Electric Schedule D, industrial power service, shall be available to all occupancies in which products are manufactured or in which processing, assembling, mixing, packaging, finishing, decorating, or repair operations are conducted as per NFPA 101:3.3.134.8. Industrial occupancies may include, but not be limited to, the following: dry cleaning plants, all kinds of factories, food processing plants, gas plants, hangars (for servicing/maintenance), laundries, power plants, refineries, sawmills, and telephone exchanges.
(a) Availability. The schedule is available throughout the area served by the utility wherever system facilities are adequate. This service covers energy supplied for industrial power of minimum demand of 100 average kilowatts and over. It is the responsibility of the customer alone to request a review of their rate schedule to determine eligibility. KPU shall not be responsible for a customer paying at a rate different than that which they are eligible. Requests for changing rate classification must be made in writing. Only one request per account will be allowed per year.
(b) Character of Service. Energy delivered under this schedule shall be single-phase or three-phase, 60-cycle AC, at nominal voltage of 120/240, 208Y/120, 480Y/277, 7,200/12,470, 34,500 three-wire Delta volts.
(c) Rates. The rates for Schedule D are:
(1) Monthly customer service charge: $80.95.
(3) Demand charge per kW of maximum demand per month: $4.41 in excess of 25 kW.
(d) Service Connect Charge. The service connection charge shall be the actual cost to the utility with a minimum charge of $114.30.
(e) Discount. The consumer is entitled to a discount of five percent if service is supplied at primary voltage of 7,200/12,470 volts if available and if the customer furnishes the transformer(s) and the primary metering equipment, with the exception of the watt-hour meter. At the discretion of KPU, transformer compensated metering may be applied in lieu of the five percent discount.
(f) Determination of Demand. The demand, when determined by a demand meter, shall be the average kilowatt-hour delivery of an interval in which the utilization of electrical energy is greater than in any other interval in that month. The demand measuring interval may be 30, 15 or five minutes at the option of the utility. The demand is to be expressed in kilowatts to the nearest kilowatt.
(Ord. 1054 § 2, 1985; Ord. 1111 § 1, 1987; Ord. 1126 § 2, 1988; Ord. 1144 § 5, 1989; Ord. 1170 § 5, 1989; Ord. 1210 § 4, 1991; Ord. 1290 § 4, 1994; Ord. 1489 § 4, 2004; Ord. 1540 § 5, 2006; Ord. 1591 § 4, 2008; Ord. 1805 §§ 9, 10, 2016; Ord. 1869 §§ 9, 10, 2018; Ord. 1888 §§ 9, 10, 2019; Ord. 1924 §§ 9, 10, 2021; Ord. 1961 §§ 9, 10, 2023; Ord. 1988 §§ 9, 10, 2024; Ord. 1996 §§ 9, 10, 2025; Ord. 26-2014, 3/19/2026)