separate docket 16 convolutes the procedure. Until there is an order 17 in this new docket, we have nothing to ask you to 18 stay. And, therefore, I agree that it should be in 19 writing, but we are kind of between a rock and a 20 hard place. 21 And as Ms. Christensen said, the item is 22 before you now. This is the first opportunity that 23 we have had to raise it. I will say that I was very 24 surprised in the way this was filed as a tariff, 25 which I suggest to you that it is not, and that the FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 38 1 tariff filing rules that Ms. Helton is alluding to 2 just are not applicable here. So the whole way this 3 has been processed was surprising to me, and this is 4 our first opportunity to discuss it with you as far 5 as I'm aware. 6 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Okay. Then, Ms. 7 Helton, so with things being a surprise as has been 8 explained, how would they have the opportunity to 9 have it in writing? 10 MS. HELTON: In my mind what they are 11 asking for you to stay today is implementation of 12 the final order where you required in the final 13 order and in the motion -- excuse me, the order on 14 reconsideration that TECO start collecting the step 15 increase the beginning of next year. So that, I 16 think, is what they are asking you to stay, so I 17 think there is something out there. 18 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Can I have a 19 response? 20 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Ms. Christensen. 21 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Thank you. I think 22 fundamentally the problem that we are running into 23 here and why this came as a surprise the way it was 24 presented is because there is an assumption that 25 they have met the criteria in the final order, and I FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 39 1 am suggesting the way that the recommendation was 2 written they have not met the criteria, so there was 3 no automatic putting in of this rate on January 1st, 4 2010. There always had to be a showing by the 5 company in their burden to demonstrate that these 6 CTs were needed for load requirement and that the 7 Big Bend Rail Unit was, in fact, in commercial 8 service. I mean, I think the order -- 9 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Let me stop you 10 there for a minute, if I can. I asked the question 11 of staff a little while ago if there was a 12 requirement of the rail facility to be in commercial 13 operation or the CTs met the load requirement, and 14 staff indicated that they have not, but they were 15 going to. And are you telling me that in the past 16 in your experience here that they had to have today 17 been in operation or -- staff replied to me, I'm 18 sure you heard their reply before was that we expect 19 that they will be. 20 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Well, I think you have 21 two different things happening. You have the five 22 commercial CT units, which I don't think there's a 23 dispute that those have been placed into service. 24 The dispute comes up with the second criteria that 25 was established by the Commission in its final order FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 40 1 that stated that TECO shall only move forward with 2 the units if the capacity is needed. This condition 3 will help to ensure that TECO will only move forward 4 with its plans for the CTs if it is justified in 5 terms of load requirement. 6 That was the second criteria that the 7 Commission established in the final order. And what 8 I'm suggesting today, based on the data was 9 collected by the staff, and as it has been put forth 10 in its recommendation, they have not met that 11 requirement. And, therefore, there is no automatic 12 entitlement to the step increase. The step increase 13 was conditioned upon meeting that requirement, and I 14 think that's why this came as such a concern to us 15 the way that it was presented, because originally -- 16 and there was no description in the final order of 17 how the process would proceed, so we were all kind 18 of going forward as it was being presented. 19 I think from the order on reconsideration 20 it was clear that there would be some sort of 21 recommendation brought to the Commission and that 22 that would be presented as a PAA recommendation 23 clearly from the order on reconsideration at Page 24 12. So I think the real issue here is that if we 25 are going to proceed forward there had to have been FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 41 1 a showing by the company that it was needed for load 2 requirement and it hasn't done that. 3 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Mr. Chairman, if 4 I can, because I like to flesh things out. Has 5 there been a showing according to staff? 6 MS. CHASE: Commissioner, I think we would 7 agree with OPC that they did not demonstrate that it 8 was needed for load generation and that the final 9 order is very specific to that. However, they did 10 show evidence and our staff evaluated it that there 11 is a benefit to these CTs in fuel savings and in 12 other efficiencies. 13 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Okay. 14 MS. CHASE: And those -- 15 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: So what you're 16 saying -- I get what you're saying. But, but you 17 are telling me then that they did not meet the 18 requirement in the final order. Okay. That's -- 19 MS. CHASE: On load generation, that's 20 correct. 21 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Okay. So then 22 they did not meet the requirement. 23 Let me ask two other things; one is a 24 question and one is a comment. The next question is 25 has the PSC been in this position -- I'm sure we've FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 42 1 had to be with appeals. What has happened? Is 2 there a similar situation you could refer to where 3 we've been in this position where we've gone to 4 appeal? Has the PSC moved forward or have we waited 5 for the appeal? What is the general practice? 6 MR. BALLINGER: Commissioner Argenziano, 7 if I could address the prior one about needed for 8 load generation. I differ a little bit with JoAnn. 9 I think load generation is a broad term. The order 10 did not say are they needed to meet a 20 percent 11 reserve margin criteria? That's one part of load 12 generation is to meet your peak load. 13 There's other parts of load generation: 14 There's backup capability, there's quick start 15 capability of units, there's load generation from an 16 energy efficiency standpoint, these are more 17 efficient units. So my belief is I think they have 18 met the burden of showing that they're needed for 19 load generation in a broad term. 20 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: So then we have 21 split staff saying, one saying no and one saying 22 yes. And the way I'm reading it now is because when 23 I've read the final order and now it's been back in 24 my memory, that it does not meet the final 25 recommendation. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 43 1 MR. BALLINGER: I think, I think we are 2 saying the same thing. 3 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: I didn't hear 4 that. 5 MR. BALLINGER: Okay. 6 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Let's get off 7 that one. I've already -- I think I got the answer 8 to that. And I appreciate that, I understand what 9 you're saying. 10 Let me move to, to the, just one other 11 comment I wanted to make. And I do appreciate that 12 because now I understand a different side to that. 13 But, and I just want to say I'm not so sure that I 14 feel as certain as maybe Ms. Helton does that the 15 court will uphold the Commission's order as a 16 dissenting vote on that case with good reason. I'm 17 not so certain of that. So I don't want anybody to 18 feel, especially a new Commissioner, that that may 19 be a done deal. It may not. There's a lot to that 20 case, and we will only know when the court makes its 21 decision. But I did want the new Commissioner to 22 understand there was a dissenting vote on that. 23 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, Commissioners, 24 we've beat a dead horse to sleep on this and I think 25 we need to come to some kind of resolution. I mean, FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 44 1 I'm open to wherever the will of the Commission in 2 terms of where you guys want to go, but we need to 3 go someplace on it. So I think that we've had a lot 4 of comments, we've had a lot of questions, we've had 5 a lot of different perspective from the lawyers and 6 all like that, so I think we need to bring it in for 7 a landing. And I'm open to whatever way you guys 8 want to go, but let's go someplace with it. 9 Commissioner Skop, you're recognized. 10 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you. I just 11 have a final question to -- 12 CHAIRMAN CARTER: You're recognized. 13 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you. A final 14 question to Public Counsel. Again, the purpose of 15 the appellate review is to establish controlling 16 case law as to the Commission's authority or 17 discretion to approve a step increase. I believe 18 that's the legal issue; is that correct? 19 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Well, I think that's one 20 of the issues that's going to be on appeal. I think 21 there are other due process issues that are going to 22 be the subject of the appeal. So it's going to 23 be -- and that certainly will be one of the issues. 24 But I think there are fundamental due process issues 25 that really were the thrust of the motion on FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 45 1 reconsideration and will ultimately be the thrust of 2 the motion on reconsideration. I think as we 3 articulated in our motion for reconsideration one of 4 our concerns was this was not an issue that was teed 5 up for litigation. 6 And I think the fact that we're here today 7 setting this for a hearing I think just demonstrates 8 that it was not fully litigated in the rate case, 9 and we are here now having, in a posture where we 10 will be having a hearing and litigating at minimum 11 the issue of whether or not they met the load 12 requirement, which I think based on your own staff 13 recommendation that's a no-go. And I think 14 Mr. Ballinger's statement that the load requirement 15 is now larger than what was stated in the order I 16 think is, is another problem that I saw with this 17 recommendation. It appeared to me to attempt to put 18 in two different criteria than what was clearly 19 stated in the final order, so that's another 20 problem. But with that I'll leave my statement. 21 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. So, so there, I 22 guess there's a question of law that needs to be 23 resolved at the appellate level. But ultimately 24 when you get to the nuts and bolts of this, again, 25 my view is, you know, the utility could accomplish FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 46 1 this a couple of ways or the Commission could 2 accomplish it a couple of ways. You could do it in 3 a full-blown rate case, which costs the ratepayers a 4 lot of money to do a separate case, you could do it 5 in a limited proceeding, or you can do it, if 6 something is reasonably temporal in time and you 7 have procedural safeguards, some of which are 8 articulated in this recommendation, the three 9 criteria that have to be met or the three or four 10 that were safeguards, that provides some protection 11 subject to prudency review, which might result from 12 the hearing that staff has requested. 13 I guess the tension that I'm having in 14 trying to not only accommodate the concerns but also 15 to accommodate, you know, what I previously voted 16 for is that if the court were to rule against the 17 Commission at the appellate level say a year from 18 now whenever briefs are done and if it works its way 19 through the process that quick and overturned the 20 decision that we previously rendered, wouldn't we be 21 in the same situation that we find ourselves today? 22 We would still have a limited proceeding to allow 23 for cost recovery on the five CTs subject to the 24 prudency and cost as well as the rail facility? 25 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Not necessarily. I FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 47 1 think if the Commission -- if the court was to rule 2 against the Commission, then the company -- if -- 3 you know, the company puts plant into service all 4 the time in between rate cases, and the majority of 5 the time when they bring plant online, unless it's a 6 fairly large plant, and these are very small plants, 7 these are 60-megawatt CT plants, you know, they can 8 absorb the cost of bringing new generation online 9 because, you know, there's either increases in 10 revenues because they're increasing their customer 11 load. So there's a lot of different factors that go 12 into whether or not they need to file for a base 13 rate case. 14 COMMISSIONER SKOP: I understand. 15 MS. CHRISTENSEN: So I would respectfully 16 disagree that it necessarily would lead to a base 17 rate case if they put plant-in-service. And the 18 other problem is, is if they didn't need the 19 generation, which I think is where we are today, 20 then we're in a prudency -- 21 COMMISSIONER SKOP: I'll get to that, I'll 22 get to that in a second. But, again, new issues 23 keep getting raised and it makes this issue even 24 more confusing, which, you know, there's different 25 ways to do things, and at least for me some ways are FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 48 1 more straightforward than the others. But, you 2 know, when the other issues are coming in, it's 3 starting to get clouded even for me. 4 And what I'm trying to do is accommodate 5 to the best of my ability the due process 6 considerations and concerns raised by Public 7 Counsel, as well as the Intervenors, as well as 8 being fair to the utility. And that's the operative 9 word, doing what's fair. 10 What I fail to see though is even if the 11 Commission were overturned on the decision to grant 12 a step increase, to me that's not fatal and not 13 prejudicial to TECO's right to request a proceeding. 14 And again it's up to them. They may say, hey, we're 15 just going to eat this. We're going to absorb it 16 within existing rates. But there's nothing at the 17 appellate level that would prevent them from 18 immediately filing for a limited proceeding to do 19 exactly what staff has recommended here today; is 20 that correct? 21 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Yes. I would think that 22 if they could make the showing that they needed the 23 revenue, they could file for a limited proceeding 24 and request the Commission process it. And, yes, I 25 would agree with you. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 49 1 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Mr. Wright, did you 2 want to respond? I saw you -- 3 MR. WRIGHT: I think the difference -- Mr. 4 Chairman, with your leave. 5 CHAIRMAN CARTER: You're recognized. 6 MR. WRIGHT: Thank you, sir. I think the 7 difference is that in that scenario it would be 8 de novo as of that point in time. If the court 9 rules against the Commission, Tampa Electric always 10 has the right to come in and say we need more money 11 in order to provide adequate service and have the 12 opportunity to earn a reasonable rate of return with 13 adequate, sound, prudent management. But the 14 difference is it would be as of that point in time 15 they could come and ask for it. 16 If I could make, make just one other 17 observation. I, I have read fairly recently in 18 connection with the Progress Item 17 GTE v. Clark, 19 but, and I will say I believe that Ms. Helton's 20 exposition of that case is accurate. 21 I would want to think about it further 22 before I lock myself down to that as to whether the 23 facts in this case as to the potential for a future 24 surcharge comport on all fours with GTE v. Clark. 25 But if, if it's true that GTE v. Clark would provide FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 50 1 Tampa Electric with the opportunity for a surcharge 2 down the road, then the assertion that the money 3 would be irretrievably lost to Tampa Electric is not 4 accurate. And in fact what could happen is if the 5 court upholds the Commission, contrary to our 6 position, then you could have a hearing as to 7 whether Tampa Electric satisfied the requirements of 8 the final order in the rate case as of that, you 9 know, at that time -- you could have the hearing, 10 you know, as to whether they satisfied the 11 requirements as of January 1st, 2010. And, if so, 12 again assuming that GTE v. Clark does apply, they 13 would have a remedy of getting the revenue 14 requirements back to the effective date of the 15 original final order in the rate case plus interest, 16 I believe. So I think it's a corresponding remedy. 17 MS. BRUBAKER: Mr. Chairman -- I'm sorry. 18 MR. WRIGHT: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. 19 Thank you. 20 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Ms. Brubaker. 21 MS. BRUBAKER: Jennifer Brubaker for legal 22 staff. 23 I would like to take Mr. Wright's comments 24 and actually amplify them a little. The concern 25 isn't so much that TECO may not have a remedy FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 51 1 available to it if we get into a surcharge 2 situation. The concern is more the impact on the 3 customers. 4 If the court upholds the Commission's 5 order and we should have been implementing rates 6 from the date of the final order forward, we are 7 looking at those rates to customers being raised not 8 only consistent with the final order but having a 9 surcharge on top of that. And one of the concerns 10 about a surcharge is rate shock to customers. So 11 that is a concern that staff would have. 12 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Skop. 13 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you, Mr. Chair. 14 Just to Ms. Christensen and perhaps 15 Mr. Wright, if, Ms. Christensen, if you could just 16 make this a very short response, please. 17 MS. CHRISTENSEN: I will, I will try. I 18 -- 19 COMMISSIONER SKOP: But here's the 20 question. You've got to wait for the question. 21 (Laughter.) 22 MS. CHRISTENSEN: I like to answer my own 23 question, but -- 24 COMMISSIONER SKOP: It's Jeopardy. You 25 have to wait for the question. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 52 1 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yeah, Jeopardy. She 2 gives you the answer and then you ask the question. 3 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Exactly. Exactly. 4 Okay. Appellate review aside and the 5 legal issues associated with that aside, in terms of 6 protecting your interests on behalf of the citizens 7 of the State of Florida and the Intervenors' 8 interests and getting to an end result on this as 9 expediently as possible, what harm do you foresee in 10 going to hearing which provides you with full due 11 process to fully litigate the issues, to address all 12 the concerns, outside the legal issues, again those 13 are procedural legal issues, inherent authority of 14 the Commission, due process, at that level, but in 15 terms of the nuts and bolts as to whether consumers 16 should be, or the nuts and bolts as to whether the 17 utility should be allowed to recover from its 18 ratepayers the revenue requirement associated with 19 putting five CTs and the rail facility into service 20 for the benefit of the ratepayers, wouldn't the 21 hearing provide that due process to fully vet, to 22 fully flesh out any concerns you have to address 23 once and for all, notwithstanding your right under 24 appellate review, but wouldn't it give you that 25 opportunity that you so desperately seek to raise FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 53 1 the concerns as to why it's not appropriate to grant 2 recovery, why criteria have not been met? 3 Again, we're looking for the end result 4 here. Either they should be allowed to recover or 5 they should not be allowed to recover, and that 6 comes down to a prudency review. Was it prudent to 7 put the five CTs in? Are the costs associated with 8 that capital investment prudent? Should the 9 ratepayers be required to pay for those assets that 10 have been placed in service for the public use? You 11 know, controlling case law, Bluefield, Hope, you 12 know, all that good stuff. 13 I recognize due process, but I'm also 14 trying to get to an end result that makes everyone 15 happy, to allow you to fully vet, fully litigate any 16 issues and questions you have. But what gets to me 17 to some degree -- and again those are the issues 18 raised which we are going to litigate at some point, 19 but we're talking about five CTs. I mean, the costs 20 of those are very finite and definitized. And the 21 rail facility which is a little bit more open-ended, 22 but we should be able to lock that down. So we know 23 what the costs are. It's not like we're building a 24 nuclear power plant or trying to build a rocket to 25 space. But, you know, I'm just trying to understand FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 54 1 why a hearing would not get you in the process to 2 afford due process to allow you to fully litigate 3 the concerns that you have, because it sounds to me 4 like that's the big concern here. 5 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Well, I think a couple 6 of things, and then I would also request that my 7 colleagues be given an opportunity to answer. 8 I think first and foremost is that the 9 Commission set up its criteria in the final order 10 and it says we're going to judge it by this one -- 11 two criterias. Basically whether or not they've 12 come into commercial service, it appears that that's 13 not disputed. I mean, that's -- but the second 14 criteria is needed for load requirement. And under 15 the process in the final order there would be a 16 recommendation and a PAA order would be issued by 17 the Commission which would either make a finding 18 that they were needed for load requirement or they 19 were not needed for load requirement. 20 And my suggestion was we are here today 21 with a recommendation that says basically they were 22 not needed for load requirements. And although it's 23 trying to add two different criteria -- and the 24 reason I'm saying that is because essentially then 25 you have customers paying for something that the, FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 55 1 what I believe TECO is not entitled to. 2 COMMISSIONER SKOP: I got that. I've got 3 an extensive power generation background, so I'm 4 with you on that. 5 My concern again, and this seems to be a 6 new issue, which is what -- it's been so long, 7 either this is a new issue or emerging issue or 8 something, there's a disconnect for me on that very 9 point. 10 MS. CHRISTENSEN: Uh-huh. 11 COMMISSIONER SKOP: For the five CTs, I 12 guess the question to staff, was there a need 13 determination by this Commission that they were 14 needed? No? Mr. Ballinger? 15 MS. CHRISTENSEN: No. 16 MR. BALLINGER: You're not required to do 17 a need determination for combustion turbines. 18 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. So they were 19 used for peakers or -- okay. And then how would you 20 respond to, to Ms. Christensen's assertion that they 21 were not needed for a reserve margin as a 22 reliability issue or what, what's driving that? 23 Again, is this a new issue that OPC is seeking to 24 litigate late in the game or was this issue always 25 in play? FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 56 1 MR. BALLINGER: The -- my understanding 2 is -- I'm sorry. My understanding is the final 3 order asked that the one condition be are they 4 needed for load generation? Our group was asked to 5 look at that from the need of the facilities to 6 serve load. 7 They are not needed from a strict reserve 8 margin standpoint, if you will, except for a couple 9 of months in 2009 and 2010. Those months being like 10 in January I believe when they're doing some 11 extended maintenance on the Big Bend 4 facility. 12 Staff noted that TECO would have other options to 13 cover short-term shortages, if you will, due to 14 maintenance. They could purchase power from other 15 utilities. You don't necessarily build another 16 power plant just to cover a maintenance outage. But 17 TECO is in the process of constructing these units, 18 so they are serving that need to serve load 19 reliability over those couple of months. 20 Is that a strict reserve margin for peak 21 load? No. It's a, it's a -- we try to evaluate the 22 whole system as a whole. So they are providing a 23 reliability benefit to TECO's system. 24 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. Well, I've 25 heard reliability before. And, again, it's been FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 57 1 months since we've delved into this issue. It seems 2 to me like Ms. Christensen is trying to raise a 3 point and I'm trying to find out whether it's a, 4 it's a valid point. It seems like it would be 5 vigorously litigated within any type of hearing as 6 to whether it was prudent to do this from a load 7 perspective. And it seems like even staff is kind 8 of conceding that they may have a point. Is that -- 9 MR. BALLINGER: I don't know that's a 10 point. I think it goes back to when we had this 11 discussion with Mr. Devlin, the final order that 12 said for load generation didn't lay out all the 13 criterias of load generation. Staff has pointed out 14 there's many facets of it. And, yes, this may be a 15 contested issue at a hearing. I think that's one 16 reason why staff has suggested to you go straight to 17 hearing with this item because these may come up. 18 MR. BEASLEY: Mr. Chairman, if I may, 19 we're, we're fully prepared to meet that burden at 20 hearing and that's why we think that staff's 21 approach is the better alternative. 22 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Hang on a second, 23 everybody. Just hold on for a minute. We've, we've 24 kind of -- we've gone as much as we need to go and 25 we'll probably go a little longer. But I'm FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 58 1 concerned fundamentally that the issue of rate 2 shock, is that if we don't do this, then not only 3 would they get the rate increase that's within the 4 context of the case, but they'll also get -- this 5 would be a surcharge for this; is that correct? Am 6 I reading this right, Ms. Brubaker? 7 MS. BRUBAKER: I think the concern is 8 whether, whether the Commission wants to go forward 9 with a hearing, whether it wants to abate that 10 proceeding pending the outcome of the appeal. I 11 think we would still recommend that the, the, the 12 increase be put in subject to refund. The concern 13 being if the final order is upheld on appeal, that 14 we would be in a surcharge issue. And, of course, 15 as I stated earlier, there is the concern about -- 16 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Hang on one second, 17 Commissioner. I'll be with you. I want to just get 18 this out. 19 Probably no one has done this yet, but I 20 would want to know how much of a rate increase that 21 would be if that were to happen. 22 MS. CHASE: Commissioner, that would 23 depend on how long it takes the court to make the 24 decision. And, no, we have not done those, run the 25 numbers yet. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 59 1 MR. BEASLEY: Mr. Chairman, I have some 2 input, if you would like it, on that subject. 3 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Mr. Beasley. 4 MR. BEASLEY: The staff recommendation 5 step increase before the slight modification they 6 made this morning or this afternoon would have a 7 $1.55 per kWh base energy charge increase, but that 8 would be offset by an overall decrease in the fuel 9 adjustment charge of over $6, with a net impact in 10 January of the bills going down $1.88 after 11 inclusion of the step increase. So that would give 12 you the impact on the front end. I'm not sure what 13 the impact would be if the surcharge had to later be 14 imposed. 15 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Argenziano. 16 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: And with all due 17 respect, and I appreciate that and I really am 18 concerned about rate shock also, but it would also 19 be lower if it wasn't implemented, if it wasn't 20 meant to be. If the court ultimately decides that 21 it was not right and does not uphold the 22 Commission's vote, the fuel decrease would be the 23 opposite of rate shock. There would be nothing 24 added to that, so it would be even less of a burden 25 for the consumer. So you can argue it both ways. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 60 1 It is a difficult one. 2 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Speaking of arguing it 3 both ways, we've heard multiple recitations and I 4 think that, you know, we probably need to bring this 5 in for a landing, Commissioners. I don't think -- 6 you know, we've said it multiple times, the parties 7 have said it multiple times, and we've had multiple 8 answers from staff, and I think we need to kind of 9 cut the Gordian Knot. The Chair is now open for a 10 motion. 11 Commissioner Skop, you're recognized. 12 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you, Mr. 13 Chairman. In making this motion I just want it to 14 be known that I'm firmly convinced that moving 15 forward with the hearing will allow the parties full 16 due process to litigate the issues that are 17 troubling them. I feel that there's adequate 18 protection provided by recovering costs subject to 19 refund with interest. Again, it's a, it's a touchy 20 issue because there's appellate issues going on in 21 parallel with this. 22 But I would respectfully make the motion 23 based on my comments to approve the staff 24 recommendation for Issues 1 and 2. I think that's 25 the best path forward based on all I've heard. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 61 1 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Mr. Chairman, if I 2 may. 3 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes, ma'am. 4 Commissioner Edgar, you're recognized. 5 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: A comment was made I 6 think by Commissioner Skop a few moments ago about 7 trying to make everybody happy, and unfortunately 8 not every item that comes before us I think we have 9 the wisdom or the ability to, to do that. That is 10 part of the adversarial process. 11 In this instance I hear loudly the 12 concerns of the Intervenors and in my mind they're 13 just, there isn't necessarily a way to make 14 everybody happy on these particular specific and 15 unique factors. So with that I will second the 16 motion, recognizing it as maybe not a perfect 17 decision but probably the better decision, 18 realizing, as Commissioner Skop has said, that I do 19 think it provides procedural and due process 20 protections to all parties and the ratepayers 21 included. 22 I would also add just as a comment that I 23 am very interested in the appellate proceeding. I 24 recognize, and, Commissioner Argenziano, as you 25 pointed out, that the vote that has kind of brought FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 62 1 us to here on these issues during the rate case and 2 at the conclusion of it was made on a four to one. 3 I remain comfortable with the basis for that 4 majority decision and my participation in it, but I 5 fully recognize that it is not black and white and 6 that it is one of those issues that reasonable 7 people could easily have seen it differently. And 8 because of that all the more I look forward to the 9 supreme court's review of our authority and our 10 implementation of it under these circumstances and 11 hope that that will proceed and that we will then be 12 able to implement whatever that clarification is. 13 So again, Mr. Chairman, I appreciate the 14 discussion and I second Commissioner Skop's motion. 15 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioners, we've got 16 a motion and a second. We're in debate. Any 17 debate? 18 Commissioner Klement, you're recognized. 19 COMMISSIONER KLEMENT: Thank you, Mr. 20 Chairman. 21 I agree with Commissioner Skop's position, 22 especially the caveats that he's put in regarding 23 the future. But the comments made by, by 24 Commissioner Argenziano and Commissioner Carter 25 regarding the risk of a surcharge to the ratepayers FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 63 1 is my biggest concern. It would, it would be bad 2 for them and it would be bad for us. 3 I also acknowledge what TECO's 4 representative has said regarding the potential harm 5 to TECO investors, and we need to consider those 6 too. So I think I can support the motion. 7 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Further debate. 8 Commissioner Argenziano. We're in debate, 9 Commissioners, in debate. 10 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Just comments 11 on -- since I was the one who dissented on the 12 original vote, I agree that everybody has their own 13 opinion, I would be, it would be hypocritical for me 14 to think that now instituting a, a charge to a 15 customer now would be fair or right since I pointed 16 out in my dissent due process issues and other, 17 other issues. So I could not vote in favor of this 18 today. It just wouldn't be right. 19 So -- and in regards to the consumers, the 20 impact, as well as the shareholders, I fully 21 recognize, am cognizant of those impacts. As I said 22 before, I see the, the rate shock working both ways. 23 If, if I'm of the belief that that shouldn't be 24 charged to those consumers and the court does, does 25 uphold, well, then we have to live by what the court FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 64 1 says. If they go the other way, then the, then the 2 consumer never should have been charged that to 3 begin with. So I look at it as maybe a relief in 4 that sense that as the fuel goes down, maybe there 5 would be not something else added upon their bills 6 until the court makes that decision. 7 But with all respect to my colleagues, I 8 understand there's differences of opinions, and I 9 think really what it comes down to is we have to 10 wait for the court's decision. But I could not vote 11 for this, staff's recommendation today. 12 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. In debate. 13 Commissioner Skop. 14 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Thank you, Mr. Chair. 15 And, Commissioner Argenziano, I fully 16 appreciate that position. Actually I'm, I'm 17 struggling with this one to the extent that I fully 18 support my prior vote; however, with this one 19 there's merits to granting or looking at seriously 20 taking a stay or abatement during the pendency of 21 the appellate review. But I can't foresee how long 22 that will take with any reasonable degree of 23 certainty. So if you got in a situation where you 24 stated that assets were placed in service for the 25 public use, the court upheld the Commission's FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 65 1 decision, then that might be a situation where it 2 could be prejudicial to the company. And, again, 3 that's where that fairness comes into play. 4 So I think with your perspective, I think 5 it's a very good one that, you know, if the court 6 rules against the Commission, then the consumer 7 should never be charged in the first place, which is 8 factual. If the court rules in favor of the 9 Commission, the customer should have been charged, 10 but there's no way to do it. So it's trying to 11 balance that tug of war in light of the fact that 12 we've made a decision that's obviously being 13 appealed. 14 So I think what turned the table for me 15 and gave me some comfort is that even if the court 16 rules against us, that's where that subject to 17 refund with interest I think protects the 18 ratepayers. They have to maybe pay it a little bit 19 now. But, you know, if the court ultimately rules 20 against the Commission, then there's that at least 21 to me adequate protection. And I know that's not 22 probably in line with, with, you know, your feelings 23 on the matter. But, again, I think that, you know, 24 I've got to stand by the previous vote, but then in 25 this situation there's a little bit more discretion FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 66 1 as to what the best approach is. And at least to me 2 there's not really a good one here because I see, I 3 see both and it's like one of those fine lines. 4 But I think it's, to me I'd rather get 5 into -- what intrigues me is the issues that were 6 raised by the Intervenors today. Because, again, 7 this seems to be hotly contested and I didn't even 8 really know that that would be as contested as it 9 would be. So I think with those regards I'd really 10 like to have a hearing and see what the real issues 11 are and get to the nuts and bolts and maybe they 12 make their case that way. 13 So, again, I just wanted to give a little 14 bit more explanation as to why I made the motion. 15 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Any further 16 debate, Commissioners? Any further debate? A 17 motion and a second has been made. 18 All in favor, let it be known by the sign 19 of aye. 20 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Aye. 21 COMMISSIONER KLEMENT: Aye. 22 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Aye. 23 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Aye. 24 All those opposed, like sign. 25 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Aye. FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 67 1 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Show it done. Thank 2 you. 3 Commissioners, I really want to push 4 through. I want to keep on going, so, so let's kind 5 of change out there. 6 MR. YOUNG: Mr. Chairman? 7 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes, sir. Mr. Young? 8 MR. YOUNG: Issue 3 was not voted on. I 9 think Commissioner Skop made a motion on Issue 1 and 10 2. 11 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Is that the close the 12 docket? 13 MR. YOUNG: Yes. 14 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner, on the 15 close the docket? 16 COMMISSIONER SKOP: I did not, I did 17 not -- 18 MR. YOUNG: It's to leave the docket open. 19 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Okay. My mistake. 20 There's so many pages here in this book, the one I 21 looked, I thought when I did my count -- so I'd move 22 to approve staff recommendation on Issue 3. Sorry. 23 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Second. 24 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Moved and properly 25 seconded. All in favor, let it be known by the sign FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 68 1 of aye. 2 COMMISSIONER EDGAR: Aye. 3 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Aye. 4 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Aye. 5 COMMISSIONER KLEMENT: Aye. 6 CHAIRMAN CARTER: All those opposed, like 7 sign. 8 COMMISSIONER ARGENZIANO: Aye. 9 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Show it done. 10 COMMISSIONER SKOP: Mr. Chair, I'm getting 11 old because again I did my count and only saw two 12 issues there. So I need to get my glasses on or 13 something. 14 CHAIRMAN CARTER: Just for the clerk so 15 you can note, the vote was four to one on both. 16 Okay? Thank you. 17 (Agenda item concluded.) 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION 69 1 STATE OF FLORIDA ) 2 : CERTIFICATE OF REPORTERS 3 COUNTY OF LEON ) 4 WE, JANE FAUROT, RPR, and LINDA BOLES, RPR, CRR, Official Commission Reporters, do hereby 5 certify that the foregoing proceeding was heard at the time and place herein stated. 6 IT IS FURTHER CERTIFIED that we 7 stenographically reported the said proceedings; that the same has been transcribed under our direct 8 supervision; and that this transcript constitutes a true transcription of our notes of said proceedings. 9 WE FURTHER CERTIFY that we are not a 10 relative, employee, attorney or counsel of any of the parties, nor are we a relative or employee of 11 any of the parties' attorneys or counsel connected with the action, nor are we financially interested 12 in the action. 13 14 DATED THIS ______ day of December, 2009. 15 16 _________________________ _________________________ JANE FAUROT, RPR LINDA BOLES, CRR, RPR 17 FPSC Official Commission FPSC Official Commission Reporter Reporter 18 (850) 413-6732 (850) 413-6734 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 FLORIDA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION