The term "cable system," as defined in Federal law and as set forth in Section
5.24.160 below, does not include a facility that serves subscribers without using any public rights-of-way. Consequently, the categories of multichannel video programming distributors identified below are not deemed to be "cable systems" and are therefore exempt from the City's franchise requirements and from certain other local regulatory provisions authorized by Federal law, provided that their distribution or transmission facilities do not involve the use of the City's public rights-of-way.
A. Multichannel
multipoint distribution service (MMDS), also known as wireless cable,
which typically involves the transmission by an FCC-licensed operator
of numerous broadcast stations from a central location using line-of-sight
technology;
B. Local
multipoint distribution service (LMDS), another form of over-the-air
wireless video service for which licenses are auctioned by the FCC,
and which offers video programming, telephony and data networking
services;
C. Direct
broadcast satellite (DBS), also referred to as direct-to-home satellite
services, which involves the distribution or broadcasting of programming
or services by satellite directly to the subscriber's premises without
the use of ground receiving or distribution equipment, except at the
subscriber's premises or in the uplink process to the satellite. Local
regulation of direct-to-home satellite services is further proscribed
by the following Federal statutory provisions:
1. 47
U.S.C. Section 303(v) confers upon the FCC exclusive jurisdiction
to regulate the provision of direct-to-home satellite services.
2. Section
602 of the Communications Act states that a provider of direct-to-home
satellite service is exempt from the collection or remittance, or
both, of any tax or fee imposed by any local taxing jurisdiction on
direct-to-home satellite service. The terms tax and fee are defined
by Federal statute to mean any local sales tax, local use tax, local
intangible tax, local income tax, business license tax, utility tax,
privilege tax, gross receipts tax, excise tax, franchise fees, local
telecommunications tax, or any other tax, license or fee that is imposed
for the privilege of doing business, regulating or raising revenue
for a local taxing jurisdiction.
(Prior code § 18-2.12; Ord. 1494 § 2, 1999; Ord. 21-1722 § 2)
A. Unless the customer protection and customer service obligations of a video provider, as that term is defined in Section
5.24.160, are specified in a franchise, license, lease, or similar written agreement with the City, a video provider must comply with all applicable provisions of the following State statutes:
1. The
Cable Television and Video Customer Service and Information Act (Government
Code Sections 53054, et seq.);
B. All
video providers that are operating in the City on the effective date
of this chapter, or that intend to operate in the City after the effective
date of this chapter, must register with the City; provided, however,
that this registration requirement is not applicable to any video
provider that has executed a franchise, license, lease or similar
written agreement with the City. The registration form must include
or be accompanied by the following:
1. The
video provider's name, address and local telephone numbers;
2. The
names of the officers of the video provider;
3. A
copy of the video provider's written policies and procedures relating
to customer service standards and the handling of customer complaints,
as required by
Government Code Sections 53054, et seq. These customer
service standards must include, without limitation, standards regarding
the following:
a. Installation, disconnection, service and repair obligations, employee
identification, and service call response time and scheduling,
b. Customer telephone and office hours,
c. Procedures for billing, charges, refunds and credits,
d. Procedures for termination of service,
e. Notice of the deletion of a programming service, the changing of
channel assignments, or an increase in rates,
f. Complaint procedures and procedures for bill dispute resolution,
g. The video provider's written commitment to distribute annually to
the City, and to its employees and customers, a notice describing
the customer service standards specified above in subsections (B)(3)(a)
through (f) of this section. This annual notice must include the report
of the video provider on its performance in meeting its customer service
standards, as required by
Government Code Section 53055.2;
4. Unless
a video provider is exempt under Federal law from its payment, a registration
fee in an amount established by resolution of the City Council to
cover the costs reasonably incurred by the City in reviewing and processing
the registration form;
5. In
addition to the registration fee specified above in subsection (B)(4)
of this section, the written commitment of the video provider to pay
to the City, when due, all costs and expenses reasonably incurred
by the City in resolving any disputes between the video provider and
its subscribers, which dispute resolution is mandated by Government
Code Section 53088.2(p).
C. The
City Council may establish by ordinance a schedule of monetary penalties
for the material breach by a video provider of its obligations under
subparagraphs (a) through (n) of
Government Code Section 53088.2.
As used, in this subsection, the term material breach means any substantial
and repeated failure to comply with the consumer service standards
set forth in
Government Code Section 53088.2. The provisions of that
ordinance must be consistent with the provisions of
Government Code
Section 53088.2. The schedule of monetary penalties may also impose
a penalty, as authorized by
Government Code Section 53056(a), for
the failure of a video provider to distribute the annual notice required
by
Government Code Section 53055.1, which penalty may not exceed $500
for each year in which the notice is not distributed as required by
State statute.
(Prior code § 18-2.13; Ord. 1494 § 2, 1999; Ord. 21-1722 § 2)
The City's Zoning Code sets forth the regulatory requirements
that apply to the siting and construction of various categories of
antennas that are commonly used in transmitting or receiving telecommunications
services.
(Prior code § 18-2.14; Ord. 1494 § 2, 1999; Ord. 21-1722 § 2)
A. The
City Council finds and determines as follows:
1. The
Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996 preempts and declares invalid
all State rules that restrict entry or limit competition in both local
and long-distance telephone service.
2. The
California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) is primarily responsible
for the implementation of local telephone competition, and it issues
certificates of public convenience and necessity to new entrants that
are qualified to provide competitive local telephone exchange services
and related telecommunications service, whether using their own facilities
or the facilities or services provided by other authorized telephone
corporations.
3. Section
234(a) of the California
Public Utilities Code defines a "telephone
corporation" as every corporation or person owning, controlling, operating,
or managing any telephone line for compensation within this State.
4. Section
616 of the California
Public Utilities Code provides that a telephone
corporation may condemn any property necessary for the construction
and maintenance of its telephone line.
5. Section
2902 of the California
Public Utilities Code authorizes municipal
corporations to retain their powers of control to supervise and regulate
the relationships between a public utility and the general public
in matters affecting the health, convenience and safety of the general
public, including matters such as the use and repair of public streets
by any public utility and the location of the poles, wires, mains
or conduits of any public utility on, under, or above any public streets.
6. Section
7901 of the California
Public Utilities Code authorizes telephone
and telegraph corporations to construct telephone or telegraph lines
along and upon any public road or highway, along or across any of
the waters or lands within this State, and to erect poles, posts,
piers or abutments for supporting the insulators, wires, and other
necessary fixtures of their lines, in such manner and at such points
as not to incommode the public use of the road or highway or interrupt
the navigation of the waters.
7. Section
7901.1 of the California
Public Utilities Code confirms the right
of municipalities to exercise reasonable control as to the time, place
and manner in which roads, highways and waterways are accessed, which
control must be applied to all entities in an equivalent manner, and
may involve the imposition of fees.
8. Section
50030 of the California
Government Code provides that any permit fee
imposed by a City for the placement, installation, repair or upgrading
of telecommunications facilities, such as lines, poles or antennas,
by a telephone corporation that has obtained all required authorizations
from the CPUC and the FCC to provide telecommunications services,
must not exceed the reasonable costs of providing the service for
which the fee is charged, and must not be levied for general revenue
purposes.
B. In recognition of and in compliance with the statutory authorizations and requirements set forth above in subsection
A of this section, the following regulatory provisions are applicable to a telephone corporation that desires to provide telecommunications service by means of facilities that are proposed to be constructed within the City's public rights-of-way:
1. The
telephone corporation must apply for and obtain, as may be applicable,
an excavation permit, an encroachment permit or a building permit
(ministerial permit).
2. In
addition to the information required by this Code in connection with
an application for a ministerial permit, a telephone corporation must
submit to the City the following supplemental information:
a. A copy of the certificate of public convenience and necessity issued
by the CPUC to the applicant, and a copy of the CPUC decision that
authorizes the applicant to provide the telecommunications service
for which the facilities are proposed to be constructed in the City's
public rights-of-way;
b. If the applicant has obtained from the CPUC a certificate of public
convenience to operate as a competitive local carrier, the following
additional requirements are applicable:
i. As required by Decision No. 95-12-057 of the CPUC, the applicant
must establish that it has timely filed with the City a quarterly
report that describes the type of construction and the location of
each construction project proposed to be undertaken in the City during
the calendar quarter in which the application is filed, which information
is sufficient to enable the City to coordinate multiple projects,
as may be necessary.
ii. If the applicant's proposed construction project will extend beyond
the utility rights-of-way into undisturbed areas or other rights-of-way,
the applicant must establish that it has filed a petition with the
CPUC to amend its certificate of public convenience and necessity
and that the proposed construction project has been subjected to a
full-scale environmental analysis by the CPUC, as required by Decision
No. 95-12-057 of the CPUC.
iii. The applicant must inform the City whether its proposed construction
project will be subject to any of the mitigation measures specified
in the Negative Declaration (Competitive Local Carriers (CLCs) Projects
for Local Exchange Communication Service throughout California) or
in the Mitigation Monitoring Plan adopted in connection with Decision
No. 95-12-057 of the CPUC. The City's issuance of a ministerial permit
will be conditioned upon the applicant's compliance with all applicable
mitigation measures and monitoring requirements imposed by the CPUC
upon telephone corporations that are designated as competitive local
carriers.
C. In recognition
of the fact that numerous excavations in the public rights-of-way
diminish the useful life of the surface pavement, and for the purpose
of mitigating the adverse impacts of numerous excavations on the quality
and longevity of public streets within the City, the following policies
and procedures are adopted:
1. The
City Manager is directed to ensure that all public utilities, including
telephone corporations, comply with all local design, construction,
maintenance and safety standards that are contained within, or are
related to, a ministerial permit that authorizes the construction
of facilities within the public rights-of-way.
2. The
City Manager is directed to coordinate the construction and installation
of facilities by public utilities, including telephone corporations,
in order to minimize the number of excavations in the public rights-of-way.
In this regard, based upon projected plans for street construction
or renovation projects, the City Manager is authorized to establish
on a quarterly basis one or more construction time periods or windows
for the installation of facilities within the public rights-of-way.
Telephone corporations and other public utilities that submit applications
for ministerial permits to construct facilities after a predetermined
date may be required to delay such construction until the next quarterly
window that is established by the City.
D. The
City reserves all rights that it now possesses or may later acquire
with respect to the regulation of any cable or telecommunications
service that is provided, or proposed to be provided, by a telephone
corporation. These reserved rights may relate, without limitation,
to the imposition of reasonable conditions in addition to or different
from those set forth in this Article IV, the exaction of a fee or
other form of consideration or compensation for use of public rights-of-way,
and related matters; provided, however, that such regulatory rights
and authority must be consistent with Federal and State law that is
applicable to cable or telecommunications services provided by telephone
corporations.
(Prior code § 18-2.15; Ord. 1494 § 2, 1999; Ord. 21-1722 § 2)