Title: PROW Management: Legal, Regulatory and Bankruptcy Issues
1PROW Management Legal, Regulatory and Bankruptcy
Issues
- Nicholas P. Miller
-
- Transportation Research Board Sub-Committee on
- Pavement Management for Local Agencies
- January 15, 2003
- Washington, D.C.
2Program
- Local Governments Property Rights on
Rights-of-Way - Evaluate Telecommunications Act impact on
- Municipal ability to regulate
- Reasonable regulations and fees
- Efforts to Change the Rules
- Courts, Congress FCC
3Program (continued)
- Market Impact
- Valuation of Rights-of-Way
- Utility bankruptcies and facility abandonment
- Utility business failures, is no longer an
oxymoron - What you need to do.
4Local Government Interests in PROW
- Recognition of Property Rights
- Planning and Management of Infrastructure
- PROW is not a free good
- Preserve ability to allocated for highest and
best use.
5The Law of Local Governments Property Rights
6What is a Franchise?
- A Grant of a Special Privilege
- A Revocable Personal License to Use PROW
- Not a Privilege to Offer a Service
- Broad Confusion Between These Two
7Federal Laws --5th Amendment US Constitution47
USC 253(c) 332(c)(7)
- Federal 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
- Company Must Acquire a Property Right (Right to
Use) From the Owner of the Property - Estate in Fee/Lease/Easement/ Franchise/or
License (Explicit or Implicit) Required - Fifth Amendment Federal Law May NOT Preempt
State Property Law
9If State Law Controls
- State Legislation Controls
- Usual Rule Cities are Creatures of State and
State Can Pull Back - property
- police power authority
- Local Government May Have Independent Right of
Ownership
10 Unfunded Mandates--cost transfers from companies
to taxpayers
- Accelerated deterioration of infrastructure
- Additional costs imposed on other PROW users
- Dallas and Southfield floods
- Abandoned bankrupt facilities
- DC road disruption
- Public safety and disaster recovery costs
11Local Governments Response
- Government Property
- normal state property law controls right to use
- local governments own or control right to use
- local governments can set terms and price of use
- Exception
- prior State grant of property to company
- recent State preemption of local governments
12Companies Response
- Telecomm Regulation in the Guise of Property
Rights - State PUCs, not Locals, Retain Authority to
Regulate--253(b) - Local regulation preempted--253(a).
- Compensation limited to impact fees.
13Federal Law --47 USC 253(c) 332(c)(7)
- Right to Charge Rent
- Right to Manage Behavior in ROW
- Right to zone and site antennas and towers
14Fundamental PROW Dispute
- Is franchise a regulatory relationship?
- Is franchise a property interest?
15Leading Cases have been determined by this
question.
- 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
16Supreme Court
- St. Louis v. Western Union Tel., 148 U.S. 92,
98-99, 13 S. Ct. 485, 487-88 (1823). - Public utilities use the rights-of-way in a way
that is an "absolute, permanent and exclusive
appropriation. - Who would question the right of the city to
charge for the use of the ground thus occupied,
or call such charge a tax, or anything else
except rental?
17Recent State, Hilland FCC Developments
18The Legislative Threat
- Unfettered Tcom PROW entry and free occupation of
PROW - Growing restrictions on cable franchises
- State and federal legislatures.
- Michigan
- 4 Congressional broadband bills
19Threat Defined
- Legislation
- Should broadband get free PROW?
- Is DSL/Cable Modem competition or duopoly?
- Regulation
- Cable modem/DSL preemption
- PROW preemption
20Section 253 History as a target
- Local Government Wins
- Federal legislation 1996
- FCC action 1997
- Federal Appellate Courts 6 of 7
- 1st 2d 4th 5th 6th 9th 11th
- E.g, White Plains (2d)
21Industry Forum Shopping
- Industry has shifted battle to state level
- Michigan legislation
- Florida legislation
- NARUC study committee
- NARUC and NCSL co-opted?
- Where are the Governors?
22Section 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
23Back to the Federal Level
- FCC has changed since 2000
- Wireless Networks Dkt
- Oct 16 Forum
- NTIA
- open docket
- Call for best practice communities
- Congress--again
24PROW in Congress
25McCAIN BILL
- S. 2863
- The Consumer Broadband Deregulation Act
- The bill establishes a "regulatory free zone" for
residential broadband services from local
oversight and limits recovery of rights-of-way
access fees to costs.
26BREAUX-NICKLES
- S. 2430--Broadband Regulatory Parity Act of
2002. - Mandates regulation be equal or none for all
broadband providers, i.e. cable modem, ISDN or
satellite - Jeopardizes local government authority over its
rights of way.
27TAUZIN-DINGELL
- H.R. 1542-- Internet Freedom and Broadband
Deployment Act of 2001 - preserves local governments right to regulate
cable - broad exemption to broadband from regulation
28LIEBERMAN
- S. 2582--National Broadband Strategy Act of
2002. - Administration should articulate a broadband
policy, including local rights-of-way management.
29Cubin--the Stalking Horse
- H.R. 3258, the Reasonable Right-of-Way Fees Act
of 2002. - Introduced by Rep. Cubin (R-Wy).
- Applies to federal lands
- Overturns traditional federal standards for
compensation from best use to least use.
30Other Local Interests Threatened By Legislation
- Rural LECs deny local government access to
universal service funds. - Cellular/Nextel Public Safety has no Priority to
spectrum and wireline. - FCC preempt local cable franchising--deregulate
DSL and Cable Modem
31Cable Modem NPRM Tentatively Concludes
- No ISP rights to demand access to cable modem
networks. - Cable franchises authorize use of PROW for cable
modem services. - No additional permission required to provide
cable modem service. - Cable Modem Service falls outside cable franchise
fee.
32Valuation of PROW
33Methodology
- There are numerous appraisal methods
- Book Value
- Replacement Value
- Willing Buyer/Willing Seller Value
- Income-Based Method
- Comparable Transactions Valuation
34BEA Value of Pavement
- Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) states that the
present value of the total capital expenditures
on streets and highways is 1,423,833,000,000.
These are the costs borne by taxpayers to improve
streets and highways, not to acquire the land on
which they sit.
35TeleCommUnity Valuation
- Employing the book value method of appraisal,
i.e., the value of the land plus the value of
improvements, TeleCommUnity established the total
book value, at 4,676,039,947,040 - When multiplied by corridor enhancement factor,
this number rises to over 7 trillion dollars.
36NOAA Valuation per mile
- NOAA stated, Forrights of way greater than 5
miles in length, price levels rose from 8,026
per mile in 1987 to 11,880 per mile in 1993 to
100,042 in 1997. - NOAA developed a linear trend, which places the
value of right-of-way today approaching 120,000
per mile per year. - Such a valuation in rent results in value of PROW
as high as 10,984,611,600,000
37CONCLUSION
- Management should not be the fight
- Every Provider becomes an Incumbent
- Huge private investment
- Compensation is the issue--Is PROW a free good?
- Short-sighted by industry lobbyists
- Long-term taxpayer costs
38 - WHAT HAPPENS WHEN A TELECOM OR CABLE COMPANY GOES
BANKRUPT? - HOW DOES IT IMPACT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS?
39Chapter 11 or Chapter 7?
- Chapter 11 is for reorganization
- Purpose is to reorganize the company and pay
creditors over time - In Chapter 11, the company usually continues to
operate the business - Chapter 7 is where company is liquidated
- Independent Chapter 7 trustee appointed by the
bankruptcy court - Trustee shuts down business and liquidates
debtors assets - Most companies more likely to file under Chapter
11 - At least initially, debtor will usually continue
to operate its business
40Where will debtor likely file?
- Headquarters
- Major presence (New York increasingly popular)
- State of Incorporation (Delaware)
41Filing Notice of Appearance
- Request for Notice With Bankruptcy Court
- Allows municipality to closely monitor case
- Will receive notice of any significant motion or
proceeding that might affect municipalitys
interest - May be inundated with paperwork
- Alternative is to monitor case docket
electronically
42Proof of Claim
- For debts owed before the bankruptcy filing
- Debtor required to provide proof of claim form
and notice of the bankruptcy filing - Deadline for filing a proof of claim is set by
the bankruptcy court - Typically deadline is several months after
commencement of case
43Automatic Stay - 11 U.S.C. 362
- 362(a) Filing of bankruptcy petition operates as
a stay, applicable to all entities, of - (1) commencement or continuation, including the
issuance or employment of a process, of a
judicial, administrative, or other action or
proceeding against the debtor that was or could
have been commenced before the commencement of
the case under this title, or to recover a claim
against the debtor that arose before the
commencement of the case under this title - (2) the enforcement, against the debtor or
against property of the estate, of a judgment
obtained before the commencement of the case
under this title - (3) any act to obtain possession of property of
the estate or of property from the estate or to
exercise control over property of the estate - (4) any act to create, perfect, or enforce any
lien against property of the estate -
-
44Automatic Stay - 11 U.S.C. 362
- (5) any act to create, perfect, or enforce
against property of the debtor any lien to the
extent that such lien secures a claim that arose
before the commencement of the case under this
title - (6) any act to collect, assess, or recover a
claim against the debtor that arose before the
commencement of the case under this title - Generally prevents any entity from filing a
lawsuit, attempting to collect a debt, filing a
lien against the debtors property, enforce a
judgment or take any action to control property
of the bankruptcy estate - Municipality should not take any action to
attempt to collect franchise or license fees,
penalties or any other monies due, or to enforce
a judgment, file a lien or exercise control over
debtors property
45Exception 362(b)(4) "Regulatory Power
Exception"
- Filing of petition does not operate as a stay
"under paragraph (1), (2), (3) or (6) of
subsection (a) of this section, of the
commencement or continuation of an action or
proceeding by a government unit . . . to enforce
such governmental unit's or organization's police
and regulatory power, including the enforcement
of a judgment other than a money judgment,
obtained in an action or proceeding by the
governmental unit to enforce such governmental
unit's or organization's police or regulatory
power." - Municipalities are generally exempt from the
automatic stay to the extent they are acting to
exercise their police or regulatory power - Regulatory power exception does not apply to
362(a)(4) and (5) and does not allow for
enforcement of money judgment - Municipality can enforce construction
requirements or standards, performance or
customer service standards, build-out or upgrade
requirements or PEG requirements - Provided that municipality is acting to protect
the public health, safety and welfare and is not
trying to collect a debt or advance its financial
interests
46Section 525 Protection Against Discriminatory
Treatment
- 11 U.S.C. 525
- governmental unit may not deny, revoke, suspend
or refuse to renew a license, permit, charter,
franchise, or other similar grant to . . .
discriminate with respect to such a grant
against, . . . a person that is or has been a
debtor under this title or a bankrupt . . .
solely because such bankrupt or debtor is or has
been a debtor under this title or a bankrupt . .
. or has not paid a debt that is dischargeable in
the case under this title . . . - NextWave Decision U.S. Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit held that FCC could not terminate
spectrum licenses as a result of non-payment - On appeal before U.S. Supreme Court decision
expected any day - Comes into play with Adelphia
47Payment of Franchise Fees
- Any fees not paid before the bankruptcy filing
would be an unsecured claim - Municipality cannot take any steps to collect
- Franchise fees due after the bankruptcy would
likely qualify as administrative priority claim,
entitled to priority status over unsecured
creditors - Actual, necessary cost of preserving the estate
under 11 U.S.C. 503(b) - Municipality can request that the bankruptcy
court order payment of post-petition fees - Debtor would be required to pay all franchise
fees due if it assumes franchise agreement,
including fees due before the bankruptcy case - As a practical matter, franchise fees will likely
be paid even if they are not paid during the
early stages of the bankruptcy franchise,
license, row fees generally being paid by
bankrupt telecoms and Adelphia
48Property of the Estate
- Bankruptcy Estate created upon filing bankruptcy
petition - Estate comprised of property that vests in estate
- 11 U.S.C. 541, including - All legal or equitable interests of the debtor in
any property as of the commencement of case - Proceeds, product, rents or profits from property
of estate - Includes fiber, equipment, facilities
- Includes intellectual property, intellectual
property licenses
49What Happens to Estate?
- Debtor can keep property, use to reorganize
- Debtor can sell or lease property in bankruptcy
- 11 U.S.C 363
- Notice and hearing
- Must provide adequate protection to any entity
that has interest in property - Can sell free and clear of liens
- Trustee can sell in Chapter 7 liquidation
- Debtor or trustee can abandon property
- 11 U.S.C. 554 - Allows debtor to abandon
property - Burdensom to estate, inconsequential value
- Unless risk to public safety - Midlantic case
50Selling the Franchise in Bankruptcy
- Can Debtor Sell a Franchise over your objection?
- Franchise Agreement constitutes executory
contract - Bankruptcy Code generally allows assignment of
executory contract over objection of other
party to contract - Exception to this rule for contracts that are
personal in nature, where the identity of the
parties is material to the contract, or where
other applicable law excuses a party from
having to accept performance by another party - Examples of personal service contracts artist,
professional ballplayer, architect, contractor,
membership in a private club - What other applicable law excuses a party from
having to accept performance? - Patent license, contract with the United States
Government
51Selling the Franchise in Bankruptcy
- Municipalities can argue that franchises are
personal in nature and cannot be assigned without
consent of franchising authority - Provisions in Cable Ordinance that prohibit
assignment may be deemed to be applicable law - Government franchises may not be assignable
without consent of government entity under
applicable law - Uncertain outcome
52Municipal Takeover of Cable System
- Depends in part on whether terms of franchise
agreement and cable ordinance allow - Cannot takeover system unless franchise is
revoked or otherwise terminates - Municipality cannot revoke franchise solely
because of bankruptcy - May be able to revoke franchise if other material
defaults under franchise agreement or cable
ordinance - If Debtor rejects franchise, municipality may be
able to take over
53Compliance with State Laws
- 28 U.S.C. Section 959(b)
- Debtor must manage and operate property according
to requirements of valid state laws - Example environmental laws Midlantic National
Bank case - Pecuniary claims less likely to be upheld than
regulatory laws
54 The Metricom Bankruptcy RECAPTURING
TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITIES ABANDONED IN THE
PUBLIC RIGHTS-OF-WAY.
55WHO WAS METRICOM?
- Ricochet Service
- High Speed Internet Access
- Mobile, wireless modems
- Radio antennas placed on light and utility poles
- Poletop agreements with cities, utilities
- Wired Access Points - placed on roofs of
buildings - Right-of-way agreements with local governments
56METRICOM CASE STUDY
- Metricom Bankruptcy - Chapter 11
- Liquidation
- Attempted to sell all assets - no buyers
- Sold in pieces
- Rejected poletop, right-of-way/franchise
agreements - Abandoned poletop radios, WAPS
-
57METRICOM CASE STUDY
- Equipment left to municipalities, private
landlords (subject to liens) - 11 U.S.C. 554 - Allows debtor to abandon
property - Burdensome to estate, inconsequential value
- Unless risk to public safety - Midlantic case
- Metricom determined value of equipment less than
cost of removal - Metricom sold intellectual property to Aerie
Networks
58METRICOM CASE STUDY
- Opportunity for cities
- Internal communication system
- Mobile transmission, effective for emergency
transmission of data, traffic and parking
enforcement, meter reading, etc. - Commercial partnership
- Cities negotiate with Aerie Networks
- Strong bargaining position
59METRICOM CASE STUDY
- Denver
- Commercial Service in operation
- 1000 modems, free service to City
- Additional Opportunities
- Telecommunications companies
- Cable
60Questions
61Contact Information
Nicholas Miller nmiller_at_millervaneaton.com Miller
Van Eaton, P.L.L.C. Suite 1000 1155 Connecticut
Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 - 4301 phone
(202) 785 - 0600 fax (202) 785 -
1234 www.millervaneaton.com