Though one director is reaching his term limit, MISO’s nine-member Board of Directors could look the same going into 2018.
Directors Thomas Rainwater’s, Paul Bonavia’s and Baljit Dail’s terms expire at the end of 2017. Rainwater and Bonavia have not reached MISO’s limit of three three-year terms, and both agreed to seek re-election by MISO membership for another term.
Dail has reached the term limit, but Board Chairman Michael Curran said at the March 23 board meeting that Dail has agreed to seek re-election for an additional term if a waiver is recommended by the Nominating Committee and approved by the board.
MISO’s Principles of Corporate Governance state that the term limit can be waived if the board determines “that a director’s continued service is necessary to retain his or her skills or expertise, to maintain geographic or other diversity of the board, or is otherwise in the best interests of” the RTO.
MISO’s board has seen considerable turnover in the past two years, with two directors — Phyllis Currie and Mark Johnson — added in late 2015 to replace former Director Eugene Zeltmann, and three directors — H.B. “Trip” Doggett, Barbara Krumsiek and Todd Raba — brought on in late 2016 to replace former Directors Judy Walsh, Michael Evans and Paul Feldman.
This year, stakeholders elected Arkansas Public Service Commission Chairman Ted Thomas to serve on the Nominating Committee. The vote for the second stakeholder seat ended in a tie between Madison Gas and Electric’s Megan Wisersky and Entergy’s Matt Brown. Stakeholder relations staffer Alison Lane said the vote for the second seat will be redone, with ballots sent out again this week. She said if all seven voting-eligible sectors participate, the vote cannot end in a tie.
MISO Market Software Adequate for Another 5-7 Years
MISO will be able to squeeze an extra couple of years out of its aging market system, said Dail, chair of the Technology Committee.
Late last year, MISO Executive Director of Market Design Jeff Bladen said officials expected to replace the system in two to three years, announcing that the RTO had hired consultants to study system improvements. (See MISO to Study Aging Software; Market Improvements Planned for 2017.)
But Dail said the system can take on more complexity and remain usable for five to seven years.
The RTO’s staff said the Clean Power Plan’s likely rejection by the Trump administration defers the need for new system technology, because intermittent and behind-the-meter generation is not expected to be added at such a rapid pace. Currie asked how much money MISO could expect to save because of the IT deferral. MISO CEO John Bear said the savings would be reported in future budget projections.
“That’s a welcome, but somewhat dramatic, change in timeframe,” Krumsiek said.
Dail also said that an internal technology audit again ranked MISO low when it comes to removing employee access to MISO systems after they are transferred or leave the RTO’s workforce. MISO had a self-imposed goal of 24 hours to remove both critical system access and perform an administrative cleanup. NERC standards allow 24 hours to remove an employee’s system access and 31 days to scrub employee information from the system. Dail said MISO has since allowed itself a more doable seven days to perform an administrative cleanup, separating it from the 24-hour access deadline.
MISO Operations Under Budget; Project Timing Nudges Capital Spending Over
MISO’s $37.7 million in spending so far in 2017 is under budget by $100,000, or 0.3%, newly hired Chief Financial Officer Melissa Brown said. She said the savings can be attributed to a slower hiring rate and MISO delaying some travel and the hiring of consultants.
However, MISO’s capital spending is over budget by 2.4%. Tony Guisinger, strategic development and operations executive, said capital spending is higher than planned because of some later-than-planned equipment purchases and related installation fees.
Guisinger, who assumed financial duties after former Vice President of Finance Jo Biggers left unexpectedly last year, is still assisting Brown, who joined MISO in late January. (See MISO Appoints Melissa Brown as New CFO.)
Board May Conduct Long-Term Incentive Review
Human Resources Committee Chair Todd Raba said MISO is planning a review of its long-term executive incentive plan.
The long-term bonus plan, which gauges and rewards performance for longer than one year, has not been changed in 15 years. Raba said his committee would complete a review of the current plan in June and act on proposed changes by October.
MISO made changes to its short-term incentive plan, doled out annually, last year. (See MISO Directors to Decide Yearly Executive Bonuses.)
MISO Adds 2 New Members
The board unanimously voted to grant RTO membership to two non-transmission-owning companies.
Clean energy project developer and operator ALLETE Clean Energy joined the Independent Power Producers sector, and transmission developer Verdant Plains Electric joined the Competitive Transmission Developers sector.
— Amanda Durish