Public Regulation Commission touts new e-filing system, says utilities oversight needs specialized staff

Senate Finance Committee · January 26, 2026

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Summary

The PRC told the Senate Finance Committee it does not 'approve' utility wildfire plans but reviews them for cost recovery and transparency; the commission unveiled a $2.5M e-filing system, seeks modest staff increases and GROW funding for community solar program, and warned specialized staff are needed to assess PSPS and mitigation plans.

A Public Regulation Commission representative told the Senate Finance Committee that the agency’s leverage in wildfire preparedness and response is largely economic — reviewing utility filings, convening stakeholders and deciding whether to allow cost recovery for wildfire-related spending.

The PRC speaker said the commission "does not in any way endorse, bless, or approve utility wildfire plans" but uses those filings to spark conversation and, in appropriate cases, disallow cost recovery. The commission also noted the need for specialized staff or independent evaluators to review public safety power shutoff (PSPS) plans and field spending.

The PRC announced that its new e-docket and case management system, funded at $2.5 million, is live and expected to improve public transparency and case-processing efficiency. The commission requested funding approaches that would allow it to internalize community solar program functions (preferring GROW funding rather than one-year special appropriations) and listed a $5 million capital outlay estimate for building upgrades and hearing room space.

Why it matters: Utilities’ wildfire planning affects power reliability, emergency evacuations and ratepayer bills; the PRC’s role in reviewing cost recovery means staffing and technical review capacity can affect whether certain mitigation or utility actions receive ratepayer-funded recovery.

Committee reaction: Senators probed PRC staffing for telecom and broadband oversight, community solar funding approaches, and how the PRC interacts with other agencies on wildfire response. The commission said it has added technical expertise (engineers, economists) and is investing in staff training and an Office of Technical Advisory and Policy (OTAP).

Next steps: The committee will weigh PRC recurring and special request levels as part of FY27 budget deliberations.