HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgenda Packet 10/14/2008
Utility Advisory Committee
Special Meeting
Public Works Conference Room
Port Angeles, W A 98362
October 14, 2008
1 :00 P.M.
AGENDA
I. Call To Order
II. Roll Call
III. Approval Of Minutes For September 30, 2008
IV. Late Items
V. Discussion Items
A. Bonneville Power Administration Power Sales Agreement
B. Medic 1 Utility Cost Of Service Update
C. Solid Waste Utility Rates
D. Request For Proposals - Network Needs Assessment And Wireless
Technology Plan
VI.
Next Meeting Date:
November 11, 1008 (Holiday - Date To Be
Determined)
VII. Adjournment
UTILITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE
, IO~
GUEST SIGN UP SHEET
PRINT NAME
ORGANIZATION
N: \PWKS \LIGHT\ CONS \ CATE \ SIGNUP. wpd
Utility Advisory Committee
Special Meeting
Public Works Conference Room
Port Angeles, W A 98362
September 30, 2008
11 :00 a.m.
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L Call To Order
Chairman Reed called the meeting to order at 11 :00 a.m.
IL Roll Call
Members Present:
Chairman Reed, Betsy Wharton, Dan Di Guilio, Karen Rogers
(11: 1 0), Orville Campbell
Members Absent:
None
Staff Present:
Jerry Osterman, Bill Bloor, Yvonne Ziomkowski, Mike Puntenney,
Steve Sperr, Larry Dunbar, Phil Lusk, Tom McCabe, Cate Rinehart
Others Present:
None
IlL Approval of Minutes:
Chairman Reed asked if there were any corrections to the minutes of September 30, 2008.
Orville Campbell moved to approve the minutes. Councilman Di Guilio seconded the motion,
which carried unanimously.
IV
Late Items
None
J;: Discussion Items:
A. Solid Waste Utility Cost Of Service Study
Larry Dunbar, Deputy Director of Power Systems, distributed a handout. Angie Sanchez, FCS
Group, gave a presentation by phone based upon that information. The discussion included an
overview ofthe rate study process, transfer station operations, closure and post-closure reserves,
collection operations, and the time frame for public hearings. There was a lengthy discussion.
Councilmember Wharton moved to recommend City Council proceed with a public
hearing on the cost of service studies for the Solid Waste Collection and Transfer Station
Utilities. Councilmember Rogers seconded the motion, which carried unanimously.
UTILITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE
September 30, 2008
B. Electric Utility Rates And Fees
Larry Dunbar, Deputy Director of Power Systems, distributed a handout, reviewed the August
12th presentation, and noted the changes that had occurred since that meeting. Staff determined
that with new information received from Bonneville current rates are sufficient through 2009 and
no rate adjustment was needed. Staff confirmed that the previously discussed changed to
electrical works permit fees and ordinance housekeeping amendments are recommended. There
was a lengthy discussion.
Councilman Di Guilio moved to recommend City Council proceed with the fee adjustments
and ordinance housekeeping amendments for the Electric Utility. Councilmember Rogers
seconded the motion, which carried unanimously.
VI. Next Meeting Date:
October 14, 2008 - Special Meeting
(1 :00 p.m. to 5 p.m.)
VII. Adjournment:
The meeting was adjourned at 1: 10 p.m.
Chairman Reed
Cate Rinehart, Admin Spec II
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WAS H I N G TON, U. S. A.
Utility Advisory Committee Memo
October 14,2008
Utility Advisory Committee
Larry Dunbar, Deputy Director of Power Systems
Bonneville Power Administration Power Sales Agreement
Summary: Ms. Shannon Greene, BP A Account Executive, and City staff will present an
overview of the new Power Sales Agreement and Tiered Rates Methodology to the Utility
Advisory Committee.
Recommendation: For information only, no action requested.
Background/Analysis: The City's Electric Utility currently has a Power Sales Agreement
and a Transmission Service Agreement with the Bonneville Power Administration (BP A). The
Power Sales Agreement is in effect through September 2011. The Transmission Service
Agreement is in effect through September 30,2036.
A new Power Sales Agreement has been offered to the City by the BP A, which must be accepted
by the City no later than December 1, 2008. The new Power Sales Agreement would commence
on October 1,2011 and conclude on September 30, 2028. The primary change in the new Power
Sales Agreement is a shift from average embedded rates to a complex Tiered Rates Methodology
(TRM). Power purchases under the new tier 1 rate are anticipated to be similar to current costs.
The new tier 2 rate will reflect the marginal cost of new power resources and is anticipated to be
significantly higher than the tier 1 rate. The preliminary tier 2 annual cost estimate ranges from
$530,000 to $680,000 beginning October 1,2011, and would continue to climb in future years
based on the City's load growth. The City's future decisions on tier 2 power resources are
anticipated to be the largest issue the Electric Utility will face over the next twenty years.
Ms. Shannon Greene, BPA Account Executive, and City staff will present an overview of the new
Power Sales Agreement and TRM to the Utility Advisory Committee. Depending on the
committee's interest in the TRM, a special meeting may need to be scheduled before next month's
meeting. Staff will request a recommendation from the Utility Advisory Committee on the new
Power Sales Agreement at the November meeting, which would be considered by City Council at
their November 18, 2008 meeting. BP A produced the attached factsheet and background
information that committee members are encouraged to read before the meeting.
Attachment: Factsheet, A Roadmap To The Provisions Of Regional Dialogue Contracts And
Tiered Rates
N:\UAC\DepDir\BPA Power Sales Agreement.doc
BON N E V
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POW E R
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ADM
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S T RAT
o N
August 2008
A roadmap to the provisions of
Regional Dialogue contracts and
tiered rates
BPA's current power sales contracts expire Sept. 30,
2011. After years of collaborative discussions with
customers and other parties and much hard work on
all sides, BPA is offering new contracts to its
customers. 'rhese contracts will work in tandem with
a new Tiered Rate Methodology BPA has proposed
ft)r the Priority Firm Power (PF) rate. These Regional
Dialogue contracts and the tiered PF rate form the
foundation of the business relationship BPA is
offering for the next 20 years.
This fact sheet summarizes the provisions of the new
Regional Dialogue power contracts and Tiered Rate
Methodology. As a summary, it provides a guide for
basic understanding of the ne\v contracts and Tiered
Rate Methodology and should not be relied on as an
authoritative interpretation of those documents.
New long-term contracts
The new power sales contracts will cover fiscal years
2012-2028. Customers will have until Dec. 1,2008,
to consider and sign their new contracts. BPA is
offering contracts ahead of when the current contracts
expire so that BPA and its customers will know well
in advance who has the responsibility to develop new
resources to mect load growth starting in FY 2012.
Having this certainty in advancc will help ensure that
new resources arc in place when tbey are needed.
Also, by signing these contracts, customcrs will
secure the benefits of a defined amount of low cost-
bascd power from the federal system for another
20 years.
Another reason to sign the new contracts this year
is that BPA has spent considerable time helping the
current administration in Washington, D.C.,
understand thc nced for new long-teml contracts.
If the contracts are not signed by the Dec. 1
deadlinc, the region faccs thc risk of delay as a
ncw administration is brought up to speed. Therc
also is the possibility of significant and unpredictable
changes to thc contracts or rates.
In many important rcspects, the new power sales
contracts will be similar to the CUlTcnt Subscription
Key dates
Contracts:
Aug. 18, 2008 - Final Regional Dialogue
Load Following and Block contract
templates provided to customers
Aug. 29, 2008 - Final Regional Dialogue
Slice contract template provided to
customers
Dec. 1, 2008 - Deadline for signing
Regional Dialogue contracts
Tiered Rate Methoc:lplogy:
Oct. 6, 2008 - Final TRM Record of
Decision andFinal TRM filedwith FERC
V'
contracts. For example, customers will have a choice
of power products much like in the current contracts
m Load Following, Block and Slice/Block.
In general, the new Load FoIlowing product is similar
to the Load Following products sold under the current
Subscription contracts where BPA is responsible for
serving the customer's entire load, minus what is
served by the customer's own resources. However,
the new Regional Dialogue Load FoIlowing product
gives customers more opportunities for applying new
non-federal resources to serve their own load over
time than was allowed under the Subscription
contracts.
The new Block products also are similar to those
provided under the Subscription contracts. Each
customer is responsible for serving its own load
except that which is served by its defined BPA Block
purchase amounts. The Flat Block product (which
provides equal amounts in all hours of the year) is the
same as the product under the Subscription contracts.
Under the Shaped Block product, the allowable shape
for the Tier 1 portion (see the next section for an
explanation of Tier 1 and Tier 2) is based on the shape
of the customer's monthly net requirement. The
portion of Block served at Tier 2 rates is flat across
Renewable Energy Credits
Renewable Energy Gredits (REGs) come with
the power purchased under the High Water
Mark contracts, and there is no extra charge
for them. Each utility's power purchases at
Tier 1 rates will Include REGs in an amount
proportional to the amount of power
purchased compared with the total amount of
Tier 1 system resources. Power purchased at
Tier 2 rates may include REGs, depending on
the resource(s) whose costs are the basis for
the Tier 2 rate(s). If customers wish to have
REGs included with their Tier 2 purchases,
BPA will seek to acquire Tier 2 resources that
provide REGs.
the year. As is the case with the Subscription
contracts, Shaping Capacity can be added to the
Block product.
The Slice portion of the Slice/Block product is
generally similar to the Slice product under the
Subscription contracts. However, the new Slice
product is required to come initially with an amount
of Block product. The Block portion of the Slice/
Block product can be flat or shaped.
"High Water Marks" and tiered rates
By far the biggest change the new contracts will bring
is that each customer \vill have a contract-defined
right to purchase an aUlOunt of power at "Tier 1"
rates, which represents the cost of BPA's existing
system. That amount of power is called the High
Water Mark, or HWM. Utilities will still have the
right to have BPA meet their net requirement load
(the utility's load minus its own resources), but BPA
will meet net requirement load above the HWM at
"Tier 2" rates. Tier 2 rates will be set to cover the full
cost of the additional power BPA buys to meet those
additional loads.
Giving each customer anHWM and tiering the
Priority Finn Power rate has significant benefits to
customers and to the region as a whole:
tt HWMs define the portion ofload that will be
served at Tier 1 rates; this will be the bulk of
most customers' load for the foreseeable future.
Limiting the resources to the existing federal
system and a minimum amount of augmentation
purchases whose costs will be recovered through
Tier 1 rates keeps those rates lower and more
stable.
Many utilities want a choice between buying from
BPA or developing their own resources to meet
load growth. BPA's current practice of meeting
all net requirements at one melded rate makes
choosing to develop non-BPA resources
uneconomical because the melded rate blends the
costs of existing federal resources with market
2
purchases, resulting in lower rates than new
resource costs. HWMs and tiered rates give
utilities a real choice about how to meet their
load growth.
The tiered rate design will give customers the full
economic value of their decisions to conserve,
manage their load shapes and add new resources
in beneficial shapes without imposing costs on
other customers.
BPA's continued funding for fish recovery and
other public purposes will dearly be a Tier 1
obligation and will provide stable funding for
these purposes.
There are several types of High Water Marks that
BPA will calculate at different times and for different
purposes.
Most important is the Contract HWM or CHWM.
BPA will calculate Contract HWMs in FY 2011 based
on each customer's FY 2010 measured load, adjusted
for unusual occurrences in that year, such as abnormal
weather, minus customers' existing resource amounts
in FY 20 I 0 as those resource amounts were defined
on Sept. 30,2006 (with some limited exceptions).
BPA also will adjust each utility's HWM to provide
credit for conservation savings achieved by that
utility. (The conservation adjustment redistributes the
Contract HWM amounts among customers but does
not change the total Contract H\VM amount for all
utilities as a group.)
The total HWMs will be limited to the expected
FY 2012-2013 firm output of the federal generation
system, plus up to 300 aMW of "augmentation"
purchases. Current forecasts suggest that most
customers' HWMs will be slightly higher than needed
to cover the difference between their FY 2010 loads
and their FY 2010 resources. But this is not certain,
since there is wlcertainty about both load growth and
the output of the federal system.
BPA will calculate the Rate Period High Water Mark
(or RHWM) for each customer prior to each rate case.
.~..
The RHWM is the same as the CHWM except for
some adjustments for changes in the output of the
existing BPA generation system. Because the output
ofBPA resources does not stay constant from year to
year, BPA will calculate the RHWM before each rate
case to reflect the latest forecast of firm resource
output. To calculate RHWM, BPA will divide each
utility's Contract HWM by the sum of all customers'
Contract HWMs, and then multiply by the forecast
output of BPA's resources averaged for that rate
period. The Rate Period IIWM defines the maximum
planned amount of power a customer is eligible to
purchase at Tier 1 rates for a particular rate period.
In FY 2009, BPA will calculate the Transition Period
High Water Mark. It has a limited purpose, which is
to define how much power (if any) each customer will
need to either buy from BPA at the Tier 2 rate or
acquire from other sources for at least FY 2012-2013.
History leading up to
contract offers
The Regional Dialogue process began in
April 2002 when a group of BPA's customers
submitted a "joint customer proposal" to BPA
that addressed near- and long-term contract
and rate issues. Since then, BPA and
customers and other interested parties have
worked to resolve the numerous issues
necessary to put new 20-year contracts into
place. BPA laid out its policy guidance on
these issues in its Long-Term Regional
Dialogue Final Policy in July 2007. Intensive
collaborative regional effort continued, and in
October 2007 BPA released the draft of the
master contract template for the first time.
After more months of dialogue, on April 7,
2008, BPA again released the contract
templates to the region for review and
comment. More drafts and detailed
negotiations ensued, leading to the final
templates in August 2008.
3
The RHWM, not the Transition Period HWM, will
define actual rights to buy power at the Tier 1 rate for
those transitional years. But since the RI-IWM wiII
not be determined until 2011, the Transition Period
HWM is needed so that responsibilities for meeting
above-HWM load can be defined far enough in
advance to allow BPA and utilities to line up the
necessary power sources.
That's a lot of High Water Marks. Customers will
have a chance to review and comment on BPA's
calculations of CHWMs and RHWMs before they
become final.
It bears repeating: the CHWM and the RHWM do not
limit the amount of power customers can buy from
BPA. The HWMs set maximum planned amounts of
power customers can purchase at Tier 1 rates. Under
the new contracts, as now, customers wiII continue to
have the right to buy enough power to meet their full
net requirements from BPA. The change is that some
of the net requirement purchase will be at Tier 1 rates,
and some will be at Tier 2 rates.
The 20-year Tiered Rate Methodology
Rates under these new contracts will be very different
from current and previous rates. Our customers said,
and BPA agreed, that BPA should establish a long-
term rate method that will provide certainty about
how those rates will be constmcted during the term of
the contracts. The Tiered Rate Methodology (TRM)
provides this certainty. After much collaborative work
with customers, BPA has proposed a long-tenn tiered
PF rate methodology in a rate case that is scheduled
to conclude in the fall of 2008, in time to be useful
for the decision to sign the new contracts.
Although the Tiered Rate Methodology will not be
final for at least a few months and sales under the
new contracts will not commence until FY 2012,
the following summary is written as though this new
business relationship is a reality, simply for ease of
presentation.
UncleI' the tiered PF rate, rates will be structured
differently but will remain cost-based.
In simple terms, the Tier 1 rate will be based on the
cost of the existing system, although Tier 1 costs will
include the cost of a relatively small amount of power
purchased by BPA as "augmentation" of the existing
federal system. The Tier 1 cost pools cover all of
BPA's power costs except costs of resources added
to meet load beyond what existing resources plus
the limited allowable augmentation can meet. As
described belm\!, portions of the rate arc based on
forecast market prices, but in total the rate will
recover only the costs of the existing system and
the small amount of augmentation.
Currently, most of each non-Slice customer's bill is
made up of heavy load hour and light load hour
energy charges per kilowatt-hour. Afler FY 2011,
there will be many fewer per-kilowatt-hour charges.
Instead, most of the bill will be based on percentages
of "pools" of Tier 1 costs - not per-kilowatt-hour
charges.
The percentage a customer pays of each pool is called
the TOCA ("Tier I Cost AUocator"). Using a TOCA
makes the calculation of charges for all customcrs --
Slice and Non-Slice - similar and reduces the
potential for any appearance of inequity between
Slice and non-Slice customers.
By far the biggest pool of Tier 1 costs, which covers
the bulk of BP1\'s power costs, is called the
"composite" pool. There are some smaller cost pools
- the Slice pool for costs that apply only to the Slice
product and the non-Slice pool for costs that apply
only to the Block or Load FoUowing products.
The demand charge under the Tiered Rate
Methodology is velY different from the current
demand charge. The CUlTent demand charge is a
relatively low charge that applies to all demand
purchased. Under tiered rates, the demand charge will
be much higher, because it is based on the cost of new
capacity. But it will apply to only a small percentage
of total demand purchased, at least in the initial years
of the new contracts, depending on peak load growth.
Another change in the demand charge is that it will be
based on the utility's own peak load instead of being
4
measured at the time of BPA's peak load. This change
gives utilities more ability to predict and control their
peak loads. These changes will allow utilities that find
ways to manage their peaks to reap the reward of
doing so, while keeping the overall rate cost-based
and avoiding cost shifts to other customers.
There is also a Load Shaping charge. This charge
covers the cost of reshaping the output of the federal
system to match the shape of each utility's actual
load. The Load Shaping charge applies to Block and
Load Following purchases. For some customers this
"charge" can actually be a credit, because their load
shape is relatively easy to meet.
Even though it will not be large for most customers,
the Load Shaping charge plays a key role. It lets
customers that invest in load management,
conservation or new resources in beneficial shapes
realize the full benefit of their investment through
reductions in their BPA power bill. It does this
without departing tl'cml the fundamental principle
of cost-based rates.
The new long-term contracts and the new Tiered Rate
Methodology work in tandem. Neither works without
the other. The Tiered Rate Methodology defines a
method for setting the tiered PF rate but not the levels
of the Tier I and Tier 2 rates. The rate levels will be
set in future rate cases that will oceur every two
years. The first rate. case that will set rates under the
Tiered Rate Methodology will set the rates for the
first two years of the new contracts,FY 2012-2013.
Choices for meeting load growth
Customers have several choices for meeting load
above their High Water Marks, which generally will
be load resulting from load growth but may also be
due to reductions in output from the existing federal
system. They have until November 2009 to make this
choice tor at least the Transition Period (FY 2012-
2014).
Customers can meet all or paJi of their load growth
with purehases fl'om another supplier or develop a
new power resource, either on their own or in
partnership with other utilities. BPA can provide the
services needed to shape the output of such resources
to load, or the customer can purchase those services
from other suppliers. For Load Following customers,
these non-BPA resources can be added in a variety
of shapes. As necessary, BPA will reshape its
deliveries at the Tier I rate to meet the customer's
remaining load.
Or the customer can ask BPA to meet aU or part of its
load growth. If a customer wants BPA to do this, there
will be periodic deadlines to notify BPA so it can
acquire the necessary power by the time it is needed.
BPA will avoid passing to Tier I rates the costs and..
risks of meeting above-HWM load by keeping those
costs and risks withinTier 2 to the maximum extent
possible.
Power will be priced as a flat block in all Tiel: 2 rate
alternatives. All load fluctuations and peak demands
above this flat block will be covered in the Tier 1
service with the load shaping charge accounting for
the differences in the cost to serve different shapes of
load growth.
Customers will have several choices to make by
November 2009:
5
The customer may want BPA to serve its load
growth during just FY 2012-2014 (the transition
period). If a customer makes this choice, the
customer wiII be charged the Tier 2 Short-Term
rate, and it will have another chance inFY 2011
to either continue buying from BPA or buy from
another supplier from FY 2015 to 2019.
For Load Following customers, the customer may
want BPA to meet its load beyond what is
available at Tier 1 rates for the duration of the new
contracts. If a customer chooses BPA, it will buy
such power at the Tier 2 Load Growth rate. BPA
wiII provide power at Tier 2 rates for all customers
who sign up to purchase at the Load Growth rate.
l!I BPA expects to offer a "vintaged" Tier 2 rate or
rates in 2009. If a Cllstomer chooses a vintage
Tier 2 rate, it wiII sign up to pay the actual costs
of a patticular resource or group of resources.
If a utility is a Load Following customer and
commits to meet load beyond that served at the
Tier 1 rates at the Tier 2 load growth rate, it can
join the Shared Rate Plan. The Shared Rate Plan
adds all the participants' Tier 2 charges and Tier 1
customer charges and spreads the total over all the
participants so that all participants pay the same
cost per kilowatt-hour. Participants will pay their
own individual demand charges. Initial sales for
the pool of purchasers in the Shared Rate Plan are
limited to 700 aMW because selling too much at
these melded rates would undermine the regional
benefits of tiering rates. Other customers wiII see
no cost shift due to BPA's offer of the Shared
Rate Plan.
Low Density Discount
The low density discount (LDD) wiII be available, but
not for above-High Water Mark purchases. The LDD
will be based on total retail load (minus resources) so,
if a utility has load growth, it will receive an LDD
equivalent to what it would have received under the
cUlTent melded rates. The LDD will be applied to all
Tier 1 charges - the customer charges, the load
shaping charge and the demand charge.
Irrigation Rate Mitigation
Loads eligible for irrigation rate mitigation (IRM)
will be shown in each customer's new power sales
contract and \viIl not increase during the term of the
contract. IRM will be a percentage discount on the
Tier 1 rates that is determined in each rate case. A
true-up process at the end of the irrigation season
will ensure that each utility had the full amount of
irrigation load stated in its contract.
Stability and durability of contracts
BPA intends the new business relationship it is
offering to be predictable and durable. Both BPA and
its customers arc seeking long-term certainty and
stability. Some customers will be nlaking long-term
financial commitments to new resources and need
to know that the underlying deal with BPA carmot
change except under specific extraordinary
circumstances and through specific processes.
Similarly, BPA must meet its customers' net
requirements in a reliable and cost-effective way.
The Tiered Rate Methodology lays out the rules for
making changes in the TRM. The protections laid out
in the Tiered Rate Methodology will be secured by
the contract, ensuring that changes can be made only
under the narrowest of circumstances.
Consequences of not
signing contracts by Dec. 1
As noted earlier, BPA will be offering contracts soon
and would like all customers to sign the new contracts
by the Dec. 1 deadline because that would be best for
each customer and for the region generally. BPA has
worked with customers to resolve concerns in hopes
that each customer wiII be comfortable signing.
Customers are not required to sign a contract that
includes a High Water Mark in order for BPA to meet
their net requirement load. BPA expects that
customers wiII sign the contracts by Dec. 1. In the
unlikely event a customer doesn't, BPA will otfer a
different contract before the current Subscription
power sales contract expires. BPA has not yet defined
6
what that alternative contract would look like and will
not be able to focus on developing that alternative
contract this year.
cases. BPA does not currently intend to tier the 1P
rate, but the TRM does not mle it out.
Public residential exchange
and billing credits
Most customers have said that Tier I rates should not
include any costs or risks of any resources that BPA
acquires to meet load growth. That is BPA's intent,
and the Tiered Rate Methodology includes mles to
ensure that the costs of such new resources will be
included in the Tier 2 cost pools. Likewise, there is
broad agreement that the costs of new non-BPA
resources acquired by customers should not appear in
the Tier 1 rate. Thus, the new contracts and TRM
include provisions to ensure that costs of resources
acquired by BPA or customers to meet load growth do
not find their way into the Tier 1 rate through public
utilities' taking part in the residential exchange or
through billing credits. An exception is for resources
customers already had in place in 2006, because these
resources were in place before the Tiered Rate
Methodology was created and because they reduce
customers' High Water Marks.
OSI service
BPA has not yet decided about service to the direct-
service industrial customers (D51s). BPA has been
exploring various means of providing service benefits
to tbe D5Is, including a financial mechanism similar
to their current contract, which provides the region
with known, capped costs. BPA also is considering
actual power deliveries, which would be priced at the
Industrial Firm Power (IP) rate, as developed in rate
!lONNEVILLI' POWER ADMINISTRATION
DOE/BP-3911 . AUGUST 2008
7
Regional Dialogue - Benefits
~ Secure the low cost power of the Federal
based system for the ratepayers and
consumers of the Pacific Northwest.
~ Twenty-year contracts with a 17- year
implementation period.
~ Utilities have a choice of how to meet
their future load growth.
Slid~~"'"
1
Current Contractual Relationship
between
Port Angeles and BP A
~ Contractual right to lowest priority fmn
rate
> Melded rate of dle Federal based system
and market purchases.
:>- Rates periods have varied during current
contract.
Slid~
Regional Dialogue Contractual
Relationship
~ Load Following Power Sales Agreement
> BP A continues to follow Port Angeles'
load.
.. Take or Pay arrangement for first tier of
power and committed second tier power.
>- Port Angeles can add resources to meet
second tier power.
Slid~~'
3
'"
Regional Dialogue Contracts
Signature Deadline:
December 1, 2008
Slid~~'
RD Power Product Options
~ Load-Following
:> Provides load-following service from BPA for metered
load less non-Federal resources applied to load.
~ Block
>- Provides an anlOunt of power to meet a customer's
planned cmnual net requirement; can be flat or shaped;
can be paired with shaping capacity.
~ Slice/Block
:> Provides for the combined sale of two distinct power
services for service to a preference customer's planned
net requirement: the Slice Service and the Block
Service.
Slide~"
5
Slice/Block Product
~ How does it work?
>- The Slice service provides power in the shape of BP A's
generation from the Federal system resources over the
year.
:> Provides finn power on a planned monthly basis (the
Block portion) in addition to an cilllOunt of energy based
on Federal system energy which can include over-
generation, such that this product also includes an
advanced sale of surplus energy.
>- A customer purchasing Slice will be responsible for
following their own hourly load
Slide'1~~'
Tiered Rate Methodology
~ What is the Tiered Rate
Methodology?
> The TRM preserves the value of the
Federal based system for the consumers
of the Northwest.
> The TRM establishes a predictable and
durable means by which to tier BP A's
priority firnl power rate starting in
October 2011.
Slide:~'
7
i
of,
Contracts
G Standardized contract template for each product
offering.
o Released fIrst draft for comment in early April.
<) September - November 2008 contracts are issued
for signing.
o December 1, 2008 is the deadline to sign contracts.
o There is no alternative contract developed at this
time for utilities who do not sign this contract.
Slide'1~'
.. May 2008 - Forecast above Tier 1 Determination
.. October 2008 - Tiered Rate Methodology rate case concludes
.. December 1, 2008: Contract signing deadline
. Prior to Nov. 2009 - Initial commitment for serving above Tier
1 loads for FY 2012 - 2014
.. Early FY 2011 - Initial Rate Case st.'lrts
.. Mid FY 2011 - Contract above Tier 1 calculated
... Mid FY 2011 - Rate Period above Tier 1 calculated
... Late FY 2011 - Initial Rate Case ends
.. FY 2012 - Power delivery begins
... Prior to Oct 2011 - Subsequent commitment for serving above
Tier 1 for FY 2015 - 2019
Slide'1iV'
9
"' .
Power Sales Agreement
Tiered Rate Methodology
-=:::~..
~ --..
~
Preliminary ObseIVations
October 14, 2008
Power Sales Agreement
~ Selection of load following service
~ Waiving certain rights
+ Billing credits
+ Residential exchange
+ Average embedded rates
~ Elwha River Ecosystem and Fisheries
Restoration Act
~ Morse creek operation?
.. WP AG & PPC representation
~ December 1, 2008 acceptance deadline
.'
..
Tier 2
~ TRM & rates not finalized
~ BP A rates higher than Tier 1
~ Anticipated take/don't take but pay
..;. Significant notices & commitments
~ Other tier 2 service options
.... Operating reserve needs further increase
~ New capital & operating risks likely
.... Conservation rate signal?
~ Economic development
Tier 2 - Continued
~ Planning & UAC workshop needed
.Conservation potential assessment
. Local power resource options
. Energy Northwest & other power resource options
. Renewable resource portfolio options
. BP A short teml, load growth, vintage product options
. Risk mitigation
.2009 COSA & retail rate design options
..;. November 1, 2009 Tier 2 decisions
3
Date:
To:
From:
Subject:
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WAS H I N G TON, U. S. A.
Utility Advisory Committee Memo
October 14, 2008
Utility Advisory Committee
Dan McKeen, Fire Chief
Yvonne Ziomkowski, Finance Director
Medic 1 Utility Cost of Service Study Update
Summary: Staff recently updated the 2007 cost of service study for the Medic 1 Utility. This
year's update will be presented to the Utility Advisory Committee including the recommended rate
adjustments. It will be necessary to adjust retail rates at this time to maintain the fund in a
financially prudent position.
Recommendation: Forward a favorable recommendation to City Council to proceed with a
public hearing on the update to the cost of service study for the Medic 1 Utility.
Background/Analysis: The City of Port Angeles' Medic 1 program is structured as a utility
- supported through an enterprise fund using transport charges, a monthly utility charge, and a
General Fund contribution. The enterprise fund is based upon a cost of service approach, with the
last cost of service study completed in 2007.
Following a presentation by staff, the Utility Advisory Committee will be asked for their
recommendation to City Council to proceed with a public hearing on this year's update to the cost
of service study for the Medic 1 Utility.
The proposed City Council public hearing is November 4,2008 for a presentation of the update to
the study and to allow public input to the process after the presentation. The public hearing would
be continued to November 18, 2008 at which time the public hearing will be closed. Staff will
return to the Utility Advisory Committee on November 12,2008 requesting a recommendation to
City Council to adopt rate ordinance amendments. The proposed rate adjustments would be
effective January 1, 2009.
N:\UAC\DepDir\Medic 1 Cost of Service Study.doc
~~J
ORDINANCE NO.
AN ORDINANCE of the City of Port Angeles, Washington, revising Chapter
13.73 of the POltAngeles Mtmicipal Code relating to Medic 1 Charges.
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PORT ANGELES DO HEREBY ORDAIN
AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1.
Ordinance 3215, as amended, and Chapter 13.73 of the Port Angeles
Municipal Code are hereby amended by amending subpmts 13.73.400 and Exhibit A P AMC to
read as follows:
13.73.400. Charges Established, In accordance with the rate study presented to the City
Council, the base rates and fees for the Utility shall be as follows:
User Classification
Residential
Adult family homes*
Assisted living facilities*
classifi cation
24-Hour nursing facilities*
classification
Group homes*
classification
Jail faciliti es *
classification
Schools*
classifi cation
Commercial/B usiness
City public areas
classification
Rate
$49-:-tT 52.12 per year, per unit
$63-&.00 667.80 per yem', per classification
$10,8J9.00 11.489.34 per year, per
$2;4-54:00 2.601.24 per year, per
$5tB-B 53.74 per year, per unit
$15,402.00 16.326.12 per year, per
* Rates fOT individual facilities vary based upon their percentage afuse within that cIassifi cation.
For individual facility rates, see Exhibit A.
-1-
Seetion2 - Severabilitv.
If any provisions of this Ordimince or its applications to any
person or circumstances is held to be invalid, the remainder of the Ordinance or applicatioll of
the provisions of the Ordinance to other persons or circumstances is not affected.
Section 3 - Corrections.
The City Clerk and the codifiers of this ordu1ance are
authorized to make necessary corrections to this ordinance including, but not limited to, the
con-ection of the scrivener' s/clerical en"ors, references, ordinance Dumbering, section/subsection
numbers and any references thereto.
Section 4 - Effective Date. This ordinance, being an exercise of a power specifically
delegated to the City legislative body, is Dot subject to referendum. This ordinance shall take
effect January 1,2009.
PASSED by the City Council oftlle City of Port Angeles at a regular meeting of said
Council held 011 the_ day of October, 2008.
MAYOR
ATTEST:
Becky 1. Upton, City Clerk
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
William E. Bloor, City Attomey
PUBLISHED: October . 2008
By Summary
G:\Leg.l_ B.,lmp\oRDINANCES&.RESOLUTIONSIORDLNANCES.200H\41 - Medi, I Rales.IOOHOS. wpd
-2-
J\ledic I Utility 2008 Annual Fees
Exhibit A
Facility Base Rate Utilization Amount % of Exemption Annual Fee Availability Final
0/0 BeFore Exelll ption Amount After Adjustment Annual Fee
Exemption Exemption
24-Hour Nursing Facilities
Crestwood $ -T,3-3-2 37% $ 2,Tt3- 53% $t;4-3-& $f;Tt5- $1 $+7%
1116 E Lauridsen Blvd 1,772 2,876 1,524 1,352 1,353
rOt t Angeles CMe Center ~ 6-3% $4,619 24.4:3% $1, 128 ~ $-1- ~
' ,
825 "Cast 5th I
Group Homes
2nd Street House $ t-;9-3-7 18% $3-8 72.6% $2R- $S6 $1 $-8T
138 W 2nd 1,841 331 240 91 92
Clallam County Hostelries $+;-1-37 7% $tzt 100% $1-2+ $0 N/A $0
1132 Hazel 1.841 129 129
Serenity House $ t;--'B'r 75% $+;3-83- 47% $6+2: $69+ $1 $69Z
2321 W 18th 1.841 1,381 649 732 1""
;);)
Adult Family Homes
Home Away From I-lome $63-8 71% $449- 40% $+7-9 $%S $1 $%9
13 19 W 16th 668 474 190 284 285
Olympic RN Adult Family $63-8 25% $-:158 61.25% $99- $6t $1 $62:
I-lome, 1725 W 11 th 668 167 102 65 66
-3-
Facility Base Rate Utilization AmOllnt % of Exemption Annual Fee A vailn bilily Final
% Bero re Exemption Amount After Adjustment Annual Fee
Exemption Exemption
The Good Shepherds $63B 4% $2:5 25% $6 $+9 $1 $W
Haven, Inc 668 27 1 20 21
2314 S Lincoln I
Assisted Laving
Laurel Park $tfT;fB9 40% $4-;3-3-6 38.72% $+,6-1-9 $Z;65-7 $1 $L;-65-lY
1133 East Park Avenue 11.489 4,596 1.780 2.816 2.817
Park View Villa $~ 21% $2;2-% 0% $0 $2-;-2-T6 $1 $277-T
1435 & 1445 Park View 11 .489 2,413 2.413 2.414
Lane
Peninsula Manor $~9 3% $3-25 60% $ -1-95 $-Be $1 $-H-t
1017W17th 11.489 345 207 138 139
St. Andrews Place $10,839 36% $3;962: 56% $7:;-l-8-5 I $ -t-;--9'+t $1 $ -t;-9-Ht
520 East Park A venue 11.489 4.136 2.31.Q I 1.820 1.821
Jail Facilities
Clallam County Adult $t;t92 81% $96{j N/A N/A $%6 $1 $96t
223 East 4th 1.264 1.024 1.024 1.025
ClaUam County Juvenile $+;+92 19% $226 N/A N/A $226 $1 $2TT
1912 West 18th 1,264 240 240 241
-4-
Facility Base Rate Utilization Amount % of Exemption Annufll Fee Availability Final
% BefOI'e Exemption Amollnt After" Adjustment Annual Fee
Exemption Exemption
Schools
Lincoln School $2:;4-54 2% $4-9 N/A N/A $4-9 $1 $5&:7e
924 West 9th 2.601 52 52 53.74 I
Franklin Middle School $2:;4-54 8% $-l-96 N/A N/A $-l-96 $1 $+:9-1
2505 S Washington 2.601 208 208 209
Hamilton Middle School $Z;4-S4 0% $0 N/A N/A $0 $1 $:5B:Te
1822 West 7th 2,601 53.74 I
Jefferson Middle School $2:;4-54 4% $98 N/A N/A $9-& $1 $99
218 East 12th 2.601 104 104 105 .
Peninsula College $2-;4-54 8% $+96 N/A N/A $+96 $1 $t9T
1502 E Lauridsen 2,601 208 208 209
POli Angeles High School $2-;-454 69% $ f-;tr93- N/A N/A $-r,693- $1 $+-;694
304 East Park Ave 2,601 1,795 1.795 1,796
Queen Of Angels $7:;454 4% $98 N/A N/A $% $1 $99
209 West 11 th 2,601 104 104 105
Stevens Middle School $Z;454 4% $9-& N/A N/A $9-8 $1 $99
1139West 14th 2,601 104 104 105
) High demand llser classifications that do not qualify for all exemption cannot have a per-unit fee less than that of the cOlTUnercialJbusiness classification
-5-
Date:
To:
From:
Subject:
~ORTANGELES
WAS H I N G TON, U. S. A.
Utility Advisory Committee Memo
October 14, 2008
Utility Advisory Committee
Larry Dunbar, Deputy Director of Power Systems
Solid Waste Utility Rates
Summary: FCS Group completed comprehensive rate studies for the Solid Waste Collections and
Transfer Station utilities. The studies were presented to the Utility Advisory Committee last
month including the recommended retail rate adjustments. It will be necessary to adjust retail rates
at this time to maintain the funds in a financially prudent position.
Recommendation: Forward a favorable recommendation to City Council to proceed with
the proposed rate adjustments for the Solid Waste Collection and Transfer Station Utilities.
Background/Analysis: Earlier this year, the City contracted with FCS Group to complete
comprehensive rate studies for the Water, Wastewater, Solid Waste Collections, and Solid Waste
Transfer Station utilities. The studies for Water and Wastewater utilities have been presented and
rate and fee adjustments have been considered and approved.
After receiving a presentation on the rate studies on September 30, 2008, the Utility Advisory
Committee recommended that City Council proceed with a public hearing. The City Council
public hearing was held on October 7,2008. At today's meeting staff will summarize the input
received at the October 7, 2008 public hearing and any additional input received since then.
Staff recommends that the Utility Advisory Committee forwards a favorable recommendation to
City Council to continue the public hearing, close the public hearing, then adopt rate ordinance
amendments. The proposed rate adjustments would be effective January I, 2009.
N:\UAC\DepDir\Solid Waste Utility Rate Recommendations.doc
CITY OF
n'Q/ 'Rr'T' ,I: A IN,, 'G/ iE'iL: E'iS'i
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, ..........., .-------.,
.
WAS H I N G TON, U. S. A.
Utility Advisory Committee Memo
Date:
October 14,2008
To:
Utility Advisory Committee
From:
Larry Dunbar, Deputy Director of Power Systems
Subject:
Request For Proposals - Network Needs Assessment and Wireless Technology Plan
Summary: Staff prepared a Request For Proposals to obtain consulting services for the
Institutional Network Needs Assessment and the Public Safety Wireless Technology Plan. The
next step in the process is to advertise the Request For Proposals. Consultant proposals will be due
to the City no later than December 26,2008.
Recommendation: For information only, no action requested.
Background/Analysis: As part of the 2008-2014 Capital Facilities Plan adopted by City
Council on June 24, 2008, staff prepared a Request For Proposals to secure consulting services for
two related projects, the Institutional Network Needs Assessment and the Public Safety Wireless
Technology Plan.
The Institutional Network Needs Assessment is related to the City's seven-year service agreement
with Capacity Provisioning, Inc., which expires on August 26,2009. As part of the agreement
renewal process, a needs assessment needs to be conducted to determine the City's future
telecommunications infrastructure, equipment, and service needs.
The Public Safety Wireless Technology Plan is an assessment of the Police and Fire Departments
technology needs including a plan that identifies hardware and software solutions, vehicle
equipment needs, and mobile wireless communications service options within the City.
Below is a summary of the milestones and timeline for the Request For Proposals process.
Milestones
Advertisement of Request for Proposals
Consultant proposal submittal deadline
UAC recommendation on professional services agreement
City Council consideration & approval of professional services agreement
Completion
October 26, 2008
December 26, 2008
January 13, 2009
January 20,2009
N:\UAC\DepDir\I-Net Needs Assessment & Wireless Technology Plan.doc