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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20121231Avista to Staff 103-109,113,114,117,118etc..pdfAvista Corp. 1411 East Mission P.O. Box 3727 Spokane. Washington 99220-0500 Telephone 509-489-0500 Toll Free 800-727-9170 December 28, 2012 iiVIS TA' REC Ell \PED Corp. DEC 31 AMD 06 PU • Idaho Public Utilities Commission 472 W. Washington St. Boise, ID 83720-0074 Attn: Karl T. Klein Weldon B. Stutzman Deputy Attorney General Re: Production Request of the Commission Staff in Case Nos. AVU-E-12-08 and AVU-G- 1 2-07 Dear Mr. Klein and Mr. Stutzman, Enclosed are an original and three copies of Avista's responses to IPUC Staffs production requests in the above referenced docket. Included in this mailing are Avista' s responses to production requests 103 -109,113,114,117,118,121,122,124,127— 131, and 137-144. The electronic versions of the responses were emailed on 12/28/12 and are also being provided in electronic format on the CD included in this mailing. Also included are Avista's CONFIDENTIAL responses to PR 108C, 117C and 130C. These responses contain TRADE SECRET, PROPRIETARY or CONFIDENTIAL information and is separately filed under IDAPA 31.01.01, Rule 067 and 233, and Section 9-340D, Idaho Code, and pursuant to the Protective Agreement between Avista and IPUC Staff dated October 16, 2012. It is being provided under a sealed separate envelope, marked CONFIDENTIAL. If there are any questions regarding the enclosed information, please contact Paul Kimball at (509) 495-4584 or via e-mail at paul.kimball@avistacorp.com Sincerely, Paul Kimball Regulatory Analyst Enclosures CC: all parties AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jeanne Pluth TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Fed. Reg. REQUEST NO.: Staff-103 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2204 REQUEST: Please provide a description and method of calculation for allocation basis/reference number 16 in Report ID G-OTX- 1 2A in the Gas Results of Operations Report for the test year (12 months ending 6/30/2012). RESPONSE: Factor 16 is no longer used by the Company. The reference to factor 16 should have been changed to factor 1, which is identified on page G-OTX- 1 2A in the Gas Results of Operations Report. Factor 1 is the system contract demand allocation factor that was used to allocate those costs on that report. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jeanne Pluth TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Fed. Reg. REQUEST NO.: Staff-104 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2204 L!1i1iJ Please provide a description and method of calculation for allocation basis/reference "JP" in the Gas Results of Operations Report for the test year (12 months ending 6/30/2012). Please verify the date of the data used to develop the allocation versus the date published in the report. RESPONSE: The JP factor uses the net plant investment in the Jackson Prairie storage facility. The factor is calculated using the December 31 balance for the upcoming year. For example, the balance at December 31, 2011 was used for all months in 2012, including June 30, 2012 reports. Please see Staff _PR-1 04-Attachment A for the calculation of the factor. 406,993.93 0.00 406,993.93 59,811.72 -20,211.58 39,600.14 841,323.45 -399,597.55 441,725.90 282,549.34 -182,682.33 99,867.01 52,850.07 -34,525.57 18,324.50 110,236.38 48,429.91 61,806.47 61,655.69 -40,278.17 21,377.52 12,567,367.22 -4,625,947.12 7,941,420.10 254,354.23 -239,177.12 15,177.11 203,330.47 -54,311.10 149,019.37 5,359,690.41 -3,522,557.31 - 1,837,133.10 1,044,477.12 -473,762.91 570,714.21 1 1,374,727.18 -1,893,028.64 9,481,698.54 173,783.82 420,842.09 594,625.91 407,617.44 -355,505.01 52,112.43 1,477,939.85 -676,959.15 800,980.70 34,678,708.32 -12,146,131.38 22,532,576.94 117.33 0.00 117.33 1,043.51 0.00 1,043.51 16,383.43 -372.24 16,011.19 903,208.25 -49,919.37 853,288.88 1,464,161.54 -24,589.35 1,439,572.19 450,620.15 -47,340.71 403,279.44 62,303.99 -4,720.96 57,583.03 2,846,545.24 -169,163.23 2,677,382.01 0.00 0.00 0.00 7,206.14 -229.39 6,976.75 5,751,589.58 -296,335.25 5,455,254.33 40,430,297.90 -12,442,466.63 27,987,831.27 80.5% 19.5% Staff—PR-1 04-Attachment A.xls 2011 JP Balances at 12/31/2011 Page 1 of I AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12121/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jeanne Pluth TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Fed. Reg. REQUEST NO.: Staff-105 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2204 REQUEST: Please provide the Oregon Gas Results of Operation report for twelve months ending June 30, 2012. RESPONSE: Please see Staff _PR_i 05-Attachment A for the 12 Months Ended June 30, 2012 report prepared using the average of monthly averages (AMA) basis, which is being provided electronically. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/19/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Robert J. Lafferty REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: John Lyons, Ph.D. TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Energy Resources REQUEST NO.: Staff-106 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8515 REQUEST: Given that Idaho has no RPS requirement, does Avista plan to use 100% of the RECs produced by the Palouse Wind project to satisfy RPS requirements in Washington? Does Avista believe that Idaho is entitled to a share of the Palouse Wind project RECs even though Idaho has no RPS requirement? Does Avista plan to sell Idaho's share of the RECs and credit the revenue to Idaho, or alternatively, to impute revenue to Idaho-equal to the value of Idaho's share of the RECs if it chooses to use all of the project's RECs to satisfy Washington RPS requirements? RESPONSE: Avista plans to meet its Washington RPS requirements with qualified hydroelectric upgrades, The Palouse Wind Project and the Kettle Falls generating station. Avista believes that Idaho customers are entitled to their pro rata share of value from RECs generated from all of Avista's electric generating resources. This value will accrue to Idaho customers in a manner similar to other REC sales currently made for renewable projects, as is detailed in Company witness Johnson's testimony. As RECs are sold, Idaho customers will receive their pro rata share through base retail rates or the PCA. If any portion of RECs attributable to Idaho customers are used to satisfy Washington RPS requirements, Idaho customers will be credited market value for those RECs. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/19/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Robert J. Lafferty REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: John Lyons, Ph.D. TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Energy Resources REQUEST NO.: Staff-107 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8515 REQUEST: Given that Idaho has no RPS requirement and that Avista's 2011 IRP does not show a need for new energy resources to meet load until 2018 (Lafferty, Direct, p. 15 and Exhibit 4, Schedule 1), please explain how Idaho ratepayers specifically benefit from the Palouse Wind PPA. To the extent possible, please quantify any identified benefits for Idaho ratepayers. RESPONSE: Avista's planning for future generation resource needs is based on the internal analytic work completed in the integrated resource planning process, which results in a 20-year Preferred Resource Strategy (PRS) that includes "... a mix of wind generation, energy efficiency, upgrades at existing generation and distribution facilities and new gas-fired generation. The IRP process is augmented by the public participation of"...customers, commission staff, the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, consumer advocates, academics, utility peers, government agencies and other interested parties" (2011 IRP, p. i), and other interested parties through the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC). TAC members"... play a central role in guiding the development of the PRS and IRP as a whole by providing significant input on modeling and planning assumptions, and the general direction of the planning process" (2011 IRP, p. i). The IRP considers all current and expected future state and federal rules and laws regarding generation needs during the 20-year planning horizon for the Company's entire system. The IRP does not segment resource needs by jurisdiction. After determining the need through the IRP process, The Palouse Wind PPA was acquired through a competitive RFP process to ensure that the best choice was made of the available renewable generation resource types identified in the Preferred Resource Strategy. The 2009 and 2011 IRP processes had both identified the need for a wind resource in 2012 to serve all customers. The benefits to Idaho customers associated with the Palouse Wind Project fall into many categories and include, but are not limited to: • Substantial state and federal tax benefits for the completion of the project by December 31, 2012. These include the imputed savings for the expiring 30 percent federal investment tax credit and the expiring Washington state sales tax exemption on wind generation equipment. • Significantly lower priced wind generation equipment and construction compared to what was available in the 2009 RFP or with the development of the Reardan Wind Site. • Locks in a wind site that meteorological reports identify as a higher wind capacity factor than most wind sites in the region. • A 30-year fixed priced resource, with an option to purchase the project after ten years. Page 1 of . Significantly lower priced than other approved utility scale Idaho PURPA wind projects signed at the time of the Palouse Wind Project (see Staff _PR_i 08 Confidential Attachment A). . Reduced power supply financial variability and risk as discussed in the 2009 and 2011 IRPs. Increased fuel diversity and decreased fuel risk as discussed in the 2009 and 2011 IRPs. Idaho's share of generated RECs sold into the marketplace will benefit Idaho customers. Page 2 of 2 JURISDICTION: CASE NO: REQUESTER: TYPE: REQUEST NO.: AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/19/2012 AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Robert J. Lafferty IPUC RESPONDER: John Lyons, Ph.D. Production Request DEPARTMENT: Energy Resources Staff-108 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8515 REQUEST: Please compare on a monthly basis for 2013 the cost of purchases under the Palouse Wind PPA to the expected cost of market alternatives as indicated by internal price forecasts, broker quotes or forward-prices. If the cost of market alternatives is less than the cost of purchases under the Palouse Wind PPA, does Avista believe that Idaho ratepayers should be responsible for the higher cost of the Palouse Wind PPA? Please explain. RESPONSE: Please see Avista's response 108C, which contains TRADE SECRET, PROPRIETARY or CONFIDENTIAL information and exempt from public view and is separately filed under IDAPA 3 1.0 1.0 1, Rule 067 and 233, and Section 9-340D, Idaho Code. The Palouse Wind PPA is a long-term (30-year) firm resource that provides all of the benefits to Idaho customers as described in detail in Staff Production Request 107. As such, a comparison of a snapshot of a single year of forward market prices is not appropriate or comparable to the value represented by a single year of costs from a 30-year firm resource. Many of Avista's resources or long-term purchases have a higher cost than the current, low spot market power prices. That, however, does not mean they were not prudent acquisitions or that customers should not pay the full costs. Staff PR_lO8Confidential Attachment A provides the 2013 monthly forward market data requested for two dates: 6/28/12 and 12/18/12. To reflect a more appropriate long-term resource pricing comparison, also included in the confidential attachment is a comparison of long-term annual PURPA prices effective in the state of Idaho to the annual costs of the Palouse Wind Project. This annual price comparison does not include the value of Renewable Energy Credits (RECs)-that Idaho customers will realize from the Palouse Wind Project. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/19/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Robert J. Lafferty REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: John Lyons, Ph.D. TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Energy Resources REQUEST NO.: Staff-109 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8515 REQUEST: If the Idaho Commission ultimately decides not to allow recovery of above-market costs of the Palouse Wind PPA until the Company can demonstrate a need by Idaho ratepayers, how will Avista attempt to recover the costs of the PPA (e.g., assign all costs and benefits of the PPA-to Washington, resell Idaho's share of the project output and associated RECs, something else)? RESPONSE: Avista has made no decisions concerning potential disallowance of costs associated with the acquisition of the Palouse Wind PPA. The Company believes that it has demonstrated the Palouse Wind PPA is a prudent, long-term, firm, system resource acquisition based upon the competitive process through which it was acquired; the analysis and documentation provided in this case in Company witness Lafferty's testimony; and its consistency with the Preferred Resource Strategy as laid out in the Company's 2009 and 2011 Integrated Resource Plans. The Company's generation resource acquisitions are guided by the integrated resource planning process as described in detail in Staff Production Request 107. Through base retail rates and the PCA, Idaho customers will receive their share of benefits from Palouse Wind, including the value of the energy and any ancillary benefits, including REC sales revenue, non-carbon premiums, and any other ancillary benefits derived from renewable generation. For further information and/or benefits see Avista's responses to PR 106-108. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/18/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 /AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jennifer Smith TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Reg REQUEST NO.: Staff- i 13 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2098 REQUEST: Please provide a schedule of lobbying and/or political action committee expenses associated with or allocated to Avista Gas and Electric Operations for the test period (the twelve months ending June 30, 2012). Please describe the nature of the expenses, the payee, amounts paid, accounts posted, transaction/voucher number, date paid, and cross-reference where the expense was removed from the Company's filing. RESPONSE: The Company is not aware of any lobbying and/or political action committee expenses allocated to Avista Gas and Electric Operations for the test period (the twelve months ending June 30, 2012). AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/18/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jennifer Smith TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Reg REQUEST NO.: Staff- i 14 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2098 REQUEST: Please identify any extraordinary expenses, revenues, gains or losses for the years 2011 and 2012 to date that were directly assigned or allocated to Avista Gas and/or Electric Operations. Please describe the circumstances, identify dates of relevant events, amounts, transaction/voucher number, date of transaction, and accounts posted including how and where items were amortized. If any of these costs were included in the Company's filing please identify where they were included. RESPONSE: The Company does not believe there are any extraordinary expenses, revenues, gains or losses for the test period, which is the twelve months ended June 30, 2012. Each month, as the Results of Operations reports are prepared, the Company reviews unusual fluctuations in revenues and expenses. All prior period costs are removed at that time. In addition, the Company prepares a monthly summary of Unusual Journal Entries. When preparing the current rate case, the Company reviewed these summaries. Based upon our review of the unusual journal reports for the test period, there were no material extraordinary expenses, revenues, gains/loss, out-of-period adjustments or extraordinary items. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Mark Thies REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Rich Stevens TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Risk Management REQUEST NO.: Staff -i 17 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4330 REQUEST: Please provide a detailed schedule of any insurance settlements, refunds, legal settlements and the like that occurred during 2011 and 2012 to date. Please include within your response the nature/reason for the funds received or awarded, the date of the award, the account numbers posted, transaction/voucher number, dollar amounts posted and how they were included in the Company's filing. If they were not included in the Company's filing, please describe why not. RESPONSE: Please see Avista's response 117C, which contains TRADE SECRET, PROPRIETARY or CONFIDENTIAL information and exempt from public view and is separately filed under IDAPA 31.01.01, Rule 067 and 233, and Section 9-340D, Idaho Code. Page 1 of! JURISDICTION: CASE NO: REQUESTER: TYPE: REQUEST NO.: AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Mark Thies IPUC RESPONDER: Rich Stevens Production Request DEPARTMENT: Risk Management Staff-1 18 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4330 REQUEST: Please provide a detailed schedule of any insurance settlements, refunds, legal settlements and the like that have not occurred but are pending or likely to occur. Please include within your response the nature/reason for the funds to be received or awarded, the potential date of the award, the account numbers to be posted, and approximate dollar amounts to be posted. RESPONSE: There are no current or pending matters that are expected to result in insurance settlements in favor of Avista. The future outcomes of pending claims are uncertain and results could vary from our current expectations. Page 1 of! AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/18/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G42-07 WITNESS: Dave DeFelice REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Howard Grimsrud TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Projects/FA Accounting REQUEST NO.: Staff-121 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2936 REQUEST: Please describe the process by which costs associated with abandoned projects are recorded. Please include within your response the total costs recorded in the test year (12 months ended June 30, 2012) by account and a detailed spreadsheet (in Excel format) identifying the project number, project description, expenditure type, vendor description, transaction description, transaction amount, date posted, document/transaction number, and total amount posted. If any of these costs were included in the Company's filing please identify where they were included. RESPONSE: Capital investments are recorded in capital projects or suspense projects. For capital projects, costs are recorded in FERC account 107 (Construction Work in Progress) during the planning and construction of the project. For suspense projects, costs are recorded in either FERC account 183 (Preliminary Survey and Investigation Study Costs), or FERC account 186 (Miscellaneous Deferred Debits). For both types of projects (capital and suspense), when the project is approved, a project number is assigned. During the active phase of a project, costs are processed through various systems and interfaced to Oracle Projects. The systems of original cost entry include: • UltiPro - payroll transactions • Oracle Supply Chain - inventory • Oracle AP - voucher transactions • Financial Support System -project related journal entries • Appropriate overhead allocations are processed and recorded in the project through an Oracle Projects burdening process. • AFUDC is calculated and posted through a capitalized interest process in Oracle Projects. Once the capital project is deemed used and useful, the costs are transferred to plant in service. Periodically, a capital project will be canceled. If a project is canceled the accumulated project costs are generally handled through one of the following methods. 1. If the costs provide no benefit to other construction projects, the costs in the recording project are written off to expense through transfer to an appropriate expense project. All burdens and AFUDC are reversed. Once the project has a zero balance it is closed to prevent further charging. 2. If any costs provide benefit to other construction projects, the appropriate charges are transferred to the other capital projects and any remaining costs are transferred to an appropriate expense project. As in 1 above, all burdens and AFUDC are reversed andthe project is closed to prevent further charging. Once a decision has been made regarding a suspense project, the costs are either transferred to a capital project, so the costs of the construction project can be recorded in FERC account 107, or the costs are transferred to the appropriate operating expense account for those -projects abandoned. The appropriate operating expense account is determined for each project, based on whether the costs of the preliminary investigations will provide benefit to other utility projects and to customers. In some instances the project may be part of a broader objective, where circumstances change and another alternative becomes a more cost-effective solution to meet the objective. In that instance, the Company may seek recovery of the investment in the abandoned project through a filing with the commission. For example, in the past the Company began preliminary survey and investigation toward construction of a new generating resource which was later abandoned, because of a change in circumstances. In these instances the Commission has generally provided recovery of the costs of the abandoned project through amortization and recovery of the costs over a period of time. Staff PR_1 21 Attachment A includes a listing of costs that were transferred during the test period for all projects abandoned during the test year. Total system costs transferred were $117,086. $96,835 was transferred to another capital project. The remaining $20,251 was transferred to expense (O&M, A&G) which was included in the Company's test period. This equates to approximately $4,500 Idaho electric and $1,300 Idaho natural gas that is included in the Company's test period. ..of:.BURDEr& 107040 107110 107300 107400 107500 107610 107628 107632 108000 300100 587000 595000 870000 920000 921000 935670 ________ is as li-mi4 •.•. ........ 4,497 1,611 ¶ 6,108 4,453 ________ . . - 4,453 1,100• 1,100 638 1,412 2,050 4,181 1,125 166 5,472 2,560 . 2,560 (1,611) 379 . . (1,232) 5,906 5,888 21,108 3,841 36,267 2,488 825 76,323 190 ________ . ______ 190 2,268 2,268 283 _________ 283 6,742 6,742 42 42 10,726 . •• ... 1127O ' .................*I41,O22 .: 65 ,32,488 28 : zO94 0 111O86 :: Staff—PR-121 Attachment A.xlsx Page 1 of 1 AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/18/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Dave DeFelice REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Howard Grimsrud TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Projects/17A Accounting REQUEST NO.: Staff-122 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2936 REQUEST: To the extent not provided in response to the previous request, please provide a detailed listing of costs expensed during the test period (12 months ended June 30, 2012) for capital projects not approved. Please separately identify within your response those costs included within the Company's Idaho rate case filings for electric and natural gas rate increases. RESPONSE: Please see the Company's response to Staffs Production Request No. 121. AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/18/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jennifer Smith TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Reg REQUEST NO.: Staff-124 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2098 REQUEST: Please identify the FERC account and subaccount to which any expenses were written off, the transaction/voucher numbers, date posted, amount posted, transaction description and the corresponding amounts allocated to Idaho contained within the Company's general rate case. RESPONSE: Please see the Company's response to Staff Production Request 114. After receiving clarification from IPUC staff, during their onsite audit visit, it is the Company's position that any expenses written off, other than "usual" or bad debt write-offs, would be included in the listing of unusual journals recorded during the test period (twelve months ended June 30, 2012) which includes, "out-of-period adjustments" and "extraordinary items". AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/'i8/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-O8 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Ben McArthur TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: General Accounting REQUEST NO.: Staff-127 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2133 REQUEST: Please provide a schedule of prepaid items as of December 31, 2011 and on a quarterly basis for 2012 showing amounts, vendors, explanations and accounts used. RESPONSE: Please see Staff PR 127 Attachment A. 001 165100 PREPAYMENTS-PREPAID INSURANCE 001 165150 PREPAYMENTS-PREPAID LICENSE FEES 001 165180 PREPAYMENTS-CUSTOMER BILLING SUPPLIES 001 165260 PREPAYMENTS-SPOKANE TRIBE 001 165270 PREPAYMENTS-REC & CCX 001 165280 PREPAYMENTS - PM&E 001 165312 GAS IMBALANCE - LANCASTER 001 165320 GAS IMBALANCE-AVISTA LDC 001 165320 GAS IMBALANCE-AVISTA LDC 001 165320 GAS IMBALANCE-AVISTA LDC 001 165340 GAS IMBALANCE-COYOTE SPRINGS 2 001 165350 GAS IMBALANCE-RATHDRUM 001 165360 GAS IMBALANCE-NORTHEAST CT 001 165370 GAS IMBALANCE-BOULDER PARK 001 165380 GAS IMBALANCE-KETTLE FALLS CT 001 165390 GAS IMBALANCE-KETTLE FALLS GS 001 165550 PREPAYMENTS-WILMINGTON TRUST 001 165681 PREPAYMENT LAKE CdA 4e CDR FUND See enclosed schedule (165100 sheet) U ZZ DL 4,490,990.42 3,724,810.49 2,383,61653 1,308,920.93 See enclosed schedule (165150 sheet) U ZZ DL 1,314,849.55 1,996,986.46 2,464,168.91 2,024,422.82 Forms for customer service/supplies are expected to turn over every nine months therefore 1/9 of balance will be charged to the expense each month. 09900710-903153-915- H51 $XXX.XXX 165180-ZZ-ZZ-DL U U DL 99,643.62 50,029.32 44,400.64 65,201.51 Quarterly balance sheet restatement of positions (n the monies/out of tie monies) in account 134120, which is the Newedge clearing/margin account. Refer to DJ473- Newedge. U ZZ DL 7,156,422.50 - 8,656,351.00 8,156,002.56 United States Postal Service U ZZ DL 56,654.84 27,565.90 17,753.78 41,194.59 City oRathdrum U U DL - 119,997.00 79,998.00 39,999.00 Moscow Prepaid U ZZ DL - - - - BPA—deposit payment for transmission reservations U U DL 81,870.31 81,344.00 81,625.08 116,344.00 RLS Lime Contract—depletion rate of $37,500/mo. U U DL 1,846,106.46 1,733,663.46 1,621,106.46 1,506.977.46 Annual amortization of the Spokane Tribe - Little Falls Settlement. Annual payment is determinate upon contract terms and prior year generation etc. U ZZ DL - 609,28650 406,191.00 203,095.50 ZZ ZZ DL - - - 300,800.00 Spokane River Relicensing PM&E prepayment U U DL - - - - Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL 39,893.40 14,397.79 1,435.34 19,229.10 Various gas pipeline vendors GD ID DL 43,400.99 (31,222.73) (2,409.44) 5,639.08 Various gas pipeline vendors GD OR DL 100,358.82 99,971.65 136,766.46 110.45 Various gas pipeline vendors GD WA DL 94,941.01 (75,044.86) (5,319.15) 10,126.18 Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL 60,556.78 38,765.12 (47,707.12) (6,279.67) Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL 948.14 12,466.58 4,306.06 4,593.16 Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL (6,310.04) (79.70) 891.28 (1,516.39) Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL (7,222.21) (11,401.36) 745.31 11,831.94 Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL 170.01 (3,166.46) 1,729.49 (1,704.10) Various gas pipeline vendors ED AN DL (4,443.19) (5,538.64) (247.70) 184.79 Monthly amortizations U U DL 167,753.15 145,721.90 123,690.65 101,659.40 Coeur d'Alene Reservation Fund U ZZ DL 999,999.98 499,999.97 (0.04) 1,499,999.99 Total 16,536,584.54 9,028,552.39 15,969,092.54 15,406,832.30 001 165190 RESOURCE DEFERRED OPT EXPENSE 001 165200 PREPAYMENTS-POSTAGE METERS 001 165210 PREPAYMENTS-RATHDRM MUN DVLPMT 001 165230 PREPAYMENTS-MOSCOW OFFICE SALE 001 165240 PREPAYMENTS-BPA TRANS RESERVATION 001 165250 COLSTRIP PREPAID ASSET Staff—PR-127 Attachment A.xlsx Page lofi AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/18/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Mark Thies REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Adam Munson TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: General Accounting REQUEST NO.: Staff-128 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-2471 REQUEST: Please provide the total amounts spent on the following activities during the test period (12 months ending June 30, 2012) and show how the amounts were allocated between regulated and non-regulated operations: a.Internal auditing expenses (by employees and others); b.Avista Corporation's annual report; c.Avista's filings with the SEC; d.External audits and consulting; e.Overhead items including utilities, property taxes, security services, and other corporate headquarters' expenses. RESPONSE: Avista directly assigns all costs to Avista Utilities/Corp. and to its subsidiaries; therefore, there is no allocation of costs between the entities. On a regular basis, general office employees of Avista Corporation spend time on corporate service support, such as accounting, federal income tax filing, planning, graphic services, etc. for subsidiaries. Their time is charged to suspense accounts (Deferred Debit 186), loaded for benefits and then established as a receivable (Account 146) when billed to the subsidiary. If other resources are expended during the course of this work such as travel or consulting services, these costs are also charged to suspense accounts and billed to the subsidiary. All corporate services provided, and costs incurred, are direct billed to subsidiaries at cost. No additional margin or profit is included and no assets are allocated. Suspense and capture of Avista Corporation employee costs, which are then billed back to the subsidiary at cost, serve to reduce the utility expenses. Information regarding specific costs follows: a.Please see Staff _PR_l28 Attachment A. b.Total fees incurred for the preparation of Avista's Corp.'s annual report for the 12 months ended June 30, 2012 were $147,203. The total spend only includes amounts paid to third parties who were directly associated with the preparation of the annual report and there is no employee time related to the preparation included in this amount. All costs related to the annual report are recorded to a common jurisdiction and common service account which is then allocated between each jurisdiction and service line (natural Page 1 of gas and electric) using the four factor allocation method. Since 100 percent of the costs are allocated using the four factor allocator, all the costs are included in regulated operations and none are allocated to non-regulated operations. c.Total fees incurred-for filing all of Avista Corp.'s reports with the SEC for the 12 months ended June 30, 2012 were $72,371. The total spend only includes amounts paid to third parties who were directly associated with filing the reports with the SEC and there is no employee time related to the preparation and filing of the reports included in this amount. In addition to the fees above, we also incur legal fees related to the review of our filings and these fees are described in detail in Avista's Response to Staff Production Request (PR) 125 and are excluded here. Please refer to PR 125 for further information on these fees. All costs related to the annual report are recorded to a common jurisdiction and common service account which is then allocated between each jurisdiction and service line (natural gas and electric) using the four factor allocation method. Since 100 percent of the costs are allocated using the four factor allocator, all the costs are included in regulated operations and none are allocated to non-regulated operations. d.Please see Staff_PR_128 Attachment A. e.None of the corporate headquarters overhead is allocated to our non-regulated operations. ECOVA, our primary operating subsidiary, maintains its own headquarters and associated overhead. Utilities: $123,508.68 Property Taxes: $5,464,787.78 Security: $276,531.26 Misc HQ Overhead Charges $782,110.34 It should be noted that during the preparation of this rate case, the Company reviewed all Utility employees that charged hours to subsidiaries, to compute the amount of indirect/overhead-type costs that could be related to this work. The Company estimated these costs to be under $3,000 for Idaho electric service and under $1,000 for Idaho natural gas service, therefore, no adjustment was made in the case due to the immateriality of the amounts. Page 2 of 2 WUC Data Request 128 Internal Audit Expenses 12 months ended June 30, 2012 Utility Expenses (Operating) Loaded Labor External Audit & Consulting Services Other Expenses Total Non-Utility Expenses (Non-Operating) Loaded Labor External Audit & Consulting Services Other Expenses Total Total Expenses Loaded Labor External Audit & Consulting Services Other Expenses Total $ 877,565 1,433,600 29,917 2,341,082 22,505 832 23,336 900,070 1,433,600 30,749 $ 2,364,419 Staff—PR-1 28 Attachment A.xlsx Page 1 of 1 AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/28/2012 CASE NO: AVUE12:08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Elizabeth Andrews REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Don Falkner TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Finance REQUEST NO.: Staff-129 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4326 REQUEST Please identify all instances in which the Company successfully appealed a property tax assessment in which refunds were received during the years 2011-2012. Please provide within your response the amounts of the refunds for each year and how they were incorporated into the Company's filing. RESPONSE: There were no property tax appeals that resulted in refunds received during the years 2011-2012. Page 1 of 1 AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12t1-812&12 - CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Mark Thies REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Paul Kimball TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Regulation REQUEST NO.: Staff-130 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4584 REQUEST: Please list all pending legal cases and describe their status including the issue, estimates of liability and possible ramifications to the Company. RESPONSE: Please see Avista's response 130C, which contains TRADE SECRET, PROPRIETARY or CONFIDENTIAL information and exempt from public view and is separately filed under IDAPA 31.01 .01, Rule 067 and 233, and Section 9-340D, Idaho Code. Please see Staff PR 130 Attachment A and Staff_PR_130C Confidential Attachment A. Page 1 of! NOTE 11. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES In the course of its business, the Company becomes involved in various claims, controversies, disputes and other contingent matters, including the items described in this Note. Some of these claims, controversies, disputes and other contingent matters involve litigation or other contested proceedings. For all such matters, the Company intends to vigorously protect and defend its interests and pursue its rights. However, no assurance can be given as to the ultimate outcome of any particular matter because litigation and other contested proceedings are inherently subject to numerous uncertainties. For matters that affect Avista Utilities' operations, the Company intends to seek, to the extent appropriate, recovery of incurred costs through the ratemaking process. With respect to matters discussed in this Note relating to Avista Energy, any potential liabilities or refunds by Avista Energy remain the responsibility of Avista Corp. and/or its subsidiaries and were not assumed by the purchaser of Avista Energy's contracts and operations in 2007. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Inquiry In April 2004, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) approved the contested Agreement in Resolution of Section 206 Proceeding (Agreement in Resolution) between Avista Corp. doing business as Avista Utilities, Avista Energy and the FERC's Trial Staff which stated that there was: (1) no evidence that any executives or employees of Avista Utilities or Avista Energy knowingly engaged in or facilitated any improper trading strategy during 2000 and 2001; (2) no evidence that Avista Utilities or Avista Energy engaged in any efforts to manipulate the western energy markets during 2000 and 2001; and (3) no finding that Avista Utilities or Avista Energy withheld relevant information from the FERC's inquiry into the western energy markets for 2000 and 2001 (Trading Investigation). The Attorney General of the State of California (California AG), the California Electricity Oversight Board, and the City of Tacoma, Washington (City of Tacoma) challenged the FERC's decisions approving the Agreement in Resolution, which are now pending before the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (Ninth Circuit). In May 2004, the FERC provided notice that Avista Energy was no longer subject to an investigation reviewing certain bids above $250 per MW in the short-term energy markets operated by the California Independent System Operator (CalISO) and the California Power Exchange (Ca1PX) from May 1, 2000 to October 2, 2000 (Bidding Investigation). That matter is also pending before the Ninth Circuit, after the California AG, Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E), Southern California Edison Company (SCE) and the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) filed petitions for review in 2005. Based on the FERC's order approving the Agreement in Resolution in the Trading Investigation and order denying rehearing requests, the Company does not expect that this proceeding will have any material effect on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Furthermore, based on information currently known to the Company regarding the Bidding Investigation and the fact that the FERC Staff did not find any evidence of manipulative behavior, the Company does not expect that this matter will have a material effect on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. California Refund Proceeding Staff _PR_i 30 Attachment A Page 1 of 8 In July 2001, the FERC ordered an evidentiary hearing to determine the amount of refunds due to California energy buyers for purchases made in the spot markets operated by the Ca1ISO and the Ca1PX during the period from October 2, 2000 to June 20, 2001 (Refund Period). Proposed refunds are based on the calculation of mitigated market clearing prices for each hour. The FERC ruled that if the refunds required by the formula would cause a seller to recover less than its actual costs for the Refund Period, sellers may document these costs and limit their refund liability commensurately. In September 2005, Avista Energy submitted its cost filing claim pursuant to the FERC's August 2005 order. The filing was initially accepted by the FERC, but in March 2011, the FERC ordered Avista Energy to remove any return on equity in a compliance filing with the Ca1ISO, which Avista Energy did in April 2011. A challenge to Avista Energy's cost filing by the California AG, the CPUC, PG&E and SCE was denied in July 2011 as a collateral attack on the FERC's prior orders accepting Avista Energy's cost filing. In July 2011, the California AG, the CPUC, PG&E and SCE filed a petition for review of the FERC's orders regarding Avista Energy's cost filing with the Ninth Circuit. The 2001 bankruptcy of PG&E resulted in a default on its payment obligations to the Ca1PX. As a result, Avista Energy has not been paid for all of its energy sales during the Refund Period. Those funds are now in escrow accounts and will not be released until the FERC issues an order directing such release in the California refund proceeding. The Ca1ISO continues to work on its compliance filing for the Refund Period, which will show "who owes what to whom." In July 2011, the FERC accepted the preparatory rerun compliance filings by the Ca1PX and CallS 0, and responded to the Ca1PX request for guidance on issues related to completing the final determination of "who owes what to whom." The FERC directed both the CallS 0 and the Ca1PX to prepare and submit to the FERC their final refund rerun compliance filings. The FERC's order also directs the Ca1PX to pay past due principal amounts to governmental entities. In February 2012, the FERC denied the challenges made to the July 2011 order by the California AG, the CPUC, PG&E and SCE. As of September 30, 2012, Avista Energy's accounts receivable outstanding related to defaulting parties in California were fully offset by reserves for uncollected amounts and funds collected from the defaulting parties. Many of the orders that the FERC has issued in the California refund proceedings were appealed to the Ninth Circuit. In October 2004, the Ninth Circuit ordered that briefing proceed intwo rounds. The first round was limited to three issues: (1) which parties are subject to the FERC' 5 refund jurisdiction in light of the exemption for government-owned utilities in section 201(f) of the FPA; (2) the temporal scope of refunds under section 206 of the FPA; and (3) which categories of transactions are subject to refunds. The second round of issues and their corresponding briefing schedules have not yet been set by the Ninth Circuit. In September 2005, the Ninth Circuit held that the FERC did not have the authority to order refunds for sales made by municipal utilities in the California refund proceeding. In August 2006, the Ninth Circuit upheld October 2, 2000 as the refund effective date for the FPA section 206 refund proceeding, but remanded to the FERC its decision not to consider an FPA section 309 remedy for tariff violations prior to that date. In an order issued in May 2011, the FERC clarified the issues set for hearing for the period May 1, 2000 - October 1, 2000 (Summer Period): (1) which market practices and behaviors constitute a violation of the then-current Ca1ISO, Ca1PX, and individual seller's tariffs and FERC orders; (2) whether any of the sellers named as respondents in this proceeding engaged in those tariff violations; and (3) whether any Staff_PR_i 30 Attachment A Page 2 of 8 such tariff violations affected the market clearing price. The FERC reiterated that the California Parties are expected to be very specific when presenting their arguments and evidence, and that general claims would not suffice. The FERC also gave the California Parties an opportunity to show that exchange transactions with the Ca1ISO during the Refund Period were not just and reasonable. Avista Energy has one exchange transaction with the Ca1ISO. The California AG, the CPUC, PG&E and SCE filed for rehearing of the FERC's May 2011 order, arguing that it improperly denies them a market-wide remedy for the pre-refund period. That request for rehearing was denied in an order issued by FERC on November 2, 2012. The California AG, the CPUC, PG&E and SCE also filed a petition for review of the May 2011 order with the Ninth Circuit. A FERC hearing commenced on April 11, 2012 and concluded on July 19, 2012. Post- hearing briefs were filed September 28, 2012, and reply briefs are due December 4, 2012. The initial decision is to be issued no later than February 15, 2013. On August 27, 2012, the Presiding Administrative Law Judge issued a partial initial decision granting Avista Utilities' motion for summary disposition, based on the stipulation by the California Parties that there are no allegations of tariff violations made against Avista Utilities in this proceeding and therefore no tariff violations by Avista Utilities that affected the market clearing price in any hour during the Summer Period. The California Parties filed a brief on exceptions on September 26, 2012, and Avista Utilities filed a brief opposing exceptions on October 16, 2012. On November 2, 2012, FERC issued an order affirming the partial initial decision and dismissing Avista Utilities from the proceeding, thereby terminating all claims against Avista Utilities for the Summer Period. In the same order, FERC also held that a market-wide remedy would not be appropriate with regard to any respondent during the Summer Period. FERC stated that it is clear that the Ninth Circuit did not mandate a specific remedy on remand and, instead, left it to the FERC's discretion to determine which remedy would be appropriate. Because the resolution of the California refund proceeding remains uncertain, legal counsel cannot express an opinion on the extent of the Company's liability, if any. However, based on information currently known, the Company does not expect that the refunds ultimately ordered for the Refund Period would result in a material loss. This is primarily due to the fact that the FERC orders have stated that any refunds will be netted against unpaid amounts owed to the respective parties and the Company does not believe that refunds would exceed unpaid amounts owed to the Company. Pacific Northwest Refund Proceeding In July 2001, the FERC initiated a preliminary evidentiary hearing to develop a factual-record as to whether prices for spot market sales of wholesale energy in the Pacific Northwest between December 25, 2000 and June 20, 2001 were just and reasonable. In June 2003, the FERC terminated the Pacific Northwest refund proceedings, after finding that the equities do not justify the imposition of refunds. In August 2007, the Ninth Circuit found that the FERC, in denying the request for refunds, had failed to take into account new evidence of market manipulation in the California energy market and its potential ties to the Pacific Northwest energy market and that such failure was arbitrary and capricious and, accordingly, remanded the case to the FERC, stating that the FERC's findings must be reevaluated in light of the evidence. In addition, the Ninth Circuit concluded that the FERC abused its discretion in denying potential relief for transactions involving energy that was purchased by the California Energy Resources Scheduling (CERS) in the Pacific Northwest and ultimately consumed in California. The Ninth Circuit Staff _PR_I 30 Attachment A Page 3 of 8 expressly declined to direct the FERC to grant refunds. The Ninth Circuit denied petitions for rehearing by various parties, and remanded the case to the FERC in April 2009. On October 3, 2011, the FERC issued an Order on Remand, finding that, in light of the Ninth Circuit's remand order, additional procedures are needed to address possible unlawful activity that may have influenced prices in the Pacific Northwest spot market during the period from December 25, 2000 through June 20, 2001. The Order establishes an evidentiary, trial-type hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (AU), and reopens the record to permit parties to present evidence of unlawful market activity during the relevant period. The Order also allows participants to supplement the record with additional evidence on CERS transactions in the Pacific Northwest spot market from January 18, 2001 to June 20, 2001. The Order states that parties seeking refunds must submit evidence demonstrating that specific unlawful market activity occurred, and must demonstrate that such activity directly affected negotiations with respect to the specific contract rate about which they complain. Simply alleging a general link between the dysfunctional spot market in California and the Pacific Northwest spot market will not be sufficient to establish a causal connection between a particular seller's alleged unlawful activities and the specific contract negotiations at issue. Claimants filed notice of their claims on August 17, 2012, and they filed their direct testimony on September 21, 2012. Respondents' answering testimony is due November 28, 2012; staffs answering testimony is due January 15, 2013; and respondents' cross-answering testimony is due February 13, 2013. Claimants' rebuttal testimony is due March 8, 2013. The hearing is scheduled to begin on April 15, 2013. On July 11, 2012, Avista Energy and Avista Utilities filed settlements of all issues in this docket with regard to the claims made by the City of Tacoma. On September 21, 2012, and September 26, 2012, the FERC issued orders approving the settlements between the City of Tacoma and Avista Utilities and Avista Energy, respectively, thus terminating those claims. The two remaining direct claimants against Avista Utilities and Avista Energy in this proceeding are the City of Seattle, Washington, and the California Attorney General (on behalf of CERS). Both Avista Utilities and Avista Energy were buyers and sellers of energy in the Pacific Northwest energy market during the period between December 25, 2000 and June 20, 2001 and, are subject to potential claims in this proceeding, and if refunds are ordered by the FERC with regard to any particular contract, could be liable to make payments. The Company cannot predict the outcome of this proceeding or the amount of any refunds that Avista Utilities or Avista Energy could be ordered to make. Therefore, the Company cannot predict the potential impact the outcome of this matter could ultimately have on the Company's results of operations, financial condition or cash flows. California Attorney General Complaint (the "Lockyer Complaint") In May 2002, the FERC conditionally dismissed a complaint filed in March 2002 by the California AG that alleged violations of the FPA by the FERC and all sellers (including Avista Corp. and its subsidiaries) of electric power and energy into California. The complaint alleged that the FERC's adoption and implementation of market-based rate authority was flawed and, as a result, individual sellers should refund the difference between the rate charged and a just and reasonable rate. In May 2002, the FERC issued an order dismissing the complaint. In September 2004, the Ninth Circuit upheld the FERC's market-based rate authority, but held that the FERC erred in ruling that it lacked authority to order refunds for violations of its reporting requirement. Staff _PRJ 30 Attachment A Page 4 of 8 The court remanded the -case-for further proceedings. In March 2008, the FERC issued an order establishing a trial-type hearing to address "whether any individual public utility seller's violation of the FERC's market-based rate quarterly reporting requirement led to an unjust and unreasonable rate for that particular seller in California during the 2000-2001 period." Purchasers in the California markets were given the opportunity to present evidence that "any seller that violated the quarterly reporting requirement failed to disclose an increased market share sufficient to give it the ability to exercise market power and thus cause its market-based rates to be unjust and unreasonable." In March 2010, the Presiding ALJ granted the motions for summary disposition and found that a hearing was "unnecessary" because the California AG, CPUC, PG&E and SCE "failed to apply the appropriate test to determine market power during the relevant time period." The judge determined that "[w]ithout a proper showing of market power, the California Partiesfailed to establish a prima facie case." In May 2011, the FERC affirmed "in all respects" the AL's decision. In June 2011, the California AG, CPUC, PG&E and SCE filed for rehearing of that order. Those rehearing requests were denied by the FERC on June 13, 2012. On June 20, 2012, the California AG, CPUC, PG&E and SCE filed a petition for review of the FERC's order with the Ninth Circuit. Based on information currently known to the Company's management, the Company does not expect that this matter will have a material effect on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Coistrip Generating Project Complaint In March 2007, two families that own property near the holding ponds from Units 3 & 4 of the Coistrip Generating Project (Coistrip) filed a complaint against the owners of Colstrip and Hydrometrics, Inc. in Montana District Court. Avista Corp. owns a 15 percent interest in Units 3 & 4 of Coistrip. The plaintiffs allege that the holding ponds and remediation activities have adversely impacted their property. They allege contamination, decrease in water tables, reduced flow of streams on their property and other similar impacts to their property. They also seek punitive damages, attorney's fees, an order by the court to remove certain ponds, and the forfeiture of profits earned from the generation of Colstrip. In September 2010, the owners of Coistrip filed a motion with the court to enforce a settlement agreement that would resolve all issues between the parties. In October -201 1, the court issued an order, which enforces the settlement agreement. The plaintiffs have subsequently appealed the court's decision and in September 2012 the Montana Supreme Court heard arguments on the appeal, and a decision is pending. Under the settlement, Avista Corp.'s portion of payment (which was accrued in 2010) to the plaintiffs was not material to its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Although the final resolution of this complaint remains uncertain, based on information currently known to the Company's management, the Company does not expect this complaint will have a material effect on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Sierra Club and Montana Environmental Information Center Notice On July 30, 2012, Avista Corp. received a Notice of Intent to Sue for violations of the Clean Air Act at Coistrip Steam Electric Station (Notice) from counsel on behalf of the Sierra Club and the Montana Environmental Information Center (MEIC), an Amended Notice was received on Staff PR_130 Attachment A Page 5 of 8 September 4, 2012, and a Second Amended Notice was received on October 1, 2012. The Notice, Amended Notice, and Second Amended Notice were all addressed to the Owner or Managing Agent of Coistrip, and to the other Coistrip co-owners: PPL Montana, Puget Sound Energy, Portland General Electric Company, NorthWestern Energy and PacifiCorp. The Notice alleges certain violations of the Clean Air Act, including the New Source Review, Title V and opacity requirements. The Amended -Notice alleges additional opacity violations at Colstrip, and the Second- Amended Notice alleges additional Title V allegations. All three notices state that Sierra Club and MEIC will request a United States District Court to impose injunctive relief and civil penalties, require a beneficial environmental project in the areas affected by the alleged air pollution and require reimbursement of Sierra Club's and MEIC's costs of litigation and attorney's fees. Under the Clean Air Act, lawsuits cannot be filed until 60 days after the applicable notice date. Avista Corp. is evaluating the allegations set forth in the Notice, Amended Notice and Second Amended Notice, and cannot at this time predict the outcome of this matter. Harbor Oil Inc. Site Avista Corp. used Harbor Oil Inc. (Harbor Oil) for the recycling of waste oil and non-PCB transformer oil in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In June 2005, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 10 provided notification to Avista Corp. and several other parties, as customers of Harbor Oil, that the EPA had determined that hazardous substances were released at the Harbor Oil site in Portland, Oregon and that Avista Corp. and several other parties may be liable for investigation and cleanup of the site under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, commonly referred to as the federal "Superfund" law, which provides for joint and several liability. The initial indication from the EPA is that the site may be contaminated with PCBs, petroleum hydrocarbons, chlorinated solvents and heavy metals. Six potentially responsible parties, including Avista Corp., signed an Administrative Order on Consent with the EPA on May 31, 2007 to conduct a remedial investigation and feasibility study (RI/FS). The draft final RI/FS was submitted to the EPA in December 2011 and was accepted as pre-final in March 2012. The EPA indicated in their approval letter that they intend to recommend a finding of No Further Action later in 2012. The actual cleanup, if any, will not occur until the RI/FS is finalized and approved by the EPA. Based on the review of its records related to Harbor Oil, the Company does not believe it is a major contributor to this potential environmental contamination based on the small volume of waste oil it delivered to the Harbor Oil site. As such, the Company does not expect that this matter will have a material effect on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. The Company has expensed its share of the RI/FS ($0.5 million) for this matter. Spokane River Licensing The Company owns and operates six hydroelectric plants on the Spokane River. Five of these (Long Lake, Nine Mile, Upper Falls, Monroe Street, and Post Falls) are regulated under one 50- year FERC license issued in June 2009 and are referred to as the Spokane River Project. The sixth, Little Falls, is operated under separate Congressional authority and is not licensed by the FERC. The license incorporated the 4(e) conditions that were included in the December 2008 Settlement Agreement with the United States Department of Interior and the Coeur d'Alene Tribe, as well as the mandatory conditions that were agreed to in the Idaho 401 Water Quality Staff _PR_I 30 Attachment A Page 6 of 8 Certifications and in the amended Washington 401 Water Quality Certification. As part of the Settlement Agreement with the Washington Department of Ecology (DOE), the Company has participated in the Total Maximum Daily Load {TMDL) process for the Spokane River and Lake Spokane, the reservoir created by Long Lake Dam. On May 20, 2010, the EPA approved the TMDL and on May 27, 2010, the DOE filed an amended 401 Water Quality Certification with the FERC for inclusion into the license. The amended 401 Water Quality Certification includes the Company's level of responsibility, as defined in the TMDL, for low dissolved oxygen levels in Lake Spokane. The Company submitted a draft Water Quality Attainment Plan for Dissolved Oxygen to the DOE in May 2012 and this was approved by the DOE in September 2012. This has now been submitted to the FERC for their approval. It is not possible to provide cost estimates at this time because the mitigation measures have not been fully approved by the FERC. However, management believes any potential costs would not be material. On July 16, 2010, the City of Post Falls and the Hayden Area Regional Sewer Board filed an appeal with the United States District Court for the District of Idaho with respect to the EPA's approval of the TMDL. The Company, the City of Coeur d'Alene, Kaiser Aluminum and the Spokane River Keeper subsequently moved to intervene in the appeal. In September 2011, the EPA issued a stay to the litigation that will be in effect until either the permits are issued and all appeals and challenges are complete or the court lifts the stay. The EPA and the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (Idaho DEQ) are preparing draft National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permits and the 401 Water Quality Certifications for the Idaho dischargers, respectively, which once issued will be released for a 30-day public comment period. The IPUC and the WUTC approved the recovery of licensing costs through the general rate case settlements in 2009. The Company will continue to seek recovery, through the ratemaking process, of all operating and capitalized costs related to implementing the license for the Spokane River Project. Cabinet Gorge Total Dissolved Gas Abatement Plan -Dissolved atmospheric gas levels in the Clark Fork River exceed state of Idaho and federal water quality standards downstream of the Cabinet Gorge Hydroelectric Generating Project (Cabinet Gorge) during periods when excess river flows must be diverted over the spillway. In 2002, the Company submitted a -Gas Supersaturation Control Program (GSCP) to the Idaho DEQ and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). This submission was part of the Clark Fork Settlement Agreement for licensing the use of Cabinet Gorge. The GSCP provided for the possible opening and modification of two diversion tunnels around Cabinet Gorge to allow streamfiow to be diverted when flows are in excess of powerhouse capacity. In 2007, engineering studies determined that the tunnels would not sufficiently reduce Total Dissolved Gas (TDG). In consultation with the Idaho DEQ and the USFWS, the Company developed an addendum to the GSCP. The GSCP addendum abandons the concept to reopen the two diversion tunnels and requires the Company to evaluate a variety of different options to abate TDG. In March 2010, the FERC approved the GSCP addendum of preliminary design for alternative abatement measures. In the second quarter of 2011, the Company completed preliminary feasibility assessments for several alternative abatement measures and determined that two alternatives will be considered for continued development. Further analysis and review of these alternatives is expected to be completed through 2012. The Company will continue to seek recovery, through the ratemaking Staff_PRJ 30 Attachment A Page 7 of 8 process, of all operating and capitalized costs related to this issue. Fish Passage at Cabinet Gorge and Noxon Rapids In 1999, the USFWS listed bull trout as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The Clark Fork Settlement Agreement describes programs intended to help restore bull trout populations in the project area. Using the concept of adaptive management and working closely with the USFWS, the Company is evaluating the feasibility of fish passage at Cabinet Gorge and Noxon Rapids. The results of -these studies led, in part, to-the decision to move forward with development of permanent facilities, among other bull trout enhancement efforts. In 2009, the Company selected a contractor to design a permanent upstream passage facility at Cabinet Gorge. The Company anticipates that the design and cost estimates will be completed by the end of 2012 with construction taking place in 2013 and 2014. In January 2010, the USFWS revised its 2005 designation of critical habitat for the bull trout to include the lower Clark Fork River as critical habitat. The Company believes its ongoing efforts through the Clark Fork Settlement Agreement continue to effectively address issues related to bull trout. The Company will continue to seek recovery, through the ratemaking process, of all operating and capitalized costs related to fish passage at Cabinet Gorge and Noxon Rapids. Aluminum Recycling Site In October 2009, the Company (through its subsidiary Pentzer Venture Holdings II, Inc. (Pentzer)) received notice from the DOE proposing to find Pentzer liable for a release of hazardous substances under the Model Toxics Control Act, under Washington state law. Pentzer owns property that adjoins land owned by the Union Pacific Railroad (UPR). UPR leased their property to operators of a facility designated by the DOE as "Aluminum Recycling - Trentwood." Operators of the UPR property maintained piles of aluminum "black dross," which can be designated as a state-only dangerous waste in Washington State. In the course of its business, the operators placed a portion of the aluminum dross pile on the property owned by Pentzer. Pentzer does not believe it is a contributor to any environmental contamination associated with the dross pile, and submitted a response to the DOE's proposed findings in November 2009. In December 2009, Pentzer received notice from the DOE that it had been designated as a potentially liable party for any hazardous substances located on this site. UPR completed a RI/FS Work Plan in June 2010. At that time, UPR requested a contribution from Pentzer towards the cost of performing the RI/FS and also an access agreement to investigate the material deposited on the Pentzer property. Pentzer concluded an access agreement with UPR in October 2010. UPR completed the RI/FS during 2011. Based on information currently known to the Company's management, the Company does not expect this issue will have a material effect on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. Other Contingencies In the normal course of business, the Company has various other legal claims and contingent matters outstanding. The Company believes that any ultimate liability arising from these actions will not have a material impact on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. It is possible that a change could occur in the Company's estimates of the probability or amount of a liability being incurred. Such a change, should it occur, could be significant. Staff _PR_I 30 Attachment A Page 8 of 8 AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/19/2012 CASE NO: AVLJ-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Don Kopczynski REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Amanda Reinhardt TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Customer Service REQUEST NO.: Staff-131 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-7941 REQUEST: Please provide a copy of the policy for bad debt write-offs and collection of past due amounts. RESPONSE: The following is the procedure the customer service system (CS S) or representative takes related to bad debt write-offs and collection of past due amounts: After the closing bill due date, accounts with an outstanding balance are reviewed to determine appropriate action. A typical closing bill process includes: closing bill reminder, outbound call, and a follow up letter to inform the customer of their outstanding balance. If the customer has opened a new account, then the Company would follow the process to transfer the balance to the open account. If the customer does not have an open account, or does not contact the Company with satisfactory payment or payment arrangements, the balance is written off (between 40 to 90 days after the close of the account) and assigned with a third party collection agency. AYISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Patrick Ehrbar REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Patrick Ehrbar TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Regulation REQUEST NO.: Staff-137 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8620 REQUEST: For the following electric rate schedules, please explain why the Company is proposing the revenue increase be spread on a uniform percentage basis to the energy billing components, rather than applying the revenue increase uniformly to all billing components: a.General Service Schedule 11/12 b.Large General Service Schedule 21/22 c.Extra Large General Service 25 d.Clearwater Paper Schedule 25P e.Pumping Service Schedule 31/32 RESPONSE: In recent general rate cases, the Company has received approval to increase the demand charge, and certain basic charges, by a percentage typically higher than the increase in the energy rates for Schedules 11, 21, 25 and 25P. For example, Schedule 25 received a energy rate decrease of 0.5% while the minimum monthly demand charge increased by 4.2% and the demand charge increased by 12.5% in Case AVU-E-1 1-01. The Company chose to apply the increase to the energy charges in this case, after taking into account the prior increases in the demand charges and basic charges. Page 1 of I AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 /AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Patrick Ehrbar REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Patrick Ehrbar TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Regulation REQUEST NO.: Staff-138 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8620 REQUEST: On page 21 of Pat Ehrbar's Testimony, Table 6 shows the Company serves one interruptible sales service customer on Schedules 131 or 132. Please provide the number of times this customer has been curtailed over the last four years. As part of your response, please compare the revenue from this customer during the test period to what would have been collected had this customer been on a firm service schedule. RESPONSE: The one customer on Schedule 132 has not been curtailed in the last four years. The base revenue from the customer in the test period was $69,620.23, and would have been $66,538.44 had the customer been served on Schedule 112. The customer is paying more in terms of base revenues on Schedule 132 versus the alternative schedule. The billing revenue (which includes the cost of natural gas, demand costs, etc.) from the customer in the test period was $201,091.32, and would have been $238,799.73 had the customer been served on Schedule 112. The customer is paying less in terms of billing revenues, which is entirely related to the avoidance of demand/transportation costs as discussed in the Company's response to Staff-139. Page 1 of I AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Patrick Ebrbar REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Patrick Ehrbar TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Regulation REQUEST NO.: Staff-l39 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-8620 REQUEST: Please explain how the Company determines the cost of providing service to interruptible customers, particularly given the number, magnitude and duration of interruptions may vary. RESPONSE: The cost of service study provided by the Company as Exhibit 12, Schedule 6 is based on the twelve months ended June 2012 test year pro forma results of operations. For the single Schedule 132 customer, that customer is allocated its share of distribution plant, based on the allocation factors included in Company witness Ms. Knox's cost of service study, in addition to any identified directly assigned plant (such as the meter). The primary difference between customers served on an interruptible schedule versus a non-interruptible schedule is that the customer served on Schedule 132 does not pay for fixed pipeline transportation - i.e., demand costs. This can be seen by looking at natural gas Schedule 150 where Schedules 131 and 132 do not pay a demand charge. Below is a copy of the table from Schedule 150 which demonstrates this: Demand Commodity Total Schedules 101 10.327 33.2850 43.612 Schedules 111 and 112 10.3270 33.2850 43.6120 Schedules 131 and 132 .0000 33.2850 33.285 Page 1 of! AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Tara Knox REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Joe Miller/Jeff Webb TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Rates/Gas Engineering REQUEST NO.: Staff-140 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4546 (509) 495-4424 REQUEST: Please explain how the Company allocates the costs of gas distribution mains to the various rate schedules when the installation or expansion is necessary to enhance system reliability or capacity. As part of your response, explain how the costs of distribution mains used for looping are treated differently than other distribution mains of the same diameter. RESPONSE: The Company allocates all distribution mains using the peak and average ratio for the distribution system. Schedule 131/132 and 146 customers that are identified as solely utilizing a portion of distribution main in the GIS mapping system receive a direct allocation of that distribution main. The Company does not attempt to differentiate the allocation of distribution main based on system reliability, capacity or looping. In addition, the Company does not separately track projects related to looping and therefore is unable to provide any further detail as to the length or diameter of pipe. The Company treats the costs of distribution main used for looping the same as other distribution mains of the same diameter. Page 1 of 1 AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Tara Knox REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jeff Webb TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Gas Engineering REQUEST NO.: Staff-141 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4424 REQUEST: Please explain how gas distribution mains less than four inches in diameter contribute to the overall reliability and capacity of the system. As part of your response, please explain how Schedule 146 customers might benefit from improved reliability and additional capacity on the distribution system. Gas distribution mains deliver or distribute gas from one or more sources (city gate stations and regulator stations) to customers. Gas distribution mains are sized using a mathematical analysis to ensure that customer demands can be met. Specifically, the diameter must be able to supply customer demand based on the distance from the existing source or nearest main to the customer's point of service. Thus, longer distances and larger loads will require larger diameters. As customer needs increase or additional customers are added, reinforcement projects are required to increase capacity. Such projects are sized to incorporate anticipated growth and to mitigate the need for additional projects in the future. These reinforcement projects may include upsizing existing mains or installation of mains that loop the distribution system. Loop feeds are added to increase capacity for meeting customer demand(s); they may also have the inherent benefit of additional reliability. All gas distribution mains (less than and greater than four inches) contribute to the overall capacity of the system to some extent. While larger diameter mains have greater capacity, they are only added to the system when necessitated by customer demands. All customers, including Schedule 146, benefit from the entire makeup of their respective distribution system. Any existing main (regardless of size) removed or taken out of service will lessen capacity and reliability to that distribution system. Currently, all five Schedule 146 customers are connected to distribution main that is four inches or larger due to their large loads. Page 1 of! AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Tara Knox REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Jeff Webb/Joe Miller TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: Gas Engineering/Rates REQUEST NO.: Staff-142 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4424 (509) 495-4546 REQUEST: The Company's gas Cost-of-Service study classifies distribution mains into two categories: those less than four inches and those four inches or greater. Please provide the number of distribution mains four inches or greater serving fewer than five customers. As part of your response, please provide the change in revenue requirement for each schedule if the cost of the large distribution mains serving fewer than five customers were directly assigned to the customers served from these mains. RESPONSE: The Company has not performed such analysis and without manually going through the mapping of the entire distribution system would be unable to perform such analysis. In general, only in rare circumstances, such as serving a large transportation load, would the Company expect to serve fewer than five customers on a distribution main greater than four inches. Page 1 of! AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNES& Tara Knox REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Joe Miller TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Reg. REQUEST NO.: Staff-143 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4546 REQUEST: Page 20 of Pat Ehrbar's testimony describes the purpose of having Schedules 112 and 132. Please provide the number of customers who switched between Schedule 146 and Schedules 112 or 132 during the test period. As part of your response, please provide a detailed explanation of how fixed costs were annualized for the test period to account for customers switching between schedules. RESPONSE: The Company experienced one customer who switched from Schedule 146 to Schedule 112 during the test year. The Company incorporated this customers annual therm usage, billings, peak therms and meter type as if the customer had been on Schedule 112 for the entire twelve month test period to ensure both revenues and expenses were annualized properly. Page 1 of 1 AVISTA CORPORATION RESPONSE TO REQUEST FOR INFORMATION JURISDICTION: IDAHO DATE PREPARED: 12/21/2012 CASE NO: AVU-E-12-08 / AVU-G-12-07 WITNESS: Tara Knox REQUESTER: IPUC RESPONDER: Joe Miller TYPE: Production Request DEPARTMENT: State & Federal Reg. REQUEST NO.: Staff-144 TELEPHONE: (509) 495-4546 REQUEST: If the Special Contract revenues and costs are not shown separately in Cost-of-Service, please provide the revenues and costs from providing service to Special Contract customers. If the Special Contract revenues and costs are shown separately, please explain where they can be found. RESPONSE: The pro forma value in "Account 495.xx Other Gas Rev - Misc & Spec Cont Rev" of $143,000 is assigned to rate schedules in the cost of service model at row 418 of the Detail tab of "Idaho Gas COS.xls" (hardcopy print GCOS-86). Of the $143,000 shown as Other Gas Rev - Misc & Spec Cont Rev, $97,227 is derived from the two Special Contracts currently in place (hardcopy print PDE-G-3). As notated in the classification basis column, the Other Revenue value has been assigned to classes "as Rate Base" which is on row 123. Related disaggregation into function is shown in rows 431 through 434 of the same page. The following infonnation addresses incremental costs associated with the two contracts. In Order No. 26559 approving the Schedule 147 special contract, the Commission found "that the 20 per therm contract rate for distribution service is competitive, reasonable and necessary to retain the IMSAMET load. Avista has found that the cost of the incremental facilities installed to serve IMSAMET were recovered by the Company in the prior contract term. Based on the information presented, the Company finds that the proposed contract service charges exceed the Company's variable cost of providing service." In Order No. 30307 approving the current Schedule 159 special contract, the Commission found "that the provisions of the Agreement are reasonable. Considering the surrounding circumstances, the company has negotiated an acceptable net -contribution to fixed costs." The net contribution to fixed costs from these special contract customers is flowing back to all other customers as a reduction to the required return on rate base because the allocated "Other Revenue" reduces the amount of revenue otherwise necessary to be recovered through base rates. Page 1 of I