Public Utility Commissions are among the most consequential regulatory bodies in the United States, governing trillions of dollars in infrastructure investment and touching virtually every regulated industry. Yet the data infrastructure surrounding them is, in a word, broken.
Each state PUC operates its own docket system, maintains its own website architecture, and publishes its proceedings on its own schedule — with no standardization, no aggregation, and no intelligence layer. A government affairs professional monitoring regulatory activity across multiple states must manually navigate dozens of disparate systems, each with its own quirks and failure modes.
“Intelligence is not just data; it is the clarity of signal in a field of noise. RegulatorIndex was built to be that clarity.”
The result is a systemic intelligence gap that costs government affairs professionals time, accuracy, and — ultimately — outcomes. RegulatorIndex was built to close that gap, permanently.
Every Public Utility Commission in the United States. Real-time monitoring. No gaps.
Docket filings, commissioner orders, and procedural notices are synthesized and delivered as they are published — not aggregated at the end of the week.
Comprehensive profiles on every sitting commissioner across all 50 state PUCs — appointment history, voting patterns, and known policy positions.
Government relations teams at regulated companies who need to know what commissioners are doing before they issue an order.
Legal professionals representing clients in PUC proceedings who need accurate, current docket intelligence.
Consultants advising utilities, developers, and investors on state regulatory strategy across multiple jurisdictions.
Private equity and infrastructure investors conducting regulatory due diligence on assets in regulated industries.
PUC Watch delivers curated intelligence on regulatory proceedings as they happen. Subscribe to receive alerts on the states and dockets that matter to your practice.
“I built RegulatorIndex not as a software company, but as a practitioner who was tired of being under-resourced in the most consequential regulatory environments in the country. Every feature is a decision I needed to make myself.”