FIRST REGULAR SESSION
SENATE COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE BILL NO. 495
95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Reported from the Committee on Commerce, Consumer Protection, Energy and the Environment, April 23, 2009, with recommendation that the Senate Committee Substitute do pass.
TERRY L. SPIELER, Secretary.
1386S.05C
AN ACT
To repeal sections 190.308 and 392.460, RSMo, and to enact in lieu thereof three new sections relating to telecommunications, with a penalty provision.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Missouri, as follows:
Section A. Sections 190.308 and 392.460, RSMo, are repealed and three new sections enacted in lieu thereof, to be known as sections 190.308, 392.460, and 392.600, to read as follows:
190.308. 1. In any county that has established an emergency telephone service pursuant to sections 190.300 to 190.320, it shall be unlawful for any person to misuse the emergency telephone service. For the purposes of this section, "emergency" means any incident involving danger to life or property that calls for an emergency response dispatch of police, fire, EMS or other public safety organization, "misuse the emergency telephone service", includes, but is not limited to, repeatedly calling the "911" for nonemergency situations causing operators or equipment to be in use when emergency situations may need such operators or equipment and "repeatedly" means three or more times within a one-month period.
2. Any violation of this section is a class B misdemeanor.
3. No political subdivision shall impose any fine or penalty on the owner of a pay telephone or on the owner of any property upon which a pay telephone is located for calls by another party to the emergency telephone service made from the pay telephone. Any such fine or penalty is hereby void.
392.460. 1. As used in this section, the following words shall mean:
(1) "Alternative service provider", any person or entity providing local voice services, or any person or entity allowing another person or entity to use its equipment or facilities to provide local voice services, or any person or entity securing rights to select an alternative service provider for a property owner or developer. Alternative service provider shall not include an incumbent local exchange carrier providing service within its commission-approved local exchange service area;
(2) "Greenfield area", real property that requires entirely new construction of local loops or local connectivity in addition to the deployment of any necessary switching and other network equipment to serve new real property developments;
(3) "Local voice service" or "local voice services", any two-way voice service offered through any form of technology that is capable of placing calls to or receiving calls from a provider of basic local telecommunications services, including voice over Internet protocol services;
(4) "Owner or developer", an entity that owns or develops a business or residential property, any condominium association or homeowner's association thereof, any person or entity having ownership in or control over the property, or any person acting on behalf of such owner or developer;
(5) "Real property", any single tenant or multitenant business or residential property, subdivisions, condominiums, apartments, office building, or office parks.
2. No telecommunications company authorized by the commission to provide or offer basic local or basic interexchange telecommunications service within the state of Missouri on January 1, 1984, shall abandon such service until and unless it shall demonstrate, and the commission finds, after notice and hearing, that such abandonment will not deprive any customers of basic local or basic interexchange telecommunications service or [access thereto] access to local voice service and is not otherwise contrary to the public interest.
3. Notwithstanding other provisions of this chapter or chapter 386, RSMo, a local exchange carrier obligated under this section to serve as the carrier of last resort in greenfield areas shall automatically be relieved of such obligation and shall not be obligated to provide basic local voice service or any telecommunications service to any occupants of real property if the owner or developer of the real property, or a person acting on behalf of the owner or developer of real property, engages in any of the following acts:
(1) Permits an alternative service provider to install its facilities or equipment used to provide local voice services based on a condition of exclusion of the local exchange carrier during the construction phase of the real property;
(2) Accepts or agrees to accept incentives or rewards from an alternative service provider that are contingent upon the provision of any or all local voice services by one or more alternative service providers to the exclusion of the local exchange carrier; or
(3) Collects from the occupants or residents of the real property mandatory charges for the provision of any local voice service provided by an alternative service provider to the occupants or residents in any manner, including, but not limited to, collection through rent, fees, or dues.
4. The local exchange carrier relieved of its carrier of last resort obligation to provide basic local telecommunications service to the occupants of real property under subsection 3 of this section shall notify the commission in writing of that fact within one hundred twenty days after receiving knowledge of the existence of such fact.
5. A local exchange carrier that is not relieved of its carrier of last resort obligation under subsections 2 and 3 of this section may seek a waiver of its carrier of last resort obligation from the commission for good cause shown based on the facts and circumstances of the provision of local voice service or Internet access services or video services to a particular real property. Upon petition for such relief, notice shall be given by the local exchange carrier at the same time to the relevant owner or developer. The commission shall make a determination concerning the petition on or before ninety days after such petition is filed, unless the commission determines that good cause exists to delay the determination for an additional ninety days and that such delay is not likely to have a materially adverse effect upon consumers of telecommunications services.
6. If a local exchange carrier is relieved of its carrier of last resort obligation under subsection 3 or 5 of this section, the owner or developer shall notify all occupants and any subsequent owner of the specific real property of the following:
(1) That the incumbent local exchange carrier does not have facilities installed to serve the specific real property, and that such carrier has been relieved of its carrier of last resort obligations; and
(2) The name of the person that will be providing local telecommunications service to the real property, and the type of technology that will be used to provide such service.
7. If all conditions described in subsection 3 and the conditions that form the basis for relief under subsection 5 of this section cease to exist at the property, no company is providing local voice service there, and the owner or developer requests in writing that the local exchange carrier make local voice service available to occupants of the real property and confirms in writing that all conditions described in subsections 3 and 5 of this section have ceased to exist at the property, the carrier of last resort obligation under this section shall again apply to the local exchange carrier at the real property. The local exchange carrier shall provide notice to the commission that it is assuming the carrier of last resort obligation. The local exchange carrier may require that the owner or developer pay the local exchange carrier in advance a reasonable fee to recover costs that exceed the costs that would have been incurred to construct or acquire facilities to serve customers at the real property initially. The commission may verify that the fee enables the local exchange carrier to recover its costs that exceed the costs that would have been incurred to construct or acquire facilities to serve customers at the real property initially, including, but not limited to, amounts necessary to install or retrofit any facilities or equipment, to cut or trench sidewalks and streets, and to restore roads, sidewalks, block walls, or landscapes to original conditions. The local exchange carrier shall have a reasonable period of time following the request from the owner or developer to make arrangements for local voice service availability.
If the conditions described in subsection 3 or the conditions that form the basis for relief under subsection 5 of this section again exist at the real property, the relief in subsection 3 or 5 of this section shall again apply.
8. When real property is located in a greenfield area, a carrier of last resort shall not automatically be excused from its obligations under subsection 3 of this section unless the alternative service provider possesses or will possess at the time of commencement of service the capability to provide local voice service or the functional equivalent of such service through any form of technology.
9. If an owner or developer of real property permits an alternative service provider to install its facilities or equipment used to provide local voice service to such property based on a condition of exclusion of the local exchange carrier, the owner or developer shall provide written notice to the purchaser of any such real property that there is an exclusion of that local exchange carrier and that the alternative service provider is the exclusive provider of service to such property.
10. An incumbent local exchange carrier shall have the right to require a payment from an owner or developer in cases where the costs of extending facilities to serve a multitenant business or residential property, including, but not limited to, apartments, condominiums, subdivisions, office buildings, or office parks are not economically reasonable. The terms and conditions applicable to such payments shall be specified in the incumbent local exchange carrier's tariffs. An incumbent local exchange carrier shall not be obligated to provide local voice service or any other telecommunications service without payment specified in the incumbent local exchange carrier's tariff.
11. Notwithstanding other provisions of this chapter or chapter 386, RSMo, an incumbent local exchange carrier may meet its carrier of last resort obligations by providing local voice service using any technology.
12. Any local exchange carrier relieved of its carrier of last resort obligation in a particular area under subsection 3 or 5 of this section shall not be deemed to have lost its general designation as carrier of last resort for essential local telecommunications service outside that area for purposes of subsection 5 of section 392.248.
13. When a local exchange carrier is relieved of the carrier of last resort obligation to serve in a designated area, in no instance shall the carrier of last resort obligation be transferred to any alternative service provider or provider of local voice service, including interconnected voice over Internet protocol service in that designated service area.
392.600. 1. The general assembly finds and declares it to be beneficial to Missouri consumers and the competitive market to change historical public policy and bring more transparency to rates for telecommunications services by reducing hidden subsidies within the intrastate switched exchange access compensation system through the reduction of switched exchange access rates paid from one company to another to originate and terminate telephone calls.
2. As used in this section, "composite" shall mean, when referring to intrastate or interstate switched exchange access rates, the sum of all of the traffic sensitive and non-traffic sensitive tariffed rate elements included in originating and terminating intrastate and interstate switched exchange access service, including, but not limited to, carrier common line, but excluding any subscriber line charges approved by the Federal Communications Commission.
3. Originating and terminating intrastate switched exchange access rates shall be reduced by all incumbent local exchange telecommunications companies, except that the provisions of this subsection shall not apply to any incumbent local exchange telecommunications company regulated under section 392.240. Each incumbent local exchange telecommunications company subject to this subsection shall decrease its composite originating and terminating intrastate switched exchange access rates each year by twenty percent of the difference between its current composite intrastate switched exchange access rate and its composite interstate switched exchange access rate, such that by December 31, 2013, the composite intrastate switched exchange access rate shall be equal to the composite interstate switched exchange access rate. The first twenty percent reduction shall occur by December 31, 2009, and each subsequent twenty percent reduction shall occur by December thirty-first of each subsequent year thereafter.
4. Beginning August 28, 2009, each incumbent local exchange telecommunications company regulated under section 392.240 shall have the option to reduce its composite intrastate switched exchange access rates. Each year a company makes such an optional rate reduction, it may file tariff revisions, effective concurrent with the rate reduction, to increase its rates for basic local telecommunications service by up to two dollars per month to balance the decrease in its composite intrastate switched exchange access rate reduction. The public service commission's review of such tariffs shall be limited to verifying the rate increase does not recover more revenue than the amount of the company's voluntary revenue reduction and the commission shall not conduct an earnings review or a review of all relevant factors pursuant to sections 392.230 or 392.240.
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