Current through Register Vol. 30, No. 52, December 27, 2024
A. Customer service complaints
1. Each utility shall make a full and prompt
investigation of each service complaint made by one of its customers, whether
made directly or through the Commission.
2. Within five business days after a
complaint is made, the utility shall respond to the complainant and, if
applicable, to the Commission representative regarding the status of the
utility's investigation of the complaint.
3. The utility shall notify the complainant
and, if applicable, the Commission representative of the final disposition of
each complaint. Upon request of the complainant or the Commission
representative, the utility shall report the findings of its investigation in
writing.
4. The utility shall
inform the customer of the right to file an informal complaint with the
Commission, under subsection (C)(1), if the customer is dissatisfied with the
results of the utility's investigation or the final disposition of the
complaint.
5. Each utility shall:
a. Create a record of each service complaint
received including, at a minimum, the following data:
i. Name and address of
the customer;
ii. Service address
at issue, if different from the customer's address;
iii. Date and nature of
the complaint;
iv. Disposition of the complaint; and
v. A
copy of any correspondence between the utility, the customer, and a Commission
representative; and
b.
Maintain each service complaint record for at least one year after final
disposition of the complaint and make the record available for inspection by
the Commission upon request.
B. Customer bill disputes
1. A utility customer who disputes a portion
of a bill rendered for utility service shall, prior to the due date for the
bill, pay the undisputed portion of the bill and notify a representative of the
utility that the unpaid amount is in dispute.
2. Upon receipt of the customer's notice of
dispute, the utility shall:
a. Within five
business days after receiving notice of the dispute, provide the customer
confirmation that the dispute has been received;
b. Initiate a prompt investigation of the
source of the dispute;
c. Withhold
termination of service until the investigation is completed and the customer
has been informed of the results of the investigation;
d. Notify the customer of the results of the
investigation and final disposition of the bill dispute, in writing if
requested by the customer; and
e. Inform the customer
of the right to file an informal complaint with the Commission, under
subsection (C)(1), if dissatisfied with the results of the utility's
investigation or final disposition.
3. Once the customer has received the results
of the utility's investigation and the utility's final disposition, the
customer shall, within five business days, submit payment to the utility for
any disputed amounts. Failure to make full payment within five business days
shall be grounds for termination of service under
R14-2-211(C)(1)(b).
C. Commission resolution of
service and bill disputes
1. if a customer is
dissatisfied with the outcome of a utility's investigation or final disposition
of a service or bill dispute, the customer may file with the Commission a
written statement of dissatisfaction, which shall be deemed an informal
complaint against the utility.
2.
Within 30 days after receiving an informal complaint against a utility, a
Commission representative shall attempt to resolve the dispute through
communications with the utility and the customer (written or telephonic or
both). If resolution of the dispute is not achieved within 20 days of the
Commission representative's initial effort, the Commission shall hold a
mediation regarding the dispute, in accordance with the following:
a. A Commission representative shall preside
over the mediation, and the participants shall be the customer and the utility.
b. Each participant may be represented by legal
counsel, at the participant's own expense, if desired.
c. The
mediation may be recorded or held in the presence of a stenographer.
d.
Each participant shall have the opportunity to present written or oral material
to support the participant's position.
e. Each participant
shall have the opportunity to cross-examine the other participant, and the
Commission representative shall have the opportunity to examine each
participant.
f. The Commission representative shall render a
written decision to the participants within five business days after conclusion
of the mediation. the written decision of the Commission representative shall
not be binding on the participants, who shall retain the right to make a formal
complaint to the Commission.
3. The utility may implement normal
termination procedures, under
R14-2-211(C)(1)(b),
if the customer fails to pay all undisputed bills rendered during the
resolution of the dispute by the Commission.
4. Each utility shall maintain a record of
written statements of dissatisfaction and their resolution for at least one
year and shall make such records available for Commission inspection upon
request.
D. Notice by
utility of responsible officer or agent
1.
Each utility shall file with the Commission a written statement containing the
name, address (business and mailing), email, and telephone number (business) of
at least one officer, agent , or employee responsible for the general
management of its operations as a utility in Arizona.
2. Each utility shall give notice, by filing
a written statement with the Commission of any change in the information
required herein within five business days from the date of any such
change.
E. Time-frames
for processing applications for Certificates of Convenience and Necessity
1. This rule prescribes time-frames for the
Commission's processing of any application for a Certificate of Convenience and
Necessity filed pursuant to this Article.
2. Within 120 calendar days after receipt of
an application for a new Certificate of Convenience and Necessity, or to amend
or change the status of any existing Certificate of Convenience and Necessity,
staff shall notify the applicant, in writing, that the application is either
administratively complete or deficient. If the application is deficient, the
notice shall specify all deficiencies.
3. Staff may cease its review of an
application if the applicant does not remedy all deficiencies within 60
calendar days of the notice of deficiency.
4. After receipt of a corrected application,
staff shall notify the applicant within 90 calendar days that the corrected
application is either administratively complete or deficient. If the corrected
application is deficient, the notice shall specify all deficiencies.
5. The time-frame for administrative
completeness review shall be suspended from the time a notice of deficiency is
issued until staff determines that the application is complete.
6.
Within 150 days after an application is determined to be administratively
complete, the Commission shall approve or reject the application.
7. For
purposes of A.R.S. §
41-1072
through A.R.S. §
41-1079,
the Commission has established the following time-frames:
a. Administrative completeness review
time-frame: 120 calendar days.
b.
Substantive review time-frame: 150 calendar days.
c. Overall time-frame: 270 calendar
days.
8. If an applicant requests, and is granted, an
extension or continuance, the appropriate time-frames shall be tolled from the
date of the request and for the duration of the extension or
continuance.
9. During the substantive review time-frame, the
Commission may, for good cause, upon its own motion or that of any interested
party to the proceeding, suspend the time-frame rules.
F. Filing and availability of tariffs
1. Each utility shall file with the
Commission, within 120 days after the effective date of new rules or
requirements adopted by the Commission, or within a shorter period ordered by
the Commission, tariffs that comply with the new rules or requirements adopted
by the Commission.
2. Each utility
shall file with the Commission any proposed changes to the utility's tariffs on
file with the Commission, along with a statement of justification supporting
the proposed changes.
3. A
utility's proposed change to the utility's tariffs on file with the Commission
shall not become effective until reviewed and approved by the Commission,
except as provided by law.
4. Each
utility shall make its applicable tariffs available on its website and, upon
request, either in paper form or in a readily accessible electronic format such
as Adobe PDF.
G.
Accounts and records
1. Each utility shall
keep general and auxiliary accounting records reflecting the cost of its
properties, operating income and expense, assets and liabilities, and all other
accounting and statistical data necessary to give complete and authentic
information as to its properties and operations.
2. Each utility shall maintain its books and
records in conformity with the Uniform Systems of Accounts for Class A, B, C,
and D Electric Utilities as adopted and amended by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission or, for electric cooperatives, as promulgated by the
Rural Utilities Service.
3. each
utility shall produce or deliver in this state any or all of its formal
accounting records and related documents requested by the Commission. A utility
may, at its option, provide verified copies of original records and documents
rather than produce the originals.
4. Each utility shall submit an annual report
to the Commission, through the Utilities Division, on a form prescribed by the
Utilities Division. The annual report shall be filed on or before the 15th day
of April for the preceding calendar year. If the utility has received a report
on the utility prepared by a certified or licensed public accountant, the
utility shall include a copy of the report with its annual report
submission.
5. Each utility shall
submit to the Commission, through the Utilities Division, a copy of all reports
the utility is required to file with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
6. Each utility shall submit to the Commission,
through the Utilities Division, a copy of all annual reports the utility is
required to file with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and, in
addition, for electric cooperatives, each annual report the utility is required
to file with the Rural Utilities Service.
H. Maps. Each utility shall file with the
Commission a map or maps clearly setting forth the location and extent of the
area or areas included within the utility's approved certificates of
convenience and necessity, in accordance with the Cadastral (Rectangular)
Survey of the United States Bureau of Land Management, or by metes and bounds
with a starting point determined by the aforesaid Cadastral Survey.
I. Variations, exemptions of Commission rules
. The Commission may, by order, approve variations or exemptions from any of
the rules in this Article either upon application of an affected party
establishing that the public interest requires such variation or exemption or
upon determining, on its own initiative, that such variation or exemption is
necessary to serve the public interest. In case of conflict between these rules
and an approved tariff or order of the Commission, the provisions of the
approved tariff or order shall apply.
J. Prior agreements. The adoption of these
rules by the Commission shall not affect any agreements entered into between
the utility and customers or other parties who, pursuant to such contracts,
arranged for the extension of facilities in a provision of service prior to the
effective date of these rules.
K. A
utility shall obtain and maintain for each customer the customer's preferred
method of communication, which may be email, U.S. mail, voice telephone call,
text message, or other communication method acceptable to the utility and the
customer. Except as otherwise specified in this Article, a utility shall
communicate with a customer and the customer's designated third party using the
customer's preferred method of communication. If a utility does not yet have a
customer's preferred method of communication on file, the utility may use the
U.S. mail.