Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB986 Senate Committee Report / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    By: Carona S.B. No. 986
 (In the Senate - Filed February 28, 2011; March 8, 2011,
 read first time and referred to Committee on Business and Commerce;
 April 4, 2011, reported adversely, with favorable Committee
 Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 9, Nays 0; April 4, 2011,
 sent to printer.)
 COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR S.B. No. 986 By:  Carona


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to deregulation of certain telecommunications markets and
 companies.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 52.002, Utilities Code, is amended by
 adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
 (c)  The commission may not require a telecommunications
 utility that is not a public utility, including a deregulated or
 transitioning company, to comply with a requirement or standard
 that is more burdensome than a requirement or standard the
 commission imposes on a public utility.
 SECTION 2.  Subsection (b), Section 54.251, Utilities Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (b)  Except as specifically determined otherwise by the
 commission under this subchapter or Subchapter G of this chapter,
 and except as provided by Subchapters C and D, Chapter 65, the
 holder of a certificate of convenience and necessity[, or the
 holder of a certificate of operating authority issued under Chapter
 65,] for an area has the obligations of a provider of last resort
 regardless of whether another provider has a certificate of
 operating authority or service provider certificate of operating
 authority for that area.
 SECTION 3.  Section 54.3015, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 54.3015.  APPLICABILITY OF SUBCHAPTER.  This subchapter
 applies to a transitioning company [holder of a certificate of
 operating authority issued] under Chapter 65 in relation to its
 regulated exchanges in the same manner and to the same extent this
 subchapter applies to a holder of a certificate of convenience and
 necessity.
 SECTION 4.  Subsection (d), Section 56.023, Utilities Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (d)  The commission shall adopt rules for the administration
 of the universal service fund and this chapter and may act as
 necessary and convenient to administer the fund and this chapter.
 The rules must include procedures to ensure reasonable transparency
 and accountability in the administration of the universal service
 fund.
 SECTION 5.  Subchapter B, Chapter 56, Utilities Code, is
 amended by adding Section 56.032 to read as follows:
 Sec. 56.032.  SUPPORT AVAILABLE TO DEREGULATED MARKETS.
 (a)  An incumbent local exchange company may not receive support
 from the universal service fund for a deregulated market that has a
 population of at least 30,000.
 (b)  An incumbent local exchange company may receive support
 from the universal service fund for a deregulated market that has a
 population of less than 30,000 only if the company demonstrates to
 the commission that the company needs the support to provide basic
 local telecommunications service at reasonable rates in the
 affected market.  A company may use evidence from outside the
 affected market to make the demonstration.
 (c)  An incumbent local exchange company may make the
 demonstration described by Subsection (b) in relation to a market
 before submitting a petition to deregulate the market.
 SECTION 6.  Section 65.051, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 65.051.  MARKETS DEREGULATED.  A market that is
 deregulated as of September 1, 2011, shall remain deregulated.
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, the commission
 may not reregulate a market or company that has been deregulated
 [(a)     Except as provided by Subsection (b), all markets of all
 incumbent local exchange companies are deregulated on January 1,
 2006, unless the commission determines under Section 65.052(a) that
 a market or markets should remain regulated.
 [(b)     A market of an incumbent local exchange company in
 which the population in the area included in the market is less than
 30,000 is deregulated on January 1, 2007, unless the commission
 determines under Section 65.052(f) that the market should remain
 regulated].
 SECTION 7.  Subsections (a), (b), and (c), Section 65.052,
 Utilities Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  An incumbent local exchange company may petition the
 commission to deregulate a market of the company that the
 commission previously determined should remain regulated.
 Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, only the
 incumbent local exchange company may initiate a proceeding to
 deregulate one of the company's markets.  Not later than the 90th
 day after the date the commission receives the petition, [Except as
 provided by Subsection (f),] the commission shall:
 (1)  determine whether the regulated [each] market [of
 an incumbent local exchange company] should remain regulated [on
 and after January 1, 2006]; and
 (2)  issue a final order classifying the market
 [company] in accordance with this section [effective January 1,
 2006].
 (b)  In making a determination under Subsection (a), the
 commission may not determine that a market should remain regulated
 if:
 (1)  the population in the area included in the market
 is at least 100,000; or
 (2)  the population in the area included in the market
 is [at least 30,000 but] less than 100,000 and, in addition to the
 incumbent local exchange company, there are at least two
 competitors operating in all or part of the market that [three
 competitors of which]:
 (A)  are unaffiliated with the incumbent local
 exchange company [at least one is a telecommunications provider
 that holds a certificate of operating authority or service provider
 certificate of operating authority and provides residential local
 exchange telephone service in the market]; and
 (B)  provide voice communications service without
 regard to the delivery technology, including through:
 (i)  Internet Protocol or a successor
 protocol;
 (ii)  satellite; or
 (iii)  a technology used by a wireless
 provider or a commercial mobile service provider, as that term is
 defined by Section 64.201 [at least one is an entity providing
 residential telephone service in the market using facilities that
 the entity or its affiliate owns; and
 [(C)     at least one is a provider in that market of
 commercial mobile service as defined by Section 332(d),
 Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. Section 151 et seq.), Federal
 Communications Commission rules, and the Omnibus Budget
 Reconciliation Act of 1993 (Pub. L. No. 103-66), that is not
 affiliated with the incumbent local exchange company].
 (c)  If the commission deregulates a market under this
 section and the deregulation results in a regulated or
 transitioning company no longer meeting the definition of a
 regulated or transitioning company, the commission shall issue an
 order reclassifying the company as a transitioning company or
 deregulated company, as those terms are defined by Section 65.002
 [The commission shall issue an order classifying an incumbent local
 exchange company as a deregulated company that is subject to
 Subchapter C if:
 [(1)     the company does not have any markets in which the
 population in the area included in the market is less than 30,000;
 and
 [(2)     the commission does not determine that a market
 of the company should remain regulated on and after January 1,
 2006].
 SECTION 8.  Subsection (a), Section 65.102, Utilities Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A deregulated company that holds a certificate of
 operating authority issued under this subchapter:
 (1)  is a nondominant carrier governed in the same
 manner as a holder of a certificate of operating authority issued
 under Chapter 54;
 (2)  is not required to:
 (A)  fulfill the obligations of a provider of last
 resort;
 (B)  comply with retail quality of service
 standards or reporting requirements;
 (C)  file an earnings report with the commission
 unless the company is receiving support from the Texas High Cost
 Universal Service Plan; or
 (D)  comply with a pricing requirement other than
 a requirement prescribed by this subchapter; and
 (3)  [, except that the deregulated company:
 [(1)     retains the obligations of a provider of last
 resort under Chapter 54;
 [(2)]  is subject to the following provisions in the
 same manner as an incumbent local exchange company that is not
 deregulated:
 (A)  Sections 54.156, 54.158, and 54.159;
 (B)  Section 55.012; and
 (C)  Chapter 60[; and
 [(3)     may not increase the company's rates for
 stand-alone residential local exchange voice service before the
 date that the commission has the opportunity to revise the monthly
 per line support under the Texas High Cost Universal Service Plan
 pursuant to Section 56.031, regardless of whether the company is an
 electing company under Chapter 58].
 SECTION 9.  Section 65.151, Utilities Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 65.151.  PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO TRANSITIONING
 COMPANY.  (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (b), a [A]
 transitioning company is governed by this subchapter and the
 provisions of this title that applied to the company immediately
 before the date the company was classified as a transitioning
 company.  If there is a conflict between this subchapter and the
 other applicable provisions of this title, this subchapter
 controls.
 (b)  A transitioning company is not required to fulfill the
 obligations of a provider of last resort in a deregulated market.
 SECTION 10.  Subsection (b), Section 65.152, Utilities Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 (b)  A transitioning company may not be required to:
 (1)  comply with [exchange-specific] retail quality of
 service standards or reporting requirements in a market that is
 deregulated; or
 (2)  file an earnings report with the commission unless
 the company is receiving support from the Texas High Cost Universal
 Service Plan.
 SECTION 11.  Subchapter D, Chapter 65, Utilities Code, is
 amended by adding Sections 65.154 and 65.155 to read as follows:
 Sec. 65.154.  RATE AND PRICE REQUIREMENTS NOT APPLICABLE.
 (a)  A transitioning company is not required to comply with the
 following requirements prescribed by this title on submission of a
 written notice to the commission:
 (1)  a direct or indirect requirement to price a
 residential service at, above, or according to the long-run
 incremental cost of the service or to otherwise use long-run
 incremental cost in establishing prices for residential services;
 or
 (2)  a requirement to file with the commission a
 long-run incremental cost study for residential or business
 services.
 (b)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a), a transitioning company
 may not:
 (1)  establish a retail rate, price, term, or condition
 that is anticompetitive or unreasonably preferential, prejudicial,
 or discriminatory;
 (2)  establish a retail rate for a basic or non-basic
 service in a deregulated market that is subsidized either directly
 or indirectly by a basic or non-basic service provided in an
 exchange that is not deregulated; or
 (3)  engage in predatory pricing or attempt to engage
 in predatory pricing.
 (c)  A rate or price for a basic local telecommunications
 service is not anticompetitive, predatory, or unreasonably
 preferential, prejudicial, or discriminatory if the rate or price
 is equal to or greater than the rate or price in the transitioning
 company's tariff for that service in effect on the date the
 transitioning company submits notice to the commission under
 Subsection (a).
 (d)  This section, including Subsection (a)(1), does not
 affect:
 (1)  other law or legal standards governing predatory
 pricing or anticompetitive conduct; or
 (2)  an infrastructure commitment under Chapter 58 or
 59.
 Sec. 65.155.  COMPLAINT BY AFFECTED PERSON. (a)  An
 affected person may file a complaint at the commission challenging
 whether a transitioning company is complying with Section
 65.154(b).
 (b)  Notwithstanding Section 65.154(a)(2), the commission
 may require a transitioning company to submit a long-run
 incremental cost study for a business service that is the subject of
 a complaint submitted under Subsection (a).
 SECTION 12.  Subsections (d), (e), and (f), Section 65.052,
 and Sections 65.054 and 65.055, Utilities Code, are repealed.
 SECTION 13.  (a)  In this section, "commission" means the
 Public Utility Commission of Texas.
 (b)  Not earlier than January 2, 2012, the commission shall
 initiate one or more proceedings to review and evaluate whether the
 universal service fund accomplishes the fund's purposes, as
 prescribed by Section 56.021, Utilities Code, or whether changes
 are necessary to accomplish those purposes.
 (c)  The commission has all authority necessary to conduct
 the review, including determining issues relevant to each
 telecommunications provider's need for universal service fund
 support, adjusting monthly per line support amounts under Section
 56.031, Utilities Code, and implementing any other changes it
 determines are necessary and in the public interest.
 (d)  Notwithstanding Subsection (b), Section 56.024,
 Utilities Code, a party to a commission proceeding examining the
 universal service fund is entitled to access confidential
 information provided to the commission under Subsection (a),
 Section 56.024, Utilities Code, if a protective order is issued for
 the confidential information in the proceeding.
 (e)  The commission shall complete the proceeding or
 proceedings required by this section and issue any associated
 orders not later than November 1, 2012.  The commission shall
 provide to the legislature a copy of any findings or orders issued
 under this section.
 SECTION 14.  (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (b) of
 this section, this Act takes effect September 1, 2011.
 (b)  Sections 56.032, 65.154, and 65.155, Utilities Code, as
 added by this Act, take effect January 2, 2012.
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