Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) Purpose. This
section establishes guidelines for financial assistance to eligible
telecommunications providers (ETPs) that serve the high cost rural areas of the
state, other than study areas of small and rural incumbent local exchange
companies (ILECs), so that basic local telecommunications service may be
provided at reasonable rates in a competitively neutral manner.
(b) Application. This section applies to
telecommunications providers that have been designated ETPs by the commission
in accordance with §
26.417 of this title (relating to
Designation as Eligible Telecommunications Providers to Receive Texas Universal
Service Funds (TUSF)).
(c)
Definitions. The following words and terms when used in this section have the
following meaning unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
(1) Business line--The telecommunications
facilities providing the communications channel that serves a single-line
business customer's service address. For the purpose of this definition, a
single-line business line is one to which multi-line hunting, trunking, or
other special capabilities do not apply. For a line served by an ILEC, a
business line is a line served in accordance with the ILEC's business service
tariff or a package that includes such a tariffed service. For a line served by
an ILEC in accordance with a customer specific contract or that is otherwise
not served in accordance with a tariff, to qualify as a business line, the
service must be provided in accordance with a customer application, subscriber
agreement, or contract entered into by a public or private organization of any
character, or a representative or agent of such entity, irrespective of the
person or entity in actual possession of the telephone device. For a line that
is served by an ETP other than an ILEC, to qualify as a business line, the
service must be provided in accordance with a customer application, subscriber
agreement, or contract entered into by a public or private organization of any
character, or a representative or agent of such entity, irrespective of the
person or entity in actual possession of the telephone device.
(2) Eligible line--A residential line or a
single-line business line over which an ETP provides the service supported by
the THCUSP through its own facilities, purchase of unbundled network elements
(UNEs), or a combination of its own facilities and purchase of UNEs. An
eligible line may be a business line or a residential line but cannot be
both.
(3) Eligible
telecommunications provider (ETP)--A telecommunications provider designated by
the commission in accordance with §
26.417 of this title.
(4) Physical 911 address--For the purposes of
this section, a physical 911 address is an address transmitted to the
applicable emergency service providers by an ETP with respect to a line that is
not stated in GPS coordinates.
(5)
Residential line--The telecommunications facilities providing the
communications channel that serves a residential customer's service address.
For the purpose of this definition, a residential line is one to which
multi-line hunting, trunking, or other special capabilities do not apply. A
line that qualifies as a business line does not qualify as a residential
line.
(6) Service Address--For the
purposes of this section, a business or residential customer's service address
is defined using the following criteria:
(A) A
service address is the unique physical street address, including any suite or
unit number, where a line is provided to a customer, except as provided in
clauses (i) - (ii) and subparagraph (B) of this paragraph.
(i) If no unique physical street address is
available, a physical 911 address must be used.
(ii) If no unique physical street address and
no physical 911 address are available, the business or residential customer's
service address must be an area of land under common operation or use as
defined by a deed, state permit, lease name, or licensed or registered field of
operation, which must be described by an ETP using GPS coordinates. Multiple
buildings within a single area of land under common operation or use must not
qualify as separate service addresses, even if the GPS coordinates for each
building are different.
(B) For eligible lines served using
commercial mobile radio service, a service address for such a line may be the
customer's billing address for the purposes of this definition.
(d) Service to be
supported by the THCUSP. The THCUSP must support basic local telecommunications
services provided by an ETP in high cost rural areas of the state. Local
measured residential service, if chosen by the customer and offered by the ETP,
must also be supported.
(1) Initial
determination of the definition of basic local telecommunications service.
Basic local telecommunications service must consist of the following:
(A) flat rate, single party residential and
business local exchange telephone service, including primary directory
listings;
(B) tone dialing
service;
(C) access to operator
services;
(D) access to directory
assistance services;
(E) access to
911 service where provided by a local authority;
(F) telecommunications relay
service;
(G) the ability to report
service problems seven days a week;
(H) availability of an annual local
directory;
(I) access to toll
services; and
(2) Subsequent
determinations.
(A) Initiation of subsequent
determinations.
(i) The definition of the
services to be supported by the THCUSP shall be reviewed by the commission
every three years from September 1, 1999.
(ii) The commission may initiate a review of
the definition of the services to be supported on its own motion at any
time.
(B) Criteria to be
considered in subsequent determinations. In evaluating whether services should
be added to or deleted from the list of supported services, the commission may
consider the following criteria:
(i) the
service is essential for participation in society;
(ii) a substantial majority, 75% of
residential customers, subscribe to the service;
(iii) the benefits of adding the service
outweigh the costs; and
(iv) the
availability of the service, or subscription levels, would not increase without
universal service support.
(e) Criteria for determining amount of
support under THCUSP. The commission will determine the amount of per-line
support to be made available to ETPs in each eligible wire center in accordance
with this section. The amount of support available to each ETP must be
calculated using the base support amount as of the effective date of this
section and applying the annual reductions as described in this subsection. As
used in this subsection, "basic local telecommunications service" refers to
services available to residential customers only, and "exchange" or "wire
center" refer to regulated exchanges or wire centers only.
(1) Determining base support amount available
to ILEC ETPs. The initial annual base support amount for an ILEC ETP must be
the annualized monthly THCUSP support amount for the month preceding the
effective date of this section, less the 2011 amount of support disbursed to
the ILEC ETP from the federal universal service fund for High Cost Loop, High
Cost Model, Safety Net Additive, and Safety Valve components of the frozen
high-cost support as determined by the Universal Service Administration Company
in accordance with 47 C.F.R.
§
54.312(a). The
initial per-line monthly support amount for a wire center must be the per-line
support amount for the wire center for the month preceding the effective date
of this section, less each wire center's pro rata share of one-twelfth of the
2011 amount of support disbursed to the ILEC ETP from the federal universal
service fund for High Cost Loop, High Cost Model, Safety Net Additive, and
Safety Valve components of the frozen high-cost support determined by the
Universal Service Administration Company in accordance with
47 C.F.R §
54.312(a). The initial
annual base support amount must be reduced annually as described in paragraph
(3) of this subsection.
(2)
Determination of the reasonable rate. The reasonable rate for basic local
telecommunications service will be determined by the commission in a contested
case proceeding. To the extent that an ILEC ETP's existing rate for basic local
telecommunications service in any wire center is less than the reasonable rate,
the ILEC ETP may, over time, increase its rates for basic local
telecommunications service to an amount not to exceed the reasonable rate. The
increase to the existing rate must not in any one year exceed an amount to be
determined by the commission in the contested case proceeding. An ILEC ETP may,
in its sole discretion, accelerate its THCUSP reduction in any year by as much
as 10% and offset such reduction with a corresponding local rate increase in
order to produce rounded rates. In no event will any such acceleration obligate
the ETP to reduce its THCUSP support in excess of the total reduction
obligation initially calculated under paragraph (3) of this
subsection.
(3) Annual reductions
to THCUSP base support and per-line support recalculation. As part of the
contested case proceeding referenced in paragraph (2) of this subsection, each
ILEC ETP must, using line counts as of the end of the month preceding the
effective date of this rule, calculate the amount of additional revenue that
would result if the ILEC ETP were to charge the reasonable rate for basic local
telecommunications service to all residential customers for those services
where the price, or imputed price, are below the reasonable rate. Lines in
exchanges for which an application for deregulation is pending as of June 1,
2012 must not be included in this calculation. If the application for
deregulation for any such exchanges subsequently is denied by the commission,
the ILEC ETP must, within 20 days of the final order denying such application,
submit revised calculations including the lines in those exchanges for which
the application for deregulation was denied. Without regard to whether an ILEC
ETP increases its rates for basic local telecommunications service to the
reasonable rate, the ILEC ETP's annual base support must be reduced on January
1 of each year for four consecutive years, with the first reduction occurring
on January 1, 2013. The ETP's annual base support amount must be reduced by 25%
of the additional revenue calculated in accordance with this paragraph in each
year of the transition period. This reduction must be accomplished by reducing
support for each wire center served by the ETP proportionally.
(4) Portability. The support amounts
established in accordance with this section are applicable to all ETPs and are
portable with the customer.
(5)
Limitation on availability of THCUSP support.
(A) THCUSP support must not be provided in a
wire center in a deregulated market that has a population of at least
30,000.
(B) An ILEC may receive
support from the THCUSP for a wire center in a deregulated market that has a
population of less than 30,000 only if the ILEC demonstrates to the commission
that the ILEC needs the support to provide basic local telecommunications
service at reasonable rates in the affected market. An ILEC may use evidence
from outside the wire center at issue to make the demonstration. An ILEC may
make the demonstration for a wire center before or after submitting a petition
to deregulate the market in which the wire center is located.
(6) Total Support Reduction Plan.
Within 10 days of the effective date of this section, an ILEC may elect to
participate in a Total Support Reduction Plan (TSRP) as prescribed in this
subsection, by filing a notification of such participation with the commission.
The TSRP would serve as an alternative to the reduction plan prescribed in
paragraph (3) of this subsection. The TSRP will be implemented as follows:
(A) For an ILEC making this election, the
ILEC must reduce its THCUSP funding in accordance with paragraph (3) of this
subsection with the exception that THCUSP reductions due to exchange
deregulation may be credited against the electing ILEC's annual reduction
obligation in the calendar year immediately following such
deregulation.
(B) In no event will
an electing ILEC seek or receive THCUSP funding after January 1, 2017 even if
the electing ILEC would otherwise be entitled to such funding as of this
date.
(f)
Support Reduction. Subject to the provisions of §
26.405(f)(3) of
this title (relating to Financial Need for Continued Support), the commission
will adjust the support to be made available from the THCUSP according to the
following criteria.
(1) For each ILEC that is
not electing under subsection (e)(6) of this section and that served greater
than 31,000 access lines in this state on September 1, 2022, or a company or
cooperative that is a successor to such an ILEC, the monthly per-line support
that the ILEC is eligible to receive for each exchange on December 31, 2023,
from the THCUSP is reduced:
(A) on January 1,
2024, to 75 percent of the level of support the ILEC was eligible to receive on
December 31, 2023 ;
(B) on January
1, 2025, to 50 percent of the level of support the ILEC was eligible to receive
on December 31, 2023;
(C) on
January 1, 2026, to 25 percent of the level of support the ILEC was eligible to
receive on December 31, 2023; and
(D) on January 1, 2027, to zero percent of
the level of support the ILEC was eligible to receive on December 31,
2023.
(2) An ILEC subject
to this subsection may file a petition to show financial need for continued
support, in accordance with §
26.405(f)(1) of
this title, before January 1, 2027.
(g) Reporting requirements. An ETP that
receives support in accordance with this section must report the following
information:
(1) Monthly reporting
requirement. An ETP must report the following to the TUSF administrator on a
monthly basis:
(A) the total number of
eligible lines for which the ETP seeks TUSF support; and
(B) a calculation of the base support
computed in accordance with the requirements of subsection (d) of this
section.
(2) Quarterly
filing requirements. An ETP must file quarterly reports with the commission
showing actual THCUSP receipts by study area.
(A) Reports must be filed electronically in
the project number assigned by the commission's central records office no later
than 3:00 p.m. on the 30th calendar day after the end of the calendar quarter
reporting period.
(B) Each ETP's
reports must be filed on an individual company basis; reports that aggregate
the disbursements received by two or more ETPs will not be accepted as
complying with the requirements of this paragraph.
(C) All reports filed in accordance with
paragraph (3) of this subsection must be publicly available.
(3) Annual reporting requirements.
An ETP must report annually to the TUSF administrator that it is qualified to
participate in the THCUSP.
(4)
Other reporting requirements. An ETP must report any other information that is
required by the commission or the TUSF administrator, including any information
necessary to assess contributions and disbursements from the TUSF.