All Roll Calls
Yes: 293 • No: 25
Sponsored By: Jen Kiggans - to resign 12/31 (Republican)
Became Law
Electric utilities; shared solar programs; Phase I Utility. Amends certain provisions related to the shared solar program established by the State Corporation Commission for Appalachian Power Company. The bill permits excess bill credits to be distributed to shared solar subscribers more than once annually. The bill also requires the utility in administering its shared solar program to require net crediting functionality for customer utility bills, as described in the bill. The bill also directs Appalachian Power to (i) release an additional 50 megawatts as part two of the shared solar program on July 1, 2026; (ii) release a further additional 50 megawatts as part three of the shared solar program by January 1, 2028; and (iii) petition the Commission to initiate a shared solar expansion proceeding to determine the capacity for part four of the shared solar program by May 1, 2029. See final enactments for bill effective date. As introduced, this bill was a recommendation of the Commission on Electric Utility Regulation. This bill is identical to SB 255.
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5 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 2 mixed.
If you meet the low‑income definition in §56‑594.3, your subscription must deliver at least 10% net savings over its life. Savings equal total bill credits minus total subscription fees across the contract. This rule protects low‑income customers for the full subscription term.
All customer classes can join shared solar and you keep your current rate class. Residential customers do not face credit checks. A utility must get your written or electronic consent before sharing your billing or usage data. Standard disclosure forms and education rules give clear contract information. You can keep or transfer your subscription if you move within the same utility area. Subscriber groups send monthly subscriber lists. Utilities send monthly reports showing total credits and each subscriber’s credit.
The Commission adopts shared solar rules by January 1, 2025. Utilities file needed tariffs and forms by July 1, 2025. After rules are final, utilities start crediting within 180 days. Part one capacity is the lesser of 50 MW or 6% of peak load. Another 50 MW opens on July 1, 2026, and 50 MW more by January 1, 2028. The Commission updates rules by December 31, 2026 and requires filings by March 1, 2027. Net crediting rules take effect July 1, 2027. By May 1, 2029, the utility asks to expand again, and the Commission weighs long‑run costs, renewable goals, jobs, and resilience.
You get a bill credit for your share of kWh times your class’s credit rate. The Commission sets that rate each year as class revenues divided by class kWh sales. Unused credits carry forward, and subscriber groups must allocate banked credits at least yearly. Credits last at least 25 years from the project’s start. You must still pay a Commission‑set minimum bill each month. Starting July 1, 2027, bills can use net crediting; fees are capped at 1% and fees cannot exceed credits in a month. The utility may recover any gap between credits paid and its energy cost, which can raise rates. Renewable energy certificates go to the utility and are retired for its renewable standard.
The program requires fair, efficient rules to connect projects to the grid. Utilities can recover reasonable interconnection costs. Utilities can also recover reasonable program administration costs. Two or more shared solar facilities may be on the same parcel under Commission guidelines. Projects on rooftops, brownfields, landfills, or dual‑use farms can get incentives.
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Jen Kiggans - to resign 12/31
Republican • Senate
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 293 • No: 25
Senate vote • 2/26/2026
Passed Senate
Yes: 22 • No: 18
Senate vote • 2/25/2026
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Yes: 0 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/25/2026
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading)
Yes: 40 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/23/2026
Reported from Commerce and Labor
Yes: 8 • No: 6
House vote • 2/4/2026
Read third time and passed House Block Vote
Yes: 97 • No: 1
House vote • 2/4/2026
Passed House Block Vote
Yes: 98 • No: 0
House vote • 1/29/2026
Reported from Labor and Commerce with substitute
Yes: 22 • No: 0
House vote • 1/27/2026
Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute
Yes: 6 • No: 0
Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0673)
Approved by Governor-Chapter 673 (Effective - see bill)
Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026
Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026
Fiscal Impact Statement from State Corporation Commission (HB809)
Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB809ER)
Enrolled
Signed by President
Signed by Speaker
Passed Senate (22-Y 18-N 0-A)
Read third time
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading) (40-Y 0-N 0-A)
Rules suspended
Reported from Commerce and Labor (8-Y 6-N)
Referred to Committee on Commerce and Labor
Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)
Passed House Block Vote (98-Y 0-N 0-A)
Reconsideration of passage agreed to by House
Read third time and passed House Block Vote (97-Y 1-N 0-A)
Engrossed by House - committee substitute
committee substitute agreed to
Read second time
Fiscal Impact Statement from State Corporation Commission (HB809)
Read first time
Chaptered
4/13/2026
Enrolled
3/3/2026
Substitute
1/29/2026
Substitute
1/28/2026
Substitute
1/27/2026
Introduced
1/13/2026
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SB648 — Counties, cities, & towns; members of governing body, continuing personal interest in transactions.
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