The following regulations are hereby adopted and shall be known as the cable TV regulations for the city.
(1986 Code, ch. 4, sec. 10:1)
Unless otherwise apparent, the following definitions shall apply in this article:
Affiliated programmer.
An affiliated programmer is a programmer with an ownership interest of 5 percent or more including general partnership interests, direct ownership interests, and stock interests in a corporation where such stockholders are officers or directors or who directly or indirectly own 5 percent or more of the outstanding stock, whether voting or nonvoting. Such interests include limited partnership interests of 5 percent or greater.
Basic service tier.
The basic service tier shall, at a minimum, include all signals of domestic television broadcast stations provided to any subscriber (except a signal secondarily transmitted by satellite carrier beyond the local service area of such station, regardless of how such signal is ultimately received by the cable system), any public, educational, and governmental programming required by the franchise to be carried on the basic tier, and any additional video programming signals or service added to the basic tier by the cable operator.
Cable operator.
Any person or group of persons:
(1) 
Who provides cable service over a cable system within the city under a franchise issued by the city, and who directly or through one or more affiliates owns a significant interest in such cable system; or
(2) 
Who otherwise controls or is responsible for, through any arrangement, the management and operation of such a cable system.
Cable programming service.
Cable programming service includes any video programming provided over a cable system, regardless of service tier, including installation or rental of equipment used for the receipt of such video programming, other than:
(1) 
Video programming carried on the basic service tier as defined in this section;
(2) 
Video programming offered on a pay-per-channel or pay-per-program basis; or 46 * Federal law reference–Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act, Public Law No. 102-385 (1992).
(3) 
A combination of multiple channels of pay-per-channel or pay-per-program video programming offered on a multiplexed or time-shifted basis so long as the combined service:
(A) 
Consists of commonly identified video programming; and
(B) 
Is not bundled with any regulated tier of service.
Commission.
The Federal Communications Commission.
Small system.
A cable television system that serves 1,000 or fewer subscribers. The service area of a small system is determined by the number of subscribers that are served by a system’s principal headend, including any other headends or microwave receive sites that are technically integrated to the system’s principal headend.
(1986 Code, ch. 4, sec. 10:2)
A cable operator must provide the following information to subscribers on monthly bills:
(1) 
A statement substantially the same as the following: “The basic service tier rates and related equipment and installation charges are regulated by the City. If you have any questions or comments regarding these rates, you may call or write the City at 308 S. Houston, Cameron, Texas 76520 (817) 697-6646”;
(2) 
The name, mailing address and phone number of the Cable Services Bureau of the FCC; and
(3) 
The FCC community unit identifier for the cable system.
(1986 Code, ch. 4, sec. 10:3)
A cable operator shall not charge a subscriber for any service or equipment that the subscriber has not affirmatively requested by name. This provision, however, shall not preclude the addition or deletion of a specific program from a service offering, the addition or deletion of specific channels from an existing tier of service, or the restructuring or division of existing tiers of service that does not result in a fundamental change in the nature of an existing service or tier of service, provided that such change is otherwise consistent with applicable regulations. A subscriber’s failure to refuse a cable operator’s proposal to provide such service or equipment is not an affirmative request for service or equipment. A subscriber’s affirmative request for service or equipment may be made orally or in writing.
(1986 Code, ch. 4, sec. 10:4)
(a) 
Cable operators may identify as a separate line item of each regular subscriber bill the following:
(1) 
The amount of the total bill assessed as a franchise fee.
(2) 
The amount of the total bill assessed to satisfy any requirements imposed on the cable operator by the franchise agreement to support public, educational, or governmental channels or the use of such channels.
(3) 
The amount of any other fee, tax, assessment, or charge of any kind imposed by any governmental authority on the transaction between the operator and the subscriber. In order for a governmental fee or assessment to be separately identified under this section, it must be directly imposed by a governmental body on a transaction between a subscriber and an operator.
(b) 
The charge identified on the subscriber bill as the total charge for cable service should include all fees and costs itemized pursuant to this section.
(1986 Code, ch. 4, sec. 10:5)