West Virginia Code § 24-2-1n

West Virginia Business Ready Sites Program
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(a) The Legislature finds and declares that:
(1) Presently, West Virginia's available industrial sites lack competitiveness with industrial
sites in surrounding states due in part to the lack of presently constructed, adequate utility
infrastructure serving sites having industrial potential;
(2) Having construction-ready industrial sites with adequately developed utility
infrastructure will increase the state's potential to attract new industrial projects to the state
and advance the state's economic development efforts; u
(3) Incentivizing utilities to construct adequate public utility infrastructure and provide
services to sites identified as having industrial potential will increase the likelihood that such
sites are developed; and a
(4) Responsibly increasing the number of industriall sites with adequate and fully developed
utility services is in the public interest of the state.
(b) Definitions. – For the purpose of this section:
"Industrial Development Agency" means any individual, incorporated organization,
foundation, association, private incorporated entity, or agency to whose members or
shareholders no profit inures, which has as its primary function the promotion,
encouragement, and development of industrial, commercial, manufacturing, and tourist
enterprises or projects in this state;
"Industrial Developm ent Site" means a land development containing a minimum of 50
contiguous acres that is identified by the secretary as having potential for industrial
development and that does not currently have adequate public utility services from one or
more public utilities regulated by the Public Service Commission;
"Secretary" means the Secretary of the Department of Commerce; and
"Utility" means electricity, natural gas, water, or sewage service provided by a public utility
regulated by the Public Service Commission.
(c) The secretary shall administer a program known hereafter as "The West Virginia
Business Ready Sites Program" for the purpose of promoting economic development in
certain areas of the state by facilitating the construction of utility infrastructure necessary to
increase the attractiveness of such sites for industrial development within the state.
(d) An industrial development agency may identify a potential industrial development site
and apply to the secretary for approval of the site as an industrial development site,
including recommendations as to any required criteria for utility service to the site.
(e) Upon receipt of the application, the secretary shall determine whether the potential
industrial development site has the attributes to accomplish the public purposes of this
section; and, upon determining that the site has such attributes, the secretary may certify
the site as an industrial development site subject to, at his or her discretion, all or some of
the identified required criteria for utility service and communicate such certification to the
Public Service Commission.
(f) After the Public Service Commission receives the certification described in subsection (e)
of this section, public utilities that are able to meet the required criterira, if any, may file with
the Public Service Commission an application for a multi-year comprehensive plan for
infrastructure development to construct public utility infrastructure and provide services to
industrial development sites. Subject to commission review and approval, a plan may be
amended and updated by the public utility as circumstancest warrant. The recovery of costs
in support of the plans shall be allowed in the manner set forth in this section if the proposed
plans have been found to be prudent and useful.
(g) The application submitted to the Public Service Commission under subsection (e) of this
section is in lieu of a proceeding, pursuant to s§24-2-11 of this code, and shall contain the
following:
(1) A description of the infrastructurge program, in such detail as the Public Service
Commission prescribes, and the projected annual amount in approximate line sizes and feet,
general location, type, and proejected installation timing of the facilities that the applicant
proposes to replace, construct, or improve;
(2) The projected net cost, on an annual basis, of the replacement, construction, or
improvements;
(3) The projected start date for the infrastructure program;
(4) The projected numbers of potential new customers that may be served by the
infrastructure program and the projected annual demand for public utility services of the
customers;
(5) The projected debt for the infrastructure program funding and the projected capital
structure for infrastructure program funding;
(6) A proposed full and timely cost recovery mechanism consistent with this section; and
(7) Other information the applicant considers relevant, or the Public Service Commission
requires.
(h) Upon filing of the application, the applicant shall publish, in the form the Public Service
Commission directs, which form shall include, but not be limited to, the anticipated rates
and, if any, rate increase under the proposal, by average percentage and dollar amount for
customers within a class of service, as a Class I legal advertisement in compliance with the
provisions of §59-3-1 et seq. of this code, the publication area to be each county in which
service is provided by the public utility, a notice of the filing of the application, and that the
commission shall hold a hearing on the application within 90 days of the notice; unless no
substantial opposition to the rate change is received by the commission within one week of
the proposed hearing date, in which case the hearing can be waived, and issue a final order
within 150 days of the application filing date.
(i) Upon notice and hearing, if required by the Public Service Commission, the commission
shall approve the infrastructure program and allow expedited recoveryr of costs related to
the expenditures, as provided in subsection (i) of this section, if the commission finds that
the expenditures and the associated rate requirements are just, reasonable, and are not
contrary to the public interest.
(j) Upon Public Service Commission approval, utilities will be authorized to implement the
infrastructure programs and to recover related incremental costs, net of contributions to
recovery of return, operation, and maintenance, depreciation and tax expenses directly
attributable to the infrastructure program served by the infrastructure program
investments, if any, as provided in the followinsg:
(1) An allowance for return shall be calculated by applying a rate of return to the average
planned net incremental increase tog rate base attributable to the infrastructure program for
the coming year, considering the projected amount and timing of expenditures under the
infrastructure program plus aney expenditures in previous years of the infrastructure
program. The rate of return shall be determined by utilizing the rate of return on equity
authorized by the PublicL Service Commission in the public utility's most recent rate case
proceeding or in the case of a settled rate case, a rate of return on equity as determined by
the commission, and the projected cost of the public utility's debt during the period of the
infrastructure program to determine the weighted cost of capital based upon the public
utility's capital structure.
(2) WIncome taxes applicable to the return allowed on the infrastructure program shall be
calculated at the statutory tax rate for inclusion in rates.
(3) Incremental operation and maintenance, depreciation, and property tax expenses directly
attributable to the infrastructure program shall be estimated for the upcoming year.
(4) Following Public Service Commission approval of its infrastructure program, a public
utility shall place into effect rates that include an increment that recovers the allowance for
return, related income taxes at the statutory rate, operation and maintenance, depreciation,
and property tax expenses associated with the public utility's estimated infrastructure
program investments for the upcoming year, net of contributions to recovery of those
incremental costs provided by new customers served by the infrastructure program
investments, if any. In each year subsequent to the order approving the infrastructure
program and the incremental cost recovery increment, the public utility shall file a petition
with the Public Service Commission setting forth a new proposed incremental cost recovery
increment based on investments to be made in the subsequent year, plus any under-recovery
or minus any over-recovery of actual incremental costs attributable to the infrastructure
program investments, for the preceding year.
(5) The facilities installed in an application approved by the Public Service Commission shall
be considered used and useful as of the date of construction expenditure for rate recovery.
(k) The public utility may make any accounting accruals necessary to establish a regulatory
asset or liability through which actual incremental costs incurred and costs recovered
through the rate mechanism are tracked.
(l) Utilities may defer incremental operation and maintenance expenditures attributable to
regulatory and compliance-related requirements introduced after the public utility's last rate
case proceeding and not included in the public utility's current rates. In a future rate case,
the Public Service Commission may allow recovery of tahe deferred costs amortized over a
reasonable period of time to be determined by the commission provided the commission
finds that the costs were reasonable and prudentlyl incurred and were not reflected in rates
in prior rate cases. s
(m) The provisions of this section are effeictive upon passage.

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