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1. Miller & Van Eaton P.L.L.C
Washington D.C. San Francisco, California
MUNICIPAL COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS Key Legal Issues for Texas Cities
2. August 2, 2007 Page 2 Miller & Van Eaton P.L.L.C
Summary of Presentation Basic terminology/concepts
State law and municipal networking
Federal law and municipal networking
A closer look: Wi-Fi legal issues
Conclusion: what legal requirements mean for planning and implementation
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Terms Three basic categories of services
Cable service
Telecommunications service common carriage of signals chosen by the user to locations designated by the user
Information services services involving storage, forwarding and manipulation of information: call waiting, e-mail, Internet service
CAUTIONS: definitions vary slightly, state to state and from fed to states; AND there are many activities outside these definitions; AND many activities whose status is unknown
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Basic Structural Issues Two basic modes of communication
Wireline
Wireless
Each can be used to provide telecom, information or video services
For wireless modes, service may be provided on:
licensed frequencies (protected from interference by others)
unlicensed frequencies (Wi-Fi being a prime example) no interference protection
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Significance State law defines:
what services a municipality may provide, and under what conditions
roles of the state and locality in regulating providers, consistent with federal law
Federal law defines obligations and rights that attach when:
a locality is providing a particular type of service in a particular way
a locality is regulating another service provider
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Key State Law Issues Texas law effectively prohibits a locality from providing most telecom services directly or indirectly to the public; BUT
Texas law does not prevent localities from providing cable services or information services wirelessly or via wireline facilities
Texas law does not prevent a locality from leasing dark fiber on a nondiscriminatory, nonpreferential basis
Texas law allows provision of telecom services as part of the provision of an energy service.
See: TEXAS UTILITY CODE SEC 54.201-202
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Key State Law Issues UTILITY CODE 54.204 contains strong anti-discrimination provisions with respect to telecom service:
access to RoW
access to buildings
pole attachment and conduit rates
AND requires a uniform pole/conduit attachment rate
LOCAL GOVT CODE 283.056 allows for police power regulation of telecom providers:
apply to all persons
competitively neutral and non-discriminatory
UTILITY CODE 66.010 contains similar requirements for an entity holding a state video franchise
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Federal Law Key Points Contains nothing that directly restricts localities from providing telecom services, cable services, or information services. BUT:
Different rights and obligations apply depending on what services are provided; and how those are provided
Generally telecom service and cable service providers have greatest regulatory obligations, and regulatory benefits
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Trade-offs: Info Services v. Telecom Services No state PUC or local regulation
FCC is applying (or considering applying)
CALEA
911
Other requirements
No rights against carriers for
Interconnection
Non-discrimination
Revenue sharing
No 224 (pole attachment) rights of CATV or Telecomm Service
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Federal Law: Key Points Federal law imposes limitations on local authority to regulate, e.g.
Sec 253 non-discriminatory access to RoW (and other facilities?) for telecom providers
Over-the-Air Reception Devices Rule (OTARD)
Limitation on local authority to prevent interference in unlicensed spectrum
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Federal Law Key Points AND Federal law may create new opportunities
Public safety spectrum (generally)
700 MHz
Lautenberg/Boucher bills (preempting states laws prohibiting municipalities from providing advanced telecom services)
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Applying the Rules: Wi-Fi Several different models for provision of Wi-Fi.
Municipal Provisioning
Free Service License
Revenue-Generating License
Anchor Tenant
Franchise
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Examples of legal issues Regulation of Radio Frequency Interference
Compliance with the Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) Pub. L. No. 103-414, 108 Stat. 427 (1994) (codified in 18 U.S.C. and 47 U.S.C.)
Compliance with OTARD
Management of the Public Rights-of-Way
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Comparing the Models Where municipality is providing service, it must comply with federal requirements like CALEA; but local ability to prevent frequency interference, control RoW use is maximized
Where municipality is partnering to provide service, CALEA may not apply (depending on municipal role), but other issues are of greater concern.
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Example: OTARD Danger: if provider has exclusive use of space on pole, it may be entitled to provide services, and install facilities not contemplated by contracts
Possible approach: carefully craft contract to avoid granting OTARD rights; seek waivers of OTARD rights
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Example: RoW Danger: If locality mixes RoW regulation with contract for services, it may find itself forced to extend the same benefits to other RoW users
Approach: do not mix service concepts/ RoW regulation or provide means for altering the contract if a problem arises
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Looking Beyond Wi-Fi Planning for a municipal system requires localities to decide
WHAT services to provide
TO WHOM the services should be provided
WHAT technology will be used to deliver the services
WHO will own facilities/provide services
ALL these issues are driven by legal considerations, which impose different limitations/costs depending on choices made
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Looking Beyond Wi-Fi This field is rapidly changing, and there may be different ways to meet goals
Important to retain flexibility, while focusing on what is required to meet current goals
Required: coordinated, careful legal planning at every stage of the process