Title: Legal and Regulatory Issues in PROW Management
1Legal and Regulatory Issues in PROW Management
- Nicholas P. Miller
- University of Wisconsin, Madison
- March 4, 2002
- www.millervaneaton.com
Miller Van Eaton P.L.L.C.
2OVERVIEW
- Local Governments Interests
- Who is Using PROW
- The Source of Local Authority
- Federal Law Dispute
3Local Government Interests
- Unfunded Mandates
- Property Rights
- Planning and Management of Infrastructure
- Public Benefits for Public Resources
4 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
5Property rights in ROW
- PROW is not a free good
- must be allocated for highest and best use
6Planning and Management of Infrastructure
- first come-first served doesnt work
- Growth and Limited Space
- Aesthetics and Congested Facilities
- GIS requirements
7 Public Benefits for Public Resources
- Taxpayer benefit
- fair compensation for use of public resource
- Community benefit
- smart growth
- in-kind resources to address
- digital divide
- universal service
- government efficiency
8Who is Using Rights of Way?
- CATV-- 5 fees, normal permitting
- ILECs-- usually a fee or user tax, normal
permitting - CLECs --
- dont charge us more than ILEC
- speed to market
- costs of construction
- risks of construction
9Others Using Rights of Way?
- Dark fiber providers
- Conduit providers
- Pass-through/spot users
- Combo companies/consortia
10What is a Franchise?
- A Grant of a Special Privilege
- A Revocable Personal License to Use PROW
- Possibly a Privilege to Offer a Service
- Broad Confusion Between These Two
11State 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
12If 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
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15Local 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
16Companies Response
- Telecomm Regulation in the Guise of Property
Rights - State PUCs, not Locals, Retain Authority to
Regulate--253(b) - Local regulation preempted--253(a)
17Companies Response (Continued)
- Taxation in the Guise of Rent
- No New Property Interest
- States/Locals gave RBOCs easements long ago
- new companies have right to partition the same
easements - e.g. 47 USC 224
- Compensation limited to impact fees
18Federal 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
19SEC. 253. 47 U.S.C. 253 REMOVAL OF BARRIERS TO
ENTRY.
- (a) In General.--No State or local statute or
regulation, or other State or local legal
requirement, may prohibit or have the effect of
prohibiting the ability of any entity to provide
any interstate or intrastate telecommunications
service. - (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.
20Every Word and Phrase in Sec 253 Still Disputed
- Auburn v. QWEST--Not The Last Word
- Qwest v. Portland--Gross revenues OK
21Title II (Sec. 253) Definitions
- What is a prohibition?
- Auburn combination of requirements
- Coral Springs a factual question
- Cases that Permit Exclusion
- Omnipoint v. Port Authority of NY (D.Ct. NY)
local govt can require new entrant to conform to
pre-existing standards - Cablevision v. Boston (2d Cir, 2000) local govt
can impose different terms on new entrant
22Definitions (cont)
- What is use?
- Dallas II only physical occupancy
- Dearborn anticipatory and inchoate uses
23Definitions (cont)
- What is management?
- Troy (FCC) specific list, community burden to
prove - Coral Springs a factual question, safe-harbor
analysis
24Definitions (cont)
- What is fair reasonable compensation
- Dallas II Allocated Direct and Indirect costs
- Prince Georges I Only Cost of Regulation
- Dearborn reasonably related to value conveyed
25Fundamental PROW Dispute
- is franchise a regulatory relationship?
- a property interest?
26Case outcomesdetermined 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
27AD HOC AGREEMENTSShort Term Relief, Long Term
Pain
- Avoids Immediate Litigation
- Risks Least Restrictive Terms in Each Agreement
Will Apply to All - Risks Granting Free and Unlimited Property
Interests - Imposes Contractual Limits on Future Regulations
- Most Vulnerable to Claims of Discrimination
28AN ORDINANCEShort Term Pain, Long Term Control
- Companies Uniformly Join to Intimidate
- Tell the Courts What You are Trying to Do
- Define
- Scope of Your Authority to Control Entry
- Right-of-Way Management Authority
- Compensation Mechanisms
- Enforcement Authority
29CONCLUSION
- 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
- Electeds Must Be Told the Taxpayers Interest