2) The proposed reporting, bookkeeping and other procedures required for compliance with the rule: None.
3) The types of professional skills necessary for compliance with the rule: None.
Fiscal Estimate
The proposed rule provides for the charging of fees for camping and other recreational uses of the reserve. The fees will generate revenue for the Kickapoo Valley Reserve Management Board that will be used for management of the Reserve. Since fee rates and the amount of recreational uses are unknown, it is not possible to determine the amount of revenue that will be generated.
Copies of Rule and Contact Information
For additional information about or copies of the proposed rules contact:
Marcy West, Executive Director
Telephone (608) 625-2960
Kickapoo Reserve Management Board
505 North Mill Street
LaFarge, WI 54639
Notice of Hearings
Public Instruction
Notice is hereby given that pursuant to ss. 43.09(2) and 227.11 (2) (a), Stats., and interpreting s. 43.09, Stats., the department of public instruction will hold public hearings as follows to consider the amending of Chapter PI 6, relating to public librarian certification.
Hearing Information
October 5, 1999   Wausau
Tuesday   Marathon Co. Public Library
10:00 a.m. – noon   300 N. First Street, 3rd Flr.
  Wausau Room
October 6, 1999   Madison
Wednesday   Reference & Loan Library
10:00 a.m. - noon   2109 S. Stoughton Road
The hearing sites are fully accessible to people with disabilities. If you require reasonable accommodation to access any meeting, please call Peg Branson, Continuing Education Consultant, at (608) 266-2413 or leave a message with the Teletypewriter (TTY) at (608) 267-2427 at least 10 days prior to the hearing date. Reasonable accommodation includes materials prepared in an alternative format, as provided under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Copies of Rule and Contact Person
A copy of the proposed rule and the fiscal estimate may be obtained by sending an email request to lori.slauson@dpi.state.wi.us or by writing to:
Lori Slauson
Administrative Rules & Federal Grants Coordinator
Department of Public Instruction
125 South Webster Street
P.O. Box 7841
Madison, WI 53707
Written comments on the proposed rules received by Ms. Slauson at the above address no later than October 13, 1999, will be given the same consideration as testimony presented at the hearing. Comments submitted via email will not be accepted as formal testimony.
Analysis by the Department of Public Instruction
The proposed rules clarify and update the current public librarian certification rules by making the following modifications:
  Continuing education participation will be measured by contact hours rather than continuing education points.
  The required number of contact hours for continuing education will be the same for all grade levels.
  Provisional certificates will be granted for 5 years, rather than one year.
  Applicants who have not completed all of the library course requirements will be issued temporary certificates rather than provisional certificates.
  Temporary certificates will be available, depending on the grade level and the courses to be completed. These certificates must be renewed annually and may not be renewed after 3 years.
  Library directors in communities with a population increase will receive an upgraded provisional certificate for the same time period as the certificate being replaced.
  Library directors eligible for temporary certification must apply within 3 months of employment, rather than the current 6 months.
  Temporary certificates will be available to certain previously certified applicants whose certification has expired.
Fiscal Estimate
The proposed rules make minor, procedural changes and will not result in any increased state or local government costs.
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The proposed rules are not anticipated to have a fiscal effect on small businesses as defined under s. 227.114(1)(a), Stats.
Notice of Hearing
Public Service Commission
Notice is hereby given that a hearing will be held to consider revision to ch. PSC 111, relating to strategic energy assessment, at the time and place indicated below, and continuing at times to be set by the presiding hearing examiner.
The Public Service Commission proposes to repeal and recreate ch. PSC 111, Wis. Adm. Code. These rules currently describe procedures for filing and reviewing Advance Plan information and applications for Certificates of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCN) under s. 196.491, Stats. The enactment of 1997 Wis. Act 204, however, replaced Advance Plans with biennial Strategic Energy Assessments and revised the law regarding CPCNs. These proposed rules follow the statutory revisions.
Hearing Information
September 29, 1999   Amnicon Falls Hrg. Room
Wednesday   Public Service Commission
9:00 a.m.   610 North Whitney Way
  Madison, WI
The Public Service Commission does not discriminate on the basis of disability in the provision of programs, services, or employment. This building is accessible to people in wheelchairs through the Whitney Way first floor (lobby) entrance. Parking for people with disabilities is available on the south side of the building. Any person with a disability who needs additional accommodations or who needs to obtain this document in a different format should contact the case coordinator listed below.
Contact Information
Persons who desire to actively participate as full parties must request full party status in writing. Full party status requests should be addressed to Jeffry Patzke, Hearing Examiner, Public Service Commission of Wisconsin, Examining Division, P.O. Box 7854, Madison, Wisconsin 53707-7854.
Questions from the media may be directed to Jeffrey L. Butson, Public Affairs Director, at (608) 267-0912.
Questions regarding this matter may be directed to case coordinator Randel Pilo at (608) 267-1474.
Summary and Analysis of Rules
Statutory authority: ss. 196.02 (3), 196.491 (2) (ag) and (3) (a) 1., and 227.11
Statute interpreted: s. 196.491(2) and (3)
1997 Wis. Act 204 repealed the advance plan process for electric utilities. In its place, state law now requires that the Public Service Commission (Commission) biennially prepare a strategic energy assessment (SEA). The SEA will evaluate the reliability of Wisconsin's current and future electric supply. Public utilities, rural electric cooperatives, municipal utilities, merchant plant operators, and independent power producers are all involved in producing and providing electric power in Wisconsin, so each will be required to submit information for the SEA. New rules with respect to CPCNs are proposed to conform the Commission's rules to the revisions made in the CPCN process by Act 204.
Preparation of an SEA will commence with a forecast of peak electric demand over the biennial period of an SEA, plus one additional year. The forecast will then be compared against electric power supply, to determine if capacity will be available to meet future Wisconsin demand and to provide the additional reserve margin needed for contingencies.
Electricity providers will be required to submit the information necessary to prepare the forecast of peak electric demand. This information will consist of monthly actual non-coincident peak load for a period preceding the SEA, and of predicted peak load for the 3-year period encompassing the SEA. The peak load information will then be offset by programs in place to control peak load, such as direct load control and interruptible load, and by net purchases of firm capacity, i.e., capacity backed up by reserves. Any contracts by an electricity provider to sell firm capacity with reserves will increase peak load, while any contracts to purchase capacity with reserves will offset the peak forecast. Subchapter II covers this assessment of electric demand.
Next, each provider's electric power supply will be evaluated. Each electricity provider will be required to submit information showing how much generating capacity it has installed in Wisconsin or is using to provide electricity to ultimate end-users in Wisconsin. This level of installed generating capacity must then be offset by plans to retire units and sell capacity without reserves during the 3-year period encompassing the SEA. Any plans to upgrade existing units, add new units, and purchase more capacity without reserves will increase the electric power supply. The total amount of electric power supply will then be compared against the forecasted peak electric demand. Subchapter III covers the assessment of electric power supply.
Purchases and sales of power depend on the electric transmission system to complete the transaction. To the extent that Wisconsin relies on such capacity arrangements to provide firm power, an evaluation of the transmission system's adequacy must also be completed. Electricity providers will be required to submit data on any firm reservations for use of the transmission system, while transmission providers will be required to describe plans for constructing new transmission lines during the 3-year period encompassing the SEA, and to file copies of long-term transmission studies that examine plans for transmission lines within and into Wisconsin. Subchapter V covers transmission system operation data.
As part of its SEA, the Commission must assess the extent that competition is contributing to a reliable, low-cost electric system. In addition, the Commission must assess the regional bulk power market's effect on the adequacy and reliability of electric supply in Wisconsin, and the reasonableness of electric prices. To accomplish these ends, the proposed rules require information on system dispatch costs and average energy production costs. The Commission must also evaluate whether competition is contributing to an environmentally sound electric system, consider the public interest in environmental protection, identify and describe activities to discourage inefficient and excessive power use, and perform an environmental assessment of each SEA. Conservation information is also required to comply with the state energy goals and priorities under ss. 1.12 and 196.025, Stats., when the Commission makes determinations within the SEA. As a result, the proposed rules require information on pollutant emissions and conservation. The required cost, emissions, and conservation information is covered in Subchapter IV.
Subchapter VI relates to the filing of applications for CPCNs. Included in the subchapter are the minimum data requirements for any application to build a large electric generating facility or high-voltage transmission line.
Anyone wishing to receive a free copy of the proposed rules and the template for submitting and organizing the required data should contact the case coordinator listed below.
Fiscal Estimate
These rules revise ch. PSC 111 and have no fiscal effect, independent of the fiscal effect of s. 196.491 (2) and (3), Stats., as created in 1997 Wis. Act 204. The Public Service Commission relies upon the fiscal analysis prepared for Assembly Bill 940, which ultimately resulted in the enactment of 1997 Wis. Act 204, as the starting point for its fiscal analysis. The fiscal analysis of Assembly Bill 940 indicates that there is no expected effect on local governments and that the costs of the Commission may increase, but the increase may be possible to absorb within the agency's budget.
1997 Wis. Act 204 created statutes replacing the Advance Plan process with the biennial Strategic Energy Assessment (SEA) and modified the process for filing applications for Certificates of Public Conveniences and Necessity. Under s. 196.491 (2) (a), Stats., the Commission is to prepare a biennial SEA that evaluates the adequacy and reliability of Wisconsin's current and future electrical supply.
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The proposed rules would apply to any entity that has or expects to have generation in Wisconsin greater than 5 MW, or that provides electric service to ultimate end users in Wisconsin, including self-providers and any entity providing transmission service in Wisconsin. Based on the Commission's investigation, it is unlikely that any such providers would be a small business as defined in s. 227.114, Stats. The proposed rules are therefore not expected to affect small businesses as defined in s. 227.114, Stats.
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Links to Admin. Code and Statutes in this Register are to current versions, which may not be the version that was referred to in the original published document.