CALIFORNIA WATER SERVICE GROUP | 2013 | FY | 3


        Regulatory assets and liabilities were comprised of the following as of December 31:

 
  2013   2012  

Regulatory Assets

             

Pension and retiree group health

  $ 119,868   $ 223,153  

Certain property-related temporary differences

    60,780     56,991  

Other accrued benefits

    43,061     40,362  

Net WRAM and MCBA long-term accounts receivable

    15,423     12,051  

Asset retirement obligations, net

    12,549     11,862  
           

Total Regulatory Assets

  $ 251,681   $ 344,419  
           
           

Regulatory Liabilities

             

Future tax benefits due ratepayers

  $ 24,195   $ 24,932  

Conservation program

    6,291     6,538  

Other liabilities

    3,765     4,250  
           

Total Regulatory Liabilities

  $ 34,251   $ 35,720  
           
           

        Short-term regulatory assets and liabilities are excluded from the above table. The short-term regulatory assets for 2013 and 2012 were $30,887 and $34,020, respectively. The short-term regulatory assets were primarily net WRAM/MCBA receivable balances. The short-term portion of regulatory liabilities for 2013 and 2012 were $1,827 and $5,018, respectively. The short-term regulatory liabilities were primarily net WRAM/MCBA liability balances and net refund balances to rate payers for the 2007 sale of the Extended Service Protection program to Home Service USA

        The Company operates extensively in a regulated business, and as such is subject to the accounting standards for regulated utilities. Utility companies defer costs and credits on the balance sheet as regulatory assets and liabilities when it is probable that those costs and credits will be recognized in the ratemaking process in a period different from the period in which they would have been reflected in income by an unregulated company. Regulatory assets other than WRAM represent deferral of costs that will be recovered in the future and do not include a return. In determining the probability of costs being recognized in other periods, the Company considers regulatory rules and decisions, past practices, and other facts or circumstances that would indicate if recovery is probable. In the event that a portion of the Company's operations were no longer subject to the accounting standards for regulated utilities, the Company would be required to write off related regulatory assets and liabilities. If a commission determined that a portion of the Company's assets were not recoverable in customer rates, the Company would be required to determine if a disallowance of asset costs had occurred. If a disallowance had occurred, it would require a write-down in the assets' valuation.

        The Company's qualified, defined-benefit, non-contributory pension plan and other postretirement plan benefit (Retire Group Health) regulatory asset is the amount the Company expects to recover from ratepayers in the future for these plans at the end of the calendar year.

        The certain property-related temporary differences relate primarily to the difference between book and federal income tax depreciation on utility plant that was placed in service before the regulatory Commissions adopted normalization for rate making purposes. Previously, the tax benefit of tax depreciation was passed on to customers (flow-through). For state income tax purposes, the Commission continues to use the flow-through method. As such timing differences reverse, the Company will be able to include the impact of such differences in customer rates. These federal tax differences will continue to reverse over the remaining book lives of the related assets.

        Other accrued benefits are accrued benefits for vacation, self-insured workers' compensation, and directors' retirement benefits. The net WRAM and MCBA long-term accounts receivable is the undercollected portion of recorded revenues that are not expected to be collected from ratepayers within 12 months. The asset retirement obligation regulatory asset represents the difference between costs associated with asset retirement obligations and amounts collected in rates.

        The future tax benefits due to ratepayers represent regulatory liabilities for tax deductions that will be taken and flowed through to customers in the future. Regulatory liabilities also reflect timing differences provided at higher than the current tax rate, which will flow-through to future ratepayers. The conservation program regulatory liability is for cost recovery in rates that exceeded incurred costs and is refundable to ratepayers as of December 31, 2013.


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