Bill Text: GA HB376 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Telecommunications competition; Access Transition Fund; implement
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-04-03 - House Withdrawn, Recommitted [HB376 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2009-HB376-Introduced.html
Bill Title: Telecommunications competition; Access Transition Fund; implement
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-04-03 - House Withdrawn, Recommitted [HB376 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2009-HB376-Introduced.html
09 LC 36
1273ER
House
Bill 376
By:
Representatives Parsons of the
42nd,
Geisinger of the
48th,
Lucas of the
139th,
Martin of the
47th,
and Wix of the
33rd
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Article 4 of Chapter 5 of Title 46 of the Official Code of Georgia
Annotated, relating to telecommunications and competition development, so as to
modernize telecommunications competition by implementing the Access Transition
Fund; to revise certain definitions; to revise certain provisions relating to
rates for basic local exchange services to require Tier 2 local exchange
companies to transition from intrastate switched access; to provide for review
by the Public Service Commission; to provide for annual reports to the General
Assembly; to provide for termination of the Access Transition Fund; to provide
an annual limitation on the Access Transition Fund; to provide for jurisdiction
and authority of the commission; to provide for related matters; to repeal
conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
Article
4 of Chapter 5 of Title 46 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating
to telecommunications and competition development, is amended by revising
subsection (b) of Code Section 46-5-161, relating to legislative findings and
intent relative to "The Telecommunications and Competition Development Act of
1995," as follows:
"(b)
It is the intent of this article to:
(1)
Permit local exchange companies to elect alternative forms of
regulation;
(2)
Protect the consumer during the transition to a competitive telecommunications
market;
(3)
Assure reasonable cost for universal access to basic telecommunications services
throughout Georgia;
(4)
Encourage investment in Georgia's telecommunications infrastructure and
encourage the introduction of innovative products and services for Georgia's
consumers;
(5)
Authorize competition for local exchange services; and
(6)
Allow pricing flexibility for all telecommunications services other than basic
local exchange services
for certain
telecommunications
companies."
SECTION
2.
Said
article is further amended by revising Code Section 46-5-162, relating to
definitions relative to "The Telecommunications and Competition Development Act
of 1995," as follows:
"46-5-162.
As
used in this article, the term:
(1)
'Alternative regulation' means a form of regulation pursuant to which the rates,
terms, and conditions for telecommunications services provided by a local
exchange company are set pursuant to the rules specified in this
article.
(2)
'Basic local exchange services' or 'universal access local exchange services'
mean
means
the provision to residential and single line business customers in Georgia of
services composed of a touch tone switched access line and dial
tone,
of a quality sufficient for
two
way
two-way
voice and 9600 baud data/fax communications. This service shall include 1+
dialing for access to competitive providers of telecommunications services by
January 1, 1997. The elements of universal access local exchange services are
subject to subsequent review and modification by the commission.
(3)
'Caller identification service' means a type of telephone service which permits
telephone customers to see the telephone number of incoming telephone
calls.
(4)
'Commission' means the Georgia Public Service Commission.
(5)
'Electing company' means a local exchange company subject to the alternative
regulation described in this article.
(6)
'Fund' means the
Universal
Transition
Access Fund
created
referred
to in Code Section 46-5-167.
(7)
'Gross domestic product-price index' or 'GDP-PI' means the gross domestic
product fixed weight price index calculated by the United States Department of
Commerce.
(8)
'Interconnection service' means the service of providing access to a local
exchange company's facilities for the purpose of enabling another
telecommunications company to originate or terminate telecommunications
service.
(9)
'Local calling area' means the geographic area encompassing one or more local
exchanges
exchange
services as described in commission orders
or in maps, tariffs, and rate schedules reviewed and approved by the
commission.
(10)
'Local exchange company' means a telecommunications company authorized to
provide local exchange service as described in this article. For purposes of
this article, there shall be two categories of local exchange
companies:
(A)
Tier 1 companies are those companies with 2 million or more access lines within
Georgia holding a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the
commission; and
(B)
Tier 2 companies are those companies with less than 2 million access lines
within Georgia holding a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued
by the commission.
(11)
'Local exchange services' means services offered for the transmission and
utilization of two-way interactive communications and associated usage with the
local calling area.
(12)
'Local interconnection services' means that part of switched interconnection
service provided for the purpose of originating or terminating a call which
originates and terminates within the local calling area.
(13)
'Portability' means the technical capability that permits a customer to retain
the same local number at the same customer location regardless of the provider
of the local exchange service.
(14)
'Switched access' means that part of switched interconnection service provided
for the purpose of originating or terminating a toll service.
(15)
'Switched interconnection service' means that part of interconnection service
which utilizes the local exchange company's switching facilities to provide line
or trunkside access or both to the local exchange company's end office or tandem
switches for the purpose of originating and terminating the telecommunications
services of other telecommunications companies.
(16)
'Tariff' means the schedule or other writing filed with the commission that
describes the rates, terms, and conditions of certain telecommunications
services provided by the telecommunications company.
(17)
'Telecommunications company' means any person, firm, partnership, corporation,
association, or municipal, county, or local governmental entity offering
telecommunications services to the public for hire.
(18)
'Telecommunications services' means the services for the transmission of two-way
interactive communications to the public for hire. For purposes of illustration,
the term 'telecommunications services' includes without limitation local
exchange services and interconnection services.
(19)
'Toll service' means the transmission of two-way interactive switched
communications between local calling areas.
(20)
'Universal access provider' means a local exchange company that is obligated to
provide basic local exchange service in all of its local calling areas in
response to reasonable requests for such service and which, in consideration of
such obligation, may have its rates for local switched interconnection service
established as provided in this article."
SECTION
3.
Said
article is further amended by revising subsection (e) of Code Section 46-5-164,
relating to interconnection among certificated local exchange companies, as
follows: "(e) The commission is authorized to allow local exchange
companies to resell the services purchased from other local exchange companies
pursuant to rules determining when and under what circumstances such resale
shall be
allowed;
provided, however, that the resale of basic local exchange services supported by
the Universal Access Fund shall be limited to users and uses conforming to the
definition of basic local exchange services set forth in paragraph (2) of Code
Section 46-5-162. Any local exchange
company or telecommunications company desiring to purchase or to resell services
purchased from another local exchange company may petition the commission for
the authorization to purchase or to resell such services. In cases where the
purchase or resale of services purchased is authorized by the commission, the
commission shall determine the reasonable rates, terms, or conditions for the
purchase or resale of such local exchange services such that no local exchange
company or telecommunications company gains an unfair market position. The
commission shall render a final decision in any proceeding initiated pursuant to
the provisions of this subsection no later than 60 days after the close of the
record except that the commission, by order, may extend such period in any case
in which it shall find that the complexity of the issues and the length of the
record require an extension of such period, in which event the commission shall
render a decision at the earliest date practicable. In no event shall the
commission delay the rendering of a final decision in such proceeding beyond the
earlier of 120 days after the close of the record or 180 days from the filing of
the notice of petition under this subsection. The commission, at its discretion
or upon a petition filed by either party, may modify a ruling rendered under
this subsection, provided that a petition for modification
may
shall
not be filed more than once in any 18 month period."
SECTION
4.
Said
article is further amended by revising subsections (f) and (g) of Code Section
46-5-166, relating to rates for basic local exchange services, as
follows:
"(f)(1)
Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the rates for switched access
by each Tier 1 local exchange company shall be no higher than the rates charged
for interstate access by the same local exchange company. The rates for switched
access shall be negotiated in good faith between the parties. In the event that
the rates for switched access cannot be negotiated between the parties, any
party may petition the commission to set reasonable rates, terms, or conditions
for switched access. The commission shall render a final decision in any
proceeding initiated pursuant to the provisions of this paragraph no later than
60 days after the close of the record except that the commission, by order, may
extend such period in any case in which it shall find that the complexity of the
issues and the length of the record require an extension of such period, in
which event the commission shall render a decision at the earliest date
practicable. In no event shall the commission delay the rendering of a final
decision in such proceeding beyond the earlier of 120 days after the close of
the record or 180 days from the filing of the notice of petition for
determination of rates for switched access that initiated the
proceeding.
(2)
Each Tier 2 local exchange company shall
transition, in
the manner described in this subsection and subsection (d) of
46-5-167,
prior to
July 1, 2000, adjust in equal annual
increments its intrastate switched access
charges
rate
to parity with its similar interstate
switched
access rates
that are in
effect as of July 1, 2009. The transition to intrastate and interstate switched
access parity shall occur in equal increments over a period of five years and in
a manner consistent with the adjustment of basic local exchange service rates in
subsection (d) of Code Section 46-5-167. In addition, each telecommunications
company holding a certificate of authority, or otherwise authorized to provide
telecommunications services in this state, shall transition in equal increments
over a period of five years beginning on either July 1, 2009, or the date on
which said telecommunications company initiates offering service, whichever is
later, its intrastate switched access rates to levels not to exceed the similar
interstate switched access rates in effect as of July 1, 2009, that the
incumbent Tier 1 or Tier 2 company in the corresponding service territory
charges for equivalent functions. After this five-year period, the commission
may review the Tier 2 company's and the telecommunications company's intrastate
and interstate switched access rates then in effect and may order, upon good
cause shown, further reductions in intrastate switched access
rates.
to their
corresponding interstate levels and shall allow adjustment of other rates,
including those of basic local exchange services or universal service funds, as
may be necessary to recover those revenues lost through the concurrent reduction
of the intrastate switched access rates. In no event shall such adjustments
exceed the revenues associated with intrastate to interstate access parity as of
July 1, 1995. In addition, if access revenues have dropped below July 1, 1995,
levels in subsequent years, the adjustment in those years will be based on the
reduced balance. Any intrastate to interstate switched access adjustments
resulting in increased local rates that have been capped under subsection (b) of
this Code section will be allowed and a new cap will be established pursuant to
this Code section. In the event that the rates for switched access cannot be
negotiated in good faith between the parties, the commission shall determine the
reasonable rates for switched access in accordance with the procedures provided
in paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(g)
In accordance with rules to be promulgated by the commission, any electing
company shall file tariffs with the commission for basic local exchange services
and other local exchange services that state the terms and conditions of such
services and the rates
as
established pursuant to this Code section
unless such
company has eliminated such tariffs pursuant to paragraph (2) of subsection (b)
of Code Section
46-2-23."
SECTION
5.
Said
article is further amended by revising Code Section 46-5-167, relating to the
Universal Access Fund, as follows:
"46-5-167.
(a)
The commission shall
create a
Universal
implement
the Access
Transition
Fund to assure the provision of reasonably priced access to basic local exchange
services throughout Georgia
and as a
mechanism to allow the recovery of revenues lost by Tier 2 companies through the
intrastate switched access rate rebalancing under paragraph (2) of subsection
(f) of 46-5-166. The fund shall be
administered by the commission under rules to be promulgated by the commission
as needed to assure that the fund operates in a competitively neutral manner
between competing telecommunications
providers
companies.
The commission shall include in its annual report to the General Assembly
required under Code Section 46-5-174 the status of the intrastate switched
access rate rebalancing and shall conduct a review of the Access Transition Fund
in 2015 and shall report its findings in 2016 to the General Assembly.
Notwithstanding any other provision in this article, the Access Transition Fund
shall cease to exist on June 30, 2019.
(b)
The commission shall require all telecommunications companies providing
telecommunications services within Georgia to contribute quarterly to the fund
in a
proportionate amount to their gross revenues from sale to end users of such
telecommunications services as determined by rules to be promulgated by the
commission.
The commission
shall determine the manner of contribution using either one or a combination of
the following two contribution
methodologies:
(1)
A charge for each working telephone number; or
(2)
A proportionate amount based on each telecommunications company's gross revenues
from sales to end users of its telecommunications services.
(c)
The commission may also require any telecommunications company to contribute to
the fund if, after notice and opportunity for hearing, the commission determines
that the company is providing private local exchange services or radio based
local exchange services in this state that compete with a telecommunications
service provided in this state for which a contribution to the fund is required
under this Code section.
(d)
Contributions
to the fund shall be determined by the commission based upon estimates as to the
difference in the reasonable actual costs of basic local exchange services
throughout Georgia and the amounts established by law or regulations of the
commission as to the maximum amounts that may be charged for such
services.
The commission
shall determine the size of the fund pursuant to this subsection. Consistent
with the five-year transition described in paragraph (2) of subsection (f) of
Code Section 46-5-166, the commission shall first allow the adjustment of rates
for basic local exchange services, which rates shall include mandatory expanded
area service fees, to benchmarks to be established by the commission that shall
be 125 percent of the July 1, 2009, residential state-wide weighted average rate
for basic local exchange services imputed across all access lines and adjusted
annually for inflation measured by the change in GDP-PI. Thereafter, each Tier
2 company, including any that has elected alternative regulation pursuant to
Code Section 46-5-165, may, at its option, request and be granted quarterly
distributions from the fund with respect to the total portion of the Tier 2
company's intrastate switched access revenue reductions that were not
recoverable through the prescribed transition to the benchmark at any point
during the five-year transition period. The transition to the prescribed
benchmark shall occur in equal increments over a period of five years beginning
on July 1, 2009; however, in the event that a Tier 2 company, at its own
discretion, chooses not to increase its basic local exchange rates to the
prescribed increment, then the Tier 2 company's distributions under the fund
shall be determined after imputing the difference between the Tier 2 company's
revenues attributable to the prescribed benchmark and the incremental revenues
that would have been realized if the Tier 2 company had reached the prescribed
increment. Notwithstanding any other provision in this article, the Access
Transition Fund shall be limited to an annual total amount of $25
million.
(e)
Moneys in
the fund shall be distributed quarterly to all providers of basic local exchange
services upon application and demonstration that the reasonable costs as
determined by the commission to provide basic local exchange services exceed the
maximum fixed price permitted for such basic local exchange services. The
commission may take into account the possibility that a competing local exchange
company is providing or could provide lower cost basic local exchange services.
Competitive providers shall be entitled to obtain a similar subsidy from the
fund to the extent that they provide basic local exchange services; provided,
however, that such subsidy shall not exceed 90 percent of the per line amount
provided the incumbent local exchange company for existing basic local exchange
service or 100 percent of new basic local exchange service.
Notwithstanding
any other provision in this article, once any electing local exchange company
has achieved intrastate and interstate switched access parity and certifies to
the commission that it will not apply for reimbursement from the Access
Transition Fund, subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) of Code Section 46-5-166
shall no longer apply and subsection (e) of Code Section 46-5-166 shall apply to
all rates.
(f)
The commission shall require any local exchange company seeking reimbursement
from the fund to file the information reasonably necessary to determine the
actual and reasonable costs of providing basic local exchange
services.
(g)
The commission shall have the authority to make adjustments to the contribution
or distribution levels based on yearly reconciliations and to order further
contributions or distributions as needed between companies to equalize
reasonably the burdens of providing basic local exchange service throughout
Georgia.
(h)
A local exchange company or other company shall not establish a surcharge on
customers' bills to collect from customers' contributions required under this
Code section."
SECTION
6.
Said
article is further amended by revising Code Section 46-5-168, relating to
jurisdiction and authority of commission, as follows:
"46-5-168.
(a)
The jurisdiction of the commission under this article shall be construed to
include the authority necessary to implement and administer the express
provisions of this article through rule-making proceedings and orders in
specific cases.
(b)
The commission's jurisdiction shall include the authority to:
(1)
Adopt reasonable rules governing certification of local exchange
companies;
(2)
Grant, modify, impose conditions upon, or revoke a certificate;
(3)
Establish and administer the
Universal
Access
Transition
Fund including modifications to the maximum allowable charge for basic local
exchange service
in accordance
with the provisions of this
article;
(4)
Adopt reasonable rules governing service quality;
(5)
Resolve complaints against a local exchange company regarding that company's
service;
(6)
Require a telecommunications company electing alternative regulation under this
article to comply with the rate adjustment provisions of this
article;
(7)
Approve and if necessary revise, suspend, or deny tariffs in accordance with the
provisions of this article;
(8)
If necessary, elect another comparable measurement of inflation calculated by
the United States Department of Commerce;
(9)
Establish reasonable rules and methodologies for performing cost allocations
among the services provided by a telecommunications company; and
(10)
Direct telecommunications companies to make investments and modifications
necessary to enable portability.
(c)
The commission shall render a final decision in any proceeding initiated
pursuant to the provisions of this article no later than 60 days after the close
of the record except that the commission, by order, may extend such period in
any case in which it shall find that the complexity of the issues and the length
of the record require an extension of such period, in which event the commission
shall render a decision at the earliest date practicable. In no event shall the
commission delay the rendering of a final decision in such proceeding beyond the
earlier of 120 days after the close of the record or 180 days from the filing of
the notice of rulemaking, petition, or complaint that initiated the
proceeding.
(d)
In conducting any rule-making proceeding under this article, the commission
shall consider the following factors:
(1)
The extent to which cost-effective competitive alternatives are available to
existing telecommunications networks and services; and
(2)
Requirements necessary to prevent any disadvantage or economic harm to
consumers, protect universal affordable service,
implement
the
establish
and maintain an affordable Universal
Access
Transition
Fund, protect the quality of telecommunications services, prevent
anticompetitive practices, and prevent abandonment of service to areas where
there is no competing provider of telecommunications service.
(e)
Subject to any other provision of law protecting the confidentiality of trade
secrets, the commission shall have access to the books and records of
telecommunications companies as may be necessary to ensure compliance with the
provisions of this article and with the commission's rules and regulations and
to carry out its responsibilities under this article.
(f)
In order to promote economic development and competitive advantage for the State
of Georgia, the commission shall have the authority to petition, intervene, or
otherwise commence proceedings before the appropriate federal agencies and
courts having specific jurisdiction over the regulation of telecommunications
seeking to enhance the competitive market for telecommunications services within
the state."
SECTION
7.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.