Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
Every large telecommunications utility, as defined in OAR
860-023-0001(2), must adhere to the standards in OAR 860-023-0055. Every small
telecommunications utility, as defined in 860-034-0010(3)(a) must adhere to the
standards in 860-034-0390. Every competitive telecommunications provider, as
defined in ORS 759.005(1),
that maintains more than 1,000 access lines on a statewide basis, must adhere
to the following service standards:
(1) Definitions.
(a) "Access Line" - A facility engineered
with dialing capability to provide retail telecommunications service that
connects a customer's service location to the Public Switched Telephone
Network;
(b) "Average Busy Season
Busy Hour" - The hour that has the highest average traffic for the three
highest months, not necessarily consecutive, in a 12-month period. The busy
hour traffic averaged across the busy season is termed the average busy season
busy hour traffic;
(c) "Average
Speed of Answer" - The average time that elapses between the time the call is
directed to a representative and the time it is answered;
(d) "Blocked Call" - A properly dialed call
that fails to complete to its intended destination except for a normal busy (60
interruptions per minute);
(e)
"Customer" - Any person, firm, partnership, corporation, municipality,
cooperative, organization, governmental agency, or other legal entity that has
applied for, been accepted, and is currently receiving local exchange
telecommunications service;
(f)
"Exchange" - Geographic area defined by maps filed with and approved by the
Commission for the provision of local exchange telecommunications service;
(g) "Final Trunk Group" - A
last-choice trunk group that receives overflow traffic and that may receive
first-route traffic for which there is no alternative route;
(h) "Force Majeure"- Circumstances beyond the
reasonable control of a competitive telecommunications provider, including but
not limited to, delays caused by:
(A) A
vendor in the delivery of equipment, where the competitive telecommunications
provider has made a timely order of equipment;
(B) Local, state, federal, or tribal
government authorities in approving easements or access to rights of way, where
the competitive telecommunications provider has made a timely application for
such approval;
(C) The customer,
including but not limited to, the customer's construction project or lack of
facilities, or failure to provide access to the customer's premises;
(D) Uncontrollable events, such as explosion,
fire, floods, frozen ground, tornadoes, severe weather, epidemics, injunctions,
wars, acts of terrorism, strikes or work stoppages, and negligent or willful
misconduct by customers or third parties, including but not limited to, outages
originating from introduction of a virus onto the provider's network;
(i) "Held Order for
Lack of Facilities" - Request for access line service delayed beyond the
initial commitment date due to lack of facilities. An access line service order
includes an order for new service, transferred service, additional lines, or
change of service;
(j) "Initial
Commitment Date" - The initial date pledged by the competitive
telecommunications provider to provide a service, facility, or repair action.
This date is within the minimum time set forth in these rules or a date
determined by good faith negotiations between the customer and the competitive
telecommunications provider;
(k)
"Network Interface" - The point of interconnection between the competitive
telecommunications provider's communications facilities and customer terminal
equipment, protective apparatus, or wiring at a customer's premises. The
network interface must be located on the customer's side of the competitive
telecommunications provider's protector;
(l) "Retail Telecommunications Service" - A
telecommunications service provided for a fee to customers. Retail
telecommunications service does not include a service provided by a competitive
telecommunications provider to another competitive telecommunications provider
or telecommunications utility, unless the competitive telecommunications
provider or telecommunications utility receiving the service is the end user of
the service;
(m) "Service Area" -
The entire geographic area the Commission has certified a competitive
telecommunications provider to serve. A competitive telecommunications provider
may petition the Commission to designate a different geographic area as its
service quality reporting area.
(n) "Tariff" - A schedule showing rates,
tolls, and charges that the competitive telecommunications provider has
established for a retail service;
(o) "Trouble Report" - A report of a
malfunction that affects the functionality and reliability of retail
telecommunications service on existing access lines, switching equipment,
circuits, or features made up to and including the network interface, to a
competitive telecommunications provider by or on behalf of that competitive
telecommunications provider's customer, which affects the functionality and
reliability of retail telecommunications service;
(p) "Wire Center" - A facility where local
telephone subscribers' access lines converge and are connected to switching
equipment that provides access to the Public Switched Telephone Network,
including remote switching units and host switching units. A wire center does
not include collocation arrangements in a connecting competitive
telecommunications provider's wire center or broadband hubs that have no
switching equipment.
(2) Measurement and Reporting Requirements. A
competitive telecommunications provider must take the measurements required by
this rule and report them to the Commission as specified. Reported measurements
must be reported to the first significant digit (i.e., one number should be
reported to the right of the decimal point). The service quality objective
service levels set forth in sections 4 through 8 of this rule apply only to
normal operating conditions and do not establish a level of performance to be
achieved during force majeure events.
(3) Additional Reporting Requirements. The
Commission may require a competitive telecommunications provider to submit
additional reports on any item covered by this rule.
(4) Provisioning and Held Orders for Lack of
Facilities. The representative of the competitive telecommunications provider
must give a retail customer an initial commitment date of not more than six
business days after a request for access line service, unless a later date is
determined through good faith negotiations between the customer and the
competitive telecommunications provider. The competitive telecommunications
provider may change the initial commitment date only if requested by the
customer. When establishing the initial commitment date, the competitive
telecommunications provider may take into account the actual time required for
the customer to meet prerequisites; e.g., line extension charges or trench and
conduit requirements. If a request for service becomes a held order for lack of
facilities, the serving competitive telecommunications provider must, within
five business days, send or otherwise provide the customer a written commitment
to fill the order.
(a) Measurement:
(A) Commitments Met - A competitive
telecommunications provider must calculate the monthly percentage of
commitments met for service, based on the initial commitment date, across its
Oregon service territory. Commitments missed for reasons solely attributed to
customers, another competitive telecommunications provider or
telecommunications utility may be excluded from the calculation of the
"commitments met" results;
(B)
Held Orders for Lack of Facilities - A competitive telecommunications provider
must determine the total monthly number of held orders, due to lack of
facilities, not completed by the initial commitment date during the reporting
month and the number of primary (initial access line) held orders, due to lack
of facilities, over 30 days past the initial commitment date.
(b) Objective Service Level:
(A) Commitments Met - Each competitive
telecommunications provider must meet at least 90 percent of its commitments
for service.
(B) Held Orders:
(i) The number of held orders for the lack of
facilities for each competitive telecommunications provider must not exceed the
greater of two per wire center, or designated service area, per month averaged
over the entire Oregon geographic area served by the competitive
telecommunications provider, or five held orders for lack of facilities per
1,000 inward orders and
(ii) The
total number of primary held orders for lack of facilities in excess of 30 days
past the initial commitment date must not exceed 10 percent of the total
monthly held orders for lack of facilities within the entire Oregon geographic
area served by the competitive telecommunications provider.
(c) Reporting
Requirement: Each competitive telecommunications provider must report monthly
to the Commission the percentage of commitments met for service, total number
of held orders for lack of facilities, and the total number of primary held
orders for lack of facilities over 30 days past the initial commitment date.
(d) Retention Requirement: Each
competitive telecommunications provider must maintain records about held orders
for lack of facilities for one year. The record must explain why each order is
held and the initial commitment date.
(5) Trouble Reports. Each competitive
telecommunications provider must maintain an accurate record of all reports of
malfunction made by its customers.
(a)
Measurement: A competitive telecommunications provider must determine the
number of customer trouble reports that were received during the month. The
competitive telecommunications provider must relate the count to the total
working access lines within a reporting wire center, or designated service
area. A competitive telecommunications provider need not report those trouble
reports that were caused by circumstances beyond its control. The approved
trouble report exclusions are:
(A) Cable
Cuts: A competitive telecommunications provider may take an exclusion if the
"buried cable location" (locate) was either not requested or was requested and
was accurate. If a competitive telecommunications provider or the provider's
contractor caused the cut, the exclusion can only be used if the locate was
accurate and all general industry practices were followed;
(B) Internet Service Provider (ISP) Blockage:
If an ISP does not have enough access trunks to handle peak traffic;
(C) Modem Speed Complaints: An exclusion may
be taken if the copper cable loop is tested at the subscriber location and the
objective service levels in section 10 of this rule were met;
(D) No Trouble Found: Where no trouble is
found, one exemption may be taken. If a repeat report of the same trouble is
received within a 30-day period, the repeat report and subsequent reports must
be counted;
(E) New Feature or
Service: Trouble reports related to a customer's unfamiliarity with the use or
operation of a new (within 30 days) feature or service;
(F) No Access: An exclusion may be taken if a
repair appointment was kept and the copper based access line at the nearest
accessible terminal met the objective service levels in section 10 of this
rule. If a repeat trouble report is received within the following 30-day
period, the repeat report and subsequent reports must be counted;
(G) Subsequent Tickets/Same Trouble/Same
Access Line: Only one trouble report for a specific complaint for the same
access line should be counted within a 48-hour period. All repeat trouble
reports after the 48-hour period must be counted;
(H) Non-Regulated or Deregulated Equipment:
Trouble associated with such equipment should not be counted;
(I) Trouble with Other Competitive
Telecommunications Providers or Telecommunications Utilities: A trouble report
caused solely by another competitive telecommunications provider or
telecommunications utility;
(J)
Lightning Strikes: Trouble reports received for damage caused by lightning
strikes can be excluded if all accepted grounding, bonding, and shielding
practices were followed by the competitive telecommunications provider, at the
damaged location; and
(K) Other
exclusions: As approved by the Commission.
(b) Objective Service Level: A competitive
telecommunications provider must maintain service so that the monthly trouble
report rate, after approved trouble report exclusions, does not exceed:
(A) For wire centers, or designated service
areas with more than 1,000 access lines: two per 100 working access lines per
wire center, or designated service area, more than three times during a sliding
12-month period.
(B) For wire
centers, or designated service area, with 1,000 or less access lines: three per
100 working access lines per wire center, or designated service area, more than
three times during a sliding 12-month period.
(c) Reporting Requirement: Each competitive
telecommunications provider must report monthly to the Commission:
(A) The trouble report rate by wire center,
or designated service area;
(B)
The reason(s) a wire center, or designated service area, meeting the standard
(did not exceed the trouble report rate threshold for more than three of the
last 12 months) exceeded a trouble report rate of 3.0 per 100 working access
lines during the reporting month;
(C) The reason(s) a wire center, or
designated service area, not meeting the standard, after the exclusion
adjustment, exceeded the trouble report rate threshold per 100 access lines
during the reporting month; and
(D) The access line count for each wire
center, or designated service area.
(d) Retention Requirement: Each competitive
telecommunications provider must maintain a record of reported trouble in such
a manner that it can be forwarded to the Commission upon the Commission's
request. The competitive telecommunications provider must keep all records for
a period of one year. The record of reported trouble must contain as a minimum
the:
(A) Telephone number;
(B) Date and time received;
(C) Time cleared;
(D) Type of trouble reported;
(E) Location of trouble; and
(F) Whether or not the present trouble was
within 30 days of a previous trouble report.
(6) Repair Clearing Time. This standard
establishes the clearing time for all trouble reports from the time the
customer reports the trouble to the competitive telecommunications provider
until the trouble is resolved. The competitive telecommunications provider must
provide each customer making a network trouble report with a commitment time
when the competitive telecommunications provider will repair or resolve the
problem.
(a) Measurement: The competitive
telecommunications provider must calculate the percentage of trouble reports
cleared within 48 hours of receiving a report for each repair center, or
designated service area. Alternatively, the competitive telecommunications
provider may use the following weekend exception to calculate the percentage
for trouble reports cleared for those reports that are received between 12 pm
on Friday until 5 pm on Sunday.
(A) The
trouble reports cleared must be calculated for reports received between 12 pm
Friday and 5 pm Saturday and cleared by 5 pm the following Monday for each
repair center, or designated service area.
(B) The trouble reports cleared must be
calculated for reports received between 5 pm Saturday and 5 pm Sunday and
cleared by 5 pm the following Tuesday for each repair center, or designated
service area. Alternative weekend repair calculations must be aggregated into
the calculation for the percentage of trouble reports cleared within 48 hours.
(b) Objective Service
Level: A competitive telecommunications provider must monthly clear at least 90
percent of all trouble reports within 48 hours of receiving a report for each
repair center, or designated service area. Alternatively, for those reports
that are received between 12 pm on Friday and 5 pm on Sunday, the competitive
telecommunications provider may use the following weekend exception to
calculate the percentage for trouble reports cleared:
(A) The competitive telecommunications
provider must clear 90 percent of all trouble reports received between 12 pm
Friday and 5 pm Saturday by 5 pm the following Monday for each repair center or
designated service area.
(B) The
competitive telecommunications provider must clear 90 percent of all trouble
reports received between 5 pm Saturday and 5 pm Sunday by 5 pm the following
Tuesday for each repair center or designated service area.
In the standard or alternative calculation methods, trouble
reports attributed solely to customers of another competitive
telecommunications provider or telecommunications utility may be excluded from
the calculation of the "repair clearing time" results.
(c) Reporting Requirement: Each
competitive telecommunications provider must report monthly to the Commission
the percentage of trouble reports cleared within 48 hours by each repair
center, or designated service area with optional adjustments allowed for
weekend repair exceptions described in (b). A competitive telecommunications
provider must use its best efforts to complete out-of-service restorations for
business customers. In addition, a competitive telecommunications provider must
use its best efforts to complete out-of-service restorations for residential
customers who have identified either a medical necessity or no access to an
alternative means of voice or E-911 communications.
(d) A competitive telecommunications provider
must indicate in its report if it opts to use the alternative weekend exception
period reporting.
(e) Retention
Requirement: None.
(7)
Blocked Calls. A competitive telecommunications provider must engineer and
maintain all intraoffice, interoffice, and access trunking and associated
switching components to allow completion of calls made during the average busy
season busy hour without encountering blockage or equipment irregularities in
excess of levels listed in subsection (7)(b) of this rule.
(a) Measurement:
(A) A competitive telecommunications provider
must collect traffic data; i.e., peg counts and usage data generated by
individual components of equipment or by the wire center as a whole, and
calculate blockage levels of the interoffice final trunk groups.
(B) System blockage is determined by special
testing at the wire center. Commission Staff or a competitive
telecommunications provider technician will place test calls to a predetermined
test number, and the total number of attempted calls and the number of
completed calls will be counted. The percentage of calls completed must be
calculated.
(b)
Objective Service Level:
(A) A competitive
telecommunications provider must maintain interoffice final trunk groups to
allow 99 percent completion of calls during the average busy season busy hour
without blockage (P.01 grade of service); and
(B) A competitive telecommunications provider
must maintain its switch operation so that 99 percent of the calls do not
experience blockage during the normal busy hour.
(C) When a competitive telecommunications
provider fails to maintain the interoffice final trunk group P.01 grade of
service for four or more consecutive months, it will be considered
out-of-standard until the condition is resolved. A single repeat blockage
within two months of restoring the P.01 grade of service will be considered a
continuation of the original blockage.
(c) Reporting Requirement: Each competitive
telecommunications provider must report monthly to the Commission:
(A) Local and extended area service (EAS)
final trunk groups that do not meet the objective service level for trunk group
blockage, measured from each of its switches, regardless of the ownership of
the terminating switch;
(B) Its
tandem switch final trunk group blockages associated with EAS traffic;
(C) Any known cause for the
blockage and actions to bring the trunks into standard; and
(D) Identity of the competitive
telecommunications provider or telecommunications utility, if other than the
reporting competitive telecommunications provider, responsible for maintaining
those final trunk groups not meeting the standard.
(d) Retention Requirement: Each competitive
telecommunications provider must maintain records for one year.
(8) Access to Competitive
Telecommunications Provider Representatives. This rule sets the allowed time
for competitive telecommunications provider business office or repair service
center representatives to answer customer calls.
(a) Measurement:
(A) Direct Representative Answering: A
competitive telecommunications provider must measure the answer time from the
first ring at the competitive telecommunications provider business office or
repair service center;
(B) Driven,
Automated, or Interactive Answering System: The option of transferring to the
competitive telecommunications provider representative must be included in the
initial local service-screening message. The competitive telecommunications
provider must measure the answering time from the point a call is directed to
its representatives; e.g., when the call leaves the Voice Response Unit;
(C) Each competitive
telecommunications provider must calculate:
(i) The monthly percentage of the total calls
placed to the business office and repair service center and the number of calls
answered by representatives within 20 seconds; or
(ii) The average speed of answer time for the
total calls received by the business office and repair service center.
(b)
Objective Service Level:
(A) No more than 1
percent of calls to the competitive telecommunications provider business office
or repair service center may encounter a busy signal.
(B) The competitive telecommunications
provider representatives must answer at least 80 percent of calls within 20
seconds or have an average speed of answer time of 50 seconds or less.
(c) Reporting
Requirement:
(A) Each competitive
telecommunications provider must report monthly to the Commission an exception
report if busy signals were encountered in excess of 1 percent for either the
business office or repair service center; and
(B) Each competitive telecommunications
provider must report monthly to the Commission the percentage of calls answered
within 20 seconds or the average speed of answer time for both the business
office and repair service center. Once a method of measurement is reported by
the provider, that method can only be changed with permission of the
Commission.
(d)
Retention Requirement: None.
(9) Interruption of Service Notification. A
competitive telecommunications provider must report significant outages that
affect customer service. These interruptions could be caused by switch outage,
electronic outage, cable cut, or construction.
(a) Measurement: A competitive
telecommunications provider must notify the Commission when an interruption
occurs that exceeds any of the following thresholds:
(A) Cable cuts, excluding service wires and
wires placed in lieu of cable, or electronic outages lasting longer than 30
minutes and affecting 50 percent or more of in-service lines.
(B) Toll or Extended Area Service isolation
lasting longer than 30 minutes and affecting 50 percent or more of in-service
lines.
(C) Isolation of a central
office (host or remote) from the E 9-1-1 emergency dialing code or isolation of
a Public Safety Answering Position (PSAP).
(D) Isolation of a wire center for more than
15 minutes.
(E) Outage of the
business office or repair center access system lasting longer than 15 minutes
in those instances where the traffic cannot be re-routed to a different center.
(b) Objective Service
Level: Not applicable.
(c)
Reporting Requirement: A competitive telecommunications provider must report
service interruptions to the Commission engineering staff by telephone, by
facsimile, by electronic mail, or personally within two hours during normal
work hours of the business day after the company becomes aware of such
interruption of service. Interim reports will be given to the Commission as
significant information changes (e.g., estimated time to restore, estimated
impact to customers, cause of the interruption, etc.) until it is reported that
the affected service is restored.
(d) Retention Requirement: None.
(10) Customer Access Line Testing.
All customer access lines must be designed, installed, and maintained to meet
the levels in subsection (b) of this section.
(a) Measurement: Each competitive provider
must make all loop parameter measurements at the network interface, or as close
as access allows;
(b) Objective
Service Level: Each access line must meet the following levels:
(A) Loop Current: The serving wire center
loop current, when terminated into a 400-ohm load, must be at least 20
milliamperes;
(B) Loop Loss: The
maximum loop loss, as measured with a 1004-hertz tone from the serving wire
center, must not exceed 8.5 decibels (dB);
(C) Metallic Noise: The maximum metallic
noise level, as measured on a quiet line from the serving wire center, must not
exceed 20 decibels above referenced noise level - C message weighting (dBrnC);
and
(D) Power Influence: As a
goal, power influence, as measured on a quiet line from the serving wire
center, must not exceed 80 dBrnC.
(c) Reporting Requirement: A competitive
telecommunications provider must report measurement readings as directed by the
Commission;
(d) Retention
Requirement: None.
(11)
Customer Access Lines and Wire Center Switching Equipment. All combinations of
access lines and wire center switching equipment must be capable of accepting
and correctly processing at least the following network control signals from
the customer premises equipment. The wire center must provide dial tone and
maintain an actual measured loss between interoffice and access trunk groups.
(a) Measurement: Each competitive
telecommunications provider must make measurements at or to the serving wire
center;
(b) Objective Service
Level:
(A) Dial Tone Speed. Ninety-eight
percent of originating average busy hour call attempts must receive dial tone
within three seconds; and
(B) A
competitive telecommunications provider must maintain all interoffice and
access trunk groups so that the actual measured loss (AML) in no more than 30
percent of the trunks deviates from the expected measured loss (EML) by more
than 0.7 dB and no more than 4.5 percent of the trunks deviates from EML by
more than 1.7 dB.
(c)
Reporting Requirement: None.
(d)
Retention Requirement: None.
(12) Special Service Access Lines. All
special service access lines must meet the performance requirements specified
in applicable competitive telecommunications provider tariffs or contracts.
(13) Competitive
Telecommunications Provider Interconnectivity. A competitive telecommunications
provider connected to the facilities of another competitive telecommunications
provider or telecommunications utility must operate its system in a manner that
will not impede either company's ability to meet required standards of service.
A competitive telecommunications provider must report interconnection
operational problems promptly to the Commission.
(14) Remedies for Violation of This Standard.
(a) If a competitive telecommunications
provider subject to this rule fails to meet a minimum service quality standard,
the Commission must require the competitive telecommunications provider to
submit a plan for improving performance as provided in ORS
759.450(5). If
a competitive telecommunications provider does not meet the goals of its
improvement plan within six months, or if the plan is disapproved by the
Commission, the Commission may assess penalties in accordance with ORS
759.450(5) through
(7).
(b) In addition to the remedy provided under
ORS 759.450(5), if
the Commission believes that a competitive telecommunications provider subject
to this rule has violated one or more of its service standards, the Commission
must give the competitive telecommunications provider notice and an opportunity
to request a hearing. If the Commission finds a violation has occurred, the
Commission may require the competitive telecommunications provider to provide
the following relief to the affected customers:
(A) An alternative means of
telecommunications service for violations of paragraph (4)(b)(B) of this rule;
(B) Customer billing credits equal
to the associated non-recurring and recurring charges of the competitive
telecommunications provider for the affected service for the period of the
violation; and
(C) Other relief
authorized by Oregon law.
(15)
(a) If
the Commission determines that effective competition exists in one or more
exchange(s), it may exempt all competitive telecommunications providers and
telecommunications utilities providing telecommunications services in those
exchanges from the requirements of this rule, in whole or in part. In making
this determination, the Commission will consider:
(A) The extent to which the service is
available from alternative providers in the relevant exchange(s);
(B) The extent to which the services of
alternative providers are functionally equivalent or substitutable at
comparable rates, terms, and conditions;
(C) Existing barriers to market entry;
(D) Market share and
concentration;
(E) Number of
suppliers;
(F) Price to cost
ratios;
(G) Demand side
substitutability (e.g., customer perceptions of competitors as viable
alternatives); and
(H) Any other
factors deemed relevant by the Commission.
(b) When a competitive telecommunications
provider petitions the Commission for exemption under this provision, the
Commission must provide notice of the petition to all relevant competitive
telecommunications providers and telecommunications utilities providing the
applicable service(s) in the exchange(s) in question. The Commission will
provide such notified competitive telecommunications providers and
telecommunications utilities an opportunity to submit comments in response to
the petition. The comments may include requests that, following the
Commission's analysis outlined above in paragraphs (15)(a)(A) through (H), the
commenting competitive telecommunications provider or telecommunications
utilities be exempt from these rules for the applicable service(s) in the
relevant exchange(s).
(c) The
Commission may grant a competitive telecommunications provider's petition for
an exemption from service quality reporting requirements if the competitive
telecommunications provider meets all service quality objective service levels
set forth in sections (4) through (8) of this rule for the 12 months prior to
the month in which the petition is filed.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 183, 756 & 759
Stats. Implemented: ORS
756.040,
759.020,
759.030 &
759.050