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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20181207Avista and Hydro One Brief.pdfDeborah A. Ferguson, ISB No. 5333 Ferguson Durham, PLLC 223 N. 6th Street, Suite 325 Boise, Idaho 83702 (208) 34s-sr83 daf@fergusondurham.com Counsel on Behalf of Hydro One Limited and Olympus Equity LLC David J. Meyer, Esq., ISB No.8317 r . , ii, .. -. Vice President and Chief Counsel of Regulatory and Governmental Affairs Avista Corporation l l4l I E. Mission Avenue P.O. Box 3727 Spokane, Washington 99220 (s09) 49s4316 Counsel on Behalf of Avista Corporation BEFORE THE IDAHO PI'BLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION IN THE TVTATTER OF THE JOINT APPLICATION OF HYDRO ONE LMITED AND AVTSTA CORPORATION FOR APPROVAL OF A MERGER AGREEMENT HYDRO ONE LIMITED'S AND AVISTA'S BRIEF ON IDAHO coDE $ 6l-327 L INTRODUCTION Idaho Public Utilities Commission's ("IPUC") Staffhas conducted exhaustive due diligence on the Hydro One Limited ('Hydro One") and Avisa Corporation ('Avista") proposed merger. This hard look confrms that the transaction meets the criteria of Idaho Code $ 6l-328, and that this merger is good for the citizens of ldaho. Late in the process, months after the intervention deadline, an entity called the Avista Customer Group intervened, and now asserts that Idaho Code $ 6l-327 bars the merger. As discussed below, Idaho Code $ 6l-327 does not apply to this uansaction, and the merger should be approved by the IPUC. cAsE NO. AVU-E-t7-09 AVU-G-17-05 II. STATUTORY TRAMEWORK In January 1951, the ldaho Legislature passed Session Law 1951, ch.3, compiled as ldaho Code $$ 6l-32?- 6l-331 ('the Act'). (A copy of the Act is attached in its entirety as an Appendix to this brief.) Section 327 of the Act provides that certain public governmental agencies, as well as entities not subject to regulation by the IPUC, are prohibited from acquiring property in ldaho used to generate eleclrtcily. Any transfer of such property is subject to the IPUC's approval underthe Act, which also includes penalty provisions. IIL STATEMENTOFFACTS Avisa is a Washington Starc corporation that generates, transmis, and distributes elecricity in ldaho and else$rhere. Hydro One is an investor-owned electricity ransmission and disribution utility headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The capital stock of Hydro One is uaded on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Hydro One is not a govemment entity, but rather is an investor-owned corporation organized under the laws of Ontario. Direst Testimony of Mayo Schmidt at 5{ (Sept. 14, 20l7x*Schmidt Direct"). A number of investors, including some investors that are government entities, own some of Hydro One's capital stock. .ld. at 8. No single investor or group of alfiliated investors owns or controls all or even a majority of Hydro One's capial stock. Direct Testimony of Christopher Lopez at l0 (Sept. 14,2017). As a result, no investor has a controlling interest in Hydro One. Id. Among Hydro One's investors, the Province of Ontario (the "Province") is the largest Investor. Rebuttal Testimony of Thomas Woods at 2 (Nov. 14, 2018) ("Woods Reb."). However, the Province docs not control Hydro One. Id. The Province currently owns less than 50% of Hydro One's stock and, after completion of the merger, the Province will own less than(So/o of Hy&o One's stock. Supplemenal Testimony of James Scarlett at22-23 (Sept. 24,2018). The Province is prohibited by a Govemance Agreement bctween the Province and Hydro One from 2 II. STATUTORY FRAMEWORK In January 1951, the Idaho Legislature passed Session Law 1951, ch.3, compiled as ldaho Code $$ 6l-327- 6l -33 I ("the Act'). (A copy of the Act is anached in its entirery as an Appendix to this brief.) Section 327 of the Act provides that certain public governmental agencies, as well as entities not subject to regulation by the IPUC, are prohibited from acquiring property in ldaho used to generate electricity. Any transfer of such properfy is subject to the IPUC's approval under the Act, which also includes penalty provisions. UI. STATEMENT OF FACTS Avista is a Washington State corporation that generates, transmits, and distributes electricity in Idaho and elsewhere. Hydro One is an investor-owned elecuicity transmission and distribution utility headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The capital stock of Hydro One is traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Hydro One is not a govenunent entity, but rather is an investor-owned corporation organized under the laws of Ontario. Direct Testimony of Mayo Schmidt at 5-6 (Sept. 14,2017)("Schmidt Direct"). A number of investors, including some investors that are government entities, own some of Hydro One's capital stock. Id. at 8. No single investor or group of affiliated investors owns or controls all or even a majority of Hydro One's capital stock. Direct Testimony of Christopher Lopez at l0 (Sept. 14,2017). As a result, no investor has a controlling interest in Hydro One. Id. Among Hydro One's investors, the Province of Ontario (the "Province") is the largest Investor. Rebuttal Testimony of Thomas Woods at 2 (Nov. 14,2018) ("Woods Reb."). However, the Province does not control Hydro Ooe.Id. The Province currently owns less than 50% of Hydro One's stock and, after completion of the merger, the Province will own less than 43Yo of Hydro One's stock- Supplemental Testimony of James Scarlett at22-23 (Sept. 24,2018). The Province is prohibited by a Governance Agreement between the Province and Hydro One from 2 acquiring additional shares if doing so would result in the Province having control over more than45%oofshares. Id.at23;Ex. l0-3at$2.T.l.HydroOnealsodoesnotactasatrustee nominee, agent, or representative for the Province. Woods Reb. at 2-8. The role of the Province with respect to Hydro One is established and resticted by the Governance Agreement that was entered in 2015 as part of Hydro One's lnitial Public Offering. Joint Application at I7. Neither the Province nor any other Hy&o One shareholder has any representatives on Hydro One's Board of Directors. Woods Reb. at 7-8. Instead, with the exception of the CEO, all Hydro One Directors must be independent of both Hydro One and the Province. See Exh. l0-3 (Governance Agreement ("GA") $$ 4.2.2, 4.2-3). The Governance Agreement also establishes that the Hydro One Board is responsible for managing and supervising Hydro One's business and affairs. Schmidt Direct at l0; see also GA $ 2.1.2. The Govemance Agreement explicitly states that the Province will be involved in Hydro One as an investor and not as a manager. Schmidt Direct at l0; see also GA $ 2.1.3. After the merger (the "Transaction") closes, ttre stock of Avista will be 100% owned by Olympus Equity LLC, an Idaho limited liabiliry company. Olympus Equity LLC stock in turn will be held by Olympus Holding Coqp., a Dclaware corporation which is a wholly owned indirect subsidiary ofHydro One. See Errata to Joint Application, Appendix I (Nov. 26,2018). Avista's assets will continue to be owned by Avista and managed by Avista's executives and Board. Pursuant to the Stipulated Commitrnents filed with the [PUC, only two of Avista's nine Board members will be executives or employees of Hydro One- Stipulated Commiunent No. 3. All other Avista Board members will be either independent or Avista executives or employees. .Id. Avista's Board of Directors alone will be responsiblc for the selection of its CEO and will set all policies for the utility, including any policy regarding the disposition of utility property. Stipulated Commiunent No. 2. Alt decision-making authority over Avista operations will belong 3 to the Avista Board, and not to Hydro One. Thc Province will not own any Avisia stock and cannot exercise any control, direct or indirect, over Avista after the merger. Iv. DISCUSSION The plain language of Idaho Code $ 6l-327 and the legislative intent underlying the statute demonstrate that Idaho Code $ 6l-327 does not apply to the merger between Avista and Hydro One. (e) The plain language of ldaho Code $ 6l-327 does not apply to the merger. Under ldaho law "[tlhe language of a statute should be given its plain, usual and ordinary meaning. Where a statute is clcar and unambiguous, the expressed intent of the legislature shall be given effect without engaging in statutory construction. The literal words of a statute are the best guide to determining legislative intent." Idaho Code $ 73-l l3(a). Therefore any analysis must start with the language of the statute. Article III, sertion 16 of the Idaho Constitution requires that every act must express its subject matter in is title. Idaho Code $ 6l-327 begins as follows: "ELECTRIC UTILITY PROPERTY- ACQUISITION BY CERTAIN PLJBLIC AGENCIES PROHIBITED." From the title of Idaho Code $61-327 it is clcar the subject maner of the law prohibits "certain public agencies" from acquiring electric utility propeny, which is consistent with the language of the Section. Specifically, the statute provides that "[n]o title to or intcrest in any public utility . . . property located in this state which is used in thc generation, transmission, distribution or supply of electric power and energy to the public or any portion thereofl shall be transferred or transferable to, or acquired by, directly or indirectly, by any me:urs or device whatsoever," ( I ) "any govemmeot or municipal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental orpolitical unit, subdivision orcorporation, organized orexisting under the laws of any otherstate"; 4 (2) "or any person, firm, association, corporation or organization acting as Eustee, nominee, agcnt or representative for, or in concert or arrangement with, any such government or municipal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental or political unit, subdivision or corporation"; (3) "or any company, association, organization or corporation, organized or existing under the laws of this state or any other state, whose issued capital stock, or other cvidence of ownership, membership or other interest therein, or in the property thereof, is owned or contolled, directly or indirectly, by any such govemment or municipalcorporation,quasi-municipalcorporation,orgovemmentalorpoliticalunit, subdivision or corporation"; (4) "or any company, association, organization or corporation, organized under the laws of any other state, not coming under or within the definition of an elecric public utility or electrical corporation as contained in chapter l, title 61, Idaho Code, and subject to the jurisdiction, regulation and conrol ofthe public utilities commission of the state of Idaho under the public utilities law of this state; ...." Idaho Code $ 6l-327.t 1. Because Eydro One and Avista are taxable for-profit corporations, and not government entities, Idaho Code $ 6l-327 does not apply to the Transaction. In enacting Idaho Code $ 6l-327, the Legislature was specifically concemed with preventing tax-exempt government entities from acquiring operating public utility property in Idaho because this would deprive the State of valuable tax revenue supplied by these utilities. In a nutshelt, it wanted to retain is ability to tax and regulate these entities.2 To address these concerns, the Legislature prohibited transfers to any "government or municipal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental or political unit, suMivision or corporation, organized or existing under the laws of any other state." Because ldaho Code $ 6l-327 only applies to goverrunent entities, and because Hydro One is not a government entity, Idaho Code $ 6l-327 does not apply to the Transaction. Hydro One and Avista, like other for-profit I This is ao excerpt ofldaho Code $ 6l-327 aod does not include the exceptioo added in 1982 for cooperative electric corporatioos. Alrc, for readability, the subheading numbers (l) - (4) were added 2 The legislative intent of $ 6l-327 is discussed further in section (b) of this brief at 8-10. 5 corporations, operate with the purpose of producing profits for their shareholders. Avista pays Idaho taxes. If Avista merges wittr Hydro One, Idaho will continue to be paid taxes, as the merger does not involve any tax exempt governmental entities. Further, the IPUC will reain full regulatory authority over Avista. Hydro One is also not acting as "trustee, nominee, agent or representative for, or in concert or arrangement with" a govemment entity. All of those terms indicate an intent on behalf of the Legislature to encompass companies that are acting on behalf of a govenrment endry. Hydro One does not meet that definition and is not the Province's alter ego. Although the Province owns a portion of Hydro One's shares, so do many private investors. No single investor owns or controls all or even a majority of Hydro One's capital stock. The Hydro One Board is not empowered or permitted to consider the interesB of the Province separate from its duties to the corporation and is sakeholders as a whole. The Province does not serve on the Hydro One Board. GA $$ 4.2.2,4.2.3. Hydro One's Board of Directors, alone, is responsible for deciding to pursue the merger with Avista. GA $$ 2.1.2,2.1.3. Because Hydro One is not acting on behalf of, or as the alter ego of, the Province, the Transaction is not prohibited by ldaho Code $ 6l-327. Finally, Hydro One is not a "corporation ... whose issued capital stock, or other evidence of ownership, membership or other interest therein, or in the property thereofl is owned or controlled, directly or indirectly," by a government entity. The terms "owned or controlled" are not defined, so a court will give those terms their plain mganing. The plain meaning of thc phrase 'bwned" is ttrat the govemment entity must own all or a majority of the corporation's stock. The Province's minority interest in Hydro One does not make Hydro One a government entity or give the Province ownership of Hydro One- Furttrermore, the Province cannot be said to control (i.e., possess the power to manage or direct) the actions of Hydro One. GA $$ 2.1.2, 2.1.3,4.2.2,4.2.3.The Governance Agreement prohibits the Province from controlling or 6 managing Hy&o One or its subsidiaries. Any interest the Province has in Hydro One by virnre of stock holdings cannot be used to transfer any title to or interest in Avista's public utility property, impact the regulation of Avisa by the IPUC or be used to conEol Avista. Because Hydro One is not controlled by the Province, and Avista cannot be controlled by the Province, Idaho Code $ 6l-327 does not prohibit the Transaction.3 2. Idaho Code $ 6l-327 applies only to transfers of tangible utility property in ldaho. Idaho Code $ 6l-327 also does not apply to the Transaction because there will bc no transfer of title or interest in tangible public utility property. Idaho Code $ 6l-327 is expressly limitcd to transfers or acquisitions of "title to or interest in any public utility . . . property located in this state which is used in the generation, transmission, distribution or supply of electric power and energy to the public ... ." The literal words of the statute require this construction. The property covered by the stanrte is defined with respect to is location and use. It must be within Idaho, and used for the generation, transmission, distribution, or supply of electric power and energy. This clear language does not apply to the ransfer of shares of capital stock of Avista. The IPUC has never interpreted Idaho Code $ 6l-327 to prohibit mergers involving the stock of investor owned companies. On the contrary, it has approved them.a Furthermore, the language of the penalty provisions in the Act demonstrate that Idaho Code g 6l-327 is limited to tangible public utility property. Section 329 of the Act references the I Becarse the immediate parent of Avista will be Olympus Equity LLC, an ldaho LLC, the fourth limitation in Idaho Code $ 6l-327 is not triggercd-{See,e.g.,Finalfrer,2S2l3,JoiotApplicatioaofPaciliCorpandScottishPowerPLC,Nov. 15, l999,at l7n-18, which approved a merger tansaction betu,een PaciliCorp and Scottish Power, a foreign corporation. In this order, the IPUC disposed of ldaho Code $ 6l-327 in I foolnote oo lhe basis that both PacifiCorp and Scottish Power were privately owued corporations that did not fall within lhe parameters of Idnho Code $ 6t- 327. 7 court's sale of property escheated to the State to be conducted as a foreclosure sale. Likewise, the penalties in Section 33 I explicitly refer to "a transfer of any real or personal property." In the Transaction pending before the Commission, the only items being acquired by Hydro One (through its indirect subsidiary, Olympus Equity LLC) are the shares of Avista's capital stock owned by Avista's investors. Avista will continue to exist and operate as a stand- alone utiliry in ldaho and will continue to have its own Board of Directors and its own CEO. Joint Application at 9. None of Avista's properry or other asses will change hands as a result of the Transaction. Id. This is evidenced further by the fact that Avista has retained its water rights. Capital stock is not "property" within the meaning of Idaho Code $ 6l-327 both because it is not tangible prope4y located in Idaho and because it is not used to generate or supply elecriciry to the public. Because capital stock is not "property" under Idaho Code $ 6l-327, and because capital stock is the only itcm being acquired in the Transaction through the merger and by operation of law, Section 6l-327 does not apply to the Transaction. Hydro One's acquisition of Avista's capial stock also will not result in an "indirect" transfer of Avista's angible public utiliry property in Idaho to Hydro One. Under Idaho law, a corporation is a distinct and separate legal entity. Jolley v. Idaho Securities, Inc.,9O ldaho 373, 387 , 414 P.2d 879 ( 1966). Ownership of stock in a corporation does not equate to ownership of the corporation's assets or property. Pincock v. Pocatello Gold & Copper Mining Co., 100 Idaho 325, 328,597 P.2d 2l I (1979). Because stock ownership does not confer an ownership interest in a corporation's property to a stockholder, no title or interest in Avisia's public utility property will change hands as a result of the Transaction, either directly or indirectly. I O) The Legislative history aod the public policy underlying the Act support Hydro One's interpretation that it does not bar the Transaction. If the IPUC finds Idaho Code $ 6l-327 ambiguous, it may consider the legislative history of Section 6l-327 to understand the l*gislature's intent in enacting this law. Fornrnately there are several historical documents that reveal the clear purpose and intent behind Section 6l-327.5 These documents confirm it was the intent of the Legislature to bar tax-exempt governmental bodies from other states from acquiring utility property in ldaho to protect its tax base. Shortly after passage, the Act was summarized succinctly by the ldaho Attorney General in his l95l-1952 Biennial Report to the State Legislature: The l95l Legislature enacted a statute which forbade acquisition by a municipal corporation of another state of facilities for the generation or transmission of electrical energy in ldaho. The satute was patently aimed at preventing acquisition by Public Utility Disricts of the Sate of Washington of the operating properties of the Washington Power Company located in North ldaho. Ferguson Declaration, Ex. D, p. 37. As recounted by the ldaho Daily Stalesman on January 23, 1951, the Legislature took this emergency action in a single day because if the Washington Water Power Company (which was investor owned), was transferred to tax-exempt Public Utility Disricts in Washington State, the State of ldaho would lose significant tax revenues. Ferguson Declaration, Ex E, p. 43. A concern was expressed at the Technical Hearing that if the Legislature barred the transfer of utility property to government entities of other states, it may have intended to bar foreign govennmental entities too, as it seems unlikely it would give preferential treatment to foreign bodies over sister states. However, there is a logical reason why the legislature targeted sister states and was unconcerned about foreign govemmental entities. The Act applies to t These documeots are attached as exhibits to the Declaration of Deborah A. FergusoD, and submitted in support of this brief. Hydro One asks the IPUC to take administsative notice under IDAPA 31.01.01.263.01(b)(-3) of the historical public documents surrounding Section 327, which are attachcd as exhibits to the declaration. 9 domestic governmental entities of other states because of thcir tax exempt status;6 foreign entities are taxable. So even if a parry to this transaction were a foreign govemmental entity, or controlled by one, the statute is not a bar. But the Commission can safely avoid rcaching that issue because Hydro One and Avista are non-governmental private entilies. Private entities--foreign or domestic-are not barred by Section 6l-327.If a foreign entity sought to acquire elcctric utility property within ldaho's borders, it would remain taxable and subject to IPUC control, and Section 6l-327 would have no application to it. As in the IPUC's order approving the merger of PacifiCorp and Scottish Power, Section 6l-327 likewise does not apply here, as this Transaction is also between non- governmental entities subject to Idaho taxes and IPUC regulation. V. CONCLUSION Idaho Code $ 6l-327 does not apply to this Transaction as demonsrated through the Ianguage of the Act and the legislative intent behind it. Because the Hydro One and Avista merger is in the best interest of ldahoans, it should be approved by the Commission. Respectfully submitted this 7rh day of December, 2018. 6 Idaho Code $ 63-602A exempts from property tax, among other things, "property belonging to the statc ofldaho ... [andl property belonging to any county or mrmicipal corporation or school district within this state." While there is no law that iaterpres this statemenl in the conlext ofa muoicipal corporation organized under the law ofa state other than Idaho, the slight variation in the language of this statute from similar language ia Article 7- Section 4 of the Constitution of the State of ldaho indicates that the lafter exemption should be read as broadly applicable to property within the State of ldaho that is owned by any municipal corporalion organized under the law of any state. In addition, out-of-state govemment entities generally are not subject to ldaho's income tax provisions, which bcgin with aud are intended to "nrirroC' applicable U.S. federal income tax law except to lhe exteot expressly provided in the ldaho Code. Idaho Code $ 63-3002. Thus, without specific provision--of which there is none-to overide Section I l5 of the Intemal Revenue Code of 1986, as amende{ an out-of-state govemment entity should not be subject to ldaho income taxalion to the extent the income concerned is derived from the entity's performance of an esseotial governtrlent function and accrues to the entity. 10 TTYDRO ONE LIIIIITED Ferguson Durham,PLLC Counsel on Behalf of Hydro One Limited and Olynrpus Equity LLC AVISTA CORPORATION ,,,y'7,/ s David ]/Mleyer, ISB No. 83 17 Chief€ounsct for Regutatory and Govcrnmental Affairs Counselon Behalf of Avista Corporation 11 APPENDIX TO HYDRO ONE LIMITED'S AND AVISTA'S BRrEF ON rDAHO CODE S 6r-327 Idaho Statutes TITTE 51 PUBTIC UTILITY REGULATION CHAPTER 3 DUTIES OF PUBTIC UTITITIES 6I-327. EIECTRIC UTILITY PROPERTY - ACQUISITION BY CERTAIN PUBLIC AGENCIES PROHIBITED. No title to or interest in any public utility (as such term 1s defined in chapled,--$&-Le--51, Idaho Code) property located in this state which is used in the qeneration, transmission, distribution or supply of electric power and energy t.o the publi-c or any portion thereof, shall be transferred or transferable to, or acquired by, directly or indirectly, by any means or device whaEsoever, any government or municipal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental or political- unit, subdivision or corporation, organized or existing under the laws of any other state; or any person, fj-rm, association. corporation or organization actingas trustee, nominee, agent or representative for, or in concert or arrangement with, any such government or municipal corporati.on, quasi- municipal corporation, or governmental or political unit, subdivision or corporation; or any company, associ-ation, organization or corporation, organized or existing under the laws of this state or anyother state, whose issued capital stock, or other evidence of ownership, membership or other interest therein, or in the property thereof, is owned or controlled, di-rectly or indirectly, by any such government or municipal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental or political unit, subdivision or corporation; or any company, associaEion, organization or corporati.on, organized under the laws of any other state, not coming under or within the definition of an electric public utility or electrical corporation as contained 1n chaPter_1.,@,rdahoCode,andsubjecttothejurisdiction, regulation and control of the public utilities commission of the state of fdaho under the public utilities .Law of this state; provided, nothing herein shall prohibit the transfer of any such property by apublic utility to a cooperative electrical corporation organized underthe laws of another state, which has among its members mutual nonprofit or cooperative electrical corporations organized under the laws of the state of Idaho and doing business in this state, if such public utility has obtained authori-zatj.on from the public utilities commission of the state of Idaho pursuant to section 6t-328, Idaho Code. History: t6L-327, added 1951, ch. 3, sec. 1, p. 4; am. L982, ch. 7, sec. 1,p. 10.1 How current is this law? Search the ldaho Statutes and Constitution Idaho Statutes TITTE 51 PUBLIC UTILITY REGULATION CHAPTER 3 DUT]ES OF PUBLIC UTILITIES 6L-328. ELECTRIC UTILITIES - SALE OT PROPERTY TO BE APPROVED BY COMMISSION. (1) No electric public utility or electrical corporation as defined in chapjBgf-L,lijE-Is-5l, fdaho Code, owning, controlling or operating any property Located in this state whlch is used in the generation, transmission, distribution or supply of electric power and energy to the public or any portion thereof, shall merlre, sell, lease, assign or transfer, directly or indirectly, in any manner whatsoever, any such property or interest therein, or the operati-on, management or control thereof, or any certificaEe of convenience and necessity or franchise covering the same, except when authorized to do so by order of t,he public utilities commission. {2, The electric publ1c uti}ity or electrical corporation sha11 fiLe a verified application setting forth such facts as the commission shall prescribe or require. The commissj.on shall issue a publj.c notice and shall conduct a public hearing upon the application.(3) Before authorizing the transacti.on, the public utilities commi-ssion shaL.I find:(a) That the transaction is consistent with the public interest,'(b) That the cost of and rates for supplying service wj-ll not be increased by reason of such transactioni and(c) That the applicant, for such acquisition or transfer has the bona fi.de intent and financial ability to operate and maintain said property in the public service. The applicant shal] bear the burden of showing that standards listed above have been satisfied.(4) The commission shal} have power to j-ssue said authorization and order as prayed fox, or to refuse to issue the same, or to issue such authorization and order with respect only to a part of theproperty involved. The commission sha]L include in any authorization or order the conditi.ons required by the director of the department of water resources under section !2:J33L(61 , Idaho Code. The commission may attach to its auEhorization and order such other terms and conditions as in its judgment the public convenience and necessity may require.History: l6L-328, added 1951, ch.3, sec.2, p. 4t am.20OO, ch.224, sec. 2, p. 620.1 How current is this law? Search the Idaho Statutes and Consdtudon Idaho Statutes TITLE 61 PUBLIC UTILITY REGULATION CHAPTER 3 DUTIES OF PUBLIC UTILITIES 6l-329. UNLAWFUL TRANSFER OR ACQUISITION ESCHEAT. Any suchproperty or interest in property hereafter transferred or acquired inviolation of this act sha1I escheat to the state of ldaho. The attorney general ot the state shall institute proceedings in the district court of any county in which such property, or any portion thereof, is si-tuated, to have such escheat adjudged and decreed. If the property is operating property, the court sha11 continue the operation thereof under a recej-ver appointed by and under the control and supervision of the court, pending final determi-nation of the act j-on and the sale and dispos j-tion of the property. !{hen the court has entered judgment escheating the property to the state, the court shall thereupon order a sale of the property, or interest therein, inthe same manner as prescribed by the laws of the state of Idaho for the sale of real estate under mortgage foreclosure. Out of the proceeds arisJ-ng from such saIe, any valid liens or claims of third parties shaLl be paid, and the balance shal1 be paid into the state treasury for the credit of the school fund. History: 161-329, added 1951, ch. 3, sec. 3, p. 4.1 How current is this law? Search the Idaho Statutes and Consdtudon Idaho Statutes TITLE 61 PUBLIC UTILITY REGULATION CHAPTER 3 DUTIES OF PUBLIC UTILITIES 6L-330. EVASIONS OF ACT CONCLUSM PRESUMPTIONS. Every conveyance or transfer of property, or any interest therein, inviolat,ion of the provisi-ons of this act, whether voluntary orinvoluntary, or though colorable 1n form, or if made with the intent or purpose to evade or avoid the provisions of this act, shall be voidas to the state, and the property or interest thereby conveyed ortransferred, shaIl escheat Eo the state as in this act provided. Aconclusive presumption that the conveyance or transfer is made with the intent or purpose to evade or avoid the provisi-ons of this actshall arise upon proof of any of the following facts: a. The purchase, acqulsition or t,aking of the property, orinterest therein, in the name of a person or party other than persons or part,ies referred Lo in section 6l-327 t, fdaho Codel , if theconsideration is paid, guaranteed or otherwise secured, or agreed or understood Lo be pai-d, guaranteed or otherwise secured, directly or indirecEly, by a government or municipal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental or polltica1 unit, subdivision orcorporation referred to in section 6l-327[, Idaho Code]. b. The taking of the property in the name of a company,association, organization or corporation, if the shares of stock therein, or other evidence of ownership, membership or other interesttherein, or in the property thereof, held by any government or munj-clpal corporation, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental orpolitical unit, subdivision or corporation, or any other company, association, organization or corporation, referred to in section 61- 3271, Idaho Codel, together with such shares or other evidence ofownership. membershlp or interest held by others but paid for, guaranteed or otherwise secured, directly or indirectly, by any such government or municipal corporaEJ.on, quasi-municipal corporation, or governmental or political uni-t, subdivision or corporation, amount to a majority of the issued stock or other evidence of ownership, membership or other interest therein, or in the property thereof. c. The purchase, acquisition or holding of the majority of the issued stock, or other evidence of ownership, membership or other int,erest. therein, or the voEing control of any such stock or other evidence of ownership, membership or interest, either directly or indirectly, by any government or municipal corporation. quasi- municipal corporation, or governmental or political unit, subdivisionor corporation, or any other company, association, organization orcorporat,ion, referred Eo in section 6L-327 L, Idaho Codel, in any company, association, organizatj-on or corporation now or hereafter owning, holding or operating any property located in this state which is used in the generation, transmissi-on, distribution or supply ofelectric power and energy to the public or any portion thereof. The enumeration in this section of certain presumptions shall notbe construed as to preclude other presumptions or inferences that reasonably may be made as to the existence of intent or purpose to e evade or avoid the provisions of this aet, or escheat as provided for herein. History: [61-330, added 195]., ch. 3, sec. 4, p. 4.1 How current is this law? Search the Idaho Statutes and Cons6tudon Idaho Statutes TITLE 61 PUBLIC UTILITY REGULATION CHAPTER 3 DUTIES OF PUBI,IC UTILITIES 51-331. VIOLATION Of ACT - CRIMINAL PENALTY. If any person, or two (2, or more persons, act, negotlate, participate, attempt, arrange or conspj.re to make or effect, or to receive or Eake, a transfer of any real or personal property used for the purposes speci.fied in sect.ion il*2j- or section 61-328 [, Idaho Code] , or of any interest t,herein, in violation of the prohibltions contained in section 51- 327t, Idaho Code,l or of any other provi.sion of this act, each, any or all of such persons, upon conviction thereof, sha1l be punished by imprisonment in the county jail or state penitentiary not exceedingtwo (21 years or by a fine not exceeding $5000, or by both such fine and imprisonment.History: [51-331, added 1951, ch. 3, sec. 5, p. 4.] How current is this law? Search the Idaho Statutes and Consdtudon Deborah A. Ferguson,ISB No. 5333 Ferguson Durham, PLLC 223 N. 6th Street, Suite 325 Boisg ldatro 83702 (208) 34s-s183 da@fergusondurham.com Auorneyfor Hydro One Limiled BEFORE TEE IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION IN TIIE MATTER OF TTIE JOINT APPLICATION OF HYDRO ONE LIMTIED A}.ID AVISTA CORPORATION FOR APPROVAL OF MERGER AGREEMENT )) cAsE NO. AW-E-1749) AV(J-G-I7-o5 )) DECLARATTON OF) IIEBORAE A. trERGUSON IN ) SUPPoRTOFEYDROOI\IE) LIMTTED'S AI\D AVISTA'S BRrEF ) oN rDAEO CODE S 6r-327 ) ) STATE OF rDArrO ) CoT.JNTYOF ADA ) I, Deboratr A. Fergusog declare as follows: l. I am duly licensed to practice law in the State of Idaho and before the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (tre "Commission"), and I'anr an afiorney with the firm Ferguson Durham, PLLC and am an attorney of record for Hydro One Limited ('Hydro One") in the above-referenced action. I make this declaration based upon my own personal knowledge, and can testify as to the tnrth of the statements contained herein if called upon to do so. 2. I make this declaration in support of Hydro Ones and Avista's brief on ldaho Code $ 6l- 327 filedconcurrenfly herewith (the "Brief'). I 3. I researched whether there are any official records of the floor debates on January 22,1951, pertaining to the passage of the legislation that became Idaho Code S 6l-327. There are no official records of the floor debates recorded by the legislature. 4. Attached hereto as Exhibit A is a true and correct copy of Hydro One's Articles of Incorporation. 5. Attached hereto as Exhibit B is a true and correct excerpt of People, Politics & Public Po$'er by Ken Billingfon, Washington Public Utility Districts' Association, p. 58 (1988). 6. Attached hereto as Exhibit C is a true and correct excerpt of the January 22, l95l ldaho House and Senate Joumal. 7. Attached hereto as Exhibit D is a true and correct excerpt from the Thirty-First Biennial Report of the Attomey General of Idaho, l95l-1952, Robert E. Smylie, Attorney General. 8. Attached hereto as Exhibit E is a true and conect copy of an article published in The ldaho Daily Statesman on January 23,lg5l,by John Corlett tilled,"Rill Pas.sed Banning I'ttblic Utility Sales lo Governmenlal Agencies." I declare under penalty of perjury pursuant to the law of the State of ldaho that the foregoing is true and correct. Respectfully submitted this /' day of December,20l8. HYDRO ONE LMITED By: Deborah A. Ferguson Ferguson Durham, PLLC On Behalf of Hydro One Limited and Olympus Equity LLC ,) EXHIBIT A For Ministry Use A l'usaqe exclusil du Only minislitE Ontario Corporation Number Numdro de la soci€b ea Onlaio $;- B:irristry of t,iiniri+i'e dL,g Lrf Covemmertl SEryrees 6ervicas gouve:nemcntslurontario CERTIFICATE CEFITIFICATfhis is lo aertify thirt &\e$e Cej cetdie qua f""ii Jiri;ajrr:9lrlicles are eflec(ive on flatuts errtt,{lt en vi0u*i_jr lG ". au-gusJ__3"1 AO0T, 2015 @ 1941138 A J siness Corrjor#'ioil-r Lri sur les socji$ec par l(,lcos ARTICLES OF INCORPORATIONsilrurs coNsTtruTtFs The name of the corporation is: (Sel out in BLOCK CAPITAL LErrERS)Form 1 BusioBss Corporallons Act Fotmule 1 Loi surlas soci'Es par actons H Y Ddnomination sociale de la sociitd en LEI"IRES MAJUSCULES E l;irli 2. The address of the regislered oflice is: Adresse du sidge soclal: 4R3 Rav StrecJ Sotrlh Tower Srritc 800 (Steet & Number or R.R. Number & if Multi.Ofiico Building give Room No-) (Rue et numqrc ou numiro de la R.R. el, s'il s'eglt d'un adlfrce e bureaux, num'ro du bureau) roronto oNTARto LM ls iC-lr ff{ (Name of Municipality or Post Office) (Nom de la municipalitd ou du bureau de posle) (Poslal Code) (Code postal') 10 15 3. Number of directors islare: Nombrc d adminislraleurs : 4. The first director(s) is/are: P re m ie r( s) ad mi ni strate u (s) Fixednumbe, l" - --l OR minimumandmaximum Nombrefixd i- -. .-. I OIJ minlmumelmaximum Fkst name, middle names and sumame Prenom, autrcs Pftnoms et nom de famille See Schedule 1A. Address for service, giving Street & No. or R.R. No., Municipalily, Province, Country and Postal Code Domicile 6lu, y compris la rue et le numdro, le numdro de la R.R. ou le nom de ta municipaliE, la province, le pays et le code poslal Resident Canadian? Yes or No Rdsident canadien? OuiNon *lol N E L M ID9 T D I I -J l 071 16E(05/2007) 1 I I Schedule 1A Firs( namc, middlc namcs and surnamc Pr6nom, autrcs Prdnoms €t nom de famille Addrcss Mayo Schmidt David Denison George Cooke Gale Rubenstein Marcello (Marc) Caira Charles Brindamour Kathryn Jackson lan Bourne Frances Lankin Jim Hinds Margaret (Marlanne) Hanis Christie Clark Philip Orsino Jane Peverett Roberta Jamieson Addrcss for scrvic€, givlng Street & No' or R.R. No., Municipality, Provlnce, Country lnd Postal Codc Domicile dlu, y contpris la ru! ct lc num6ro, le num6ro dc la R.R ou le nom de la mnnicipalite, la provincq le pays et lc codc postal 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MsG 2P5 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MsG 2P5 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MsG 2P5 333 Bay Street, Suite 3400 Toronlo, ON MsH 2S7 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MsG 2Ps 700 University Avenue, Suite 1500 Toronto, ON MsG OA1 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON, MsG 2P5 606 4th Street SW, Suite 1410 CalgaryAB T2P 1T1 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MsG 2P5 40 Castle Frank Road Toronto, ON M4W 226 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronlo, ON MsG 2P5 401 Bay Street, Suite 1600 Toronto, ON MsH 2Y4 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MSG 2P5 483 Bay Street, 8th Floor, South Tower Toronto, ON MsG 2P5 50 Generations Drive Ohsweken, ON NOA 1M0 Residcnt Canadian? Yes or No Rdsident canadlcn? No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 071 16E(06/2007) 5. Restriclions, ifany, on business the corporation may carry on or on powers the corporation may exercise. Linites, s'il y a lieu, imposies aux activitds commerciales ou aux pouvoirs de la soci6te. None. 6. The classes and any maximum number of shares that the corporation ls authorized lo issue: Ca6goies et nombre maximal, s'il y a lieu, d'actions que la sociee est aulorisee e emenre : an unlimited number of Common Shares; and an unlimited number of Preferred Shares, issuable in series. 071 16E (06/2007) 1 7. Rights, privileges, restrictions and conditions (if any) attaching to each class of shares and directors authority with respect to any class of shares which may be issued in serles: Droits, pivibges, restrictions et conditions, s'il y a lieu, rattachds d chaque caftgoie d'actions et polvcirs des administrateurs relatifs d chaque catdgaia d'actions qui peut etre emise en serie : See Schedule 74 - Common Share Terms See Schedule 78 - Prefened Share Class Terms 3A SCHEDULE"TA" IIYDRO ONE LIMITED (The "CORPORATION") COMMON SHARE TERMS The Cornmon Shares shall, as a class, have attached thereto the following rights, privileges, restrictions and conditions : I. The holders of the Common Shares shall be entitled to receive notice of and to attend all meetings of shareholders of the Corporation except meetings at which only the holders of another class or series of shares are entitled to vote separately as a class or series, and shall be entitled to one vote at all such meetings in respect of each Common Share held. 2- Subject to the rights, privileges, restrictions and conditions attaching to any other class or series of shares, the holders of the Common Shares shall, at the discretion of the directors, be entitled to receive any dividends declared and payable by the Corporation on the Common Shares. 3. Subject to the rights, privileges, restrictions and conditions attaching to any other class or series of shares, upon the liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Corporation or other distribution of the Corporation's assets among its shareholders for the purposes of winding-up its affairs, the holders of the Common Shares shall be entitled to receive the remaining assets of the Corporation. 2007s3s6.4 3B SCITEDULBs'78" HYDRO OI\TE LIMITED (The "CORPORATION") PREF'ERRED SHARE CLASS TERMS The Preferred Shares shall, as a class, have attached thereto the following rights, privileges, restrictions and conditions : l. The Preferred Shares may, from time to time, be issued in one or more series; 2. The Preferred Shares of each series shall, as to the payment of dividends, distribution of assets and retum of capital in the event of liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation, rank on parity with the Preferred Shares of every other series and senior to the Common Shares and all other shares ranking in such regard junior to the Prefened Shares; 3. The directors of the Corporation may from time to time issue Preferred Shares in one or more series, each series to consist of such number of shares as shall before issuance thereof be fixed by the directors who (subject as herein provided) shall at the same time determine the designation, rights, privileges, reshictions and conditions attaching to the Preferred Shares of such series including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing the rate of preferential dividends, the dates of payment thereof, the redemption price and terms and conditions of redemption (if any), the conversion rights (if any), the participation rights (if any) and any sinking fund, purchase fund or other provisions attaching to the Preferred Shares of such series, the whole subject to the issuance of a certificate of amendment in accordance with the Bustness Corporations lcl (Ontario); and 4, Subject to the Business Corporations Act (Ontaio), the holders of the Prefened Shares or ofa series thereofshall not be entitled as holders ofsuch class or series to receive notice of or to attend any meeting of the shareholders of the Corporation or to vote at any such meeting except that votes may be granted to a series of Preferred Shares when dividends are in arrears on any one or more series; such voting rights, if any, will be determined by the applicable series provisions. t9907556.6 071 16E (06/2007) 4 8. The issue, lransfer or ownership of shares is/is not restricted and the restrictions (if any) are as follows: L'6mission, le tnnsfed ou la propr6td d'aclions es/n'est pas restreint. Les restnbtbns, s'il y a lieu, sonl les suivanles See Schedule 8A - Ownership Restrictions 4A SCHEDULE "8A" OWNERSHIP RESTRICTIONS 1. INTERPRETATION AND DET'INITIONS l.l In this Schedule "8A": 1.1.1 The terms "company" and "person" have the meanings given to those terms, respectively, in the Securities Act (Ontario) ("OSA"), as now enacted or as the same may be from time to time amended, varied, replaced, restated, re-enacted or supplemented. 1.1.2 The term o'control" and the phrase "acting jointly or in concert" are to be intelpreted in a manner that is consistent with the interpretation of that phrase as used in Part )O( of the OSA, 1.1.3 All terms otherthan those referred to in subsections 1.1.1 and 1.1.2 and which are not otherwise defined in this Schedule "8A" have the meanings given to those terms in the OSA or the Business Corporations Act (Ontario) ("OBCA'), respectively, provided that in the event of any inconsistency between a definition contained in the OSA and a definition contained in the OBCA, the definition contained in the OSA shall prevail. 1.1.4 Except where the context requires the contrary, words importing the singular shall include the plural and vice versa and words importing gender shall include masculine, feminine and neuter genders. 1.2 In this Schedule "8A": o'Affected Shareholders" has the meaning set out in section 11.2; "Amendments" has the meaning set out in section 2.2; "directors' determination", or "as determined by the directors of the Corporation" and similar expressions mean a deterrnination made by the directors of the Colporation in accordance with section 12; "Electricity Act" means the Electricity Act, /998 (Ontario); "excess Voting Securities" means the number of Voting Securities beneficially owned or over which control or direction is exercised in excess of the maximum number of Voting Securities that could be beneficially owned or over which control or direction could be exercised in compliance with the share constraint; "net proceeds of sale" has the meaning set out in section 7.3; "OBCA" has the meaning set out in section 1.1.3; 1.3 4B *OSA" has the meaning set out in section 1.1. i; "Province" means the Minister as defined in the Elechicity Act on behalf of Her Majesty in right of Ontario; "redemption price" has the meaning set out in section 8.2; "sell-down notice" has the meaning set out in section 5.1; "share constraint" has the meaning set out in section 3.2; "shareholder default" has the meaning set out in subsection 5.1.4; "shareholder's declaration" means a declaration made in accordance with section 13; "suspension" has the meaning set out in section 6.1 and "suspend", "suspended" and similar expressions have comesponding meanings; and "voting security" has the same meaning as voting security in the Electricity Act; and "Voting Security" means any voting security issued by the Corporation, For greater certainty, no person or company is presumed to be acting jointly or in concert with any other person or company for purposes of this Schedule "8A" solely by reason thal one of them has given the other the power to vote or direct the voting of Voting Securities of a class or series of Voting Securities at a meeting of the holders of that class or series under a revocable proxy where: 1 .3.1 the prory is solicited solely by means of an information circular issued in a public solicitation of proxies that is made in respect of all Voting Secwities of that class or series and in accordance with applicable law; 1.3.2 the proxy is solicited but no information circular is required to be issued under the OSA or the OBCA; or 1.3.3 the proxy is not solicited. 1.4 For the purposes of this Schedule "8A": 1.4.1 where two or more persons or companies acting jointly or in concert beneficially own or exercise control or direction over Voting Securities, the number of Voting Securities beneficially owned or over which control or direction is exercised by each person or company shall include the number of Voting Securities beneficially owned or over which control or direction is exercised with those other persons or companies; and I.4.2 references to Voting Securities "held by" a person or company are to Voting Securities beneficially owned or over which control or direction is exercised by that person or company. I9346615.1 r 2.2 4C 1.5 Where Voting Securities are registered in the name of a depositary that does not beneficially own, or, except for purposes of complying with this Schedule "8A", exercise control or direction over, Voting Securities, then, unless explicitly stated otherwise or unless the context otherwise requires, references in this Schedule "8A" to the "registered holder" refer to the depositary in its capacity as the registered holder solely of the Voting Securities beneficially owned, or over which confuol or direction is exercised, by a particular person or company or a particular combination of person or companies, referenced in this Schedule "8A" and not of all the Voting Securities registered in the name of the depositary. 2, REGULATION 2.t The Coqporation has imposed the restrictions on the transfer and ownership of the Voting Securities set out in this Schedule "8A" for the purposes of ensuring that the Corporation complies with section 48.2 of the Electricity Act. ln the event that the provisions of section 48.2 of the Electricity Act are from time to time amended, varied, replaced, restated, re-enacted or supplemented (the "Amendments'), and the Amendments are inconsistent with this Schedule "8A", the Amendments are deemed to be incorporated in this Schedule "8A" from their effective date, without, for greater certainty, any approval by the holders of Voting Securities, and the Amendments supersede the provisions of this Schedule'08A" to the extent of the inconsistency. On the date that the Corporation is not required to constrain the transfer or ownership of its Voting Securities for the purposes identified in section 2,1 or otherwise, this Schedule "8A" shall be deemed to be deleted in its entirety from the Articles of the Corporation without, for greater certainty, any approval by the holders of Voting Securities and this Schedule "8A"shall be of no further force or effect as and from that date. 2.3 2.4 In the event that this Schedule "8A" is amended as provided for in section 2.2 or is deemed to be deleted in accordance with section 2.3, the directors of the Corporation shall restate the Articles of lncorporation of the Corporation, as amended from time to time, to reflect the amendment or deletion within thirry (30) days of such amendment or deletion, without, for greater certainty, any approval by the holders of Voting Securities. The Corporation shall, within fifteen (15) days of the effective date of restatement of the Articles, give written notice of the restatement to each registered holder of Voting Securities registered as of the close of business on the effective date of the restatement. The accidental failure or omission to give the notice to one or more of the holders shall not affect the validity of the provisions of this section 2.4. 3. SHARE CONSTRAINT 3,1 No person or company, and no combination of persons or companies acting jointly or in concert, may beneficially own or exercise confool or direction over more than l0 per cent of any class or series of Voting Securities. However this reskiction does not apply with respeet to Voting Securities held by the Province. I 9345615. I l 4.1 4D 3.2 The prohibition set out in section 3.1 is referred to in this Schedule "8A" as the "share constraint". 3.3 The share constraint does not apply to an undenvriter who holds Voting Securities solely for the pupose of distributing Voting Securities to purchasers who comply with section 3.1. 4. CONTRAVENTION OF TIIE SHARE CONSTRAINT In the event of a directors' determination, whether based on a review of the securities registerc of the Corporation or otherwise, that any person or company or any combination of persons or companies is in contavention of the share constraint: 4.1.1 the Corporation shall not accept any subscription for Voting Securities from that person or company or any person or company forming part of that combination; 4.1.2 the Corporation shall not issue any Voting Securities to that person or company or any person or company forming part of that cornbination; 4.1.3 the Corporation shall not register or otherwise recognize the transfer of any Voting Securities to that person or company or any person or company forming part of that combination; 4.1.4 no person or cbmpany may, in person or by proxy, exercise the right to vote any of the Voting Securities held by that person or company or any person or company forming part of that combination; 4.1.5 subject to section 11,1, the Corporation shall not declare or pay any dividend, or make any other distibution: 4.1.5.1 on any excess Voting Securities held by that person or company or any person or company forming part of such combination; or 4.1.5.2 on all of the Voting Securities held by that person or company or any person or company forming part of such combination if there is a directors' determination that the contravention of the share constraint was intentional, unless there is a directors' determination that it would be in the best interests of the Corporation to make the distribution in respect of some part or all of the non-excess Voting Securities; and any entitlement to that dividend or other distribution shall be forfeited; and 4.1.6 the Corporation shall send a sell-down notice to the registered holder of the Voting Securities held by that person or company or any person or company forming part of such combination. 4.2 In the event of a directors' determination, whether based on a review of the securities registers of the Corporation or otherwise, that any person or company or combination of 19346615.r I 4,3 4E persons or companies, after any proposed subscription for or issue or foansfer of Voting Securities, would be in contravention of the share constraint, the Corporation shall not: 4.2.1 accept the proposed subscription for Voting Securities from; 4.2-2 issue the proposed Voting Securities to; or 4.2.3 register or otherwise recognize the proposed transfer of any Voting Securities to; that person or company or any person or company forming part of that combination. In the event of a directors' determination that during any prior period or at any prior time any person or company or any combination of persons or companies is or was in contravention of the share constraint, the directors of the Corporation may, where there is a directors' determination that it would be in the best interests of the Corporation, also make a directors' determination that: 4.3,1 any votes cast, in person or by proxy during that period or at that time in respect of the Voting Securities held by that person or company or any person or company forming part of that combination shall be disqualified and deemed not to have been cast; and 4.3.2 5. SELL-DOWN NOTICE 5.1 Any notice (a "sell-down notice') required to be sent to a registered holder of Voting Securities under subsection 4. 1.6: 5.1.1 shall specifr in reasonable detail, based on the information then available to the directors of the Corporation, the nature of the contravention of the share constraint, the number of Voting Securities determined to be excess Voting Securities and the consequences ofthe contravention specified in section 4; 5.1,2 shall request an initial or further shareholder's declaration; r9346615.1 r subject to section 11.1, each such person or company or each person or company fonning part of such combination is liable to the Corporation to restore to the Corporation the amount of any dividend paid or disfribution received during that period: 4.3.2.1on the excess Voting Securities held by that person or company and of each other person or company forming part of that combination; or 4.3.2.2 on all of the Voting Securities held by that person or company or any person or company formrng part of that combination in the event of a directors' determination that the contravention of the share constraint was intentional. 4F 5.1.3 shall specify a date, which shall be not less than 45 days after the date of the sel[- down notice (srrch date specified, the "response date"), by which the excess Voting Securities are to be sold or disposed of; and 5.1.4 shall state that unless the registered holder either: 5, 1.4.1 sells or otherwise disposes of the excess Voting Securities by the response date on a basis that does not result in any contravention of the share constraint and provides to the directors of the Colporation, in addition to the shareholder's declaration requested under subsection 5.1.2, writien evidence satisfactory to the directors of the Corporation of that sale or other disposition; or 5.l.4.2provides to the directors of the Corporation by the response date, in addition to the shareholder's declaration requested under subsection 5.1.2, written evidence satisfactory to the directors of the Corporation that there is no contravention ofthe share constraint; a default (a "shareholder default") shall occur that shall result in the consequence of suspension under section 6 and may result in the consequence of sale in accordance with section 7 or redemption in accordance with section 8, in each case without fuither notice to the registered holder, and shall specifr in reasonable detail the nature and timing of those consequences. In the event that, following the sending of a sell-down notice, written evidence is submitted to the directors of the Corporation for purposes of subsection5.l.4.2 by the response date, the directors of the Corporation shall assess the evidence as soon as is reasonably practicable and shall give a second notice to the person or company submitting the evidence as soon as is reasonably practicable after receipt of the evidence stating whether the evidence has or has not satisfied the directors of the Corporation that there is no contavention of the share constraint. If the evidence has satisfied the directors of the Corporation, the sell-down notice shall be cancelled and the second notice shall so state. If the evidence has not satisfied the directors of the Corporation, the second notice shall reiterate the statements required to be made in the sell-down notice under subsections 5.1.3 and 5.1.4 provided the response date for the second notice shall be the later of: (i) the response date specified in the first notice and (ii) third business day following the date that the second notice is given. 6. SUSPENSION 6,1 In the evEnt of a shareholder default in respect of any registered holder of Voting Securities, then, without firrther notice to the registered holder: 6,1.1 all of the Voting Securities of the registered holder shall be deemedto be struok frorn the securities register of the Corporation; 6.1.2 no person or company may, in person or by proxy, exercise the right to vote any of those Voting Securities; 5.2 t934661 5. I I 4G 6.1 .3 subject to section 1 1.1, the Corporation shall not declare or pay any dividend, or make any other distribution, on any of those Voting Securities and any entitlement to a dividend or other distribution shall be forfeited; 6.1.4 the Corporation shall not send any form of proxy, information circular or financial statements of the Corporation or any other general communication from the Corporation to any person or company in respect of those Voting Securities; and 6.1.5 no person or company may exercise any other right or privilege ordinarily attached to those Voting Securities. (All of the foregoing consequences of a shareholder default are referred to in this Schedule "8A" as a "suspension".) Notwithstanding the foregoing, a registered holder of suspended Voting Securities shall have the right to transfer those Voting Securities on any securities register of the Corporation on a basis that does not result in contravention ofthe share conshaint. 6.2 The directors of the Corporation shall cancel any suspension of Voting Securities of a registered holder and reinstate the registered holder to the securities register of the Corporation for all purposes if they make a directors' determination that, following the cancellation and reinstatement, none of those Voting Securities will be beneficially owned, controlled or directed in contravention of the share constraint. For greater certainty, any reinstatement shall permit, from and after the reinstatEment, the exercise of all rights and privileges attached to the Voting Securities so reinstated, but subject to section 1 1.1, shall have no retroactive effect. 7. SALE 7.1 In the event of a shareholder default in respect of any registered holder of Voting Securities, the Corporation may choose by directors' determination to sell, on behalf of the registered holder, the excess Voting Securities of that registered holder, without fuither notice to that registered holder, on the terms set out in this section 7 and section 9. 7.2 The Corporation may sell any excess Voting Securities in accordance with this section 7 7.2.1 on the Toronto Stock Exchange; or 7.2.2 if the Voting Securities are not then listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, on any other stock exchange or organi2sd market on which the Voting Securities are then listed or traded as the directors of the Corporation may choose by directors' determination; or 7.2,3 if the Voting Securities are not then listed on any stock exchange or traded on any organized market, in any other manner as the directors of the Corporation may choose by directors' determination. 7.3 The "net proceeds of sale" of excess Voting Securities sold in accordance with this section 7 shall be the net proceeds from such sale after deduction of any commission, tax 193466t5.1 I 7.4 4H and other costs of sale (including, but not limited to, the Corporation's reasonable legal fees). The Corporation has the requisite legal power and authority for all purposes of a sale of excess Voting Securities in accordance with this section, as if it were the registered holder and beneficial owner of the Voting Securities being sold. 8. REDEMPTION 8.1 In the event of a shareholder default in respect of any registered holder of Voting Securities and in the event of a directors' determination either ttrat the Corporation has used reasonable efforts to sell excess Voting Securities in accordance with section 7 but that the sale is impracticable or that it is likely that the sale would be contrary to the best interests of the Corporation, the Corporation may choose by directors' determination, subject to applicable law, to redeem the excess Voting Securities of the registered holder, without further notice to the registered holder, on the terms set out in this section 8 and section 9. 8,2 The "redemption price" paid by the Corporation to redeem any excess Voting Securities in accordance with this section 8 shall be: 8.2.1 the average of the closing prices per share of the Voting Securities on the Toronto Stock Exchange (or, if the Voting Securities are not then listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange or if the requisite trading of Voting Securities has not occurred on the Toronto Stock Exchange! any other stock exchange or any other organized market on which the requisite trading has occurred as the directors of the Corporation may choose by directors' determination) over the last 10 trading days on which at least one board lot of Voting Securities has traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange (or other stock exchange or other organized market) in the period ending on the trading day immediately preceding the date fixed for redemption by the directors pursuant to a directors' determination; or 8.2.2 if the requisite trading of Voting Securities has not occurred on any stock exchange or other organized market, on any basis the directors of the Corporation may choose by directors' determination; less any commission, tax and other costs of redemption (including, but not limited to, the Corporation's reasonable legal fees). 9. PROCEDURES RELATING TO SALE AND RE,DEMPTION 9.1 In the event of any sale or redemption of excess Voting Securities in accordance with sections 7 or 8, respectively, the net proceeds of sale or the redemption price; respectively, constitute trust firnds and the Corporation shall deposit the funds in a special trust account in any bank or frust corporation in Canada selected by it. The Corporation may commingle the trust funds with other such trust funds. The amount of the deposit, together with any income earned thereon from the beginning of the month next following the date of the receipt by the Corporation of the net proceeds of sale or the redemption I 934661 5. I I 9.2 9.3 9.4 4T price, less any taxes on the income and the reasonable costs of adminisftation of the trust fund shall be payable to the registered holder of the excess Voting Securities sold or redeemed on presentation and surrender by the registered holder to the Corporation or to the trust corporation to which the trust funds are transferred in accordance with section 9.6 of the certificate or certificates representing the excess Voting Securities if such certificate or certificates have been issued or, ifno certificate has been issued, other evidence of ownership of the excess Voting Securities satisfactory to the Corporation or its registrar and transfer agent. A receipt signed by the registered holder shall be a complete discharge of the Corporation, or the trust corporation to which the trust funds are transferred in accordance with section 9.6, in respect of the trust funds and income eamed on these trust funds paid to the registered holder. From and after any deposit made under section9,l, the registered holder shall not be entitled to any of the remaining rights of a registered holder in respect of the excess Voting Sectuities sold or redeemed, other than the right to obtain a certificate or other evidence of ownership representing the excess Voting Securities for the purpose only of tendering it to receive trust funds in respect of the excess Voting Securities sold or redeemed and to receive the trust funds on presentation and surrender of the certificate or certificates or other evidence of ownership satisfactory to the Corporation or its registrar and transfer agent representing the excess Voting Securities sold or redeemed. If a part only of the Voting Securities represented by any certificate is sold or redeemed in accordance wittr section 7 or 8, respectively, the Corporation shall, on presentation and surrender ofthat certificate and at the expense and request ofthe registered holder, issue a new certificate representing the balance of the Voting Securities. As soon as is reasonably practicable after, and, in any event, not later than 30 days after, a deposit made under section 9.1, the Corporation shall send a notice to the registered holder of the excess Voting Securities sold or redeemed and the notice shall state: 9.4.1 that a specified number of Voting Securities has been sold or redeemed, as the case may be; 9.4,2 9.4.3 9.4.4 9.4.s the amount of the net proceeds of sale or the redemption price, respectively; the name and address of the bank or kust company at which the Corporation has made the deposit of the net proceeds of sale or the redemption price, respectively; all other relevant particulars of the sale or redemption, respectively; and that to receive the net proceeds of sale or the redemption price, the registered holder must present and surrender to the Corporation the certificate or certificates representing the excess Voting Securities so sold or redeemed if such certificate or ceftificates have been issued or, if no certificate has been issued, other evidence of ownership of the excess Voting Securities satisfactory to the Corporation or its registrar and transfer agent. I 93466t 5. I I 0q 9.6 4t The accidental failure or omission to give the notice to the registered holder shall not affect the validity of the sale or redemption of Voting Securities completed in accordance with section 7,8 or 9. For greater certainty, the Corporation may sell or redeem excess Voting Securities in accordance with section 7 or 8, respectively, despite the fact that the Corporation does not possess the certificate or certificates representing the excess Voting Securities at the time of the sale or redemption. If, in accordance with section 7, the Corporation sells excess Voting Securities without possession of the certificate or certificates representing the excess Voting Securities, the Corporation shall issue to the purchaser of such excess Voting Securities s1 i1s nsminee a new certificate or certificates or other evidence of ownership representing the excess Voting Securities sold. If, in accordance with section 7 or section 8, the Corporation sells or redeems excess Voting Securities without possession of the certificate or certificates representing the excess Voting Securities and, after the sale or redemption, a person or company establishes that it is a bona fide purchaser of those sarne excess Voting Securities also sold or redeemed by the Corporation, then, subject to applicable law: 9.s.1 the excess Voting Securities beneficially owned by the bona fide purchaser are deemed to be, from the date of the sale or redemption by the Corporation, as the case may be, validly issued and outstanding Voting Securities in addition to the excess Voting Securities sold or redeemed; and 9.5.2 notwithstanding section9.2, the Corporation is entitled to the trust funds deposited under section 9.2 and, in the case of a sale in accordance with section 7, shall add the amount of the deposit to the stated capital account for the class and series, if applicable, of Voting Securities issued; provided that if the steps contemplated by sections 9.5.1 and 9.5.2 are not permitted by applicable law, then the Corporation shall take other reasonable steps to rectify the circurnstances ofsuch bona fide purchaser. The Corporation may transfer any trust fund established under this section 9 and its administration to a trust corporation in Canada registered as such under the laws of Canada or a province or a territory thereof, and the Corporation is then discharged ofall further liability in respect of the trust fi:nd. The trust funds described in section9.l together with any income earned on the trust funds, less any taxes and reasonable costs of administration, that has not been claimed for a period of 10 years after the date of the sale or redemption by the person or company entitled under section 9 to receive such funds is forfeited to the Corporation. EXCEPTIONS Notrvithstanding section 3, the share constraint does not apply in respect of Voting Securities that are held: 10.1.1 by any pemon or company or combination of persons or companies by way of security only provided such person or company does not exercise the votes 10. 10.1 19346615.1I 4K attaching to such Voting Securities and does not otherwise exercise control or direction over such Voting Securities, but only in respect of such person or company or combination of persons or companies; by aoy person or company or combination of persons or companies who beneficially owns or exercises conhol or direetion over such shares by virtue of having realized on a security interest in the Voting Securities but who is in the process of disposing of the Voting Securities, for a reasonable period of time to be determined by a directors' determination to facilitate such disposition, provided that during such period of time the number of votes attached to those Voting Securities shall be reduced to a number that is the largest whole number of votes that may be attached to the Voting Securities which that person or company or combination of persons or companies could beneficially own or exercise control or direction over from time to time in compliance with the share conshaint or for greater certainty, by any person or company that is acting in relation to the Voting Shares solely in its capacity as an intermediary in the payment of funds or the holding or delivery of securities, or both, in connection with trades in securities and that provides centralized facilities for the clearing of trades in securities, but only in respect of that person or company. SAVING PROVISIONS 10.1,.2 10.1.3 11. 11.1 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Schedule "8A": 11.1.1 the dircctors of the Corporation may choose by directors' determination to pay a dividend or to make any other disfribution on Voting Securities that would otherwise be prohibited by any other provision of this Schedule '08A" where there is a directors' determination that the contravention of the share constraint that gave rise to the prohibition was inadvertent or of a technical nature and such contravention of the share constraint has been remedied within a reasonable period of time, as determined by the directors; and ll.l.2 where a dividend has not been paid or any other distribution has not been made on Voting Securities as a result of a directors' determination of a contravention of the share consffaint, ot where the amount of a dividend or any other distribution has been restored to the Corporation under subsection 4.3.2 as a result of a directors' detennination of a conhavention of the share constraint, the directors of the Corporation shall declare and the Corporation shall pay the dividend, make the dishibution, or refund the restored amount to the affected shareholder, respectively, if there is a subsequent directors' determination that no contravention occurred. 11.2 In the event thatthe Corporation suspends or redeems Voting Securities in accordance with section 6 or 8, respectively, or otherwise redeems, purchases for cancellation or otherwise acguires Voting Securities, and the result of that action is that any person or company or any combination of persons or companies who, prior to that action, were not I934661 5. r l 4L in contravention of the share constraint are, after that action, in contravention (the "Affected Shareholders"), then, notwithstanding any other provision of this Schedule ,08A", 11.2.1 subject to section 11.2.3, the sole consequence of that action to each Affected Shareholder, in respect of the Voting Securities that Affected Shareholder beneficially owned or over which control or direction is exercised at the time of that action, shall be that the number of votes attached to those Voting Securities will be reduced to a nurnber that is the largest whole number of votes that maybe attached to the Voting Securities which that Affected Shareholder could beneficially own or exercise control or direction over from time to time in compliance with the share eonstraint, as determined by directors' determination; 11.2.2 the directors of the Corporation shall identify, by directors' determination, the Affected Shareholders and the Corporation shall give written notice to each Affected Shareholder so identified, within fifteen (15) days of the directors' determination, of the fact that the Affected Shareholder is in contravention of the share constraint and is entitled to rely on the protection provided in section ll.2.l; and I 1.2.3 the protection afforded to any Affected Shareholder in section 1 1.2.1 is effective from the date the Affected Shareholder is in contravention of the share constraint as a result of the actions of the Corporation described above, up to and including the date that is 180 days after that date. The accidental failure or omission to give the notice referred to in section 11.2.2 to one or more of the Affected Shareholders shall not affect the validity of the provisions of this section 11.2. i 1.3 Notwithstanding any other provision of this Schedule "8A", a contravention of the share constaint shall have no consequences except those that are expressly provided for in this Schedule "8A" or under applicable law. For greater certainty but without limiting the generality of the foregoing: I 1.3.1 no hansfer, issue or ownership of, and no title to, Voting Securities; 11.3.2 no resolution of shareholders (exceptto the extent that the result is affected as a result of a directors' determination under subsection 4,3.1); and 11.3.3 no act of the Corporation, including any transfer of property to or by the Corporation; will be invalid or otherwise affected by any contravention of the share constraint. 12. 12.1 DIR.ECTORS' DETERMINATIONS The directors of the Corporation shall have the sole right and authority to administer the provisions of ttris Schedule "8A" and to make any determination required or l93466rs.lr 4M contemplated under this Schedule '08A". In so acting, the directors of the Corporation shall enjoy, in addition to the powers set out in this Schedule '08A", all of the powers necessary or desirable, in their sole opinion, to carry out the intent and purpose of this Schedule "SA" including, without limitation, the power to require: 12.1.1 the filing ofa shareholder's declaration under section 13; 12.I.2 the production of all documents in the possession, power or control of the maker of the shareholder's declaration touching or conceming the subject of the shareholder's declaration, together with certification that such production has been made; 12.1.3 the response to such written interrogatories concerning the subject of the shareholder's declaration as the directors of the Corporation may determine to ask the maker of the shareholder's declaration; and 12.1.4 the attendance before the directors of the Corporation of the maker of the shareholder's dEclaration or such other persons or companies related thereto as the directors may determine, for the purpose of responding to questions from the directors of the Corporation conceming the subject of the shareholder's declaration. 12.2 In the event of a directors' determination that a person or company has failed to provide a complete, accurate and timely response to a request for information that the directors of the Corporation have made pursuant to their powers under sectionl2.l, the directors of the Corporation may draw an inference adverse to the interests of that person or company. 12.3 The directors of the Corporation shall make, on a basis which is timely in the circumstances, all determinations neeessary for the adrninistration of the provisions of this Schedule "8A" and, without limitation, if the directors of the Corporation consider that there are reasonable grounds for believing that a contravention ofthe share constraint has occurred or will occur, the directors of the Corporation shall make a determination with respect to the matter. All directors' determinations shall be conclusive, final and binding except to the extent modified by any subsequent directors' determination. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the directors of the Corporation may delegate, in whole or in part: 12.3.1 their power to make a directors' determination in respect of any particular matter to a committee of the board of directors of the Corporation subject to section 127 of the OBCA; and 12.3.2 any of their other powers under this Schedule "8A" subject to sections 127 and 133(a) of the OBCA. 12.4 In administering the provisions of this Schedule "8A", including, without limitation in making any directors' determination required or contemplated under this Schedule "8A", the directors of the Corporation shall act honestly and in good faith with a view to the r 93466t 5. r l 4N best interests of the Corporation and shall exercise their business judgment. ln this regard, the directors of the Coryoration shall not owe fiduciary duties or any duty of care to those who could be affected by their determinations, although the directors of the Corporation shall endeavour to make their determinations by way of a process that is fair in all the circumstances to those who could reasonably be expected to be affected. 12.5 The directors of the Corporation shall not be considered to be subject to a conflict of interest in administering the provisions of this Schedule "8A" and there shall be no reasonable apprehension of bias by reason only that their own tenure as directors or officers of the Corporation could be affected directly or indirectly by a determination they are to make pursuant to the provisions of this Schedule "8A". 12.6 In administering the provisions of this Schedule "8A", the directors of the Corporation may rely on any information on which the directors of the Corporation consider it reasonable to rely in the circumstances. Without limitation, the directors of the Corporation may rely upon any shareholder's declaration, the securities register of the Corporation, the knowledge of any director, officer, employee or agent of the Corporation or any advisor to the Corporation and the opinion of counsel to the Corporation. 12.7 Provided that the directors of the Corporation have acted honestly and in good faith, no shareholder of the Corporation or any other interested person or company shall have any claim or action against the Corporation or against any director or officer of the Corporation nor shall the Corporation have any claim or action against any director or offrcer of the Corporation arising out of or in relation to any act (including any omission to act) performed under or in pursuance of the provisions of this Schedule '08A", and, for greater certainty, neither the Corporation nor any director or officer shall be liable for any damages or losses related to or as a consequence ofany such act or any breach or alleged breach of the provisions of this Schedule "8A". To the extent that, in accordance with sections 12.1 or 12.3, arry other person exercises the powers of the directors of the Corporation under these provisions, this section 12.7 applies mutatis mutandis. 12.8 Any directors' determination required or contemplated by this Schedule "8A" shall be expressed and conclusively evidenced by a resolution ofthe directors ofthe Corporation, or of any committee of the directors exercising the powers of the directors of the Corporation under this Schedule "8A" pursuant to section 12.3.1, duly adopted. 13. 13. I SHAREHOLDER' S DECLARATIONS For purposes of monitoring the compliance with and of enforcing the provisions of this Schedule "8Ao', the directors of the Corporation may require that any registered holder or beneficial owner of Voting Securities, or any other person or company of whom it is, in the circumstances, reasonable to make a request (including, without limitation, any person who wishes to have a transfer of a Voting Security registered in the name of, or to have a share issued to, that person), file with the Corporation or its registrar and transfer agent a completed shareholder's declaration. The directors of the Corporation shall approve from time to time written guidelines with respect to the nature of the 1934661 5.t r 40 shareholder's declaration to be requested, the times at which shareholder's declarations are to be requested and any other relevant matters relating to shareholder's deslarations. 13.2 A shareholder's declaration shall be in the form from time to time approved by the directors of the Corporation under section 13.1 and, without limitation, may be required to be in the form of a simple declaration in writing or a statutory declaration under the Evidence Act (Ontaio). Without limitation, a shareholder's declaration may be required to contain information with respect to: 13.2.1 whether the person or company is the beneficial or,vner of or exercises control or direction over, particular Voting Securities or whether any other person or company is the beneficial owner of, or exercises control or direction over, those Voting Securities; and 13,2.2 whether the person or company is acting joinfly or in concert with any other person or company or is part of a combination of persons or companies acting jointly or in concert with respect to any Voting Securities, including whether the person or company and any other person or company are parties to an agreement or an arrangement, a purpose of which is to require them to act in concert with respect to their interests, direct or indirect, in the Corporation. MISCELLANEOUS14, t4.t 14.2 The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision, in whole or in part, of this Schedule "8A" for any reason shall not affect the validity or enforceability of any other provision or part thereof. Subject to the OBCA and the Electricity Act, the directors of the Corporation may make, amend or repeal any rules or by-laws they deem necessary or appropriate to administer the share constraint. 14.3 In addition to dealing with registered holders of Voting Securities in the administration of the provisions of this Schedule "8A", the directors of the Corporation and the Corporation may also deal with the beneficial owner of Voting Securities if the identity of the beneficial owner is known to the directors of the Corporation and the Corporation as a result of a directors' determination or otherwise. Without limiting any other provision of this Schedule "8A", where the identity of the beneficial owner is unknown, the directors of the Corporation may require the registered holder to assist the Corporation in ensuring complianoe by the beneficia.l owner with the share constraint. l 93465t 5.1 I 071 1 6E (06/2007) 5 9. Other provislons if any: Autres disposilions, s'il Y a lieu None. 07 1 16E (06/2007) Signature / signature 10. The names and addresses of the incorporators are: Aroms et adr.esses des fondaleurs.' Firsl name. middle narnes and sumame or corporate name Pftr1om, auhes pftnoms et nom de famille ou denomination sociale Full address for service or if a corporalion, the address of the registered or head office giving slreel & No. or R.R. No., municipality, province, country and postal code Domicile 6lu au complet ou, dans le cas d'une soci6b, adresse du sicge social ou adresse de l'itablissement principal, y compris la rue et le numero ou le numCro de la R.R., Ia municipalitC, la province, le pays et le code D Angela Carberry 79 Wellington Skeet W., 30th Floor, TD South Tower Toronto, ON MsK 1N2 These arlicles are signed in duplicate. Les prdsenrs sfatuts sonl s,gn6s en double exemplairc. Full name(s) and signature(s) of incorporator(s). In the case of a corporation set out the name of the corporation and the name and otfice of the person signing on behalf of the corporation au complel et signaturc(s) du ou des fondateurs. Si re fondaleur est une soci6t6, indiquer la dCnomination sociale et le nom et le titrc de la personne signant au nom de la socie|3 Angela Carberry Name of incorporator (or corporation name & signatories name and office) Nom du fondateur (ou dCnonination sociale et nom et titte du signataire) Signature / signature Name ol incorporator (or corporation name & signatories name and ofiice) Nom du fondateur (ou denomination sociale et nom et titre du signatairc) Signature / signature Name of incorporator (or corporation name & signatories name and office) Nom du tondateur (oa denomination sociale et nom et titre du signalalre) Name of incorporator (ol corpolatlon name & slgnatories name and office) Nom du fondaleur (ou denomination sociale et nom et titre du signataire) EXHIBIT B Q.{ People, Politics Rrblic Pmper Ken Billington Itt,ofrle, Politics dr f)uhlic Port'er llx, srrorrg 1'ublic power mo',ement in the Pa- , ilir Nortlrs't'^st began as a protest agairst the alrrrn'r ,rf the monopoly prlvate porver companies, u'lri' h u,.'r,' owned by eastern holding companies, more interested in making money than in provld- ing good electric service. Electric rates were exorbitant for people in thc cities, but they rvere the lucky ones. Farmers'rvives were cooking on wood stoves and scrubbing their clothes on washboards into the late 1930's because the private companies refused to build lines to rural areas. ln Washington State, farmers through their granges joined with labor organizations to do something about the problem, and in 1930 lnitia- tive I to the legislature, the basic public porver law, rvas passed by a statewide vote of the people. The new law permitted the people of a county ro create a public urility district and elect local commissionets to provide not-for,profit utility service under strict procedures set by the legisla- turc. \0ith the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932, the broad federal public power program got under way, and the Bonneville Pourer Administra- rion became the main supplier of power to the PUDs. But the private companies did not give up eas, ily. ln the V/ashlngton State Legislature, they sought to weaken the public pourer law by intro- duclng bills at every session to hamstring the pub. lic utility districts if they could not dissolve them. ln C, u rgress, they tried to do away with the "prefer- crue,.'laustl in the BPA law which gives public lxN'(r uttlirie" firsr rights to buy lorp.crxt Bon. nlr tlle Jr, nver. tJntu thi.; l.artltfirld in 1951 came Ken Bil- Iitrgt,u1, tlrc v,turU ljxuutivt f)irect,rr oftheWrsh- rrrgrou l)uhlir Iltility f)istricts' A**rr'i;rrir)rr, \\'lr,, itrtri.l ns a pul{it' Jxrurr krbbyist of legislatr;rr,, -li' ) I t,v ,s, E I \ J Peop[e, Po[f,'[ilcs Publflc Power hy Ken Billington Washington Public Utilit y Districts' Association .Srtttlc, Wrshington ra Copyright @ 1988 by IGn Billtngton All rights reservcd. Library of Congres Catalog Card No.: g?-51001 ISBN : 0.9619682-0.6 (Cloth) ISBN: 0-96t%82-I4 (Iaper) Library of Congresc Caaloging.in.publication Date Billington, IGn, 1916- Pcople, polidcs & public power lncludes index. l. Electrlc uriliries-Covernment ownership_ Vashingron (State) - History. 2. Electric utilitL _ lovmnmgnt orvnership-Oygon- History. l. public uriliry districts - Washington (State) - Hisrory. 4. public u tility distticts - Oregon - Hisrory. l. r00ashingon public UtilityDistrics'Associarion. IL Title, lll. Titler pcople, politics, and public porver. HD9685.U6WI9 1988 363.6'2'09?97 87-5t001rsBN 0-9619682-0{ ISBN 0.9619682.14 Gradc pbk.) First edition. Prilrted in the U.S.A. Prefoce vii 1 Lg?A,1951: Backgror Tlw Public Uriliry Disrri PUD Political Actirrisr, I LocalPUD Employrnent 2 Public Power Activiry National Puuu tWarsoJ the 1940s Money in Polints 51 3 LgsL. tg56Era: Face.l 1951 - 1952 57 1953 - 1954 75 1e55. 1956 r I0 4 lBs? - t96zBra;The ( 1957-19s8 130 195q - 1960 154 1961 - 1962 175 5 D$.1968Era:Thel 1963 - 1964 194 1965 " 1966 209 1e67 - 1968 240 6 Lg6g " L9?4Braz"Peace Private Power 1969- 1970 277 1971. 1972 307 1973 - 1974 336 7 Lg?s - 1981 Era: Power Act 1975 - 1976 351 1977.1978 372 1979- 1980 384 I98I - Retirement 398 8 WPPSS-VictimorCulp I Pubtic Power Pioneers ar lndex 461 l G J With acrive negotiations going on for three eastern Washington PLIDs to acquire the common stock of Washington V/ater Power from AP&L, the ldaho Legislature rushed a law through, under private power urging, mak- ing it illegal for any PUD to own property in that statc' The law also estab- lished substantial penalties and 6ues for PUD olficials found guilry of try- ing to acquirc property for u public utiliry. ln this State, efforts to block the PUD purchase took the form of legislation providing that the City of Spo- kane would have a vote on the matter. Proponents of the bill were claiming rlrat public power was being "rammed down the throats" of the Spokane people who had never voted for public power. This legislation was sup- ported by Covernor Arthur B, Langlie, who came from the City crf Seattle and as its former Mayor had been supportive of Seattle City Liglrt, but felt strongly thu local people should have the right to vote on whether they wanted public power. Backed by the Covernor! support, the Senate passed the bill by a vote of 28 to 17. 'To ofrset this pro-private power legislation, the PUD forces sponsored a bill mandating that the City of Spokane would have the riglrt to acquire such properties from the PUDs should the pur- cha^sc. occur, aud that the city could make rhe purchase by condemning any such PUD-orvned properties. The issues hounced back and forth between the Scnate and the House hy means of parliamentary maneuvers unril March /, when utter confrlsion arose over s statement on the House floor by a Pierce County rcpresentativc that he and one other nrcmber had been offered a bribe to support the Spokane Power Bill. His accusatioru resulted in the investigarion and jailing of the person he named although no direct link could be establlshed between that person and the private power lobby- ists rvho were suspecred of being behind the bribe. The result was defeat of tlrc -Spokane Pcnver llill in the House 55 ro 44 and passage by the L,egislature of rhe PUD-sporxored lcgislation to make sure rhat if the PUDs' purchase went for$'ard, rhe people of Spokane could take over the properties in that c iry. lc was during thls lcgislativc session that an event took placc which t'hanged my personal life. Frank Stcwart had left dre V/ashington Public Utiliry Commissioners'Association in early 1950 to pursue business devel. opments in Brewster rvhere corurrucrion of the ChiefJtxeph Dam had just srarted. Replacing Stewarr as Executive Secretary rva.s John McCauley, u,ho had previously joined thc PUD Association's staff as an editor o[ irs newsletter. During House coruidcrarion of the public power sponsored bill, a vote on the House floor rvas sctreduled for a Friday. On Monday of rhar week, McCauley sent a special notice to the various PUD commissioners arr'rund the Stare u'hich included a lisr of Housc nrembers whom Mc- .5tf * PcoPlc, Polrtir-r I hlilic Pwer {iuuley labeled as being ready to ir; and a list of those whose intcr cr:rnmissioners to contact thc lc1 kn tlrcir support. On Friday, jus wlxr somehorv had obtained a cr lris fcllow mernbers if they would 0rr tl're matrer. He then procecdcc lrrrrassing revelation did not hinc trorr, but shordy thereafter McC $trhington, D.C., and the Washr *r:iation was looking for a new E Because of nry statewide work , rrrlunccer work with the old Publ h*el hclped out ln Olympia to g, rtlicient PUD opcrati()nr several P nw ifl was interested in the job. J w lirred. I moved my family to Seatrl While I had heen somewhat t l' rility Commissioners' Associatio *r v ice corporation now called the au arc of the sorry financial status ,rlr scene, I found about $300 on l Irrrncys and a printing 6rm of sevrr{r cmployee, a very efficient an, du,.. We scrounged around among I rc, thc,Association and gor enough u,ritcd several times for my payctrec rrxrring which I requested rvas hetd rln I'UD commigsioners and manr Arsociatlon and that if I had to sp,t rrr'ouraging the PUD membership t.i' the work I could see nerded do Iui2, and if necessary to use some I tlrat if at tfiat time we rvere not a Ielrrvhere for rvork, since I had a fan rrfi.: and from that low poinr the Assr p.ro'rdination and service on mutual rlm Srate ofV/ashington, the pacific I Facing my responsibility as AssotIrl u'ork, I hoped rhere u,ould be tir 1951_la-56 L - E,XHIBIT C 1 .fnnrurr/ 2lJ HOUSD JOUENAL iloaon to 8u.D.nd DEIB llqvtd Dy rtfr, Xor&g. EsoEa.d t!, Mr, ,EurDhY, FoIl Crtrl rq,ulted {ir followli E!u, nla qitstlol tr.tDgi ,'ShoU tlouso B0l No. ?0 D0!t?n Roll c8tl tuul.t.d ,( ,oUowE: Eubnu, K(wchmlttqr, lPrytor\ SyoIttL VMdu- crcu$it-Gef,fney. Glwartnuy, Holm, IfioDcvitt, V!r- tbtd-59, l8 paecca, to trhr SGtratB.tfir tl$a the Spoutor xoucd thi .AppalltrHont Oo&dtttat. ;. XffS--+lo*trnri!0rt8r Smttl\ Vettr. Total-$. :: .Abscn! orld qlglr1qil-6oifn.y, ewuta.y, Uo}rI\ McDivittr V.mor.:hotal--{.d rar"r-+c. ',.,.i Wbor*poo, tbs Sbrskr d.clu'.a Urlt nor. t.bE trv+thErfiiJtrvrDg vot.d lr t rc OftlD[t1rr, lh. mot or prcvrilao, thr rulcriwt-ro tuponded, ual Eouro Ell! Ivo, !0 w&r rcral-thr.ll[t tlmo by;tluq rllotra lius-Dy $tlo, qnil-t&a thlrd tln! ^t leryth, !$tion byrl.0tion" ual plsord upoD tt! flnal pE.&!t , llburc O! RcDrctaht4tivc!, Boiic, Id8bo, l{r. ltporr.rr JNurr!' 22' 1e5L I movo ' th&t sll tn a, of thc EouEe lnt(rtortn!: wlth tuc lnms-di0.t pEaltg! ol IIou. BUI No. 26 !. rulplralld; t}lt the DoltloDsal gqotlo{i(t. l\rtiolc E ot trc OouEtituUon ot th Etrte ol ldrho,iuqulrlaf rll Etlll to bE Farl E thrc r.vsrrl {oy! Dt dtp!4i.d witI,thli b.irir s c.ua of ur*crcv, onit thct Houlr EtIl No. 20 br r[dtbo ,i!rt ttthc Dy UUc, deo6nd ttrnc bJ llou, snd tl$ thrr{. tlm€ rtluttb, tcotiDtr D, ,octlotr, md b6 put uDo! ltt llnr.l Purtu i Eotlto Blll No. ?5 wu rold th. riFrt ttmr by UtlG, tlr {.oondrtlm. by trtsr, rnit tlriri tlno jt Isgtb, {.Ction- by irotton. 'init iDhrccd bt on Ur. ltouac loa frnil rsnsliltrruon. th!dcoli16, :r9 EENATD IoURNAL Frnury 2q Motlom oud lt+tullittonilllotlon to StrBpud IluIoEElute Chmb€r, BoUc, Llrho,Juuuy 22, 1061,. .lo rrtm h.rcwltll Fmltr Conourl'ut (rA.SOITOT/F8EN,. Chl.f ClGrk,' Mr, Prchuent:-i novitfr* all st.r o! the s.natG lrrt.r!.t'tnf e'tth thdlm.dlatcput!! o( Eou0a llu No..26 b. ,uipoudod; tiot thc porlioE ot'SsoUoln fO, ArtlclG 3 o!. lhG Coutituqlbn ot th. Ftrt! ot frteho, ri{ukJng ilt'bfllr to bc nxd on titrc !.v.rd dryr bs dilpcE.d vtltt, this bcinC I cssc ol ut'tmcy, ond tllrt EoUBB BiU No. 36 bc mld uic flillnlmo by tluo, iccoiit tine by tio., ud the thlrd ttmc url.EEt!, r€ceion Dy t.oilon, ud !. Dut.upon lgt lild DEilAt, . .a\Dtut sd riot "otlnt-Notrc,Ehcu..ii-Bdrr, I/rwt, tlttlt.! uA lSmol( TotBl---a. Tro-O{rde hrvins votld ln trE dflnnttlv., th. Prqlditrt drcls.dtho ndql rufirondrd floulc BIU No, 26 wE Nrd th! fr$t limc by tlUe, tj|c uo(rotrd tlmc .Dy utls,rimd thlld ttmo At lon8th, auCtlon by rectlor, nnd plasrolcfor. tJla. gemio ,or llh4l Coh(idarrtls, lfi. q[rrtlou b6ttrt', i'ghi]l ., tho biu lt0c!?" Movod by 8€utor Codbcrg. . .gronilod by. Scrator atrr. Th. qua*ion betng, n8hdl thr rula. br rurp4hdqd?" nall c{rll ltqult d ir ,ollwr: IEqra ol h,tprGlrtrtatlvu, Eolso, Iduho,&mtry 2a 1061. lIuAtr, SUar, InCt'lIr, Pb[IiPr.'r'oirl-s. lhxsilrr, Wrllht,,rgidlf, Fhtuipr, Totrl.-t,Ab.ut srd uot, votlnS--.No8, t(oru4al-€trir, Lowry, lliurf, (rid 8nooL, Totol-(. Whoraupo! tie Pr.atdht 6cctu.d tlle btll prra*l- TiU0 wu rDDFv.6 ual.tlG blll ordrmd r.tumcal to thc lioudt.ilrrrrc brluli no obj.cuol' thr lmit! Etumod to thE Nlrtb Ordctgl BurltrN,Mcs{s lrch ths Eoorc Mr'.INo. E,XHIBIT I) HFI 4tto I Atr5? 't' ,tl .:r Attomey General Idaho 1951- --1952 i ROBERT E. SPIIT,IE' Attorncy General 6;ffih, RE:PORT OF TIilE CI"lHli, $il, t9 l05r '.'. .1 . .1: ! i, " '.i.,i, ' . .l;.t .'.:.. ::' OF .rl @.:r ,.i ! II BIBNNIAL Iord Lr bolng handlcd wlth rn lacrearc 20 pcr cont over tho rtof rlurlng tho LTTIOATION ,t rer.low ol thc ilockct rcctlon ol thlr rrport wlll lndlcr,h thrt w'r have boorr ubla to olose miny pentthg clccr ln the o6c6 8nd thrt tlrs litlgntlon docket ir now In bcttu condition than rt nny reeeat time. Thl',has bccn duo ir port io thc cn0ctmrllt ot thc ncv prwirlona ol tha lncomc Tax Ltrw which authorlre thc Trx Oolleslnr to oiocuts snd lrruc wm.nrntl oI dltttrhl lor unprld trr$. Previourly r lnlr sutthrd to be ,nrtttutcil on cach dcllnquont lcdounL thlr hm not auto- Dllttcouy roorccd tho Durdcn ol work tn thb olaoo by thr aurucrlool nuubor ol oolor, beoauso oaoh illshatat wrrrant reqllros'oourultetion. Eowevcr, the litlgotion burden, with lts coasequent coEtt, llsB been substontlally lclrcncd by thc nm ctotutc. Thc cuscl whlch nrc ro\y onthc dockct, howavcr, rrc complcx, and time.conauming in nlturc.A dctailcd report of thc litigciion actlvity of thc officc Ir attaoheal to thls raport, Some od lhc mora Int rortlng clscs ric rlmfilbed belov. lYro \Yuhinrtou Vatcr Porrcr Carc nre 1961 Logielatuo emted o stsluts rvhich lorbndc roquiril,ion by r rnuhiciDtrl corporltion ol trnothc! stoto ol lacilitled for thc genera- tlon or trarunllrlon ol clectrlcal.euGlg? ttr ldalo, Tte rt{tlta wtrpatrntly rirucd r,t proventlng rcquldtlou by Publlc Utiuty ptrtrlctr af tha Stato ol Washlngton of tho operrtiug proporttes of thc \Yoeh- hgton Water P-bver Coupany locltcd iu North lclahq. Tho cnact- msni of thc cta[to vu producdvc of tha mort tlmo conruming litilra- tion ln rvhlah thioDicr hal bccn rqargiil ln thc period reportril in ihlo report, Our efforto worc dfurctcd at ths ploblern of, daourihg .n oldo- trcnt oa tha hew rtrtuts, Tbc T[achlngton Wrte Povor Compeny rvrs t]cn.,lyholly owneal rubrldlory ol Anerlorn Poryer & Llght Qorfprhy, ln 19d8, tho .A-Eorlctrn Cornp&ny blil boon ordorc.t by tho Smurltleg & Exohnngo'' Oommlsrl,on ol tIa Unlted 8tltcr to dlvcrt ltacE ol {ta opcatfug Dropertirs, inqludiry tbs Warhlnlton Qorapaty. In 1061, ths Am;rlccn Oompany cntcrcd lnto a cortrsst to setl dl o, th? cqmmqn ctoct ol thc Tfrshlngtou 0omDruy to thr 'Wruhlrytor Etrtc Publlc Uttllty Dir.tl{ott, Ccrtth cltlrenr ot thc Publlc UtiUti Dlstrlct! undortook to reetreln tJr:.purthAlo by the Dlstr,lcta on the gruunrl thlt rcquJrltion ol the ld.ho pro!.rHer bv the lf,ethhg:ton Dlatrictc wti bo)rond thalrporr@. Ttre Warhligton Stotc Oourb ro'held onal anroltroal trh. sol6 ,rnd ?unb!.. ar thftr proporadr Thcr€upon, wa [rg!{t tlr6 Saourluor & Erohatrg! conrtrlsrion to rn- forca lt! 1949 ordlr ol dfurolutlol by t kllg nandatoty sotlon agolnrt 10 ln tho o6cc, fho hcroarcd.ln porsoanel rruounting to l9a1-19{3 Diernlum, ATTORNEY CENERAL'g REPORT Trork only ti: ATTORNEY (IDNJTRAI,'S NEPORT I1 tlre Ameriurn Cornponr-, We ougryeated thtrt thn pro!€r mothod ol occomDlllhtrg 6 divslliture oX thi Wr6lrlngton ComlrDby war by dic. trlbutlon o, tho Warlrington Cornpsny common Btook to the atock. hotdel'r ot thp Artot'luan CotnlAhyr ?r'0 r'ota eB their ownership in thc Amorican Cotnpany rplcol6d. . Atlcr r Eori., of lrear{ngr the Srcoril,ios & Dro}aug:c Colnnrig*ion ot'il6r,ed th&t guch diveftlture oecur not hter thoh Jrnunry l, 1061ttrrlcrr flanr were thon In procoat o.f comploHon rvuoh rsould ofcct solto othat' iUsporlt{on oI thr ITashiugton Conrprny. Jnst prtor ta tLe deodllnc, tho Aurellorn 0onrpany filed r plot for nnothar salq of the Washing'on Corupor:y tq tho fublic Utilitf Dirtrich Btld to an klnho Corlloratlon Dot yot forrnod. It alcvoloDed th[t Do contrrct d, salc brd beon entcrod into betrvcon thc lllopomd Dnrticg (nd thot l,heldrho coryoration, whilo non-profit in clroructer, rwnld ln rftr:ct be anotler }olding cotDp*ny fdr' tlrc operating pr:oprrty, We frlt oorn- pellecl to rciist thfu plnn nnd nnde epproprlste roprcarntrtion to tho Securltiee & Exchange Commlssiou. An oldcr,vol entqro{i settlng the Amcricon plsn for srle ond, tho plcn for divoltiturc bl dlstrtbu. tion ilown for hs.rinr, The Pub[c Utilfb DiBtricts thereupon sought &'rastrsininlr orde]ln tho U,$. Circult Court of Appeals for th6 Nhth Cir.cul[ agaiott, holding ths healing. \Ts Jotned tho Sreuyiticr Conrmiseion in *eekirg to htv6 the ryestrulning ptder di;aolueil anil the petitiorr {irr }dvlq. oI i:he Conrlrisiouls aotion diamhsed. fhe Court agrocd rvlthihir rmsition,idismisscd tbc lrtition for reqlew ond dissolvod thc restralniug order. the Corrrtnigllon theroupon orderea tle hcaildg. fhe Amerlo.u Conrpany thcn Alod u plon fo1 dirf.dbution in oecor.d- mce vlth our lnitial Bugg6tlon to tho donniggioF. Thst dlstri|)lrtlon \yia finally nccompliahetl on August Zl, 1069 rtnd ihe Washington CoErDAny is now un lnderendsnt opcr&tinE utllity, $ithob[ ]roldina: Golllpstly oontlol o, llny lllhal. Tho purlprso ol i}c 10[1 Etntuto hsvc becn rendcrod cflective, Wo 0ntot6il tlre litigotion ct, thc Feiter.gl admiilstrative level in order to nvoid |onE, dllffcult and costly lltiga- tion ln otrr orya Etato Courtr, und in tlre scvernl Unlted Stites Courts. . Thc Clhrgcr Cnsc Two cascs roca in Madison Couaty whlch lrr of lunalemcntal lDr- portnrrcc to the condnct ol the public tust. lmporrd on thc ortnluiotra- tlon of the public ochool luds, Tbr Lgnd Board off€rcd a roerlon olIMd ln tllnt county for arlc at publlc auotiou to thq highegt hitlder. Ths lrud wsl oford ln tvo pnrcels. On one pnreel R colnpctia4r btaldolvrs fuccosrful ond on thq othcr the per|sorr whq hrd npDlie<l to havctlo lolld otcrcd for relo rsa! suceossftl, fhB conrpotiuon rt the nuctionwrs brlst, auil ttre pel8otr wbo aFrlicd to huvc ths land oFerod fof Bale diEhonored }er check lor thc.dorw pryrient or tho h6-\t busiDess EXHIBIT E, fffi b E t E€S'.E# IF.E€ IHa EEOoifi 5F{M< n g i E E E ,jI E E o TT Ei EJ Ei o6 ac)oF{c)Eq) qD -6g+)g q) EtrL'(D orhv oI|lr aq) f- EBa >rir).Htr{o=l{-r]-) Iolr{ -r-lFr{--F{ hDtr.F{ HgdE €q)aa 6€Fr trltr{.iE Ia Eo-a 6corE o k tl.sgt3t.tsr;E , f. ] E Ill- EE69ai-EH EE E EI B} , € EE gEEi**ffiffi, EB I ! -eEEtsD 6.:tE= LtI* 5 "e EE E.? ;'sEr8E t-'Eq rl.rO< 9{E'e E *$#E< 6) E g& fiEd caLora-)B .3uoe)t-I orC 13\3l- ooq) q)larr'q) "Ecr) q) hl x U) ra( a*!N >r a Et !nEI E oR F.a.E o t- o4a'tt 0 otrl M Pego Slx Bill Passr Quich Action On Measure Draws Protest Proponenlr l)eclare Law May Prevent Lose of Revenuc rultr thrn 16 l.rl,o AfnhF, llosto ho hotl8opcrt not relltovolc B rshlch Ddltot world t8n- sovamol nnd ctrnod& I !lvon axptrlnc0wri to atrrt ,rom thc uroaIt Itr tnhl ity( prrt It: ot dtyrfr TOrr htAk mov.t dB p tu DrcptrUsnot clctrpo lh^ hhsra l}lat tiom el 6t l( ffi-trrcri ftop, Davld Doane (Ada), asslstanl RoDubllc8n floor lon(lol', opcncd tho rlebote for tho blll'g rirpportolr, Iro exp)alned thnt the mnjor purpose was to plotcctDow-er uscrs o( Idnho, parttctllarly tlrose in Nol'th ldsho, "to bo Bul'ethat tho eloctrlc rltlllty ptopertlos bo olnod ln Idaho unal not esc{rp6tuntion."Ho told tho houas that thorolvrs nolv pondlnB nogotlstions br- l.rvecn tho lVashtngton Wnterfowor company nnd thc PUD EIouD fi'om' Worhlngton lor tho Irlo -ot tho tonnor'r north Idaho Droncl'tlo8.' "llorv Boon lhey aro gotng throuAh trlth tlo denl, ws don'tInorv," snld Doane, "lrut lt ls cs- lrcntlnl thnt thla blll bc prased li6hL nrvoy."Lrrrrls OlUroslllonvcttcr; lcndinE ofl for the oPPo. nltlon, sltrl 'rt.don't seo f,ny ncccll'illt]' for ruthlnF thl$ kind of lc8' lslntlorr throurh." IIo lnld tho nlolrsulo N8s p.-ut on htg dcsk only lhis rn(n'nlnr. "It ls so iomnlicated. I'r'o wtlt. tcn nrv nttor,noi." he iddod. "AllI ltn.ri' nbout tilh blll cnmo lrom lhc nttol'nev fol'the Idnho Polvol' conlDflnv nird I'll tell yoll rvhot I tolrl'hini to Ns tsco-f don't trult }itrt,"Stnndlns at hls dcrlt wlth thilmhs h;okcrl lnto hle lower vest Dockots. Vcltol' tllrncd hls nttcn' ilon to itro PUD'g. Thcso cooporn'tlrc EmuDs. hc mld. lvcro orvnsd bv frii'nrei'n "antl I'd r'athor trustiiic fnrnrers-I'lr1 rotl8ftod thoy *'ill not. cxplolt tho Peoplc." "-sornolhlite." snld Vetter' hls trtch-l)llchaa-'volco t'islng ltlSher, "iriorti nrichtv ttrcng to nlc lhnt iiii.i';io ir:i:trri to gct'thi8 thr.rtrgh ro ottlclt."- RLn. Joscnh l(nschrnltter' (D' fttatiii toott' up for thG ottpocl' tion, ",Untn' of tho thlngs thnl I$r' ltcLtor irnr rald, I nnt lr filll nc' coniJ' lro s,lld. "I nsk'-rvhy- tlto haste? I. fol mY Imt't, wlnt l'o itnorv n littlc ntoi'o-before I voto trr fncol' ol lt."--'rieri. tf'tittnm P-rlc (R-Coodlng) drrnctnd I ollcstlon f,t Vottcr. "I. too. uur R fnrmer." he gnld. "r n;k t'iru \rlll tho fal'luel's who nr'(t tryinr to btll thcsc lttllltlos }nvo iirtcir{tl'clrou5h to pny tltott' tn.r:cr ln Irlntro?" "I'm lvlllhlg to trust 'enir" wn8 Vcttcr"s t'cplY,Ron. $'tillnrn C. Snrlth (D-Sho- rhonc) cchoctl KIscllmittcr's words. llan. \\'nltel' f)lnnison (n-Clcnl" rrntoi). t'cntlntllrE lhnt h0 lvns n north Idshoan. inld ho tognrdod hasto aa csscrtlel ln the PrcscntDrntter.closlnB dobntr, Doano empha- alzctt lhnt hls lntcrtst ln tho blll rvas alictntcd b\, hl8 convrcrlon thllt tho mcttsrtr'c rvns to thc lntctcst oft|le stote, IIe srld thnt lf the north Idahb propol'tie3 rvctc sold hefotttho legishturc co[ld Etop lt, thr rtatc would loso at terst $,180,000in roverrucs. Thoso votln8 agBlnst thc blll lnthc hotue-all DcmoslatB-wcr6Rcps. \Y, D. Drcvlow (Lcrvls), S{rnr Ea8trnan (Kootennl), I(nsch-mltter (IdEho), W, O, Peyton(Vnlloy), Smith (Shoshonel undItsrvtn G, Vandcnbcrg (Botul- dury). ahd Vettcr.In thc rcnete, son. B, ,. lool. i /\b;h-* borg (B-Butte), thc maJorlty tloor leador, lnunchetl the debato Iry soying t}ture \ua6 "great urgency" for possage ol the measure bc. ceuse otl negotlatlono now ln prog. resg h Now york Clty. "ff the sale tr matle Prlor to Dassaso of thls Dlll. Idaho would itnnd-to toso hcnvi\r ln tnxeg, Ifthe Washtngton Wotor Power comrr&nv wero tranefbrreil to the fa.x-ixefnpt PUDI tn Washlngton, tho stato-of Idaho woul6 stsnd to lore a lot ol monoy.'l Sen, Cladt llamllton (D.lVa!h- lngtorr) was the only opponent to tnlro tho floor ngairist the blll lu tho scnato. Ho sald he oPPoeed thc hurry in paeslng the btll. AL another polnt he gald he thousht "it w&! a vlcloue Dlll, a batl blll." Ltter, rolonlng to Publtc.owncdutilltlos, he sold:"I fcel they ought to bc brought bnck olt tho tax tolls. I thlnk all coopernttve.q ehould PaY taxes," S-en. Willlam'J. CostloY (D-Lew- ls) satd, "If we rvnnt PUDa ln ftloho tl. shotrld be for thlg body anil tho ono ncross tlte holl (houae) to ect rtp the "Plnn." He exPressed fenr tlrai follttro to pase the mena' ruro rulEht mcnn tlat PUDg woulal be forCerl on ldaho. Sonator Cost' lc.y enld ho wos served bY REIA nrirl rrrlvatc Dowcr company, 8dd'lnr fhnt RICA ratos wero hlglrer thiin Wtrshlngton Water Powor'8,,but thol!'s o reason for lt." Rdectlotrr Nototl Son. lVilllam C. Moore (R'La' tnh) notecl thot SPoknno countY votcrs ln Wnshlngton had twlco rolccterl ptrbllc tttllltv dlstrlotn nncl thnt l[sotln countf, Washtng' too, rvhich adjolne hlg honrs cotln- ty,'Just lnst November reJected a PIID hv & fivo-to-ono vote."lvhi.'if thev don't cnre about PUD tii' ncarbd'WashlnBton atote, nhould lt bo thirrst upon ua," llena' tor Moore tlomanded. Tllo three senate votel against the bill wero cast bv Sene. Ha.mtl.ton (lVnshlngton), -James L. fn'galls (I(ootcnal) antl ClarenccPhllllpr (Casela).Duilns.its mornlng end atter- noorr fieEslons, tho houso recelvedeighl bills, one of these, lntro' duced bv Rep. fr\unk 'Chalfant, (R-/r.da)-8nd hop. Poter J. Rtcks(R-Madison), rv6uld prevent the sale of beer ln such cst&bllohmenttas grocery stores and any othet placo where youths undor 20 arcpertrrltterl to enter.- Six bills and a Jolnt memorlsl wcl.e lntroduced ln ure aenate.Both tho housc and aenate ad-lntu.lo \ tnr loday.