Some Fear Shutdown of Texas Utility Watchdog Agency Will Hurt Consumers
By Vikas Bajaj, The Dallas Morning News -- April 20
Texas should abolish the Office of the Public Utility Counsel, which represents consumers on electricity and telecommunications issues, a state panel said Monday.
But the Utility Counsel office and consumer advocates said the proposed move
would eliminate an important and independent consumer voice in Austin.
"The most objective representation of residential and small commercial
customers will come from an agency whose staff are not dependent on the [PUC]
commissioners to be hired and fired," said Clarence Johnson, director of
regulatory analysis at the Utility Counsel office.
The Utility Counsel was created in 1983 because of fears that consumers'
concerns were getting lost in utility proceedings. The office has an annual
budget of $1.6 million and a staff of 23. Eliminating the office and shifting
its work elsewhere would save the state $1 million annually beginning in 2007.
"While residential consumers may still need independent representation
in the declining number of rate cases, a stronger consumer focus at PUC could be
more beneficial to Texas consumers than the current adversarial role of OPUC,"
the report said.
The 12-member Sunset Commission will hold hearings July 13-14 on a number of
proposals in the report, which also reviewed the Public Utility Commission, the
Electric Reliability Council of Texas and the Telecommunications Infrastructure
Fund Board. The panel will issue recommendations to the Legislature in
September.
The report also recommended:
--Requiring the Public Utility Commission to hire a firm to monitor
manipulations of wholesale electricity markets.
--Increasing the penalties the PUC can levy to $25,000 per day, per
violation, up from $5,000.
--Replacing the Reliability Council's 14-member board with a panel of nine
independent members who would be subject to the state open meetings law.
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