Bill Text: MI HB5949 | 2019-2020 | 100th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Communications: internet; regulation of broadband internet; modify. Amends secs. 102, 103, 201, 202, 205, 210, 213, 303, 304, 305, 305a, 305b, 313, 353a, 401, 502 & 503 of 1991 PA 179 (MCL 484.2102 et seq.) & adds secs. 301a, 306, 308, 309b, 311, 312, 314, 321, 362, 504 & 602.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 18-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2020-07-23 - Bill Electronically Reproduced 07/22/2020 [HB5949 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2019-HB5949-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL NO. 5949
July 22, 2020, Introduced by Reps. Camilleri,
Hope, Brenda Carter, Brixie, Sowerby, Tyrone Carter, Peterson, Hood,
Pohutsky, Manoogian, Shannon, Anthony, Stone, Hoadley, Lasinski, Rabhi,
Pagan and Hammoud and referred to the Committee on Communications and
Technology.
A bill to amend 1991 PA 179, entitled
"Michigan telecommunications act,"
by amending sections 102, 103, 201, 202, 205, 210, 213, 303, 304, 305, 305a, 305b, 313, 353a, 401, 502, and 503 (MCL 484.2102, 484.2103, 484.2201, 484.2202, 484.2205, 484.2210, 484.2213, 484.2303, 484.2304, 484.2305, 484.2305a, 484.2305b, 484.2313, 484.2353a, 484.2401, 484.2502, and 484.2503), sections 102, 201, 202, 205, 210, 213, 303, 305, 305a, 305b, 353a, 401, and 503 as amended by 2011 PA 58 and sections 103, 304, 313, and 502 as amended by 2014 PA 52, and by adding sections 301a, 306, 308, 309b, 311, 312, 314, 321, 362, 504, and 602.
the people of the state of michigan enact:
Sec. 102. As used in this act:
(a) "Access
service" means access to a local exchange network for the purpose of
enabling a provider to originate or terminate telecommunication services within
the local exchange. Except for end-user common line services, access service
does not include access service to a person who is not a provider.
(b) "Basic local
exchange service" or "local exchange service" means the
provision of an access line and usage within a local calling area for the
transmission of high-quality 2-way interactive switched voice or data
communication.
(c) "Broadband
service" means a mass-market retail
service capable of transmitting data over
an access line at a rate greater than 200 kilobits per second.by wire or radio provided to customers in this state
that provides the capability to transmit data to, and receive data from, all or
substantially all internet endpoints, including, but not limited to, any
capabilities that are incidental to and enable the operation of the
communications service, but excluding dial-up internet access service. Broadband
service includes any service provided to customers in this state that provides
a functional equivalent of a service described in this subdivision or that is used
to evade the protections of this act.
(d) "Cable
service" means 1-way transmission to subscribers of video programming or
other programming services and subscriber interaction for the selection of
video programming or other programming services.
(e) "Commission"
means the Michigan public service commission.
(f) "Contested
case" or "case" means a proceeding as defined in section 3 of
the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.203.
(g) "Educational
institution" means a public educational institution or a private
non-profit educational institution approved by the department of education to
provide a program of primary, secondary, or higher education, a public library,
or a nonprofit association or consortium whose primary purpose is education. A
nonprofit association or consortium under this subdivision shall consist of 2
or more of the following:
(i) Public educational institutions.
(ii) Nonprofit
educational institutions approved by the department of education.
(iii) The state board of
education.
(iv) Telecommunication
providers.
(v) A nonprofit
association of educational institutions or consortium of educational
institutions.
(h) "End user" means the retail subscriber of a
telecommunication service.
(i) "Energy management services" means a service of
a public utility providing electric power, heat, or light for energy use
management, energy use control, energy use information, and energy use
communication.
(j) "Exchange" means 1 or more contiguous central
offices and all associated facilities within a geographical area in which basic
local exchange service is offered by a provider.
(k) "Information services" or "enhanced
services" means the offering of a capability for generating, acquiring,
storing, transforming, processing, retrieving, utilizing, or making available
information, including energy management services, that is conveyed by
telecommunications. Information services or enhanced services do not include
the use of that capability for the management, control, or operation of a telecommunications
system or the management of a telecommunications service.
(l)
"Interconnection" means the technical arrangements and other elements
necessary to permit the connection between the switched networks of 2 or more
providers to enable a telecommunication service originating on the network of 1
provider to terminate on the network of another provider.
(m) "License" means a license issued under this
act.
(n) "Line" or "access line" means the
medium over which a telecommunication user connects into the local exchange.
(o) "Local calling area" means a geographic area
encompassing 1 or more local communities as described in maps, tariffs, or rate
schedules filed with and approved by the commission.
(p) "Local directory assistance" means the provision
by telephone of a listed telephone number within the caller's area code.
(q) "Local exchange rate" means the monthly and
usage rate, including all necessary and attendant charges, imposed for basic
local exchange service to customers.
(r) "Loop" means the transmission facility between
the network interface on a subscriber's premises and the main distribution
frame in the servicing central office.
(s) "Operator service" means a telecommunication
service that includes automatic or live assistance to a person to arrange for
completion and billing of a telephone call originating within this state that
is specified by the caller through a method other than 1 of the following:
(i) Automatic
completion with billing to the telephone from which the call originated.
(ii) Completion
through an access code or a proprietary account number used by the person, with
billing to an account previously established with the provider by the person.
(iii) Completion in
association with directory assistance services.
(t) "Operator service provider" or "OSP"
means a provider of operator service.
(u) "Payphone service" means a telephone call
provided from a public, semipublic, or individually owned and operated
telephone that is available to the public and is accessed by the depositing of
coin or currency or by other means of payment at the time the call is made.
(v) "Person" means an individual, corporation,
partnership, association, governmental entity, or any other legal entity.
(w) "Person with disabilities" means an individual
who has 1 or more of the following physical characteristics:
(i) Blindness.
(ii) Inability to
ambulate more than 200 feet without having to stop and rest during any time of
the year.
(iii) Loss of use of 1
or both legs or feet.
(iv) Inability to
ambulate without the prolonged use of a wheelchair, walker, crutches, braces,
or other device required to aid mobility.
(v) A lung disease
from which the individual's expiratory volume for 1 second, when measured by
spirometry, is less than 1 liter, or from which the individual's arterial
oxygen tension is less than 60 mm/hg of room air at rest.
(vi) A cardiovascular
disease from which the individual measures between 3 and 4 on the New York heart Heart Association classification
scale, or from which a marked limitation of physical activity causes fatigue,
palpitation, dyspnea, or anginal pain.
(vii) Other diagnosed
disease or disorder including, but not limited to, severe arthritis or a
neurological or orthopedic impairment that creates a severe mobility limitation.
(x) "Port", except for the loop, means the entirety
of local exchange, including dial tone, a telephone number, switching software,
local calling, and access to directory assistance, a white pages listing,
operator services, and interexchange and intra-LATA toll carriers.
(y) "Public safety system" means a communication
system operated by a public entity to provide emergency police, fire, medical,
and other first responder services. Public safety system includes the Michigan
state police communication system.
(z) "Reasonable rate" or "just and reasonable
rate" means a rate that is not inadequate, excessive, or unreasonably
discriminatory.
(aa) "Residential customer" means a person to whom
telecommunication services are furnished predominantly for personal or domestic
purposes at the person's dwelling.
(bb) "Special access" means the provision of access
service, other than switched access service, to a local exchange network for
the purpose of enabling a provider to originate or terminate telecommunication
service within the exchange, including the use of local private lines.
(cc) "State institution of higher education" means
an institution of higher education described in sections 4, 5, and 6 of article
VIII of the state constitution of 1963.
(dd) "Telecommunications act of 1996" means Public
Law 104-104.
(ee) "Telecommunication provider" or
"provider" means a person that for compensation provides 1 or more
telecommunication services. Telecommunication provider does not include a
provider of commercial mobile service as defined in section 332(d)(1) of the
telecommunications act of 1996, 47 USC 332.
(ff) "Telecommunication services" or
"services" includes regulated and unregulated services offered to
customers for the transmission of 2-way interactive communication and
associated usage. A
telecommunication service is not a public utility service.
(gg) "Toll service" means the transmission of 2-way
interactive switched communication between local calling areas. Toll service
does not include individually negotiated contracts for similar
telecommunication services or wide area telecommunications service.
(hh) "Total service long run incremental cost"
means, given current service demand, including associated costs of every
component necessary to provide the service, 1 of the following:
(i) The total
forward-looking cost of a telecommunication service, relevant group of
services, or basic network component, using current least cost technology that
would be required if the provider had never offered the service.
(ii) The total cost
that the provider would incur if the provider were to initially offer the
service, group of services, or basic network component.
(ii) "Wide area telecommunications service" or
"WATS" means the transmission of 2-way interactive switched
communication over a dedicated access line.
Sec. 103. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this
act, this act shall does not be construed to prevent any person from providing
telecommunication services in competition with another telecommunication provider.
(2) The commission shall maintain a publicly available
database of providers in each exchange that are licensed to or otherwise
provide toll and local exchange service in this state. submit an annual report describing the status of
competition in telecommunication services in this state, including, but not
limited to, the toll and local exchange service markets in this state. The
report required under this section must be submitted to the governor and the
house and senate standing committees with oversight of telecommunication
issues.
(3) A provider shall
submit to the commission all information requested by the commission necessary
for the preparation and maintenance of
the database annual report under this section.
Sec. 201. (1) Except as otherwise provided by this act
or federal law, the commission has the jurisdiction and authority to administer
this act and all federal telecommunications laws, rules, orders, and
regulations that are delegated to the state. , including, but
not limited to, the authority to arbitrate and enforce interconnection
agreements and to establish rates in accordance with the standards set forth by
applicable law.
(2) The commission has the jurisdiction and authority to
regulate all providers of broadband service.
(3)
The commission shall exercise its
jurisdiction and authority consistent with this act and all federal
telecommunications laws, rules, orders, and regulations.
Sec. 202. (1) In addition to the other powers and
duties prescribed by this act, the commission shall do all of the following:
(a) Establish by order
the manner and form in which telecommunication providers of regulated services
within the state keep accounts, books of accounts, and records in order to
determine the total service long-run incremental cost requirements of this act of
providing a service. The commission requirements under this subdivision shall must be consistent with any regulations
covering the same subject matter made by the federal communications commission.Federal Communications Commission.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in
this subdivision, require Require by order that a provider of a regulated
service, including access service, make available for public inspection and
file with the commission a schedule of the provider's rates, services, and
conditions of service, including access service provided by contract. Except for access service, a
provider is exempt from any commission order requiring that provider to file
with the commission its rates, services, and conditions of regulated service if
the provider files a certification with the commission opting out of the filing
requirement. A certification under this subdivision shall be signed by an
officer of the provider.
(c) Promulgate rules
under section 213 to establish and enforce quality standards for all of the
following:
(i) The provision of basic local exchange service to end users.
(ii) The provision of
unbundled network elements and local interconnection services to providers that
are used in the provision of basic local exchange service.
(iii) The timely and
complete transfer of an end user from 1 provider of basic local exchange
service to another provider.
(iv) Providers of
basic local exchange service that cease to provide the service to any segment
of end users or geographic area, go out of business, or withdraw from the
state, including the transfer of customers to other providers and the
reclaiming of unused telephone numbers.
(v) The provision of broadband service in
this state including, but not limited to, billing transparency, pricing,
service quality, dispute resolution, nondiscriminatory treatment, service for
vulnerable populations, and discontinuance of service.
(d) Preserve the provision of high quality basic local
exchange service.
(2) Rules promulgated under subsection (1)(c) shall must include remedies
for the enforcement of the rules that are consistent with this act and federal
law. Rules promulgated under subsection (1)(c)(ii) shall do not apply to the
provision of unbundled network elements and local interconnection services
subject to quality standards in an interconnection agreement approved by the
commission. In promulgating any rules under subsection (1)(c), the commission
shall consider to what extent current market conditions are sufficient to
provide adequate service quality to basic local exchange service end users. Any
service quality rules promulgated by the commission shall expire within 3 years of after the effective
date of the rules. The commission may, before the expiration of the rules,
promulgate new rules under subsection (1)(c). However, the commission may promulgate new rules under
subsection (1)(c)(iii) at any time. Any service quality rules
promulgated by the commission under subsection (1)(c)(i) and any retail
service quality rules promulgated before January 1, 2006 shall expire on June
30, 2011.
(3) The commission shall permit the electronic filing of any
pleadings, tariffs, or any other document required or allowed to be filed with
the commission under this act.
Sec. 205. (1) The commission may
investigate and resolve complaints under this act. The penalties under this act
shall must not be imposed for
a violation that occurred more than 2 years before the date the complaint was
filed.
(2) If the commission finds, after notice and hearing, that
the rates, quality, general availability, or conditions for a regulated service
violate this act, an order of the commission under this act, or is adverse to
the public interest, the commission may require changes in how the
telecommunication services are provided. The commission's authority includes,
but is not limited to, the revocation of a license and issuing cease and desist
orders.
Sec. 210. (1)
Except under the terms of a mandatory protective order, trade secrets and
commercial or financial information submitted under this act are exempt from disclosure under the
freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.231 to 15.246.
(2) If information is disclosed under a mandatory protective
order, then the information may be included in the commission's evidentiary
record if admissible, but shall
remain remains confidential.
(3) There is a rebuttable presumption that cost studies,
customer usage data, marketing studies, and contracts between providers are
trade secrets or commercial or financial information protected under subsection
(1). The burden of removing the presumption under this subsection is with the
party seeking to have the information disclosed.
(4) Information regarding settlement, including a recommended
settlement issued by a mediator in a proceeding, shall be disclosed only to the
parties to the proceeding unless all parties consent to disclosure. A
mediator's recommended settlement may be disclosed to the commission after the
commission has issued a final order. The administrative law judge assigned to
any contested case proceeding arising from a mediation shall not be made aware
of the acceptance or rejection by the parties of the recommended settlement, or
the terms of the recommended settlement. The parties to the mediation shall not
disclose or reveal the terms of the recommended settlement to anyone other than
the parties to the mediation.
Sec. 213. (1)
Subject to section 201,
and limited to its specific
authority over a service as provided under this act, the
commission may promulgate rules under the administrative procedures act of
1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.
(2) A proceeding before the commission to promulgate rules
under this act shall must be concluded
within 180 days from after the date that the
proceeding is initiated.
(3) The following administrative rules are rescinded:
(a) Privacy standards for telecommunication services, R
484.201 to R 484.208 of the Michigan administrative code.
(b) Billing standards for basic residential telecommunication
service, R 484.301 to R 484.386 of the Michigan administrative code.
(c) Telecommunications service quality, R 484.519 to R
484.571 of the Michigan administrative code.
Sec. 301a. A provider licensed under this act shall offer primary basic local exchange service to each residential customer within the provider's service area where the provider is offering residential basic local exchange service.
Sec. 303. (1) The
sale or transfer of shares of stock of a provider of primary basic local exchange service is not a
sale or transfer of a license or a discontinuance of service.
(2) The commission has the authority to approve or deny a
proposed addition, elimination, or modification of an area code in this state.
The commission shall give public notice and shall conduct a public hearing in
the affected geographic area before an addition, elimination, or modification
of an area code is made in this state.
(3) A license issued under this act is not transferable to an
unlicensed provider.
(4) In case of the bankruptcy of a licensed provider, the
commission shall establish the procedures for the transfer of the license to
another qualified provider.
Sec. 304. (1) The rates for primary basic local
exchange service must be just and reasonable. Each provider shall set the
initial rates for primary basic local exchange service. Except as provided
under section 310a or a higher rate approved by the commission under subsection
(2)(d), the initial rates may not exceed the rates for the lowest cost calling
plan that includes a limited number of outgoing calls of the provider in place
before the rates are set under this subsection. If a provider does not offer a
calling plan with a limited number of outgoing calls, the provider shall set
the initial rate for primary basic local exchange service that must be just and
reasonable and is subject to commission review.
(2) A provider may alter its rates for primary basic local
exchange services by 1 or more of the following:
(a) Filing with the commission a notice of a reduction in a
primary basic local exchange rate. A rate alteration under this subdivision is
effective without commission review or approval.
(b) Filing with the commission a notice of an increase in a
primary basic local exchange rate to a level not to exceed the rate established
under subsection (1) or subdivisions (c) and (d). A rate alteration under this
subdivision is effective without commission review or approval.
(c) Filing with the commission notice of an increase in a
basic local exchange rate that does not exceed 1% less than the Consumer Price Index.
Unless the commission determines that the rate alteration exceeds the allowed
increase under this subdivision, the rate alteration takes effect 90 days after
the date of the notice required under subsection (3). As used in this
subdivision, "Consumer Price Index" means the most recent reported
annual average percentage increase in the Detroit Consumer Price Index for all
items for the prior 12-month period by the United States Department of Labor.
(d) Filing with the commission an application to increase a
primary basic local exchange rate in an amount greater than that allowed under
subsection (1) or subdivision (c). The application must be accompanied with
sufficient documentary support that the rate alteration is just and reasonable.
The commission shall make a determination within the 90-day period provided for
in subsection (5) of 1 of the following:
(i) That the rate alteration is just and
reasonable.
(ii) That a filing under section 203 is necessary
to review the rate alteration.
(3) Notice to customers of a rate alteration is required for
a rate alteration under subsection (2)(c) or (d) and must be included in or on
the bill of each affected customer of the provider at least 1 billing cycle before
the effective date of the rate alteration.
(4) The notice required under subsection (3) must contain at
least all of the following information:
(a) A statement that the customer's rate may change.
(b) An estimate of the amount of the annual change for the
typical residential customer that would result by the rate change.
(c) A statement that a customer may comment on or receive
complete details of the rate alteration by calling or writing the commission.
The statement must also include the telephone number and address of the
commission. Complete details of the rate alteration must be provided free of
charge to the customer at the expense of the provider.
(5) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (2) and (6),
an altered primary basic local exchange rate takes effect 90 days after the
date of the notice required by subsection (3).
(6) Upon receiving a complaint or pursuant to a determination
under subsection (2)(d), the commission may require a filing under section 203
to review a proposed rate alteration under subsection (2)(d). The commission's
final order may approve, modify, or reject the rate alteration.
(7) In reviewing a rate alteration under subsection (6), the
commission shall consider only 1 or more of the following factors if relevant
to the rate alteration as specified by the provider:
(a) Total service long run incremental cost of basic local
exchange services.
(b) Comparison of the proposed rate to the rates charged by
other providers in this state for the same service.
(c) Whether a new function, feature, or capability is being
offered as a component of basic local exchange service.
(d) Whether there has been an increase in the costs to
provide basic local exchange service in the geographic area of the proposed
rate.
(e) Whether the provider's further investment in the network
infrastructure of the geographic area of the proposed rate is economically
justifiable without the proposed rate.
(8) A provider is allowed only 1 rate increase for each
regulated service during any 12-month period.
(9) A call made to a local calling area adjacent to the caller's
local calling area is considered a local call and shall must be billed as a local call. Effective
December 31, 2007, a call made to a called party who is not located within the
geographic area of the caller's local calling area or an adjacent local calling
area as defined by the commission's order in case numbers U-12515 and U-12528,
dated February 5, 2001, is not a local call if the tariff, service guide, or
similar document containing the terms and conditions of the provider
originating the call does not classify the call as a local call.
(10) An alteration by a provider to the rate of a package,
combination, or bundle of telecommunication or other services that includes
primary basic local exchange service is not subject to this section as long as
the primary basic local exchange service component of the package, combination,
or bundle is available for purchase on a stand-alone basis.
(11) A provider shall offer its unregulated calling features
on a stand-alone basis to its primary basic local exchange service customers.
The purchase of a calling feature under this subsection does not affect the
regulated rate of the primary basic local exchange service.
(12) A person with disabilities or who is voluntarily
providing a service for an organization classified by the Internal Revenue
Service as a section 501(c)(3) or (19) organization, or a person who provides a
service for a congressionally chartered veterans organization or their duly
authorized foundations, is exempt from the 100 calls per month limitation and must
receive a flat rate allowing unlimited calls per month. A person exempt from
the call cap under this subsection must not be charged a rate greater than the
flat rate charged residential customers for primary basic local exchange
service.
(13) Except as provided in subsection (14), for the purposes
of this section and the act, providers who, together with any affiliated
providers, provide basic local exchange service or basic local exchange and
toll service to less than 250,000 end-users in this state may determine total
service long run incremental cost through preparation of a cost study or may
determine that their total service long run incremental cost is the same as
that of a provider with more than 250,000 end-users.
(14) (2) A provider of basic local exchange service with
less than 10,000 15,000 end-users in
this state may determine that their total service long run incremental cost is
the same as that of a provider with more than 250,000 end-users.
(15) A provider shall file with the commission for review and
approval of a tariff for the rates and charges for calls made that exceed the
100-call limit of primary basic local exchange service.
Sec. 305. A
provider of basic local exchange service shall not do any of the following:
(a) Discriminate against another provider by refusing or
delaying access service to the local exchange.
(b) Refuse or delay interconnections or provide inferior
connections to another provider.
(c) Degrade the quality of access service provided to another
provider.
(d) Impair the speed, quality, or efficiency of lines used by
another provider.
(e) Develop new services to take advantage of planned but not
publicly known changes in the underlying network.
(f) Refuse or delay a request of another provider for
information regarding the technical design, equipment capabilities and
features, geographic coverage, and traffic patterns of the local exchange
network.
(g) Refuse or delay access service or be unreasonable in
connecting another provider to the local exchange whose product or service
requires novel or specialized access service requirements.
(h) Upon a request, fail to fully disclose in a timely manner
all available information necessary for the design of equipment that will meet
the specifications of the local exchange network.
(i) Discriminate against any provider or any party who
requests the information for commercial purposes in the dissemination of
customer proprietary information. A provider shall provide without unreasonable
discrimination or delay telephone directory listing information and related
services to persons purchasing telephone directory listing information to the
same extent and in the same quality as provided to the provider, affiliates of
the provider, or any other listing information purchaser.
(j) Refuse or delay access service by any person to another
provider.
(k) Sell, lease, or otherwise transfer an asset to an
affiliate for an amount less than the fair market value of the asset.
(l) Buy, lease, or otherwise acquire an
asset from an affiliate of the provider for an amount greater than the fair
market value of the asset.
(m) (k) Bundle unwanted services or products for sale
or lease to another provider.
(n) (l) Perform any act
that has been prohibited by this act or an order of the commission.
(o) (m) Sell services or products, extend credit, or
offer other terms and conditions on more favorable terms to an affiliate of the
provider than the provider offers to other providers.
(p) Discriminate in favor of an affiliated burglar and fire
alarm service over a similar service offered by another provider.
Sec. 305a. (1)
Except as otherwise provided by federal law, where technically feasible, a
provider originating or forwarding an intrastate call that is terminated on the
network of another provider shall do all of the following:
(a) For originated calls, transmit the telephone number of
the party originating the call . The telephone number shall be
transmitted without alteration in the network signaling
information.
(b) For forwarded calls, transmit the telephone number of the
party originating the call,
to the extent that information has been provided by the originating carrier, . The telephone number shall be
transmitted without alteration in the network signaling
information.
(2) The commission shall may investigate complaints alleging
violations of this section and may initiate proceedings under section 203 to
resolve disputes between providers regarding identification of traffic and
disputes regarding compensation rights and obligations between providers who
originate, forward, or terminate intrastate traffic.
(3) If the commission determines that the telephone number
has not been transmitted as required by this section, the provider against whom
the complaint was filed shall demonstrate that it was not technically feasible
to transmit the information, or that it had a legitimate business or other good
faith reason for not transmitting the telephone number.
(4) If the commission determines that a provider violated
this section, the commission shall determine if the violation resulted in a
nonpayment or underpayment of compensation to the complaining provider under
the terms of the parties' compensation agreement or its intrastate access
tariff. The commission shall determine the amount of the nonpayment or
underpayment and order the violating provider to make payment. The commission shall may assess a fine
against the violating provider in an amount equal to 2 times the payment
amount, and may take any other action authorized by Michigan law that it considers necessary.
(5) A provider that originates an intrastate call subject to
section 251(b)(5) of the telecommunications act of 1996, 47 USC 251, shall
agree to establish a reciprocal compensation arrangement for the termination of
those calls. Originating and terminating providers shall agree to begin
negotiations no more than 30 days after the originating provider receives a request
from a terminating provider to establish an arrangement. During the negotiation
period, reciprocal compensation rates shall must be assessed by the terminating carrier
under an interim arrangement with the originating carrier. Originating and
terminating providers shall use good faith efforts to conclude negotiations and
finalize an agreement within a reasonable time period.
(6) A provider that originates an intrastate intra-LATA call
subject to a terminating carrier's intrastate access tariffs shall pay the
tariffed rate for termination of the call.
(7) The commission may resolve disputes under this section
between originating and terminating providers related to negotiation of the
reciprocal compensation agreement and the payment of the tariffed rates.
Sec. 305b. A
provider of any telecommunication service shall do all of the following:
(a) Upon Before a customer purchases a service
or upon request, provide each customer a clear and simple
explanation of the terms and conditions of the services purchased by the
customer including, but not limited to, a statement of all fees, charges, and
taxes that will be included in the customer's monthly bill.
(b) The statement required under subdivision (a) shall
include a good faith estimate by the provider of the actual monthly cost that
the customer will be required to pay if the service is purchased.
(c) Comply with all federal and state requirements regarding
truth in billing, E 9-1-1 services, and primary basic local exchange service.
(d) If E 9-1-1 service is not available to the customer,
ensure that the customer has an alternative means to reach emergency service
responders.
(e) Comply with sections 505 and 507.
Sec. 306. A telecommunication provider
of basic local exchange service is not required to provide toll services. If a
telecommunication provider that provides basic local exchange service does not
offer toll or have interconnection with a toll provider, the commission shall
order a toll provider to interconnect with the telecommunication provider upon
terms that are fair to both providers.
Sec. 308. (1) Basic local exchange or
access rates or proceeds from the sale, lease, or transfer of rate acquired
assets must not be used, directly or indirectly, to subsidize or offset the
costs of other products or services offered by the provider or an affiliate of
the provider by providing such other products or services at less than the
total service long-run incremental cost.
(2)
A provider of basic local exchange service shall not sell or transfer capital
assets used to provide the service for an amount less than the fair market
value to any other provider or affiliated entity for the purpose of providing
an unregulated service.
(3)
A provider of basic local exchange service shall notify the commission when it
transfers, in whole or in part, substantial assets, functions, or employees
associated with basic local exchange service to an affiliated entity,
indicating the identity of the affiliated entity, description of the
transaction, and the impact on basic local exchange service.
(4) In an investigation under this section or under section 203, the commission may review the books and accounts of both the provider and affiliated entities of the provider.
Sec. 309b. A provider of a regulated
service in this state shall take no action prohibited under state or federal
labor laws to discourage or prevent its employees from seeking union
representation, pursuing collective bargaining, or engaging in any other
activities protected, including, but not limited to, the closing of an office
or facility in this state to prevent organizing.
Sec. 311. (1) A telecommunication
provider of both basic local exchange service and toll service shall impute as
provided under section 362 to itself its prices of special toll access service
and switched access for the use of essential facilities it uses in the
provision of toll, WATS, or other service for which toll access service is a
component.
(2)
All other providers of intrastate special toll access service, switched toll
access services, toll, or WATS shall impute to themselves in the aggregate on a
service by service basis their individual cost of special or switched toll
access service or its equivalent in their pricing.
(3)
Telecommunication services that utilize special or switched toll access service
must be made available for resale by the telecommunication provider offering
the service.
Sec. 312. (1) The commission shall not
review or set the rates for toll service.
(2)
The commission shall require that toll service is universally available to all
persons within the state.
(3) Upon commission review and approval, all providers of toll service shall make available to their customers adjacent exchange toll calling plans. All providers of toll service shall inform their customers of the available plans that provide a monthly allowance of toll calling to adjacent exchanges for which there is no local calling. All providers of toll service shall inform their customers of the available plans. The plans required under this subsection remain in effect under this act until altered by order of the commission.
Sec. 313. (1) A
telecommunication provider that provides either basic local exchange or toll
service, or both, shall not discontinue either service to an exchange unless 1
or more alternative telecommunication
providers for
toll service, or 2 or more alternative providers for basic local exchange
service, are furnishing a comparable voice the same telecommunication service to the
customers in the exchange. A
comparable voice service includes any 2-way voice service offered through any
form of technology that is capable of placing and receiving calls from a
provider of basic local exchange service, including voice over internet
protocol services and wireless services.
(2) A telecommunication provider proposing to discontinue a
regulated service to an exchange shall file a notice of the discontinuance of
service with the commission, publish the notice in a newspaper of general
circulation within the exchange, provide notice to each of its customers within the exchange
by first-class mail or within customer bills, and provide other
reasonable notice as required by the commission.
(3) Within 60
30 days
after the date of publication or
receipt of the notice required by subsection (2), a person or
other telecommunication provider affected by a discontinuance of services by a
telecommunication provider may apply to the commission to determine if the
discontinuance of service is authorized under this act. Within 90 days after the date of
publication of the notice required by subsection (2), the commission may, in
response to a request or on its own initiative, commence a proceeding to
determine if the discontinuance of service is authorized under this act. The
commission has 180 days from the date any proceeding is initiated under this
subsection to issue its final order. A provider shall not discontinue service
unless it has provided at least 60 days' notice to each customer after a
commission order has been issued under this subsection or after the last day
for initiating a proceeding under this subsection.
(4) Discontinuance of basic local exchange service under this
section by an incumbent local exchange carrier does not affect the requirements
of that incumbent local exchange carrier under federal law and this act. As
used in this subdivision, "incumbent local exchange carrier" means
that term as defined in section 251(h) of the telecommunications act of 1996,
47 USC 251. This section does not create, restrict, or expand the commission's
jurisdiction and authority for any of the following:
(a) The jurisdiction and authority established under section
201.
(b) The jurisdiction and authority to carry out the
commission's obligations to enforce the rights, duties, and obligations of an
entity that are established in sections 251 and 252 of the telecommunications
act of 1996, 47 USC 251 and 252, and any applicable agreement or wholesale
tariff or state law, rule, regulation, or order related to wholesale rights,
duties, and obligations, including, but not limited to, interconnection and
exchange voice traffic.
(c) The jurisdiction and authority to regulate switched
access rates, terms, and conditions, including the implementation of federal or
state law concerning intercarrier compensation.
(5) Subsections (1) to (3) do not apply after December 31,
2016. Beginning January 1, 2017, a telecommunication provider that provides
basic local exchange or toll service may discontinue that service in an
exchange by doing each of the following:
(a) At the same time as filing a petition under section 214
of the telecommunications act of 1996, 47 USC 214, all of the following:
(i) File a notice of the proposed
discontinuance of service with the commission.
(ii) Publish a notice of the proposed discontinuance
of service in a newspaper of general circulation within the exchange.
(iii) Provide notice of the proposed
discontinuance of service to each of the telecommunication provider's customers
within the exchange by first-class mail or within customer bills.
(iv) Provide notice of the proposed
discontinuance of service to any interconnecting telecommunication providers by
first-class mail or other notice permitted under the terms of the
interconnection agreement between the providers.
(b) Upon approval of the federal communications commission to
discontinue service, at least 90 days before discontinuing service, all of the
following:
(i) File a notice of the discontinuance of
service with the commission.
(ii) Publish a notice of the discontinuance of
service in a newspaper of general circulation within the exchange.
(iii) Provide notice of the discontinuance of
service to each of the telecommunication provider's customers within the
exchange by first-class mail or within customer bills.
(iv) Provide notice to any interconnecting
telecommunication providers by first-class mail or other notice permitted under
the terms of the interconnection agreement between the providers.
(6) After January 1, 2017, and only in an area in which a
telecommunication provider either has given notice of a proposed discontinuance
of service under subsection (5) or has discontinued service within the previous
90 days, a customer of that provider or any interconnecting telecommunication
provider may request the commission to investigate the availability of
comparable voice service with reliable access to 9-1-1 and emergency services
to that customer or a customer of an interconnecting telecommunication
provider. If the commission, after conducting an investigation to last no longer
than 180 days regarding the availability of comparable voice service with
reliable access to 9-1-1 and emergency services, determines that the federal
communications commission failed to make a finding that the present and future
public convenience and necessity is not adversely affected or has not
adequately addressed the issue, the commission shall declare by order that an
emergency exists in an area in this state that is not served by at least 1
voice service provider offering comparable voice service with reliable access
to 9-1-1 and emergency services through any technology or medium and shall
conduct a request for service process to identify a willing provider of
comparable voice service with reliable access to 9-1-1 and emergency services
in that area, including the current provider. A provider shall not be required
to participate in the request for service process. The willing provider may
utilize any form of technology that is capable of providing comparable voice
service with reliable access to 9-1-1 and emergency services, including voice
over internet protocol services and wireless services. If the commission
determines that another provider is not capable of providing comparable voice
service with reliable access to 9-1-1 and emergency services in that area, the
commission shall issue an order requiring the current telecommunication
provider to provide comparable voice service with reliable access to 9-1-1 and
emergency services in that area utilizing any form of technology that the
commission determines is capable of providing comparable voice service with
reliable access to 9-1-1 and emergency services, including voice over internet
protocol services and wireless services, until another willing provider is
available. An intrastate universal service fund under section 316a shall not be
created or used to compensate or fund a willing provider or current
telecommunication provider to provide service under this section. As used in
this subsection:
(a) "Comparable voice service" includes any 2-way voice
service offered through any form of technology, including voice over internet
protocol services and wireless services, that is capable of placing calls to
and receiving calls from a provider of basic local exchange service.
(b) "Emergency services" means services provided to
the public by police, fire, ambulance, or other first responders.
(c) "Reliable access to 9-1-1" means the rules,
regulations, and guidelines set forth in the FCC trials order, including all
appendices, that provide comparable and reliable consumer access to emergency
services.
(d) "Willing provider" means a provider that
voluntarily participates in the request for service process.
(7) Beginning January 1, 2017, a telecommunication provider
that discontinues service under this section shall adhere to all rules,
regulations, and guidelines set forth in the FCC trials order, including all
appendices, for each of that telecommunication provider's exchanges in this
state, whether or not the discontinuance is undertaken pursuant to an official
trial under the FCC trials order, except that all notices or reports to be
filed with the federal communications commission shall be submitted to the
Michigan public service commission for its information. This subsection is
effective until the federal communications commission determines the legal and
policy framework and establishes the requirements for the IP-transition
including emergency connectivity requirements that provide comparable and
reliable consumer access to emergency services.
(8) As used in this section, "FCC trials order"
means the order of the federal communications commission, GN docket nos. 13-5
and 12-353, adopted January 30, 2014, and any subsequent order of the federal
communications commission modifying or revising that order that includes
emergency connectivity requirements that provide comparable and reliable
consumer access to emergency services.
Sec. 314. (1) A provider of a
regulated service shall not discontinue the regulated service for failure by a
customer to pay a rate or charge imposed for an unregulated service. For the
purposes of this section, the commission may determine how payments are
allocated between regulated and unregulated services.
(2) The commission shall determine when and under what conditions a provider of basic local exchange service may discontinue service under this section.
Sec. 321. A provider of a regulated telecommunication service shall not charge a rate for the service that is less than the total service long run incremental cost of providing the service.
Sec. 353a. (1) When
negotiating a successor interconnection agreement, unless the parties agree
otherwise, the parties shall use an interconnection agreement which that has been approved
by the commission in the 3-year period immediately preceding the commencement
of negotiations as the baseline document. A party requesting the adoption of language different than
that found in the baseline document in an arbitration proceeding bears the
burden of persuasion that the requested change is lawful and appropriate.
(2) If a party negotiating an interconnection agreement takes
a position that the opposing party believes is contrary to a prior ruling of
the commission in an arbitration proceeding, the opposing party may file a
motion with the commission for a determination under this section. The motion shall must be filed no later
than 90 days from after the commencement
of negotiations. The commission shall rule upon the motion within 21 days of after the date the
motion is filed, and the commission shall determine the extent to which the
issue may be relitigated.
Sec. 362. (1) The rate of a provider
of local exchange service is subject to subsection (2) if all of the following
apply:
(a)
The provider has a service that competes with a service of another provider.
(b)
The other provider utilizes a service, including any unbundled service element
or basic network component, from the provider of local exchange service that is
not available within the relevant market or geographic area from any other
provider of local exchange service.
(c)
The provider of local exchange service uses that same noncompetitive service or
its functional equivalent.
(2)
The rate of a telecommunication service must exceed the sum of both of the
following:
(a)
The tariffed rates, including access, carrier common line, residual
interconnection, and similar charges, for the noncompetitive service or its
functional equivalent that is actually used by the provider of local exchange
service, as those rates would be charged a customer for the use of that
service.
(b) The total service long run incremental costs of all other components of the provider of local exchange service.
Sec. 401. (1)
Except as otherwise provided by law or preempted by federal law, the commission
does not have authority over enhanced services, paging, cellular, mobile,
answering services, retail
broadband service, video, cable service, pay-per-view, shared
tenant, private networks, financial services networks, radio and television,
WATS, personal communication networks, municipally owned telecommunication
system, 800 prefix services, burglar and fire alarm services, energy management
services, except for state institutions of higher education the reselling of
centrex or its equivalent, payphone services, interconnected voice over
internet protocol service, and the reselling of an unlicensed telecommunication
service. The services listed in this subsection shall are not be considered part of basic local exchange
service.
(2) The commission has authority over the telecommunication
services specifically provided for in this act.
(3) This section does not modify or affect either of the
following:
(a) The authority of a provider or the commission to act
pursuant to or enforce 47 USC 251, 47 USC 252, any lawful and applicable
tariff, or any state law, regulation, or order related to wholesale rights and
obligations, including the rights and obligations of local exchange carriers to
interconnect and exchange voice traffic.
(b) The payment of switched access rates or other
intercarrier compensation rates, as applicable.
Sec. 502. (1) A provider of a basic local exchange telecommunication service shall not do
any of the following:
(a) Make a statement or
representation, including the omission of material information, regarding the
rates, terms, or conditions of providing a telecommunication service that is intentionally false,
misleading, or deceptive. As used in this subdivision, "material
information" includes, but is not limited to, a good faith estimate of all applicable fees, taxes,
and charges that will be billed to the end-user, regardless of whether the
fees, taxes, or charges are authorized by state or federal law.
(b) Charge an end-user
for a subscribed service for which the end-user did not make an initial
affirmative order. Failure to refuse an offered or proposed subscribed service
is not an affirmative order for the service.
(c) If an end-user has
canceled a service, charge the end-user for service provided after the
effective date the service was canceled.
(d)
If a residential end-user has orally ordered a service, fail to confirm the
order in writing within 15 days after the service is ordered.
(e)
State to an end-user that their basic local exchange service or other regulated
service will be discontinued unless the end-user pays a charge that is due for
an unregulated service.
(f)
Disparage the services, business, or reputation of another by false, deceptive,
or misleading representation of fact.
(g)
Represent to a party to whom services are supplied that the services are being
supplied in response to a request made by or on behalf of the party when they
are not.
(h)
(d) Cause a probability of confusion or a misunderstanding
as to the legal rights, obligations, or remedies of a party to a transaction by
making an intentionally false, deceptive, or misleading statement or by failing
to inform the customer of a material fact, the omission of which is deceptive
or misleading.
(i)
(e) Represent or imply that the subject of a transaction
will be provided promptly, or at a specified time, or within a reasonable time,
if the provider knows or has reason to know it will not be so provided.
(j)
Cause coercion and duress as a result of the time and nature of a sales
presentation.
(k)
(f) Require the purchase of a regulated service of the
provider as a condition of purchasing an unregulated service.
(l) (g) If a bona fide dispute
exists between a customer and the provider, disconnect the service to the
customer for nonpayment of that disputed amount.
(2) When the commission
has authority to bring a proceeding for a violation of this section, the
commission may accept an assurance of discontinuance of a method, act, or
practice that is alleged to be unlawful under this section from the person who
is alleged to have engaged, be engaging, or be about to engage in the method,
act, or practice. The assurance of discontinuance is not an admission of guilt
and shall must not be introduced in any other
proceeding. Unless rescinded by the parties or voided by the court for good
cause, the parties to the assurance of discontinuance may enforce the assurance
in circuit court. The assurance of discontinuance may include a stipulation for
any of the following:
(a) The voluntary payment
by the person for the cost of investigation.
(b) An amount to be held
in escrow pending the outcome of an action.
(c) An amount for restitution to an aggrieved person.
Sec. 503. (1) The commission shall promulgate
rules that establish privacy guidelines in the providing of telecommunication
services.
(2) The rules promulgated under this section must include,
but need not be limited to, protections against the releasing of certain
customer information and customer privacy intrusions.
(3) A person who obtains an unpublished telephone number using a
telephone caller identification service shall not do any of the following
without the written consent of the customer of the unpublished telephone
number:
(a) Disclose the unpublished telephone number to another
person for commercial gain.
(b) Use the unpublished telephone number to solicit business.
(c) Intentionally disclose the unpublished telephone number
through a computer data base, on-line bulletin board, or other similar
mechanism.
Sec. 504. Each telecommunication
provider doing business in this state shall file with the commission a small
and minority owned telecommunication business, as defined by the department of
management and budget, participation plan. A new provider seeking to do
business in this state shall file a small and minority owned telecommunication
business participation plan with the commission with its application for
license. The plan must contain the entity's plan for purchasing goods and
services from small and minority telecommunications businesses and information
on programs, if any, to provide technical assistance to small and minority
telecommunications businesses.
Sec. 602. The commission shall assure that none of the amounts paid under section 601 or any other related defense costs are passed through to the provider's customers in any manner.