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Public Service Commission seeks modern docket system and federal grant adjustments; Office of Consumer Advocate requests reclassifications to retain staff
Summary
The Wyoming Public Service Commission asked the Joint Appropriations Committee for a one‑time $400,000 replacement of its docket management system plus $200,000 a year in support, additional federal travel funds tied to pipeline inspections, and other technical requests; the Office of Consumer Advocate sought reclassification and pay adjustments to address recruitment and retention challenges in utility litigation roles.
The Public Service Commission (PSC) told the Joint Appropriations Committee it needs a modern docket management system to replace a 2010 platform that the agency says is unsupported and causing intermittent downtime. Executive Director Marcy Norby described the proposed system as a cloud‑based, fully integrated platform with automated workflows, search, ADA compliance and the ability for the public to file comments and complaints directly. Norby said the PSC’s preferred vendor would require a one‑time $400,000 implementation…
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