VirginiaHB11912026 Regular SessionHouseWALLET

Electric substation construction agreements; "electric cooperatives" or "cooperative", definitions.

Sponsored By: Jen Kiggans - to resign 12/31 (Republican)

Became Law

Summary

Utility consumer services cooperatives; substation construction agreements. Permits an electric cooperative to enter into an agreement to construct a substation with a member receiving regulated electric service, with an electric demand of at least 20 megawatts during the most recent calendar year, that requires a point of interconnection with a transmission line system of 230 kilovolts or more. The bill provides that, upon final completion of a substation constructed under such an agreement, the member shall transfer ownership of such substation to the cooperative for the cooperative to operate and maintain at the member's sole expense. Under the bill, the costs of acquisition, operation, or maintenance of such a substation shall be excluded from the cooperative's general and base rates and shall not be recovered from any other ratepayer. This bill is identical to SB 377.

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Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

4 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 0 costs, 4 mixed.

High-demand cooperative members can build substations

If your business is a cooperative member and used at least 20 megawatts last year, you can enter a substation construction deal. The substation must connect to a 230 kilovolt or higher transmission line and serve only your facilities. You pay all construction costs and the work must meet laws, reliability standards, and the cooperative’s specs. You and the cooperative must file the agreement with the Commission, and you can ask for confidentiality.

Other customers shielded from substation costs

After final completion, the member transfers the substation to the cooperative by donation or agreed payment. The cooperative runs and maintains it, but charges the member alone for all operation and maintenance under its rates. The Commission keeps these costs out of general and base rates, and other cooperative customers do not pay any part of them.

Timelines and Commission help for substations

You and the cooperative must negotiate in good faith. If the cooperative does not negotiate or send a draft within 120 days after your written request, you may petition the Commission. The Commission hears the case within three months if needed and issues an order within six months. You must pay a petition fee that the Commission sets. After you give written notice of substantial completion, the cooperative must inspect within 60 days and issue any final change orders within 30 days after the inspection. Either side can use the Commission’s informal or formal process to resolve disputes during negotiation, construction, or transfer.

Definitions and exemptions for these agreements

The law defines who counts as an electric cooperative and who counts as a member for these substation deals. It also exempts these agreements and acquisitions from Chapters 5 and 10.1 of Title 56.

Sponsors & Cosponsors

Sponsor

  • Jen Kiggans - to resign 12/31

    Republican • Senate

Cosponsors

There are no cosponsors for this bill.

Roll Call Votes

All Roll Calls

Yes: 320 • No: 0

Senate vote 2/26/2026

Passed Senate Block Vote

Yes: 40 • No: 0

Senate vote 2/25/2026

Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading)

Yes: 40 • No: 0

Senate vote 2/25/2026

Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

Yes: 0 • No: 0

Senate vote 2/23/2026

Reported from Commerce and Labor

Yes: 15 • No: 0

House vote 2/11/2026

Passed House Block Vote

Yes: 98 • No: 0

House vote 2/11/2026

Read third time and passed House Block Vote

Yes: 96 • No: 0

House vote 2/5/2026

Reported from Labor and Commerce with substitute

Yes: 22 • No: 0

House vote 2/3/2026

Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute

Yes: 9 • No: 0

Actions Timeline

  1. Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0021)

    3/31/2026Governor
  2. Approved by Governor-Chapter 21 (effective 7/1/2026)

    3/31/2026Governor
  3. Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026

    3/10/2026Governor
  4. Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026

    3/10/2026House
  5. Fiscal Impact Statement from State Corporation Commission (HB1191)

    3/9/2026House
  6. Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB1191ER)

    3/3/2026House
  7. Enrolled

    3/3/2026House
  8. Signed by President

    3/3/2026Senate
  9. Signed by Speaker

    3/3/2026House
  10. Passed Senate Block Vote (40-Y 0-N 0-A)

    2/26/2026Senate
  11. Read third time

    2/26/2026Senate
  12. Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

    2/25/2026Senate
  13. Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading) (40-Y 0-N 0-A)

    2/25/2026Senate
  14. Rules suspended

    2/25/2026Senate
  15. Reported from Commerce and Labor (15-Y 0-N)

    2/23/2026Senate
  16. Fiscal Impact Statement from State Corporation Commission (HB1191)

    2/19/2026House
  17. Referred to Committee on Commerce and Labor

    2/12/2026Senate
  18. Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)

    2/12/2026Senate
  19. Passed House Block Vote (98-Y 0-N 0-A)

    2/11/2026House
  20. Reconsideration of passage agreed to by House

    2/11/2026House
  21. Read third time and passed House Block Vote (96-Y 0-N 0-A)

    2/11/2026House
  22. Engrossed by House - committee substitute

    2/10/2026House
  23. committee substitute agreed to

    2/10/2026House
  24. Read second time

    2/10/2026House
  25. Read first time

    2/9/2026House

Bill Text

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