Wisconsin Code § 196.194

Gas utility individual contracts
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
Nothing in ss.
196.03, 196.19, 196.20, 196.22, 196.37, 196.60, 196.604 and
196.625 prohibits the commission from approving the filing of a
tariff which permits a gas utility to enter into an individual contract with an individual customer if the term of the contract is no
more than 5 years, or a longer period approved by the commission, and if the commission determines that substitute gas services are available to customers or potential customers of the gas
utility and the absence of such a tariff will cause the gas utility to
be disadvantaged in competing for business. A tariff filed under
this section shall include the condition that any such contract
shall be compensatory. The tariff shall include any other condition and procedure required by the commission in the public interest. Within 20 days after a contract authorized under this section or an amendment to such a contract has been executed, the
gas utility shall submit the contract to the commission. The commission shall give notice to any person, upon request, that a contract authorized under this section has been received by the commission. The notice shall identify the gas utility that has entered
into the contract. Within 6 months after receiving substantial evidence that a contract may be noncompensatory, or upon its own
motion, the commission shall investigate and determine whether
the contract is compensatory. If the commission determines that
the contract is noncompensatory, the commission may make appropriate adjustments in the rates or tariffs of the gas utility that
has entered into the contract, in addition to other remedies under
this chapter. The dollar amount of the adjustment may not be less
than the amount by which the contract was found to be
noncompensatory.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.