[ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                            LBD03808-06-1
 S. 5451--A                          2
 
 legislature finds and declares that it  is  unknown  to  the  state  the
 number  of New Yorkers who had their services terminated or disconnected
 during the pandemic. The legislature finds that many  utility  customers
 rely  on  continuous  service  for heat, water, and electricity to power
 necessary equipment, such as life-saving health care devices  and  other
 New  Yorkers  require  cooling  during  extreme heat conditions and heat
 during extreme cold conditions, particularly when congregate care  cool-
 ing  and heating facilities are not safe for use by medically vulnerable
 households.  Now, as vaccine approvals and distributions signal a poten-
 tial end to the pandemic, the legislature finds and declares that it  is
 imperative to ascertain the disruptive effects the pandemic had on util-
 ity  customers'  finances,  and  utility finances and services,  so that
 evidence-based policy can be properly crafted thereafter.
 
                                  PART A
 
   Section 1. 1. As used in this act:
   a. "Assistance program" shall mean any  program  offered  to  eligible
 low-income  customers  to  assist  with  the  costs of electricity, gas,
 water, and telephone including but not limited to  the  low-income  home
 energy   assistance  program,  any  low-income  affordability  plans  as
 provided by public service commission case number 14-M-0565, and/or  any
 other  financial  assistance  program  provided through or by individual
 utilities, counties or municipalities.
   b. "COVID-19 state of emergency" shall mean the state  disaster  emer-
 gency declared pursuant to executive order 202 of 2020.
   c. "Department" shall mean the department of public service.
   d.  "Municipality"  shall  have  the same meaning as subdivision 16 of
 section 2 of the public service law  and  shall  include  potable  water
 districts  and  potable  water  systems owned and/or operated by a city,
 town, village, authority or other governmental subdivision.
   e. "Telephone corporation" shall have the same meaning as  subdivision
 17 of section 2 of the public service law.
   f. "Utility" shall mean a municipality, telephone corporation, utility
 corporation,  steam  corporation,  water-works  corporation, an electric
 corporation as defined in subdivision 13 of  section  2  of  the  public
 service law, a gas corporation as defined in subdivision 11 of section 2
 of the public service law, a combination gas and electric corporation as
 defined  in  subdivision  14  of  section 2 of the public service law, a
 steam corporation as defined in subdivision  22  of  section  2  of  the
 public service law and any other community water system as defined in 10
 NYCRR § 5-1.1.
   g.  "Utility  corporation" shall have the same meaning as subdivisions
 23 and 24 of section 2 of the public service law.
   h. "Water-works corporation" shall have the same meaning  as  subdivi-
 sion 27 of section 2 of the public service law.
   2. a. Within 45 days after the effective date of this act, the depart-
 ment  shall  prepare  and  submit  to the governor and the legislature a
 written report that shall make findings and  recommendations  concerning
 the  effect  the COVID-19 state of emergency has had on the provision by
 utilities of electric, gas, water, and telephone service  to  commercial
 and  residential  customers  in  this  state. An updated report shall be
 submitted monthly until 180 days after the end of the COVID-19 state  of
 emergency.    Following  the  lifting or expiry of the COVID-19 state of
 emergency, each utility shall quarterly for a period of three years,  or
 until  such  covered entity ceases to provide service in New York state,
 S. 5451--A                          3
 
 file with the department  the  information  required  pursuant  to  this
 subdivision.    Without  unreasonably exposing consumer personally iden-
 tifiable information in a  manner  that  violates  public  service  law,
 department  and  public  service commission practice or federal law, the
 reports shall include but not be limited  to  the  following,  with  all
 information  to  be  broken  down  by utility, type of service provided,
 month, customer class, governmental subdivision, zip code,  county,  and
 United  States  Census  American  Community Survey Public Use Micro-data
 Area:
   (1) the number of customers and how that number compares to the previ-
 ous year's number of customers at the same time;
   (2) the number of  disconnection  notices  sent  due  to  non-payment,
 disconnections  due to non-payment, reconnections of customers that were
 disconnected for non-payment, average time between service disconnection
 due to non-payment and  service  reconnection,  and  how  those  numbers
 compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (3) the number of liens on real property placed, sold, or enforced due
 to  non-payment,  and  how those numbers compare to the previous year at
 the same time;
   (4) the number of customers in arrears  by,  1-30  days,  31-59  days,
 60-89 days, 90-119 days, 120-149 days, 150-179 days and greater than 180
 days  at the end of each month, the total dollar amount owed and average
 amount owed per customer in each of  those  categories,  and  how  those
 numbers compare to the previous year at the same time.  Provided, howev-
 er,  that  a  utility  or municipality may petition the department, in a
 form and manner to be determined by the department, to allow such utili-
 ty or municipality to provide such data in an alternative format if  the
 specificity  set  forth  in this act cannot be obtained from an existing
 utility information technology system and such data would result in  the
 increase of customer utility bills;
   (5) the number of customers that became eligible for disconnection due
 to  bill  non-payment  but  were not disconnected because of any legally
 mandated or voluntary suspension of disconnections due to  the  COVID-19
 state  of emergency, or for any other statutory, regulatory or voluntary
 reason irrespective of the COVID-19 emergency, or such other  states  of
 emergency as may follow the end of the COVID-19 emergency;
   (6)  the  number  of  customers  that  declared  a change in financial
 circumstances due  to  the  COVID-19  state  of  emergency  pursuant  to
 sections 32, 89-b, 89-l and 91 of the public service law;
   (7) the number of customers enrolled in deferred payment agreements at
 the  end  of  each month, the total dollar amount of arrears and average
 amount of arrears per customer subject to such agreements,  the  average
 length  of  the  repayment  term  under  such  agreements, and how those
 numbers compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (8) the number of customers that entered into, successfully completed,
 or defaulted from a deferred payment agreement, the total dollar  amount
 of  arrears  and  average amount of arrears per customer subject to such
 agreements, and how those numbers compare to the previous  year  at  the
 same time;
   (9)  available customer assistance programs, including terms of eligi-
 bility, available budget for each program, and any enhancements  to  the
 programs  that have been made or are planned to address actual or antic-
 ipated increased demand;
   (10) the number of customers that  applied  for  financial  assistance
 under  each applicable assistance program, and how those numbers compare
 to the previous year at the same time;
 S. 5451--A                          4
 
   (11) the number of customers receiving assistance under  each  assist-
 ance  program  at  the  end  of  each  month, the total dollar amount of
 assistance provided for arrears and the average amount per customer, the
 total dollar amount of assistance provided for current or  future  bills
 and  the  average  amount per customer, and how those numbers compare to
 the previous year at the same time;
   (12) the number of customers  charged  late  fees,  penalties,  recon-
 nection  fees,  interest,  and  any  other  charge  associated with late
 payment;
   (13) the total dollar amount of late fees, penalties, interest, recon-
 nection fees and any other  charge  associated  with  late  payment  per
 customer,  and  the  average  amount  of late fees, penalties, interest,
 reconnection fees and any other charge associated with late payment  and
 how those numbers compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (14)  the average and median dollar amount billed to customer accounts
 and the average and median utility usage per customer account,  and  how
 those numbers compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (15)  the  total  dollar amounts billed to and collected from customer
 accounts and how those amounts compare to the previous year at the  same
 time,  except that such data need not be broken down by municipality and
 zip code, and United States Census American Community Survey Public  Use
 Micro-data Area within the service area of a utility;
   (16)  the  methods and contents of general communications by utilities
 to customer accounts concerning their rights  and  available  assistance
 programs, excluding any customer-specific communications;
   (17)  the department's assessment of whether existing customer assist-
 ance programs are presently and will in the future be sufficient to meet
 the financial needs of customer accounts in arrears who  are  unable  to
 pay those arrears in full, as well as the needs of customer accounts who
 may be unable to pay bills for current service;
   (18)  each utility's revenue, including sales revenue and operating or
 net revenue information, and how those numbers compare to  the  previous
 year at the same time; and
   (19)  each  utility's  schedule  of  rates  and charges, provided that
 "rates" means the fixed component, if any, and the volumetric  or  other
 variable component, if any, of the cost of service that are applied to a
 category  of  customers and "charges" means amounts that are billed to a
 customer under specific circumstances  that  are  not  included  in  the
 provider's   base  rate  including,  but  not  limited  to,  late  fees,
 connection fees, impact fees for new development, deposits  for  opening
 new accounts and any other fees, surcharges or penalties.
   b.  Each  utility  shall, within 30 days of the effective date of this
 act, and monthly thereafter until 180 days after the end of the COVID-19
 state of emergency, file with the  department,  in  a  form  and  manner
 determined by the department, the information required pursuant to para-
 graph  a  of  this subdivision.   Following the lifting or expiry of the
 COVID-19 state of emergency, each utility shall quarterly for  a  period
 of  three  years, or until such covered entity ceases to provide service
 in New York state, file with the  department  the  information  required
 pursuant  to paragraph a of this subdivision. Each utility shall publish
 on its website the data it reports pursuant to  this  paragraph,  simul-
 taneously with submission of the data to the department.
   3. If the data required by this act cannot reasonably be obtained from
 an existing utility information technology system without an increase in
 customer  utility  bills,  a  utility  or  municipality may petition the
 S. 5451--A                          5
 
 department, in a form and manner to be determined by the department,  to
 provide the required data in an alternative format.
   4.  The  department  shall publish on its website the reports required
 pursuant to subdivision two of this  section,  simultaneously  with  the
 submission  of  each report.  The reports shall include presentations of
 the information required pursuant to subdivision two of this section  in
 a spreadsheet format.
   § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
                                  PART B
 
   Section 1. 1. As used in this act:
   a.  "Assistance  program"  shall  mean any program offered to eligible
 low-income customers to assist with the costs of wastewater services.
   b. "COVID-19 state of emergency" shall mean the state  disaster  emer-
 gency declared pursuant to executive order 202 of 2020.
   c.  "Department"  shall mean the department of environmental conserva-
 tion.
   d. "Municipality" shall mean a county, city, town or village and shall
 include wastewater districts and systems  owned  and/or  operated  by  a
 city, town, village, authority or other governmental subdivision.
   e.  "Utility"  shall  mean  a  municipality  or other entity providing
 wastewater services to customers in the state.
   2. a. Within 45 days after the effective date of this act, the depart-
 ment shall prepare and submit to the  governor  and  the  legislature  a
 written  report  that shall make findings and recommendations concerning
 the effect the COVID-19 state of  emergency  Following  the  lifting  or
 expiry  of the COVID-19 state of emergency, each utility shall quarterly
 for a period of three years, or until  such  covered  entity  ceases  to
 provide service in New York state, file with the department the informa-
 tion    required  pursuant  to  this subdivision.   Without unreasonably
 exposing consumer personally identifiable information in a  manner  that
 violates  public  service  law, department and public service commission
 practice or federal law, the reports shall include but not be limited to
 the following, with all information to be broken down by  utility,  type
 of  service  provided,  month,  customer  class, municipality, zip code,
 county, and United States Census American Community  Survey  Public  Use
 Micro-data Area:
   (1) the number of customers and how that number compares to the previ-
 ous year's number of customers at the same time;
   (2)  the  number  of  disconnection  notices  sent due to non-payment,
 disconnections due to non-payment, reconnections of customers that  were
 disconnected for non-payment, average time between service disconnection
 due  to  non-payment  and  service  reconnection,  and how those numbers
 compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (3) the number of liens on real property placed, sold, or enforced due
 to non-payment, and how those numbers compare to the  previous  year  at
 the same time;
   (4) the number of customers in arrears by 1-30 days, 31-59 days, 60-89
 days,  90-119 days, 120-149 days, 150-179 days and greater than 180 days
 at the end of each month, the  total  dollar  amount  owed  and  average
 amount  owed  per  customer  in  each of those categories, and how those
 numbers compare to the previous year at the same time.  Provided, howev-
 er, that a utility or municipality may petition  the  department,  in  a
 form and manner to be determined by the department, to allow such utili-
 ty  or municipality to provide such data in an alternative format if the
 S. 5451--A                          6
 specificity set forth in this act cannot be obtained  from  an  existing
 utility  information technology system and such data would result in the
 increase of customer utility bills;
   (5) the number of customers that became eligible for disconnection due
 to  bill  nonpayment  but  were  not disconnected because of any legally
 mandated or voluntary suspension of disconnections due to  the  COVID-19
 state  of emergency, or for any other statutory, regulatory or voluntary
 reason irrespective of the COVID-19 emergency, or such other  states  of
 emergency as may follow the end of the COVID-19 emergency;
   (6)  the  number  of  customers  that  declared  a change in financial
 circumstances due to the COVID-19 state of emergency;
   (7) the number of customers enrolled in deferred payment agreements at
 the end of each month, the total dollar amount of  arrears  and  average
 amount  of  arrears per customer subject to such agreements, the average
 length of the repayment  term  under  such  agreements,  and  how  those
 numbers compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (8) the number of customers that entered into, successfully completed,
 or  defaulted from a deferred payment agreement, the total dollar amount
 of arrears and average amount of arrears per customer  subject  to  such
 agreements,  and  how  those numbers compare to the previous year at the
 same time;
   (9) available customer assistance programs, including terms of  eligi-
 bility,  available  budget for each program, and any enhancements to the
 programs that have been made or are planned to address actual or  antic-
 ipated increased demand;
   (10)  the  number  of  customers that applied for financial assistance
 under each applicable assistance program, and how those numbers  compare
 to the previous year at the same time;
   (11)  the  number of customers receiving assistance under each assist-
 ance program at the end of  each  month,  the  total  dollar  amount  of
 assistance  provided  for arrears, the total dollar amount of assistance
 provided for current or future bills and the average amount per  custom-
 er, and how that number compares to the previous year at the same time;
   (12)  the  number  of  customers  charged late fees, penalties, recon-
 nection fees, interest,  and  any  other  charge  associated  with  late
 payment;
   (13)  the  total  dollar  amount of late fees, penalties, reconnection
 fees, interest and any other charge associated  with  late  payment  per
 customer,  and  the average amount of late fees, penalties, reconnection
 fees, interest, and any other charge associated with  late  payment  and
 how those numbers compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (14)  the average and median dollar amount billed to customer accounts
 and the average and median utility usage per customer account,  and  how
 those numbers compare to the previous year at the same time;
   (15)  the  total  dollar amounts billed to and collected from customer
 accounts and how those amounts compare to the previous year at the  same
 time,  except that such data need not be broken down by municipality and
 zip code, and United States Census American Community Survey Public  Use
 Micro-data Area within the service area of a utility;
   (16)  the  methods and contents of general communications by utilities
 to customer accounts concerning their rights  and  available  assistance
 programs, excluding any customer-specific communications;
   (17)  the department's assessment of whether existing customer assist-
 ance programs are presently and will in the future be sufficient to meet
 the financial needs of customer accounts in arrears who  are  unable  to
 S. 5451--A                          7
 
 pay those arrears in full, as well as the needs of customer accounts who
 may be unable to pay bills for current service;
   (18)  each utility's revenue, including sales revenue and operating or
 net revenue information, and how those numbers compare to  the  previous
 year at the same time; and
   (19)  each  utility's  schedule  of  rates  and charges, provided that
 "rates" means the fixed component, if any, and the volumetric  or  other
 variable component, if any, of the cost of service that are applied to a
 category  of  customers  and "charges" mean amounts that are billed to a
 customer under specific circumstances  that  are  not  included  in  the
 provider's   base  rate  including,  but  not  limited  to,  late  fees,
 connection fees, impact fees for new development, deposits  for  opening
 new accounts, and any other fees, surcharges, or penalties.
   b.  Each  utility  shall, within 30 days of the effective date of this
 act, and monthly thereafter until 180 days after the end of the COVID-19
 state of emergency, file with the  department,  in  a  form  and  manner
 determined by the department, the information required pursuant to para-
 graph  a  of  this subdivision.   Following the lifting or expiry of the
 COVID-19 state of emergency, each utility shall quarterly for  a  period
 of  three  years, or until such covered entity ceases to provide service
 in New York state, file with the  department  the  information  required
 pursuant to paragraph a of this subdivision.  Each utility shall publish
 on  its  website  the data it reports pursuant to this paragraph, simul-
 taneously with submission of the data to the department.
   3. If the data required by this act cannot reasonably be obtained from
 an existing utility information technology system without an increase in
 customer utility bills, a  utility  or  municipality  may  petition  the
 department,  in a form and manner to be determined by the department, to
 provide the required data in an alternative format.
   4. The department shall publish on its website  the  reports  required
 pursuant  to  subdivision  two  of this section, simultaneously with the
 submission of each report.  The reports shall include  presentations  of
 the  information required pursuant to subdivision two of this section in
 a spreadsheet format.
   § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
   § 3. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi-
 sion, section or part of this act shall be  adjudged  by  any  court  of
 competent  jurisdiction  to  be invalid, such judgment shall not affect,
 impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall  be  confined  in
 its  operation  to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section
 or part thereof directly involved in the controversy in which such judg-
 ment shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of
 the legislature that this act would  have  been  enacted  even  if  such
 invalid provisions had not been included herein.
   §  4.  This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that
 the applicable effective date of Parts A through B of this act shall  be
 as specifically set forth in the last section of such Parts.