To: Mark R. Hafner, City Manager
From: Lupe Orozco, Administrative Services Manager
Subject:
Title
Consider an ordinance approving a negotiated settlement between the Atmos Cities Steering Committee ("ACSC") and Atmos Energy Corp., Mid-Tex Division regarding the company's 2022 Rate Review Mechanism filing; declaring existing rates to be unreasonable; adopting tariffs that reflect rate adjustments consistent with the negotiated settlement; finding the rates to be set by the attached settlement tariffs to be just and reasonable and in the public interest; approving an attachment establishing a benchmark for pensions and retiree medical benefits; requiring the company to reimburse ACSC's reasonable ratemaking expenses; determining that this ordinance was passed in accordance with requirements of the Texas Open Meetings Act; adopting a savings clause; declaring an effective date; and requiring delivery of this ordinance to the company and the ACSC's legal counsel.
Action Requested:
City Council consideration of an ordinance approving a negotiated settlement between the Atmos Cities Steering Committee (“ACSC”) and Atmos Energy Corp., Mid-Tex Division regarding the company’s 2022 rate review mechanism filing; declaring existing rates to be unreasonable; finding the rates to be set by the settlement tariffs to be just and reasonable and in the public interest; and declaring an effective date.
Background:
The City, along with 181 other Mid-Texas cities served by Atmos Energy Corporation, Mid-Tex Division (“Atmos Mid-Tex” or “Company”), is a member of the Atmos Cities Steering Committee (“ACSC”). In 2007, ACSC and Atmos Mid-Tex settled a rate application filed by the Company pursuant to Section 104.301 of the Texas Utilities Code for an interim rate adjustment commonly referred to as a GRIP filing (arising out of the Gas Reliability Infrastructure Program legislation). That settlement created a substitute rate review process, referred to as Rate Review Mechanism (“RRM”), as a substitute for future filings under the GRIP statute. Since 2007, there have been several modifications to the original RRM Tariff.
The most recent iteration of an RRM Tariff was reflected in an ordinance adopted by ACSC members in 2018. On or about April 1, 2022, the Company filed a rate request pursuant to the RRM Tariff adopted by ACSC members. The Company claimed that its cost-of-service in a test year ending December 31, 2021, entitled it to additional system-wide revenues of $141.3 million. Application of the standards set forth in ACSC’s RRM Tariff reduces the Company’s request to $115 million, $83.26 million of which would be applicable to ACSC members. ACSC’s consultants concluded that the system-wide deficiency under the RRM regime should be $95.8 million instead of the claimed $141.3 million. The Executive Committee recommends a settlement at $115 million. The Effective Date for new rates is October 1, 2022.
Financial Impact:
The impact of the settlement on average residential rates is an increase of $4.60 on a monthly basis, or 6.7 percent. The increase for average commercial usage will be $14.34 or 4.3 percent.
Citizen Input/Board Review:
N/A
Legal Review:
Proposed Ordinance has been reviewed and submitted by the Atmos Cities Steering Committee (ACSC) Executive Committee and its general counsel at Lloyd Gosselink, Rochelle & Townsend.
Alternatives:
City Council has the following alternatives:
- Approve as submitted
- Approve with changes
- Denial
Council Action:
The ACSC Executive Committee and its designated legal counsel and consultants recommend that all member cities approve the resolution with its attachments approving the negotiated rate settlement resolving the 2022 RRM filing, and implementing the rate change.