Texas Administrative Code
Title 16 - ECONOMIC REGULATION
Part 2 - PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION OF TEXAS
Chapter 24 - SUBSTANTIVE RULES APPLICABLE TO WATER AND SEWER SERVICE PROVIDERS
Subchapter K - ENFORCEMENT, SUPERVISION, AND RECEIVERSHIP
Section 24.355 - Operation of Utility that Discontinues Operation or is Referred for Appointment of a Receiver
Universal Citation: 16 TX Admin Code § 24.355
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) After providing a utility with notice and an opportunity for a hearing, the commission may appoint a willing person, municipality, or political subdivision to temporarily manage and/or operate a utility that:
(1) has
discontinued or abandoned operations or the provision of services; or
(2) is being referred to the attorney general
for the appointment of a receiver under TWC §13.412 for:
(A) having expressed an intent to abandon or
abandoned operation of its facilities;
(B) having violated a final order of the
commission;
(C) having allowed any
property owned or controlled by it to be used in violation of a final order of
the commission; or
(D) having
violated a final judgment issued by a district court in a suit brought by the
attorney general under:
(i) Chapter 13, Texas
Water Code;
(ii) Chapter 7, Texas
Water Code; or
(iii) Chapter 341,
Texas Health and Safety Code.
(b) Appointment under this section may be by emergency order under Chapter 22, Subchapter P of this title (relating to Emergency Orders for Water Utilities). A corporation may be appointed as a temporary manager.
(c) Abandonment includes, but is not limited to:
(1) failure
to pay a bill or obligation owed to a retail public utility or to an electric
or gas utility with the result that the utility service provider has issued a
notice of discontinuance of necessary services;
(2) failure to provide appropriate water or
wastewater treatment so that a potential health hazard results;
(3) failure to adequately maintain facilities
or provide sufficient facilities resulting in potential health hazards,
extended outages, or repeated service interruptions;
(4) failure to provide customers adequate
notice of a health hazard or potential health hazard;
(5) failure to secure an alternative
available water supply during an outage;
(6) displaying a pattern of hostility toward
or repeatedly failing to respond to the commission or the utility's customers;
and
(7) failure to provide the
commission or its customers with adequate information on how to contact the
utility for normal business and emergency purposes.
(d) This section does not affect the authority of the commission to pursue an enforcement claim against a utility or an affiliated interest.
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