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Quick Jump:

October 10, 2002

Honorable Greg Nickels
Mayor of Seattle
Seattle Municipal Building, 12th Floor
600 Fourth Avenue
Seattle, WA 98104


Dear Mayor Nickels:

Re: Mayor's City Light Review Committee

The attached report represents the work accomplished by the City Light Review Committee you appointed on May 2, 2002. During the past four months, our six-member group developed the recommendations summarized below. If implemented, they should bring a more disciplined and prudent level of oversight to the management of Seattle City Light.

In the past six years, City Light experienced a period of exceptional volatility caused by restructuring of the wholesale electric energy market. This changed business environment was made worse by an extended drought of historic proportions. The combination of these circumstances forced City Light to purchase power on the open market at a time when electricity prices were spiraling out of control. This confluence of negative impacts or, as some say, a "perfect storm," resulted in higher rates for customers and long-term debt for the utility. There are many individuals and organizations looking retrospectively at the choices made by City Light and elected officials during this period. Although we were briefed on policy decisions made in the recent past, our committee did not attempt to judge the quality of those decisions.

Instead, as you requested, we looked to the future. Specifically, we offer our advice as to how the Mayor and Seattle City Council can provide oversight of Seattle City Light that will help ensure the utility makes the best decisions on behalf of its citizen customers.

Your letter requesting our participation in this committee asked us to focus on four major strategy areas for City Light: financial strategies; power supply strategies; risk management strategies; and governance. While attending our first meeting, you stressed that governance is your top concern. You asked us to look at the other three strategy areas to determine how they might be strengthened through improvements to City Light governance and oversight.

We believe you were right to call for a review of City Light governance during this period of rapid change. What has worked well in the past may not be sufficient for the future. Past weaknesses in the system, if repeated, could result in severe adverse consequences. The stakes are high. The risk and complexity of the new market and regulatory environment could cause ill-formed decisions, and cost City Light customers much more than ever.

Recognizing this, our committee considered a wide range of options, from marginal improvements to a complete restructuring of City Light governance. Not surprisingly, we found we are not alone in this effort. Tacoma and Los Angeles are among the other major cities examining the governance structure of their electric utilities in light of recent changes in the industry.

In the process of our review, we acknowledged the inherent strengths of our current system of checks and balances provided by City Council and Mayoral oversight. Seattle City Light enjoys a proud history of public power, providing affordable and reliable electricity to residential and business ratepayers for 100 years. Indisputably, low-cost electricity has been a key factor behind the City's economic development and our quality of life. In addition, starting in the 1970s, City Light has developed one of the nation's strongest conservation and environmental programs.

Through several difficult and controversial periods, the current system for governing City Light helped make many good public policy decisions. Deliberate analysis and discussion, even dissension between the Executive and Legislative branches, have served to develop policies that provide for the long-term well being of City Light and its customers. This has occurred, however, when both branches of government are fully engaged and commit the resources necessary for the important responsibilities of governance and oversight.

Fundamentally, the committee agrees that, at the very least, the current system needs additional resources and discipline brought to bear on the task of governance. The following summarizes the committee's ten recommendations for improving the governance of City Light.


  1. The Mayor's Committee unanimously agrees that the complex and dynamic nature of the electric utility industry requires the addition of a strong, independent board, exclusively focused on City Light policy issues.


Such a board is critical to providing an independent voice regarding utility oversight, helping to insulate City Light from the short-term political pressures that can occupy elected officials, and to maintain the utility's focus upon its core mission. Additionally, this board can bring a level of expertise, experience, and in-depth consideration of policy issues that elected officials may not have the time or background to provide. The board should be comprised of highly qualified individuals, from a diverse range of backgrounds, each of them striving to provide the best-informed, objective counsel to the Mayor, City Council, and City Light management.

We observed that under the current governance system there is a potential conflict between preserving the long-term financial health of City Light and responding to more immediate public policy and political pressures. This imbalance is often caused by the higher political profile of near-term public policy decisions, such as rates and environmental impacts. For instance, plenty of loud voices urge low electric rates, but many fewer thoughtful voices warn of the risks low rates might present in terms of long-term financial stability, including the levels of debt incurred. An independent board would help bring balance to this equation by creating a respected, knowledgeable, and influential body to provide strategic advice, even advocacy, on key policies.


  1. While the Mayor's Committee unanimously recommends the creation of an independent board, we are evenly divided on the question of whether this board should possess governing authority or whether it should be advisory only.

Half of the Mayor's Committee (Craig Gannett, Randy Revelle, and Sam Sperry) believes an advisory board will address most of the shortcomings in the present governance system. They recommend an advisory board rather than a governing board because they believe the Mayor and City Council should retain accountability for governing City Light. An advisory board preserves the direct linkage between Seattle's elected officials and the voters who, in effect, are the utility's ''stockholders.''

The other half of the Mayor's Committee (Sharon Nelson, Richard Sonstelie, and Keith Warner) is not confident an advisory board will provide the required level of expertise, nor sufficient insulation of utility governance from short-term political pressures. They fear that an advisory board with no governing authority will be marginalized and eventually ignored, and will cease to attract the caliber of members required. Fundamentally, these committee members believe the magnitude of changes that have taken place and are likely to continue in the electric utility industry mandate a more systemic change to City Light governance.

Nelson, Sonstelie, and Warner think an independent governing board should be established, possessing the powers that are usually exercised by corporate boards such as setting rates, issuing debt, and approving budgets. They believe the board should also have the authority to hire and fire the Superintendent of City Light. Members of this board would be appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by the City Council. These three committee members argue that such a governance structure would better position City Light for an energy future that will require focused, flexible, and quick decision making.

Gannett, Revelle, and Sperry disagree with this recommendation. They fear the addition of an entity outside the current City structure would diminish accountability for City Light governance. As officials elected by Seattle voters and ratepayers, the Mayor and City Council should be responsible to them for the governance of City Light. These three committee members cited examples in Washington State government where authority has been dispersed to independently elected offices such as those of the Commissioner of Public Lands and Superintendent of Public Instruction, limiting the Governor's ability to provide effective leadership and oversight of those critical state functions. In their view, establishing a new governing board might be an appealing departure from tradition in response to today's energy environment, but once established, it could prove to be an impediment rather than an aid to more effective governance. They fear a new governing board could lose touch with the public purposes and values elected officials are expected to nurture.

Establishment of an independent governing board with the responsibilities proposed above would require changes to the Seattle City Charter and to state law, which provides that the City Council alone can issue debt and set rates for City Light. The entire Mayor's Committee is mindful of the difficulty of amending the City Charter and convincing the Washington State Legislature to change state law. Furthermore, even if the Legislature could be convinced to do so, the committee recognizes the timeline would be lengthy.


  1. Given the fast-paced changes in the electric utility industry, the Mayor's Committee believes the creation of an independent advisory board should be pursued promptly. Therefore, the committee is united in calling for the early establishment of a City Light Advisory Board, with the recommended requirement that the Mayor and City Council assess the efficacy of the board within three to five years of creating it.


The Mayor's Committee is united in proposing the City Light Advisory Board be composed of five to seven members appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by a majority vote of the Seattle City Council. Board members should possess demonstrated expertise and experience in one or more of the following areas: business, finance, energy conservation, environmental protection, energy law, utility operations, and power/risk management. In appointing the board members, the Mayor should strive not to select one each from a list of political constituencies, but to assemble the best balance of experience and expertise to advise the elected officials and utility management on policies related to City Light's finances, power supply, and risk management.

To increase the likelihood the advisory board's advice will be given due consideration, the ordinance establishing this board should include the following language:

  • "The Mayor, Seattle City Council, and Superintendent shall give every serious consideration to all recommendations of the advisory board."

  • "Should the Mayor and/or City Council determine it is necessary to reject or modify any written recommendation of the advisory board, the Mayor and/or the Chair of the Council's Energy and Environmental Policy Committee, or successor committee, shall, within thirty days of rejecting or modifying such written recommendation, explain in writing why the advisory board's recommendation is being rejected or modified."

The board's recommendations and the Mayor and/or City Council's reasons for rejecting them should be publicly available, including posting on the City's website.

Once the board is formed, it should work with the Mayor and City Council to reassess the role of the Rate Advisory Committee. The Mayor's Committee believes there will be an important need for customer review of rate recommendations that can complement, but not be replaced, by the work of the advisory board.

The other recommendations of the Mayor's Committee, which follow in this report, should also be put in place promptly. We all agree the success of City Light cannot be placed on the shoulders of an advisory board alone. The Mayor and City Council should commit to redirecting resources to ensure an upgraded oversight of City Light and should implement the other recommendations contained in this report.


  1. If within three to five years the Mayor and City Council cannot demonstrate the efficacy of the advisory board, the Mayor's Committee unanimously recommends the Mayor and City Council attempt to change the City Charter and state law to allow for the establishment of an independent structure to govern City Light.


Among other models to be researched at that point, the committee suggests looking closely at the structure of an independent city agency, such as the one governing the Jacksonville Energy Authority in Jacksonville, Florida; or a city-owned public corporation such as the one used in Toronto, Canada.


  1. The Mayor's Committee recommends providing more staff resources in the Executive and City Council offices. Specifically, a senior-level staff person should be added to the Mayor's Office or the Office of Policy and Management. Additional staff resources in the Budget office and City Council office should focus on policy development and oversight, rather than daily operational issues of City Light.

To make the best policy decisions, the Mayor and City Council need access to thorough, well-developed proposals, analyzed independently from Seattle City Light. Experienced analysts need to be knowledgeable enough to ask tough questions of utility management and staff, be able to challenge assumptions, and frame the implications of policy decisions. This analytical staff capacity needs to be increased in both the Executive and Legislative offices to facilitate policy review in both branches.

This change should strengthen the necessary policy development dialogue that must occur among the Executive, the City Council, and City Light staff to ensure thoughtful, well-informed oversight actually occurs. The committee specifically recommends a senior-level staff person, experienced in the electric power industry, be added to the Mayor's executive staff. This person should focus exclusively on City Light's top priority issues of intermediate and long-term importance, not daily operational matters.

Staff dedicated to the oversight of City Light has ebbed and flowed too often at the mercy of political tides and near-term budget concerns. Now, more than any time in City Light's past, continuity, stability, and well-informed oversight are critical to its success.

The City needs to prioritize its resources to provide this greater level of dedicated staffing. If an advisory or governing board is formed, it will require staff support as well. To the extent feasible, the additional staff should be provided within existing resources. If necessary, they should be funded with additional resources.


  1. The Mayor and City Councilmembers should commit a greater amount of time and effort to governance and oversight of Seattle City Light.

In recent years, the amount of attention paid to City Light by Mayors and City Councilmembers has varied significantly. These elected officials need to commit the time and effort to examine and understand highly complex and technical utility issues. Indeed, if they cannot or will not, then a separate utility governing board may ultimately be the only answer. There is an undeniable correlation between time and effort spent and the quality of governance and oversight. In the absence of informed direction from elected officials, the role of guiding the utility necessarily falls to non-elected management staff. Such an outcome does not keep faith with the voters.


  1. In addition to committing the time and effort to understand the complex and technical issues influencing Seattle City Light, the Mayor in particular and City Councilmembers as appropriate must lend their stature to regional partnerships and other efforts to influence the direction of state, regional, and federal decisions that affect public power utilities directly and indirectly.

The job of advocating for City Light's interests in the face of federal and state legislative and regulatory changes has fallen recently to utility management staff. Instead, the Mayor of Seattle, as the most visible and influential representative of the City, should be advocating for the utility in federal and regional discussions. As the recent past shows, we have much to gain and even more to lose in regulatory restructuring. Heading off ill-advised legislative or regulatory proposals could be one of the most important actions taken by a Mayor to protect City Light.



  1. The Mayor and City Councilmembers must carefully examine the issues and challenges of the power/risk management functions, and then adopt by concurring resolution clear policies to guide them.


The power management branch of City Light is given the task of selling surplus electricity to maximize revenues, and buying electricity to meet supply deficits at the minimum cost. Although this sounds simple, it is an incredibly complex task, made infinitely more difficult by the rapid changes in the wholesale power market which will probably continue to evolve, perhaps dramatically, over the next few years.

Because the financial risks associated with these activities are so large, City Light must have an effective policy framework for managing these risks, and the City's elected officials must provide the utility with strong policy direction for these functions. Based on our review, the Mayor's Committee believes there has been an insufficient focus upon assessing the utility's approach to power/risk management, and the Mayor's and City Council's oversight of these management processes must be intensified.


  1. Mayoral and City Council policy staff should become more directly involved in City Light's power/risk management decision process by participating regularly in City Light's weekly Risk Management Committee meetings.

Regular participation in these meetings would raise the overall knowledge level of this complex business activity, better inform policy decisions, and provide more timely awareness of emerging challenges. The Executive and Legislative staff will need to respect the potential confidentiality of market sensitive information and to honor the decision-making authority of City Light executive personnel.


  1. City Light requires the flexibility to operate outside some City systems, particularly those governing salaries.

City Light's power management staff is charged with decisions that require an exceptional level of knowledge, extensive experience, and business sophistication. The choices they make can earn or cost the utility hundreds of millions of dollars each year. There is no parallel to this function elsewhere in City government.

In recruiting qualified risk/power management staff, City Light competes against the private sector, not against other City departments or other public agencies. Thus, power management staff salaries need to compete with those of the private sector. Mayor's Committee members noted that on a dollar-for-dollar basis, failure to pay sufficient salaries could result in a shift of a million dollars to or away from the utility based on the experience of the person making a transaction. Not to raise certain of these salaries could well prove to be a policy that is penny wise and pound foolish.

Many other utility jobs besides power marketing require a high level of technical expertise. City Light competes for the services of skilled engineers and other professionals as well. Many of City Light's professional staff appear to be underpaid in comparison to their private sector counterparts. The benefits of working for the City can help to compensate, but these intangible advantages cannot be relied upon to make up the difference. The utility needs the flexibility to compete for top-flight talent in the marketplace by setting competitive salary scales.

Conclusion

To develop our recommendations, we received very informative and candid presentations from a former Seattle City Light Superintendent, the current City Council Energy and Environment Committee members, the Power Committee Chair of the Northwest Power Planning Council, Vantage Consulting, Inc. (the firm being retained to conduct a thorough audit of City Light), and utility management staff in Seattle and Tacoma. We read volumes of information. We plumbed our own extensive experience working on electricity issues in both the public and the private sectors.

Repeatedly we heard there are no panaceas, no perfect, one-size-fits-all governance model for an electric utility in these times. After four months of study, we would share this view. Each existing model governing public utilities throughout the country offers the ability to succeed or fail based upon the quality, experience, and dedication of the individuals who make the decisions and who do the work. Thus, our report makes recommendations for enhancing the knowledge of those individuals, including elected officials and utility staff within the system.

The unique responsibilities of Seattle City Light to the economic development of the region require a unique brand of governance and oversight by elected officials. With regulatory and market changes happening so rapidly, each day can bring difficult new challenges, with implications for the long-term well being of City Light and the community it serves. We respectfully urge the Mayor and City Council to consider our recommendations seriously, and to begin implementing them promptly.

Respectfully submitted:




Mayor's Office: Seattle City Hall, 600 Fourth Avenue, 7th Floor
Mailing address: PO Box 94749 Seattle, WA 98124-4749

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