Terms Used In Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1228

  • Appeal: A request made after a trial, asking another court (usually the court of appeals) to decide whether the trial was conducted properly. To make such a request is "to appeal" or "to take an appeal." One who appeals is called the appellant.
  • Assignee: means any legal or commercial entity, including but not limited to a corporation, limited liability company, partnership, limited partnership, or other legally recognized entity to which an electric utility sells, assigns, or transfers, other than as security, all or a portion of its interest in or right to storm recovery property. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Bankruptcy: Refers to statutes and judicial proceedings involving persons or businesses that cannot pay their debts and seek the assistance of the court in getting a fresh start. Under the protection of the bankruptcy court, debtors may discharge their debts, perhaps by paying a portion of each debt. Bankruptcy judges preside over these proceedings.
  • Commission: means the Public Service Commission or, solely with respect to an electric utility furnishing electric service within the city of New Orleans, the council of the city of New Orleans. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
  • Financing costs: means :

    (a)  Interest and acquisition, defeasance, or redemption premiums that are payable on storm recovery bonds;

    (b)  Any payment required under an ancillary agreement and any amount required to fund or replenish reserve or other accounts established under the terms of any indenture, ancillary agreement, or other financing documents pertaining to storm recovery bonds;

    (c)  Any other cost related to issuing, supporting, repaying, and servicing storm recovery bonds, including but not limited to servicing fees, accounting and auditing fees, trustee fees, legal fees, consulting fees, administrative fees, placement and underwriting fees, capitalized interest, rating agency fees, stock exchange listing and compliance fees, and filing fees, including costs related to obtaining the financing order;

    (d)  Any income taxes and license fees imposed on the revenues generated from the collection of storm recovery charges or otherwise resulting from the collection of storm recovery charges, in any such case whether paid, payable, or accrued; or

    (e)  Any state and local taxes, franchise, gross receipts, and other taxes or similar charges including but not limited to regulatory assessment fees, in any such case whether paid, payable, or accrued. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227

  • Financing order: means an order of the commission, if granted by the commission in its sole discretion, which allows for:

    (a)  The issuance of storm recovery bonds. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227

  • Financing party: means any holder of storm recovery bonds and any trustee, collateral agent, or other person acting for the benefit of holders of storm recovery bonds. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
  • Oath: A promise to tell the truth.
  • Partnership: A voluntary contract between two or more persons to pool some or all of their assets into a business, with the agreement that there will be a proportional sharing of profits and losses.
  • person: includes a body of persons, whether incorporated or not. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 1:10
  • Precedent: A court decision in an earlier case with facts and law similar to a dispute currently before a court. Precedent will ordinarily govern the decision of a later similar case, unless a party can show that it was wrongly decided or that it differed in some significant way.
  • Security interest: means a pledge, hypothecation, or other encumbrance of or other right over any portion of storm recovery property created by contract to secure the payment or performance of an obligation. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Storm: means a named tropical storm or hurricane, ice or snow storm, flood, or other significant weather or natural disaster that occurred during calendar year 2005 or that occurs thereafter. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Storm recovery bonds: means bonds, debentures, notes, certificates of participation, certificates of ownership, or other evidences of indebtedness or ownership that are issued pursuant to an indenture, contract, or other agreement of an electric utility or an assignee pursuant to a financing order, the proceeds of which are used directly or indirectly to provide, recover, finance, or refinance commission-approved storm recovery costs, financing costs, and costs to replenish or fund a storm recovery reserve to such level as the commission may authorize in a financing order, and which are secured by or payable from storm recovery property. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Storm recovery costs: means , if requested by the electric utility, and as may be approved by the commission, costs incurred or to be incurred by an electric utility in undertaking a storm recovery activity. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227
  • Storm recovery property: means the contract right constituting incorporeal movable property newly created pursuant to this Part which may consist of any of the following:

    (a)  All rights and interests of an electric utility or successor or assignee of the electric utility under a financing order, including the right to impose, bill, charge, collect, and receive storm recovery charges authorized in the financing order and to obtain periodic adjustments to such charges as may be provided in the financing order. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 45:1227

A.  An electric utility may petition the commission for a financing order.  Application by an electric utility for authority for the electric utility or its affiliate or other assignee to issue storm recovery bonds shall be made in such form as the commission prescribes.  Every application shall be made under oath and shall be signed and filed on behalf of the electric utility by its president or by a vice president, treasurer, or other executive officer having knowledge of the matters set forth.  No electric utility or affiliate or other assignee shall issue any storm recovery bonds until it has been specifically authorized to do so by order of the commission.  No electric utility shall, without the consent of the commission granted in a commission order, apply any proceeds of storm recovery bonds to any purpose not specified in the commission’s order or supplemental order, or to any purpose in excess of the amount allowed for such purpose in the order or supplemental order, or to any purpose in contravention of the order or supplemental order.

B.  The commission may grant an application under Subsection A of this Section in whole or in part by a financing order, and with such modifications thereto and upon such terms and conditions as the commission prescribes, and may from time to time, after opportunity for hearing and for good cause shown, make such supplemental orders in the premises as it finds necessary or appropriate, subject, if the commission so provides, to Paragraph (C)(5) of this Section.  If the commission issues a financing order approving any issue of storm recovery bonds under this Part, the commission may consider whether the proposed structuring, expected pricing, and financing costs of the storm recovery bonds are reasonably expected to result in lower overall costs or would avoid or mitigate rate impacts to customers as compared with traditional methods of financing or recovering storm recovery costs.  The commission may determine what degree of flexibility to afford to the electric utility in establishing the terms and conditions of the storm recovery bonds, including but not limited to repayment schedules, interest rates, and other financing costs.  A copy of any financing order made and entered by the commission under this Part duly certified by the secretary or clerk, as applicable, of the commission shall be sufficient evidence for all purposes of whole and complete compliance by the electric utility with all procedural and other matters required precedent to the entry of the order.

C.  For a financing order issued to an electric utility by the commission to create storm recovery property, the financing order shall:

(1)  Specify the amount of storm recovery costs and any level of storm recovery reserves, taking into consideration, to the extent the commission deems appropriate, any other methods used to recover these costs and any offsets or credits to those costs, and provide with respect to the amount of financing costs which may be recovered through storm recovery charges and specify the time period over which all such costs may be recovered.

(2)  Specify and create the storm recovery property of an electric utility or its successors or assignees that shall be used to pay or secure storm recovery bonds and financing costs.

(3)  Provide that such storm recovery property shall be sold, assigned, or transferred by the electric utility to a subsidiary which is wholly owned, directly or indirectly, by the electric utility and which will be the issuer of the storm recovery bonds.

(4)  Provide that the storm recovery charges shall be sufficient at all times to pay the principal of and interest on the storm recovery bonds as the same shall become due and payable and all other financing costs and, if determined appropriate by the commission, establish a true-up mechanism requiring that the storm recovery charges be reviewed and adjusted at least annually to correct any overcollection or undercollection during the period since the issuance or preceding adjustment and to ensure the projected recovery of amounts sufficient to provide timely payment of all financing costs.

(5)  Provide and pledge that after the earlier of the transfer of storm recovery property to an assignee or the issuance of storm recovery bonds authorized thereby, a financing order is irrevocable until the indefeasible payment in full of the storm recovery bonds and the financing costs and, provide that, except as provided in Subsection F of this Section or to implement any true-up mechanism adopted by the commission as described in Paragraph (C)(4) of this Section, the commission may not amend, modify, or terminate the financing order by any subsequent action or reduce, impair, postpone, terminate, or otherwise adjust storm recovery charges approved in the financing order, provided nothing shall preclude limitation or alteration if and when full compensation is made for the full protection of the storm recovery charges collected pursuant to a financing order and the full protection of the holders of storm recovery bonds and any assignee or financing party.

(6)  Specify how amounts collected from a customer shall be allocated between storm recovery charges and other charges.

(7)  Provide that a financing order remains in effect until the storm recovery bonds issued pursuant to the order have been indefeasibly paid in full and the financing costs of such bonds have been recovered in full.

(8)  Provide that a financing order shall remain in effect and unabated notwithstanding the reorganization, bankruptcy, or other insolvency proceedings, or merger or sale, of the applicable electric utility or its successors or assignees.

(9)  Authorize and require the electric utility, to the extent that any interest in storm recovery property is sold or assigned, to contract with the assignee or any financing party that it will continue to operate its system to provide service to its customers, will collect amounts in respect of the storm recovery charges for the benefit and account of such assignee or financing party, and will account for and remit such amounts to or for the account of such assignee or financing party, including pursuant to a sequestration order authorized by this Part.

D.  In a financing order issued to an electric utility, the commission may:

(1)  Prescribe any limitations on potential assignees of storm recovery property.

(2)  Authorize an assignee organized under the laws of this state which is a subsidiary of an electric utility and which issues storm recovery bonds to provide and establish in its articles of incorporation, partnership agreement, or operating agreement, as applicable, that in order for a person to file a voluntary bankruptcy petition on behalf of that assignee, the prior unanimous consent of the directors, partners, or managers, as applicable, shall be required.  If so authorized in a financing order:

(a)  Any such provision set forth in the articles of incorporation, partnership agreement, or operating agreement of such an assignee shall constitute a legal, valid, and binding agreement of the shareholder(s), partners, or member(s), as applicable, of such assignee and is enforceable against such shareholder(s), partners, or member(s).

(b)  A person shall have authority under the laws of this state to file a voluntary bankruptcy petition on behalf of such assignee only after compliance with any such provision and prerequisite.

(3)  Provide that the creation of the electric utility’s storm recovery property pursuant to Paragraph (C)(2) of this Section is conditioned upon, and shall be simultaneous with, the sale, assignment, or other transfer of the storm recovery property to an assignee and the security interest created in the storm recovery property to secure storm recovery bonds.

(4)  Otherwise provide with respect to any matters pertaining to and within the Public Service Commission‘s constitutional jurisdiction over electric utilities and plenary power to regulate electric utilities or such other jurisdiction as may be conferred on the commission by law, or in the case of the council of the City of New Orleans otherwise provide with respect to any matters pertaining to and within its Home Rule Charter jurisdiction and authority over electric utilities providing service within the city of New Orleans.

E.  After the issuance of a financing order, and within such time and subject to any other limitations set forth in the financing order, the electric utility retains discretion regarding whether to sell, assign, or otherwise transfer storm recovery property or to cause the storm recovery bonds to be issued, including the right to defer or postpone such sale, assignment, transfer, or issuance, provided that nothing herein shall limit in any manner the commission’s authority to review any such decision for rate-making purposes.

F.  At the request of an electric utility or on its own motion or the motion of any party affected by the financing order, the commission may commence a proceeding and issue a subsequent financing order that provides for the refinancing, retiring, or refunding of storm recovery bonds issued pursuant to the original financing order if the commission finds that the subsequent financing order satisfies all of the criteria specified in Subsection B of this Section or that provides for an accounting, refunding, or crediting to rate payers of the proceeds of any true-up mechanism adopted by the commission consistent with Paragraph (C)(4) of this Section.  Effective on retirement of the refunded storm recovery bonds and the issuance of new storm recovery bonds, the commission may adjust the related storm recovery charges accordingly or establish substitute storm recovery charges.

G.  All financing orders by the commission shall be operative and in full force and effect from the time fixed for them to become effective by the commission.

H.  An aggrieved party or intervenor may as its sole remedy, within fifteen days after the financing order or a supplemental order made by the commission becomes effective, file in the district court of the domicile of the commission, a petition setting forth the particular cause of objection to the order complained of.  When a timely application for a rehearing has been made at the commission, the fifteen-day time for such appeal does not commence until the effective date of the commission order disposing of the rehearing application.  Inasmuch as delay in the determination of the appeal of a financing order may delay the issuance of storm recovery bonds, thereby diminishing savings to customers which might be achieved if such bonds were issued as contemplated by a financing order, all such cases shall be given precedence over all other civil cases in the court and shall be heard and determined as speedily as possible.  No appeal to the supreme court shall be allowed unless the petition therefor is filed within fifteen days from the date on which the judgment of the district court is entered and only if the party taking the appeal has the record certified to the supreme court and his brief filed therein within twenty days from the date on which the judgment of the district court is entered.  Review on appeal from the Public Service Commission otherwise shall be in accordance with La. Rev. Stat. 45:1193 through 1195.  However, the immediately preceding two sentences of this Subsection shall have no application to appeals of any order of the council of the City of New Orleans, which shall proceed in the manner provided therefor by applicable law.

Acts 2006, No. 64, §2, eff. May 22, 2006.