Application of Normalization Accounting Rules to Balances of Excess Deferred Income Taxes and Accumulated Deferred Investment Tax Credits of Public Utilities Whose Assets Cease To Be Public Utility Property, 75762-75765 [E5-7583]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 244 / Wednesday, December 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–104385–01]
RIN 1545–AY75
Application of Normalization
Accounting Rules to Balances of
Excess Deferred Income Taxes and
Accumulated Deferred Investment Tax
Credits of Public Utilities Whose
Assets Cease To Be Public Utility
Property
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking,
notice of public hearing, and
withdrawal of previous proposed
regulations.
rmajette on PROD1PC67 with PROPOSALS
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document contains
proposed regulations that provide
guidance on the normalization
requirements applicable to public
utilities that benefit (or have benefited)
from accelerated depreciation methods
or from the investment tax credit
permitted under pre-1991 law. The
proposed regulations permit a utility
whose assets cease to be public utility
property to return to its ratepayers the
normalization reserve for excess
deferred income taxes (EDFIT) with
respect to those assets and, in certain
circumstances, also permit the return of
part or all of the reserve for accumulated
deferred investment tax credits (ADITC)
with respect to those assets. This
document also provides notice of a
public hearing on these proposed
regulations and a withdrawal of
proposed regulations [REG–104385–01]
published March 4, 2003, at 68 FR
10190.
DATES: Written or electronic comments
must be received by March 21, 2006.
Requests to speak and outlines of topics
to be discussed at the public hearing
scheduled for April 5, 2006, at 10 a.m.
must be received by March 15, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to:
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–104385–01), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, PO Box
7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington,
DC 20044. Submissions may be handdelivered Monday through Friday
between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–104385–01),
Courier’s Desk, Internal Revenue
Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC, or sent
electronically, via the IRS Internet site
at https://www.irs.gov/regs or via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
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REG–104385–01). The public hearing
will be held in the IRS Auditorium,
Internal Revenue Building, 1111
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
David Selig, at (202) 622–3040;
concerning submissions of comments,
the hearing, or to be placed on the
building access list to attend the
hearing, Treena Garrett, at (202) 622–
7190 (not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document contains proposed
amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR Part 1) relating to
the normalization requirements of
sections 168(f)(2) and 168(i)(9) of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code), section
203(e) of the Tax Reform Act of 1986,
Public Law 99–514 (100 Stat. 2146), and
former section 46(f) of the Code.
Proposed regulations relating to the
normalization requirements applicable
to electric utilities that benefit (or have
benefited) from accelerated depreciation
methods or from the investment tax
credit permitted under pre-1991 law
[REG–104385–01] were published in the
Federal Register on March 4, 2003 (the
2003 proposed regulations). The 2003
proposed regulations would have
provided rules under which electric
utilities whose electricity generation
assets cease to be public utility
property, whether by disposition,
deregulation, or otherwise, could
continue to flow through certain
reserves associated with those assets
without violating the normalization
requirements. In response to public
comments and after further analysis, the
2003 proposed regulations are
withdrawn, and new regulations are
proposed in this document.
Normalization Method of Accounting
Section 168 of the Code permits the
use of accelerated depreciation
methods. Section 168(f)(2) provides,
however, that accelerated depreciation
is permitted with respect to public
utility property only if the taxpayer uses
a normalization method of accounting
for ratemaking purposes.
Under a normalization method of
accounting, a utility calculates its
ratemaking tax expense using
depreciation that is no more accelerated
than its ratemaking depreciation
(typically straight-line). In the early
years of an asset’s life, this results in
ratemaking tax expense that is greater
than actual tax expense. The difference
between the ratemaking tax expense and
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the actual tax expense is added to a
reserve (the accumulated deferred
federal income tax reserve, or ADFIT).
The difference between ratemaking tax
expense and actual tax expense is not
permanent and reverses in the later
years of the asset’s life when the
ratemaking depreciation method
provides larger depreciation deductions
and lower tax expense than the
accelerated method used in computing
actual tax expense.
This accounting treatment prevents
the immediate flow-through to utility
ratepayers of the reduction in current
taxes resulting from the use of
accelerated depreciation. Instead, the
reduction is treated as a deferred tax
expense that is collected from current
ratepayers through utility rates, and
thus is available to utilities as
investment capital. When the
accelerated method provides lower
depreciation deductions in later years,
only the ratemaking tax expense is
collected from ratepayers and the
difference between actual tax expense
and ratemaking tax expense is charged
to ADFIT.
Excess Deferred Income Tax
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 (the 1986
Act) reduced the highest corporate tax
rate from 46 percent to 34 percent. The
excess deferred federal income tax
(EDFIT) reserve is the balance of the
deferred tax reserve immediately before
the rate reduction over the balance that
would have been held in the reserve if
the 34 percent rate had been in effect for
prior periods. The EDFIT reserves were
amounts that utilities had collected
from ratepayers to pay future taxes that,
as a result of the 1986 Act reduction in
corporate tax rates, would not be
imposed.
Section 203(e) of the 1986 Act
specifies the manner in which the
EDFIT reserve must be flowed through
to ratepayers under a normalization
method of accounting. It provides that
the EDFIT reserve may be reduced, with
a corresponding reduction in the cost of
service the utility collects from
ratepayers, no more rapidly than the
EDFIT reserve would be reduced under
the average rate assumption method
(ARAM). For taxpayers that did not
have adequate data to apply the average
rate assumption method, subsequent
guidance permitted use of the reverse
South Georgia method as an alternative.
In general, both the average rate
assumption method and the reverse
South Georgia method spread the flowthrough of the EDFIT reserve over the
remaining lives of the property that gave
rise to the excess.
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Accumulated Deferred Investment Tax
Credits (ADITC)
Former section 46 of the Code
similarly addressed the flow-through to
ratepayers of the investment tax credit
determined under that section. Under
former section 46(f)(1), the rate base (the
amount on which the utility is
permitted to collect a return from
ratepayers) could be reduced by reason
of the credit if the reduction in the rate
base was restored not less rapidly than
ratably. If the rate base is reduced, the
credit may not also be used to reduce
the utility’s cost of service. Under
former section 46(f)(2), an electing
utility could flow through the
investment credit not more rapidly than
ratably (that is, could reduce the cost of
service collected from ratepayers by no
more than a ratable portion of the credit)
over the investment’s regulatory life.
The balance of the credit remaining to
be flowed through to ratepayers would
be held in a reserve for accumulated
deferred investment tax credits (ADITC).
If the utility elected ratable flowthrough of the credit, the rate base could
not be reduced by reason of any portion
of the credit.
Private Letter Rulings
The IRS has issued a number of
private letter rulings holding that flowthrough of the EDFIT and ADITC
reserves associated with an asset is not
permitted after the asset’s deregulation,
whether by disposition or otherwise.
These rulings were based on the
principle that flow-through is permitted
only over the asset’s regulatory life and
when that life is terminated by
deregulation no further flow-through is
permitted. After further consideration,
the IRS and Treasury have concluded
that former section 46(f) does not, in all
cases, prohibit flowthrough of ADITC
reserves after deregulation and that
section 203(e) of the Tax Reform Act
does not preclude flowthrough of the
EDFIT reserve with respect to
deregulated property.
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Explanation of Provisions
The 2003 proposed regulations
provided that utilities whose generation
assets cease to be public utility
property, whether by disposition,
deregulation, or otherwise (deregulated
public utility property), may continue to
flow through EDFIT reserves associated
with those assets without violating the
normalization requirements. The rate of
flowthrough was limited to the rate that
would have been permitted under a
normalization method of accounting if
the assets had remained public utility
property. But for section 203(e) of the
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1986 Act, the entire EDFIT reserve
would have been flowed through to
ratepayers when the reduction in rates
became effective, whether the assets to
which the EDFIT reserve was
attributable remained public utility
property for their entire useful life or
were subsequently deregulated or sold.
As noted in the preamble of the 2003
proposed regulations, the IRS and
Treasury have concluded that section
203 of the 1986 Act provides a schedule
for flowing through the EDFIT reserve
but that nothing in that section suggests
that something less than the entire
reserve should ultimately be flowed
through to ratepayers. Accordingly,
these proposed regulations retain the
rule of the 2003 proposed regulations,
with the effective date changes
described below, for generation assets
and extend the application of the rule to
all other public utility property.
The 2003 proposed regulations also
provided similar rules under which
utilities could continue to flow through
ADITC reserves associated with
deregulated generation assets without
violating the normalization
requirements. The proposed regulations
did not address the treatment of
deregulated assets under former section
46(f)(1) (relating to the use of the
investment credit to reduce the
taxpayer’s rate base). After further
consideration, the IRS and Treasury
have concluded that flowthrough of the
ADITC reserve should not continue after
deregulation except to the extent the
utility is permitted to recover stranded
costs after deregulation.
If an asset qualifying for the
investment tax credit is purchased by a
utility, the allowance of the credit,
without flowthrough, lowers the
utility’s actual tax expense but does not
result in higher tax expense for
ratepayers than would have been the
case if the asset had not been purchased.
Thus, in the absence of flowthrough, the
investment tax credit is a subsidy from
the Federal government for the purchase
of the asset rather than a transfer from
ratepayers to the utility. The underlying
policy of former section 46(f) is to share
this subsidy between ratepayers and
utilities in proportion to their respective
contributions to the purchase price. In
general, former section 46(f) treats
ratepayers as contributing to the
purchase price when ratemaking
depreciation expense with respect to the
asset is included in the rates they pay,
resulting in full flowthrough over the
asset’s regulatory life. In the case of a
deregulated asset, the contribution of
ratepayers can be appropriately
measured by the ratemaking
depreciation expense they are charged
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with respect to the asset and any
additional stranded cost that the utility
is permitted to recover with respect to
the asset after its deregulation.
Accordingly, the proposed regulations
permit flowthrough of the ADITC
reserve with respect to public utility
property to continue after its
deregulation only to the extent the
reduction in cost of service does not
exceed, as a percentage of the ADITC
with respect to the property at the time
of deregulation, the percentage of the
total stranded cost that the taxpayer is
permitted to recover with respect to the
property. In addition, the credit may not
be flowed through more rapidly than the
rate at which the taxpayer is permitted
to recover the stranded cost with respect
to the property.
As in the case of the EDFIT reserve,
these proposed regulations extend the
flowthrough rule for generation assets to
all public utility property. In addition,
these proposed regulations provide
equivalent rules for property to which
former section 46(f)(1) (relating to rate
base restoration) applies.
Proposed Effective Date
The 2003 proposed regulations would
have applied to public utility property
deregulated after March 4, 2003.
Utilities would have been permitted an
election to apply the proposed rules to
property that was deregulated on or
before that date.
Comments suggested that
deregulation agreements between
utilities and their regulators entered into
before the March 4, 2003 proposed
effective date were based on the only
guidance then available (i.e., the private
letter rulings issued by the IRS) and that
the availability of a retroactive election
could effectively change the terms of
those agreements. Although private
letter rulings are directed only to the
taxpayers who requested them and may
not be used or cited as precedent, the
IRS and Treasury have concluded that
the Secretary’s authority under section
7805(b)(7) to provide for retroactive
elections should not be exercised in a
manner that impairs existing agreements
between utilities and their regulators.
Accordingly, these proposed regulations
do not include a similar election to
apply the regulations retroactively.
As noted above, these proposed
regulations are broader in scope than
the 2003 proposed regulations.
Accordingly, these regulations are
proposed to apply to public utility
property that becomes deregulated
public utility property after [DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register]. For public
utility property that becomes
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 244 / Wednesday, December 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
deregulated public utility property on or
before [DATE OF PUBLICATION OF
FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register],
the IRS will follow the holdings set
forth in the private letter rulings that
prohibit flow-through of the EDFIT and
ADITC reserves associated with an asset
after the asset’s disposition.
Flowthrough will be permitted,
however, if it is consistent with the
2003 proposed regulations, and occurs
during the period March 5, 2003,
through the earlier of the last date on
which the utility’s rates are determined
under the rate order in effect on [DATE
OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register], or [DATE 2
YEARS AFTER PUBLICATION OF
FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
rmajette on PROD1PC67 with PROPOSALS
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this notice
of proposed rulemaking is not a
significant regulatory action as defined
in Executive Order 12866. Therefore, a
regulatory assessment is not required. It
also has been determined that section
553(b) of the Administrative Procedure
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply
to these regulations and, because the
regulations do not impose a collection
of information on small entities, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
chapter 6) does not apply. Therefore, a
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is not
required. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of
the Code, this notice of proposed
rulemaking will be submitted to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration for comment
on its impact on small business.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are
adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any
comments that are submitted (in the
manner described in the ADDRESSES
caption) timely to the IRS. All
comments will be available for public
inspection and copying. Treasury and
IRS specifically request comments on
the clarity of the proposed regulations
and how they may be made clearer and
easier to understand.
A public hearing has been scheduled
for April 5, 2006, at 10 a.m. in room
7218 of the Internal Revenue Building,
1111 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC. Because of access
restrictions, visitors will not be
admitted beyond the Internal Revenue
Building lobby more than 30 minutes
before the hearing starts. Due to
building security procedures, visitors
must enter at the Constitution Avenue
entrance. In addition, all visitors must
present photo identification to enter the
building.
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The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3)
apply to the hearing.
Persons who wish to present oral
comments at the hearing must submit
comments and submit an outline of the
topics to be discussed and the time to
be devoted to each topic (signed original
and eight (8) copies) by March 15, 2006.
A period of 10 minutes will be
allotted to each person for making
comments.
An agenda showing the scheduling of
the speakers will be prepared after the
deadline for receiving outlines has
passed. Copies of the agenda will be
available free of charge at the hearing.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these
regulations is David Selig, Office of the
Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs
and Special Industries), IRS. However,
other personnel from the IRS and
Treasury Department participated in
their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Withdrawal of Proposed Regulations
Under the authority of 26 U.S.C. 7805,
the notice of proposed rulemaking
(REG–104385–01) published in the
Federal Register on March 4, 2003 (68
FR 10190) is withdrawn.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read, in part, as
follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.46–6 is amended by
adding paragraph (k) to read as follows:
§ 1.46–6 Limitation in case of certain
regulated companies.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) Treatment of accumulated deferred
investment tax credits upon the
deregulation of public utility property—
(1) Scope. This paragraph (k) provides
rules for the application of former
sections 46(f)(1) and 46(f)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code with respect to
public utility property that ceases,
whether by disposition, deregulation, or
otherwise, to be public utility property
(deregulated public utility property).
(2) Ratable amount—(i) Restoration of
rate base reduction. A reduction in the
taxpayer’s rate base on account of the
credit with respect to public utility
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property that becomes deregulated
public utility property is restored
ratably during the period after the
property becomes deregulated public
utility property if the amount of the
reduction remaining to be restored does
not, at any time during the period,
exceed the restoration percentage of the
recoverable stranded cost of the
property at such time. For this
purpose—
(A) The stranded cost of the property
is the cost of the property reduced by
the amount of such cost that the
taxpayer has recovered through
regulated depreciation expense during
the period before the property becomes
deregulated;
(B) The recoverable stranded cost of
the property at any time is the stranded
cost of the property that the taxpayer
will be permitted to recover through
rates after such time; and
(C) The restoration percentage for the
property is determined by dividing the
reduction in rate base remaining to be
restored with respect to the property
immediately before the property
becomes deregulated public utility
property by the stranded cost of the
property.
(ii) Cost of service reduction.
Reductions in the taxpayer’s cost of
service on account of the credit with
respect to public utility property that
becomes deregulated public utility
property are ratable during the period
after the property becomes deregulated
public utility property if the cumulative
amount of the reduction during such
period does not, at any time during the
period, exceed the flow-through
percentage of the cumulative stranded
cost recovery for the property at such
time. For this purpose—
(A) The stranded cost of the property
is the cost of the property reduced by
the amount of such cost that the
taxpayer has recovered through
regulated depreciation expense during
the period before the property becomes
deregulated;
(B) The cumulative stranded cost
recovery for the property at any time is
the stranded cost of the property that
the taxpayer has been permitted to
recover through rates on or before such
time; and
(C) The flow-through percentage for
the property is determined by dividing
the amount of credit with respect to the
property remaining to be used to reduce
cost of service immediately before the
property becomes deregulated public
utility property by the stranded cost of
the property.
(3) Cross reference. See § 1.168(i)–(3)
for rules relating to the treatment of
balances of excess deferred income
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 244 / Wednesday, December 21, 2005 / Proposed Rules
taxes when public utility property
becomes deregulated public utility
property.
(4) Effective dates—(i) In general. This
paragraph (k) applies to public utility
property that becomes deregulated
public utility property after [DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register].
(ii) Application of regulation project
REG–104385–01 to pre-effective date
reductions in cost of service. A
reduction in the taxpayer’s cost of
service will be treated as ratable if it is
consistent with the proposed rules in
regulation project REG–104385–01
(2003–1 C.B. 634) and occurs during the
period March 5, 2003, through the
earlier of the last date on which the
utility’s rates are determined under the
rate order in effect on [DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register], or [DATE 2
YEARS AFTER PUBLICATION OF
FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
Par. 3. Section 1.168(i)–3 is added to
read as follows:
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§ 1.168(i)–(3) Treatment of excess deferred
income tax reserve upon disposition of
deregulated public utility property.
(a) Scope. This section provides rules
for the application of section 203(e) of
the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law
99–514 (100 Stat. 2146) with respect to
public utility property (within the
meaning of section 168(i)(10)) that
ceases, whether by disposition,
deregulation, or otherwise, to be public
utility property (deregulated public
utility property).
(b) Amount of reduction. If public
utility property of a taxpayer becomes
deregulated public utility property to
which this section applies, the
reduction in the taxpayer(s excess tax
reserve permitted under section 203(e)
of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 is equal
to the amount by which the reserve
could be reduced under that provision
if all such property had remained public
utility property of the taxpayer and the
taxpayer had continued use of its
normalization method of accounting
with respect to such property.
(c) Cross reference. See § 1.46–6(k) for
rules relating to the treatment of
accumulated deferred investment tax
credits when utilities dispose of
regulated public utility property.
(d) Effective dates—(1) In general.
This section applies to public utility
property that becomes deregulated
public utility property after [DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register].
(2) Application of regulation project
REG–104385–01 to pre-effective date
reductions of excess deferred income
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tax reserve. A reduction in the
taxpayer’s excess deferred income tax
reserve will be treated as ratable if it is
consistent with the proposed rules in
regulation project REG–104385–01
(2003–1 C.B. 634) and occurs during the
period March 5, 2003, through the
earlier of the last date on which the
utility’s rates are determined under the
rate order in effect on [DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN
THE Federal Register], or [DATE 2
YEARS AFTER PUBLICATION OF
FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
Mark E. Matthews,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
[FR Doc. E5–7583 Filed 12–20–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 117
[CGD05–05–131]
RIN 1625–AA09
Drawbridge Operation Regulations;
New Jersey Intracoastal Waterway,
Manasquan River, NJ
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard proposes to
change the regulations that govern the
operation of the Route 35 Bridge, at New
Jersey Intracoastal Waterway (NJICW)
mile 1.1, across the Manasquan River, at
Brielle, New Jersey. The proposal will
allow the drawbridge to provide vessel
openings upon four hours advance
notice from December 1 to March 31.
This proposal will reduce draw tender
services during the non-peak boating
season while still providing for the
reasonable needs of navigation.
DATES: Comments and related material
must reach the Coast Guard on or before
February 6, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may mail comments
and related material to Commander
(obr), Fifth Coast Guard District, Federal
Building, 1st Floor, 431 Crawford Street,
Portsmouth, VA 23704–5004. The Fifth
Coast Guard District maintains the
public docket for this rulemaking.
Comments and material received from
the public, as well as documents
indicated in this preamble as being
available in the docket, will become part
of this docket and will be available for
inspection or copying at Commander
(obr), Fifth Coast Guard District between
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75765
8 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bill.
H. Brazier, Bridge Management
Specialist, Fifth Coast Guard District, at
(757) 398–6422.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Comments
We encourage you to participate in
this rulemaking by submitting
comments and related material. If you
do so, please include your name and
address, identify the docket number for
this rulemaking (CGD05–05–131),
indicate the specific section of this
document to which each comment
applies, and give the reason for each
comment. Please submit all comments
and related material in an unbound
format, no larger than 8’’ by 11 inches,
suitable for copying. If you would like
a return receipt, please enclose a
stamped, self-addressed postcard or
envelope. We will consider all
submittals received during the comment
period. We may change this proposed
rule in view of them.
Public Meeting
We do not now plan to hold a public
meeting. But you may submit a request
for a meeting by writing to Commander
(obr), Fifth Coast Guard District at the
address under ADDRESSES explaining
why one would be beneficial. If we
determine that one would aid this
rulemaking, we will hold one at a time
and place announced by a later notice
in the Federal Register.
Background and Purpose
The New Jersey Department of
Transportation (NJDOT) owns and
operates the Route 35 Bridge, at NJICW
mile 1.1., across the Manasquan River,
at Brielle, New Jersey. The current
operating regulations set out in 33 CFR
117.733(b) requires the drawbridge to
open on signal except as follows: from
May 15 through September 30, on
Saturdays, Sundays and Federal
holidays, from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. the
draw need only open 15 minutes before
the hour and 15 minutes after the hour;
on Mondays to Thursdays from 4 p.m.
to 7 p.m., and on Fridays, except
Federal holidays from 12 p.m. to 7 p.m.
the draw need only open 15 minutes
before the hour and 15 minutes after
hour; and year-round from 11 p.m. to 8
a.m., the draw need only open if at least
four hours notice is given.
The Route 35 Bridge, a bascule-type
drawbridge, has a vertical clearance in
the closed position to vessels of 30 feet,
at mean high water.
The NJDOT has requested a change to
the existing regulations for the Route 35
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 244 (Wednesday, December 21, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 75762-75765]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-7583]
[[Page 75762]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG-104385-01]
RIN 1545-AY75
Application of Normalization Accounting Rules to Balances of
Excess Deferred Income Taxes and Accumulated Deferred Investment Tax
Credits of Public Utilities Whose Assets Cease To Be Public Utility
Property
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking, notice of public hearing, and
withdrawal of previous proposed regulations.
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SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations that provide
guidance on the normalization requirements applicable to public
utilities that benefit (or have benefited) from accelerated
depreciation methods or from the investment tax credit permitted under
pre-1991 law. The proposed regulations permit a utility whose assets
cease to be public utility property to return to its ratepayers the
normalization reserve for excess deferred income taxes (EDFIT) with
respect to those assets and, in certain circumstances, also permit the
return of part or all of the reserve for accumulated deferred
investment tax credits (ADITC) with respect to those assets. This
document also provides notice of a public hearing on these proposed
regulations and a withdrawal of proposed regulations [REG-104385-01]
published March 4, 2003, at 68 FR 10190.
DATES: Written or electronic comments must be received by March 21,
2006. Requests to speak and outlines of topics to be discussed at the
public hearing scheduled for April 5, 2006, at 10 a.m. must be received
by March 15, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-104385-01), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, PO Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions may be hand-delivered Monday through
Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-
104385-01), Courier's Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC, or sent electronically, via the IRS
Internet site at https://www.irs.gov/regs or via the Federal eRulemaking
Portal at https://www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG-104385-01).
The public hearing will be held in the IRS Auditorium, Internal Revenue
Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations,
David Selig, at (202) 622-3040; concerning submissions of comments, the
hearing, or to be placed on the building access list to attend the
hearing, Treena Garrett, at (202) 622-7190 (not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document contains proposed amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR Part 1) relating to the normalization requirements
of sections 168(f)(2) and 168(i)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code
(Code), section 203(e) of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law 99-514
(100 Stat. 2146), and former section 46(f) of the Code. Proposed
regulations relating to the normalization requirements applicable to
electric utilities that benefit (or have benefited) from accelerated
depreciation methods or from the investment tax credit permitted under
pre-1991 law [REG-104385-01] were published in the Federal Register on
March 4, 2003 (the 2003 proposed regulations). The 2003 proposed
regulations would have provided rules under which electric utilities
whose electricity generation assets cease to be public utility
property, whether by disposition, deregulation, or otherwise, could
continue to flow through certain reserves associated with those assets
without violating the normalization requirements. In response to public
comments and after further analysis, the 2003 proposed regulations are
withdrawn, and new regulations are proposed in this document.
Normalization Method of Accounting
Section 168 of the Code permits the use of accelerated depreciation
methods. Section 168(f)(2) provides, however, that accelerated
depreciation is permitted with respect to public utility property only
if the taxpayer uses a normalization method of accounting for
ratemaking purposes.
Under a normalization method of accounting, a utility calculates
its ratemaking tax expense using depreciation that is no more
accelerated than its ratemaking depreciation (typically straight-line).
In the early years of an asset's life, this results in ratemaking tax
expense that is greater than actual tax expense. The difference between
the ratemaking tax expense and the actual tax expense is added to a
reserve (the accumulated deferred federal income tax reserve, or
ADFIT). The difference between ratemaking tax expense and actual tax
expense is not permanent and reverses in the later years of the asset's
life when the ratemaking depreciation method provides larger
depreciation deductions and lower tax expense than the accelerated
method used in computing actual tax expense.
This accounting treatment prevents the immediate flow-through to
utility ratepayers of the reduction in current taxes resulting from the
use of accelerated depreciation. Instead, the reduction is treated as a
deferred tax expense that is collected from current ratepayers through
utility rates, and thus is available to utilities as investment
capital. When the accelerated method provides lower depreciation
deductions in later years, only the ratemaking tax expense is collected
from ratepayers and the difference between actual tax expense and
ratemaking tax expense is charged to ADFIT.
Excess Deferred Income Tax
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 (the 1986 Act) reduced the highest
corporate tax rate from 46 percent to 34 percent. The excess deferred
federal income tax (EDFIT) reserve is the balance of the deferred tax
reserve immediately before the rate reduction over the balance that
would have been held in the reserve if the 34 percent rate had been in
effect for prior periods. The EDFIT reserves were amounts that
utilities had collected from ratepayers to pay future taxes that, as a
result of the 1986 Act reduction in corporate tax rates, would not be
imposed.
Section 203(e) of the 1986 Act specifies the manner in which the
EDFIT reserve must be flowed through to ratepayers under a
normalization method of accounting. It provides that the EDFIT reserve
may be reduced, with a corresponding reduction in the cost of service
the utility collects from ratepayers, no more rapidly than the EDFIT
reserve would be reduced under the average rate assumption method
(ARAM). For taxpayers that did not have adequate data to apply the
average rate assumption method, subsequent guidance permitted use of
the reverse South Georgia method as an alternative. In general, both
the average rate assumption method and the reverse South Georgia method
spread the flow-through of the EDFIT reserve over the remaining lives
of the property that gave rise to the excess.
[[Page 75763]]
Accumulated Deferred Investment Tax Credits (ADITC)
Former section 46 of the Code similarly addressed the flow-through
to ratepayers of the investment tax credit determined under that
section. Under former section 46(f)(1), the rate base (the amount on
which the utility is permitted to collect a return from ratepayers)
could be reduced by reason of the credit if the reduction in the rate
base was restored not less rapidly than ratably. If the rate base is
reduced, the credit may not also be used to reduce the utility's cost
of service. Under former section 46(f)(2), an electing utility could
flow through the investment credit not more rapidly than ratably (that
is, could reduce the cost of service collected from ratepayers by no
more than a ratable portion of the credit) over the investment's
regulatory life. The balance of the credit remaining to be flowed
through to ratepayers would be held in a reserve for accumulated
deferred investment tax credits (ADITC). If the utility elected ratable
flow-through of the credit, the rate base could not be reduced by
reason of any portion of the credit.
Private Letter Rulings
The IRS has issued a number of private letter rulings holding that
flow-through of the EDFIT and ADITC reserves associated with an asset
is not permitted after the asset's deregulation, whether by disposition
or otherwise. These rulings were based on the principle that flow-
through is permitted only over the asset's regulatory life and when
that life is terminated by deregulation no further flow-through is
permitted. After further consideration, the IRS and Treasury have
concluded that former section 46(f) does not, in all cases, prohibit
flowthrough of ADITC reserves after deregulation and that section
203(e) of the Tax Reform Act does not preclude flowthrough of the EDFIT
reserve with respect to deregulated property.
Explanation of Provisions
The 2003 proposed regulations provided that utilities whose
generation assets cease to be public utility property, whether by
disposition, deregulation, or otherwise (deregulated public utility
property), may continue to flow through EDFIT reserves associated with
those assets without violating the normalization requirements. The rate
of flowthrough was limited to the rate that would have been permitted
under a normalization method of accounting if the assets had remained
public utility property. But for section 203(e) of the 1986 Act, the
entire EDFIT reserve would have been flowed through to ratepayers when
the reduction in rates became effective, whether the assets to which
the EDFIT reserve was attributable remained public utility property for
their entire useful life or were subsequently deregulated or sold. As
noted in the preamble of the 2003 proposed regulations, the IRS and
Treasury have concluded that section 203 of the 1986 Act provides a
schedule for flowing through the EDFIT reserve but that nothing in that
section suggests that something less than the entire reserve should
ultimately be flowed through to ratepayers. Accordingly, these proposed
regulations retain the rule of the 2003 proposed regulations, with the
effective date changes described below, for generation assets and
extend the application of the rule to all other public utility
property.
The 2003 proposed regulations also provided similar rules under
which utilities could continue to flow through ADITC reserves
associated with deregulated generation assets without violating the
normalization requirements. The proposed regulations did not address
the treatment of deregulated assets under former section 46(f)(1)
(relating to the use of the investment credit to reduce the taxpayer's
rate base). After further consideration, the IRS and Treasury have
concluded that flowthrough of the ADITC reserve should not continue
after deregulation except to the extent the utility is permitted to
recover stranded costs after deregulation.
If an asset qualifying for the investment tax credit is purchased
by a utility, the allowance of the credit, without flowthrough, lowers
the utility's actual tax expense but does not result in higher tax
expense for ratepayers than would have been the case if the asset had
not been purchased. Thus, in the absence of flowthrough, the investment
tax credit is a subsidy from the Federal government for the purchase of
the asset rather than a transfer from ratepayers to the utility. The
underlying policy of former section 46(f) is to share this subsidy
between ratepayers and utilities in proportion to their respective
contributions to the purchase price. In general, former section 46(f)
treats ratepayers as contributing to the purchase price when ratemaking
depreciation expense with respect to the asset is included in the rates
they pay, resulting in full flowthrough over the asset's regulatory
life. In the case of a deregulated asset, the contribution of
ratepayers can be appropriately measured by the ratemaking depreciation
expense they are charged with respect to the asset and any additional
stranded cost that the utility is permitted to recover with respect to
the asset after its deregulation.
Accordingly, the proposed regulations permit flowthrough of the
ADITC reserve with respect to public utility property to continue after
its deregulation only to the extent the reduction in cost of service
does not exceed, as a percentage of the ADITC with respect to the
property at the time of deregulation, the percentage of the total
stranded cost that the taxpayer is permitted to recover with respect to
the property. In addition, the credit may not be flowed through more
rapidly than the rate at which the taxpayer is permitted to recover the
stranded cost with respect to the property.
As in the case of the EDFIT reserve, these proposed regulations
extend the flowthrough rule for generation assets to all public utility
property. In addition, these proposed regulations provide equivalent
rules for property to which former section 46(f)(1) (relating to rate
base restoration) applies.
Proposed Effective Date
The 2003 proposed regulations would have applied to public utility
property deregulated after March 4, 2003. Utilities would have been
permitted an election to apply the proposed rules to property that was
deregulated on or before that date.
Comments suggested that deregulation agreements between utilities
and their regulators entered into before the March 4, 2003 proposed
effective date were based on the only guidance then available (i.e.,
the private letter rulings issued by the IRS) and that the availability
of a retroactive election could effectively change the terms of those
agreements. Although private letter rulings are directed only to the
taxpayers who requested them and may not be used or cited as precedent,
the IRS and Treasury have concluded that the Secretary's authority
under section 7805(b)(7) to provide for retroactive elections should
not be exercised in a manner that impairs existing agreements between
utilities and their regulators. Accordingly, these proposed regulations
do not include a similar election to apply the regulations
retroactively.
As noted above, these proposed regulations are broader in scope
than the 2003 proposed regulations. Accordingly, these regulations are
proposed to apply to public utility property that becomes deregulated
public utility property after [DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE
Federal Register]. For public utility property that becomes
[[Page 75764]]
deregulated public utility property on or before [DATE OF PUBLICATION
OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register], the IRS will follow the
holdings set forth in the private letter rulings that prohibit flow-
through of the EDFIT and ADITC reserves associated with an asset after
the asset's disposition. Flowthrough will be permitted, however, if it
is consistent with the 2003 proposed regulations, and occurs during the
period March 5, 2003, through the earlier of the last date on which the
utility's rates are determined under the rate order in effect on [DATE
OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register], or [DATE 2 YEARS
AFTER PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this notice of proposed rulemaking is
not a significant regulatory action as defined in Executive Order
12866. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not required. It also has
been determined that section 553(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act
(5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to these regulations and, because
the regulations do not impose a collection of information on small
entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not
apply. Therefore, a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is not required.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, this notice of proposed
rulemaking will be submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration for comment on its impact on small
business.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any comments that are submitted (in the
manner described in the ADDRESSES caption) timely to the IRS. All
comments will be available for public inspection and copying. Treasury
and IRS specifically request comments on the clarity of the proposed
regulations and how they may be made clearer and easier to understand.
A public hearing has been scheduled for April 5, 2006, at 10 a.m.
in room 7218 of the Internal Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC. Because of access restrictions, visitors
will not be admitted beyond the Internal Revenue Building lobby more
than 30 minutes before the hearing starts. Due to building security
procedures, visitors must enter at the Constitution Avenue entrance. In
addition, all visitors must present photo identification to enter the
building.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the hearing.
Persons who wish to present oral comments at the hearing must
submit comments and submit an outline of the topics to be discussed and
the time to be devoted to each topic (signed original and eight (8)
copies) by March 15, 2006.
A period of 10 minutes will be allotted to each person for making
comments.
An agenda showing the scheduling of the speakers will be prepared
after the deadline for receiving outlines has passed. Copies of the
agenda will be available free of charge at the hearing.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these regulations is David Selig, Office of
the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs and Special Industries), IRS.
However, other personnel from the IRS and Treasury Department
participated in their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Withdrawal of Proposed Regulations
Under the authority of 26 U.S.C. 7805, the notice of proposed
rulemaking (REG-104385-01) published in the Federal Register on March
4, 2003 (68 FR 10190) is withdrawn.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read,
in part, as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.46-6 is amended by adding paragraph (k) to read
as follows:
Sec. 1.46-6 Limitation in case of certain regulated companies.
* * * * *
(k) Treatment of accumulated deferred investment tax credits upon
the deregulation of public utility property--(1) Scope. This paragraph
(k) provides rules for the application of former sections 46(f)(1) and
46(f)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code with respect to public utility
property that ceases, whether by disposition, deregulation, or
otherwise, to be public utility property (deregulated public utility
property).
(2) Ratable amount--(i) Restoration of rate base reduction. A
reduction in the taxpayer's rate base on account of the credit with
respect to public utility property that becomes deregulated public
utility property is restored ratably during the period after the
property becomes deregulated public utility property if the amount of
the reduction remaining to be restored does not, at any time during the
period, exceed the restoration percentage of the recoverable stranded
cost of the property at such time. For this purpose--
(A) The stranded cost of the property is the cost of the property
reduced by the amount of such cost that the taxpayer has recovered
through regulated depreciation expense during the period before the
property becomes deregulated;
(B) The recoverable stranded cost of the property at any time is
the stranded cost of the property that the taxpayer will be permitted
to recover through rates after such time; and
(C) The restoration percentage for the property is determined by
dividing the reduction in rate base remaining to be restored with
respect to the property immediately before the property becomes
deregulated public utility property by the stranded cost of the
property.
(ii) Cost of service reduction. Reductions in the taxpayer's cost
of service on account of the credit with respect to public utility
property that becomes deregulated public utility property are ratable
during the period after the property becomes deregulated public utility
property if the cumulative amount of the reduction during such period
does not, at any time during the period, exceed the flow-through
percentage of the cumulative stranded cost recovery for the property at
such time. For this purpose--
(A) The stranded cost of the property is the cost of the property
reduced by the amount of such cost that the taxpayer has recovered
through regulated depreciation expense during the period before the
property becomes deregulated;
(B) The cumulative stranded cost recovery for the property at any
time is the stranded cost of the property that the taxpayer has been
permitted to recover through rates on or before such time; and
(C) The flow-through percentage for the property is determined by
dividing the amount of credit with respect to the property remaining to
be used to reduce cost of service immediately before the property
becomes deregulated public utility property by the stranded cost of the
property.
(3) Cross reference. See Sec. 1.168(i)-(3) for rules relating to
the treatment of balances of excess deferred income
[[Page 75765]]
taxes when public utility property becomes deregulated public utility
property.
(4) Effective dates--(i) In general. This paragraph (k) applies to
public utility property that becomes deregulated public utility
property after [DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal
Register].
(ii) Application of regulation project REG-104385-01 to pre-
effective date reductions in cost of service. A reduction in the
taxpayer's cost of service will be treated as ratable if it is
consistent with the proposed rules in regulation project REG-104385-01
(2003-1 C.B. 634) and occurs during the period March 5, 2003, through
the earlier of the last date on which the utility's rates are
determined under the rate order in effect on [DATE OF PUBLICATION OF
FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register], or [DATE 2 YEARS AFTER PUBLICATION
OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
Par. 3. Section 1.168(i)-3 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 1.168(i)-(3) Treatment of excess deferred income tax reserve
upon disposition of deregulated public utility property.
(a) Scope. This section provides rules for the application of
section 203(e) of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law 99-514 (100
Stat. 2146) with respect to public utility property (within the meaning
of section 168(i)(10)) that ceases, whether by disposition,
deregulation, or otherwise, to be public utility property (deregulated
public utility property).
(b) Amount of reduction. If public utility property of a taxpayer
becomes deregulated public utility property to which this section
applies, the reduction in the taxpayer(s excess tax reserve permitted
under section 203(e) of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 is equal to the
amount by which the reserve could be reduced under that provision if
all such property had remained public utility property of the taxpayer
and the taxpayer had continued use of its normalization method of
accounting with respect to such property.
(c) Cross reference. See Sec. 1.46-6(k) for rules relating to the
treatment of accumulated deferred investment tax credits when utilities
dispose of regulated public utility property.
(d) Effective dates--(1) In general. This section applies to public
utility property that becomes deregulated public utility property after
[DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
(2) Application of regulation project REG-104385-01 to pre-
effective date reductions of excess deferred income tax reserve. A
reduction in the taxpayer's excess deferred income tax reserve will be
treated as ratable if it is consistent with the proposed rules in
regulation project REG-104385-01 (2003-1 C.B. 634) and occurs during
the period March 5, 2003, through the earlier of the last date on which
the utility's rates are determined under the rate order in effect on
[DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register], or [DATE 2
YEARS AFTER PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE IN THE Federal Register].
Mark E. Matthews,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. E5-7583 Filed 12-20-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P