Bill Text: NC H522 | 2013-2014 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Foreign Laws/Protect Constitutional Rights
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 6-0)
Status: (Passed) 2013-08-26 - Ch. SL 2013-416 [H522 Detail]
Download: North_Carolina-2013-H522-Introduced.html
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2013
H D
HOUSE DRH80137-LM-124* (03/14)
Short Title: Master Meters/Landlord-Tenant Agreement. |
(Public) |
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Sponsors: |
Representative Avila. |
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Referred to: |
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A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT providing for the use of a master meter for electric and natural gas service when the tenant and landlord have agreed in the lease that the cost of the services shall be included in the rental payments and the service shall be in the landlord's name.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. G.S. 143‑151.42 reads as rewritten:
"§ 143‑151.42. Prohibition of master meters for electric and natural gas service.
(a) From and after September 1, 1977, in order that each
occupant of an apartment or other individual dwelling unit may be responsible
for his own conservation of electricity and gas, it shall be unlawful for any
new residential building, as hereinafter defined, to be served by a master
meter for electric service or natural gas service. Each individual dwelling
unit shall have individual electric service with a separate electric meter and,
if it has natural gas, individual natural gas service with a separate natural
gas meter, which service and meters shall be in the name of the tenant or other
occupant of said apartment or other dwelling unit. No electric supplier or
natural gas supplier, whether regulated public utility or municipal corporation
or electric membership corporation supplying said utility service, shall
connect any residential building for electric service or natural gas service
through a master meter, and said electric or natural gas supplier shall serve
each said apartment or dwelling unit by separate service and separate meter and
shall bill and charge each individual occupant of said separate apartment or
dwelling unit for said electric or natural gas service. A new residential
building is hereby defined for the purposes of this section as any building for
which a building permit is issued on or after September 1, 1977, which includes
two or more apartments or other family dwelling units. Provided, however, that
any owner or builder of a multi‑unit residential building who desires to
provide central heat or air conditioning or central hot water from a central
furnace, air conditioner or hot water heater which incorporates solar
assistance or other designs which accomplish greater energy conservation than
separate heat, hot water, or air conditioning for each dwelling unit, may apply
to the North Carolina Utilities Commission for approval of said central heat,
air conditioning or hot water system, which may include a central meter for
electricity or gas used in said central system, and the Utilities Commission
shall promptly consider said application and approve it for such central meters
if energy is conserved by said design. This section shall apply to any dwelling
unit normally rented or leased for a minimum period of one month or longer,
including apartments, condominiums and townhouses, but shall not apply to
hotels, motels, hotels or motels that have been converted into condominiums,
dormitories, rooming houses or nursing homes, or homes for the elderly.elderly,
or situations where the tenant and landlord have agreed in the lease that the cost
of the electric service or natural gas service, or both, shall be included in
the rental payments and the service shall be in the name of the landlord.
…."
SECTION 2. This act is effective when it becomes law.