Unless otherwise apparent, the following definitions shall apply
in this article:
Affiliated programmer.
An affiliated programmer is a programmer with an ownership
interest of five percent (5%) 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 five percent (5%) or more of the outstanding stock
whether voting or nonvoting. Such interests include limited partnership
interests of five percent (5%) 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.
Cable operator means any person or group of persons (i) 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 (ii)
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 if rental of equipment is 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
(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.
City.
The City of Stanton, Texas.
Small system.
A small system is a cable television system that serves fewer
than 1,000 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.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 2, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.701)
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 (915-756-3301)"; and
(2) The
FCC community unit identifier for the cable system.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 3, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.702)
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
do 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.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 4, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.703)
(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.
(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 the 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.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 5, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.704)
(a) Basic service tier rates.
Basic service tier rates are subject to regulation by the city in order to assure that they are in compliance with the requirements of 47 U.S.C. section 543. Rates that are demonstrated, in accordance with this article, not to exceed the "initial permitted per-channel charge" or the "subsequent permitted per-channel charge" as described below, or the equipment charges as specified in section
5.06.006, will be accepted as in compliance. The maximum monthly charge per subscriber for the basic service tier offered by a cable operator shall consist of a permitted per-channel charge multiplied by the number of channels on the tier, plus a charge for franchise fees. The maximum monthly charges for the basic service tier shall not include any charges for equipment or installations. Charges for equipment and installations are to be calculated separately pursuant to section
5.06.006 of this article.
(b) Initial permitted per-channel charge.
(1) For purposes of this section, the initial date of regulation for
the basic service tier shall be the date on which the city gives written
notice to the cable operator that (i) the city has been certified
by the commission to regulate rates for the basic service tier and
(ii) this article has been adopted by the city.
(2) For purposes of this section, rates "in effect on the initial date
of regulation" or "in effect on September 30, 1992," shall be the
rates charged to subscribers for service received on that respective
date.
(3) The permitted per-channel charge on the initial date of regulation
shall be, at the election of the cable operator, either:
(i) A charge determined pursuant to a cost-of-service proceeding; or
(ii)
The charge specified in subsection (i), (ii), or (iii) of this
subsection, as applicable:
(A)
If the operator's per-channel charge for the basic service tier
and equipment in effect on the date of initial regulation is equal
to or below the benchmark per-channel charge, as adjusted forward
for inflation from September 30, 1992, to the date of initial regulation,
then the permitted per-channel charge shall be the per-channel charge
in effect on the date of initial regulation, adjusted for equipment.
(B)
If: (a) the operator's per-channel charge for the basic service
tier and equipment in effect on the date of initial regulation is
above the benchmark per-channel charge, as adjusted forward for inflation
from September 30, 1992, until the initial date of regulation, and
(b) the operator's per-channel charge for the basic service tier and
equipment in effect on September 30, 1992, was above the benchmark
per-channel charge, then the permitted per-channel charge is nine-tenths
of the per-channel charge in effect on September 30, 1992, but no
lower than the benchmark per-channel charge, additionally adjusted
for inflation from September 30, 1992, to the initial date of regulation,
for equipment, and for any changes in the number of channels offered
on the basic service tiers.
(C)
If: (a) the operator's per-channel charge for the basic service
tier and equipment in effect on the date of initial regulation is
above the benchmark per-channel charge, as adjusted forward for inflation
from September 30, 1992, until the initial date of regulation, and
(b) the operator's per-channel charge for the basic service tier and
equipment in effect on September 30, 1992, was below the benchmark
per-channel charge, then the permitted per-channel charge is the benchmark
rate per channel adjusted for inflation from September 30, 1992, to
the initial date of regulation, for equipment, and for any changes
in the number of channels offered on the basic service tier.
(c) Subsequent permitted per-channel charge.
After the initial
date of regulation, the permitted channel charge for the basic service
tier shall be, at the election of the cable operator, either:
(1) A per-channel rate determined pursuant to a cost-of-service showing;
or
(2) The prior permitted per-channel charge previously approved by the city, adjusted for inflation and external costs in accordance with the price cap requirements set forth in subsection
(d) of this section.
(d) Price cap requirements.
(1) Inflation adjustments.
Permitted per-channel charges
for the basic service tier may be adjusted periodically on account
of inflation. Adjustments to permitted per-channel charges on account
of inflation shall be based on changes in the Gross National Product
Price Index (GNP-PI) published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis
of the United States Department of Commerce.
(2) External costs.
Permitted per-channel charges for the
basic service tier may also be adjusted for changes in external costs
measured on a per-channel per-subscriber basis. To the extent external
cost increases are greater or less than the GNP-PI for the relevant
period, the per-channel charge will be adjusted accordingly. Per-channel
charges may not be increased if external costs other than franchise
fees increase at a rate less than inflation. Permitted per-channel
charges also shall be decreased on account of external costs to the
extent such costs decrease from previous levels.
(A) Categories.
External costs shall consist of costs in
the following categories:
(i)
State and local taxes applicable to provision of cable television
service;
(iii)
Costs of complying with franchise requirements, including costs
of providing public, educational, and governmental access channels
as required by the city;
(iv)
Retransmission consent fees; and
(B) The permitted per-channel charge for the basic service tier shall
be adjusted on account of programming costs and retransmission consent
fees only for programming or broadcast signals offered on that tier.
(C) The permitted per-channel charge shall not be adjusted for costs
of retransmission consent fees or charges in those fees incurred prior
to October 6, 1994.
(D) The starting date for adjustments on account of external costs for
the basic service tier shall be the initial date of regulation or
180 days from September 1, 1993, if the initial date of regulation
occurs on or after 180 days from September 1, 1993.
(E) Changes in franchise fees shall not result in an adjustment to permitted
per-channel charges, but rather shall be calculated separately as
part of the maximum monthly charge per subscriber for the basic service
tier.
(F) Adjustments to permitted per-channel charges on account of increases
in costs of programming obtained from affiliated programmers shall
be the lesser of actual increases or the previous permitted rate level
increased by the amount of inflation.
(G) Adjustments to permitted per-channel charges on account of increases
in costs of programming shall be further adjusted to reflect any revenues
received by the operator from the programmer.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 6, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.705)
(a) Scope.
(1) The equipment regulated under this section consists of all equipment
in a subscriber's location that is used to receive the basic service
tier, regardless of whether such equipment is additionally used to
receive other tiers of regulated programming service and/or unregulated
service. Such equipment shall include, but is not limited to:
(C) Connections for additional television receivers; and
(2) Subscriber charges for such equipment shall not exceed charges based
on actual costs in accordance with the requirements set forth below.
(b) Unbundling.
A cable operator shall establish rates for
remote control units, converter boxes, other customer equipment, installation,
and additional connections separate from rates for the basic service
tier. In addition, the rates for such equipment and installations
shall be unbundled one from the other.
(c) Equipment basket.
A cable operator shall establish an equipment basket, which will include all costs associated with providing customer equipment and installation under this section. Equipment basket costs shall be limited to the direct and indirect material and labor costs of providing, leasing, installing, repairing, and servicing customer equipment, as determined in accordance with the cost accounting and cost allocation requirements of section
5.06.007. The equipment basket shall not include general administrative overhead including general marketing expenses. The equipment basket may include a reasonable profit.
(d) Hourly service charge.
A cable operator shall establish
charges for equipment and installation using the hourly service charge
(HSC) methodology. The HSC shall equal the operator's annual equipment
basket costs, excluding the purchase cost of customer equipment, divided
by the total person-hours involved in installing, repairing, and servicing
customer equipment during the same period. The purchase cost of customer
equipment shall include the cable operator's invoice price plus all
other costs incurred with respect to the equipment until the time
it is provided to the customer. The HSC is calculated according to
the following formula:
Where:
|
EB
|
=
|
Annual equipment basket cost;
|
CE
|
=
|
Annual purchase cost of all customer equipment; and
|
H
|
=
|
Person-hours involved in installing and repairing equipment
per year.
|
(e) Installation charges.
Installation charges shall be
either:
(1) The HSC multiplied by the actual time spent on each individual installation;
or
(2) The HSC multiplied by the average time spent on a specific type of
installation.
(f) Remote control charges.
Monthly charges for rental of
a remote control unit shall consist of the average annual unit purchase
cost of the type of remote leased, including acquisition price and
incidental costs such as sales tax, financing and storage up to the
time it is provided to the customer, added to the product of the HSC
times the average number of hours annually repairing or servicing
a remote, divided by 12 to determine the monthly lease rate for a
remote according to the following formula:
Monthly
Charge
|
=
|
UCE + (HSC x HR)
|
|
12
|
|
Where:
|
HR
|
=
|
Average hours repair per year; and
|
UCE
|
=
|
Average annual unit cost of remote.
|
Separate charges shall be established for each significantly
different type of remote control unit.
(g) Other equipment charges.
The monthly charges for rental
of converter boxes and other customer equipment shall be calculated
in the same manner as for remote control units and shall be established
for each significantly different type of converter box and each significantly
different type of other customer equipment.
(h) Additional connection charges.
The costs of installation and monthly use of additional connections shall be recovered as charges associated with the installation and equipment cost categories, and at rate levels determined by the actual cost methodology presented in the foregoing subsections
(e),
(f), and
(g) of this section. An operator may recover additional programming costs and the costs of signal boosters on the customer's premises, if any, associated with the additional connection as a separate monthly unbundled charge for additional connections.
(i) Charges for equipment sold.
A cable operator may sell
customer premises equipment to a subscriber. The equipment price shall
recover the operator's cost of the equipment, including costs associated
with storing and preparing the equipment for sale up to the time it
is sold to the customer, plus a reasonable profit. An operator may
sell service contracts for the maintenance and repair of equipment
sold to subscribers. The charge for a service contract shall be the
HSC times the estimated average number of hours for maintenance and
repair over the life of the equipment.
(j) Promotions.
A cable operator may offer equipment or installation at charges below those determined under subsections
(e) through
(g) of this section, as long as those offerings are reasonable in scope in relation to the operator's overall offerings in the equipment basket and not unreasonably discriminatory. Operators may not recover the cost of a promotional offering by increasing charges for other equipment basket elements, or by increasing programming service rates above the maximum monthly charge per subscriber prescribed by this article. As part of a general cost-of-service showing, an operator may include the cost of promotions in its general system overhead costs.
(k) Franchise fees.
Equipment charges may include a properly
allocated portion of franchise fees paid to the city.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 7, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.706)
(a) Applicability.
The requirements of this section are
applicable for purposes of rate adjustments on account of external
costs and for cost-of-service showings.
(b) Generally accepted accounting principles.
Cable operators
shall maintain their accounts in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles, except as otherwise directed by the city.
(c) Accounts required.
Cable operators shall maintain accounts
in a manner that will enable identification of appropriate costs and
application of the city's cost assignment and allocation procedures,
to cost categories necessary for rate adjustments due to changes in
external costs and for cost-of-service showings. Such categories shall
be sufficiently detailed and supported to permit verification and
audit against the company's accounting records.
(d) Accounting level.
Except to the extent indicated below,
cable operators shall aggregate expenses and revenues at either the
franchise, system, regional, or company level in a manner consistent
with practices of the operator as of April 3, 1992. However, in all
events, cable operators shall identify at the franchise level their
costs of franchise requirements, franchise fees, local taxes, and
local programming.
(e) Cost allocation requirements.
(1) For purposes of establishing expenses at the franchise level, cable
operators shall allocate expenses and revenues aggregated at higher
levels to the franchise level based on the ratio of the total number
of subscribers served at the franchise level to the total number of
subscribers served at the higher level.
(2) Except to the extent indicated below, all categories of costs allocated
to, or identified at, the franchise level shall be allocated to the
basic service tier based on the ratio of channels in the basic tier
to the total number of channels offered in the franchise area, including
nonregulated and leased commercial access channels. These costs shall
be allocated to each tier of cable programming services based on the
ratio of channels in that tier to the total number of channels offered
in the franchise area.
(3) Costs of programming and retransmission consent fees, however, shall
be allocated only to the tier on which the programming or broadcast
signal at issue is offered.
(4) Costs of franchise fees shall be allocated among equipment and installations,
program service tiers and subscribers in a manner that is most consistent
with the methodology of assessment of franchise fees by the city.
(5) Costs of public, educational, and governmental access channels carried
on the basic tier shall be directly assigned to the basic tier where
possible.
(f) Common costs.
Expenses which cannot be assigned to any
single expense or service category shall be described as common costs.
Common costs shall be allocated to expense categories as follows:
(1) Wherever possible, common costs are to be allocated to service cost
categories based on direct analysis of the origin of the costs themselves.
(2) When direct analysis is not possible, common costs shall, if possible,
be allocated to service cost categories based on an indirect, cost-causative
linkage to other costs directly assigned or allocated to the service
cost category.
(3) When neither direct nor indirect measures of cost allocation can
be found, common costs shall be allocated to each service cost category
based on the ratio of all costs directly assigned and attributed to
a service cost category over total costs directly assignable and attributable.
(g) Unrelated expenses and revenue.
Cable operators shall exclude from cost categories used to develop rates for the provision of the basic service tier and equipment, any direct or indirect expenses and revenues not related to the provision of such services. Common costs of providing the basic service tier and equipment and unrelated activities shall be allocated between them in accordance with subsection
(f) of this section.
(h) Part-time channels.
In situations where a single channel
is divided on a part-time basis and is used to deliver service associated
with different tiers or with pay-per-channel or pay-per-view service,
a reasonable and documented allocation of that channel between services
shall be required along with the associated revenues and costs.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 8, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.707)
(a) The
costs of satisfying franchise requirements to support public, educational,
and governmental channels shall consist of the sum of:
(1) All per-channel costs for the number of channels used to meet franchise
requirements for public, educational, and governmental channels;
(2) Any direct cost of meeting such franchise requirements; and
(3) A reasonable allocation of general and administrative overhead.
(b) The
costs of satisfying any other requirement under the franchise shall
consist of the direct and indirect costs, including a reasonable allocation
of general and administrative overhead.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 9, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.708)
(a) This
section shall govern charges for any changes in service tiers or equipment
provided to the subscriber that are initiated at the request of a
subscriber after initial service installation.
(b) The charge for customer changes in service tiers effected solely by coded entry on a computer terminal or by other similarly simple methods shall be a nominal amount, not exceeding actual costs, as defined in subsection
(c) of this section.
(c) The charge for customer changes in service tiers or equipment that involve more than coded entry on a computer or other similarly simple method shall be based on actual cost. The actual cost charge shall be either the HSC, as defined in section
5.06.006 of this article, multiplied by the number of person hours needed to implement the change, or the HSC multiplied by the average number of person hours involved in implementing customer changes.
(d) A
cable operator may establish a higher charge for changes effected
solely by coded entry on a computer terminal or by other similarly
simple methods, subject to approval by the city, for a subscriber
changing service tiers more than two times in a twelve-month period,
except for such changes ordered in response to a change in price or
channel line-up. If a cable system adopts such an increased charge,
the cable system must notify all subscribers in writing that they
may be subject to such a charge for changing service tiers more than
the specified number of times in any twelve-month period.
(e) Downgrade
charges that are the same as, or lower than, upgrade charges are evidence
of the reasonableness of such downgrade charges.
(f) For
30 days after notice of retiering or rate increases, a customer may
obtain changes in service tiers at no additional charge.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 10, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.709)
(a) A
cable operator shall provide written notice to a subscriber of any
increase in the price to be charged for the basic service tier or
associated equipment at least 30 days before any proposed increase
is effective. The notice shall include a provision stating that protests
to such prices may be filed with the city at 102 W. School St., PO
Box 370, Stanton, Texas, 79782. The notice shall also include a statement
that such protests must be filed with the city no later than 30 days
after the notice is received by the subscriber.
(b) In addition to the notice required in subsection
(a), the cable operator shall give the city a minimum of 30 days' advance written notification of any changes in rates for cable programming service or associated equipment.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 11, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.710)
A cable operator shall file its schedule of rates for the basic
service tier and associated equipment with the city within 30 days
of receiving written notification from the city that the city has
been certified by the commission to regulate rates for the basic service
tier, or by November 15, 1993, whichever is later.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 10, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.711)
(a) After a cable operator has submitted to the city for review its existing rates for the basic service tier and associated equipment costs, or a proposed increase in these rates (including increases in the baseline channel charge that result from reductions in the number of channels in a tier), the existing rates will remain in effect or the proposed rates will become effective after 30 days from the date of submission to the city. Provided, however, that the city may toll this 30-day deadline for an additional time by issuing a brief written order as described in subsection
(d) within 30 days of the rate submission explaining that it needs additional time to review the rates. The city may, at any time, require the cable operator to produce additional information, including proprietary information, that the city deems necessary in order to make a rate determination. If proprietary information is provided, the provisions of section
5.06.013 hereof will apply to such information.
(b) Upon
receipt by the city, the cable operator's submittal shall be available
for public inspection and copying. Comments on the submittal by interested
persons may be submitted in writing or orally at a city council meeting
held at any time during the initial 30-day review period. Written
comments shall be addressed to the city administrator-secretary or
the mayor and must be received prior to the end of the 30-day review
period.
(c) If
a cable operator submits a proposed rate increase for review that
appears to exceed the presumptively reasonable level and does not
include a cost-of-service showing to justify the rate, the city will
permit the cable operator to cure this deficiency and submit a cost-of-service
showing.
(d) If the city is unable to determine, based upon the material submitted by the cable operator, that the existing or proposed rates are within the permitted basic service tier charge or actual cost of equipment as defined in sections
5.06.005 and
5.06.006 hereof, or if a cable operator has submitted a cost-of-service showing pursuant to sections
5.06.007 and
5.06.014 hereof, seeking to justify a rate above the basic service tier charge as defined in sections
5.06.005 and
5.06.006 hereof, the city may toll the 30-day deadline in subsection
(a) of this section to request and/or consider additional information or to consider the comments from interested parties as follows:
(1) For an additional 90 days in cases not involving cost-of-service
showings; or
(2) For an additional 150 days in cases involving cost-of-service showings.
The order tolling the effective date of the proposed rate shall explain why the city could not make the necessary determination, and it shall also provide the cable operator an opportunity to cure any deficiencies in its original filing. During the additional time periods provided in this subsection, comments from interested persons may be submitted in writing, as provided in subsection
(b) of this section, or orally during at least one city council meeting during the period of abatement.
(e) If the city has availed itself of the additional 90 or 150 days permitted in subsection
(d) of this section, and has taken no action within these additional time periods, then the proposed rates will go into effect at the end of the 90- or 150-day periods, or existing rates will remain in effect at such times, subject to refunds if the city subsequently issues a written decision disapproving any portion of such rates. Provided, however, that in order to order refunds, the city must have issued a brief written order to the cable operator by the end of the 90- or 150-day period permitted in subsection
(d) of this section directing the operator to keep an accurate account of all amounts received by reason of the rate in issue and on whose behalf such amounts were paid.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 13, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.712; Ordinance adopting 2024 Code)
(a) If
the city has required the cable operator to produce proprietary information
under the provisions of this article, the cable operator may submit
therewith a request that such information not be made routinely available
for public inspection. A copy of the request shall be attached to
and shall cover all of the materials to which it applies and all copies
of those materials. If feasible, the materials to which the request
applies shall be physically separated from any materials to which
the request does not apply. If this is not feasible, the portion of
the materials to which the request applies shall be identified.
(b) Each
such request shall contain a statement of the reasons for withholding
the materials from inspection and of the facts upon which those reasons
are based. If the request is that the materials be withheld from inspection
for a limited period of time, that period shall be specified.
(c) Casual requests which do not comply with the requirements of subsections
(a) and
(b) of this section will not be considered.
(d) Upon receipt of a request in compliance with subsections
(a) and
(b), the city will not grant routine public access to the materials. A letter to that effect will be placed in a public file in lieu of the materials withheld from public inspection.
(e) Provided,
however, if a written request for the materials is received by the
city pursuant to the Open Records Act, chapter 552, Texas Government
Code, the city will notify the person providing the materials of the
request for the materials. If the person providing the materials requests
the city to do so, the city will request an opinion from the attorney
general, pursuant to the Open Records Act, regarding the public availability
of the materials. If the person providing the materials does not request
the city to request an opinion from the attorney general, the city
may, at its option, either request such an opinion or provide the
materials to the public.
(f) If
the attorney general issues an opinion or letter ruling requiring
the city to make the materials available to the public, the materials
will be made available for public inspection.
(g) If
no request for confidentiality is submitted, the city assumes no obligation
to consider the need for non-disclosure.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 14, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.713)
(a) A cable operator has the burden of proving that its existing or proposed rates for basic service and associated equipment comply with 47 U.S.C. 543, and sections
5.06.005 and
5.06.006 hereof.
(b) For an existing or a proposed rate for the basic service tier or associated equipment that is within the permitted tier charge and actual cost of equipment as set forth in sections
5.06.005 and
5.06.006, the cable operator must submit the appropriate FCC form to the city.
(c) For an existing or a proposed rate for the basic service tier that exceeds the permitted tier charge as set forth in sections
5.06.005 and
5.06.006 hereof, the cable operator must submit to the city a cost-of-service showing to justify the proposed rates. The cost-of-service showing must in conformance with accounting and cost allocation requirements as adopted and amended by the commission for cable system operators.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 15, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.714)
(a) Option 1.
(1) A small system, as defined in section
5.06.001, may certify that the small system's initial rates for basic service and associated equipment comply with section
5.06.005 hereof. A certification by a small system under this section shall be filed with the city within 30 days of receiving written notification from the city that the city has been certified by the commission to regulate rates for the basic service tier. The certification shall be in writing, shall be signed by the general manager of the system, and shall be verified.
(2) Such certification shall be subject to verification by the city on its own motion or upon complaint by a subscriber. The city may request additional information from the operator in order to verify the certification. In the event proprietary information is requested by the city, the provisions of section
5.06.013 hereof shall control the availability of such information to the public.
(3) As used in this section, "initial rates" shall mean those rates charged
by the small system operator on the date on which the city gives written
notice to the cable operator that (i) the city has been certified
by the commission to regulate rates for the basic service tier and
(ii) this article has been adopted by the city.
(4) If the city determines that the small system's certification is in
error, it shall so notify the small system operator and shall require
the small system to comply with all filing requirements for non-small
systems in this article.
(5) Subsequent rate filings by a small system operator shall comply in
all respects with the provisions of this article.
(b) Option 2.
(1) A small system, as defined in section
5.06.001, may certify that the small system's rates for basic service and associated equipment, and subsequent rate increases, comply with section
5.06.005 hereof. A certification by a small system under this section for its initial rates shall be filed with the city within 30 days of receiving written notification from the city that the city has been certified by the commission to regulate rates for the basic service tier. Certifications for subsequent rate increases shall be filed with the city at the same time that notice is given to the small system's subscribers of the proposed rate increase, in conformance with section
5.06.010 hereof. All certifications shall be in writing, shall be signed by the general manager of the system, and shall be verified.
(2) Such certification shall be subject to verification by the city on its own motion or upon complaint by a subscriber. The city may request additional information from the operator in order to verify the certification. In the event proprietary information is requested by the city, the provisions of section
5.06.013 hereof shall control the availability of such information to the public.
(3) If the city determines that the small system's certification is in
error, it shall so notify the small system operator and shall require
the small system to comply with all filing requirements for non-small
systems in this article.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 16, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.715)
(a) The
city shall issue a written decision in a rate-making proceeding whenever
it disapproves an initial rate for the basic service tier or associated
equipment in whole or in part, disapproves a request for a rate increase
in whole or in part, or approves a request for an increase in whole
or in part over the objections of interested parties. The city is
not required to issue a written decision that approves an unopposed
existing or proposed rate for the basic service tier or associated
equipment.
(b) Public notice shall be given of any written decision required in subsection
(a) of this section, by making the text of any written decision available to the public, and by publication of the decision one time in the official newspaper of the city.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 17, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.716)
(a) The city may order a cable operator to implement a prospective reduction in basic service tier or associated equipment rates where necessary to bring rates into compliance with the standards set forth in sections
5.06.005 and
5.06.006 hereof.
(b) The
city may prescribe a reasonable rate for the basic service tier or
associated equipment after it determines that a proposed rate is unreasonable.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 18, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.717)
(a) The city may order a cable operator to refund to subscribers that portion of previously paid rates determined by the city to be in excess of the permitted tier charge or above the actual cost of equipment, unless the operator has submitted a cost-of-service showing which justifies the rate charged as reasonable. Before ordering a cable operator to refund previously paid rates to subscribers, the city shall give the operator notice and opportunity to comment on the proposed refunds may be at any meeting of the city council during the city's period of review of the operator's rates. If the city has extended its review period under section
5.06.012, and has issued an accounting order under section
5.06.012(e), then the operator, prior to refunds being ordered, may request an opportunity to appear before the city council to comment upon the proposed refunds.
(b) An
operator's liability for refunds is limited to a one-year period,
except that an operator that fails to comply with a valid rate order
issued by the city shall be liable for refunds commencing from the
effective date of such order until such time as it complies with such
order.
(c) The
refund period shall run as follows:
(1) From the date the operator implements a prospective rate reduction
back in time to September 1, 1993, or one year, whichever is shorter.
(2) From the date the city issues an accounting order pursuant to section
5.06.012(d) hereof, and ending on the date the operator implements a prospective rate reduction ordered by the city or one year, whichever is shorter.
(d) The
cable operator, in its discretion, may implement a refund in the following
manner:
(1) By returning overcharges to those subscribers who actually paid the
overcharges, either through direct payment or as a specifically identified
credit to those subscribers' bills; or
(2) By means of a prospective percentage reduction in the rates for the
basic service tier or associated equipment to cover the cumulative
overcharge. This shall be reflected as a specifically identified,
one-time credit on prospective bills to the class of subscribers that
currently subscribe to the cable system.
(e) Refunds
shall include interest computed at applicable rates published by the
Internal Revenue Service for tax refunds and additional tax payments.
(Ordinance 1214-B, sec. 19, adopted 10/11/1993; 1994 Code, sec. 4.718)