PUCs at 2000 - Question OneState Commissioners

Fortnightly Magazine - November 15 1995
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Question: Will your commission still be around in the year 2000? If so, what will it look like? Are you restructuring your commission with the same fervor you devote to electricity, gas, and telecommunications?Response by Nancy McCaffree, Chair, Montana Public Service Commission:

As a regulator I have had the opportunity to listen to economists, energy planners, and other professional soothsayers. I have come to the conclusion that the only certainty pertaining to future forecasts is that they will be wrong 100 percent of the time. Therefore, I am safe in making my own predictions, knowing that I will fare as well as any. Like many forecasters who want to narrow the odds (and presumably keep their jobs), I offer two different scenarios. There are simply too many variables that must be settled in the latter half of the 90's that will determine what regulation will look at in 2000.

I believe the Montana PSC will still be in business as the new millennium dawns. My first scenario follows conventional wisdom and predicts that our PSC will be around, but a mere shadow of its former self. Form will have followed function, and increased competition in the utility sector means the MPSC will oversee fewer companies and markets. Remaining regulated companies and markets will transform oversight from rate-base, rate-of-return regulation to some alternative regulatory model that includes price caps and pricing flexibility. Regulation will largely be centered around retail electric distribution companies and limited review of natural gas services. The MPSC will also act as arbiter in the endless spats that will take place in the telephone industry over interconnection and access rates.

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