HomeMy WebLinkAbout03182020 PACAB Work Session Packet
PORT & COMMERCE
ADVISORY BOARD
WORK SESSION PACKET
Topic: Review the high vessel property tax, and Discuss
power factor adjustment and interconnect policy.
Wednesday, March 18, 2020 at 12:00 p.m.
Council Chambers
Port & Commerce Advisory
BoardWork Session
March 18, 2020
TABLE OF CONTENTS
DataProvidedby Kenai Peninsula Borough onHigh Vessel Property Tax............................Pg. 2
Clerk’sNotesonFebruary 19, 2020 PACABWork SessionwithElectric...............................Pg. 11
Port&CommerceAdvisory Board Resolution2019-003 on Interconnect PolicyCouncil....Pg. 14
Resolution2017-068onSeasonalRates& Rate Adjustments...................................................Pg. 21
Homer Application for InterconnectPolicy.................................................................................Pg. 25
Phil Kaluza’sCorrespondence with Electric Utility Manager John Foutz..............................Pg. 27
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From:Aeschliman, Melanie
To:"nregis@cityofseward.com";Jessica Stallard
Cc:Tilly, Chris
Subject:FW: Seward Boat Info
Date:Monday, March 16, 2020 3:28:29 PM
Attachments:image001.png
CityofSeward_Boat_Detail_2019.xlsx
Importance:High
External Email: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless
you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
Hello,
It is my understanding this got lost? I am resending the report and added Ms. Stallard.
From: Aeschliman, Melanie
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2020 8:42 AM
To: 'nregis@cityofseward.com' <nregis@cityofseward.com>
Subject: FW: Seward Boat Info
Importance: High
Good Morning,
Attached you will find data you requested.My appraisal manager, Chris took all the
boats in each of the Seward TAGS from 2019 (both main and supp roll combined)
and calculated the City Tax and what the KPB Flat tax is. From that information you
should be able to take the numbers and re-calculate whatever you are thinking of
doing whether it be adopting a flat tax or changing the mill rate.
I cannot say with any certainty if the Finance department would allow/can even
permit a different mill rate for personal than real property, so I would suggest if that
is a consideration that you contact Brandi/Jen downstairs at the Borough Finance
office.
Sincerely,
Melanie Aeschliman, Assessment Director
Kenai Peninsula Borough Assessing Dept.
Phone: (907) 714-2230
Email:maeschliman@kpb.us
PUBLIC RECORDS LAW DISCLOSURE: This email and responses to this email may be
subject to provisions of Alaska Statutes and may be made available to the public upon
request.
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CITY OF
SEWARD
TAX AMOUNT
TAGBOAT CLASSCOUNTASSESSED VALUEMILL RATE
4012 5603.84$ 2.15
40222 83,9053.84$ 322.20
40344 822,8343.84$ 3,159.68
404269 8,759,909 3.84$ 33,638.05
405236 20,833,5683.84$ 80,000.90
40631 28,565,6463.84$ 109,692.08
4076 10,092,1743.84$ 38,753.95
4110 - 3.84$ -
4120 - 3.84$ -
4131 2,2753.84$ 8.74
4140 - 3.84$ -
4159 1,428,070 3.84$ 5,483.79
41624 4,032,960 3.84$ 15,486.57
4174 1,745,525 3.84$ 6,702.82
$ 293,250.92
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FLAT TAX KPB
RATETAX AMOUNT
0$ -
0$ -
50$ 2,200.00
150$ 40,350.00
250$ 59,000.00
500$ 15,500.00
1000$ 6,000.00
0$ -
0$ -
50$ 50.00
150$ -
250$ 2,250.00
500$ 12,000.00
1000$ 4,000.00
$ 141,350.00
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TAGBOAT CLASSCOUNT
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 1 Count1
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 1 Count1
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 2 Count10
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 2 Count12
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 3 Count6
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 3 Count38
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 4 Count33
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 4 Count236
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 5 Count35
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 5 Count201
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 6 Count28
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 6 Count3
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 7 Count5
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 7 Count1
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 3 Count1
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 5 Count3
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 5 Count6
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 6 Count15
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 6 Count9
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 7 Count2
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 7 Count2
648
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TAGBOAT CLASSVALUE
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 1 160
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 1 400
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 2 15,512
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 2 68,393
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 3 158,242
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 3 664,592
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 4 2,751,173
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 4 6,008,736
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 5 6,927,496
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 5 13,906,072
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 6 28,514,271
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 6 51,375
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 7 8,599,486
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 7 1,492,688
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 3 2,275
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 5 564,420
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 5 863,650
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 6 1,018,650
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 6 3,014,310
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 7 1,574,400
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 7 171,125
76,367,426
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WATERCRAFT ADVALORUM TAXATION
Owner reports year purchased and purchase price of the respective vessel on a submitted boat
information form or personal property statement. This information is entered into our system and a 5%
depreciation factor is applied each year until a floor of 40% good is reached. This 40% good factor is
maintained on the vessel until such time as it is sold or removed from the respective account.
Should the owner not report the purchase price staff will estimate the purchase price using the best
means available to them at the time.
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Port & Commerce Advisory Board
February 19, 2020 Work Session – Electric Rates & Utilities
Clerk’s Notes
On February 19, 2020 from 12:00-1:00 p.m., the Port & Commerce Advisory Board
(PACAB) conducted a work session to review the February 3, 2020 council work session on
electric rates and utilities. Board members Laura Schneider, Erin Lemas, Lynda Paquette, and
Ben Smith were present withActingHarbormaster Matt Chase present as their administration.
Electric Manager John Foutz, Finance Director Tammy Stromberg,andUtility Clerk Jeremy
Rogers were in attendance and available to answer questions.
In response to Schneider, Electric Utility Manager JohnFoutz said the demand meters
wereconstantly being monitored, and the Finance Department would work on getting PACABa
percentage of how many utility customershaddemand meters. He said the demand meter policy
was created to ensure that people were being treated fairly. If a meter waschanged out, then the
citypaidfor the meter.
Utility Clerk Jeremy Rogers explained the process of getting a new meter. The meter was
assigned by Foutz, whocalculatedthe load in order to ensure thatstaffappliedthe proper service
to the billing. If anything changed in a customer’sbill, then the cityinformedthe customer of
their usage loads and showed them the data they were seeing.
Foutz said the City Code specifiedthat the Utility Manager madethe decision as to
whether a customer was moved from small general service to large general service.The demand
meter policy stipulatedthe conditions by which a customer wouldbe moved from small general
service to large general service, but customers could alsorequest this change in their service.
During the meter exchange, changes were made to approximately three customers’ utility bills.
In response to Paquette, Foutz said ifcustomers hadquestions about their utility bills,
they should contact the Utilities department.
In response to Smith, Foutz said the city received 5,000meters from Kodiak Electric for
free, and additional demand meters were purchased by the city through Council Resolution 2018-
011.
In response to Schneider, Foutz said he believed the people who livedin Seward year-
round appreciatedthe seasonal rates. The intent of the seasonal rates was to give Seward’s year-
round residentsa break on their utilities in the winter time. However, this did increase electric
rates in the summer time. The first time theseasonal rates were implemented there was a 25%
increase in customers’ electric bills and then a couple years later, the electric rates were adjusted
to be only a 10% increase in the Seward portion of the bill.
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In response to Public Works Director Doug Schoessler, Foutz said customers hadthe
option to pay a large amount upfront to reduce their monthly utility payments. In both rate
studies completed over the past five years, the recommendation was for the utility to estimate
what the cost would be for the year and then, charge everybody a single rate for the entire year.
Foutz said council chose not to implement this approach.
Foutz said ChugachElectric chargedthe City of Seward’s utilities for the energy,
demand, and fuel. There wasno way to accurately determine what the fuel costs weregoing to
be on a month-to-month basis, but he believed the costsof energy and demand were both fairly
level. The fuel cost had been 6.5 cents per kWh for the past five to seven years.
In response to Paquette, Foutz said Homer had a fixed cost and a Cost of Power
Adjustment (COPA).
Finance Director Tammy Stromberg believedChugach was able to garner better prices
because of the economies of scale that they had.
In response to Schneider, Foutz said a resolution was being prepared forcouncil to
conduct a rate study for future utility rates. The overall net effect of the utility was zero, and the
seasonal rates were intended to make the year-round residents’ net effects close to zero, as well.
Foutz believedthe electric rates werecontingent on how much electricity each individual chose
to use between the winter time and the summer time.
In response to citizen Aiden Wilcox, Foutz said seasonal rates had been implemented for
a total of four years, but he believed the first two years had more of a dramatic effect on citizens’
rates than the last two years. A study had been completed on the effects seasonal rates had on the
Utility, but a study had not been completed to determine the effects of the seasonal rates on
individual customers.
In response to Schneider, Foutz said most utilities were regulated by the Regulatory
Commission of Alaska (RCA). However, Seward was a home rule city, whichmeant that the
City Council regulated the City of Seward’s utilities. A regular utility could change their electric
rates up to four times a year, and Chugach Electric changed their rates two or three times a year.
Foutz said Seward changed their electric rates once a year to adjust the rate for the upcoming
year.
In response to Schneider, Foutz said other utilities submitted very extensive rate studies
to the RCA any time they asked for an adjustment to their rate, which could be up to four times a
year. He said a rate study was completedfour years ago for the City of Seward. The
recommendation received from thatrate studywas that a review studyand an extensive rate
study be completed. The extensive rate study should be completed every three to fiveyears.The
last rate study was completed twoyears ago, and the last extensive rate study was completed five
years ago.
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In response to Paquette, Foutz said that the last extensive rate study cost between $35,000
and $40,000, and the rate study completed two years ago cost between $12,000 and $15,000.
In response to Schneider, Foutz said the utility was always looking for ways to reduce
costs,but citizens could also lower their electricity rates by being more cognizant of how much
electricity they used.
The board suggested havingan Energy Fair in the fall to educate the public, as well as
adding links with educational information about conserving energy to the city website.They also
suggested that the Electric Utility Department go paperless and provide electric bills to citizens
electronically.
In response to Schneider, Foutz said the city had a contract with Chugach Electric to
purchase all of our power from them, but Chugach had always been willing to work with them
on using generators to produce more power.
In response to Paquette, Foutz said the City’s generators were run on diesel fuel, which
was the most expensive type of generator,and cost approximately $3,000 per hour. Foutz said
the city’sgenerators had been used in the past to help Moose Pass and Cooper Landing, but this
decision had to be made by Chugach Electric. He believed theupfront cost for producing our
own power was too much for the city to handle on itsown.The citywould need to find a
fundraising source to help, and there were opportunities for this available through the federal
government.
In response to Paquette, Foutz said the Lowell Canyon Hydroelectric Projectwas the
best opportunity to put generation onto the system,but it would take about ten years to get to this
point. He said a solar farm did not have the permitting restraints that a hydroelectric facility had.
Foutz had looked into this option,but he had not found a good location for a solar farm yet. He
heard from other utilities in the Alaska Railbelt Cooperative Transmission & Electric Company
(ARCTEC) that solar farms were not lowering their costs. Theywerebelieved to becosting the
utilities more money.
Utility Clerk Jeremy Rogers said solar panels took about 18 years to pay for themselves
but only hada 12year lifespan. For this reason, he believed solar panels would quit working
before the owners had a chance to make their money back that they had spent on it.
In response to Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Jason Bickling, Smith said the
wind turbine was put at the Alaska Vocational Technical Center (AVTEC)for training purposes
and it was not a utilityresource. It was a $1 million turbineand it made between $40 and $100 a
day in electricity.
Submitted By:Jessica Stallard, Deputy City Clerk
City of Seward, Alaska
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