DISCLAIMER: The Arizona Corporation Commission makes this material available on the internet as a public service. Any material provided through this website is provided solely for informational purposes. No express or implied warranties are provided here. While the Commission makes best efforts to ensure that the contents of this website are accurate and current, the Commission makes no claims, guarantees, or promises about the accuracy, currency, or completeness of the information.
Certified copies of documents can be obtained by directly contacting the Commission’s Docket Control office (602-542-3477).
To obtain the schedule prescribed for any specific docket, refer to the Procedural Orders issued in the docket and any directives provided by the assigned Administrative Law Judge during a proceeding or the Commission during an Open Meeting. The Commission shall not be held responsible for a person’s failure to review such scheduling information.
General
eDocket is an electronic docket information management system accessible via the Commission’s website ( https://edocket.azcc.gov/).
The eDocket web site was designed to work best with Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome to provide the best user experience on the website, however other browsers may also be used. Adobe Acrobat Reader DC is the recommended version to print PDF documents and reports.
Most docket numbers have five elements. (Line-siting dockets have a sixth element at the end.) As an example, the Docket Number T-01234A-19-0021 would break down as follows:
T | 01234 | A | 19 | 0021 | XXXXX |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
The primary search options in eDocket are:
Within most of the search types, you can filter results based on criteria entered. Search page results are restricted to 500 records.
All documents filed in any docket since approximately 2000 are available as PDFs on eDocket, with the exception of Transcripts. Additionally, many Commission Decisions issued before 2000 are available as PDFs on eDocket. The Commission continues to add older Decisions to eDocket as time permits.
Older documents not yet available on eDocket are saved on microfilm in the Docket Control office and can be viewed during regular operating hours. Documents on microfilm may be printed at a cost of 10 cents per page.
Yes. If you enter the 5-digit Decision Number in the search box at the top right of the screen, the result will be “Document Details,” with three different tabs. The “Document” tab takes you to the PDF of the Decision (scroll down).
If you enter the year and matter numbers in the search box at the top right of the screen (e.g., "19-0021"), the result will be "Docket Details," with seven different tabs. The "Docket" tab takes you to general information about the docket, and the "Documents" tab takes you to a list of the documents filed in the docket to date (all of which are accessible as PDFs). There are also tabs for "Decisions and Votes" by the Commission, the "Case Schedule," the Commission "Staff Assigned," the case "Service List," and any "Linked Dockets."
Generally, no, not at this time. The Commission hopes to provide this enhancement in the future. However, it is possible to search for a docket using terms that are contained in the docket description. This is available on the “Docket Search” page accessed through the “Search” link at the top right of the main eDocket page or the large “Search” icon on the main area of the page.
Yes. If you know the year and matter numbers, enter them in the search box at the top right of the screen (e.g., "22-0144"). The result will be "Docket Details," with seven different tabs. Clicking on the "Case Schedule" tab takes you to a list of all calendar events that have been scheduled in the docket to date. Clicking on the "Details" icon for any event takes you to additional information such as any available public call-in number.
The Calendar link on the top right of the screen takes you to an interactive Calendar that features past and upcoming events and provides options for Month, Week, or Day views. Clicking on any day in the Month view gives you the day’s list of events, each of which is a link that takes you to a window with event details such as start time and any available call in number. The window also includes a "Docket Details" icon that will take you to the associated docket page. The Calendar can also be filtered by event type.
Additionally, the Search link on the top right of the screen takes you to a page with several search options, including an "Event Detail Search." Using this, you can search for different types of events falling within specified date parameters.
Another of the search options allows you to do a "Docket Search" by fields such as company name, docket type, and case type. Using this "Docket Search" with a company name (including well-established acronyms such as "APS") takes you to a list of all the dockets in which the company is involved. You can select the "Details" icon to learn more about any of the dockets listed.
You can also enter the company name (including well-established acronyms such as "APS") into the search box at the top right of the screen. This obtains the same type of result as a "Docket Search" done by company name.
***A party to a case should not rely on the eDocket Calendar or Event Detail Search functions for the procedural schedule in the case. Each party is responsible for being aware of each proceeding date and procedural deadline established in a case and must review each Procedural Order issued in the case and attend (or review the archive for) each proceeding held in the case to ensure such awareness.***
With two exceptions, PDFs of all documents filed with Docket Control are available on eDocket, after scanning (if applicable) and approval. On occasion, a PDF is not immediately viewable due to technical issues. These issues are usually corrected quickly.
Transcripts are not viewable on eDocket. Please refer to the section on Transcripts for additional information.
Additionally, Exhibits filed in a Securities docket are not viewable on eDocket. Access to Securities docket Exhibits is available at the Commission’s Docket Control.
All of the documents filed in a docket can be accessed using the Documents tab for the docket. Documents can be viewed and printed using a current or recent version of Adobe Acrobat Reader.
The ACC currently accepts eFilings in all dockets. For some types of documents, there is also a requirement for paper copies to be submitted to the ACC’s Docket Control. Those requirements are described here:
Paper filings are accepted at the Commission’s Docket Control at 1200 West Washington Street, Room 108, Phoenix, AZ 85007. Docket Control is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., except on official state holidays. Documents may be personally delivered or sent to the above address through the U.S. Postal Service or another delivery service. Paper filings are also accepted at the Commission’s Tucson Office, 400 West Congress Street, Suite 218, Tucson, AZ 85701. Paper filings submitted to the Tucson office are forwarded to Docket Control in Phoenix and will not be officially filed in the docket until received by Docket Control.
Current filing requirements for paper documents are set forth here:
https://azcc.gov/hearing/docket-control-center-filing-requirements
Documents accessed on eDocket can be printed using your own equipment or downloaded for printing elsewhere. If a document is not available as a PDF on eDocket, or you are unable to print it, you may:
For information on how to request complete and certified copies of documents, please contact Docket Control at (602) 542-3477 during normal business hours,
Or submit a written request for a certified document to:
Arizona Corporation Commission
Docket Control
1200 West Washington St.
Phoenix, AZ 85007
The Commission charges a $5.00 certification fee plus 50 cents per page for each document certified. Payment can be made by cash or check only. Checks must be made payable to the Arizona Corporation Commission.
No. Transcripts currently cannot be viewed on eDocket. Transcripts can be viewed at Docket Control during normal business hours. Transcripts can also be viewed at the Commission’s Tucson office if prior arrangements have been made. Docket Control allows up to 20 pages of a hearing Transcript to be printed at 10 cents per page (or 50 cents per page if Docket Control prints the pages upon request). To obtain more than 20 pages of a Transcript, please contact Glennie Reporting Services, LLC, the court reporting agency, at (602) 266-6535.
Lists of regulated utilities by type, with company numbers, are available at:
A downloadable eDocket User Guide is available on the eDocket home page: https://edocket.azcc.gov/assets/eDocketReferenceGuide.pdf. It explains how to navigate eDocket. In addition, Docket Control personnel are available Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., except on official state holidays, at (602) 542-3477. You may also contact Docket Control personnel by email using the Feedback link at the bottom of the eDocket page (also available here: https://edocket.azcc.gov/home/feedback). Docket Control personnel will respond to you by email as soon as feasible during normal hours of operation.
Case-Related Documents
An application is a filing in which a person specifically requests that the Commission grant the person a right, a certificate, a permit, another authority or approval, arbitration, or affirmative relief, other than in the context of a formal complaint. Some common examples are when a utility requests for its rates to be changed using a rate application or requests for its service area to be changed using a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity (“CC&N”) application.
A tariff is a document that outlines the terms and conditions – and frequently the prices charged – for services provided by a particular utility. Many utility tariffs are available on the Commission’s website by clicking on “Customer Assistance” and then “Find a Utility Tariff” and then the utility type (Electric, Gas, etc.) The Commission also has a tariff library in its Utilities Division where people can research approved tariffs.
This is an abbreviation for Certificate of Convenience and Necessity. It is the permit that allows a utility to serve a specific geographic area. Before a company can provide a regulated utility service (water, electric, natural gas, sewer, or non-Internet telephone service), it must first obtain a CC&N that outlines the territory and terms under which the territory is granted (including the rates to be charged).
An interconnection agreement establishes the specific terms and conditions under which one utility may connect its infrastructure to the infrastructure of another utility. These are most common in the telecommunications industry, when one company is interconnecting and using the “hardware and software” of another company.
Before a regulated utility can put all or part of its used and useful infrastructure up as collateral against a loan, or can enter into debt with a repayment term of 12 months or longer, it must submit a financing application and receive Commission approval. Financing applications are reviewed in detail to make sure ratepayers will somehow benefit from whatever changes or improvements come from the financing.
If a person has a problem with the way a utility is providing service or billing for service, the person can submit an informal complaint describing the problem to the Commission’s Consumer Services section. If the problem is specific to the person’s own service or billing from the utility, the Commission’s Consumer Services personnel will offer to assist in resolving the problem. Consumer Services will provide the informal complaint issue to the utility for response to the customer and Consumer Services. Consumer Services may also serve as an intermediary, and possibly even an arbitrator, in an attempt to resolve the problem without the need for a formal complaint and evidentiary hearing. The informal complaint form is available here:
https://efiling.azcc.gov/online-services/utilities-complaint-external
More information is available on the Utilities Division Consumer Services page:
If a person is not satisfied after trying to resolve a problem directly with a utility or through an informal complaint submitted to Consumer Services, the person has the right to file a formal complaint under A.R.S. § 40-246. In a formal complaint, the person (“complainant”) must include the name of the utility; a detailed written description of the problem, explaining what the complainant has done to address the problem so far; the specific statutes or Commission rules that the complainant believes the utility has violated; and the specific resolution the complainant is seeking. A complainant should not seek monetary damages, as the Commission legally cannot award such damages, but can seek reimbursement if the complainant believes that overbilling has occurred.
The Commission can also file a formal complaint against a company for failing to comply with Arizona statutes or Commission rules.
The process for a formal complaint is similar to a court case. The complainant and the utility will testify in front of an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) during an evidentiary hearing. The complainant bears the burden of proof as to the assertions made against the utility in the formal complaint. After the hearing, the ALJ will prepare recommendations for the Commissioners in the form of a Recommended Opinion and Order (“ROO”), which will be provided to the complainant and utility. The Commissioners will consider and vote on the ROO at a public Open Meeting.
More information is available on the Utilities Division Consumer Services page:
An Order to Show Cause is filed by a Commission Division when it believes that a utility or another regulated entity has committed willful or serious violations of Arizona statutes or Commission rules. This is the most serious form of complaint that can be filed against a utility. An Order to Show Cause requires the utility to provide why it has acted or failed to act – in other words, to show cause as to why the utility should not be sanctioned for violating statutes or rules.
A motion to intervene is a request filed by an individual or entity that desires to become a party to a case. Becoming a party confers certain rights and responsibilities. For information about intervention, please go to:
Testimony is oral or written statements presented under oath by a witness to answer questions about the factual basis for a party’s position in a particular case. Most of the documents labeled as “testimony” in eDocket are pre-filed written testimony that parties were required to file before a hearing. Transcripts memorialize the oral testimony by and cross examination of witnesses that takes place during a hearing.
"Exceptions" is the term used for a document filed within a specified period after a Recommended Order ("RO") or Recommended Opinion and Order ("ROO") has been filed by an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ"), or a Proposed Order has been filed by a Commission Division, in which a party outlines the party’s disagreement with the recommendations made by the ALJ or the Commission Division. Only a party to a case may file exceptions. The deadline for exceptions to a ROO/RO/Proposed Order is included on a cover letter or memo to the ROO/RO/Proposed Order when it is filed. Although only a party may file exceptions, a non-party may file public comments in response to a ROO/RO/Proposed Order.
A Procedural Order issued in a case, or an applicable Commission rule, may require a utility to publish notice of its application in a newspaper/s within the affected area or to provide specific notice using another method/s. An affidavit of public notice or an affidavit of publication is a notarized document setting forth the notice that has been provided, to whom it was provided, the date it was provided, and the manner in which it was provided. An affidavit of publication must be obtained from a newspaper publisher.
A motion is a formal request for the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) to take a specific action or to rule on some aspect of a case. A party to a case should file a motion whenever the party desires for the ALJ to act or make a ruling. A party must ensure that the party’s motion conforms as closely as practicable to the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure.
Public comments can include statements, letters, petitions, or other forms of communication about a case that are filed by non-parties. Public comments often include questions, concerns, or other statements filed by persons who could be affected by the outcome of a case.
Monitoring or Participating in a Commission Case
Live stream proceedings here:
A person can receive notice of each filing made in a case by following the docket for the case.
Follow a docket here:
https://efiling.azcc.gov/cases
Intervention is a process that allows a person who is not an original party to a case, but who will be directly and substantially affected by the outcome, to participate in the case as a party. The Commission’s rule on intervention is Arizona Administrative Code (“A.A.C.”) R14-3-105, available here.
Example: In a utility rate case, the original parties are the applicant utility and the Commission’s Utilities Division (“Staff”). Sometimes a utility customer whose budget would be significantly affected by the rates proposed in the application desires to present the Commission evidence specifically related to the impact that the rates would have on the customer. To be able to do this, the customer would need to request and be granted intervention, which would make the customer a party to the case—an intervenor. Like the utility and Staff, an intervenor can provide evidence and cross-examine other parties’ witnesses.
In a case that will have a hearing, the presiding Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) will issue a Procedural Order that schedules the case for hearing. The Procedural Order typically includes a specific deadline to request intervention. If no intervention deadline is specified by Procedural Order, a request to intervene should be filed at least 5 days before the hearing commences. (See A.A.C. R14-3-105.) Even for cases that will not have a hearing, and for which no scheduling Procedural Order is issued, a person who will be directly and substantially affected may request to intervene. A person desiring to intervene should file a request to intervene as promptly as possible after learning of a case.
An intervenor is a party to the case, just like the regulated entity, Staff, and any other party of record. Party status comes with both rights and responsibilities.
It provides the right:
• to participate in discovery to learn about other parties’ cases
• to file motions requesting the ALJ to take a specific action, order another to do a specific action, or authorize a specific change in process or schedule (e.g., motion to dismiss, motion for an extension of time)
• to present evidence, through witnesses and documents
• to cross-examine other parties’ witnesses
• to file Exceptions to a Recommended Opinion and Order (the ALJ’s order)
• to request rehearing of a Commission Decision
• to appeal a Commission Decision
It creates the responsibility:
• to participate in discovery so that other parties can learn about the intervenor’s case
• to attend and participate in all proceedings (procedural conferences, prehearing conferences, the hearing, and the Open Meeting/s at which the Commission discusses the ALJ’s order), unless excused from doing so
• to make all required filings and serve the other parties with all filings made by the intervenor
• to be organized and come prepared for any hearing or other proceeding
• to make available before hearing, or as otherwise ordered by the ALJ, all necessary documents (generally exhibits and an exhibit list) with the number of copies ordered
• to make available at hearing any necessary witnesses to present the intervenor’s case
• to have the intervenor’s witnesses subjected to cross-examination
• to comply with the Commission’s rules for practice and procedure and with all Procedural Orders
An intervenor is a party to a case, with all the rights and responsibilities that entails (see above). A person providing public comment is not a party to a case and does not have those rights and responsibilities.
A person who does not desire to intervene, or who is ineligible to intervene, still has an opportunity to provide the Commission information about a case, by providing oral or written public comment or both.
Public comment, whether made in person or in writing, becomes part of the official docketed record of the case. Public comment is not admitted as evidence, however, and is not afforded the weight of sworn testimony because public commenters are not under oath and are not subject to cross-examination. Nonetheless, all public comment received can and may be considered by the ALJ and the Commission when considering a case.
A person who is not an intervenor can attend hearings to observe and to provide public comment at the time allotted, but cannot provide any testimony or other evidence or participate in the questioning of witnesses. To be permitted to question witnesses and provide evidence on the record, a person must file a request to intervene and be granted intervenor status (i.e., party status).
You can take advantage of the opportunities to provide oral public comment afforded by the Commission. Usually, interested persons have an opportunity to provide public comment on the first day of an evidentiary hearing involving a utility. In some cases, the Commission schedules separate public comment proceedings to hear what the public has to say about a case. At each of
these, each person indicating a desire to speak (generally by signing up to speak) is called upon, in turn, to provide comment.
You can submit written public comment to the Commission by:
You can also submit public comment to the Commission’s Consumer Services Section telephonically. Consumer Services will convert the comments into writing and file them in the appropriate docket. The Commission’s Consumer Services Section can be reached by phone as follows:
In addition, at the discretion of the Commissioners, interested persons may have an opportunity to provide public comment during Open Meeting when the Commission schedules the case for discussion and/or vote. To learn how to sign up in advance to provide public comment at an Open Meeting, see Can I attend the Open Meeting remotely? For additional information on public comment at Open Meetings, see the Commission’s “Rules for Public Comment.”
However you submit your public comment, you should include at least:
* If you do not include the docket number for the case, Commission personnel may not be able to identify which case your comments discuss, and your comments may not be filed in the correct docket.
Intervention is not automatic. You will not be granted intervention unless your request is timely, you have demonstrated a direct and substantial interest in the outcome of the case, and your intervention would not unduly broaden the issues before the Commission in the case. The ALJ will not act on your request to intervene until the parties of record have had an opportunity to object to your requested intervention. You will be notified in writing, or orally during a procedural conference or other proceeding, regarding the decision on your request to intervene.
If you are representing yourself and not your company or organization, you may represent yourself in a case before the Commission and should include that information in your intervention request.
If you desire to intervene on behalf of your company or organization, the Arizona Supreme Court Rules may require representation by an Arizona-licensed attorney. If that is the case, and your intervention request is not filed by such an attorney, your request to intervene will not be granted until you have obtained an attorney to represent you. See “Do I need an attorney?” below.
If you are an individual representing only yourself (i.e., not your company, another individual, or any type of organization), you may represent yourself before the Commission and are not required to hire an attorney to represent you.
An individual may not represent another individual before the Commission unless authorized to practice law in Arizona and generally may not represent an organization before the Commission unless authorized to practice law in Arizona. The Arizona Supreme Court restricts the practice of law to Arizona-licensed attorneys, with certain exceptions (see Arizona Supreme Court Rule 31; Arizona Supreme Court Rule 31.1; Arizona Supreme Court 31.2; Arizona Supreme Court Rule 31.3).
The Arizona Supreme Court has created an exception specific to proceedings before the Commission that allows a legal entity to be represented by a person who is not an Arizona-licensed attorney if:
If this exception applies for your representation of your company or organization, you need to provide a board resolution or other documentation to establish that you have been authorized to represent the company or organization.
An attorney who is licensed in another state, but not in Arizona, may represent an individual or entity before the Commission only if that attorney is admitted to practice law in Arizona pro hac vice and only after the Procedural Order granting admission pro hac vice in the case. An out-of-state attorney who makes an appearance in a Commission case before being granted admission pro hac vice in the case commits the unauthorized practice of law.
(See Arizona Supreme Court Rule 39 regarding admission pro hac vice.)
If, after obtaining and reviewing all relevant Procedural Orders, you still have a procedural question concerning a case that is before the Hearing Division, you may contact the Hearing Division at (602) 542-4250. You will need to identify who you are and to provide the docket number for the case so that administrative staff of the Hearing Division can locate the information about the case necessary to respond to your question. Depending on the question, administrative staff may need to call you back with a response.
Administrative staff of the Hearing Division are prohibited from answering questions concerning or discussing any substantive aspects of a case and are prohibited from providing legal advice.
As a party, if you want the ALJ to take a particular action in the case (such as resolve a discovery dispute, extend a filing deadline, or reschedule the hearing), you must file a formal motion containing the request. You may file the motion electronically using eFiling or in hard copy with Docket Control (in accordance with Filing Requirements). Whichever manner of filing is used, you must ensure that the motion is served on all parties of record in the case on the day of filing. Before filing the motion, you should contact the other parties informally to find out whether they will agree to your request.
The motion should include an explanation of your request, an explanation of the good cause that supports the granting of your request, and a statement of the other parties’ positions regarding the request (to the extent that you know their positions). If all parties to a case are in agreement about the request, the ALJ should be able to act upon it quickly. If the motion does not provide the other parties’ positions, or not all parties are in agreement, the ALJ generally will not act on the motion until the other parties have had an opportunity to respond. Depending on the circumstances surrounding the motion, the ALJ may schedule a procedural conference at which the motion will be discussed.
Unless otherwise specified in a Procedural Order for the case, responses to non-dispositive motions are generally due within 7 calendar days, and responses to dispositive motions are generally due within 10 calendar days. Any reply to a response is generally due within 5 calendar days after the response is filed. These deadlines are extended to the next business day if the deadline falls on a state holiday or a weekend day.
If you do not intervene, you will not be sent copies of the filings made in the docket by the ALJ or the parties of record. However, all documents filed in the docket are available online (usually within 24 hours after filing) at the Commission’s website, using the eDocket function. You may also sign up to follow the docket for the case using the ACC Portal.
See Follow a Docket or Document Type. If you follow a docket, you will receive a notification email each time a filing made in the case is approved. The email will provide a link to the new filing. (If you follow a document type or types, you will receive a notification email each time such a document type is filed.)
Even if you choose not to intervene, or your request to intervene is denied, you will still be able to attend the hearing, provide public comment, follow the docket, and review all of the documents filed in the case.
The unique number assigned to each Commission case by Docket Control is included on the first page of each official document filed for the case. It is generally located on the upper portion of the page, to the right of the caption that includes the case name.
A docket number generally looks similar to this:
W-12345A-23-0123
The letter indicates the type of regulated company or person involved (e.g., W for water, E for electric, etc.), the group of five numbers and one letter indicates the specific regulated company or person involved (each has a unique number), the two numbers indicate the year the case file was opened, and the final four numbers indicate where the case file falls within that year (i.e., the above example would be the 123rd case file opened in 2023).
Generally, service may be made by sending the documents by First Class U.S. Mail, postage paid, to a proper address. You may also send the documents through an alternate delivery service (e.g., Federal Express) or have the documents delivered personally by a courier. In many cases, the parties consent to service by email. To determine whether email service can be used for a party in a case, review the service list on eDocket to see whether “Email Opt-In” has been checked for that party. If you desire to have service upon you made by email, you may either (1) complete a global consent to email service, applicable for any docket in which you become a party, or (2) file a consent to email service for one specific docket. Information on completing each type of consent to email service is available here.
On each document required to be served, you must include either an acknowledgment of service from the recipient (very uncommon) or a signed and dated certificate of service stating that all parties of record have been served and identifying the manner of service. See the Filing Requirements for the format of a certificate of service.
As an intervenor, you will be expected to make a reasonable effort to educate yourself about the Commission’s rules and procedures. You should start by familiarizing yourself with the Commission’s Rules of Practice and Procedure (A.A.C. Title 14, Chapter 3, Article 1).
You should also review the documents already filed in the docket for the case, to become familiar with all of the requirements and deadlines included therein. You should pay special attention to any Procedural Orders issued, as this is where most requirements and deadlines will be found. You will be expected to have knowledge of the documents filed in the case, even those filed prior to your involvement, and you will be required to comply with any applicable requirements and deadlines found therein. To make sure the process is fair for all participants, a party’s failure to file a document by the established deadline could result in the exclusion of the document.
You can see what has been filed in a case by going to the Commission’s website and searching for the case using the eDocket function and the assigned docket number.
Because the Commission’s procedural rules refer to the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure, it may be helpful for you to review those as well. Those rules are available through the Arizona Judicial Branch website (https://www.azcourts.gov/rules/) by selecting the “Current Arizona Rules” link and then the link for the “Rules of Civil Procedure for the Superior Courts of Arizona.”
As an intervenor, you are expected to share information with other parties upon request and to obtain information from other parties through a process known as Discovery. You are allowed to communicate directly with any other party or, if the party is represented by an attorney, the attorney for the party. The discovery process is intended to allow parties to prepare for hearing by learning the positions and supporting documents of the other parties, so that hearings can run efficiently without surprises. The most common methods of discovery used in cases before the Commission are written questions submitted by one party to another, commonly referred to as “data requests.”
In many cases, a procedural conference (or more than one) is held before the scheduled hearing date. A procedural conference can be scheduled upon the request of a party or whenever the ALJ determines that an issue or motion can best be addressed through live discussion rather than filings in the docket. As an intervenor, you will be expected to attend all procedural conferences unless you have been excused by the ALJ.
In some cases, a pre-hearing conference will be held approximately one week prior to the hearing. This usually occurs in larger or more complicated cases with multiple parties. At a pre-hearing conference, the ALJ and parties will discuss procedural issues (such as the scheduling of witnesses and whether there are any objections to pre-filed testimony) as well as the procedural guidelines that will be used to govern the hearing (these could include the length of opening statements, whether written briefs will be required in lieu of closing arguments, etc.). The ALJ may also make the parties aware of specific questions or topics that the ALJ desires the parties to address at hearing, to help ensure that the record is clear and complete. As an intervenor, you will be expected to attend any pre-hearing conference unless you’ve been excused by the ALJ.
Your job as an intervenor is to present the information and argument that you believe best demonstrates why the ALJ and the Commission should support your position. You should ensure that you are prepared for that role. You may be required to file written testimony before the hearing, and you will generally be expected to provide live testimony and to offer exhibits at hearing. (Sometimes intervenors choose to offer no evidence themselves and only to cross-examine other parties’ witnesses.)
Hearings at the Commission resemble trial court proceedings, but are less formal. Each hearing is presided over by an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), and sometimes a Commissioner (or more than one) also attends and joins the ALJ on the bench. The Rules of Evidence and Rules of Civil Procedure are not strictly applied in Commission hearings, although they are used for guidance. This flexibility allows for development of a more comprehensive record from which the Commission can reach its decision.
At the hearing, you should be prepared to present a brief opening statement, present evidence through witness testimony and documents, cross-examine other parties’ witnesses, and make closing arguments (parties may be required to file briefs instead of or in addition to providing closing arguments).
If there are documents that you desire to have admitted as evidence in the case, you need to provide copies of those documents before the hearing as required by Procedural Order or at the hearing if permitted by the ALJ. You will be required to provide at least one copy to be the official exhibit and may be required to provide an additional copy for the use of the ALJ. You should organize your exhibits before the hearing (and likely will be required to do so by Procedural Order), and your exhibits should be labeled sequentially in the order in which you expect to offer them. (For example, if you are the only intervenor, you might label your first exhibit “INT-1,” the second “INT-2,” and so on. If you are not the only intervenor, you might use your initials instead—e.g., if your name were John Alan Doe, you might label your first exhibit “JAD-1,” and so forth.)
When you offer a document at hearing, you will generally need a witness to identify it, explain what it is and who made it, explain how the witness is familiar with it, and explain why it is important. If you are your only witness, you would be expected to do that yourself from the witness stand.
Hearings generally proceed as follows:
Following the hearing, the ALJ will take the case under advisement. The transcript for the hearing will be available approximately 10 business days after the hearing adjourns, unless an expedited transcript has been ordered by a party at that party’s expense. (To obtain a copy of the transcript, a party must make arrangements with the court reporting agency. A person may review the transcript and copy up to 20 pages of it either at the Docket Control Center in Phoenix or, upon prior arrangement, in the Commission’s Tucson office.) Once the transcript is available, the ALJ will review it along with the exhibits admitted in the case and then prepare a Recommended Opinion and Order (“ROO”). The ROO will provide the ALJ’s recommendations for how the Commission should decide the case. The ROO will be filed with Docket Control and served on all parties of record on the day that it is issued. Each ROO is issued with a cover letter that contains a deadline for parties to file Exceptions to the ROO. The cover letter generally also identifies the Commission Open Meeting at which the ROO is expected to be discussed.
Exceptions are a party’s written response to a ROO, in which the party expresses disagreement or concern with something in the ROO or provides clarification concerning something in the ROO. Parties are not required to file Exceptions but are expected to do so if they disagree with something in the ROO.
In most cases, the ROO will be placed on the agenda for an Open Meeting soon after the ROO is issued. The Commission decides when the ROO for a case will be considered at Open Meeting and creates the Open Meeting Agenda. Open Meeting dates are available on the Commission’s Event Calendar. The Open Meeting Agenda is available on the daily calendar item for the Open Meeting and also at http://azcc.gov/live next to the Open Meeting event.
If the ROO for a case is on the agenda for an Open Meeting, the Commission is likely to reach a decision regarding the outcome for the case at that Open Meeting, unless the case is controversial. If the ROO is listed on the Commission’s Proposed Consent Agenda, it will usually only be discussed upon the request of a Commissioner or a member of the public and may be voted upon without any discussion. If the ROO is listed on the Commission’s Regular Agenda, the Commission will discuss the ROO at least briefly and then will generally vote on the ROO. Sometimes a ROO will be discussed at multiple Open Meetings and will even have amendments voted on at multiple Open Meetings. The Commission can decide to adopt a ROO as is or with minor or major changes made through amendments, can vote not to adopt a ROO at all (if the ROO as is or as amended fails), or can decide not to have a vote on a ROO. The Commission can also hold a ROO instead of placing it on an Open Meeting Agenda. The Commission makes the ultimate decision in each case before it and is not bound by the recommendations of the ALJ as set forth in the ROO or by the submissions of any party to the case.
As an intervenor, you should attend, either remotely or in person, the Open Meeting at which the ROO for your case will be considered by the Commission (i.e., is on the agenda). In their discussion and consideration of a ROO during Open Meeting, the Commissioners may have questions for the parties. If the Commissioners have questions for you, and you are not available to respond to them, you could lose the opportunity to present your position directly to the Commissioners before they vote on the ROO.
Rate Case - Typical Flow
A rate case generally is commenced when a utility files its Application. After this, the Utilities Division (“Staff”) has 30 days to determine whether the Application meets the application submission requirements set by Commission rule (A.A.C. R14-2-103(B)) and can be deemed “sufficient.” If the Application is not sufficient, Staff sends the utility a Letter of Deficiency explaining what must be done to make the Application sufficient. The utility is provided an opportunity to make the Application sufficient, generally by submitting additional information or documentation. Until an Application is determined to be sufficient, as evidenced by a Letter of Sufficiency issued by Staff, the rate case will not progress.
A Class A or B utility of any type, and a Class C electric or gas utility, must include in its Application filing Direct Testimony to support the Application.
Once an Application is determined to be sufficient, the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) will issue a Procedural Order (“P.O.”) setting the schedule and procedural requirements for the case. The P.O. will require the utility to provide notice of the Application to its customers, providing the language to be used for the notice, the method/s of notice to be used, and the deadline for notice to be completed. The P.O. will also establish the deadline for intervention, dates for parties to file testimony, and (if a Class A, B, or C utility), the date/s for a hearing and any public comment session/s to be held.
Especially in a rate case that will have a hearing, an ALJ may hold a procedural conference, scheduled by P.O., to discuss the schedule and other procedural requirements with the parties before issuing the scheduling P.O.
After an Application is sufficient, the parties to the case begin what is known as “discovery,” the process through which parties request information from each other, and submit information to each other, so that each party is able to talk to witnesses, obtain any records pertinent to the case, and prepare its testimony and other evidence to offer at hearing.
Parties sometimes disagree about what information may be obtained during discovery. If parties are unable to agree upon discovery, after having made a good faith effort to resolve the dispute through telephonic or in-person discussion, a party may file a motion for a procedural conference; may contact the Hearing Division’s administrative personnel ((602) 542-4250) to request a procedural conference; or may file a Motion to Compel or Motion for Protective Order, as applicable.
Subpoenas may be used during discovery and are obtained upon application to the Executive Director’s office. Additional information on subpoenas is available here:
Except in rate cases for the smallest utilities (Class D and E), the utility and the Utilities Division (“Staff”) are required to file written testimony to support their respective positions. Intervenors are required to file written testimony if they intend to present witness testimony at hearing, but otherwise may choose not to file testimony and only to engage in cross-examination of other parties’ witnesses.
Usually, the testimony filed includes:
The parties may engage in negotiations to determine whether the disputed issues in the case can be resolved by agreement. These settlement negotiations could result in a Settlement Agreement entered into by some or all of the parties to the case. If this occurs, the Settlement Agreement will be filed with the Commission prior to the scheduled hearing. If the parties believe a Settlement Agreement might be possible and desire more time for negotiations, the parties may file a motion requesting to have the hearing rescheduled.
Through discussions, the parties may reach agreement on many of the disputed issues in the case. The parties may choose not to enter into a Settlement Agreement, but instead to reflect these changed positions in their pre-filed Testimony or witness testimony at hearing.
The scheduling Procedural Order (“P.O.”) for a Class A, B, or C rate case usually will schedule a pre-hearing conference to be held approximately one week before the first day of hearing. At the pre-hearing conference, any or all of the following, among other things intended to enhance the efficiency and orderliness of the hearing process or to ensure a more thorough evidentiary record, could occur:
In a Class A, B, or C rate case, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) presides over a hearing to examine the evidence in the case. The utility, any intervenors, and the Utilities Division (“Staff”) are provided the opportunity to make opening statements, to present their own witnesses, to cross-examine other parties’ witnesses, to present documentary exhibits, and to object to other parties’ evidence. During the hearing, the ALJ and any Commissioners in attendance may question witnesses, and the ALJ may request that a party provide additional information or exhibits on specific issues. The ALJ may allow the parties to make closing arguments at the conclusion of the hearing or may require that the parties instead file post-hearing briefs.
Members of the public may attend hearings. The ALJ will allow public comments to be made on the first day of hearing, before the presentation of evidence begins.
If a Settlement Agreement has been filed, the hearing will focus on the terms of the Settlement Agreement and whether it is in the public interest.
If the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) requires the parties to file post-hearing briefs rather than to make oral arguments at the conclusion of the hearing, the ALJ will establish the deadline for those briefs to be filed. The ALJ may require that responsive briefs also be filed.
If a party has proposed a revenue requirement, rate base, rate of return, or rate design in the case, the ALJ will require the party to file final schedules with Docket Control and, additionally, to submit to the Hearing Division an electronic copy of each electronic file prepared in reaching its final position, with all calculations and formulas intact and with billing determinants/proof of revenue included. The files need to be submitted to the Hearing Division on a USB flash drive unless another format is more appropriate.
After the hearing has concluded and any briefing has been completed, the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) prepares a recommendation to the Commissioners based on the law, the weight of the evidence received (including all admitted pre-filed testimony and other exhibits as well as all live testimony at hearing), any agreements that may have been reached, and the ALJ’s determination of what outcome will best serve the public interest. The ALJ’s recommendation is presented in a document called a Recommended Opinion and Order (“ROO”). The ROO may include requirements or reach conclusions that differ from the position of any party. A memo attached to the ROO states the estimated date on which the Commissioners will consider the matter at an Open Meeting and provides a deadline for exceptions to be filed (generally within 10 days after the ROO is filed).
Each party to the case may file exceptions to the Recommended Opinion and Order (“ROO”), to express the party’s disagreement with and any suggested changes to the ROO. Only parties may file exceptions. An interested non-party may file public comment responding to a ROO.
Once or twice a month, the Commissioners hold an Open Meeting to consider Recommended Opinions and Orders (“ROOs”) that have been issued for different cases, among other things. Members of the public are generally given the opportunity to speak on a case prior to the vote. Any member of the public who wishes to speak on a case must indicate a desire to speak by signing up to provide comment using the Commission’s public computer terminal or the ACC Portal. Commissioners often ask the parties to answer questions about the case and to provide a response to the ROO. Amendments to the ROO may be offered by any Commissioner or by the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”). A Commissioner may also choose to pick up a party’s suggested changes as an amendment. Votes are taken on each amendment offered, and then a vote is taken on the final document (as amended, if applicable). The Commissioners may accept, amend, or reject the ROO and can also send the matter back to the Hearing Division for further examination, which may include additional proceedings. The Commission’s discussion of and votes concerning a specific ROO may occur during more than one Open Meeting.
If the Commission votes to approve a ROO (as amended, if applicable) at Open Meeting, the Commissioners will subsequently sign a Decision comprised of the ROO with the changes made through any approved amendments. Once signed, the Decision is filed with Docket Control, where it is dated and assigned a unique Decision Number. In Utilities and Safety cases, the Commission serves a copy of the Decision on each party through the manner of service approved for the party. In Securities cases, the Commission sends a copy of the Decision to each party in the case by certified mail.
Under A.R.S. § 40-253, a party to a case may file with the Commission, within 20 days after a Decision is issued, an Application for Rehearing of any or all of the issues resolved in the Decision. If the Commission does not grant an Application for Rehearing within 20 days after it is filed, it is deemed denied.
If a party’s Application for Rehearing is denied, the party may appeal a Commission Decision under A.R.S. § 40-254 or § 40-254.01, as applicable.
Consent to Email Service
If the case involves consolidated dockets, you may include the caption for only the docket that appears first on the Procedural Order consolidating the case. If the title for the case docket is very large and will not fit on the Consent to Email Service form, you may create and use a cover sheet containing the full caption of the case along with the Consent to Email Service form, or you may create a filing that includes:
No. A party’s Consent to Email Service is effective only for the case in which it was filed and approved by Procedural Order.
However, if you participate (or may participate) as a party representative in multiple Commission cases, you are encouraged to complete a Global Consent to Email Service. A Global Consent to Email Service is effective for each docket in which you are included on the service list currently and for each docket in which you are added to the service list in the future. Information on Global Consent to Email Service is available here.
For additional information on how to use eDocket, see the User Guide on the eDocket home page.
You may also contact Docket Control at 602-542-3477 during normal
business hours (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday – Friday, exclusive of state
holidays).
Address:
1200 W. Washington St,
Phoenix, AZ 85007
Phone:
Main:
(602) 542-4250
Docket Control
(eDocket):
(602) 542-3477
Arizona Corporation Commission
Phoenix Office
1200 W. Washington Street
Phoenix, AZ 85007
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