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Legal Resources

Vintage year accounting for general plant accounts
    Question:

    Is it permissible for a public utility, licensee, natural gas company, or oil pipeline company to adopt a vintage year accounting method for the general plant accounts listed below
    which would eliminate the unitization and record keeping requirements associated with individual items of property and allow such companies to record only the total cost of plant additions for the year as a vintage group for each account?

    For Public Utilities, Licensees, Natural Gas Companies

    Account 391, Office Furniture and Equipment;
    Account 392, Transportation Equipment;
    Account 393, Stores Equipment;
    Account 394, Tools, Shop and Garage Equipment;
    Account 395, Laboratory Equipment;
    Account 396, Power Operated Equipment;
    Account 397, Communication Equipment;
    Account 398, Miscellaneous Equipment; and
    Account 399, Other Tangible Property.

    For Oil Pipeline Companies

    Account 179, Machine Tools and Machinery;
    Account 183, Communication Systems;
    Account 184, Office Furniture and Equipment; and
    Account 185, Vehicles and Other Work Equipment.


    Answer:

    Yes, provided the following requirements are met:

    1. the individual classes of assets for which vintage year accounting is followed are high volume, low value items;

    2. there is no change in existing retirement unit designations, for purposes of determining when expenditures are capital or expense;

    3. the cost of the vintage groups is amortized to depreciation expense over their useful lives and there is no change in depreciation rates resulting from the adoption of the vintage year accounting;

    4. interim retirements are not recognized;

    5. salvage and removal cost relative to items in the vintage categories are included in the accumulated depreciation account and assigned to the oldest vintage first; and

    6. properties are retired from the affected accounts that, at the date of the adoption of vintage year accounting, meet or exceed the average service life of properties in that account.

    A vintage year method of accounting for the general plant accounts that meets all of the foregoing requirements may be implemented without obtaining specific authorization from the Commission to do so.





    Debbie L. Clark
    Chief Accountant


    Effective:

    January 1, 1997




Updated: June 13, 2003