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Bill > HF2581
IA HF2581
IA HF2581A bill for an act establishing procedures for system enhancement of infrastructure, including for development of ratemaking principles permitted for recovery costs of certain investments in infrastructure by water and wastewater utilities.(Formerly HF 2032.)
summary
Introduced
02/18/2026
02/18/2026
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill establishes procedures for system enhancement of infrastructure, including the development of ratemaking principles permitted for the recovery costs of certain investments in infrastructure by water and wastewater utilities. The bill states the intent of the general assembly that these mechanisms be available to support the development and sustainability of adequate and resilient water and wastewater treatment facilities, and provides that the commission is not bound by traditional ratemaking principles when evaluating system enhancement infrastructure. The bill defines terms, including “system enhancement costs” and “system enhancement improvement”. System enhancement costs include depreciation expenses, operation and maintenance expenses, restoration costs, and property taxes, but exclude fines and penalties. System enhancement improvements include a water or wastewater utility plant project that constructs infrastructure necessary to comply with federal, state, or local requirements or relocates utility infrastructure necessary to accommodate required public improvement projects when the relocation costs are not reimbursed. Utility plants included in an eligible utility’s most recent rate base are excluded from the definition. The bill requires an eligible utility to obtain commission approval of a plan before seeking recovery of system enhancement costs through a system enhancement charge. The bill requires the commission to dismiss an application for a plan if the utility has not received a final order in a general rate case for the same type of utility service within the previous five years. The bill requires an application for approval of a plan to include projected annual capital expenditures, estimated operation and maintenance costs, a description of the age or condition of the existing infrastructure, applicable legal or regulatory requirements and any consent decrees, a description of how proposed improvements enable compliance, alternative compliance options considered, an engineering evaluation and report identifying system enhancement improvements along with cost estimates and estimated in-service dates, any blanket-type work order and its associated proposed cost, proposed rate schedules for the system enhancement charge, and the estimated rate impact of the charge. The bill requires the application to be a contested case, and the commission must issue a final order within 10 months of filing. The bill requires the commission, when reviewing the plan and corresponding system enhancement charge, to make reasonable efforts to ensure that the utility is in compliance with the requirements and allows the commission to consider if the plan consists of system enhancement improvements, includes cost estimates that allow reasonable assessment, and will result in rates that are just and reasonable. The bill restricts the commission from disapproving a plan on the basis of one or more service enhancements, but allows the commission to approve plans subject to removal of the service enhancement improvements that do not satisfy the criteria. The bill requires a utility providing both water and wastewater service to submit separate plans for each service. Following approval of a plan, the bill requires an eligible utility to file an annual application to establish or adjust a system enhancement charge. The charge must be calculated as a fixed monthly charge based on meter size, shall not include recovery of costs recovered through contributions in aid of construction, must recover system enhancement costs incurred prior to filing that have not been previously recovered, and must reflect costs for system enhancement improvements placed in service before the filing date. The bill requires the annual application to include a breakdown of costs for each improvement with a project’s status of completion, and actual costs incurred. The bill prohibits the commission from authorizing an adjustment to a system enhancement charge if the utility has not received a final order in a general rate case within the previous five years. The bill requires petitions under the bill to follow publication of notice requirements. The bill requires a system enhancement charge to reset to zero upon approval of new basic rates and charges for the eligible utility in a general rate case in which the system enhancement improvements are included in the utility’s rate base. The bill authorizes the commission to adopt rules establishing procedures to implement the bill.
AI Summary
This bill establishes a new process for water and wastewater utilities to recover costs associated with improving their infrastructure, aiming to ensure adequate and resilient water and wastewater treatment facilities. It allows for "alternative ratemaking mechanisms," meaning the commission overseeing utilities (referred to as "the commission") is not strictly bound by traditional methods when evaluating these infrastructure upgrades. The bill defines "system enhancement costs" as expenses like depreciation, operation, maintenance, and property taxes related to these improvements, but specifically excludes fines and penalties. "System enhancement improvements" are defined as projects to build new infrastructure to meet federal, state, or local requirements for health, safety, or environmental protection, or to relocate existing infrastructure for public projects when not otherwise reimbursed. Before a utility can charge customers for these costs through a "system enhancement charge," it must get approval from the commission for a multiyear "plan" outlining the proposed improvements. This plan requires detailed information, including projected costs, descriptions of existing infrastructure, compliance with regulations, and proposed rate changes. The commission must review these plans and charges to ensure they are reasonable and lead to just and reasonable rates, though it cannot reject a plan solely because of service enhancements that don't meet specific criteria. Utilities must file annual applications to adjust these charges, which are calculated as a fixed monthly fee based on meter size and must account for previously unrecovered costs. The bill also includes provisions for notice to the public and states that the system enhancement charge will reset to zero once new basic rates are approved in a general rate case.
Sponsors (0)
No sponsors listed
Other Sponsors (1)
Commerce (House)
Last Action
Introduced, placed on calendar. H.J. 330. (on 02/18/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=HF2581 |
| BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/HF2581.html |
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