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Am. Sub. H. B. No. 218 As Reported by the Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee
As Reported by the Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee
126th General Assembly | Regular Session | 2005-2006 |
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Representatives Daniels, Taylor, McGregor, Bubp, J. Stewart, Gibbs, Raussen, Cassell, Uecker, T. Patton, Buehrer, Webster, Aslanides, Widener, Martin, Seitz, Flowers, Carmichael, G. Smith, Schlichter, Schneider, Coley, White, Reinhard, C. Evans, Collier, Hood, Hartnett, Latta, Strahorn, Distel, Hagan, Wagoner, Calvert, Carano, Peterson, Setzer
Senators Niehaus, Jacobson, Schuler
A BILL
To amend sections 4905.04, 4927.02, 4927.03, and 4927.04 and to enact sections 4905.041 and 4905.042 of the Revised Code to revise state telecommunications policy, authorize the Public Utilities Commission to allow alternative regulation of basic local exchange service provided by larger companies, and specify the scope of Commission authority regarding wholesale telecommunications services, advanced services, and internet protocol-enabled services.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF OHIO:
Section 1. That sections 4905.04, 4927.02, 4927.03, and 4927.04 be amended and sections 4905.041 and 4905.042 of the Revised Code be enacted to read as follows:
Sec. 4905.04. (A) The public utilities commission is hereby vested
with the power
and jurisdiction to supervise and regulate public utilities and railroads, to
require all public utilities to furnish their products and render all services
exacted by the commission or by law, and to promulgate and enforce all orders
relating to the protection, welfare, and safety of railroad employees and the
traveling public, including the apportionment between railroads and the state
and its political subdivisions of the cost of constructing protective devices
at railroad grade crossings. (B) Division Subject to sections 4905.041 and 4905.042 of the Revised Code, division (A) of this section includes such power and
jurisdiction as is reasonably necessary for the commission to perform the acts
of a state commission pursuant to the "Telecommunications
Act of 1996," Pub. L. No. 104-104, 110
Stat. 56 federal law, including federal regulations, the acts of a state commission as defined in 47 U.S.C. 153.
Sec. 4905.041. (A) The public utilities commission shall not establish any requirements for the unbundling of network elements, for the resale of telecommunications services, or for network interconnection that exceed or are inconsistent with or prohibited by federal law, including federal regulations. (B) The commission shall not establish pricing for such unbundled elements, resale, or interconnection that is inconsistent with or prohibited by federal law, including federal regulations, and shall comply with federal law, including federal regulations, in establishing such pricing.
Sec. 4905.042. Regarding advanced services or internet protocol-enabled service as defined by federal law, including federal regulations, the public utilities commission shall not exercise any jurisdiction over those services that is prohibited by, or is inconsistent with its jurisdiction under, federal law, including federal regulations.
Sec. 4927.02. (A) It is the policy of this state to: (1) Ensure the availability of adequate basic local exchange service to
citizens throughout the state; (2) Maintain Rely on market forces, where they are present and capable of supporting a healthy and sustainable, competitive telecommunications market, to maintain just and reasonable rates, rentals, tolls, and charges for
public
telecommunications service; (3) Encourage innovation in the telecommunications industry; (4) Promote diversity and options in the supply of public telecommunications
services and equipment throughout the state; (5) Recognize the continuing emergence of a competitive telecommunications
environment through flexible regulatory treatment of public telecommunications
services where appropriate; (6) Consider the regulatory treatment of competing and functionally equivalent services in determining the scope of regulation of services that are subject to the jurisdiction of the public utilities commission; (7) Not unduly favor or advantage any provider and not unduly disadvantage providers of competing and functionally equivalent services; and (8) Protect the affordability of telephone service for low-income subscribers through the continuation of lifeline assistance programs. (B) The public utilities commission shall consider the policy set forth in
this section in carrying out sections 4927.03 and 4927.04 of the Revised Code and in reducing or eliminating the regulation of telephone companies under those sections as to any public telecommunications service.
Sec. 4927.03. (A)(1) Except as provided in division (B)
of this section, the The public utilities commission, upon its own
initiative or the application of a telephone company or
companies, after notice, after affording the public and any
affected telephone company a period for comment, and after a
hearing if it considers one necessary, may, by order, exempt any
such telephone company or companies, as to any public
telecommunications service except, including basic local exchange service,
from any provision of Chapter 4905. or 4909., or sections 4931.01 to 4931.35 of the Revised Code
or any rule or order adopted or issued under those chapters provisions, or establish
alternative regulatory requirements to apply to such public
telecommunications service and company or companies; provided the
commission finds that any such measure is in the public interest
and either of the following conditions exists: (a) The telephone company or companies are subject to
competition with respect to such public telecommunications
service; (b) The customers of such public telecommunications
service have reasonably available alternatives. (2) In determining whether the conditions in division
(A)(1)(a) or (b) of this section exist, factors the commission
shall consider include, but are not limited to: (a) The number and size of alternative providers of
services; (b) The extent to which services are available from
alternative providers in the relevant market; (c) The ability of alternative providers to make
functionally equivalent or substitute services readily available
at competitive rates, terms, and conditions; (d) Other indicators of market power, which may include
market share, growth in market share, ease of entry, and the
affiliation of providers of services.
(3) To authorize an exemption or establish alternative regulatory requirements under division (A)(1) of this section with respect to basic local exchange service, the commission additionally shall find that there are no barriers to entry. Further, as to an exemption with respect to basic local exchange service, the commission shall not exempt a telephone company from sections 4905.20, 4905.21, 4905.22, 4905.231, 4905.24, 4905.241, 4905.242, 4905.243, 4905.244, 4905.25, 4905.26, 4905.30, 4905.32, 4905.33, 4905.35, and 4905.381 of the Revised Code. (B) As used in this division, "basic local exchange
service" has the same meaning as in section 4927.01 of the
Revised Code, but excludes within a local service area exchange
areas to which extended area service is provided. The public utilities commission shall not approve or
authorize any exemption from or modification of any provision of
Chapter 4905. or 4909. of the Revised Code or any rule or order
issued under them which would impair the exclusive right of any
telephone company under those chapters, rules, or orders to
provide basic local exchange service in the local service areas
in which such service is provided by the company on the effective
date of this section. Nothing
in this division,
however, shall be construed to require the withdrawal or prevent
the offering by any telephone company of interexchange inward
calling services terminating on a local exchange access line or
interexchange services that employ dedicated access between the
customer's premises and the telephone company's facilities merely
because incidental use of such services by the customer for basic
local exchange service is possible. Such offering shall not be
promoted or marketed as basic local exchange service. Nothing in
this division affects the commission's authority and duties under
sections 4905.241 to 4905.25 of the Revised Code.
(C) In carrying out this section, the public utilities
commission may prescribe different classifications, procedures,
terms, or conditions for different telephone companies and for
the public telecommunications services they provide, provided
they are reasonable and do not confer any undue economic,
competitive, or market advantage or preference upon any telephone
company.
(D)(C) The public utilities commission has jurisdiction over
every telephone company providing a public telecommunications
service that has received an exemption or for which alternative
regulatory requirements have been established pursuant to this
section. As to any such company, the commission, after notice
and hearing, may abrogate or modify any order so granting an
exemption or establishing alternative requirements if it
determines that the findings upon which the order was based are
no longer valid and that the abrogation or modification is in the
public interest. No such abrogation or modification shall be
made more than eight five years after the date an order granting an
exemption or establishing alternative requirements under this
section was entered upon the commission's journal, unless the
affected telephone company or companies consent.
(E)(D) The public utilities commission shall adopt such rules
as it finds necessary to carry out this section. It shall adopt rules initially implementing the amendment of this section by H.B. No. 218 of the 126th general assembly within one hundred twenty days after the effective date of the amendment. In adopting those rules, the commission shall consider the establishment of elective alternative regulation specific to a telephone company that is an incumbent local exchange carrier as defined in 47 U.S.C. 252(h) having fewer than fifty thousand access lines.
Sec. 4927.04. (A)(1) In considering an application pursuant
to section 4909.18 of the Revised
Code, the rates and charges for basic local exchange
service or any other public telecommunications service for which
the public utilities commission has not provided an exemption or
alternative regulatory requirements under section 4927.03 of the
Revised Code may be established by the commission, upon its own
initiative or the
request of the an applicant telephone company, by a method other than that specified in section
4909.15
of the Revised Code, provided the commission finds the use of the
alternative method of establishing rates and charges to be in the
public interest and provided, in instances where the alternative
method is proposed by the commission, the applicant consents.
Alternative methods may include, but are not limited to, methods
that maintain universal telephone service in the state; minimize
the costs and time expended in the regulatory process; tend to
assess the costs of any telecommunications service to the entity
or service that causes such costs to be incurred; afford rate
stability; promote and reward efficiency, quality of service, or
cost containment by telephone companies; or provide sufficient
flexibility and incentives to the telecommunications industry to
achieve high quality, technologically advanced, and universally
available telecommunications services at just and reasonable
rates and charges. (2) An application which that proposes an alternative method of
establishing rates and charges which that could result in an increase in any rate or
charge for basic local exchange service or any other public telecommunications
service for which the public utilities commission has not provided an exemption
or alternative regulatory requirements under section 4927.03 of the Revised Code without
further action by the commission shall be deemed, without further action by the commission, to be an application for an
increase in rates and charges under section 4909.18 of the Revised Code, notwithstanding
whether an immediate increase in rates and charges is proposed. (3) An application pursuant to section 4909.18 of the Revised Code which that is not for an
increase in rates and charges, but which that proposes an alternative method of
establishing rates and charges for basic local exchange service or any other
public telecommunications service for which the public utilities commission has
not provided an exemption or alternative regulatory requirements under section
4927.03 of the Revised Code, shall include the exhibits specified in divisions
(A) to
(D) of section 4909.18 of the Revised Code, unless otherwise ordered by the
commission. Notwithstanding any provision of section 4909.18 of the Revised
Code to the
contrary, after the date such application is filed, any
person may file a request for hearing on the application. If it appears to
the commission that the request sets forth reasonable grounds for holding a
hearing, the commission shall set the matter for hearing and shall give notice
of such hearing as provided in section 4909.18 of the Revised Code. (B) Upon the application of any telephone company that is an incumbent local exchange carrier as defined in 47 U.S.C. 252(h) having
fewer than fifteen fifty thousand access lines, the public utilities
commission, by order, may exempt such company, with respect
to
any public telecommunications service it provides, from any
provision of Chapter 4905. or 4909. of the Revised Code that is
specified and requested in such application, except sections
4905.20, 4905.21, 4905.22, 4905.231, 4905.24, 4905.241, 4905.242,
4905.243, 4905.244, 4905.25, 4905.26, 4905.30, 4905.32, 4905.33,
4905.35, and 4905.381 of the Revised Code; or may establish
alternative regulatory requirements to apply to such company and
service, provided the commission finds that the alternative
requirements are in the public interest. (C) In carrying out this section, the public utilities
commission may use different methods of establishing the rates
and charges of different telephone companies, provided that the
methods are reasonable and do not confer any undue economic,
competitive, or market advantage or preference upon any telephone
company. (D) The public utilities commission shall adopt such rules
as it finds necessary to carry out this section.
Section 2. That existing sections 4905.04, 4927.02, 4927.03, and 4927.04 of the Revised Code are hereby repealed.
Section 3. The amendment of sections 4927.03 and 4927.04 of the Revised Code by this act does not invalidate any rule adopted or order issued by the Public Utilities Commission under those sections and in effect prior to the effective date of the act.
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