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tv   [untitled]    February 26, 2015 4:30pm-5:01pm PST

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it doesn't really seem transparent where the program components get reviewed and decided on and i understand it's sort of underlined under program rates and policy approvals. >> i'd be happy to make the full detailed schedule available to you but for today there's so much content it doesn't show up on the screen what i'm referring to is the expanded version so april 14th is the schedule for the program design discussion. >> great it's a lot to carry the business plan piece plus all of the commercial customers all the details of cca and how it relates to revenue and programatically and the rates and the policy conversation with the board so if there's a way to kind of consolidate that and understand that and i don't know if it's via a timeline or -- >> i think the challenge is that we're doing the business
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plan. >> right. >> and we've been talking about how cca can play a role in that and so we're going to plan on you know unveiling that when we talk about the business plan as we talk about the line of business cca we'll talk about you know how we phase it in because that goes to the risk and talk about what is the mix that that we're recommending because with the additional head room that you have on the initial offering what we want to do -- do we want to make it more greener if possible or do you want to focus on local build out? there's discussions to be had on that and if we had a second offering the opt in of a darker green we need to talk about that and what is that price what is the mix and how many projects do we want to be able to support so we're going to have to have those
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conversations but what i think is really helpful this time is that we're going to at least on the initial offering that people are automatically enrolled in, we're going to lead with affordability and we're going to set that price and figure out what is the best mixture of green versus job opportunities under that. >> and one thing that might help on the schedule is there's a whole but there's a whole bunch of work in here that doesn't that doesn't really involve the commission. if you could tease out of here when the commission is going to be considering which questions. >> yes, absolutely. >> that would be helpful. >> and i'm also hoping, too that you will have marin and sonoma in your back pocket. >> and yes and now now
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lancaster is now launching and we've continued to have a relationship with the staff and consultants working with them as we move forward definitely trying to learn from their experiences and incorporate that. >> and if i may, to your point commissioner moran of highlighting on on a calendar where the commission has a role, i might suggest that we also include where the board and where other outside decision-making entities have a role like california puc who is going to have to accept our revised implementation plan because those are some outside of our control activities and i think it might be good to highlight. >> >> thank you. i too want to commend you for this very fast turn around to come up with this as well as our general
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manager kelly it was quite a task because there's so many elements that i think most people are unaware of so thank you. >> thank you and the thanks go to my staff so i'll pass that along. >> good. >> i'd like to call for public comment now. jason freed? >> hi jason freed executive officer of lafco. i'm not going to repeat what the supervisor said earlier but i want to thank the sfpuc staff this is a different model and approach than what san francisco had been looking at doing in the old version and they definitely took that model to heart. there are different key points now that didn't exist before and other key points in my opinion are not as relevant as they once were. and so we know what our base
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energy costs are going to be and determining staff costs for the administrative part of the program and that's the key part to get to and based on what supervisor avalos said i agree with the timeline. it shouldn't be a political decision but what's the best time of the year for san francisco and when is the best time to launch and if february is what staff is saying i'm fine with that and the drafting of the rfo and that that can be done while the process is going through the board of supervisors and there's no reason if we worked with the board and mayor and everybody is basically on board but it's just going through the process why can't we draft the rfo's and the day everything is
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finalized and set in stone and approved by the board and mayor so taking that 1 month that you are drafting the rfo and putting it into the board process means it's 1 month quicker to get to the procurement contract and what can the rate potentially be and all of those items starting with 16 and move down and go back up to item 4 so when you have 16, 17 and 18 on your more detailed version and going up to item 4, all of those get moved up a month and the other thing i'll put in play on this is also making sure while we're drafting the rfo and i'm not going to disagree that 90 days is the correct window to have i believe that the bos is going to move this quickly through and if i were a betting man i'd say it's not going to take
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90 days probably closer to to 60 days. you should have that window be within the 60 days that way when the time comes you can get the rfo out quicker and it will save us 2 months off of the power procurement process and i think it's key and critical and i'm not going to disagree with keeping the the 90 days in the timeline but be ready for it to to go quicker that way we're getting everything done and i had two more comments making sure while staff is checking in, if there's a window where they are not checking in, we should make sure it's being agendized and there will be regular questions that should be asked and regular times to check in and finally ensuring or engaging with labor as quickly as possible and those discussions
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and i'd encourage us to get those discussions going tomorrow but calling them tomorrow and saying can we get these meetings rolling again and starting that process again. thank you. >> thank you jason. next speaker is eric brooks. >> are you starting the clock already? hi commissioners. eric brooks san francisco green party our city san francisco and cocoordinator and first i'll say the good part which is this is pretty good-looking document. this is getting towards what we need we need to happen. a quick side note -- something that will speed all of this up i'm sure -- i do not know why we're not talking about hiring kim malcolm back.
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her work is stellar and we need to hire her back and that will save time on on job search and i'm happy that director kelly feels like he has the capacity for this but we need somebody who really knows this well to oversee these next several months and finally the one thing that advocates are going to have a pretty serious difficulty with in the schedule in that we're not differentiating between final rates and not to exceed rates which we almost set in august of 2013 and the final rate can't be set until it says on the schedule however we were told by staff of sfpuc and lafco that build out planning and local installation program cannot begin until we know the ballpark of what rate we're going to charge so we know how much money we've got to work
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with so the advocates are going to to insist is that the one thing you change about this is to get your rate payer advocate committee to approve that so you can finally approve it here at at at the commission as quickly as possible. we know what the not to exceed rate is going to be. it's going to be the same as pge and even though the final rate will come later it's critical to start that planning now and planning for the jobs that will be created by by the build out and planning for behind the meter installations which are not well flushed out yet in the plan creating more jobs and all of that depends on having a clear setting of the not to exceed rate so that planners
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can start digging into the build out planning right now and we're going to be showing more concrete job numbers right away and definitely i'd call our labor friend on the commission to insist that those not to exceed rates be set immediately. thank you. >> thank you eric. >> can i make a quick comment? >> certainly. >> because i know that may be a theme coming up because that was the roadblock that was presented to launch clean power sf so, you know, like jason and barbara said really we know what the not to exceed rate is and i think what's going to be challenging is setting not the rate for the light green but the darker green so we need to have some conversations about that but in our detailed schedule we have june or may
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is the date that we would hopefully come back and talk about the program and also the not to exceed rate hopefully for the light green but also it would be nice for the dark green as well and so that's on the schedule but that's not the critical item on the schedule anymore. >> i think it was april actually. >> was it april? >> all right. >> i thought april was the first one and the decision in october or september? >> may basically 2 months.
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>> one other point of clarification on that part of the steps preceding that is the rate fairness board and that's the process that by charter has to happen before we can bring it to you. >> what is the legal significance of setting the not to exceed rate?
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>> i'm here today because i'm concerned about the future. climate change is one of the greatest threats facing humanity at the moment. san francisco must do its part to combat climate change and reduce carbon emissions and launching clean power sf is the best way for san francisco to do this and in addition it will bring local jobs to the area and bring san francisco to the forefront of the climate change prevention movement and give san francisco i san franciscans the type of energy they can excuse me and provide an energy option for consumers and in conclusion i urge the puc to set the rates and launch clean power san francisco as soon as possible. >> thank you. ted holsman?
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>> thank you very much commissioners. i'm mr. holsman a resident of san san francisco. i want to echo other folks in thanking the staff of the puc for putting together this amazing document especially on the relatively short timeline and it's really great to see this laid out in this detail and we look forward to seeing the full document as well and also appreciate the general manager kelly's comment about making it a realistic and conservative timeline. the important thing to remember with a conservative timeline is that you might actually beat it if you are lucky and we've heard from mr. freed and
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supervisor avalos so up to one to 2 months can be shaved off this process and i'd echo a previous comment i would hope that the staff and commission would be prepared with that level of flexibility in case we were able to come in sooner of course every month that we delay, x numbers of greenhouse gases are getting emitted unnecessarily. we've all got to the airport early and the jet way was not available because it wasn't prepared for you to be early so it sounds like the political will is there to make that happen. i would like to highlight the period of time between today and may 10th, so here it looks like pge is
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going to file green tariff rates on may 10th and i and i think that the period from now until may 10th represents basically our main target of opportunity to build excitement and publicity and goodwill about the great strides that san francisco is going to take with respect to clean power. obviously, there's going to be a lot of press when pge moves forward with this step and should be applauded for doing that. but it looks here like the program in item number 25 begins in maybe june and so it's important from now until may 10th to get as much press out there about clean power san francisco and what we're doing and i think setting not to exceed rates at pge's brown power rates would be a great
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way of expressing we're going to be able to get greener and cheaper electricity. >> thank you. next speaker is jeff ackerman. >> thank you. i'm the conservation program manager representing sixty thousand members and supporters. i just want to say thank you so much to to the commissioners and all of the staff for putting together this timeline so quickly and i'm really excited to see the additional detail and i'd also like to see the clean power sf page on the sfpuc website back up and running. i checked it last week and they all gave me error messages unfortunately. we
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have 6000 members in san francisco that would at least like to sign up for the program maybe tomorrow so if we could get that website fixed as soon as possible, that would be great. i'm really excited to see this and i'd also love to hear from the commissioners and staff a plan to include community stakeholders in this process moving forward in addition to just coming to the meetings and commenting on what's being presented but maybe our stakeholder's meetings again and not to delay any part of this process but have those voices be heard as part of the planning process thank you so much and i urge you to make to look for the places we can make this move
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faster. >> that's not the first time i've heard that about the website and i don't know about the enrollment piece and how quickly that can happen but if we can get the website on that would be great. >> i will do that. >> are there any other speakers today on this topic? seeing none, i would like to continue with the general manager's report while we're here so that would be 6 a. >> the drought. ellen? >> thank you commissioners. . ellen levin deputy manager for
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water enterprise. i'll give you the update. the first slide is where the the reservoir levels lie. water bank has dropped slightly and the cumulative , precipitation chart and we're tracking at at the at the 2007-year line and now we're it looks like we could possibly dip below last year's if we don't get some more precipitation and we had some melting of the snow from the
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last storm so we're watching that closely. we've got our snow survey ers out this week and we'll have a report at the end of this week on the snow pack conditions. on the on the total delivery side this is where probably our best news is our customers have continued to maintain their reductions in their water use and we're still seeing significant conservation well below our 10 percent reduction goal at this point. and our total system water savings again we're ahead of the curve on what we expect to save. this just shows you where we are on our
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precipitation index still for the month of february we're quite below the need for february. we're expecting some precip but unlikely to bring us the 6 the 6 inches we need by the end of the month. while december was really a phenomenonal month probably as we close out february we'll start to see ourselves slip behind on the local side but we were staying quite well ahead on the local side until february. the last time i was here with you i was telling you about the customer leak notification program that we're planning to roll out this spring. we'll use our automated water meeting data to
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identify our customers that have continuous consumption that means their use never goes to zero during the middle of the night and indicating a water fixture that is on whether it's a leaking toilet or break in the irrigation service and we'll be able to determine where those customers are and send a postcard to their billing addresses identifying that there may be a potential leak and planning to send the postcards out the first week of april and this is a pilot program we'll be monitoring these notifications in getting the leaks fixed and be able to track all of the customers we sent the notification to and see if it the leak actually got fixed. in summary, actually i think actually i'm
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sorry i think that what you have actually also shows that the new adds that we put forward and the hotel customers. can you switch this on? oh, it was on. so there's just two adds that i included in your presentation packet that shows two different advertisements that will be running in the hotel service area and eventuality move to
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other service areas and if we can switch back over to the presentation on the computer so our summary is the snow pack is deteriorating at this point. we'll continue to update you on the situation. any questions? >> thank you so much. no questions. >> the last item is the unbalanced policy report by charles perl. >> good afternoon commissioners charles perl deputy chief
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financial officer this item today is a quick update of commission policy progress reports that you requested we bring forward to you and if the content or format needs revisions or updates just let us know we'd be happy to incorporate that in the subsequent presentations and the first one is the fund balance reserve policy and as a reminder government accounting is fund based and the puc has 3 funds water sewer and power, the fund balances are considered our savings account representing cash leftover each year after paying our bills to our vendors and our reserve policy is to set a target for keeping a certain amount in a savings account in order to offset the rate setting as well
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as to accommodate emergencies and un expected expenses. so this commission took action 5 years ago in 2010 to set our fund balance reserve policy and we consider that as that as a prudent fiscal management practice and you might recognize the check boxes we've tried to incorporate this graphic in our reports that we show you each quarter and what this is doing is taking our policy and incorporating it into our documents that we share with you so our budget variance report and 10-year financial plan etc. and this is showing the policy that we set is set to meet or exceed 15 percent of our annual revenues and 15 percent of our annual expense and the 1.25 debt
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service cover ratio and generally means 2 months worth of operating reserves and what that means is we have a cash kush a a cash cushion of 2 months reserves and we'll be able to repay the bonds. >> in terms of of the objectives that we had at at the time and they remain just as relevant today to maintain operating reserves from and protecting the rate payer and making sure you have money set
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side in your savings account and it's good for long-term planning and so no need and in terms of of progress we've had lots of success in implementing this and since 2011 we've rolled this into 10-year financial plans. all of these show that we've been incorporating this policy into our fiscal planning and it also provides clear guidance to our credit markets when we go to issue bonds and the rating agencies and credit markets like to see that we're planning for prudent fiscal emergencies and our other needs similar to drought and that sort of thing and the 1.25 threshold also does setting the policy