BEFORE THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE LAW BOARD OF PUBLIC UTILITIES I/M/O THE JOINT PETITION OF PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS COMPANY ) BPU DKT. NO. EM05020106 AND EXELON CORPORATION FOR ) OAL DKT. NO. PUC-1874-05 APPROVAL OF A CHANGE IN CONTROL OF PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS COMPANY AND RELATED AUTHORIZATIONS ) ________________________________________________________________________
SURREBUTTAL TESTIMONY OF DAVID E. PETERSON ON BEHALF OF THE NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF THE RATEPAYER ADVOCATE ________________________________________________________________________
SEEMA M. SINGH, ESQ. RATEPAYER ADVOCATE Filed: December 27, 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION. 1 RESPONSE TO WILLIAM D. ARNDT’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY. 2 RESPONSE TO RUTH ANN M. GILLIS’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY. 9 David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 1 of 12 INTRODUCTION PLEASE STATE YOUR NAME, OCCUPATION AND BUSINESS ADDRESS.
My name is David E. Peterson. I am a Senior Consultant employed by
Chesapeake Regulatory Consultants, Inc. ("CRC"). Our business address is 1698
Saefern Way, Annapolis, Maryland 21401-6529. I maintain an office in Dunkirk,
ARE YOU THE SAME DAVID E. PETERSON THAT PREVIOUSLY FILED TESTIMONY IN THIS PROCEEDING?
Yes, I am. I filed direct testimony on behalf of the New Jersey Division of the
Ratepayer Advocate earlier in this proceeding.
WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF YOUR SURREBUTTAL TESTIMONY?
The purpose of my surrebuttal testimony is to respond to arguments in the rebuttal
testimonies of Mr. William D. Arndt and Ms. Ruth Ann Gillis relating to issues
that I discussed in my direct testimony.
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 2 of 12 II. RESPONSE TO WILLIAM D. ARNDT’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY BEFORE YOU BEGIN DISCUSSING SPECIFIC ARGUMENTS ADVANCED IN MR ARNDT’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY, DO YOU HAVE ANY GENERAL COMMENTS ON MR. ARNDT’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY?
Yes, I do. The central theme in Mr. Arndt’s Rebuttal Testimony as it relates to
criticisms by me and by other witnesses regarding his synergy analysis is captured
in the following passage taken from his Rebuttal Testimony:
“The comprehensive synergy study presented in my direct
testimony, supporting schedules and workpapers results
from a rigorous and thorough effort of a large number of
key managers at PSEG and Exelon. The results of that
study have been examined and verified by the PSEG and
Exelon merger integration teams that are designing the
post-merger organization and have been determined that
Mr. Arndt echoes this “rigorous, thorough, and verified” theme throughout the
remainder of his Rebuttal Testimony, as if repeating the mantra often enough will
divine certainty from his synergy estimates, where certainty clearly is
I have no doubt that Mr. Arndt and his “key managers” worked diligently
completing the synergy study. That study, however, will never be anything more
than an elaborate “what if” analysis unless and until Exelon officially commits to
implementing the personnel and operating assumptions that are embodied in the
study. To date, however, no such commitment has been provided. The Joint
Petitioners’ rebuttal testimonies did not change an earlier acknowledgment that,
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 3 of 12
to-date, no formal workforce requirement studies have been performed for post-
merger operations.2 Nor is Exelon willing to commit to the post-merger
workforce assumptions that are reflected in Mr. Arndt’s synergy study. 3 Thus, by
not committing to the business plan embodied in the synergy study, Exelon
retains for itself the freedom to implement whatever business plan it desires post-
merger, whether or not it reflects the assumptions contained in Mr. Arndt’s
synergies study. Therefore, there can be no assurance that Mr. Arndt’s study
accurately reflects the operating model that will be implemented and the synergy
savings that are likely to be achieved following the merger.
As to Mr. Arndt’s assertion that his synergies estimates have been verified, again
there is no proof that this is the case. As I understand Mr. Arndt’s testimony on
the subject, without guidance from detailed workforce requirement analyses and
without executive commitment to a specific post-merger business plan, managers
from both companies projected post-merger operating levels and an assumed
workforce. Those projections were then reviewed and “approved” by other
members of the merger integration teams. Booz Allen Hamilton consultants also
reviewed and “approved” the work of the synergy study teams. This internal
review process, however, is not the type of verification that I spoke of in my
Direct Testimony when I complained that the synergy study is not verifiable.4
Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary provides the following definitions for the
Verify: v1: To confirm or substantiate in law by
oath 2: to establish the truth, accuracy, or reality of
1 Rebuttal Testimony of William D. Arndt, page 3. 2 Response to RAR-RR-27. 3 Ibid. 4 Peterson Direct Testimony, page 10.
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 4 of 12
The verification that Mr. Arndt speaks of in his Rebuttal Testimony does not
establish the truth, accuracy or reality of the estimates contained in his synergy
study. For as much experience as Exelon’s managers and Booz Allen Hamilton
consultants have gained in other mergers, none of these people can be certain how
Exelon will operate post-merger and what level of synergies can be achieved in
this merger because Exelon has been unwilling to make an official commitment in
that regard, except as it concerns PSEG’s union workers. Thus, neither the
merger integration team nor Booz Allen Hamilton consultants are in a position to
verify the truth, accuracy, and reality of the synergies analysis as an accurate and
reliable representation of Exelon’s post-merger operations. This type of
verification can only be obtained after Exelon has committed to a specific
business plan post-merger. Even then, it seems unlikely that the synergies
estimates will ever truly be verified because Exelon has no intention of tracking
actual merger savings once the transaction has closed.5
BEGINNING AT PAGE 14 OF HIS REBUTTAL TESTIMONY, MR. ARNDT CRITICIZES YOU AND MR. EFFRON FOR RECOMMENDING A TEN-YEAR SYNERGIES ANALYSIS RATHER THAN THE FOUR- YEAR ANALYSIS THAT HE SPONSORED. DO YOU AGREE WITH MR. ARNDT’S CRITICISMS?
No, I do not. Mr. Arndt acknowledges that mergers benefits will continue into
perpetuity, while costs-to-achieve are one-time events. He also claims that there
are no new, incremental synergies following Year Four post-merger. Thus, Mr.
Arndt argues that extending the analysis beyond the initial four years “is an
attempt to portray a larger synergy estimate to use for alternatives purposes.”
5 Rebuttal Testimony of William D. Arndt, page 10.
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 5 of 12
Further, he argues that using a four-year analysis is appropriate because of the
likelihood of a base rate case within the four-year time frame.
Neither of Mr. Arndt’s reasons for objecting to a 10-year analysis is persuasive or
even relevant. Moreover, it wrong for Mr. Arndt to claim that my motivation for
using a ten-year analysis is an attempt to portray a larger synergy estimate to use
for “alternatives purposes.” Rather than advancing hidden ulterior motives, as
Mr. Arndt suggests, my reasons for recommending a ten-year synergies analysis
were clearly stated in my Direct Testimony.6 Those reasons are: 1) because the
Board had required and relied on ten-year studies in previous New Jersey merger
proceedings and 2) because I am recommending that costs-to-achieve be
amortized over ten years to better match expected savings with costs-to-achieve.
Because merger-related savings are to continue indefinitely, I am recommending
that costs-to-achieve be spread out and amortized over a number of years (i.e., ten
years) to better match expected savings with the underlying costs that were
incurred to achieve those savings. The matching principle, which supports this
treatment for costs-to-achieve, is a fundamental and pervasive accounting and
ratemaking principle. That PSE&G may file a base rate case within the ten-year
period post-merger is irrelevant to the determination of whether to use a four-year
or a ten-year synergy study. The fact is I am not advocating that any expected net
savings beyond Year Three post-merger be reflected in rates at this time. The ten-
year synergies study simply provides a better illustration and representation of
expected annual net savings when an appropriate attribution period is assigned to
6 Direct Testimony of David E. Peterson, pages 8-9.
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 6 of 12 MR. ARNDT DISAGREES WITH YOU AND MR. EFFRON THAT TRANSACTION COSTS SHOULD BE EXCLUDED RECOVERABLE COSTS-TO-ACHIEVE. ARE MR. ARNDT’S ARGUMENTS PURSUASIVE?
No, they are not. Mr. Arndt argues that it is necessary for the merging companies
to incur certain transaction costs and that those transaction costs help unlock
merger benefits that will be enjoyed by both utility customers and shareholders.
Thus, Mr. Arndt concludes that transaction costs should be included in
recoverable costs-to-achieve. I disagree.
The transactions costs in question were incurred to secure approvals for the
merger from the boards of directors and the stockholders of the two companies.
Transaction-related activities included independent valuations, market analyses,
and fairness opinions. Together, these activities were undertaken to protect
shareholder interests. They were not incurred to insure that New Jersey
ratepayers received their fair share of anticipated merger savings. That
responsibility is left to Your Honor and the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities
(“Board”). Mr. Arndt seems to have no trouble allocating costs-to-achieve in his
synergies analysis among Exelon’s and PSEG’s affiliates and business groups.
Yet, he is unwilling to consider that it is also necessary and appropriate to allocate
and to assign certain costs-to-achieve among shareholders and ratepayers. The
division of utility-incurred costs between shareholders and ratepayers is common
in New Jersey ratemaking and elsewhere and is no less appropriate in merger
proceedings. Because transaction costs are incurred to protect shareholder
interests, those costs should be assigned to shareholders and excluded from
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 7 of 12 MR. ARNDT ALSO OBJECTS TO YOUR RECOMMENDATION TO EXCLUDE GOLDEN PARACHUTE PAYMENTS, RELOCATION AND RETENTION PAYMENTS, AND SIGNAGE COSTS FROM RECOVERABLE COSTS-TO-ACHIEVE. PLEASE COMMENT.
As for golden parachute payments, the reason for their exclusion from recoverable
costs-to-achieve is self-evident. In a word, golden parachutes granted to senior
executives who are leaving the companies as a result of the merger are repugnant
to ratepayers. Nearly three dozen senior executives are expected to leave
following the merger and will receive millions of dollars for doing so. As I stated
in my direct testimony, the average severance payment that was assumed in Mr.
Arndt’s synergies study for senior executives leaving the companies is
approximately $2.02 million. Yet, Mr. Arndt assumed that the average severance
payment for non-executives who will lose their jobs as a result of the merger
would be approximately $74,000. It is not reasonable to require ratepayers to pay
for a situation created by senior executives to agree to a merger and then be
extraordinarily rewarded at ratepayers’ expense for leaving the company once the
Much the same reasoning applies to retention and relocation payments. The
companies have created a situation where it is more advantageous for certain
employees to leave the companies rather than remaining with the company or
relocating following the merger. Ratepayers should not be responsible for
reimbursing Exelon for retention and relocation payments because the merger has
made it more attractive for certain employees to leave the companies.
Finally, Mr. Arndt’s reasoning on signage change costs is incomprehensible. Mr.
Arndt acknowledges that PSE&G’s image will remain on all signs, stationery, and
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 8 of 12
communications. Yet, he claims that some signage changes will be required to
“eliminate any confusion for New Jersey customers.”7 This is absurd. Any
confusion for New Jersey customers that exists will result from, and will not be
alleviated by, signage changes. PSE&G’s current and long-standing corporate
relationship with PSEG is well known by New Jersey customers throughout the
state. Including Exelon’s corporate logo on PSE&G’s communications will likely
cause confusion rather than eliminate it.
ON PAGE 29 OF HIS REBUTTAL TESTIMONY, MR. ARNDT ARGUES THAT COSTS-TO-ACHIEVE SHOULD BE RECOVERED AS INCURRED RATHER THAN BE AMORTIZED THROUGH RATES OVER TEN YEARS AS YOU RECOMMEND. DO YOU AGREE?
No. Mr. Arndt ignores the fundamental ratemaking principle that extraordinary
one-time costs are generally not included in rates as incurred. Rather, such costs
are either excluded from rate recovery entirely because they are non-recurring or
they are amortized over several years. In this instance, it is appropriate to
amortize merger-related costs-to-achieve over a relatively long period of time
because merger-related benefits will continue in perpetuity. Matching costs with
benefits, which is also a fundamental ratemaking principle, requires a relatively
ALSO ON PAGE 29 OF HIS REBUTTAL TESTIMONY, MR. ARNDT CLAIMS THAT USING A TEN-YEAR SYNERGY ANALYSIS IS INCONSISTENT WITH YOUR RECOMMENDATION TO IMPLEMENT A RATE REDUCTION FOR THREE YEARS. IS HE CORRECT?
7 Rebuttal Testimony of William D. Arndt, page 28.
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 9 of 12
No, he is not. Apparently, Mr. Arndt does not understand my recommendation. I
did not use the ten-year analysis merely to “attempt to extract a larger rate
reduction.” In fact, I have not included any net merger savings from Years Four
through Ten in the rate reduction that I recommend at this time. As stated
previously in my direct and surrebuttal testimonies, a ten-year net savings
presentation is necessary to properly attribute merger costs-to-achieve to expected
merger-related savings. My recommendation to reduce rates by expected net
savings, however, considers only net savings during the first three years post-
merger. I calculated the $43 million rate reduction amount by averaging expected
net savings in Years One, Two and Three, from the ten-year synergies study. I
did not, however, include any anticipated savings following Year Three, nor did I
“annualize ten year’s worth of savings” as Mr. Arndt claims.
RESPONSE TO RUTH ANN M. GILLIS’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY ON PAGE 9 OF HER REBUTTAL TESTIMONY, MS. GILLIS CONTESTS YOUR CLAIM THAT THE JOINT PETITIONERS HAVE NOT PROPOSED A GENERAL SERVICES AGREEMENT (“GSA”) TO GOVERN TRANSACTIONS BETWEEN PSE&G AND EXELON BSC FOLLOWING THE MERGER. HAS MS. GILLIS’S REBUTTAL TESTIMONY CAUSED YOU TO CHANGE YOUR POSITION ON THIS
No, it has not. Nothing in Ms. Gillis’s Rebuttal Testimony has caused me to
change my position that the Joint Petitioners have thus far not provided a GSA
that will govern transactions between PSE&G and Exelon BSC following the
merger. Even though Ms. Gillis claims in her Rebuttal Testimony that “Exelon
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 10 of 12
BSC currently does not expect to make any changes to the GSA,”8 in my Direct
Testimony I pointed out where the Joint Petitioners’ discovery responses stated
they have not yet determined the future services to be provided by Exelon BSC
post-merger and it has not yet been determined what allocations methods will be
used to allocate Exelon BSC’s costs among participating affiliates post-merger.9
Ms. Gillis never reconciles these two apparent inconsistent positions. Her
Rebuttal Testimony does not change the essential facts regarding the ambiguity of
Exelon BSC’s post-merger business plan. In fact, Ms. Gillis reinforced those
ambiguities by stating that “the integration process has not yet reached the point
where the exact nature of the future products and services of the combined service
company are known.”10 Thus, there is no certainty or assurance that Exelon
BSC’s current GSA, for which the Joint Petitioners seek Board approval, will be
reflective of its post-merger business plan.
ON PAGE 11 OF HER REBUTTAL TESTIMONY, MS. GILLIS RESPONDS TO YOUR CLAIM THAT A SIGNIFICANT PROBLEM WITH THE GSA IS THAT IT COMPLIES WITH SEC RULES AND REGULATIONS AND NOT NEW JERSEY REQUIREMENTS. WOULD YOU LIKE TO ADD ANYTHING FURTHER TO THAT DISCUSSION?
Yes, I would. Ms. Gillis responds to my argument not by demonstrating that the
GSA is compatible with what the Board has required of other New Jersey service
company agreements, but rather by stating the GSA has been approved by the
SEC and by the Illinois and Pennsylvania state regulatory commissions.
Moreover, Ms. Gillis states that any changes in the GSA that the Board would
require would have to be approved by the SEC and the state regulatory
8 Rebuttal Testimony of Ruth Ann M. Gillis, page 10. 9 Direct Testimony of David E. Peterson, page 27. 10 Rebuttal Testimony of Ruth Ann Gillis, page 2.
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 11 of 12
commissions in Illinois and Pennsylvania. Ms. Gillis then states it would be a
costly and time-consuming process to change the GSA’s form. This is exactly the
type of high-handed tactics by Exelon that the Ratepayer Advocate cautioned
Your Honor and the Board about in its Direct Testimony. Here Exelon BSC has
presented a GSA to PSE&G and to the Board as a fait accompli leaving the Board
no room to incorporate its own unique regulatory requirements in the GSA. The
statutory authority under which the Joint Petitioners seek Board approval of the
GSA, N.J.S.A. 48:3-1.1, however, does not appear to require the Board to approve
the GSA merely because it has been approved by the SEC and by other state
regulatory commissions, nor does it appear to require that such approval be
granted if changes to the GSA would be costly and time-consuming. New Jersey
law grants the Board authority to review the GSA independently of the SEC and
Ms. Gillis claims that an Exelon discovery response provided a list of Exelon
BSC service providers along with specific allocation methods being used by each
one. Such information, while informative, is insufficient for approving the GSA.
It clarifies how Exelon BSC has provided services and allocated costs in the past.
It does not represent how Exelon BSC intends to operate post-merger. Moreover,
even though specific allocation methods were identified in the matrix provided in
the discovery response, the GSA permits discretion in the choice of allocation
methods because it includes the terms “expected allocation ratios.” If Exelon
BSC intends to apply the specific allocation methodologies to the specific service
provider groups as reflected in S-ENE-SA-22, it should incorporate this level of
David E. Peterson, Surrebuttal Testimony Division of the Ratepayer Advocate BPU Docket No. EM05020106 OAL Docket No PUC-1874-05 Page 12 of 12
To summarize my position, Your Honor and the Board cannot reasonably approve
a GSA until it has been determined what services will be provided post-merger by
Exelon BSC and how Exelon BSC will allocate common and jointly-incurred
costs among participants to the GSA. To date, this essential information has not
DOES THIS CONCLUDE YOUR SURREBUTTAL TESTIMONY?
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