74th OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY--2007 Regular Session
Enrolled
Senate Bill 461
Sponsored by Senator DECKERT
CHAPTER ................
AN ACT
Relating to low-income electric bill payment assistance; creating
new provisions; amending ORS 757.612; limiting expenditures;
and declaring an emergency.
Be It Enacted by the People of the State of Oregon:
SECTION 1. ORS 757.612 is amended to read:
757.612. (1) There is established an annual public purpose
expenditure standard for electric companies to fund new
cost-effective local energy conservation, new market
transformation efforts, the above-market costs of new renewable
energy resources and new low-income weatherization. The public
purpose expenditure standard shall be funded by the public
purpose charge described in subsection (2) of this section.
(2)(a) Beginning on the date an electric company offers direct
access to its retail electricity consumers, except residential
electricity consumers, the electric company shall collect a
public purpose charge from all of the retail electricity
consumers located within its service area for a period of 10
years. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this subsection,
the public purpose charge shall be equal to three percent of the
total revenues collected by the electric company or electricity
service supplier from its retail electricity consumers for
electricity services, distribution, ancillary services, metering
and billing, transition charges and other types of costs included
in electric rates on July 23, 1999.
(b) For an aluminum plant that averages more than 100 average
megawatts of electricity use per year, beginning on March 1,
2002, the electric company whose territory abuts the greatest
percentage of the site of the aluminum plant shall collect from
the aluminum company a public purpose charge equal to one percent
of the total revenue from the sale of electricity services to the
aluminum plant from any source.
(3)(a) The Public Utility Commission shall establish rules
implementing the provisions of this section relating to electric
companies.
(b) Subject to paragraph (e) of this subsection, funds
collected by an electric company through public purpose charges
shall be allocated as follows:
(A) Sixty-three percent for new cost-effective conservation and
new market transformation.
(B) Nineteen percent for the above-market costs of new
renewable energy resources.
(C) Thirteen percent for new low-income weatherization.
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 1
(D) Five percent shall be transferred to the Housing and
Community Services Department Revolving Account created under ORS
456.574 and used for the purpose of providing grants as described
in ORS 458.625 (2). Moneys deposited in the account under this
subparagraph are continuously appropriated to the Housing and
Community Services Department for the purposes of ORS 458.625
(2). Interest on moneys deposited in the account under this
subparagraph shall accrue to the account.
(c) The costs of administering subsections (1) to (6) of this
section for an electric company shall be paid out of the funds
collected through public purpose charges. The commission may
require that an electric company direct funds collected through
public purpose charges to the state agencies responsible for
implementing subsections (1) to (6) of this section in order to
pay the costs of administering such responsibilities.
(d) The commission shall direct the manner in which public
purpose charges are collected and spent by an electric company
and may require an electric company to expend funds through
competitive bids or other means designed to encourage
competition, except that funds dedicated for low-income
weatherization shall be directed to the Housing and Community
Services Department as provided in subsection (7) of this
section. The commission may also direct that funds collected by
an electric company through public purpose charges be paid to a
nongovernmental entity for investment in public purposes
described in subsection (1) of this section. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this subsection, at least 80 percent of the
funds allocated for conservation shall be spent within the
service area of the electric company that collected the funds.
(e)(A) The first 10 percent of the funds collected annually by
an electric company under subsection (2) of this section shall be
distributed to education service districts, as described in ORS
334.010, that are located in the service territory of the
electric company. The funds shall be distributed to individual
education service districts according to the weighted average
daily membership (ADMw) of the component school districts of the
education service district for the prior fiscal year as
calculated under ORS 327.013. The commission shall establish by
rule a methodology for distributing a proportionate share of
funds under this paragraph to education service districts that
are only partially located in the service territory of the
electric company.
(B) An education service district that receives funds under
this paragraph shall use the funds first to pay for energy audits
for school districts located within the education service
district. An education service district may not expend additional
funds received under this paragraph on a school district facility
until an energy audit has been completed for that school
district. To the extent practicable, an education service
district shall coordinate with the State Department of Energy and
incorporate federal funding in complying with this paragraph.
Following completion of an energy audit for an individual school
district, the education service district may expend funds
received under this paragraph to implement the energy audit. Once
an energy audit has been conducted and completely implemented for
each school district within the education service district, the
education service district may expend funds received under this
paragraph for any of the following purposes:
(i) Conducting energy audits. A school district shall conduct
an energy audit prior to expending funds on any other purpose
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 2
authorized under this paragraph unless the school district has
performed an energy audit within the three years immediately
prior to receiving the funds.
(ii) Weatherization and upgrading the energy efficiency of
school district facilities.
(iii) Energy conservation education programs.
(iv) Purchasing electricity from environmentally focused
sources and investing in renewable energy resources.
(f) The commission may establish a different public purpose
charge than the public purpose charge otherwise described in
subsection (2) of this section for an individual retail
electricity consumer or any class of retail electricity consumers
located within the service area of an electric company, provided
that a retail electricity consumer with a load greater than one
average megawatt is not required to pay a public purpose charge
in excess of three percent of its total cost of electricity
services.
(g) The commission shall remove from the rates of each electric
company any costs for public purposes described in subsection (1)
of this section that are included in rates. A rate adjustment
under this paragraph shall be effective on the date that the
electric company begins collecting public purpose charges.
(4) An electric company that satisfies its obligations under
this section shall have no further obligation to invest in
conservation, new market transformation, new renewable energy
resources or new low-income weatherization or to provide a
commercial energy conservation services program and is not
subject to ORS 469.631 to 469.645, 469.860 to 469.900 and 758.505
to 758.555.
(5)(a) A retail electricity consumer that uses more than one
average megawatt of electricity at any site in the prior year
shall receive a credit against public purpose charges billed by
an electric company for that site. The amount of the credit shall
be equal to the total amount of qualifying expenditures for new
energy conservation, not to exceed 68 percent of the annual
public purpose charges, and the above-market costs of purchases
of new renewable energy resources incurred by the retail
electricity consumer, not to exceed 19 percent of the annual
public purpose charges, less administration costs incurred under
this subsection. The credit may not exceed, on an annual basis,
the lesser of:
(A) The amount of the retail electricity consumer's qualifying
expenditures; or
(B) The portion of the public purpose charge billed to the
retail electricity consumer that is dedicated to new energy
conservation, new market transformation or the above-market costs
of new renewable energy resources.
(b) To obtain a credit under this subsection, a retail
electricity consumer shall file with the State Department of
Energy a description of the proposed conservation project or new
renewable energy resource and a declaration that the retail
electricity consumer plans to incur the qualifying expenditure.
The State Department of Energy shall issue a notice of
precertification within 30 days of receipt of the filing, if such
filing is consistent with this subsection. The credit may be
taken after a retail electricity consumer provides a letter from
a certified public accountant to the State Department of Energy
verifying that the precertified qualifying expenditure has been
made.
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 3
(c) Credits earned by a retail electricity consumer as a result
of qualifying expenditures that are not used in one year may be
carried forward for use in subsequent years.
(d)(A) A retail electricity consumer that uses more than one
average megawatt of electricity at any site in the prior year may
request that the State Department of Energy hire an independent
auditor to assess the potential for conservation investments at
the site. If the independent auditor determines there is no
available conservation measure at the site that would have a
simple payback of one to 10 years, the retail electricity
consumer shall be relieved of 54 percent of its payment
obligation for public purpose charges related to the site. If the
independent auditor determines that there are potential
conservation measures available at the site, the retail
electricity consumer shall be entitled to a credit against public
purpose charges related to the site equal to 54 percent of the
public purpose charges less the estimated cost of available
conservation measures.
(B) A retail electricity consumer shall be entitled each year
to the credit described in this subsection unless a subsequent
independent audit determines that new conservation investment
opportunities are available. The State Department of Energy may
require that a new independent audit be performed on the site to
determine whether new conservation measures are available,
provided that the independent audits shall occur no more than
once every two years.
(C) The retail electricity consumer shall pay the cost of the
independent audits described in this subsection.
(6) Electric utilities and retail electricity consumers shall
receive a fair and reasonable credit for the public purpose
expenditures of their energy suppliers. The State Department of
Energy shall adopt rules to determine eligible expenditures and
the methodology by which such credits are accounted for and used.
The rules also shall adopt methods to account for eligible public
purpose expenditures made through consortia or collaborative
projects.
(7)(a) In addition to the public purpose charge provided under
subsection (2) of this section, { - beginning on October 1,
2001, - } an electric company shall collect funds for low-income
electric bill payment assistance in an amount determined under
paragraph (b) of this subsection.
{ - (b) The total amount collected for low-income electric
bill payment assistance under this section shall be $10 million
per year. The commission shall determine each electric company's
proportionate share of the total amount. The commission shall
determine the amount to be collected from a retail electricity
consumer, except that a retail electricity consumer is not
required to pay more than $500 per month per site for low-income
electric bill payment assistance. - }
{ + (b) The commission shall establish the amount to be
collected by each electric company in calendar year 2008 from
retail electricity consumers served by the company, and the rates
to be charged to retail electricity consumers served by the
company, so that the total anticipated collection for low-income
electric bill payment assistance by all electric companies in
calendar year 2008 is $15 million. In calendar year 2009 and
subsequent calendar years, the commission may not change the
rates established for retail electricity consumers, but the total
amount collected in a calendar year for low-income electric bill
payment assistance may vary based on electricity usage by retail
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 4
electricity consumers and changes in the number of retail
electricity consumers in this state. In no event shall a retail
electricity consumer be required to pay more than $500 per month
per site for low-income electric bill payment assistance. + }
(c) Funds collected by the low-income electric bill payment
assistance charge shall be paid into the Housing and Community
Services Department Revolving Account created under ORS 456.574.
Moneys deposited in the account under this paragraph are
continuously appropriated to the Housing and Community Services
Department for the purpose of funding low-income electric bill
payment assistance. Interest earned on moneys deposited in the
account under this paragraph shall accrue to the account. The
department's cost of administering this subsection shall be paid
out of funds collected by the low-income electric bill payment
assistance charge. Moneys deposited in the account under this
paragraph shall be expended solely for low-income electric bill
payment assistance. Funds collected from an electric company
shall be expended in the service area of the electric company
from which the funds are collected.
(d) The Housing and Community Services Department, in
consultation with the federal Advisory Committee on Energy, shall
determine the manner in which funds collected under this
subsection will be allocated by the department to energy
assistance program providers for the purpose of providing
low-income bill payment and crisis assistance, including programs
that effectively reduce service disconnections and related costs
to retail electricity consumers and electric utilities. Priority
assistance shall be directed to low-income electricity consumers
who are in danger of having their electricity service
disconnected.
(e) Notwithstanding ORS 293.140, interest on moneys deposited
in the Housing and Community Services Department Revolving
Account under this subsection shall accrue to the account and may
be used to provide heating bill payment and crisis assistance to
electricity consumers whose primary source of heat is not
electricity.
(f) Notwithstanding ORS 757.310, the commission may allow an
electric company to provide reduced rates or other payment or
crisis assistance or low-income program assistance to a
low-income household eligible for assistance under the federal
Low Income Home Energy Assistance Act of 1981, as amended and in
effect on July 23, 1999.
(8) For purposes of this section, 'retail electricity
consumers' includes any direct service industrial consumer that
purchases electricity without purchasing distribution services
from the electric utility.
SECTION 2. { + The amendments to ORS 757.612 by section 1 of
this 2007 Act apply to electricity consumer billings that are
made on or after January 1, 2008. + }
SECTION 2a. { + If Senate Bill 443 becomes law, section 1 of
this 2007 Act (amending ORS 757.612) is repealed and ORS 757.612,
as amended by section 43a, chapter ___, Oregon Laws 2007
(Enrolled Senate Bill 443), is amended to read: + }
757.612. (1) There is established an annual public purpose
expenditure standard for electric companies and Oregon Community
Power to fund new cost-effective local energy conservation, new
market transformation efforts, the above-market costs of new
renewable energy resources and new low-income weatherization. The
public purpose expenditure standard shall be funded by the public
purpose charge described in subsection (2) of this section.
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 5
(2)(a) Beginning on the date an electric company or Oregon
Community Power offers direct access to its retail electricity
consumers, except residential electricity consumers, the electric
company or Oregon Community Power shall collect a public purpose
charge from all of the retail electricity consumers located
within its service area until January 1, 2026. Except as provided
in paragraph (b) of this subsection, the public purpose charge
shall be equal to three percent of the total revenues collected
by the electric company, Oregon Community Power or the
electricity service supplier from its retail electricity
consumers for electricity services, distribution, ancillary
services, metering and billing, transition charges and other
types of costs included in electric rates on July 23, 1999.
(b) For an aluminum plant that averages more than 100 average
megawatts of electricity use per year, beginning on March 1,
2002, the electric company or Oregon Community Power whose
territory abuts the greatest percentage of the site of the
aluminum plant shall collect from the aluminum company a public
purpose charge equal to one percent of the total revenue from the
sale of electricity services to the aluminum plant from any
source.
(3)(a) The Public Utility Commission shall establish rules
implementing the provisions of this section relating to electric
companies and Oregon Community Power.
(b) Subject to paragraph (e) of this subsection, funds
collected by an electric company or Oregon Community Power
through public purpose charges shall be allocated as follows:
(A) Sixty-three percent for new cost-effective conservation and
new market transformation.
(B) Nineteen percent for the above-market costs of constructing
and operating new renewable energy resources with a nominal
electric generating capacity, as defined in ORS 469.300, of 20
megawatts or less.
(C) Thirteen percent for new low-income weatherization.
(D) Five percent shall be transferred to the Housing and
Community Services Department Revolving Account created under ORS
456.574 and used for the purpose of providing grants as described
in ORS 458.625 (2). Moneys deposited in the account under this
subparagraph are continuously appropriated to the Housing and
Community Services Department for the purposes of ORS 458.625
(2). Interest on moneys deposited in the account under this
subparagraph shall accrue to the account.
(c) The costs of administering subsections (1) to (6) of this
section for an electric company or Oregon Community Power shall
be paid out of the funds collected through public purpose
charges. The commission may require that an electric company or
Oregon Community Power direct funds collected through public
purpose charges to the state agencies responsible for
implementing subsections (1) to (6) of this section in order to
pay the costs of administering such responsibilities.
(d) The commission shall direct the manner in which public
purpose charges are collected and spent by an electric company or
Oregon Community Power and may require an electric company or
Oregon Community Power to expend funds through competitive bids
or other means designed to encourage competition, except that
funds dedicated for low-income weatherization shall be directed
to the Housing and Community Services Department as provided in
subsection (7) of this section. The commission may also direct
that funds collected by an electric company or Oregon Community
Power through public purpose charges be paid to a nongovernmental
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 6
entity for investment in public purposes described in subsection
(1) of this section. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
subsection:
(A) At least 80 percent of the funds allocated for conservation
shall be spent within the service area of the electric company
that collected the funds; or
(B) If Oregon Community Power collected the funds, at least 80
percent of the funds allocated for conservation shall be spent
within the service area of Oregon Community Power.
(e)(A) The first 10 percent of the funds collected annually by
an electric company or Oregon Community Power under subsection
(2) of this section shall be distributed to education service
districts, as described in ORS 334.010, that are located in the
service territory of the electric company or Oregon Community
Power. The funds shall be distributed to individual education
service districts according to the weighted average daily
membership (ADMw) of the component school districts of the
education service district for the prior fiscal year as
calculated under ORS 327.013. The commission shall establish by
rule a methodology for distributing a proportionate share of
funds under this paragraph to education service districts that
are only partially located in the service territory of the
electric company or Oregon Community Power.
(B) An education service district that receives funds under
this paragraph shall use the funds first to pay for energy audits
for school districts located within the education service
district. An education service district may not expend additional
funds received under this paragraph on a school district facility
until an energy audit has been completed for that school
district. To the extent practicable, an education service
district shall coordinate with the State Department of Energy and
incorporate federal funding in complying with this paragraph.
Following completion of an energy audit for an individual school
district, the education service district may expend funds
received under this paragraph to implement the energy audit. Once
an energy audit has been conducted and completely implemented for
each school district within the education service district, the
education service district may expend funds received under this
paragraph for any of the following purposes:
(i) Conducting energy audits. A school district shall conduct
an energy audit prior to expending funds on any other purpose
authorized under this paragraph unless the school district has
performed an energy audit within the three years immediately
prior to receiving the funds.
(ii) Weatherization and upgrading the energy efficiency of
school district facilities.
(iii) Energy conservation education programs.
(iv) Purchasing electricity from environmentally focused
sources and investing in renewable energy resources.
(f) The commission may not establish a different public purpose
charge than the public purpose charge described in subsection (2)
of this section.
(4)(a) An electric company that satisfies its obligations under
this section shall have no further obligation to invest in
conservation, new market transformation or new low-income
weatherization or to provide a commercial energy conservation
services program and is not subject to ORS 469.631 to 469.645 and
469.860 to 469.900.
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 7
(b) Oregon Community Power, for any period during which Oregon
Community Power collects a public purpose charge under subsection
(2) of this section:
(A) Shall have no other obligation to invest in conservation,
new market transformation or new low-income weatherization or to
provide a commercial energy conservation services program; and
(B) Is not subject to ORS 469.631 to 469.645 and 469.860 to
469.900.
(5)(a) A retail electricity consumer that uses more than one
average megawatt of electricity at any site in the prior year
shall receive a credit against public purpose charges billed by
an electric company or Oregon Community Power for that site. The
amount of the credit shall be equal to the total amount of
qualifying expenditures for new energy conservation, not to
exceed 68 percent of the annual public purpose charges, and the
above-market costs of purchases of new renewable energy resources
incurred by the retail electricity consumer, not to exceed 19
percent of the annual public purpose charges, less administration
costs incurred under this subsection. The credit may not exceed,
on an annual basis, the lesser of:
(A) The amount of the retail electricity consumer's qualifying
expenditures; or
(B) The portion of the public purpose charge billed to the
retail electricity consumer that is dedicated to new energy
conservation, new market transformation or the above-market costs
of new renewable energy resources.
(b) To obtain a credit under this subsection, a retail
electricity consumer shall file with the State Department of
Energy a description of the proposed conservation project or new
renewable energy resource and a declaration that the retail
electricity consumer plans to incur the qualifying expenditure.
The State Department of Energy shall issue a notice of
precertification within 30 days of receipt of the filing, if such
filing is consistent with this subsection. The credit may be
taken after a retail electricity consumer provides a letter from
a certified public accountant to the State Department of Energy
verifying that the precertified qualifying expenditure has been
made.
(c) Credits earned by a retail electricity consumer as a result
of qualifying expenditures that are not used in one year may be
carried forward for use in subsequent years.
(d)(A) A retail electricity consumer that uses more than one
average megawatt of electricity at any site in the prior year may
request that the State Department of Energy hire an independent
auditor to assess the potential for conservation investments at
the site. If the independent auditor determines there is no
available conservation measure at the site that would have a
simple payback of one to 10 years, the retail electricity
consumer shall be relieved of 54 percent of its payment
obligation for public purpose charges related to the site. If the
independent auditor determines that there are potential
conservation measures available at the site, the retail
electricity consumer shall be entitled to a credit against public
purpose charges related to the site equal to 54 percent of the
public purpose charges less the estimated cost of available
conservation measures.
(B) A retail electricity consumer shall be entitled each year
to the credit described in this subsection unless a subsequent
independent audit determines that new conservation investment
opportunities are available. The State Department of Energy may
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 8
require that a new independent audit be performed on the site to
determine whether new conservation measures are available,
provided that the independent audits shall occur no more than
once every two years.
(C) The retail electricity consumer shall pay the cost of the
independent audits described in this subsection.
(6) Electric utilities and retail electricity consumers shall
receive a fair and reasonable credit for the public purpose
expenditures of their energy suppliers. The State Department of
Energy shall adopt rules to determine eligible expenditures and
the methodology by which such credits are accounted for and used.
The rules also shall adopt methods to account for eligible public
purpose expenditures made through consortia or collaborative
projects.
(7)(a) In addition to the public purpose charge provided under
subsection (2) of this section, { - beginning on October 1,
2001, - } an electric company or Oregon Community Power shall
collect funds for low-income electric bill payment assistance in
an amount determined under paragraph (b) of this subsection.
{ - (b) The total amount collected for low-income electric
bill payment assistance under this section shall be $10 million
per year. The commission shall determine each electric company's
proportionate share of the total amount and Oregon Community
Power's proportionate share of the total amount. The commission
shall determine the amount to be collected from a retail
electricity consumer, except that a retail electricity consumer
is not required to pay more than $500 per month per site for
low-income electric bill payment assistance. - }
{ + (b) The commission shall establish the amount to be
collected by each electric company in calendar year 2008 from
retail electricity consumers served by the company, and the rates
to be charged to retail electricity consumers served by the
company, so that the total anticipated collection for low-income
electric bill payment assistance by all electric companies in
calendar year 2008 is $15 million. In calendar year 2009 and
subsequent calendar years, the commission may not change the
rates established for retail electricity consumers, but the total
amount collected in a calendar year for low-income electric bill
payment assistance may vary based on electricity usage by retail
electricity consumers and changes in the number of retail
electricity consumers in this state. In no event shall a retail
electricity consumer be required to pay more than $500 per month
per site for low-income electric bill payment assistance. + }
(c) Funds collected by the low-income electric bill payment
assistance charge shall be paid into the Housing and Community
Services Department Revolving Account created under ORS 456.574.
Moneys deposited in the account under this paragraph are
continuously appropriated to the Housing and Community Services
Department for the purpose of funding low-income electric bill
payment assistance. Interest earned on moneys deposited in the
account under this paragraph shall accrue to the account. The
department's cost of administering this subsection shall be paid
out of funds collected by the low-income electric bill payment
assistance charge. Moneys deposited in the account under this
paragraph shall be expended solely for low-income electric bill
payment assistance. Funds collected from an electric company or
Oregon Community Power shall be expended in the service area of
the electric company or Oregon Community Power from which the
funds are collected.
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 9
(d) The Housing and Community Services Department, in
consultation with the federal Advisory Committee on Energy, shall
determine the manner in which funds collected under this
subsection will be allocated by the department to energy
assistance program providers for the purpose of providing
low-income bill payment and crisis assistance, including programs
that effectively reduce service disconnections and related costs
to retail electricity consumers and electric utilities. Priority
assistance shall be directed to low-income electricity consumers
who are in danger of having their electricity service
disconnected.
(e) Notwithstanding ORS 293.140, interest on moneys deposited
in the Housing and Community Services Department Revolving
Account under this subsection shall accrue to the account and may
be used to provide heating bill payment and crisis assistance to
electricity consumers whose primary source of heat is not
electricity.
(f) Notwithstanding ORS 757.310, the commission may allow an
electric company or Oregon Community Power to provide reduced
rates or other payment or crisis assistance or low-income program
assistance to a low-income household eligible for assistance
under the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Act of 1981,
as amended and in effect on July 23, 1999.
(8) For purposes of this section, 'retail electricity
consumers' includes any direct service industrial consumer that
purchases electricity without purchasing distribution services
from the electric utility.
(9) For purposes of this section, amounts collected by Oregon
Community Power through public purpose charges are not considered
moneys received from electric utility operations.
SECTION 2b. If Senate Bill 443 becomes law, section 2 of this
2007 Act is amended to read:
{ + Sec. 2. + } The amendments to ORS 757.612 by section
{ - 1 - } { + 2a + } of this 2007 Act apply to electricity
consumer billings that are made on or after January 1, 2008.
SECTION 3. { + Notwithstanding any other law limiting
expenditures, the limitation on expenditures established by
section 2, chapter ___, Oregon Laws 2007 (Enrolled Senate Bill
5517), for the biennium beginning July 1, 2007, as the maximum
limit for payment of expenses from fees, moneys or other
revenues, including Miscellaneous Receipts and federal funds from
the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development for
contract services, but excluding lottery funds and other federal
funds, that are collected or received by the Housing and
Community Services Department, is increased by $7,607,250 for the
purpose of carrying out the provisions of ORS 757.612 (7). + }
SECTION 4. { + This 2007 Act being necessary for the immediate
preservation of the public peace, health and safety, an emergency
is declared to exist, and this 2007 Act takes effect on its
passage. + }
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Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 10
Passed by Senate June 23, 2007
Repassed by Senate June 27, 2007
...........................................................
Secretary of Senate
...........................................................
President of Senate
Passed by House June 27, 2007
...........................................................
Speaker of House
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 11
Received by Governor:
......M.,............., 2007
Approved:
......M.,............., 2007
...........................................................
Governor
Filed in Office of Secretary of State:
......M.,............., 2007
...........................................................
Secretary of State
Enrolled Senate Bill 461 (SB 461-C) Page 12