CHAPTER 138
House Substitute for SENATE BILL No. 212
An Act concerning telecommunications services;
relating to enhanced universal service and
internet access; amending K.S.A. 1997 Supp.
66-2005, 66-2008 and 66-2011 and re-
pealing the existing sections.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas:
Section 1. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2005 is hereby amended to
read as
follows: 66-2005. (a) Each local exchange carrier shall file a
network in-
frastructure plan with the commission on or after January 1, 1997,
and
prior to January 1, 1998. Each plan, as a part of universal service
protec-
tion, shall include schedules, which shall be approved by the
commission,
for deployment of universal service capabilities by July 1, 1998,
and the
deployment of enhanced universal service capabilities by July 1,
2001
2003, as defined pursuant to subsections (p) and (q) of
K.S.A. 1997 Supp.
66-1,187 and amendments thereto, respectively. With
respect to enhanced
universal service, such schedules shall provide for deployment
of ISDN,
or its technological equivalent, or broadband facilities, only
upon a firm
customer order for such service, or for deployment of other
enhanced
universal services by a local exchange carrier. After receipt of
such an
order and upon completion of a deployment plan designed to meet
the
firm order or otherwise provide for the deployment of enhanced
universal
service, a local exchange carrier shall notify the commission.
The com-
mission shall approve the plan unless the commission determines
that the
proposed deployment plan is unnecessary, inappropriate, or not
cost ef-
fective, or would create an unreasonable or excessive demand on
the
KUSF. The commission shall take action within 90 days. If the
commission
fails to take action within 90 days, the deployment plan shall
be deemed
approved. This approval process shall continue until July 1,
2000. Each
plan shall demonstrate the capability of the local exchange carrier
to com-
ply on an ongoing basis with quality of service standards to be
adopted
by the commission no later than January 1, 1997.
(b) In order to protect universal service, facilitate the
transition to
competitive markets and stimulate the construction of an
advanced
telecommunications infrastructure, each local exchange carrier
shall file
a regulatory reform plan at the same time as it files the network
infra-
structure plan required in subsection (a). As part of its
regulatory reform
plan, a local exchange carrier may elect traditional rate of return
regula-
tion or price cap regulation. Carriers that elect price cap
regulation shall
be exempt from rate base, rate of return and earnings regulation.
How-
ever, the commission may resume such regulation upon finding, after
a
hearing, that a carrier that is subject to price cap regulation
has: violated
minimum quality of service standards pursuant to subsection (l) of
K.S.A.
1997 Supp. 66-2002 and amendments thereto; been given
reasonable no-
tice and an opportunity to correct the violation; and failed to do
so. Reg-
ulatory reform plans also shall include:
(1) A commitment to provide existing and newly ordered
point-to-
point broadband services to: Any hospital as defined in K.S.A.
65-425,
and amendments thereto; any school accredited pursuant to K.S.A.
72-
1101 et seq., and amendments thereto; any public library; or
other state
and local government facilities at discounted prices close to, but
not be-
low, long-run incremental cost; and
(2) a commitment to provide basic rate ISDN service, or the
tech-
nological equivalent, at prices which are uniform throughout the
carrier's
service area and which are designed to stimulate the
development of an
extensive residential market. Local exchange
carriers shall not be required
to allow retail customers purchasing the foregoing discounted
services to
resell those services to other categories of customers.
Telecommunica-
tions carriers may purchase basic rate ISDN services, or the
technological
equivalent, for resale in accordance with K.S.A. 1997 Supp.
66-2003 and
amendments thereto. The commission may reduce prices charged
for
services outlined in provisions (1) and (2) of this subsection, if
the com-
mitments of the local exchange carrier set forth in those
provisions are
not being kept.
(c) Subject to the commission's approval, all local exchange
carriers
shall reduce intrastate access charges to interstate levels as
provided
herein. Rates for intrastate switched access, and the imputed
access por-
tion of toll, shall be reduced over a three-year period with the
objective
of equalizing interstate and intrastate rates in a revenue neutral,
specific
and predictable manner. The commission is authorized to rebalance
local
residential and business service rates to offset the intrastate
access and
toll charge reductions. Any remaining portion of the reduction in
access
and toll charges not recovered through local residential and
business serv-
ice rates shall be paid out from the KUSF pursuant to K.S.A. 1997
Supp.
66-2008 and amendments thereto. Rural telephone companies
shall re-
duce their intrastate switched access rates to interstate levels on
March
1, 1997, and every two years thereafter, as long as amounts equal
to such
reductions are recovered from the KUSF.
(d) Beginning March 1, 1997, each rural telephone company
shall
have the authority to increase annually its monthly basic local
residential
and business service rates by an amount not to exceed $1 in each
12
month period until such monthly rates reach an amount equal to
the
statewide rural telephone company average rates for such services.
The
statewide rural telephone company average rates shall be the
arithmetic
mean of the lowest flat rate as of March 1, 1996, for local
residential
service and for local business service offered by each rural
telephone
company within the state. In the case of a rural telephone company
which
increases its local residential service rate or its local business
service rate,
or both, to reach the statewide rural telephone company average
rate for
such services, the amount paid to the company from the KUSF shall
be
reduced by an amount equal to the additional revenue received by
such
company through such rate increase. In the case of a rural
telephone
company which elects to maintain a local residential service rate
or a local
business service rate, or both, below the statewide rural telephone
com-
pany average, the amount paid to the company from the KUSF shall
be
reduced by an amount equal to the difference between the revenue
the
company could receive if it elected to increase such rate to the
average
rate and the revenue received by the company.
(e) For regulatory reform plans in which price cap regulation
has
been elected, price cap plans shall have three baskets: Residential
and
single-line business, including touch-tone; switched access
services; and
miscellaneous services. The commission shall establish price caps
at the
prices existing when the regulatory plan is filed subject to rate
rebalancing
as provided in subsection (c) for residential services, including
touch-tone
services, and for single-line business services, including
touch-tone serv-
ices, within the residential and single-line business service
basket. The
commission shall establish a formula for adjustments to the price
caps.
The commission also shall establish price caps at the prices
existing when
the regulatory plan is filed for the miscellaneous services basket.
The
commission shall approve any adjustments to the price caps for the
mis-
cellaneous service basket, as provided in subsection (f).
(f) On or before January 1, 1997, the commission shall issue a
final
order in a proceeding to determine the price cap adjustment formula
that
shall apply to the price caps for the local residential and
single-line busi-
ness and the miscellaneous services baskets and for sub-categories,
if any,
within those baskets. In determining this formula, the commission
shall
balance the public policy goals of encouraging efficiency and
promoting
investment in a quality, advanced telecommunications network in
the
state. The commission also shall establish any informational filing
require-
ments necessary for the review of any price cap tariff filings,
including
price increases or decreases within the caps, to verify such caps
would
not be exceeded by any proposed price change. The adjustment
formula
shall apply to the price caps for the local residential and
single-line busi-
ness basket after December 31, 1999, and to the miscellaneous
services
basket after December 31, 1997. The price cap formula, but not
actual
prices, shall be reviewed every five years.
(g) The price caps for the residential and single-line
business service
basket shall be capped at their initial level until January 1,
2000, except
for any increases authorized as a part of the revenue neutral rate
rebal-
ancing under subsection (c). The price caps for this basket and for
the
categories in this basket, if any, shall be adjusted annually after
December
31, 1999, based on the formula determined by the commission
under
subsection (f).
(h) The price cap for the switched access service basket shall
be set
based upon the local exchange carrier's intrastate access tariffs
as of Jan-
uary 1, 1997, except for any revenue neutral rate rebalancing
authorized
in accordance with subsection (c). Thereafter, the cap for this
basket shall
not change except in connection with any subsequent revenue
neutral
rebalancing authorized by the commission under subsection (c).
(i) The price caps for the miscellaneous services basket shall
be ad-
justed annually after December 31, 1997, based on the adjustment
for-
mula determined by the commission under subsection (f).
(j) A price cap is a maximum price for all services taken as a
whole
in a given basket. Prices for individual services may be changed
within
the service categories, if any, established by the commission
within a
basket. An entire service category, if any, within the residential
and single-
line business basket or miscellaneous services basket may be priced
below
the cap for such category. Unless otherwise approved by the
commission,
no service shall be priced below the price floor which will be
long-run
incremental cost and imputed access charges. Access charges equal
to
those paid by telecommunications carriers to local exchange
carriers shall
be imputed as part of the price floor for toll services offered by
local
exchange carriers on a toll service basis.
(k) A local exchange carrier may offer promotions within an
exchange
or group of exchanges. All promotions shall be approved by the
commis-
sion and shall apply to all customers in a nondiscriminatory manner
within
the exchange or group of exchanges.
(l) Unless the commission authorizes price deregulation at an
earlier
date, intrastate toll services within the miscellaneous services
basket shall
continue to be regulated until the affected local exchange carrier
begins
to offer 1 + intraLATA dialing parity throughout its service
territory, at
which time intrastate toll will be price deregulated, except that
prices
cannot be set below the price floor.
(m) On or before July 1, 1997, the commission shall establish
guide-
lines for reducing regulation prior to price deregulation of price
cap reg-
ulated services in the miscellaneous services basket, the switched
access
services basket, and the residential and single-line business
basket.
(n) Subsequent to the adoption of guidelines pursuant to
subsection
(m), the commission shall initiate a petitioning procedure under
which
the local exchange carrier may request rate range pricing. The
commis-
sion shall act upon a petition within 21 days, subject to a 30-day
suspen-
sion. The prices within a rate range shall be tariffed and shall
apply to all
customers in a nondiscriminatory manner in an exchange or group
of
exchanges.
(o) A local exchange carrier may petition the commission to
designate
an individual service or service category, if any, within the
miscellaneous
services basket, the switched access services basket or the
residential and
single-line business basket for reduced regulation. The commission
shall
act upon a petition for reduced regulation within 21 days, subject
to a
suspension period of an additional 30 days, and upon a good cause
show-
ing of the commission in the suspension order, or within such
shorter
time as the commission shall approve. The commission shall issue a
final
order within the 21-day period or within a 51-day period if a
suspension
has been issued. Following an order granting reduced regulation of
an
individual service or service category, the commission shall act on
any
request for price reductions within 7 seven
days subject to a 30-day sus-
pension. The commission shall act on other requests for price cap
ad-
justments, adjustments within price cap plans and on new service
offer-
ings within 21 days subject to a 30-day suspension. Such a change
will be
presumed lawful unless it is determined the prices are below the
price
floor or that the price cap for a category, if any, within the
entire basket
has been exceeded.
(p) The commission may price deregulate within an exchange
area,
or at its discretion on a statewide basis, any individual service
or service
category upon a finding by the commission that there is a
telecommuni-
cations carrier or an alternative provider providing a comparable
product
or service, considering both function and price, in that exchange
area.
The commission shall act upon a petition for price deregulation
within
21 days, subject to a suspension period of an additional 30 days,
and upon
a good cause showing of the commission in the suspension order,
or
within such shorter time as the commission shall approve; provided
that
no such petition shall be filed prior to July 1997, unless the
commission
otherwise authorizes. The commission shall issue a final order
within the
21-day period or within a 51-day period if a suspension has been
issued.
(q) Upon complaint or request, the commission may investigate
a
price deregulated service. The commission shall resume price
regulation
of a service provided in any exchange area by placing it in the
appropriate
service basket, as approved by the commission, upon a determination
by
the commission that there is no longer a telecommunications carrier
or
alternative provider providing a comparable product or service,
consid-
ering both function and price, in that exchange area.
(r) The commission shall require that for all local exchange
carriers
all such price deregulated basic intraLATA toll services be
geographically
averaged statewide and not be priced below the price floor
established
in subsection (j).
(s) Cost studies to determine price floors shall be performed
as re-
quired by the commission in response to complaints. In addition,
not-
withstanding the exemption in subsection (b), the commission may
re-
quest information necessary to execute any of its obligations under
the
act.
(t) A local exchange carrier may petition for individual
customer pric-
ing. The commission shall respond expeditiously to the petition
within a
period of not more than 30 days subject to a 30-day suspension.
(u) No audit, earnings review or rate case shall be performed
with
reference to the initial prices filed as required herein.
(v) Telecommunications carriers shall not be subject to price
regu-
lation, except that: Access charge reductions shall be passed
through to
consumers by reductions in basic intrastate toll prices; and basic
toll prices
shall remain geographically averaged statewide. As required under
K.S.A.
66-131, and amendments thereto, and except as provided for in
subsec-
tion (c) of K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2004 and amendments
thereto, telecom-
munications carriers that were not authorized to provide switched
local
exchange telecommunications services in this state as of July 1,
1996,
including cable television operators who have not previously
offered tel-
ecommunications services, must receive a certificate of
convenience
based upon a demonstration of technical, managerial and financial
via-
bility and the ability to meet quality of service standards
established by
the commission. Any telecommunications carrier or other entity
seeking
such certificate shall file a statement, which shall be subject to
the com-
mission's approval, specifying with particularity the areas in
which it will
offer service, the manner in which it will provide the service in
such areas
and whether it will serve both business customers and residential
custom-
ers in such areas. Any structurally separate affiliate of a local
exchange
carrier that provides telecommunications services shall be subject
to the
same regulatory obligations and oversight as a telecommunications
car-
rier, as long as the local exchange carrier's affiliate obtains
access to any
services or facilities from its affiliated local exchange carrier
on the same
terms and conditions as the local exchange carrier makes those
services
and facilities available to other telecommunications carriers. The
com-
mission shall oversee telecommunications carriers to prevent fraud
and
other practices harmful to consumers and to ensure compliance
with
quality of service standards adopted for all local exchange
carriers and
telecommunications carriers in the state.
Sec. 2. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2008 is hereby amended to
read as
follows: 66-2008. On or before January 1, 1997, the commission
shall
establish the Kansas universal service fund, hereinafter referred
to as the
KUSF.
(a) The initial amount of the KUSF shall be comprised of
local
exchange carrier revenues lost as a result of rate rebalancing
pursuant to
subsection (c) of K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2005 and amendments
thereto and
subsection (a) of K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2007 and amendments
thereto.
Such revenues shall be recovered on a revenue neutral basis. The
revenue
neutral calculation shall be based on the volumes and revenues for
the
12 months prior to September 30, 1996, adjusted for any rate
changes.
(b) The commission shall require every telecommunications
carrier,
telecommunications public utility and wireless telecommunications
serv-
ice provider that provides intrastate telecommunications services
to con-
tribute to the KUSF on an equitable and nondiscriminatory basis.
Any
telecommunications carrier, telecommunications public utility or
wireless
telecommunications service provider which contributes to the KUSF
may
collect from customers an amount equal to such carrier's, utility's
or pro-
vider's contribution , except that before January 1, 2000, no
such carrier,
provider or utility shall collect from customers an amount in
excess of
8.89% of its intrastate retail revenues as provided in
commission docket
no. 190-492-U but such carrier, provider or utility may collect
a lesser
amount from its customer.
Prior to January 1, 2000, with respect to wireless
telecommunications
service providers, an equitable and nondiscriminatory rate shall
be an
amount equal to the rate of contributions of wireline
telecommunications
service providers, as determined by the commission, reduced by
the per-
centage minutes of usage initiated and terminated entirely over
the wire-
less network as determined by the commission. The commission
shall es-
tablish such rate for wireless telecommunications service
providers no
later than December 31, 1998. Any contributions in excess of
distributions
collected in any reporting year shall be applied to reduce the
estimated
contribution that would otherwise be necessary for the following
year.
(c) Pursuant to the federal act, distributions from the KUSF
shall be
made in a competitively neutral manner to qualified
telecommunications
public utilities, telecommunications carriers and wireless
telecommuni-
cations providers, that are deemed eligible both under subsection
(e)(1)
of section 214 of the federal act and by the commission.
(d) The commission shall periodically review the KUSF to
determine
if the costs of qualified telecommunications public utilities,
telecommu-
nications carriers and wireless telecommunications service
providers to
provide local service justify modification of the KUSF. If the
commission
determines that any changes are needed, the commission shall
modify
the KUSF accordingly.
(e) Any qualified telecommunications carrier,
telecommunications
public utility or wireless telecommunications service provider may
re-
quest supplemental funding from the KUSF based upon a
percentage
increase in access lines over the 12-month period prior to
its the request.
The supplemental funding shall be incurred for the purpose of
providing
services to and within the service area of the qualified
telecommunica-
tions carrier, telecommunications public utility or wireless
telecommu-
nications service provider. Supplemental funding from the KUSF
shall
be used for infrastructure expenditures necessary to serve
additional cus-
tomers within the service area of such qualifying utility, provider
or car-
rier. All affected parties shall be allowed to review and verify a
request
of such a qualified utility, carrier or provider for supplemental
funding
from the KUSF, and to intervene in any commission proceeding
regard-
ing such request. The commission shall issue an order on the
request
within 120 days of filing. Additional funding also may be requested
for:
The recovery of shortfalls due to additional rebalancing of rates
to con-
tinue maintenance of parity with interstate access rates;
shortfalls due to
changes to access revenue requirements resulting from changes in
federal
rules; additional investment required to provide universal service
and en-
hanced universal service, deployed subject to subsection (a) of
K.S.A. 66-
2005, and amendments thereto; and for infrastructure
expenditures in
response to facility or service requirements established by any
legislative,
regulatory or judicial authority. Such requests shall be subject to
simpli-
fied filing procedures and the expedited review procedures, as
outlined
in the stipulation attached to the order of November 19, 1990 in
docket
no. 127,140-U (Phase IV).
(f) Additional supplemental funding from the KUSF, other than
as
provided in subsection (e) of this section, may be authorized at
the dis-
cretion of the commission. However, the commission may require
ap-
proval of such funding to be based upon a general rate case filing.
With
respect to any request for additional supplemental funding from
the
KUSF, the commission shall act expeditiously, but shall not be
subject to
the 120 day deadline set forth in subsection (e).
Sec. 3. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2011 is hereby amended to
read as
follows: 66-2011. (a) As used in this section, ``the internet''
means the
international network of interconnected government, educational,
and
commercial computer networks. An ``internet service provider''
means an
entity that provides end user access to the internet. Nothing in
this section
shall be construed to mean that the commission has any regulatory
juris-
diction over internet service providers. The provisions of this
section ap-
ply only to those locations of the state where local (7-digit)
internet access,
which supports at least 14.4 kilobits per second service with no
more than
5% blockage during the busiest hour of the service, is not
available on or
after October 1, 1996. The provisions of this
section also apply to those
locations where local access has been discontinued as of
October 1, 1996,
or access to the service deteriorates to more than 5%
blockage during the
busiest hour of the service.
(b) On or after July 1, 1996 and prior to October 1, 1996,
rural
telephone companies shall file concurring tariffs to offer internet
access
in locations identified in subsection (a) to an intraLATA internet
service
provider of the customer's choice. All rural telephone companies,
includ-
ing local exchange carriers pursuant to subsection (c), shall
provide dial-
up access to support at least 14.4 kilobit per second service
ubiquitously
throughout the exchange service area, with 28.8
19.2 kilobit per second
service made available to any requesting customer on
or on and after July
1, 1999. The commission shall increase the 19.2 kilobit per
second re-
quirement when the commission determines that more advanced
tech-
nology is both technically and economically feasible.
(c) On or after July 1, 1996 and prior to October 1, 1996, all
local
exchange carriers, other than rural telephone companies, shall file
tariffs
with the commission for two flat-rate dial-up plans, which would
provide
internet access in locations identified in subsection (a) to an
intraLATA
internet service provider of the customer's choice. All such plans
shall be
approved by the commission if they meet the criteria established in
this
section. The first plan includes: (1) For off-peak users, a monthly
rate of
not more than $15 per line for the hours of 5 p.m. through 7:59
a.m.
weekdays and all hours on weekends and federal holidays. Calls
placed
outside this specified off-peak period shall be billed at
prevailing toll rates.
(2) For unlimited usage, the rate shall not exceed $30 per line per
month.
The commission shall waive imputation considerations in reviewing
and
approving these service offerings.
(d) If a location was previously eligible for the plans
provided in sub-
section (c) and a new internet service provider establishes a
local presence
in that location, the local exchange carrier serving the
location shall:
(1) Notify all subscribers of the discounted internet
access service that
a local internet service provider is now available;
(2) continue to make the discounted internet access service
available
to existing subscribers of such service with no deterioration of
such serv-
ice; and
(3) allow no new subscribers of the discounted internet
access service.
(e) Nothing in this section shall be construed to imply
that the com-
mission has any regulatory jurisdiction over the internet or
internet serv-
ice providers with respect to quality of service, rates, billing
and collection
practices, end-to-end bandwidth, technical support or any other
aspects
of the business of providing internet access service. However,
the com-
mission shall monitor the adequacy of connectivity to internet
service
providers. Upon complaints of inadequate access, commission
staff shall
request a seven-day traffic busy line study from the local
exchange carrier
serving the internet service provider. Commission staff shall
analyze the
study results to determine whether there is more than 5% access
blockage
and shall provide the analysis to the internet service provider
for consid-
eration and possible action. If the analysis indicates a need
for additional
capacity and the internet service provider fails to take a
corrective action
within 45 days after the analysis is provided to such provider
by the
commission staff, the internet service provider shall be removed
from the
commission's internet service provider registry and subscribers
of such
internet service subscriber shall be eligible for the plans
provided in sub-
section (c) if there is no other local internet service provider
serving the
location.
(d) (f) All internet service providers
operating in the state shall reg-
ister with the commission. Such registration shall include the name
of the
internet service provider and the provider's address, contact name,
phone
number, and access line numbers. This information shall be
maintained
by the commission and disseminated to all local exchange
carriers and
rural telephone companies providing access to internet
service providers
in accordance with provisions of this section. This
information shall be
used to validate customer service requests at
the commission's internet
home page (http://www.kcc.state.ks.us). This information shall
be used to
determine a requesting customer's eligibility for the plans
provided in
subsection (c) and to provide a single authoritative listing of
internet serv-
ice provider access numbers for local exchange carriers to use
in process-
ing service orders. Absent complaints to commission staff,
internet service
providers shall be assumed to provide service with 5% or less
access block-
age upon registration. If, upon complaint and subsequent
investigation,
access blockage is determined to exceed 5%, the provider shall
be removed
from the commission's registry.
(e) (g) During the 1999 session of the
Kansas legislature, the com-
mission shall transmit a report to the chairperson,
vice-chairperson and
ranking minority member of the house standing committee on
energy
and natural resources, the senate standing committee on
transportation
and utilities and the joint committee on computers and
telecommunica-
tions concerning implementation of this section. The report shall
include
recommendations for revisions in this section necessitated by
technolog-
ical innovation or market changes in the telecommunications
industry.
The report also may include an expiration date for this
section.
New Sec. 4. (a) The commission shall establish a KUSF
working
committee. The membership of the working committee shall be
deter-
mined by the commission subject to the conditions set forth in
subsection
(b). The legislative coordinating council shall designate the chair
of the
committee and the chair shall be a legislative member. Meetings
shall be
on call of the chair.
(b) The membership of the KUSF working committee shall
include:
(1) One representative for each of the following: Local
exchange car-
riers subject to price cap regulation, interexchange carriers,
cable com-
panies, wireless telecommunications service providers, rural
telephone
companies, local exchange carriers certificated after January 1,
1996, com-
petitive access providers, internet service providers, the
citizens' utility
ratepayer board;
(2) a faculty member from a Kansas university with expertise in
tele-
communications technology, a representative of elementary and
second-
ary schools, a representative of a public library, a large
business, other
than a telecommunications public utility and a small business,
other than
a telecommunications public utility; and
(3) eight legislators as follows: two members of the house
standing
committee on utilities appointed by the speaker of the house of
repre-
sentatives, two members of such committee appointed by the
minority
leader of the house of representatives, two members of the senate
stand-
ing committee on commerce appointed by the president of the
senate
and two members of such committee appointed by the minority
leader
of the senate. Legislators serving as members of the committee and
those
members described in paragraph (2) shall receive amounts provided
by
subsection (e) of K.S.A. 75-3223 and amendments thereto for each
day
of actual attendance at any meeting of the task force or any
subcommittee
meeting approved by the task force. Such amounts paid to members
shall
be paid from appropriations to the legislative coordinating council
pur-
suant to vouchers prepared by the director of legislative
administrative
services and approved by the chairperson or vice-chairperson of the
leg-
islative coordinating council.
(c) The KUSF working committee shall discuss, identify and
develop
recommendations regarding technology issues, KUSF funding
regulatory
procedures, modifications to enhanced universal service and other
issues
identified by the committee, including but not limited to:
(1) The definition of enhanced universal service;
(2) how and when enhanced universal services should be
deployed;
(3) what mechanism is most appropriate for the recovery of
capital
costs; and
(4) how to address internet access in light of changing
technology.
(d) On or before December 1, 1998, the KUSF working
committee
shall submit a report and recommendations to the legislature based
on
the activities of the working committee.
(e) The legislative research department, the commission and
office
of the revisor of statutes shall provide staff support for the
committee.
Legislative staff shall prepare the report and any recommendations
of the
working committee.
New Sec. 5. (a) As used in this section:
(1) ``Express authorization'' means an express, affirmative
act by a
consumer clearly agreeing to the change in the consumer's
telecommu-
nications carrier or local exchange carrier to another carrier.
(2) ``Telecommunications services'' has the meaning provided
by
K.S.A. 66-1,187 and amendments thereto.
(b) No local exchange carrier or telecommunications carrier
shall sub-
mit to a local exchange carrier an order to change a consumer's
telecom-
munications carrier or local exchange carrier to another carrier
without
having obtained the express authorization of the consumer
authorized to
make the change. The local exchange carrier or telecommunications
car-
rier requesting the change shall have the burden of proving the
express
authorization by a preponderance of the evidence.
(c) No local exchange carrier, telecommunications carrier or
third
party utilized to verify an order to change a consumer's
telecommunica-
tions carrier or local exchange carrier to another carrier
shall:
(1) Engage in any activity, conduct or representation while
soliciting
or verifying a change in a consumer's telecommunications carrier or
local
exchange carrier to another carrier that has the capacity to
mislead, de-
ceive or confuse the consumer;
(2) employ a box or container used to collect entries for
sweepstakes,
contests or drawings to gather letters of agency or other documents
that
constitute authorizations by consumers to change the consumers'
tele-
communications carrier or local exchange carrier to another carrier
or to
change or add to the consumers' other telecommunications services;
or
(3) use any methods not approved by the federal
communications
commission statutes, rules and regulations (as in effect on the
effective
date of this act) or state corporation commission rules and
regulations to
change a consumer's telecommunications carrier or local exchange
carrier
to another carrier.
(d) Any local exchange carrier or telecommunications carrier
that vi-
olates subsection (b) or (c) shall be subject to a civil penalty of
not less
than $5,000 nor more than $20,000 for each such violation instead
of the
penalty provided for in subsection (a) of K.S.A. 50-636, and
amendments
thereto.
(e) Any violation of this section is a deceptive and
unconscionable act
or practice under the provisions of the Kansas consumer protection
act
and shall be subject to any and all of the enforcement provisions
of the
Kansas consumer protection act. Nothing in this section shall
preclude
the state corporation commission from exerting its authority as it
pertains
to intrastate services nor the attorney general from pursuing
violations of
any other provisions of the Kansas consumer protection act by a
local
exchange carrier or telecommunications carrier.
(f) All local exchange carriers shall offer consumers the
option of no-
tifying the local exchange carrier in writing that they do not
desire any
change of telecommunications carrier regardless of any orders to
the con-
trary submitted by any third party. The consumer shall be permitted
to
cancel such notification or to change its telecommunications
carrier by
notifying the consumer's local exchange carrier accordingly. All
local
exchange carriers shall annually notify the consumers of the
carrier's
telecommunications services of the availability of this option.
(g) This section shall be part of and supplemental to the
Kansas con-
sumer protection act.
Sec. 6. K.S.A. 1997 Supp. 66-2005, 66-2008 and 66-2011
are hereby
repealed.
Sec. 7. This act shall take effect and be in force from
and after its
publication in the Kansas register.
Approved April 23, 1998
Published in the Kansas Registers June 4, 1998
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