VII. Should the Commission Exclude Specific Bundled Customers or
    Electricity Consumption from the Bond Charge?


" . . . In no case shall the commission [California Public Utilities Commission] increase the electricity charges in effect on the date that the act that adds this section becomes effective for residential customers for existing baseline quantities or usage by those customers of up to 130 percent of existing baseline quantities, until such time as the department has recovered the costs of power it has procured for the electrical corporation's retail end use customers as provided in this division. . ."

A. Positions of Parties

B. Discussion

23 D.01-05-064 (2001 Cal. PUC LEXIS 419) 24 D.01-09-059 (2001 Cal. PUC LEXIS 857) 25 SCE, Opening Brief, p. 12; ORA, Opening Brief, p. 6; TURN, Opening Brief, p. 6. Subsequently SCE modified its position. 26 SDG&E, Opening Brief, p. 4. 27 Ibid., p. 5. 28 Ibid., p. 5. 29 SCE, Reply Brief, p. 4. 30 ORA, Reply Brief, p. 3; See also SCE, Reply Brief, p. 4 and TURN Reply Brief, p. 3. 31 D.01-05-064 (2001 Cal. PUC LEXIS 419, *32-*33) 32 Ibid. 33 As D.02-02-051 (Rate Agreement Decision) stated: "There is no doubt that the impostion of Bond Charges on the electric power sold by ESP's would help ensure the recovery of DWR's Bond-Related Costs and thereby improve the security of the bondholders. It would also be good public policy to impose Bond Charges on ESP power , since all customers benefited from the debt that was incurred by DWR to procure power during the height of the electricity crisis." (D.02-02-051, p. 33) However, the legality of such charges was deferred to a future proceeding (ultimately, R.02-01-011). 34 We note that residential usage up to 130% of baseline is about 25% of total bundled customer usage, while direct access constitutes less than 20% of total bundled customer usage (i.e., under 15% of the total of both bundled and DA usage).

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