10013
. (a) Subsequent to signing a contingent franchise, license,
or service agreement with a local agency, a privatizer shall apply to
the commission for a determination that the proposed privatization
project is not a public utility within the meaning of Section 216 and
is therefore exempt from commission regulation. When a privatizer
files an application with the commission, the privatizer shall
include the information the commission requires to make a
determination in accordance with subdivisions (b), (c), (d), and (e).
(b) (1) Not later than 60 calendar days after the privatizer
submits its application to the commission, the commission shall
determine in writing whether the application is complete and shall
immediately transmit the determination to the privatizer.
(2) If the application is determined not to be complete, the
commission shall specify in writing those parts of the application
which are incomplete and shall indicate the manner in which it can be
made complete, including a list and thorough description of the
specific information needed to complete the application. The
applicant shall submit materials to the commission in response to the
list and description. Upon resubmittal of the application, a new
60-calendar-day period shall begin, during which the commission shall
determine the completeness of the application.
(3) If the application is deemed complete, the commission may
determine not later than 90 calendar days after the application is
deemed complete that the privatization project is not a public
utility within the meaning of Section 216 and is therefore exempt
from commission regulation, if the commission finds that the
application clearly complies with the criteria in subdivisions (d)
and (e). If the commission does not make this finding, then it shall
proceed under the schedule established in subdivision (c).
(4) If the commission fails to make a written determination as to
the completeness of the application within 60 calendar days after
receipt of the original or resubmitted application, the application
shall be deemed complete for purposes of this section.
(c) Within 180 calendar days after the application is deemed
complete, the commission shall determine whether the privatization
project is a public utility within the meaning of Section 216 using
the criteria in subdivisions (d) and (e). The commission may hold a
hearing on the matter if the commission finds it to be necessary. No
franchise, license, or service agreement between a privatizer and a
local agency shall be entered into until the commission has either
exempted the project or the 180-calendar-day period has expired,
whichever comes first. Nothing in this section precludes a privatizer
and the commission from mutually agreeing to a further extension of
any time limit provided in this section.
(d) The commission may determine that a privatization project is
not a public utility within the meaning of Section 216, and is
therefore exempt from commission regulation if it finds that the
franchise, license, or service agreement both demonstrates that the
local agency retains sufficient jurisdiction to protect the public
interest and adequately addresses all aspects of the provision of
service which would otherwise be subject to commission regulation. In
making its determination, the commission shall determine whether the
local agency has complied with Section 54253 of the Government Code.
The decision of the commission shall be final and conclusive in the
absence of any subsequent changes.
(e) In making a determination pursuant to subdivision (c), the
commission shall review the franchise, license, or service agreement
to ensure that the agreement grants the local agency, at a minimum,
all of the following:
(1) Exclusive authority to establish all rates and rate changes
charged to the public.
(2) Approval over any proposal of the privatizer to provide new,
additional, or alternative service to any other public or private
entity or to change the service fee paid to the privatizer by the
local agency.
(3) Approval over the original design and construction of the
project, including any changes in design, alterations, or additions
to the project.
(4) Approval over any changes in ownership of the party or parties
subject to the franchise, license, or service agreement.
(5) Authority to impose fines and penalties for noncompliance with
any provision of the executed franchise, license, or service
agreement, or for failure to provide the service within the time
period agreed to in the franchise, license, or service agreement.
(6) Authority to ensure that the facility is adequately
maintained.
(7) Adequate opportunity to monitor compliance with the agreement
and to ensure the project will be operated to meet any applicable
federal or state water quality standards or other applicable laws.
(8) Adequate opportunity to amend the agreement in the event of
unforeseen circumstances or contingencies, such as flood, earthquake,
fire, or other natural disasters or federal tax law changes.
(f) The commission may adopt whatever procedures it deems
necessary to carry out the provisions of subdivisions (a), (b), (c),
(d), and (e). The commission shall adopt regulations for reviewing
any proposed changes to a contingent franchise, license, or service
agreement to determine if the proposed changes could render the
project a public utility within the meaning of Section 216. The
commission shall charge each privatizer submitting an application
pursuant to this section a fee which will be sufficient to defray the
costs incurred in processing the application and rendering a
decision upon it.
(g) As used in this section, "privatization project" means any
waste water or sewerage project that is owned and operated by a
privatizer pursuant to a franchise, license, or service agreement
with a local agency, or any agency of that local agency, pursuant to
which services are supplied for the benefit of the local agency, its
residents, or both, or any agency of the state. "Project" includes,
but is not limited to, financing, designing, constructing, repairing,
replacing, maintaining, and operating collector systems, pumping
stations, treatment plants, and lateral interceptors, and outfall
sewers. "Local agency" means any city, county, city and county,
special district, or county service area. "Privatizer" means any
corporation, partnership, or natural person, excluding municipal
corporations, which owns and operates a wastewater or sewerage
project pursuant to a franchise, license, or service agreement with a
local agency. "Privatization project," as used in this section,
includes the Santa Ana Watershed Project Authority's Arlington Basin
Groundwater Desalter Project, which will treat groundwater
contaminated by wastewater.