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Updated Draft Order Would Prohibit Retail Supplier Guaranteed Savings Plan Extending Beyond Date Of Known Default Service Rate

Updated Draft Would Require Retail Suppliers To Record Entirety Of All Door-to-Door, Telemarketing Sales

New Draft Drops Proposal That Suppliers Must Disclose Default Service Rate In TPV

Suppliers Would Be Required To Seek Regulator's Approval For Contract Assignments (Book Sales, etc.)


April 9, 2020

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Copyright 2010-20 EnergyChoiceMatters.com
Reporting by Paul Ring • ring@energychoicematters.com

The following story is brought free of charge to readers by EC Infosystems, the exclusive EDI provider of EnergyChoiceMatters.com

The Connecticut PURA has issued a second draft decision on electric supplier marketing standards that would still require that suppliers record the entirety of all telesales and door-to-door sales, but does omit a prior proposal that the utility Standard Service rate must be disclosed during third party verification (TPV)

While suppliers argued that current statutes and regulations are sufficient, the new draft says the new marketing standards are needed by stating, "the Authority would not have had to issue almost $4 million in penalties in 2018 alone, were the current standards contained solely within the statutes sufficient."

Recording Of Sales Interactions

The new draft provides that, "Each Electric Supplier shall record the entirety of all telesales calls and door-to-door marketing lasting ten seconds or longer with all residential customers or potential residential customers, and shall retain such recordings for three years after the date such recording was made."

The new draft provides that, "Any accompanying TPV must be retained for three years after the date of such TPV recordings and shall be supplied to PURA upon request. In the event that an Electric Supplier is unable to comply with the Authority’s request, the underlying customer contract will be deemed null and void with no ETF or cancellation fee permitted."

Door to Door Marketing

With respect to door to door marketing, the new draft provides that, "When conducting door-to-door calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, each Electric Supplier shall begin by immediately stating: (A) That they are a representative of the full name of the Electric Supplier conducting the call; (B) that the purpose of the sales call is to switch the customer’s electric supply service to the full name of the Electric Supplier conducting the call; and (C) that such Electric Supplier does not represent and is not affiliated with the customer’s local utility company."

The new draft further provides that electric suppliers engaging in door-to-door sales must provide customers with a document that states among other things, that, "the individual engaging in door-to-door sales is not an employee or member of the customer’s EDC and is not acting on behalf of the EDC."

The new draft requires that door to door marketers inform customers of the Standard Service utility supply rate.

The new draft further provides that, "When conducting door-to-door calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, prior to initiating the third-party verification, each Electric Supplier shall inform the customer or potential customer: (A) that if the customer or potential customer assents, the door-to-door call will result in the customer or potential customer immediately entering into a contract with the Electric Supplier; (B) of the customer’s right to rescind the contract with the Electric Supplier without penalty as required by 16-245o(f)(2); (C) what the standard service rate is on the date of the door-to-door call in cents per kilowatt hour, and, if the door-to-door call is being conducted within 45 calendar days of a change to the standard service rate, the date that the standard service rate will change and what the standard service rate will be on that date in cents per kilowatt hour; and (D) of all material contract terms, as defined by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority in its decisions."

The new draft prohibits use of certain language concerning marketing.

The new draft provides that, "When conducting door-to-door calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, each Electric Supplier is prohibited from: (A) representing that such Electric Supplier or its offer is affiliated with any state or utility program; (B) representing that any state program encourages or requires Connecticut electric customers to obtain an Electric Supplier; (C) representing that the local electric utility encourages or requires Connecticut electric customers to obtain an Electric Supplier; (D) representing that the standard service rate is a variable rate; and (E) representing that standard service will increase, unless the Authority has approved the upcoming standard service rate and the upcoming standard service rate is greater than the current standard service rate."

The new draft would prohibit suppliers from requesting an account number or bill from the customer until immediately before contract verification

The new draft further provides that, "When conducting door-to-door calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, no Electric Supplier may request the account information from a potential customer or request that a potential customer retrieve account information or the potential customer's electric distribution company bill until immediately before the customer or potential customer is being transferred to the TPV, or other means of contract verification indicated by statute."

The new draft provides that electric suppliers must fit all door-to-door marketers with GPS monitoring devices that allow the supplier to track, and later verify, the marketer’s location during door-to-door sales. Upon request from the Authority, an electric supplier must identify the individual who conducted the door-to-door visit to a customer that resulted in a complaint received by the Authority. In the event that an Electric Supplier cannot identify the individual who conducted the door-to-door visit upon a request by the Authority, the customer contract in question will be deemed null and void with no early termination fee (ETF) or cancellation fee permitted, the new draft provides.

Telemarketing

The new draft prohibits the use of inaccurate or misleading caller ID info, or caller ID locking.

The new draft provides, "No telephone solicitor acting on behalf of an Electric Supplier may cause to be installed or may use any blocking device or service to circumvent a consumer’s use of a caller identification service or device. No such telephone solicitor may transmit inaccurate or misleading caller identification information, such as, but not limited to, the EDC name, 'Disconnection', 'Emergency', Electric Choice' or 'Customer Service'. Rather, the telephone solicitor shall ensure that the caller identification information displays the Electric Supplier’s name (or an appropriate abbreviation thereof) and that the phone number that appears on the customer’s caller identification information is accurate and allows for the customer to call back. The Electric Supplier shall ensure its telephone solicitors do not employ devices that cause a telephone number to appear as if it is from a local area code. It is the responsibility of the Electric Supplier to ensure that all employees, representatives, agents, brokers, vendors, or any individual or group of individuals acting on behalf of or under contract to the supplier are not engaging in false, misleading or deceptive conduct. If deceptive conduct is discovered, the supplier must immediately notify the Authority in writing within ten (10) business days of discovery of the incident. Such notification shall include a detailed description of the incident, the investigation and the planned resolution, and shall be filed in the supplier’s licensing docket as well as Docket No. 14-07-20RE01."

The new draft telemarketing rules are largely similar to the door to door requirements discussed above

The new draft provides, "When conducting telesales calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, each Electric Supplier shall begin by immediately stating: (A) that they represent the full name of the Electric Supplier conducting the call; (B) that the purpose of the call is to switch the customer’s electric supply service to the full name of the Electric Supplier conducting the call; and (C) that such Electric Supplier does not represent and is not affiliated with the customer’s local utility company."

The new draft provides, "When conducting telesales calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, prior to initiating the third-party verification, each Electric Supplier shall inform the customer or potential customer: (A) that if the customer or potential customer assents, the telesales call or will result in the customer or potential customer immediately entering into a contract with the Electric Supplier; (B) of the customer’s right to rescind the contract with the Electric Supplier without penalty as required by Conn. Gen. Stat. § 16-245o(f)(2); (C) what the standard service rate is on the date of the telesales call in cents per kilowatt hour, and, if the telesales call is being conducted within 45 calendar days of a change to the standard service rate, the date that the standard service rate will change and what the standard service rate will be on that date in cents per kilowatt hour; (D) the phone number of the Electric Supplier; and (E) of all material contract terms or other items defined by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority in its decisions."

The new draft provides, "When conducting telesales calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, each Electric Supplier is prohibited from: (A) representing that such Electric Supplier or its offer is affiliated with any state or utility program; (B) representing that any state program encourages or requires Connecticut electric customers to obtain an Electric Supplier; (C) representing that the local electric utility encourages or requires Connecticut electric customers to obtain an Electric Supplier; (D) representing that the standard service rate is a variable rate; and (E) representing that standard service will increase, unless the Authority has approved the upcoming standard service rate and the upcoming standard service rate is greater than the current standard service rate."

The new draft provides, "When conducting telesales calls to all residential customers or potential residential customers, no Electric Supplier may request the customer’s account information or request that a potential customer retrieve account information or the potential customer’s electric distribution company bill until immediately before the customer or potential customer is being transferred to the TPV, or other means of contract verification indicated by statute."

The new draft provides, "Upon the Authority’s request, an Electric Supplier must identify the name of the individual caller that conducted the telemarketing call to a customer that resulted in a complaint received by the Authority. In the event that an Electric Supplier is unable to comply with the Authority’s request, the underlying customer contract will be deemed null and void with no ETF or cancellation fee permitted."

Third Party Verification

The new draft includes requirements and questions that must be asked during a residential TPV

Most notable is the new draft omits from the TPV an earlier proposed requirement that the TPV must, "State the applicable standard service rate and confirm the customer is aware that if they were on standard service they would pay that rate (Customer must respond yes/no)."

Also notable in the new draft TPV questions are two questions for which the potential customer must provide a narrative answer, and for which the customer may not simply answer yes/no

Specifically, under the new draft, the TPV shall include that following (among other questions):

• "Confirm the customer on the call is authorized to change the generation service provider on the electric bill (Person on the call must state their relationship to or employment position with the customer listed on the bill)"

• "Confirm customer’s account number, name, service address, and telephone number (The customer must read the information directly from their bill; the TPV provider cannot read the information to the customer and receive a yes/no response)"

The new draft provides that, "All TPVs must demonstrate that the customers have a clear understanding of the services offered and the customer’s consent to enroll with the Electric Supplier must be both voluntary and unequivocal. If at any time during a TPV the customer cannot answer a question, the verification process must end and a subsequent verification process involving the potential customer may not be attempted for a minimum of 24 hours thereafter."

Limit On Guaranteed Savings Plans

The new draft would prohibit guaranteed savings products whose term extends beyond the end date of the known Standard Service rate (Standard Service rates change every 6 months)

The new Draft provides, "If offered or advertised by the Electric Supplier, savings guarantees must be made for the duration of the contract, may be made only through a direct comparison of the supplier’s rate with the current standard service rate or future standard service rate that has been published by the Authority, and may be made only on offers with terms that do not exceed known standard service rates (e.g., a twelve-month supplier rate could not make a savings guarantee because a customer entering into a twelve-month offer could not know the standard service rate for the next twelve months)."

As such, longer "percent off" or minimum guaranteed savings plans are prohibited under the new draft

Other Issues

Under the new draft, all of an electric supplier’s generally available rates must be posted to the state's Rate Board. "Generally available rate" means a generation rate that is offered to customers taking service under a rate tariff or to an entire class or specific subset of residential or business customers. Offers that are displayed on a supplier’s website are deemed to be generally available.

Under the new draft, electric suppliers must update all verbal and electronic marketing materials disclosing the EDC standard service price immediately upon PURA’s approval of a new standard service price. The use of printed marketing materials with the expiring EDC standard service price must be updated to reflect the new standard service price or be discontinued within five (5) days of PURA’s approval of the new standard service price.

Under the new draft, electric suppliers may not in any way represent or imply that they are associated with the EDCs, the State of Connecticut, a state program, or PURA. All advertisements must clearly display the name of the Electric Supplier making said offers and all advertisements offering service must have an expiration date of the offer and/or terms, if applicable.

For renewals, the new draft provides that the renewal mailing must state the renewal rate and offer as a comparison the standard service rate applicable at the time the renewal rate will become effective.

The new draft requires that a "disclosure statement" be included in all written residential "offers," stating that, "Licensed Electric Suppliers are required to post the highest and lowest generation service charge rate that was billed to their customers under a variable rate offer in each of the preceding 12 months. You can find this information on [ABC Electric’s] website at www.abcelectric.com/past_variable_rates or on the supplier Rate Board that is maintained by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority at www.energizect.com/compare-energy-suppliers."

"Offer" means the information provided to consumers for each generation product or record displayed on the Rate Board. This information includes, but is not limited to, the applicable EDC tariff and customer class, term in billing cycles, all-inclusive rate, cancellation fee, enrollment fee, restrictions and other product specific information included in a proposal made by a supplier that will create a binding contract if accepted by the customer to whom it is made.

Under the new draft, this Disclosure Statement shall appear on all written offers between the supplier and the customer, including but not limited to: The supplier’s website, where offers are presented; Direct mail advertisements; Newspaper ads; Magazine ads; Email ads; Online advertisements; Advertisements in social media platforms; Any advertisement materials used in door-to-door solicitation, where an offer is presented

The new draft provides that electric suppliers must send all enrollments to the electric distribution company (EDC) within seven (7) business days after the date of the sales transaction in which the customer requests to enroll unless the customer specifically requests that the enrollment not process in such timeframe.

Assignment Of Customers

The new draft would require that suppliers seek approval for an assignment of customers

Prior to assigning or transferring any customers to another supplier, the new draft provides that an electric supplier must file a 'Notice of Assignment' with the Authority no later than sixty (60) days prior to the date of assignment or transfer.

The new draft provides that customer assignments or transfers must be approved or modified by the Authority within fifteen business days of the Authority’s receipt of a completed notice from the supplier, unless the Authority and Electric Supplier agree to a specified extension of time. The Authority may assess additional licensing fees to pay the administrative costs of reviewing a request for such transfer or assignment.

The new draft provides that, "Upon its review of the Notice of Assignment, the Authority may require certain conditions, including but not limited to granting the customer the option to terminate or cancel services with the new Electric Supplier with no cancellation or early termination fee charged to the customer should the customer terminate or cancel service up to seven (7) business days after receiving the first billing statement reflecting charges from the new Electric Supplier, and that RPS obligations from the assigning supplier must be satisfied prior to assignment."

Direct Training Required, Self-Reporting Of Violations

The new draft provides that, "All individuals and entities marketing for an Electric Supplier shall be trained about electric generation service rates and products that they are selling, applicable federal, state, and local laws, regulations, and ordinances, and ethical and responsible sales practices, and cautioned against making misleading representations. All training for everyone marketing on behalf of an Electric Supplier must be performed directly by an employee of the Electric Supplier (i.e. a sales representative may not be trained by a representative, agent, independent contractor, broker, marketer, individual, or company acting on behalf of the Electric Supplier), and must be conducted in a manner to allow interaction with and/or questions from the representative being trained. Virtual meetings that are live, face-to-face, and allow such interactions and questions are acceptable; although, all virtual meetings must be recorded and preserved for no less than three (3) years from the date of occurrence. The representative should be deemed appropriate for the type of contact they will be having with the public, and must sign a confidentiality agreement to keep personal customer information confidential."

The new draft retains requirements for self-reporting of violations

The new draft provides, "It is the responsibility of every Electric Supplier to ensure that any entity or individual marketing and/or acting on behalf of does not engage in false, misleading or deceptive trade practices, nor perform unauthorized switching of customer accounts. If an Electric Supplier discovers: deceptive trade practices affecting more than ten customers, more than three violations for any agent over a three-month period, or any unauthorized switching of customers, the Electric Supplier must notify the Authority in writing as soon as possible, but no later than within ten (10) business days of discovery. Such notification shall include a detailed description of the incident, the current state of the investigation, and the planned resolution, with updates as required by the Authority, and shall be filed in Docket No. 14-07-20RE01 and in the supplier’s licensing docket."

The new draft warns suppliers about avoiding self-reporting by not implementing a thorough oversight program for agents

The new draft states, "the Authority is troubled by the Supplier Group’s argument, 'Rather than face potential sanctions resulting from the reporting of deceptive conduct to the Authority, suppliers may choose to refrain from engaging in the exact oversight and quality control that would lead to the discovery of such conduct in the first instance.' Id. at p. 8; Supplier Group Pre-filed Testimony dated June 20, 2017, p. 13-14. The Authority highly discourages the Supplier Group from pursuing such an unwise, unethical, and illegal course of action. Suppliers currently are required to have mechanisms in place for ongoing monitoring of their marketing, whether conducted in-house or by third-party vendors. See Conn. Gen. Stat. § 16-245o(h)(10).1 The Authority assumes that suppliers currently are quickly addressing any violations they find as a result of this monitoring. Requiring suppliers to report these findings and remedies to the Authority places minimal burden on a supplier."

The new draft states that PURA will exercise its discretion in setting fines for suppliers who self-report versus those who "bury their heads in the sand."

"As the OCC notes, the Authority maintains discretion as to whether or not to open an investigation against a supplier, and can consider honest and transparent self-reporting when determining the appropriate sanction for any violations. Brief of OCC, p. 9. Suppliers can be certain the Authority will exercise those discretions and most probably impose larger sanctions and fines against a supplier that purposefully buries its head in the sand to avoid self-reporting and most probably may forego sanctions and fines or may impose smaller sanctions and fines when suppliers make reasonable, good faith efforts to comply with their obligations to timely remedy and self-report any violations," the new draft states

Effective Date

The new draft proposes that the suppliers shall comply with the new marketing standards no later than June 1, 2020

Docket 14-07-20RE01

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