Title: Public RightofWay: LegalPolicy Issues
1Public Right-of-Way Legal/Policy Issues
Maryland Municipal League June, 2005 Ocean City,
MD
Matthew Schettenhelm Miller Van Eaton, P.L.L.C.
2Myth Buster
- Federal Law does not limit the fee charged a
telecommunications company for access to public
rights-of-way to recovery of costs. - Federal law permits up to a 5 gross revenue fee
for PROW use by cable. - CAVEAT Your state may have passed limitations on
fees and charges that may be assessed a public
right of way occupant.
3What are Rights-of-Way
- Public rights-of-way (PROW) are real, tangible,
limited, and valuable real estate.
4Guiding Principle
- Sound economics and political equity require that
private entities using public property for
private profit should pay fair and reasonable
rents. Failure to capture the fair value for the
use of these assets transfers real estate costs
from company stockholders to taxpayers.
5What is a Franchise?
- A Grant of a Special Privilege
- A License to Use PROW
- Revocable
- Personal (does not travel with estate)
- Burdens the real estate
- Not a Privilege to Offer a Service
- Broad Confusion Between These Two
6Federal Law -- Yields to State Law
- 5th Amendment US Constitution
- Federal Law May NOT Preempt State Property Law
- Cities have same rights as citizens
- 47 USC Sec. 253(c)
- 47 USC Sec. 332(c)(7)
7Federal Law Reserves for Local Government
- Property Rights
- Right to Charge Rent
- Right to Manage Behavior in ROW
- Right to zone and site antennas and towers
8State Property Law Controls
- Same Principles as other Property Rights
- Must Hold a Right to Burden the Property (Right
to Use) from the Owner - Estate in Fee/Lease/Easement/ Franchise/or
License (Explicit or Implicit) Required
9Fundamental PROW Dispute
- Is franchise a regulatory relationship?
- Is franchise a property interest?
10Leading Cases were Determined by Answer
- Dearborn Cablevision of Boston right to occupy
PROW is property interest, subject to state
property law. - Auburn Prince Georges II Chattanooga PROW
occupancy is a regulatory interest, subject to
state and federal regulatory exclusion. - Coral Springs If govt action prohibits, OK if
related to property interests
11History
- The Supreme Court, as early as 1893, in City of
St. Louis v. Western Union Tel., recognized that
local governments have a property right in
controlling all elements and benefits of
rights-of-way property and that the payment of a
franchise fee is not a tax but a rental fee. - City of St. Louis v. Western Union Tel., 148 U.S.
92 (1893), opinion on rehg, 149 U.S. 465 (1893).
- City of Dallas v. FCC, 118 F.3d 393, 397 (5th
Cir. 1997).
12Rights transferred to a PROW franchisee
- ROW franchisees gain 3 types of rights
- option to place facilities in ROW burden of
potential use - construction and maintenance rights for
facilities actually installed actual burden - Ongoing use or occupation of ROW to do business
- In a free market, property owner has a right to
charge a fair market price
13Valuing Public Rights-of-Way
- Three kinds of compensation correspond to the
three valuable rights - annual option payment possibly fixed sum
- payment for facilities actually installed
possibly linear or cubic measure - fair market value for value derived by private
user from public property possibly measured by
gross revenue
14Cost vs. Value
- Industry argues that under 47 U.S.C. 253
compensation is limited to costs - There is no reference to costs in 253
- The legislative history of 253 refers to gross
revenues does not imply costs - Nonetheless, some courts have succumbed to
industrys access argument, ignoring property
rights
15Section 253
- (c) STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITY. --
Nothing in this section affects the authority of
a State or local government to manage the public
rights-of-way or to require fair and reasonable
compensation from telecommunications providers,
on a competitively neutral and nondiscriminatory
basis, for use of public rights-of-way on a
nondiscriminatory basis, if the compensation
required is publicly disclosed by such
government.
16Measures of ROW Value
- Where compensation is permitted, different ways
of determining amount may be used (subject to
state law) - Linear foot fee
- Gross revenues-based fee
- Throughput-based fee
- Access line fee
- 253 Are local franchise requirements to provide
in-kind facilities prohibitions? -- pending,
but probably OK
17Section 253 in the States
- Legislatures
- 21 States have acted
- 10 permit gross revenue charges
- PUCs
- Challenging local government as 3rd tier of
regulations. - eg Minn/Md/Mich/Oreg
18Has Your State Chosen?
- The Maryland legislature has not acted in this
context. - At least some Maryland cities retain full
authority to charge for use of ROWs.
19Has Your Municipality Chosen?
- General ordinances
- St. Louis linear foot charge starting at 1.50
in 1991 with inflation adj., now 1.88 (2004-05) - Little Rock, AR 5 of gross revenues
- Particular agreements
- Los Angeles (through 2002) 5 per linear foot
of 6 conduit 1.25 per linear foot overhead - Eugene, OR 4-5 per linear foot, or in kind
20Limited to Costs
- Some state laws limit local governments to cost
recovery - Iowa management costs caused by utilitys
occupation of the ROW - Missouri limitations established by SB 369
scope unclear some cities grandfathered - others e.g., Alaska, Indiana, Minnesota
- But the game is not over
21Identifying Costs
- Not all state laws limited categories of costs.
- Acquisition fees for obtaining rights-of-way
- Administrative or processing costs
- Inspection costs
- Costs of safety precautions for ROW work
- Costs of locates and conflict resolution
- Cost of repairing maintaining the ROW
- Construction costs for ROW improvements
- Costs to community from delays, etc.