Mississippi Public Service Commission: Utilities, Energy, and Telecommunications

The Mississippi Public Service Commission (MPSC) is the state regulatory body responsible for oversight of investor-owned electric, natural gas, telephone, and telecommunications utilities operating within Mississippi. Its authority extends to rate-setting, service quality standards, certification, and consumer complaint adjudication. The Commission functions as the primary interface between regulated utility providers and the approximately 3 million residents and commercial ratepayers served across the state's 82 counties. Understanding the Commission's structure, jurisdictional scope, and procedural mechanisms is essential for utilities, telecommunications carriers, large industrial customers, and intervenors engaged in contested proceedings.


Definition and scope

The MPSC is a constitutionally established body operating under Mississippi Code Annotated § 77-3-1 et seq. and composed of 3 elected commissioners, each serving 4-year staggered terms. The Commission exercises regulatory authority over:

The Commission operates through three internal divisions: the Energy Division, the Telecommunications Division, and the Consumer Services Division. Administrative proceedings are governed by the Mississippi Administrative Procedures Act, Mississippi Code Annotated § 25-43-1 et seq.

The MPSC does not regulate municipal electric systems, electric cooperatives, or federally licensed hydroelectric facilities. Transmission infrastructure subject to Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) jurisdiction under the Federal Power Act falls outside the MPSC's rate-setting authority. The Mississippi Public Service Commission page within the broader Mississippi government reference network maps the Commission's position within the executive branch structure; the broader structure of state government is accessible at the Mississippi Government Authority index.


How it works

The MPSC's core regulatory mechanism is the rate case proceeding. When a regulated utility seeks to adjust rates, it files an application with supporting cost-of-service studies, depreciation schedules, and demand forecasts. The Commission then:

  1. Dockets the application and establishes a procedural schedule
  2. Directs Commission staff to conduct an independent audit of the utility's test-year financials
  3. Opens a public comment period and schedules evidentiary hearings
  4. Issues a final order setting rates, which takes effect unless appealed to the Hinds County Chancery Court under Mississippi Code Annotated § 77-3-67

Rate cases are the most procedurally intensive matters on the MPSC docket. Entergy Mississippi's 2021 formula rate plan proceeding, for example, involved multi-party intervention including the Mississippi Public Utilities Staff (MPUS) — a separate, independent state agency that participates as an advocate for consumers in all Commission proceedings.

Outside of rate cases, the Commission processes:


Common scenarios

Residential rate dispute: A residential customer disputing a billing error or service disconnection files a complaint with the MPSC Consumer Services Division. Staff attempt informal mediation. If unresolved, the matter proceeds to a formal evidentiary hearing before a Commission-appointed hearing officer.

Utility rate increase filing: An investor-owned electric utility submits a base rate case requesting a revenue increase. The MPUS files testimony opposing portions of the request. Industrial intervenors — such as large manufacturing facilities in DeSoto County or Harrison County — may intervene independently to protect their load classifications and rate structures.

Telecommunications certification: A new CLEC seeking to offer local exchange service in Mississippi applies for a Certificate of Authority under Mississippi Code Annotated § 77-3-563. The Commission reviews the application for financial and technical fitness before granting authority to operate.

Generation addition: A regulated electric utility proposes construction of a new natural gas peaker plant. A CPCN proceeding is opened, with the MPUS and potentially industrial intervenors filing on adequacy of need, cost, and alternatives — including renewable procurement.


Decision boundaries

The MPSC's jurisdiction is bounded by federal preemption in three primary areas:

Area Federal Authority MPSC Role
Wholesale electricity rates FERC (Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. § 824) None — retail rates only
Internet broadband services FCC (Communications Act classifications) Limited; cannot set broadband rates
Interstate natural gas pipelines FERC (Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717) None — intrastate distribution only

Within state jurisdiction, the Commission exercises exclusive authority over retail electric and gas rates for investor-owned utilities. Electric cooperatives operating under the Electric Cooperative Law (Mississippi Code Annotated § 77-5-201 et seq.) are governed by their own member boards and are not subject to MPSC rate regulation. Municipal utilities — including those operated by cities such as Jackson and Greenwood — set rates through their own governing boards and are similarly outside MPSC jurisdiction.

The distinction between MPSC-regulated investor-owned utilities and non-regulated cooperatives or municipals is the single most consequential jurisdictional boundary for ratepayers and intervening parties in Mississippi energy proceedings. Parties uncertain whether a specific utility falls under MPSC jurisdiction can verify the utility's regulatory classification through the Commission's docket system at psc.ms.gov.


References

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