HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

2524

TWENTY-SIXTH LEGISLATURE, 2012

H.D. 2

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

 

RELATING TO THE REGULATION OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND CABLE TELEVISION SERVICES.

 

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

 


PART I

     SECTION 1.  The legislature recognizes that advanced telecommunications and cable television services capability is essential infrastructure required to drive innovation, the economy, and job creation in the twenty-first century as the telephone, interstate highways, and air travel did in the twentieth century.

     This Act establishes a telecommunications and cable television services commission within the department of business, economic development, and tourism and consolidates the regulation of telecommunications carriers and cable operators in the State under the commission.  In doing so, this Act creates a "one stop shop" to assist businesses providing telecommunications and cable services, and expedites the process for these businesses to make their services available to the public.  Consolidating and streamlining the State's regulatory processes for the telecommunications sector in the State will help facilitate the development and growth of telecommunications and cable television infrastructure and services.

     The public utilities commission currently regulates telecommunications carriers pursuant to chapter 269, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and the director of commerce and consumer affairs currently regulates cable operators pursuant to chapter 440G, Hawaii Revised Statutes.

     This Act combines the telecommunications provisions from chapter 269, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and the cable television systems from chapter 440G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, in its entirety, into a new chapter so that both telecommunications carriers and cable operators are subject to regulation by the telecommunications and cable television services commission.

     This Act provides for transitional provisions to ensure that there is no gap in regulatory authority caused by the transition.  This Act also makes conforming amendments to other chapters of the Hawaii Revised Statutes.

PART II

     SECTION 2.  The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:

"CHAPTER

TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND CABLE TELEVISION SERVICES

PART I.  GENERAL PROVISIONS

     §   -1  Definitions.  As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

     "Access organization" means any nonprofit organization designated by the director to oversee the development, operation, supervision, management, production, or broadcasting of programs for any channels obtained under section     -52, and any officers, agents, and employees of such an organization with respect to matters within the course and scope of their employment by the access organization.

     "Applicant" means a person who initiates an application or proposal.

     "Application" means an unsolicited filing.

     "Basic cable service" means any service tier which includes the retransmission of local television broadcast signals.

     "Cable franchise" means a nonexclusive initial authorization or renewal thereof issued pursuant to this chapter, whether the authorization is designated as a franchise, permit, order, contract, agreement, or otherwise, which authorizes the construction or operation of a cable system.

     "Cable operator" means any person or group of persons:

     (1)  Who provides cable service over a cable system and directly or through one or more affiliates owns a significant interest in the cable system; or

     (2)  Who otherwise controls or is responsible for, through any arrangement, the management and operation of a cable system.

     "Cable service" means:

     (1)  The one-way transmission to subscribers of video programming or other programming service; and

     (2)  Subscriber interaction, if any, which is required for the selection of video programming or other programming service.

     "Cable system" means any facility within this State consisting of a set of closed transmission paths and associated signal generation, reception, and control equipment that is designed to provide cable service which includes video programming and which is provided to multiple subscribers within a community, but does not include:

     (1)  A facility that serves only to retransmit the television signals of one or more television broadcast stations;

     (2)  A facility that serves only subscribers in one or more multiple unit dwellings under common ownership, control, or management, unless that facility or facilities uses any public right-of-way; or

     (3)  A facility of a public utility subject in whole or in part to the provisions of chapter 269, except to the extent that those facilities provide video programming directly to subscribers.

     "Carrier of last resort" means a telecommunications carrier designated by the commission to provide universal service in a given local exchange service area determined to be lacking in effective competition.

     "Commission" means the telecommunications and cable television services commission.

     "Designated local exchange service area" means an area as determined by the commission to be best served by designating a carrier of last resort pursuant to section     -47.

     "Enforcement officer" means any person employed and authorized by the commission to investigate any matter on behalf of the commission. 

     "Facility" includes all real property, antenna, poles, supporting structures, wires, cables, conduits, amplifiers, instruments, appliances, fixtures, and other personal property used by a cable operator in providing service to its subscribers.

     "Institution of higher education" means an academic college or university accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.

     "Other programming service" means information that a cable operator makes available to all subscribers generally.

     "Person" means an individual, partnership, association, joint stock company, trust, corporation, or governmental agency.

     "Proposal" means a filing solicited by the director.

     "Public, educational, or governmental access facilities" means:

     (1)  Channel capacity designated for public, educational, or governmental uses; and

     (2)  Facilities and equipment for the use of that channel capacity.

     "Public highways" has the meaning defined by section 264-1, including both state and county highways, but operation upon rails shall not be deemed transportation on public highways.

     "Public place" includes any property, building, structure, or water to which the public has a right of access and use.

     "Public utilities commission" means the public utilities commission of this State.

     "School" means an academic and noncollege type regular or special education institution of learning established and maintained by the department of education or licensed and supervised by that department.

     "Service area" means the geographic area for which a cable operator has been issued a cable franchise.

     "Telecommunications carrier" or "telecommunications common carrier" means any person that owns, operates, manages, or controls any facility used to furnish telecommunications services for profit to the public, or to classes of users as to be effectively available to the public, engaged in the provision of services, such as voice, data, image, graphics, and video services, that make use of all or part of their transmission facilities, switches, broadcast equipment, signalling, or control devices.

     "Telecommunications service" or "telecommunications" means the offering of transmission between or among points specified by a user, of information of the user's choosing, including voice, data, image, graphics, and video without change in the form or content of the information, as sent and received, by means of electromagnetic transmission, or other similarly capable means of transmission, with or without benefit of any closed transmission medium, and does not include cable service as defined in this section.

     "Video programming" means programming provided by, or generally considered comparable to programming provided by, a television broadcast station.

     §    -2  Telecommunications and cable television services commission; established.  (a)  There shall be a telecommunications and cable television services commission consisting of three members, one of which shall be the chairperson.  The speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate shall each submit a list of four nominees for each member of the commission to the governor.  The governor shall select the commissioners and the chairperson from the respective lists, with the advice and consent of the senate.  If the governor selects the chairperson from the list of nominees submitted by the speaker of the house of representatives, the governor shall appoint the other two commissioners from the lists submitted by the president of the senate.  If the governor selects the chairperson from the list of nominees submitted by the president of the senate, the governor shall appoint the other two commissioners from the lists submitted by the speaker of the house of representatives.  All commissioners shall be appointed for terms of four years each, except that the terms of the commissioners first appointed shall be for two, three, and four years, respectively, as designated by the governor at the time of appointment.   Thereafter, upon expiration of the terms of the commissioners first appointed, the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate shall submit two names each to the governor, for each vacancy on the commission.  Each commissioner shall hold office until the commissioner's successor is appointed and qualified.  No commissioner shall serve more than twelve consecutive years.

     The commissioners shall devote full time to their duties as members of the commission and no commissioner shall hold any other public office or other employment during the commissioner's term of office.  No person owning any stock or bonds of any telecommunications carrier or cable operator, or having any interest in, or deriving any remuneration from, any telecommunications carrier or cable operator shall be appointed a commissioner.

     (b)  The chairperson of the commission shall be paid a salary set at            per cent of the salary of the director of human resources development, and each of the other commissioners shall be paid a salary equal to ninety-five per cent of the chairperson's salary.  The commissioners shall be exempt from chapters 76 and 89, but shall be members of the state employees' retirement system and shall be eligible to receive the benefits of any state or federal employee benefit program generally applicable to officers and employees of the State, including those under chapter 87A.

     (c)  The commission is placed within the department of business, economic development, and tourism for administrative purposes.

     §    -3  Employment of assistants.  (a)  The chairperson of the commission may appoint and employ clerks, stenographers, agents, engineers, accountants, and other assistants for the commission as the chairperson finds necessary for the performance of the commission's functions and define their powers and duties.  The chairperson may appoint and, at pleasure, dismiss a chief administrator and hearings officers as may be necessary.  Notwithstanding section 103D-209, the chairperson shall appoint one or more attorneys independent of the attorney general who shall act as attorneys for the commission and define their powers and duties and fix their compensation.  The chief administrator and attorneys shall be exempt from chapter 76.  Research assistants, economists, legal secretaries, legal assistants, and enforcement officers may be appointed with or without regard to chapter 76.  Other employees shall be appointed as may be needed by the chairperson in accordance with chapter 76.

     (b)  Notwithstanding section 91-13, the commission may consult with its assistants appointed under authority of this section in any contested case or agency hearing concerning any issue of facts.  Neither the commission nor any of its assistants shall in the proceeding consult with any other person or party except upon notice and an opportunity for all parties to participate, save to the extent required for the disposition of ex parte matters authorized by law.

     §    -4  Annual report and register of orders.  The commission shall prepare and present to the governor, through the director of business, economic development, and tourism, in the month of January in each year a report respecting its actions during the preceding fiscal year.  This report shall include summary information and analytical, comparative, and trend data concerning major regulatory issues acted upon and pending before the commission; cases processed by the commission, including their dispositions; telecommunications carriers' and cable operators' operations, capital improvements, and rates; telecommunications carriers' and cable operators' performance in terms of efficiency and quality of services rendered; environmental matters having a significant impact upon public utilities; actions of the federal government affecting the regulation of telecommunications carriers and cable operators in Hawaii; long- and short-range plans and objectives of the commission; together with the commission's recommendations respecting legislation and other matters requiring executive and legislative consideration.  Copies of the annual reports shall be furnished by the governor to the legislature.  In addition, the commission shall establish and maintain a register of all of its orders and decisions, which shall be open and readily available for public inspection, and no order or decision of the commission shall take effect until it is filed and recorded in this register.

     §    -5  General powers and duties.  (a)  The commission shall have the general supervision hereinafter set forth over all telecommunications carriers and cable operators, and shall perform the duties and exercise the powers imposed or conferred upon it by this chapter.  Included among the general powers of the commission is the authority to adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary for the purposes of this chapter.

     (b)  The chairperson of the commission may appoint a hearings officer, who shall not be subject to chapter 76, to hear and recommend decisions in any proceeding before it other than a proceeding involving the rates or any other matters covered in the tariffs filed by the telecommunications carriers.  The hearings officer shall have the power to take testimony, make findings of fact and conclusions of law, and recommend a decision; provided that the findings of fact, the conclusions of law, and the recommended decision shall be reviewed and may be approved by the commission after notice to the parties and an opportunity to be heard.  The hearings officer shall have all of the above powers conferred upon the commission under section    ‑13.

     §    -6  Electronic copies of documents.  (a)  The commission shall accept from any person who submits a document to the commission the original and one electronic copy of each application, complaint, pleading, brief, or other document required to be filed with the commission pursuant to this chapter and the consumer advocate shall accept service of one paper copy and one electronic copy of each application, complaint, pleading, brief, or other document filed with the commission.

     (b)  The commission shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to effectuate the purposes of this section.  Until the final adoption by the commission of rules governing the electronic filing of documents with the commission, the following requirements shall apply to all documents submitted to the commission pursuant to this section; provided that additional requirements with regard to document format may be established by the commission through written guidelines:

     (1)  Unless otherwise required by this chapter or the rules or guidelines of the commission, each person who submits or files an application, complaint, pleading, brief, or other document shall submit to or file with the commission an original and one electronic copy of each document and shall serve one paper copy and one electronic copy of each document on the consumer advocate;

     (2)  All paper documents submitted to or filed with the commission shall be printed on one side of the page only and, if practicable, in portrait orientation;

     (3)  Original paper documents submitted to or filed with the commission shall not be stapled but shall be clipped together or placed in a clearly marked three-ring binder, as appropriate;

     (4)  All paper documents filed or submitted to the commission shall include appropriately labeled separator pages in addition to tabbed dividers, as applicable;

     (5)  All confidential documents filed under confidential seal shall be clearly designated in accordance with the requirements of any applicable protective order, and the sealed envelope in which the confidential documents are enclosed shall clearly indicate the appropriate docket number and subject;

     (6)  Electronic documents shall be submitted on a clearly marked compact disk and shall be in portable document format saved in separate files corresponding to the original paper document submission; provided that electronic documents submitted under confidential seal shall be submitted on a separate compact disk, clearly marked as confidential and indicating the appropriate docket number and subject; and

     (7)  Electronic documents shall be named using the filing party's name, docket number, date of filing, and name of document as part of the document title.

     Upon final adoption of rules pursuant to chapter 91, the rules of the commission governing submission or filing of electronic documents shall supersede the provisions of this subsection.

     (c)  The commission shall accept any application, complaint, pleading, brief, or other document required to be filed with the commission pursuant to this chapter as either a paper document or an electronic document.

     (d)  If a signature is required on any document submitted electronically pursuant to this section, that requirement shall be satisfied by the inclusion of an electronic signature.  Chapter 489E shall apply to all electronic documents submitted pursuant to this section.

     §    -7  Investigative powers.  (a)  The commission and each commissioner shall have the power to examine the condition of each telecommunications carrier and cable operator, the manner in which it is operated with reference to the safety or accommodation of the public, the safety, working hours, and wages of its employees, the fares and rates charged by it, the value of its physical property, the issuance by it of stocks and bonds, and the disposition of the proceeds thereof, the amount and disposition of its income, and all of its financial transactions, its business relations with other persons, companies, or corporations, its compliance with all applicable state and federal laws and with the provisions of its franchise, charter, and articles of association, if any, its classifications, rules, regulations, practices, and service, and all matters of every nature affecting the relations and transactions between it and the public or persons or corporations.

     (b)  The commission may investigate any person acting in the capacity of or engaging in the business of a telecommunications carrier or cable operator within the State, without having a certificate of public convenience and necessity or other authority previously obtained under and in compliance with this chapter or the rules adopted under this chapter.

     (c)  Any investigation may be made by the commission on its own motion, and shall be made when requested by the telecommunications carrier or cable operator to be investigated, or by any person upon a sworn written complaint to the commission, setting forth any prima facie cause of complaint.  A majority of the commission shall constitute a quorum.

PART II.  TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES

     §    -8  Certificates of public convenience and necessity.  (a)  No telecommunications carrier, as defined in section    ‑1, shall commence its business without first having obtained from the commission a certificate of public convenience and necessity.  Applications for certificates shall be made in writing to the commission and shall comply with the requirements prescribed in the commission's rules.  The application shall include the type of service to be performed, the geographical scope of the operation, the type of equipment to be employed in the service, the name of competing telecommunications carriers for the proposed service, a statement of its financial ability to render the proposed service, a current financial statement of the applicant, and the rates or charges proposed to be charged including the rules governing the proposed service.

     (b)  If the applicant for a certificate of public convenience and necessity has any known consumers or patrons at the time of the filing of the application, the applicant shall notify these consumers or patrons of the rates and charges proposed to be established by the application; provided that:

     (1)  The notice shall be mailed to the last known address of the consumer or patron on file with the applicant or the applicant's affiliates; and

     (2)  The manner and the fact of the notification shall be reported to the commission,

within seven days from the filing of the application.

     (c)  A certificate shall be issued to any qualified applicant, authorizing the whole or any part of the operations covered by the application, if it is found that the applicant is fit, willing, and able properly to perform the service proposed and to conform to the terms, conditions, and rules adopted by the commission, and that the proposed service is, or will be, required by the present or future public convenience and necessity; otherwise the application shall be denied.  Any certificate issued shall specify the service to be rendered and there shall be attached to the exercise of the privileges granted by the certificate at the time of issuance and from time to time thereafter, such reasonable conditions and limitations as a public convenience and necessity may require.  The reasonableness of the rates, charges, and tariff rules proposed by the applicant shall be determined by the commission during the same proceeding examining the present and future conveniences and needs of the public and qualifications of the applicant, in accordance with the standards set forth in section    ‑19.

     (d)  No telecommunications carrier that holds a franchise or charter enacted or granted by the legislative or executive authority of the State or its predecessor governments, or that has a bona fide operation as a telecommunications carrier heretofore recognized by the commission, shall be required to obtain a certificate of public convenience and necessity under this section.

     (e)  Any certificate, upon application of the holder and at the discretion of the commission, may be amended, suspended, or revoked, in whole or in part.  The commission after notice and hearing may suspend, amend, or revoke any certificate in part or in whole, if the holder is found to be in wilful violation of any of the provisions of this chapter or with any lawful order or rule of the commission adopted thereunder, or with any term, condition, or limitation of the certificate.

     §    -9  Telecommunications carriers to furnish information.  Every telecommunications carrier or other person subject to investigation by the commission, shall at all times, upon request, furnish to the commission all information that it may require respecting any of the matters concerning which it is given power to investigate, and shall permit the examination of its books, records, contracts, maps, and other documents by the commission, or any of its members, or any person authorized by it in writing to make the examination, and shall furnish the commission with a complete inventory of its property in a form as the commission may direct.

     §    -10  Location of records.  A telecommunications carrier shall keep and maintain within the State such records, books, papers, accounts, and other documents as the commission may determine are necessary to its effective regulation.

     §    -11  Annual financial reports.  All annual financial reports required to be filed with the commission by telecommunications carriers shall include a certification that the report conforms with the applicable uniform system of accounts adopted by the commission.

     §    -12  Report accidents.  Every telecommunications carrier shall report to the commission all accidents caused by or occurring in connection with its operations and service, and the commission shall investigate the causes of any accident which results in loss of life, and may investigate any other accidents which in its opinion require investigation.

     §    -13  Commission may compel attendance of witnesses, etc.  In all investigations made by the commission, and in all proceedings before it, the commission and each commissioner shall have the same powers respecting administering oaths, compelling the attendance of witnesses and the production of documentary evidence, examining witnesses, and punishing for contempt, as are possessed by circuit courts.  In case of disobedience by any person to any order of the commission or of any commissioner, or any subpoena issued by it or the commissioner, or of the refusal of any witness to testify to any matter regarding which the witness may be questioned lawfully, any circuit court, on application by the commission or a commissioner, shall compel obedience as in case of disobedience of the requirements of a subpoena issued from a circuit court or a refusal to testify therein.  No person shall be excused from testifying or from producing any book, waybill, document, paper, or account in any investigation or inquiry by a hearing before the commission or any commissioner, when ordered to do so, upon the ground that the testimony or evidence, book, waybill, document, paper, or account required of the person may tend to incriminate the person or subject the person to penalty or forfeiture; but no person shall be prosecuted for any crime, punished for any crime, or subjected to any criminal penalty or criminal forfeiture for or on account of any act, transaction, matter, or thing concerning which the person shall under oath have testified or produced documentary evidence.  Nothing herein shall be construed as in any manner giving to any telecommunications carrier or any person immunity of any kind.  The fees and traveling expenses of witnesses shall be the same as allowed witnesses in the circuit courts and shall be paid by the State out of any appropriation available for the expenses of the commission.  All meetings and hearings of the commission shall be public.

     §    -14  Notices.  (a)  Whenever an investigation is undertaken by the commission, reasonable notice in writing of the fact and of the subject or subjects to be investigated shall be given to the telecommunications carrier or the person concerned, and when based upon complaints made to it as prescribed in section     -7, a copy of the complaint, and a notice in writing of the date and place fixed by the commission for beginning the investigation, shall be served upon the telecommunications carrier or the person concerned, or other respondent and the complainant not less than two weeks before the date designated for the hearing.

     (b)  Any notice provided pursuant to section     -19(b), shall plainly state the rate, fare, charge, classification, schedule, rule, or practice proposed to be established, abandoned, modified, or departed from and the proposed effective date thereof and shall be given by filing the notice with the commission and keeping it open for public inspection.

     (c)  Any public hearing held pursuant to section    -19(b), shall be a noticed public hearing or hearings on the island or islands on which the telecommunications carrier provides services.  Notice of the hearing, with the purpose thereof and the date, time, and place at which it will open, shall be given not less than once in each of three weeks in the county or counties in which the telecommunications carrier provides service, the first notice being not less than twenty-one days before the public hearing and the last notice being not more than two days before the scheduled hearing.  The applicant or applicants shall notify their consumers or patrons of the proposed change in rates and of the time and place of the public hearing not less than one week before the date set, the manner and the fact of notification to be reported to the commission before the date of hearing.

     §    -15  Right to be represented by counsel.  At any investigation by or proceeding before the commission, the telecommunications carrier or the person concerned, or other respondent or party and any complainant or permitted intervenor shall have the right to be present and represented by counsel, to present any evidence desired, and to cross-examine any witness who may be called.

     §    -16  Commission may institute proceedings to enforce chapter.  (a)  If the commission is of the opinion that any telecommunications carrier or any person is violating or neglecting to comply with any provision of this chapter or of any rule, regulation, order, or other requirement of the commission, or of any provisions of its franchise, charter, or articles of association, if any, or that changes, additions, extensions, or repairs are desirable in its plant or service to meet the reasonable convenience or necessity of the public, or to ensure greater safety or security, or that any rates, fares, classifications, charges, or rules are unreasonable or unreasonably discriminatory, or that in any way it is doing what it ought not to do, or not doing what it ought to do, it shall in writing inform the telecommunications carrier or the person and may institute proceedings before it as may be necessary to require the telecommunications carrier or the person to correct any such deficiency.  In such event, the commission may by order direct the director of commerce and consumer affairs to appear in such proceeding, to carry out the purposes of this section.  The commission may examine any of the matters referred to in section     -7, notwithstanding that the same may be within the jurisdiction of any court or other body; provided that this section shall not be construed as in any manner limiting or otherwise affecting the jurisdiction of any such court or other body.

     (b)  In addition to any other remedy available, the commission or its enforcement officer may issue citations to any person acting in the capacity of or engaging in the business of a telecommunications carrier within the State, without having a certificate of public convenience and necessity or other authority previously obtained under and in compliance with this chapter or the rules adopted thereunder.

     (1)  The citation may contain an order of abatement and an assessment of civil penalties as provided in section    -32(b).  All penalties collected under this subsection shall be deposited in the treasury of the State.  Service of a citation issued under this subsection shall be made by personal service whenever possible, or by certified mail, restricted delivery, sent to the last known business or residence address of the person cited.

     (2)  Any person served with a citation under this subsection may submit a written request to the commission for a hearing, within twenty days from the receipt of the citation, with respect to the violations alleged, the scope of the order of abatement and the amount of civil penalties assessed.  If the person cited under this subsection timely notifies the commission of the request for a hearing, the commission shall afford an opportunity for a hearing under chapter 91.  The hearing shall be conducted by the commission or the commission may designate a hearings officer to hold the hearing.

     (3)  If the person cited under this subsection does not  submit a written request to the commission for a hearing within twenty days from the receipt of the citation, the citation shall be deemed a final order of the commission.  The commission may apply to the appropriate court for a judgment to enforce the provisions of any final order, issued by the commission or designated hearings officer pursuant to this subsection, including the provisions for abatement and civil penalties imposed.  In any proceeding to enforce the provisions of the final order of the commission or designated hearings officer, the commission need only show that the notice was given, a hearing was held or the time granted for requesting the hearing has run without such a request, and a certified copy of the final order of the commission or designated hearings officer.

     (4)  If any party is aggrieved by the decision of the commission or the designated hearings officer, the party may appeal to the intermediate appellate court, subject to chapter 602, in the manner provided for civil appeals from the circuit court; provided that the operation of an abatement order shall not be stayed on appeal unless specifically ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction after applying the stay criteria enumerated in section 91-14(c).  The sanctions and disposition authorized under this subsection shall be separate and in addition to all other remedies either civil or criminal provided in any other applicable statutory provision.  The commission may adopt rules under chapter 91 as may be necessary to fully effectuate this subsection.

     §    -17  Appeals.  (a)  An appeal from an order of the commission under this chapter shall lie, subject to chapter 602, in the manner provided for civil appeals from the circuit courts.  Only a person aggrieved in a contested case proceeding provided for in this chapter may appeal from the order, if the order is final, or if preliminary, is of the nature defined by section 91-14(a).  The commission may elect to be a party to all matters from which an order of the commission is appealed, and the commission may file appropriate responsive briefs or pleadings in the appeal; provided that where there was no adverse party in the case below, or in cases where there is no adverse party to the appeal, the commission shall be a party to all matters in which an order of the commission is appealed and shall file the appropriate responsive briefs or pleadings in defending all such orders.  The appearance of the commission as a party in appellate proceedings in no way limits the participation of persons otherwise qualified to be parties on appeal. 

     (b)  The appeal shall not of itself stay the operation of the order appealed from, but the appellate court may stay the order after a hearing upon a motion therefor and may impose conditions it deems proper, including but not limited to requiring a bond, requiring that accounts be kept, or requiring that other measures be taken as ordered to secure restitution of the excess charges, if any, made during the pendency of the appeal, in case the order appealed from is sustained, reversed, or modified in whole or in part.

     §    -18  Alternative dispute resolution.  The commission may require the parties in any matter before the commission to participate in nonbinding arbitration, mediation, or other alternative dispute resolution process prior to the hearing.

     §    -19  Regulation of rates; ratemaking procedures.  (a)  All rates, fares, charges, classifications, schedules, rules, and practices made, charged, or observed by any telecommunications carrier or by two or more telecommunications carriers jointly shall be just and reasonable and shall be filed with the commission.  The rates, fares, classifications, charges, and rules of every telecommunications carrier shall be published by the telecommunications carrier in such manner as the commission may require, and copies shall be furnished to any person on request.

     To the extent the contested case proceedings referred to in chapter 91 are required in any rate proceeding to ensure fairness and to provide due process to parties that may be affected by rates approved by the commission, the evidentiary hearings shall be conducted expeditiously and shall be conducted as a part of the ratemaking proceeding.

     (b)  No rate, fare, charge, classification, schedule, rule, or practice, other than one established pursuant to an automatic rate adjustment clause previously approved by the commission, shall be established, abandoned, modified, or departed from by any telecommunications carrier, except after thirty days' notice to the commission as prescribed in section     -14(b), and prior approval by the commission for any increases in rates, fares, or charges.  The commission, in its discretion and for good cause shown, may allow any rate, fare, charge, classification, schedule, rule, or practice to be established, abandoned, modified, or departed from upon notice less than that provided for in section     -14(b).  A contested case hearing shall be held in connection with any increase in rates, and the hearing shall be preceded by a public hearing as prescribed in section     -14(c), at which the consumers or patrons of the telecommunications carrier may present testimony to the commission concerning the increase.  The commission, upon notice to the telecommunications carrier, may:

     (1)  Suspend the operation of all or any part of the proposed rate, fare, charge, classification, schedule, rule, or practice or any proposed abandonment or modification thereof or departure therefrom;

     (2)  After a hearing, by order:

         (A)  Regulate, fix, and change all such rates, fares, charges, classifications, schedules, rules, and practices so that the same shall be just and reasonable;

         (B)  Prohibit rebates and unreasonable discrimination between localities or between users or consumers under substantially similar conditions;

         (C)  Regulate the manner in which the property of every telecommunications carrier is operated with reference to the safety and accommodation of the public;

         (D)  Prescribe its form and method of keeping accounts, books, and records, and its accounting system;

         (E)  Regulate the return upon its telecommunications carrier property;

         (F)  Regulate the incurring of indebtedness relating to its telecommunications carrier business; and

         (G)  Regulate its financial transactions; and

     (3)  Do all things that are necessary and in the exercise of the commission's power and jurisdiction, all of which as so ordered, regulated, fixed, and changed are just and reasonable, and provide a fair return on the property of the telecommunications carrier actually used or useful for telecommunications carrier purposes.

     (c)  The commission may in its discretion, after public hearing and upon showing by a telecommunications carrier of probable entitlement and financial need, authorize temporary increases in rates, fares, and charges; provided that the commission shall require by order the telecommunications carrier to return, in the form of an adjustment to rates, fares, or charges to be billed in the future, any amounts with interest, at a rate equal to the rate of return on the telecommunications carrier's rate base found to be reasonable by the commission, received by reason of continued operation that are in excess of the rates, fares, or charges finally determined to be just and reasonable by the commission.  Interest on any excess shall commence as of the date that any rate, fare, or charge goes into effect that results in the excess and shall continue to accrue on the balance of the excess until returned.

     (d)  The commission shall make every effort to complete its deliberations and issue its decision as expeditiously as possible and before nine months from the date the telecommunications carrier filed its completed application; provided that in carrying out this mandate, the commission shall require all parties to a proceeding to comply strictly with procedural time schedules that it establishes.  If a decision is rendered after the nine-month period, the commission shall report in writing the reasons therefor to the legislature within thirty days after rendering the decision.

     Notwithstanding subsection (c), if the commission has not issued its final decision on a telecommunication carrier's rate application within the nine-month period stated in this section, the commission, within one month after the expiration of the nine-month period, shall render an interim decision allowing the increase in rates, fares and charges, if any, to which the commission, based on the evidentiary record before it, believes the telecommunications carrier is probably entitled.  The commission may postpone its interim rate decision for thirty days if the commission considers the evidentiary hearings incomplete.  In the event interim rates are made effective, the commission shall require by order the telecommunications carrier to return, in the form of an adjustment to rates, fares, or charges to be billed in the future, any amounts with interest, at a rate equal to the rate of return on the telecommunications carrier's rate base found to be reasonable by the commission, received under the interim rates that are in excess of the rates, fares, or charges finally determined to be just and reasonable by the commission.  Interest on any excess shall commence as of the date that any rate, fare, or charge goes into effect that results in the excess and shall continue to accrue on the balance of the excess until returned.

     The nine-month period in this subsection shall begin only after a completed application has been filed with the commission and a copy served on the consumer advocate.  The commission shall establish standards concerning the data required to be set forth in the application in order for it to be deemed a completed application.  The consumer advocate may, within twenty-one days after receipt, object to the sufficiency of any application, and the commission shall hear and determine any objection within twenty-one days after it is filed.  If the commission finds that the objections are without merit, the application shall be deemed to have been completed upon original filing.  If the commission finds the application to be incomplete, it shall require the applicant to submit an amended application consistent with its findings, and the nine-month period shall not commence until the amended application is filed.

     (e)  In any case of two or more organizations, trades, or businesses (whether or not incorporated, whether or not organized in the State, and whether or not affiliated) owned or controlled directly or indirectly by the same interests, the commission may distribute, apportion, or allocate gross income, deductions, credits, or allowances between or among the organizations, trades, or businesses, if it determines that the distribution, apportionment, or allocation is necessary to adequately reflect the income of any such organizations, trades, or businesses to carry out the regulatory duties imposed by this section.

     (f)  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for telecommunications carriers having annual gross revenues of less than $2,000,000, the commission may make and amend its rules and procedures to provide the commission with sufficient facts necessary to determine the reasonableness of the proposed rates without unduly burdening the telecommunications carrier company and its customers.  In the determination of the reasonableness of the proposed rates, the commission shall:

     (1)  Require the filing of a standard form application to be developed by the commission.  The standard form application for general rate increases shall describe the specific facts that shall be submitted to support a determination of the reasonableness of the proposed rates, and require the submission of financial information in conformance with a standard chart of accounts to be approved by the commission, and other commission guidelines to allow expeditious review of a requested general rate increase application;

     (2)  Hold a public hearing as prescribed in section     -14(c) at which the consumers or patrons of the telecommunications carrier may present testimony to the commission concerning the increase.  The public hearing shall be preceded by proper notice, as prescribed in section     ‑14; and

     (3)  Make every effort to complete its deliberations and issue a proposed decision and order within six months from the date the telecommunications carrier files a completed application with the commission; provided that all parties to the proceeding strictly comply with the procedural schedule established by the commission and no person is permitted to intervene.  If a proposed decision and order is rendered after the six-month period, the commission shall report in writing the reasons therefor to the legislature within thirty days after rendering the proposed decision and order.  Prior to the issuance of the commission's proposed decision and order, the parties shall not be entitled to a contested case hearing.

              If all parties to the proceeding accept the proposed decision and order, the parties shall not be entitled to a contested case hearing, and section   ‑17 shall not apply.  If the commission permits a person to intervene, the six‑month period shall not apply and the commission shall make every effort to complete its deliberations and issue its decision within the nine‑month period from the date the telecommunications carrier's completed application was filed, pursuant to subsections (b), (c), and (d).

              If a party does not accept the proposed decision and order, either in whole or in part, that party shall give notice of its objection or nonacceptance within the time frame prescribed by the commission in the proposed decision and order, setting forth the basis for its objection or nonacceptance; provided that the proposed decision and order shall have no force or effect pending the commission's final decision.  If notice is filed, the above six‑month period shall not apply and the commission shall make every effort to complete its deliberations and issue its decision within the nine‑month period from the date the telecommunications carrier's completed application was filed as set forth in subsection (d).  Any party that does not accept the proposed decision and order under this paragraph shall be entitled to a contested case hearing; provided that the parties to the proceeding may waive the contested case hearing.

     Telecommunications carriers subject to this subsection shall follow the standard chart of accounts to be approved by the commission for financial reporting purposes.  The telecommunications carriers shall file a certified copy of the annual financial statements in addition to an updated chart of accounts used to maintain their financial records with the commission and consumer advocate within ninety days from the end of each calendar or fiscal year, as applicable, unless this time frame is extended by the commission.  The owner, officer, general partner, or authorized agent of the telecommunications carrier shall certify that the reports were prepared in accordance with the standard chart of accounts.

     (g)  Any automatic fuel rate adjustment clause requested by a telecommunications carrier in an application filed with the commission shall be designed, as determined in the commission's discretion, to:

     (1)  Fairly share the risk of fuel cost changes between the telecommunications carrier and its customers;

     (2)  Provide the telecommunications carrier with sufficient incentive to reasonably manage or lower its fuel costs and encourage greater use of renewable energy;

     (3)  Allow the telecommunications carrier to mitigate the risk of sudden or frequent fuel cost changes that cannot otherwise reasonably be mitigated through other commercially available means, such as through fuel hedging contracts;

     (4)  Preserve, to the extent reasonably possible, the telecommunications carrier's financial integrity; and

     (5)  Minimize, to the extent reasonably possible, the telecommunications carrier's need to apply for frequent applications for general rate increases to account for the changes to its fuel costs.

     §     -20  Statewide rate increase surcharge assessment on ratepayers in emergency situations.  (a)  Any telecommunications carrier that sustains damage to its facilities as a result of a state-declared emergency (including but not limited to disaster relief and civil defense emergencies as defined in chapters 127 and 128) and incurs costs related to the restoration and repair of its facilities which, if assessed only on the telecommunications carrier ratepayers of the affected telecommunications carrier service territory, may result in a rate increase of more than fifteen per cent for the average ratepayer in that telecommunications carrier service territory, may apply to the commission in accordance with this section to recover the costs provided herein through a monthly surcharge which shall be assessed on a statewide basis and shall be based on the telecommunications carrier's net restoration and repair costs; provided that the surcharge shall not result in an assessment of more than fifteen per cent for the average ratepayer in each of the other telecommunications carrier territories and provided further that the commission shall exclude ratepayers in telecommunications carrier service territories with rates that may be substantially higher than other telecommunications carrier service territories in the State.

     The commission shall have the authority to initially set, or subsequently revise, the surcharge to reflect the actual net restoration and repair costs incurred after deduction of amounts received from outside sources of recovery.  Such outside sources of recovery shall include but not be limited to insurance proceeds, government grants, and shareholder contributions.

     (b)  Any telecommunications carrier meeting the criteria set forth in subsection (a) may file an application with the commission setting forth its estimated restoration and repair costs as well as the estimated amount or amounts that may be received from outside sources of recovery.

     (c)  Within ninety days after filing of the telecommunications carrier's application, the commission, upon notice, hearing, and a determination that the application is just, reasonable, and in the public interest, shall:

     (1)  Decide the extent to which it is just, reasonable, and in the public interest for the damaged telecommunications carrier's ratepayers or shareholders, or both, to bear part or all of the restoration and repair costs;

     (2)  Determine whether the estimated amount of any net restoration and repair costs to be borne by the ratepayers of the damaged telecommunications carrier would result in a rate increase of more than fifteen per cent for the average residential ratepayer in that telecommunications carrier's service territory;

     (3)  Issue an order allowing the affected telecommunications carrier or another telecommunications carrier acting on behalf of the affected telecommunications carrier to implement a monthly surcharge on all ratepayers statewide for the type of service rendered by the affected telecommunications carrier if the commission determines pursuant to paragraph (2) that a rate increase of more than fifteen per cent would otherwise be assessed;

     (4)  Exclude from any such order ratepayers in telecommunications carrier service territories with rates that are substantially higher than other telecommunications carrier service territories in the State; and

     (5)  Periodically review the order to ensure that the amounts collected by, or on behalf of, the telecommunications carrier shall not exceed the amount determined by the commission to be the net restoration and repair costs actually incurred.

The surcharge shall be assessed over a period to be determined by the commission; provided, however, that the period shall not exceed ten years.

     (d)  Any outside sources of recovery, including but not limited to grants from federal or state sources, shall be used to offset any restoration and repair costs except where the use of the funds is otherwise limited by the grantor thereof.

     (e)  For the purposes of this section, the term "restoration and repair costs" means those costs necessary to restore facilities damaged by a state-declared emergency to a functional level substantially the same as that existing immediately before the emergency and does not include the costs of upgrades or enhancements.

     (f)  Any telecommunications carrier authorized by the commission to assess a surcharge pursuant to this section shall state separately the amount of the assessment on each affected ratepayer's monthly bill.

     §    -21  Lifeline telephone rates.  (a)  The commission shall implement a program to achieve lifeline telephone rates for residential telephone users.

     (b)  "Lifeline telephone rate" means a discounted rate for residential telephone users identified as elders with limited income and the handicapped with limited income as designated by the commission.

     (c)  The commission shall require every telephone telecommunications carrier providing local telephone service to file a schedule of rates and charges providing a rate for lifeline telephone subscribers.

     (d)  Nothing in this section shall preclude the commission from changing any rate established pursuant to subsection (a) either specifically or pursuant to any general restructuring of all telephone rates, charges, and classifications.

     §    -22  Telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.  (a)  The commission shall implement intrastate telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.

     (b)  The commission shall investigate the availability of experienced providers of quality telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.  The provision of these telecommunications relay services shall be awarded by the commission to the provider or providers the commission determines to be best qualified to provide these services.  In reviewing the qualifications of the provider or providers, the commission shall consider the factors of cost, quality of services, and experience, and any other factors as the commission deems appropriate.

     (c)  If the commission determines that the telecommunications relay service can be provided in a cost-effective manner by a service provider or service providers, the commission may require every intrastate telecommunications carrier to contract with the provider or providers for the provision of the telecommunications relay service under the terms established by the commission.

     (d)  The commission may establish a surcharge to collect customer contributions for telecommunications relay services required under this section.

     (e)  The commission may adopt rules to establish a mechanism to recover the costs of administering and providing telecommunications relay services required under this section.

     (f)  The commission shall require every intrastate telecommunications carrier to file a schedule of rates and charges and every provider of telecommunications relay service to maintain a separate accounting for the costs of providing telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.

     (g)  Nothing in this section shall preclude the commission from changing any rate established pursuant to this section either specifically or pursuant to any general restructuring of all telephone rates, charges, and classifications.

     (h)  As used in this section:

     "Telecommunications relay services" means telephone transmission services that provide an individual who has a hearing or speech disability the ability to engage in communication by wire or radio with a hearing individual in a manner that is functionally equivalent to the ability of an individual who does not have a hearing or speech disability to communicate using wire or radio voice communication services.  "Telecommunications relay services" includes services that enable two-way communication using text telephones or other nonvoice terminal devices, speech-to-speech services, video relay services, and non-English relay services.

     §    -23  Aggregators of telephone service requirements.  (a)  For the purposes of this section:

     "Aggregator" means every person or entity that is not a telecommunications carrier, who, in the ordinary course of its business, makes telephones available and aggregates the calls of the public or transient users of its business, including but not limited to a hotel, motel, hospital, or university, that provides operator-assisted services through access to an operator service provider.

     "Operator service" means a service provided by a telecommunications company to assist a customer to complete a telephone call.

     (b)  The commission, by rule or order, shall adopt and enforce operating requirements for the provision of operator-assisted services by an aggregator.  These requirements shall include but not be limited to the following:

     (1)  Posting and display of information in a prominent and conspicuous fashion on or near the telephone equipment owned or controlled by the aggregator which states the identity of the operator service provider, the operator service provider's complaint handling procedures, and means by which the customer may access the various operator service providers;

     (2)  Identification by name of the operator service provider prior to the call connection and, if not posted pursuant to paragraph (1), a disclosure of pertinent rates, terms, conditions, and means of access to various operator service providers and the local exchange carriers; provided that the operator service provider shall disclose this information at any time upon request by the customer;

     (3)  Allowing the customer access to any operator service provider operating in the relevant geographic area through the access method chosen by the provider or as deemed appropriate by the commission; and

     (4)  Other requirements as deemed reasonable by the commission in the areas of public safety, quality of service, unjust or discriminatory pricing, or other matters in the public interest.

     §    -24  Retail intrastate services; fully competitive.  (a)  Notwithstanding section     -25 or any other law to the contrary, the commission shall treat retail intrastate telecommunications services, under the commission's classification of services relating to costs, rates, and pricing, as fully competitive and apply all commission rules in accordance with that designation.  In addition, a telecommunications carrier shall not be required to obtain approval or provide any cost support or other information to establish or otherwise modify in any manner its rates, fares, and charges, or to bundle any service offerings into a single or combined price package; provided that a telecommunications carrier, except upon receiving the approval of the commission, shall not charge a higher rate for any retail telecommunications basic exchange service than the rate for the same service included in the telecommunications carrier's filed tariff.  All rates, fares, charges, and bundled service offerings shall be filed with the commission for information purposes only.

     (b)  This section shall apply to retail rates charged for service to end-user consumers only and shall not apply to wholesale rates charged for services provided by a telecommunications carrier to another telecommunications provider, a wireless communications provider, a voice over internet protocol communications provider, or other similar communications provider.

     (c)  Nothing herein shall modify any requirements of a telecommunications carrier to provide lifeline telephone service, comply with carrier of last resort obligations, or comply with applicable service quality standards.

     §    -25  Telecommunications providers and services.  (a)  Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, the commission, upon its own motion or upon the application of any person, and upon notice and hearing, may exempt a telecommunications provider or a telecommunications service from any or all of the provisions of this chapter, except the provisions of section     -38, upon a determination that the exemption is in the public interest.  In determining whether an exemption is in the public interest, the commission shall consider whether the exemption promotes state policies in telecommunications, the development, maintenance, and operation of effective and economically efficient telecommunications services, and the furnishing of telecommunications services at just and reasonable rates and in a fair manner in view of the needs of the various customer segments of the telecommunications industry.  Among the specific factors the commission may consider are:

     (1)  The responsiveness of the exemption to changes in the structure and technology of the State's telecommunications industry;

     (2)  The benefits accruing to the customers and users of the exempt telecommunications provider or service;

     (3)  The impact of the exemption on the quality, efficiency, and availability of telecommunications services;

     (4)  The impact of the exemption on the maintenance of fair, just, and reasonable rates for telecommunications services;

     (5)  The likelihood of prejudice or disadvantage to ratepayers of basic local exchange service resulting from the exemption;

     (6)  The effect of the exemption on the preservation and promotion of affordable, universal, basic telecommunications services as those services are determined by the commission;

     (7)  The resulting subsidization, if any, of the exempt telecommunications service or provider by nonexempt services;

     (8)  The impact of the exemption on the availability of diversity in the supply of telecommunications services throughout the State;

     (9)  The improvements in the regulatory system to be gained from the exemption, including the reduction in regulatory delays and costs;

    (10)  The impact of the exemption on promoting innovations in telecommunications services;

    (11)  The opportunity provided by the exemption for telecommunications providers to respond to competition; and

    (12)  The potential for the exercise of substantial market power by the exempt provider or by a provider of the exempt telecommunications service.

     (b)  The commission shall expedite, where practicable, the regulatory process with respect to exemptions and shall adopt guidelines under which each provider of an exempted service shall be subject to similar terms and conditions.

     (c)  The commission may condition or limit any exemption as the commission deems necessary in the public interest.  The commission may provide a trial period for any exemption and may terminate the exemption or continue it for such period and under such conditions and limitations as it deems appropriate.

     (d)  The commission may require a telecommunications provider to apply for a certificate of public convenience and necessity pursuant to section     -8; provided that the commission may waive any application requirement whenever it deems the waiver to be in furtherance of the purposes of this section.  The exemptions under this section may be granted in a proceeding for certification or in a separate proceeding.

     (e)  The commission may waive other regulatory requirements under this chapter applicable to telecommunications providers when it determines that competition will serve the same purpose as public interest regulation.

     (f)  If any provider of an exempt telecommunications service or any exempt telecommunications provider elects to terminate its service, it shall provide notice of this to its customers, the commission, and every telephone telecommunications carrier providing basic local exchange service in this State.  The notice shall be in writing and given not less than six months before the intended termination date.  Upon termination of service by a provider of an exempt service or by an exempt provider, the appropriate telephone telecommunications carrier providing basic local exchange service shall ensure that all customers affected by the termination receive basic local exchange service.  The commission shall, upon notice and hearing or by rule, determine the party or parties who shall bear the cost, if any, of access to the basic local exchange service by the customers of the terminated exempt service.

     (g)  Upon the petition of any person or upon its own motion, the commission may rescind any exemption or waiver granted under this section if, after notice and hearing, it finds that the conditions prompting the granting of the exemption or waiver no longer apply, or that the exemption or waiver is no longer in the public interest, or that the telecommunications provider has failed to comply with one or more of the conditions of the exemption or applicable statutory or regulatory requirements.

     (h)  For purposes of this section, the commission, upon determination that any area of the State has less than adequate telecommunications service, shall require the existing telecommunications provider to show cause as to why the commission should not authorize an alternative telecommunications provider for that area under the terms and conditions of this section.

     §    -26  Universal service subsidies.  (a)  For any alternative telecommunications provider authorized to provide basic local exchange service to any area of the State pursuant to section     -25(h), the commission may consider the following:

     (1)  Transferring the subsidy, if any, of the local exchange provider's basic residential telephone service to the alternative provider; and

     (2)  Transferring from the local exchange carrier to the alternative provider the amounts, if any, generated by the local exchange provider's services other than basic residential telephone service and which are used to subsidize basic residential service in the area.

     (b)  To receive the subsidy amounts from the local exchange service provider, the alternative telecommunications provider shall be required, to the extent possible, to obtain basic residential service subsidies from both the local exchange service provider and national universal service providers.

     §    -27  Changes in subscriber carrier selections; prior authorization required; penalties for unauthorized changes.  (a)  No telecommunications carrier shall initiate a change in a subscriber's selection or designation of a long-distance carrier without first receiving:

     (1)  A letter of agency or letter of authorization;

     (2)  An electronic authorization by use of a toll-free number;

     (3)  An oral authorization verified by an independent third party; or

     (4)  Any other prescribed authorization;

provided that the letter or authorization shall be in accordance with verification procedures that are prescribed by the Federal Communications Commission or the commission.  For purposes of this section, "telecommunications carrier" does not include a provider of commercial mobile radio service as defined by 47 United States Code section 332(d)(1).

     (b)  Upon a determination that any telecommunications carrier has engaged in conduct that is prohibited in subsection (a), the commission shall order the carrier to take corrective action as deemed necessary by the commission and may subject the telecommunications carrier to administrative penalties pursuant to section     -32.  Any proceeds from administrative penalties collected under this section shall be deposited into the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund.

     The commission, if consistent with the public interest, may suspend, restrict, or revoke the registration, charter, or certificate of the telecommunications carrier, thereby denying, modifying, or limiting the right of the telecommunications carrier to provide service in this State.

     (c)  The commission shall adopt rules, pursuant to chapter 91, necessary for the purposes of this section.  The commission may notify customers of their rights under these rules.

     §    -28  Emergency telephone service; capital costs; ratemaking.  (a)  A telecommunications carrier providing local exchange telecommunications services may recover the capital cost and associated operating expenses of providing a statewide enhanced 911 emergency telephone service in the public switched telephone network, through:

     (1)  A telephone line surcharge; or

     (2)  Its rate case.

     (b)  Notwithstanding the commission's rules on ratemaking, the commission shall expedite and give highest priority to any necessary ratemaking procedures related to providing a statewide enhanced 911 emergency telephone service; provided that the commission may set forth conditions and requirements as the commission determines are in the public interest.

     (c)  The commission shall require every telecommunications carrier providing statewide enhanced 911 emergency telephone service to maintain a separate accounting of the costs of providing an enhanced 911 emergency service and the revenues received from related surcharges until the next general rate case.  The commission shall further require that every telecommunications carrier imposing a surcharge shall identify such as a separate line item on all customer billing statements.

     (d)  This section shall not preclude the commission from changing any rate, established pursuant to this section, either specifically or pursuant to any general restructuring of all telephone rates, charges, and classifications.

     §    -29  Relations with an affiliated interest; definition; contracts with affiliates filed and subject to commission action.  (a)  For purposes of this section, "affiliated interests" with a telecommunications carrier includes the following:

     (1)  Every person owning or holding, directly or indirectly, ten per cent or more of the voting securities of a telecommunications carrier, and every person having ownership of ten per cent or more of voting securities of a person owning ten per cent or more of the voting securities of a telecommunications carrier;

     (2)  Every corporation ten per cent or more of whose voting securities is owned by any person owning ten per cent or more of the voting securities of a telecommunications carrier;

     (3)  Every person who is an officer or director of a telecommunications carrier;

     (4)  Every corporation operating a telecommunications carrier, or providing engineering, accounting, legal, or similar service to telecommunications carriers or common carriers by water, which has three or more officers or three or more directors in common with a telecommunications carrier, and every other corporation which has directors in common with a telecommunications carrier where the number of common directors is more than one-third of the total number of the telecommunications carrier's directors.

     (b)  The purpose of this section is to encourage companies providing essential utility and regulated transport service to Hawaii consumers to obtain their services, supplies, and equipment by relying, to the extent practicable, on competitive procurement practices; provided that when companies obtain their services, supplies, and equipment from affiliated interests, the contracts and agreements between the regulated entity and its affiliates must be shown by clear and convincing evidence to be in furtherance of the interests of the public.

     (c)  No contract or agreement providing for the furnishing of management, supervisory, construction, engineering, accounting, legal, financial, or similar services, and no contract or agreement for the purchase, sale, lease, furnishing or exchange of any real or personal property rights, including but not limited to real estate, improvements on land, equipment, leasehold interests, easements, rights-of-way, franchises, licenses, permits, trademarks, and copyrights, made or entered into after July 1, 1988, between a telecommunications carrier and any affiliated interest shall be valid or effective unless and until the contract or agreement has been received by the commission.  It shall be the duty of every telecommunications carrier to file with the commission a verified copy of any contract or agreement with an affiliate having a face value of at least $300,000, or a verified summary of any unwritten contract or agreement having a face value of at least $300,000 within forty-five days of the effective date of the contract or agreement.  Each and every contract or agreement between a telecommunications carrier and an affiliate for capital expenditures other than for real property or an interest therein, shall be accompanied with price quotations provided by at least two nonaffiliated suppliers, providers, or purveyors, or if such price quotations cannot be obtained without substantial expense to the telecommunications carrier, that the telecommunications carrier verify that fact by affidavit; provided that all contracts or agreements effective at the time of a general rate proceeding which were discoverable and subject to review by the commission, shall be valid and not subject to subsequent regulatory review and action by the commission; provided further, however, that notwithstanding any other provision to the contrary, there shall be no transfer of real property, or interest in real property between a telecommunications carrier and an affiliate, without prior approval of the commission, after hearing, wherein the telecommunications carrier must show that the transfer is in the best interest of the telecommunications carrier and all of its customers.

     No affirmative action is required by the commission in regards to the filing of the contract or agreement; provided  however, that if the commission, in its discretion, determines that the terms and conditions of the contract or agreement to be unreasonable or otherwise contrary to the public interest, the commission shall notify the telecommunications carrier of its determination, whereupon the telecommunications carrier shall have the option to alter, revise, amend, or terminate the contract or agreement, or assume the risk that future payments for performance of the contract or agreement will be deemed unreasonable and excluded by the commission for ratemaking purposes.

     (d)  In any proceeding, whether upon the commission's own motion or upon application or complaint, involving the rates or practices of any telecommunications carrier, the commission may exclude from the accounts of the telecommunications carrier any payment or compensation to an affiliated interest for any services rendered or property or service furnished, as above described, under existing contracts or agreements with the affiliated interest unless the telecommunications carrier shall establish by clear and convincing evidence the reasonableness of the payment or compensation.

     (e)  The commission shall have continuing supervisory control over the terms and conditions of the contracts and agreements above described so far as necessary to protect and promote the public interest.  The commission shall have the same jurisdiction over modifications of or amendments to contracts or agreements as it has over original contracts or agreements.  The fact that the telecommunications carrier may have entered into contracts or agreements without submittal of documents to the commission shall not preclude disallowance or disapproval of payments made pursuant thereto, for ratemaking purposes, if upon actual experience under the contracts or agreements it appears that the payments provided for or made are or were unreasonable.  Every contract or agreement shall be expressly conditioned upon the reserved power of the commission to take appropriate ratemaking actions if, and as necessary, subsequent to submittal of the contract or agreement in order to protect and promote the public interest.

     (f)  Whenever the commission shall discover that any telecommunications carrier is giving effect to any contract or agreement without the contract or agreement having been received by the commission for review, as required by this section, the commission has authority to issue an order to the telecommunications carrier to show cause why the telecommunications carrier should not cease and desist from making any payments or otherwise giving any effect to the terms of the contract or agreement, and the telecommunications carrier shall have the opportunity to show with clear and convincing evidence that the contract or agreement is in the best interest of the telecommunications carrier and all of its customers.

     (g)  None of the provisions of this section shall apply to transactions with affiliated interests where the total consideration involved in a transaction is less than $300,000 for any calendar year; provided that multiple payments under any contract or agreement shall be added together for purposes of construing this provision; and provided, further, that the provisions of this section shall apply to any contract or agreement structured specifically to avoid regulation hereunder.

     (h)  Transactions between affiliated Hawaii based telecommunications carriers shall be exempt from the provisions of this section.

     §    -30  Valuations.  The commission may either upon its own motion or upon application by any telecommunications carrier for any order where the commission deems it advisable and to the best interest of the public and the telecommunications carrier cause a valuation to be made to ascertain for any purpose specified in this chapter the value of the property of any telecommunications carrier and every fact and element of value which in its judgment may or does have any bearing on such value.  The commission may make revaluations and ascertain the value of all additions, betterments, extensions, and acquisitions of property of any telecommunications carrier.

     §    -31  Establishment of geothermal energy rates.  The rate payable by a telecommunications carrier to the producer of geothermal steam or electricity generated from geothermal steam shall be established by agreement between the telecommunications carrier and the supplier, subject to approval by the commission; provided that if the telecommunications carrier and the supplier fail to reach an agreement for the rate, or if the agreed upon rate is disapproved by the commission, the commission shall establish a just and reasonable rate for the geothermal steam or electricity generated from geothermal steam supplied to the telecommunications carrier by the producer.

     §    -32  Penalty.  (a)  Any telecommunications carrier violating or neglecting or failing in any particular to conform to or comply with this chapter or any lawful order of the commission shall be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $25,000 for each day a violation, neglect, or failure continues, to be assessed by the commission after a hearing in accordance with chapter 91.  The commission may order the telecommunications carrier to cease carrying on its business while the violation, neglect, or failure continues.

     (b)  Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), any person acting in the capacity of or engaging in the business of a telecommunications carrier in the State without having a certificate of public convenience and necessity or other authority previously obtained under and in compliance with this chapter and the rules adopted thereunder may be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $5,000 for each such offense, and, in the case of a continuing violation, $5,000 for each day that uncertified activity continues.

     (c)  Upon written application filed within fifteen days after service of an order imposing a civil penalty pursuant to this section, the commission may remit or mitigate a penalty upon terms as it deems proper.

     (d)  If any civil penalty imposed pursuant to this section is not paid within a period as the commission may direct, the attorney general shall institute a civil action for recovery of same in circuit court.

     §    -33  Perjury.  Any person who wilfully and knowingly makes under oath any false statement in connection with any investigation by or proceeding before the commission shall be guilty of perjury and, upon conviction, shall be subject to the penalty prescribed by law for the offense.

     §    -34  Finances; regulatory fee.  (a)  Sections 607-5 to 607-9 shall apply to the commission and each commissioner, as well as to the supreme and circuit courts, and all costs and fees paid or collected pursuant to this section shall be deposited with the director of finance to the credit of the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund established under section     -37.

     (b)  There also shall be paid to the commission in each of the months of July and December of each year, by each telecommunications carrier subject to investigation by the commission, a fee equal to one-fourth of one per cent of the gross income from the telecommunications carrier's business during the preceding year, or the sum of $30, whichever is greater.  This fee shall be deposited with the director of finance to the credit of the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund.

     (c)  Each telecommunications carrier paying a fee under subsection (b) may impose a surcharge to recover the amount paid above one-eighth of one per cent of gross income.  The surcharge imposed shall not be subject to the notice, hearing, and approval requirements of this chapter; provided that the surcharge may be imposed by the utility only after thirty days' notice to the commission.  Unless ordered by the commission, the surcharge shall be imposed only until the conclusion of the telecommunications carrier's next rate case; provided that the surcharge shall be subject to refund with interest at the telecommunications carrier's authorized rate of return on rate base if the telecommunications carrier collects more money from the surcharge than actually paid due to the increase in the fee to one-fourth of one per cent.

     (d)  Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, the commission, upon the filing of a petition by a telecommunications carrier, may credit a telecommunications carrier for amounts paid under subsection (b) toward amounts the telecommunications carrier owes in one call center fees under section 269E-6(f).

     §    -35  Application of this chapter.  This chapter shall not apply to commerce with foreign nations, or commerce with the several states of the United States, except insofar as the same may be permitted under the Constitution and laws of the United States; nor shall it apply to telecommunications carriers or public utilities owned and operated by the State, or any county, or other political subdivision.

     §    -36  Injury to telecommunications carrier property.  Any person who injures or destroys, through want of proper care, any necessary or useful facility, equipment, or property of any telecommunications carrier shall be liable to the telecommunications carrier for all damages sustained thereby.  The measure of damages to the facility, equipment, or property injured or destroyed shall be the cost to repair or replace the property injured or destroyed including direct and allocated costs for labor, materials, supervision, supplies, tools, taxes, transportation, administrative and general expense and other indirect or overhead expenses, less credit, if any, for salvage.  The specifying of the measure of damages for the facility, equipment, or property shall not preclude the recovery of such other damages occasioned thereby as may be authorized by law.

     §    -37  Telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund.  (a)  There is established in the state treasury a telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund to be administered by the commission.  The proceeds of the fund shall be used by the commission and the division of consumer advocacy of the department of commerce and consumer affairs for all expenses incurred in the administration of this chapter; provided that the expenditures of the commission shall be in accordance with legislative appropriations.  On a quarterly basis, an amount not exceeding thirty per cent of the proceeds remaining in the fund after the deduction for central service expenses, pursuant to section 36-27, shall be allocated by the commission to the division of consumer advocacy and deposited in the compliance resolution fund established pursuant to section 26-9(o); provided that all moneys allocated by the commission from the fund to the division of consumer advocacy shall be in accordance with legislative appropriations.

     (b)  All moneys appropriated to, received, and collected by the commission that are not otherwise pledged, obligated, or required by law to be placed in any other special fund or expended for any other purpose shall be deposited into the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund including but not limited to all moneys received and collected by the commission pursuant to sections 92-21,     ‑32,     -34, and 607-5.

     (c)  The commission shall submit a report to the legislature detailing all funds received and all moneys disbursed out of the fund prior to the convening of each regular session.

     (d)  All moneys in excess of $1,000,000 remaining on balance in the commission special fund on June 30 of each year shall lapse to the credit of the state general fund.

     §    -38  Obligations of telecommunications carriers.  (a)  In accordance with conditions and guidelines established by the commission to facilitate the introduction of competition into the State's telecommunications marketplace, each telecommunications carrier, upon bona fide request, shall provide services or information services, on reasonable terms and conditions, to an entity seeking to provide intrastate telecommunications, including:

     (1)  Interconnection to the telecommunications carrier's telecommunications facilities at any technically feasible and economically reasonable point within the telecommunications carrier's network so that the networks are fully interoperable;

     (2)  The current interstate tariff used as the access rate until the commission can adopt a new intrastate local service interconnection tariff pursuant to section     ‑41;

     (3)  Nondiscriminatory and equal access to any telecommunications carrier's telecommunications facilities, functions, and the information necessary to the transmission and routing of any telecommunications service and the interoperability of both carriers' networks;

     (4)  Nondiscriminatory access among all telecommunications carriers, where technically feasible and economically reasonable, and where safety or the provision of existing electrical service is not at risk, to the poles, ducts, conduits, and rights-of-way owned or controlled by the telecommunications carrier, or the commission shall authorize access to electric utilities' poles as provided by the joint pole agreement, commission tariffs, rules, orders, or Federal Communications Commission rules and regulations;

     (5)  Nondiscriminatory access to the network functions of the telecommunications carrier's telecommunications network, that shall be offered on an unbundled, competitively neutral, and cost-based basis;

     (6)  Telecommunications services and network functions without unreasonable restrictions on the resale or sharing of those services and functions; and

     (7)  Nondiscriminatory access of customers to the telecommunications carrier of their choice without the need to dial additional digits or access codes, where technically feasible.  The commission shall determine the equitable distribution of costs among the authorized telecommunications carriers that will use such access and shall establish rules to ensure such access.

     (b)  Where possible, telecommunications carriers shall enter into negotiations to agree on the provision of services or information services without requiring intervention by the commission; provided that any such agreement shall be subject to review by the commission to ensure compliance with the requirements of this section.

     §    -39  Universal service.  The commission shall preserve and advance universal service by:

     (1)  Maintaining affordable, just, and reasonable rates for basic residential service;

     (2)  Assisting individuals or entities who cannot afford the cost of or otherwise require assistance in obtaining or maintaining their basic service or equipment as determined by the commission; and

     (3)  Ensuring that consumers are given the information necessary to make informed choices among the alternative telecommunications providers and services.

     §    -40  Telecommunications number portability.  The commission shall ensure that telecommunications number portability within an exchange is available, upon request, as soon as technically feasible and economically reasonable.  An impartial entity shall administer telecommunications numbering and make the numbers available on an equitable basis.

     §    -41  Compensation agreements.  The commission shall ensure that telecommunications carriers are compensated on a fair basis for termination of telecommunications services on each other's networks, taking into account, among other things, reasonable and necessary costs to each telecommunications carrier of providing the services in question.  Telecommunications carriers may negotiate compensation arrangements, that may include "bill and keep", mutual and equal compensation, or any other reasonable division of revenues pending tariff access rates to be set by the commission.  Upon failure of the negotiations, the commission shall determine the proper methodology and amount of compensation.

     §    -42  Regulatory flexibility for effectively competitive services.  The commission may allow telecommunications carriers to have pricing flexibility for services that the commission finds are effectively competitive; provided that the rates for:

     (1)  Basic telephone service and for services that are not effectively competitive are cost-based and remain just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory; and

     (2)  Universal service is preserved and advanced.

     §    -43  Cross-subsidies.  (a)  The commission shall ensure that noncompetitive services shall not cross-subsidize competitive services.  Cross-subsidization shall be deemed to have occurred:

     (1)  If any competitive service is priced below the total service long-run incremental cost of providing the service as determined by the commission in subsection (b); or

     (2)  If competitive services, taken as a whole, fail to cover their direct and allocated joint and common costs as determined by the commission.

     (b)  The commission shall determine the methodology and frequency with which providers calculate total service long-run incremental cost and fully allocated joint and common costs.  The total service long-run incremental cost of a service shall include an imputation of an amount equal to the contribution that the telecommunications carrier receives from noncompetitive inputs used by alternative providers in providing the same or equivalent service.

     §    -44  Access to advanced services.  The commission shall ensure that all consumers are provided with nondiscriminatory, reasonable, and equitable access to high quality telecommunications network facilities and capabilities that provide subscribers with sufficient network capacity to access information services that provide a combination of voice, data, image, and video, and that are available at just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory rates that are based on reasonably identifiable costs of providing the services.

     §    -45  Universal service program; establishment; purpose; principles.  There is established the universal service program.  The purpose of this program is to:

     (1)  Maintain affordable, just, and reasonable rates for basic residential telecommunications service, as defined by the commission;

     (2)  Assist customers located in the areas of the State that have high costs of essential telecommunications service, low-income customers, and customers with disabilities, in obtaining and maintaining access to a basic set of essential telecommunications services as determined by the commission.  The commission may expand or otherwise modify relevant programs, such as the lifeline program under section     -21;

     (3)  Ensure that consumers in all communities are provided with access, at reasonably comparable rates, to all telecommunications services which are used by a majority of consumers located in metropolitan areas of the State.  The commission shall provide for a reasonable transition period to support the statewide deployment of these advanced telecommunications services, including but not limited to the use of strategic community access points in public facilities such as education, library, and health care facilities;

     (4)  Ensure that consumers are given the information necessary to make informed choices among the alternative telecommunications carriers and services; and

     (5)  Promote affordable access throughout the State to enhanced government information and services, including education, health care, public safety, and other government services.

     The commission shall administer the universal service program, including the establishment of criteria by which the purposes of the program are met.

     §    -46  Universal service program; fund; contributions.  (a)  There is established outside of the state treasury a special fund to be known as the universal service fund to be administered by the commission to implement the policies and goals of universal service.  The fund shall consist of contributions from the sources identified in subsections (e) and (f).  Interest earned from the balance of the fund shall become a part of the fund.  The commission shall adopt rules regarding the distribution of moneys from the fund including reimbursements to carriers for providing reduced rates to low-income, elderly, residents of underserved or rural areas, or other subscribers, as authorized by the commission.

     (b)  The commission may allow distribution of funds directly to customers based upon a need criteria established by the commission.

     (c)  A telecommunications carrier or other person contributing to the universal service program may establish a surcharge which is clearly identified and explained on customers' bills to collect from customers contributions required under this section.

     (d)  Telecommunications carriers may compete to provide services to underserved areas using funds from the universal service program.  For the purposes of this section, "underserved areas" means those areas in the State that lack or have very limited access to high capacity, advanced telecommunications networks and information services, including access to cable television.

     (e)  The commission shall require all telecommunications carriers to contribute to the universal service program.  The commission may require a person other than a telecommunications carrier to contribute to the universal service program if, after notice and opportunity for hearing, the commission determines that the person is offering a commercial service in the State that directly benefits from the telecommunications infrastructure, and that directly competes with a telecommunications service provided in the State for which a contribution is required under this subsection.

     (f)  The commission shall designate the method by which the contributions under subsection (e) shall be calculated and collected.  The commission shall consider basing contributions solely on the gross operating revenues from the retail provision of intrastate telecommunications services offered by the telecommunications carriers subject to the contribution.

     §    -47  Carriers of last resort.  (a)  The commission may define and designate local exchange service areas where the commission has determined that providing universal service funds to a single provider will be the most appropriate way to ensure service for these areas.

     (b)  The commission shall determine the level of service that is appropriate for each designated local exchange service area and shall invite telecommunications providers to bid for a level of service that is appropriate.  The successful bidder shall be designated the carrier of last resort for the designated local exchange service area for a period of time and upon conditions set by the commission.  In determining the successful bidder, the commission shall take into consideration the level of service to be provided, the investment commitment, and the length of the agreement, in addition to the other qualifications of the bidder.

     (c)  The universal service fund shall also provide service drops and basic service at discounted rates to public institutions, as stated in section     -45.

     (d)  The commission shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to carry out the provisions of this section.

PART III.  CABLE SERVICES

     §    -48  Issuance of cable franchises and regulation of cable operators by commission.  The commission shall be empowered to issue cable franchises and otherwise administer and enforce this part.

     §    -49  Cable franchise required.  No person shall construct, operate, or acquire a cable system, or extend an existing cable system outside its designated service area, without first obtaining a cable franchise as provided in this part.

     §    -50  Application or proposal for cable franchise; fee; certain requirements.  (a)  No cable franchise shall be issued except upon written application or proposal therefor to the commission, accompanied by a fee of $1,000.

     (b)  An application for issuance of a cable franchise shall be made in a form prescribed by the commission.  The application shall set forth the facts as required by the commission to determine in accordance with section     -52(b) whether a cable franchise should be issued, including facts as to:

     (1)  The citizenship and character of the applicant;

     (2)  The financial, technical, and other qualifications of the applicant;

     (3)  The principals and ultimate beneficial owners of the applicant;

     (4)  The public interest to be served by the requested issuance of a cable franchise; and

     (5)  Any other matters deemed appropriate and necessary by the commission including the proposed plans and schedule of expenditures for or in support of the use of public, educational, and governmental access facilities.

     (c)  A proposal for issuance of a cable franchise shall be accepted for filing in accordance with section     -51 only when made in response to the written request of the commission for the submission of proposals.

     §    -51  Cable franchise application or proposal procedure; public hearing; notice.  An application or proposal for a cable franchise shall be processed as follows:

     (1)  After the application or proposal and required fee are received by the commission and within a time frame established by rule, the commission shall notify an applicant in writing of the acceptance or nonacceptance for filing of an application or proposal for issuance of a cable franchise required by this part;

     (2)  After the issuance of a notice of acceptance for filing and within a time frame established by rule, the commission shall hold a public hearing on the application or proposal to afford interested persons the opportunity to submit data, views, or arguments, orally or in writing.  Notice thereof shall be given to the governing council and mayor of the county and to any telephone or other utility and cable company in the county in which the proposed service area is located.  The commission shall also give public notice of the application and hearing at least once in each of two successive weeks in the county in which the proposed service area is located.  The last notice shall be given at least fifteen days prior to the date of the hearing;

     (3)  After holding a public hearing, the commission shall approve the application or proposal in whole or in part, with or without conditions or modifications, or shall deny the application or proposal, with reasons for denial sent in writing to the applicant.  If the commission does not take final action after the issuance of a notice of acceptance for filing and within a time frame established by rule, the application or proposal shall be deemed denied; and

     (4)  The time limit for final action may be extended, on the commission's approval of the applicant's request and justification in writing for an extension of time to the commission at least two weeks in advance of the requested effective date of the extension, or by mutual agreement.

     §    -52  Issuance of cable franchise authority; criteria; content.  (a)  The commission is empowered to issue a cable franchise to construct or operate facilities for a cable system upon the terms and conditions provided in this part.

     (b)  The commission, after a public hearing as provided in this part, shall issue a cable franchise to the applicant when the commission is convinced that it is in the public interest to do so.  In determining whether a cable franchise shall be issued, the commission shall take into consideration, among other things, the content of the application or proposal, the public need for the proposed service, the ability of the applicant to offer safe, adequate, and reliable service at a reasonable cost to the subscribers, the suitability of the applicant, the financial responsibility of the applicant, the technical and operational ability of the applicant to perform efficiently the service for which authority is requested, any objections arising from the public hearing, the cable advisory committee established by this part, or elsewhere, and any other matters as the commission deems appropriate in the circumstances.

     (c)  In determining the area which is to be serviced by the applicant, the commission shall take into account the geography and topography of the proposed service area, and the present, planned, and potential expansion in facilities or cable services of the applicant's proposed cable system and existing cable systems.

     (d)  In issuing a cable franchise under this part, the commission is not restricted to approving or disapproving the application or proposal but may issue it for only partial exercise of the privilege sought or may attach to the exercise of the right granted by the cable franchise terms, limitations, and conditions which the commission deems the public interest may require.  The cable franchise shall be nonexclusive, shall include a description of the service area in which the cable system is to be constructed, extended, or operated and the approximate date on which the service is to commence and shall authorize the cable operator to provide service for a term of fifteen years.

     §    -53  Requirement for adequate service; terms and conditions of service.  (a)  Every cable operator shall provide safe, adequate, and reliable service in accordance with applicable laws, rules, franchise requirements, and its filed schedule of terms and conditions of service.

     (b)  The commission shall require each cable operator to submit a schedule of all terms and conditions of service in the form and with the notice that the commission may prescribe.

     (c)  The commission shall ensure that the terms and conditions upon which cable service is provided are fair both to the public and to the cable operator, taking into account the geographic, topographic, and economic characteristics of the service area and the economics of providing cable service to subscribers in the service area.

     §    -54  Cable system installation, construction, operation, removal; general provisions.  (a)  A cable franchise shall be construed to authorize the construction or operation of a cable system within the service area above, below, on, in, or along any highway or other public place and through easements which have been dedicated for compatible purposes.

     (b)  The technical specifications, general routes of the distribution system, and the schedule for construction of the cable system shall be subject to the commission's approval.

     (c)  In installing, operating, and maintaining facilities, the cable operator shall avoid all unnecessary damage and injury to any trees, structures, and improvements in and along the routes authorized by the commission.

     (d)  The cable operator shall indemnify and hold the State and the county harmless at all times from any and all claims for injury and damage to persons or property, both real and personal, caused by the installation, operation, or maintenance of its cable system, notwithstanding any negligence on the part of the State or county, their employees or agents.  Upon receipt of notice in writing from the State or county, the cable operator shall, at its own expense, defend any action or proceeding against the State or county in which it is claimed that personal injury or property damage was caused by activities of the cable operator in the installation, operation, or maintenance of its cable system.

     (e)  The cable operator shall provide a cable drop and basic cable service at no cost to any school or institution of higher education within its service area; provided that service is actually being delivered within a reasonable distance from the school or institution of higher education which may request service.

     (f)  The cable operator shall designate three or more channels for public, educational, or governmental use.

     (g)  Upon termination of the period of the cable permit or of any renewal thereof, by passage of time or otherwise, the cable operator shall remove its facilities from the highways and other public places in, on, over, under, or along which they are installed if so ordered by the commission and shall restore the areas to their original or other acceptable condition, or otherwise dispose of same.  If removal is not completed within six months of the termination, any property not removed shall be deemed to have been abandoned and the cable operator shall be liable for the cost of its removal.

     (h)  The use of public highways within the meaning of section 264-1 and other public places shall be subject to:

     (1)  All applicable state statutes and all applicable rules and orders of the commission or the public utilities commission governing the construction, maintenance, and removal of overhead and underground facilities of telecommunications carriers or public utilities;

     (2)  For county highways, all applicable public welfare rules adopted by the governing body of the county in which the county highways are situated;

     (3)  For state or federal-aid highways, all public welfare rules adopted by the director of transportation; and

     (4)  For the relocation of cable facilities, the provisions of section 264-33 concerning the allocation of expenses for the relocation of utility facilities.

     (i)  In the use of easements dedicated to compatible purposes, the cable operator shall ensure:

     (1)  That the safety, functioning, and appearance of the property and the convenience and safety of other persons is not adversely affected by the installation or construction of facilities necessary for a cable system;

     (2)  That the cost of the installation, construction, operation, or removal of facilities is borne by the cable operator or subscribers, or a combination of both; and

     (3)  That the owner of the property is justly compensated by the cable operator for any damages caused by the installation, construction, operation, or removal of facilities by the cable operator.

     §    -55  Designation of access organizations for public, educational, or governmental access channels.  (a)  The commission may designate an access organization to oversee the development, operation, supervision, management, production, and broadcasting of programs of public, educational, or governmental access facilities obtained under section     -52; provided that the designation shall be exempt from chapter 103D.

     (b)  No access organization shall be designated except upon written application or proposal to the commission, and following a public hearing on each island within the local franchise area that provides opportunity for public input and allows interested parties to intervene.

     (c)  In determining whether to make a designation, the commission shall consider:

     (1)  The content of the application or proposal;

     (2)  The public need for the proposed service;

     (3)  The ability and experience of the applicant to offer public, educational, or government programming broadcast services;

     (4)  The suitability of the applicant;

     (5)  The financial responsibility of the applicant;

     (6)  The technical and operational ability of the applicant to perform efficiently the services for which the designation is requested;

     (7)  Any objections arising from the public hearing, the cable advisory committee, or elsewhere; and

     (8)  Any other matters that the commission deems appropriate under the circumstances.

     (d)  The commission may require an applicant to provide information on its process for selecting members of its board of directors; provided that the commission shall have no authority to require that an applicant amend its selection process as a condition of designation.

     (e)  An applicant shall provide information regarding its past performance and any proposed practices for ensuring that the public, educational, or governmental access facilities support the diversity of viewpoints and uphold the public's right of free speech.

     (f)  The commission shall ensure that the terms and conditions required of the operation of an access organization designated under subsection (a) are fair to the public, taking into account the geographic, topographic, and economic characteristics of the service area and the economics of providing cable access in the service area.

     (g)  Any decision designating, modifying, or rescinding a designation of an access organization or the requirements therefore shall first be submitted to the cable advisory committee for advice under section     -62.

     (h)  The department of business, economic development, and tourism shall conduct an annual management and financial audit of the access organization designated under this section.

     §    -56  Complaints; violations; revocation, alteration, or suspension of cable franchise; penalties.  (a)  Subscriber complaints regarding the operation of a cable system may be made orally or in writing to the commission.  The commission shall resolve complaints informally when possible.

     (b)  Any cable franchise issued hereunder after hearing in accordance with chapter 91 may be revoked, altered, or suspended by the commission as the commission deems necessary on any of the following grounds:

     (1)  For making material false or misleading statements in, or for material omissions from, any application or proposal or other filing made with the commission;

     (2)  For failure to maintain signal quality under the standards prescribed by the commission;

     (3)  For any sale, lease, assignment, or other transfer of its cable franchise without consent of the commission;

     (4)  Except when commercially impracticable, for unreasonable delay in construction or operation or for unreasonable withholding of the extension of cable service to any person in a service area;

     (5)  For violation of the terms of its cable franchise;

     (6)  For failure to comply with part I or this part or any rules or orders prescribed by the commission;

     (7)  For violation of its filed schedule of terms and conditions of service; and

     (8)  For engaging in any unfair or deceptive act or practice as prohibited by section 480-2.

     (c)  In lieu of or in addition to the relief provided by subsection (b), the commission may fine a cable operator, for each violation of subsection (b)(1) through (8), an amount not less than $50 nor more than $25,000 for each violation.  Each day's continuance of a violation may be treated as a separate violation pursuant to rules adopted by the commission.  Any penalty assessed under this section shall be in addition to any other costs, expenses, or payments for which the cable operator is responsible under other provisions of this part.

     §    -57  Renewal of cable franchise.  Any cable franchise issued pursuant to this part may be renewed by the commission upon approval of a cable operator's application or proposal therefor.  The form of the application or proposal shall be prescribed by the commission.  The periods of renewal shall be not less than five nor more than twenty years each.  The commission shall require of the applicant full disclosure, including the proposed plans and schedule of expenditures for or in support of the use of public, educational, or governmental access facilities.

     §    -58  Transfer of cable franchise.  (a)  No cable franchise, including the rights, privileges, and obligations thereof, may be assigned, sold, leased, encumbered, or otherwise transferred, voluntarily or involuntarily, directly or indirectly, including by transfer of control of any cable system, whether by change in ownership or otherwise, except upon written application to and approval by the commission.  The form of the application shall be prescribed by the commission.

     (b)  Sections     -51 and      -52 shall apply to the transfer of cable franchises.

     §    -59  Rate, filed with commission; approval.  (a)  The commission shall require each cable operator to file a schedule of its rates of service on a form and with the notice that the commission may prescribe.

     (b)  To the extent permitted by federal law, the commission shall regulate rates to ensure that they are fair both to the public and to the cable operator.

     §    -60  Other duties of the commission; broadband services.  (a)  In conjunction with broadband services, the commission shall:

     (1)  Promote and encourage use of telework alternatives for public and private employees, including appropriate policy and legislative initiatives;

     (2)  Advise and assist state agencies, and upon request of the counties, advise and assist the counties, in planning, developing, and administering programs, projects, plans, policies, and other activities to promote telecommuting by employees of state and county agencies;

     (3)  Support the efforts of both public and private entities in Hawaii to enhance or facilitate the deployment of, and access to, competitively priced, advanced electronic communications services, including broadband and its products and services and internet access services of general application throughout Hawaii;

     (4)  Make recommendations to establish affordable, accessible broadband services to unserved and underserved areas of Hawaii and monitor advancements in communications that will facilitate this goal;

     (5)  Advocate for, and facilitate the development and deployment of, expanded broadband applications, programs, and services, including telework, telemedicine, and e-learning, that will bolster the usage of and demand for broadband level telecommunications;

     (6)  Serve as a broadband information and applications clearinghouse for the State and a coordination point for federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 broadband-related services and programs; and

     (7)  Promote, advocate, and facilitate the implementation of the findings and recommendations of the Hawaii broadband task force established by Act 2, First Special Session Laws of Hawaii 2007.

     (b)  The commission shall submit an annual report to the legislature, no later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session, on the commission's efforts to use broadband and its products and services to develop and expand telework initiatives, including telework participation levels and trends of both private and public sector employees in Hawaii.

     (c)  The department of business, economic development, and tourism shall report annually to the legislature, no later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session, on the receipt and expenditure of federal moneys from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, and moneys from other federal appropriation measures or applicable federal acts, for the purposes of purchasing broadband facilities, services, or equipment or for entering into contracts for broadband-related projects by all state agencies for all state agencies approval.

     (d)  Pursuant to section     -61(d), the commission may appoint and employ engineers, accountants, attorneys, and professional, clerical, stenographic, or other assistants, as required, with or without regard to chapter 76.

     §    -61  Other duties of commission; suit to enforce this part.  (a)  The commission may supervise and regulate every cable operator within this State so far as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this part, and to do all things which are necessary or convenient in the exercise of this power and jurisdiction.

     (b)  The commission may adopt, pursuant to chapter 91, rules necessary to carry out this part.

     (c)  The commission or the commission's designated representatives may from time to time visit the places of business and other premises and examine the records and facilities of all cable operators to ascertain if all laws, rules, cable franchise provisions, and orders of the commission have been complied with, and shall have the power to examine all officers, agents, and employees of cable operators, and all other persons, under oath, and to compel the production of papers and the attendance of witnesses to obtain the information necessary for administering this part.

     (d)  The commission may appoint, without regard to chapter 76, an administrator and one or more attorneys for purposes of enforcing this part.  The commission shall define their powers and duties and fix their compensation.  The commission may also appoint professional, clerical, stenographic, and other staff as may be necessary for the proper administration and enforcement of this part subject to chapter 76.

     (e)  The commission may institute all proceedings and investigations, hear all complaints, issue all process and orders, and render all decisions necessary to enforce this part or the rules and orders adopted thereunder, or to otherwise accomplish the purposes of this part.

     (f)  The commission or other aggrieved party may institute, or to intervene as a party in, any action in any court of law seeking a mandamus, or injunctive or other relief to compel compliance with this part, or any rule or order adopted thereunder, or to restrain or otherwise prevent or prohibit any illegal or unauthorized conduct in connection therewith.

     §    -62  Cable advisory committee.  (a)  There is established the cable advisory committee.  The committee shall consist of five members appointed by the governor as provided in section 26-34.

     The committee shall advise:

     (1)  The commission, cable operators, and access organizations on matters within the jurisdiction of this part at the request of the commission, any cable operator, or any access organization; and

     (2)  The commission on any decision designating, modifying, or rescinding a designation of an access organization or the requirements therefor, as provided in section     ‑55.

     (b)  The members of the committee shall serve without pay but shall be entitled to reimbursement for necessary expenses while attending meetings and while in discharge of their duties.

     §    -63  Reports.  Each cable operator shall file with the commission reports of its financial, technical, and operational condition and its ownership.  The reports shall be made in a form and on the time schedule prescribed by the commission and shall be kept on file open to the public.

     §    -64  Annual fees.  (a)  Each cable operator shall pay an annual fee to be determined by the commission.  The fees so collected under this section shall be deposited into the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund established under section     -37.

     (b)  The commission shall adjust the fees assessed under this section, as necessary from time to time, pursuant to rules adopted in accordance with chapter 91.

     §    -65  Rules.  The commission shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary for the purposes of this part.

     §    -66  Criminal and civil liability.  Nothing in this part shall be deemed to affect the criminal and civil liability of cable programmers, cable operators, or access organizations pursuant to the federal, state, or local laws regarding libel, slander, obscenity, incitement, invasions of privacy, false or misleading advertising, or other similar laws, except that no access organization shall incur any such liability arising from, based on, or related to any program not created by the access organization, which is broadcast on any channel obtained under section     -52, or under similar arrangements."

PART III

     SECTION 3.  Section 26-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (o) to read as follows:

     "(o)  Every person licensed under any chapter within the jurisdiction of the department of commerce and consumer affairs and every person licensed subject to chapter 485A or registered under chapter 467B shall pay upon issuance of a license, permit, certificate, or registration a fee and a subsequent annual fee to be determined by the director and adjusted from time to time to ensure that the proceeds, together with all other fines, income, and penalties collected under this section, do not surpass the annual operating costs of conducting compliance resolution activities required under this section.  The fees may be collected biennially or pursuant to rules adopted under chapter 91, and shall be deposited into the special fund established under this subsection.  Every filing pursuant to chapter 514E or section 485A-202(a)(26) shall be assessed, upon initial filing and at each renewal period in which a renewal is required, a fee that shall be prescribed by rules adopted under chapter 91, and that shall be deposited into the special fund established under this subsection.  Any unpaid fee shall be paid by the licensed person, upon application for renewal, restoration, reactivation, or reinstatement of a license, and by the person responsible for the renewal, restoration, reactivation, or reinstatement of a license, upon the application for renewal, restoration, reactivation, or reinstatement of the license.  If the fees are not paid, the director may deny renewal, restoration, reactivation, or reinstatement of the license.  The director may establish, increase, decrease, or repeal the fees when necessary pursuant to rules adopted under chapter 91.  The director may also increase or decrease the fees pursuant to section 92-28.

     There is created in the state treasury a special fund to be known as the compliance resolution fund to be expended by the director's designated representatives as provided by this subsection.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, all revenues, fees, and fines collected by the department shall be deposited into the compliance resolution fund.  Unencumbered balances existing on June 30, 1999, in the cable television fund under chapter 440G, the division of consumer advocacy fund under chapter 269, the financial institution examiners' revolving fund, section 412:2-109, the special handling fund, section 414-13, and unencumbered balances existing on June 30, 2002, in the insurance regulation fund, section 431:2-215, shall be deposited into the compliance resolution fund.  This provision shall not apply to any fee imposed by the telecommunications and cable television services commission pursuant to chapter    , the drivers education fund underwriters fee, sections 431:10C-115 and 431:10G-107, insurance premium taxes and revenues, revenues of the workers' compensation special compensation fund, section 386-151, the captive insurance administrative fund, section 431:19-101.8, the insurance commissioner's education and training fund, section 431:2-214, the medical malpractice patients' compensation fund as administered under section 5 of Act 232, Session Laws of Hawaii 1984, and fees collected for deposit in the office of consumer protection restitution fund, section 487-14, the real estate appraisers fund, section 466K-1, the real estate recovery fund, section 467-16, the real estate education fund, section 467-19, the contractors recovery fund, section 444-26, the contractors education fund, section 444-29, the condominium education trust fund, section 514B-71, and the mortgage foreclosure dispute resolution special fund, section 667-86.  Any law to the contrary notwithstanding, the director may use the moneys in the fund to employ, without regard to chapter 76, hearings officers and attorneys.  All other employees may be employed in accordance with chapter 76.  Any law to the contrary notwithstanding, the moneys in the fund shall be used to fund the operations of the department.  The moneys in the fund may be used to train personnel as the director deems necessary and for any other activity related to compliance resolution.

     As used in this subsection, unless otherwise required by the context, "compliance resolution" means a determination of whether:

     (1)  Any licensee or applicant under any chapter subject to the jurisdiction of the department of commerce and consumer affairs has complied with that chapter;

     (2)  Any person subject to chapter 485A has complied with that chapter;

     (3)  Any person submitting any filing required by chapter 514E or section 485A-202(a)(26) has complied with chapter 514E or section 485A-202(a)(26);

     (4)  Any person has complied with the prohibitions against unfair and deceptive acts or practices in trade or commerce; or

     (5)  Any person subject to chapter 467B has complied with that chapter;

and includes work involved in or supporting the above functions, licensing, or registration of individuals or companies regulated by the department, consumer protection, and other activities of the department.

     The director shall prepare and submit an annual report to the governor and the legislature on the use of the compliance resolution fund.  The report shall describe expenditures made from the fund including non-payroll operating expenses."

     SECTION 4.  Section 28-8.3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:

     1.  By amending subsection (a) to read:

     "(a)  No department of the State other than the attorney general may employ or retain any attorney, by contract or otherwise, for the purpose of representing the State or the department in any litigation, rendering legal counsel to the department, or drafting legal documents for the department; provided that the foregoing provision shall not apply to the employment or retention of attorneys:

     (1)  By the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, and the Hawaii labor relations board;

     (2)  By any court or judicial or legislative office of the State; provided that if the attorney general is requested to provide representation to a court or judicial office by the chief justice or the chief justice's designee, or to a legislative office by the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate jointly, and the attorney general declines to provide such representation on the grounds of conflict of interest, the attorney general shall retain an attorney for the court, judicial, or legislative office, subject to approval by the court, judicial, or legislative office;

     (3)  By the legislative reference bureau;

     (4)  By any compilation commission that may be constituted from time to time;

     (5)  By the real estate commission for any action involving the real estate recovery fund;

     (6)  By the contractors license board for any action involving the contractors recovery fund;

     (7)  By the office of Hawaiian affairs;

     (8)  By the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the enforcement of violations of chapters 480 and 485A;

     (9)  As grand jury counsel;

    (10)  By the Hawaiian home lands trust individual claims review panel;

    (11)  By the Hawaii health systems corporation, or its regional system boards, or any of their facilities;

    (12)  By the auditor;

    (13)  By the office of ombudsman;

    (14)  By the insurance division;

    (15)  By the University of Hawaii;

    (16)  By the Kahoolawe island reserve commission;

    (17)  By the division of consumer advocacy;

    (18)  By the office of elections;

    (19)  By the campaign spending commission;

    (20)  By the Hawaii tourism authority, as provided in section 201B-2.5;

    (21)  By the division of financial institutions for any action involving the mortgage loan recovery fund; [or]

    (22)  By the telecommunications and cable television services commission; or

   [(22)] (23) By a department, in the event the attorney general, for reasons deemed by the attorney general to be good and sufficient, declines to employ or retain an attorney for a department; provided that the governor waives the provision of this section."

     2.  By amending subsection (c) to read:

     "(c)  Every attorney employed by any department on a full-time basis, except an attorney employed by the public utilities commission, the telecommunications and cable television services commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, the Hawaii labor relations board, the office of Hawaiian affairs, the Hawaii health systems corporation or its regional system boards, the department of commerce and consumer affairs in prosecution of consumer complaints, insurance division, the division of consumer advocacy, the University of Hawaii, the Hawaii tourism authority as provided in section 201B-2.5, the Hawaiian home lands trust individual claims review panel, or as grand jury counsel, shall be a deputy attorney general."

     SECTION 5.  Section 36-27, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

     "(a) Except as provided in this section, and notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, from time to time, the director of finance, for the purpose of defraying the prorated estimate of central service expenses of government in relation to all special funds, except the:

     (1)  Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310;

     (2)  School cafeteria special funds of the department of education;

     (3)  Special funds of the University of Hawaii;

     (4)  State educational facilities improvement special fund;

     (5)  Convention center enterprise special fund under section 201B-8;

     (6)  Special funds established by section 206E-6;

     (7)  Housing loan program revenue bond special fund;

     (8)  Housing project bond special fund;

     (9)  Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17;

    (10)  Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109;

    (11)  Unemployment compensation fund established under section 383-121;

    (12)  Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P;

    (13)  Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards;

    (14)  Tourism special fund established under section 201B-11;

    (15)  Universal service fund established under section [269-42;]     -46;

    (16)  Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L-3;

    (17)  Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130;

    (18)  Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5;

    (19)  Glass advance disposal fee established by section 342G-82;

    (20)  Center for nursing special fund under section 304A-2163;

    (21)  Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5;

    (22)  Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5;

    (23)  Hawaii cancer research special fund;

    (24)  Community health centers special fund;

    (25)  Emergency medical services special fund;

    (26)  Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6; and

    (27)  Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43,

shall deduct five per cent of all receipts of all special funds, which deduction shall be transferred to the general fund of the State and become general realizations of the State.  All officers of the State and other persons having power to allocate or disburse any special funds shall cooperate with the director in effecting these transfers.  To determine the proper revenue base upon which the central service assessment is to be calculated, the director shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 for the purpose of suspending or limiting the application of the central service assessment of any fund.  No later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session of the legislature, the director shall report all central service assessments made during the preceding fiscal year."

     SECTION 6.  Section 46-15, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

     "(a)  The mayor of each county, after holding a public hearing on the matter and receiving the approval of the respective council, shall be empowered to designate areas of land for experimental and demonstration housing projects, the purposes of which are to research and develop ideas that would reduce the cost of housing in the State.  Except as hereinafter provided, the experimental and demonstration housing projects shall be exempt from all statutes, ordinances, charter provisions, and rules or regulations of any governmental agency or public utility relating to planning, zoning, construction standards for subdivisions, development and improvement of land, and the construction and sale of homes thereon; provided that the experimental and demonstration housing projects shall not affect the safety standards or tariffs approved by the public utility [commissions] commission for such public utility[.], or by the telecommunications and cable television services commission.

     The mayor of each county with the approval of the respective council may designate a county agency or official who shall have the power to review all plans and specifications for the subdivisions, development and improvement of the land involved, and the construction and sale of homes thereon.  The county agency or official shall have the power to approve or disapprove or to make modifications to all or any portion of the plans and specifications.

     The county agency or official shall submit preliminary plans and specifications to the legislative body of the respective county for its approval or disapproval.  The final plans and specifications for the project shall be deemed approved by the legislative body if the final plans and specifications do not substantially deviate from the approved preliminary plans and specifications.  The final plans and specifications shall constitute the standards for the particular project.

     No action shall be prosecuted or maintained against any county, its officials or employees, on account of actions taken in reviewing, approving, or disapproving such plans and specifications.

     Any experimental or demonstration housing project for the purposes hereinabove mentioned may be sponsored by any state or county agency or any person as defined in section 1-19.

     The county agency or official shall apply to the state land use commission for an appropriate land use district classification change, except where a proposed project is located on land within an urban district established by the state land use commission.  Notwithstanding any law, rule, or regulation to the contrary, the state land use commission may approve the application at any time after a public hearing held in the county where the land is located upon notice of the time and place of the hearing being published in the same manner as the notice required for a public hearing by the planning commission of the appropriate county."

     SECTION 7.  Section 91-13.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (f) to read as follows:

     "(f)  This section shall not apply to:

     (1)  Any proceedings of the public utilities commission; [or]

     (2)  Any county or county agency that is exempted by county ordinance from this section[.]; or

     (3)  Any proceedings of the telecommunications and cable television services commission."

     SECTION 8.  Section 92-21, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§92-21  Copies of records; other costs and fees.  (a)  Except as otherwise provided by law, a copy of any government record, including any map, plan, diagram, photograph, photostat, or geographic information system digital data file, which is open to the inspection of the public, shall be furnished to any person applying for the same by the public officer having charge or control thereof upon the payment of the reasonable cost of reproducing such copy. 

     (b)  Except as provided in section 91-2.5, the cost of reproducing any government record, except geographic information system digital data, shall not be less than 5 cents per page, sheet, or fraction thereof.

     (c)  The cost of reproducing geographic information system digital data shall be in accordance with rules adopted by the agency having charge or control of that data.

     [Such] (d)  All reproduction [cost] costs shall include but shall not be limited to labor cost for search and actual time for reproducing, material cost, including electricity cost, equipment cost, including rental cost, cost for certification, and other related costs. 

     (e)  All fees shall be paid in by the public officer receiving or collecting the same to the state director of finance, the county director of finance, or to the agency or department by which the officer is employed, as government realizations; provided that fees collected by the public utilities commission pursuant to this section shall be deposited in the public utilities commission special fund established under section 269-33[.], and fees collected by the telecommunications and cable television services commission shall be deposited in the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund established under section     -37."

     SECTION 9.  Section 101-43, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§101-43  Requirements prior to exercise of power.  Any corporation having the power of eminent domain under section 101-41 may continue to exercise the power[,]; provided that prior to the exercise of the power:

     (1)  The corporation submits to the public utilities commission or, in the case of telecommunications carriers, to the telecommunications and cable television services commission its intention to exercise the power, with a description of the property to be condemned; and

     (2)  The public utilities commission or, in the case of telecommunications carriers, the telecommunications and cable television services commission finds that the proposed condemnation is in the public interest, that the proposed condemnation is necessary, and that the corporation will use the property for its operations as a public utility."

     SECTION 10.  Section 138-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:

     1.  By amending subsection (a) to read:

     "(a)  There is created within the department of accounting and general services, for administrative purposes, an enhanced 911 board consisting of thirteen voting members; provided that the membership shall consist of:

     (1)  The comptroller or the comptroller's designee;

     (2)  Three representatives from wireless communications service providers, who shall be appointed by the governor as provided in section 26-34;

     (3)  One representative each from the public safety answering points for Oahu, Hawaii, Kauai, Maui, and Molokai and one representative, chosen by the mayor of the city and county of Honolulu, who shall be appointed by the governor as provided in section 26-34;

     (4)  The consumer advocate or the consumer advocate's designee;

     (5)  One representative from a communications service company that offers Interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol services, who shall be appointed by the governor as provided in section 26-34; and

     (6)  One representative of the [public utility] telecommunications carrier providing telecommunications services and land line enhanced 911 services through section [269-16.95.]      -28."

      2.  By amending subsection (e) to read:

     "(e)  The members representing wireless providers, the [public utility] telecommunications carrier providing telecommunications services and land line enhanced 911 services through section [269-16.95,]      -28, and Interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol service providers shall be appointed by the governor for terms of two years."

     SECTION 11.  Section 138-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:

     1.  By amending subsections (a) and (b) to read:

     "(a)  A monthly enhanced 911 surcharge, subject to this chapter, shall be imposed upon each communications service connection, except connections of the [public utility] telecommunications carrier providing telecommunications services and land line enhanced 911 services through section [269-16.95.]     ‑28.

     (b)  The rate of the surcharge shall be set at 66 cents per month for each communications service connection.  The surcharge shall have uniform application and shall be imposed on each communications service connection operating within the State except:

     (1)  Connections billed to federal, state, and county governmental entities;

     (2)  Prepaid connections; and

     (3)  Connections provided by the [public utility] telecommunications carrier providing telecommunications services and land line enhanced 911 services through section [269-16.95.]     -28."

      2.  By amending subsection (g) to read:

     "(g)  A [public utility] telecommunications carrier providing telecommunications services and land line enhanced 911 services for its customer base and other service providers using the wire line provider's enhanced 911 service may collect and retain the surcharge at the established rate set forth in section [269-16.95.]     -28."

     SECTION 12.  Section 163D-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:

     "(b)  If the corporation acquires the assets of a private or other corporation, then, notwithstanding any law to the contrary:

     (1)  Neither the corporation nor any subsidiary corporation vested with the assets shall be subject to chapter 91 with respect to the assets;

     (2)  Employees retained to operate the assets shall not be subject to chapter 76;

     (3)  Assets constituting real property interest shall not be subject to chapter 171;

     (4)  No investment, loan, or use of funds by the corporation or a subsidiary corporation vested with the assets shall be subject to chapter 42F or 103; and

     (5)  Neither the corporation nor a subsidiary corporation vested with the assets shall constitute a public utility or be subject to the jurisdiction of the public utilities commission under chapter 269[.] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission under chapter    ."

     SECTION 13.  Section 166-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§166-4  Park development.  Except as herein provided, the department may develop, on behalf of the State or in partnership with a federal agency, a county, or a private party, agricultural parks which, at the option of the board, shall be exempt from all statutes, ordinances, charter provisions, and rules of any governmental agency relating to planning, zoning, construction standards for subdivisions, development and improvement of land, and the construction of buildings thereon; provided that:

     (1)  The board finds the agricultural park is consistent with the purpose and intent of this chapter, and meets minimum requirements of health and safety;

     (2)  The development of the proposed agricultural park does not contravene any safety standards or tariffs approved for public utilities by the public utilities commission [for public utilities;] or by the telecommunications and cable television services commission;

     (3)  The legislative body of the county in which the agricultural park is to be situated shall have approved the agricultural park.

         (A)  The legislative body shall approve or disapprove the agricultural park within forty-five days after the department has submitted the preliminary plans and specifications for the agricultural park to the legislative body.  If after the forty-fifth day an agricultural park is not disapproved, it shall be deemed approved by the legislative body.

         (B)  No action shall be prosecuted or maintained against any county, its officials, or employees, on account of actions taken by them in reviewing, approving, or disapproving the plans and specifications.

         (C)  The final plans and specifications for the agricultural park shall be deemed approved by the legislative body if the final plans and specifications do not substantially deviate from the preliminary plans and specifications.  The final plans and specifications for the project shall constitute the planning, zoning, building, construction, and subdivision standards for that agricultural park.  For purposes of sections 501-85 and 502-17, the chairperson of the board of agriculture or the responsible county official may certify maps and plans of lands connected with the agricultural park as having complied with applicable laws and ordinances relating to consolidation and subdivision of lands, and such maps and plans shall be accepted for registration or recordation by the land court and registrar; and

     (4)  The State shall assume the responsibility of maintaining all roads within the agricultural park if the roads are developed exempt from applicable county ordinances, charter provisions, and rules regarding roads."

     SECTION 14.  Section 166E-10, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "[[]§166E-10[]]  Non-agricultural park land development.  On behalf of the State or in partnership with a federal agency, a county, or a private party and except as provided in this section, the department may develop non-agricultural park lands that, at the option of the board, may be exempt from all statutes, ordinances, charter provisions, and rules of any governmental agency relating to planning, zoning, construction standards for subdivisions, development and improvement of land, and construction of buildings thereon; provided that:

     (1)  The board finds the development is consistent with the public purpose and intent of this chapter and meets minimum health and safety requirements;

     (2)  The development of the proposed non-agricultural park land does not contravene any safety standards or tariffs approved for public utilities by the public utilities commission [for public utilities;] or by the telecommunications and cable television services commission;

     (3)  The county in which the non-agricultural park development is proposed shall approve the non-agricultural park development; and provided further that:

         (A)  The county shall approve or disapprove the development within forty-five days after the department submits preliminary plans and specifications for the development to the county.  If the county does not disapprove the development after the forty-fifth day, the development shall be deemed approved;

         (B)  No action shall be prosecuted or maintained against any county, its officials, or employees, on any actions taken by them in reviewing, approving, or disapproving the plans and specifications; and

         (C)  The final plans and specifications for the development shall be deemed approved by the county if the final plans and specifications do not substantially deviate from the preliminary plans and specifications.  The final plans and specifications for the project shall constitute the planning, zoning, building, construction, and subdivision standards for that development.  For purposes of sections 501-85 and 502-17, the chairperson of the board or the responsible county official may certify maps and plans of lands connected with the development as having complied with applicable laws and ordinances relating to consolidation and subdivision of lands, and the maps and plans shall be accepted for registration or recordation by the land court and registrar; and

     (4)  The State shall assume the responsibility of maintaining all roads and infrastructure improvements within the boundaries if the improvements are developed exempt from applicable county ordinances, charter provisions, and rules regarding development."

     SECTION 15.  Section 171-134, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:

     "(b)  At the option of the board, the development of an industrial park shall be exempt from all statutes, ordinances, charter provisions, and rules of any governmental agency relating to planning, zoning, construction standards for subdivision development and improvement of land, and the construction of buildings thereon; provided that:

     (1)  The board finds that the industrial park meets the minimum requirements of health and safety;

     (2)  The development of the industrial park does not contravene any safety standards or tariffs approved for public utilities by the public utilities commission [for public utilities;] or by the telecommunications and cable television services commission;

     (3)  The legislative body of the county in which the industrial park is proposed to be situated approves the industrial park.

         (A)  The legislative body shall approve or disapprove the industrial park within forty-five days after the department has submitted preliminary plans and specifications for the industrial park to the legislative body.  If after the forty-fifth day, an industrial park is not disapproved, it shall be deemed approved by the legislative body.

         (B)  No action shall be prosecuted or maintained against any county, its officials, or employees, on account of actions taken by them in reviewing, approving, or disapproving the plans and specifications.

         (C)  The final plans and specifications for the industrial park shall be deemed approved by the legislative body if the final plans and specifications for the industrial park do not substantially deviate from the preliminary plans and specifications.  The determination that the final plans and specifications do not substantially deviate from the preliminary plans and specifications of the industrial park shall rest with the board.  The final plans and specifications for the park shall constitute the planning, zoning, building, improvement, construction, and subdivision standards for that industrial park.  For the purposes of sections 501-85 and 502-17, the chairperson of the board or the responsible county official may certify maps and plans of land connected with the industrial park as having complied with applicable laws and ordinances relating to consolidation and subdivision of lands, and such maps and plans shall be accepted for registration or recordation by the land court and registrar; and

     (4)  The board shall assume the responsibility of all infrastructure within the industrial park, if the infrastructure developed is exempt from applicable county ordinances, charter provisions, and rules."

     SECTION 16.  Section 196D-10, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:

     "(c)  This section shall not apply to any permit issued by the public utilities commission under chapter 269[.] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission under chapter    ."

     SECTION 17.  Section 201H-13, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "[[]§201H-13[]]  Eminent domain, exchange or use of public property.  (a)  The corporation may acquire any real property, including fixtures and improvements, or interest therein: through voluntary negotiation; through exchange of land in accordance with section 171-50, provided that the public land to be exchanged need not be of like use to that of the private land; or by the exercise of the power of eminent domain which it deems necessary by the adoption of a resolution declaring that the acquisition of the property described therein is in the public interest and required for public use.  The corporation shall exercise the power of eminent domain granted by this section in the same manner and procedure as is provided by chapter 101 and otherwise in accordance with all applicable provisions of the general laws of the State; provided that condemnation of parcels greater than fifteen acres shall be subject to legislative disapproval expressed in a concurrent resolution adopted by majority vote of the senate and the house of representatives in the first regular or special session following the date of condemnation.

     (b)  The corporation may acquire by the exercise of the power of eminent domain property already devoted to a public use; provided that no property belonging to any government may be acquired without its consent, and that no property belonging to a public utility corporation may be acquired without the approval of the public utilities commission[,] or, in the case of telecommunications carriers, the approval of the telecommunications and cable television services commission, and subject to legislative disapproval expressed in a concurrent resolution adopted by majority vote of the senate and the house of representatives in the first regular or special session following the date of condemnation."

     SECTION 18.  Section 201H-33, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:

     "(c)  The corporation shall adopt, pursuant to chapter 91, rules on health, safety, building, planning, zoning, and land use that relate to the development, subdivision, and construction of dwelling units in housing projects in which the State, through the corporation, shall participate.  The rules shall not contravene any safety standards or tariffs approved by the public utilities commission[,] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission, and shall follow existing law as closely as is consistent with the production of lower cost housing with standards that meet minimum requirements of good design, pleasant amenities, health, safety, and coordinated development.

     When adopted, the rules shall have the force and effect of law and shall supersede, for all housing projects in which the State, through the corporation, shall participate, all other inconsistent laws, ordinances, and rules relating to the use, zoning, planning, and development of land, and the construction of dwelling units thereon.  The rules, before becoming effective, shall be presented to the legislative body of each county in which they will be effective and the legislative body of any county may within forty-five days approve or disapprove, for that county, any or all of the rules by a majority vote of its members.  On the forty-sixth day after submission, any rules not disapproved shall be deemed to have been approved by the county."

     SECTION 19.  Section 201H-38, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

     "(a) The corporation may develop on behalf of the State or with an eligible developer, or may assist under a government assistance program in the development of, housing projects that shall be exempt from all statutes, ordinances, charter provisions, and rules of any government agency relating to planning, zoning, construction standards for subdivisions, development and improvement of land, and the construction of dwelling units thereon; provided that:

     (1)  The corporation finds the housing project is consistent with the purpose and intent of this chapter, and meets minimum requirements of health and safety;

     (2)  The development of the proposed housing project does not contravene any safety standards, tariffs, or rates and fees approved for public utilities by the public utilities commission [for public utilities] or by the telecommunications and cable television services commission, or of the various boards of water supply authorized under chapter 54;

     (3)  The legislative body of the county in which the housing project is to be situated shall have approved the project with or without modifications:

         (A)  The legislative body shall approve, approve with modification, or disapprove the project by resolution within forty-five days after the corporation has submitted the preliminary plans and specifications for the project to the legislative body.  If on the forty-sixth day a project is not disapproved, it shall be deemed approved by the legislative body;

         (B)  No action shall be prosecuted or maintained against any county, its officials, or employees on account of actions taken by them in reviewing, approving, modifying, or disapproving the plans and specifications; and

         (C)  The final plans and specifications for the project shall be deemed approved by the legislative body if the final plans and specifications do not substantially deviate from the preliminary plans and specifications.  The final plans and specifications for the project shall constitute the zoning, building, construction, and subdivision standards for that project.  For purposes of sections 501-85 and 502-17, the executive director of the corporation or the responsible county official may certify maps and plans of lands connected with the project as having complied with applicable laws and ordinances relating to consolidation and subdivision of lands, and the maps and plans shall be accepted for registration or recordation by the land court and registrar; and

     (4)  The land use commission shall approve, approve with modification, or disapprove a boundary change within forty-five days after the corporation has submitted a petition to the commission as provided in section 2054.  If, on the forty-sixth day, the petition is not disapproved, it shall be deemed approved by the commission."

     SECTION 20.  Section 205A-46, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

     "(a)  A variance may be granted for a structure or activity otherwise prohibited in this part if the authority finds in writing, based on the record presented, that the proposed structure or activity is necessary for or ancillary to:

     (1)  Cultivation of crops;

     (2)  Aquaculture;

     (3)  Landscaping; provided that the authority finds that the proposed structure or activity will not adversely affect beach processes and will not artificially fix the shoreline;

     (4)  Drainage;

     (5)  Boating, maritime, or watersports recreational facilities;

     (6)  Facilities or improvements by public agencies or public utilities regulated under chapter 269[;] or chapter    ;

     (7)  Private facilities or improvements that are clearly in the public interest;

     (8)  Private facilities or improvements which will neither adversely affect beach processes nor artificially fix the shoreline; provided that the authority also finds that hardship will result to the applicant if the facilities or improvements are not allowed within the shoreline area;

     (9)  Private facilities or improvements that may artificially fix the shoreline; provided that the authority also finds that shoreline erosion is likely to cause hardship to the applicant if the facilities or improvements are not allowed within the shoreline area, and the authority imposes conditions to prohibit any structure seaward of the existing shoreline unless it is clearly in the public interest; or

    (10)  Moving of sand from one location seaward of the shoreline to another location seaward of the shoreline; provided that the authority also finds that moving of sand will not adversely affect beach processes, will not diminish the size of a public beach, and will be necessary to stabilize an eroding shoreline."

     SECTION 21.  Section 239-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "[[]§239-6.5[]]  Tax credit for lifeline telephone service subsidy.  A [telephone public utility] telecommunications carrier subject to this chapter that has been authorized to establish lifeline telephone service rates by the [public utilities commission] telecommunications and cable television services commission shall be allowed a tax credit, equal to the lifeline telephone service costs incurred by the [utility,] carrier, to be applied against the [utility's] carrier's tax imposed by this chapter.  The amount of this credit shall be determined and certified annually by the [public utilities commission.] telecommunications and cable television services commission.  The tax liability for a [telephone public utility] telecommunications carrier claiming the credit shall be calculated in the manner prescribed in section 239-5; provided that the amount of tax due from the [utility] carrier shall be net of the lifeline service credit."

     SECTION 22.  Section 264-20, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:

     "(b)  Any other law to the contrary notwithstanding, any decision by the State, the department of transportation, a county, or any officers, employees, or agents of the State, the department of transportation, or a county to select or apply flexibility in highway design pursuant to this section and consistent with the practices used by the Federal Highway Administration and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials shall not give rise to a cause of action or claim against:

     (1)  The State;

     (2)  The department of transportation;

     (3)  The counties;

     (4)  Any public utility regulated under chapter 269 or telecommunications carrier regulated under chapter     that places its facilities within the highway right-of-way; or

     (5)  Any officer, employee, or agent of an entity listed in paragraphs (1) to (4)."

     SECTION 23.  Section 269-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:

     1.  By amending the definition of "public utility" to read as follows:

     ""Public utility":

     (1)  Includes every person who may own, control, operate, or manage as owner, lessee, trustee, receiver, or otherwise, whether under a franchise, charter, license, articles of association, or otherwise, any plant or equipment, or any part thereof, directly or indirectly for public use for the transportation of passengers or freight; for the conveyance or transmission of telecommunications messages; for the furnishing of facilities for the transmission of intelligence by electricity within the State or between points within the State by land, water, or air; for the production, conveyance, transmission, delivery, or furnishing of light, power, heat, cold, water, gas, or oil; for the storage or warehousing of goods; or for the disposal of sewage; provided that the term shall include[:

         (A)  An] an owner or operator of a private sewer company or sewer facility; and

        [(B)  A telecommunications carrier or telecommunications common carrier; and]

     (2)  Shall not include:

         (A)  An owner or operator of an aerial transportation enterprise;

         (B)  An owner or operator of a taxicab as defined in this section;

         (C)  Common carriers that transport only freight on the public highways, unless operating within localities, along routes, or between points that the public utilities commission finds to be inadequately serviced without regulation under this chapter;

         (D)  Persons engaged in the business of warehousing or storage unless the commission finds that regulation is necessary in the public interest;

         (E)  A carrier by water to the extent that the carrier enters into private contracts for towage, salvage, hauling, or carriage between points within the State; provided that the towing, salvage, hauling, or carriage is not pursuant to either an established schedule or an undertaking to perform carriage services on behalf of the public generally;

         (F)  A carrier by water, substantially engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, that transports passengers on luxury cruises between points within the State or on luxury round-trip cruises returning to the point of departure;

         (G)  Any person who:

              (i)  Controls, operates, or manages plants or facilities for the production, transmission, or furnishing of power primarily or entirely from nonfossil fuel sources; and

              (ii)  Provides, sells, or transmits all of that power, except as is used in its own internal operations, directly to a public utility for transmission to the public;

         (H)  A telecommunications [provider only to the extent determined by the public utilities commission pursuant to section 269-16.9;] carrier or telecommunications common carrier as defined in section   -1, and subject to the authority of the telecommunications and cable television services commission pursuant to section   -5;

         (I)  Any person who controls, operates, or manages plants or facilities developed pursuant to chapter 167 for conveying, distributing, and transmitting water for irrigation and other purposes for public use and purpose;

         (J)  Any person who owns, controls, operates, or manages plants or facilities for the reclamation of wastewater; provided that:

              (i)  The services of the facility are provided pursuant to a service contract between the person and a state or county agency and at least ten per cent of the wastewater processed is used directly by the state or county agency that entered into the service contract;

             (ii)  The primary function of the facility is the processing of secondary treated wastewater that has been produced by a municipal wastewater treatment facility owned by a state or county agency;

            (iii)  The facility does not make sales of water to residential customers;

             (iv)  The facility may distribute and sell recycled or reclaimed water to entities not covered by a state or county service contract; provided that, in the absence of regulatory oversight and direct competition, the distribution and sale of recycled or reclaimed water shall be voluntary and its pricing fair and reasonable.  For purposes of this subparagraph, "recycled water" and "reclaimed water" means treated wastewater that by design is intended or used for a beneficial purpose; and

              (v)  The facility is not engaged, either directly or indirectly, in the processing of food wastes;

         (K)  Any person who owns, controls, operates, or manages any seawater air conditioning district cooling project; provided that at least fifty per cent of the energy required for the seawater air conditioning district cooling system is provided by a renewable energy resource, such as cold, deep seawater;

         (L)  Any person who owns, controls, operates, or manages plants or facilities primarily used to charge or discharge a vehicle battery that provides power for vehicle propulsion; and

         (M)  Any person who:

              (i)  Owns, controls, operates, or manages a renewable energy system that is located on a customer's property; and

             (ii)  Provides, sells, or transmits the power generated from that renewable energy system to an electric utility or to the customer on whose property the renewable energy system is located; provided that, for purposes of this clause, a customer's property shall include all contiguous property owned or leased by the customer without regard to interruptions in contiguity caused by easements, public thoroughfares, transportation rights-of-way, and utility rights-of-way.

     If the application of this chapter is ordered by the commission in any case provided in paragraphs (2)(C), (2)(D), [(2)(H),] and (2)(I), or as determined by the telecommunications and cable television services commission as provided in paragraph (2)(H), the business of any public utility that presents evidence of bona fide operation on the date of the commencement of the proceedings resulting in the order shall be presumed to be necessary to the public convenience and necessity, but any certificate issued under this proviso shall nevertheless be subject to terms and conditions as the public utilities commission may prescribe, as provided in [sections 269-16.9 and] section 269-20[.], or as the telecommunications and cable television services commission may prescribe, as provided in section    -25, whichever is applicable."

     2.  By amending the definition of "telecommunications carrier" or "telecommunications common carrier" to read:

     ""Telecommunications carrier" or "telecommunications common carrier" [means any person that owns, operates, manages, or controls any facility used to furnish telecommunications services for profit to the public, or to classes of users as to be effectively available to the public, engaged in the provision of services, such as voice, data, image, graphics, and video services, that make use of all or part of their transmission facilities, switches, broadcast equipment, signalling, or control devices.] has the same meaning as in section    -1."

     3.  By amending the definition of "telecommunications service" or "telecommunications" to read:

     ""Telecommunications service" or "telecommunications" [means the offering of transmission between or among points specified by a user, of information of the user's choosing, including voice, data, image, graphics, and video without change in the form or content of the information, as sent and received, by means of electromagnetic transmission, or other similarly capable means of transmission, with or without benefit of any closed transmission medium, and does not include cable service as defined in section 440G-3.] has the same meaning as in section    -1."

     4.  By repealing the definition of "carrier of last resort".

     [""Carrier of last resort" means a telecommunications carrier designated by the commission to provide universal service in a given local exchange service area determined to be lacking in effective competition."]

     5.  By repealing the definition of "designated local exchange service area".

     [""Designated local exchange service area" means an area as determined by the commission to be best served by designating a carrier of last resort pursuant to section 269-43."]

     SECTION 24.  Section 269-30, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§269-30  Finances; public utility fee.  (a)  Sections 607-5 to 607-9 shall apply to the public utilities commission and each commissioner, as well as to the supreme and circuit courts, and all costs and fees paid or collected pursuant to this section shall be deposited with the director of finance to the credit of the public utilities commission special fund established under section 269-33.

     (b)  There also shall be paid to the public utilities commission in each of the months of July and December of each year, by each public utility subject to investigation by the public utilities commission, a fee equal to one-fourth of one per cent of the gross income from the public utility's business during the preceding year, or the sum of $30, whichever is greater.  This fee shall be deposited with the director of finance to the credit of the public utilities commission special fund.

     (c)  Each public utility paying a fee under subsection (b) may impose a surcharge to recover the amount paid above one-eighth of one per cent of gross income.  The surcharge imposed shall not be subject to the notice, hearing, and approval requirements of this chapter; provided that the surcharge may be imposed by the utility only after thirty days' notice to the public utilities commission.  Unless ordered by the public utilities commission, the surcharge shall be imposed only until the conclusion of the public utility's next rate case; provided that the surcharge shall be subject to refund with interest at the public utility's authorized rate of return on rate base if the utility collects more money from the surcharge than actually paid due to the increase in the fee to one-fourth of one per cent.

     (d)  Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, the public utilities commission may, upon the filing of a petition by a public utility, credit a public utility for amounts paid under subsection (b) toward amounts the public utility owes in one call center fees under section 269E-6(f).

     (e)  Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, this section shall not apply to any telecommunications carrier or telecommunications common carrier as defined in section   -1 and subject to the authority of the telecommunications and cable television services commission pursuant to section    -5."

     SECTION 25.  Section 269-51, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§269-51  Consumer advocate; director of commerce and consumer affairs.  (a)  The director of commerce and consumer affairs shall be the consumer advocate in hearings before the public utilities commission[.] and the telecommunications and cable television services commission.  The consumer advocate shall represent, protect, and advance the interests of all consumers, including small businesses, of utility services.  [The consumer advocate shall not receive any salary in addition to the salary received as director of commerce and consumer affairs.]

     (b)  The responsibility for advocating the interests of the consumer of utility services shall be separate and distinct from the responsibilities of the public utilities commission and those assistants employed by the commission.  [As] The consumer advocate[, the director of commerce and consumer affairs] shall have full rights to participate as a party in interest in all proceedings before the public utilities commission[.] and the telecommunications and cable television services commission."

     SECTION 26.  Section 269-54, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsections (d) and (e) to read as follows:

     "(d)  Whenever it appears to the consumer advocate that: 

     (1)  [any] Any public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator has violated or failed to comply with any provision of this part or of any state or federal law;

     (2)  [any] Any public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator has failed to comply with any rule, regulation, or other requirement of the public utilities commission, the telecommunications and cable television services commission, or of any other state or federal agency;

     (3)  [any] Any public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator has failed to comply with any provision of its charter or franchise[;] or certificate of public convenience and necessity;

     (4)  [changes,] Changes, additions, extensions, or repairs to the plant or service of any public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator are necessary to meet the reasonable convenience or necessity of the public; or

     (5)  [the] The rates, fares, classifications, charges, or rules of any public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator are unreasonable or unreasonably discriminatory,

the consumer advocate may institute proceedings for appropriate relief before the public utilities commission[.] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission.  The consumer advocate may appeal any final decision and order in any proceeding to which the consumer advocate is a party in the manner provided by law.

     (e)  The consumer advocate may file with the public utilities commission or the telecommunications and cable television services commission and serve on any public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator a request in writing to furnish any information reasonably relevant to any matter or proceeding before the public utilities commission or the telecommunications and cable television services commission or reasonably required by the consumer advocate to perform the duties hereunder.  Any such request shall set forth with reasonable specificity the purpose for which the information is requested and shall designate with reasonable specificity the information desired.  The public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator shall comply with such request within the time limit set forth by the consumer advocate unless within ten days following service it requests a hearing on the matter before the public utilities commission or the telecommunications and cable television services commission and states its reasons therefor.  If a hearing is requested, the public utilities commission or the telecommunications and cable television services commission shall proceed to hold the hearing and make its determination on the request within thirty days after the same is filed.  The consumer advocate or the public utility may appeal the decision of the public utilities commission on any such request, subject to chapter 602, in the manner provided for civil appeals from the circuit courts.  The consumer advocate, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator may appeal the decision of the telecommunications and cable television services commission in the manner provided in section     -17.  Subject to the foregoing, such requests may ask the public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator to:

     (1)  Furnish any information with which the consumer advocate may require concerning the condition, operations, practices, or services of the public utility[;], or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator;

     (2)  Produce and permit the consumer advocate or the consumer advocate's representative to inspect and copy any designated documents (including writings, drawings, graphs, charts, photographs, recordings, and other data compilations from which information can be obtained), or to inspect and copy, test, or sample any designated tangible thing which is in the possession, custody, or control of the public utility[;], or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator; or

     (3)  Permit entry upon land or other property in the possession or control of the public utility, or beginning July 1, 2013, for a telecommunications carrier, or a cable operator for the purpose of inspection and measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling the property or any designated object thereon."

     SECTION 27.  Section 269-55, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§269-55  Handling of complaints.  The consumer advocate shall counsel public utility, telecommunications, and cable service customers in the handling of consumer complaints before the public utilities commission[.] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission.  The public utilities commission shall provide a central clearinghouse of information by collecting and compiling all consumer complaints and inquiries concerning public utilities.  The telecommunications and cable television services commission shall provide a central clearinghouse of information by collecting and compiling all consumer complaints and inquiries concerning cable operators, and beginning on July 1, 2013, telecommunications carriers."

     SECTION 28.  Section 269E-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "[[]§269E-1  Administration.[]]  This chapter shall be administered by the public utilities commission and the provisions of this chapter and of chapter 269, not inconsistent with this chapter, shall govern its administration; provided that sections 269-7.5, 269-8.2, 269-8.5, 269-9, [269-16 to 269-28,] 269-16 to 269-16.4, 269-17 to 269-28, 269-30, 269-31, [269-34 to 269-43,] and 269-71 to 269-111 shall not, in any respect, apply to the one call center."

     SECTION 29.  Section 339K-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "[[]§339K-2[]]  Compact administrator.  The compact administrator, acting jointly with like officers of other party states, may promulgate rules and regulations to carry out more effectively the terms of the compact.  The compact administrator shall cooperate with all departments, agencies, and officers of and in the government of this State and its subdivisions in facilitating the present administration of the compact or of any supplementary agreement or agreements entered into by this State thereunder.  The compact administrator shall adopt the practices and may impose the fees authorized under article III of the compact, except that state and county law enforcement agencies [and], the public utilities commission, and the telecommunications and cable television services commission  shall retain their enforcement and inspection authority relating to carriers."

     SECTION 30.  Section 356D-15, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:

     "(b)  The authority may acquire by the exercise of the power of eminent domain property already devoted to a public use; provided that no property belonging to any government may be acquired without its consent, and that no property belonging to a public utility may be acquired without the approval of the public utilities commission[;] or, in the case of telecommunications carriers, the telecommunications and cable television services commission; and provided further that the acquisition is subject to legislative disapproval expressed in a concurrent resolution adopted by majority vote of the senate and the house of representatives in the first regular or special session following the date of condemnation."

     SECTION 31.  Section 448E-13, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§448E-13  Exemption of public utility and [community antennae] cable television company employees.  All employees of a public utility within the State under a franchise or charter granted by the State which is regulated by the public utilities commission [and community antennae television company,], or employees of a cable operator within the State under a franchise granted by the State that is regulated by the telecommunications and cable television services commission, while so employed, shall be exempt from the [provision] provisions of this chapter."

     SECTION 32.  Section 481-11, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§481-11  Remedies cumulative.  The remedies prescribed in this part are cumulative and in addition to the remedies prescribed in [chapter] chapters 269, and    , for discriminations by public utilities[.], or beginning July 1, 2013, for telecommunications carriers, or cable operators.  If any conflict arises between this part and chapter 269[, the latter prevails.] or chapter    , chapter 269 or chapter    , whichever is applicable, shall prevail."

     SECTION 33.  Section 481P-5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§481P-5  Exemptions.  This chapter shall not apply to:

     (1)  A person who initiates telephone calls to a residence for the sole purpose of polling or soliciting the expression of ideas, opinions, or votes, or a person soliciting solely for a political or religious cause or purpose;

     (2)  A securities broker-dealer, salesperson, investment adviser, or investment adviser representative who is registered with this State to sell securities or who is authorized to sell securities in this State pursuant to federal securities laws, when soliciting over the telephone within the scope of the person's registration;

     (3)  A financial institution that is authorized to accept deposits under its chartering or licensing authority where such deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or the National Credit Union Administration, including but not limited to a bank, savings bank, savings and loan association, depository financial services loan company, or credit union, or a nondepository financial services loan company that is licensed or authorized to conduct business in this State by the commissioner of financial institutions, or an affiliate or subsidiary of a financial institution as defined in chapter 412;

     (4)  A person or organization that is licensed or authorized to conduct business in this State by the insurance commissioner including but not limited to an insurance company and its employees, while engaged in the business of selling or advertising the sale of insurance products or services;

     (5)  A college or university accredited by an accrediting organization recognized by the United States Department of Education;

     (6)  A person who publishes a catalog of at least fifteen pages, four times a year, with a circulation of at least one hundred thousand, where the catalog includes clear disclosure of sale prices, shipping, handling, and other charges;

     (7)  A political subdivision or instrumentality of the United States, or any state of the United States;

     (8)  The sale of goods or services by telecommunications or landline (i.e., cable) or wireless video service providers, for which the terms and conditions of the offering, production, or sale are regulated by the public utilities commission [or], the Federal Communications Commission, or [pursuant to chapter 440G,] the telecommunications and cable television services commission, including the sale of goods or services by affiliates of these telecommunications or video service providers.  Nothing herein shall be construed to preclude or preempt actions brought under any other laws including chapter 480;

     (9)  A real estate broker or salesperson who is licensed by this State to sell real estate, when soliciting within the scope of the license; or

    (10)  A travel agency that is registered with this State, when engaging in the business of selling or advertising the sale of travel services."

     SECTION 34.  Section 481X-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:

     "(a)  This chapter shall not apply to:

     (1)  Express or implied warranties;

     (2)  Maintenance agreements; and

     (3)  Warranties, service contracts, and maintenance agreements offered by public utilities on their transmission devices to the extent they are regulated by the public utilities commission or the [department of commerce and consumer affairs.] telecommunications and cable television services commission."

     SECTION 35.  Section 486J-11, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§486J-11  Powers of the public utilities commission[.] and the telecommunications and cable television services commission.  (a)  The public utilities commission and the telecommunications and cable television services commission may take any action or make any determination under this chapter, including but not limited to actions or determinations that affect persons not regulated under chapters 269,     , 271, and 271G, as the public utilities commission or the telecommunications and cable television services commission deems necessary to carry out its responsibilities or otherwise effectuate chapter 269,     , 271, or 271G.

     (b)  The public utilities commission or, beginning July 1, 2013, in the case of telecommunications carriers or telecommunications common carriers, the telecommunications and cable television services commission may examine or investigate each distributor, the manner in which it is operated, its prices and rates, its operating costs and expenses, the value of its property and assets, the amount and disposition of its income, any of its financial transactions, its business relations with other persons, companies, or corporations, its compliance with all applicable state and federal laws, and all matters of any nature affecting the relations and transactions between the distributor and the public, persons, or businesses.

     (c)  In the performance of its duties under this chapter, the public utilities commission or the telecommunications and cable television services commission shall have the same powers respecting administering oaths, compelling the attendance of witnesses and the production of documents, examining witnesses, and punishing for contempt, as are possessed by the circuit courts.  In case of disobedience by any person to any order of or subpoena issued by the public utilities commission[,] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission, or of the refusal of any witness to testify to any matter regarding which the witness may be lawfully questioned, any circuit court, upon application by the public utilities commission[,] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission, shall compel obedience as in case of disobedience of the requirements of a subpoena issued from a circuit court or a refusal to testify therein."

     SECTION 36.  Section 659-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "[[]§659-3[]]  Forfeiture of franchise.  The several circuit courts shall have jurisdiction of all proceedings in, or in the nature of, quo warranto, brought by or in the name of the public utilities commission[,] or the telecommunications and cable television services commission, or the State, for the forfeiture of the franchise of any corporate body offending against any law relating to such corporation, for misuser, for nonuser, for doing or committing any act or acts amounting to a surrender of its charter and for exercising rights not conferred upon it."

     SECTION 37.  Section 708-800, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "telecommunication service" to read as follows:

     ""Telecommunication service" means the offering of transmission between or among points specified by a user, of information of the user's choosing, including voice, data, image, graphics, and video without change in the form or content of the information, as sent and received, by means of electromagnetic transmission, or other similarly capable means of transmission, with or without benefit of any closed transmission medium, and does not include cable service as defined in section [440G-3.]     -1."

     SECTION 38.  Section 269-16.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["§269-16.5  Lifeline telephone rates.  (a)  The public utilities commission shall implement a program to achieve lifeline telephone rates for residential telephone users.

     (b)  "Lifeline telephone rate" means a discounted rate for residential telephone users identified as elders with limited income and the handicapped with limited income as designated by the commission.

     (c)  The commission shall require every telephone public utility providing local telephone service to file a schedule of rates and charges providing a rate for lifeline telephone subscribers.

     (d)  Nothing in this section shall preclude the commission from changing any rate established pursuant to subsection (a) either specifically or pursuant to any general restructuring of all telephone rates, charges, and classifications."]

     SECTION 39.  Section 269-16.6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["§269-16.6  Telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.  (a)  The public utilities commission shall implement intrastate telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.

     (b)  The commission shall investigate the availability of experienced providers of quality telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.  The provision of these telecommunications relay services to be rendered on or after July 1, 1992, shall be awarded by the commission to the provider or providers the commission determines to be best qualified to provide these services.  In reviewing the qualifications of the provider or providers, the commission shall consider the factors of cost, quality of services, and experience, and such other factors as the commission deems appropriate.

     (c)  If the commission determines that the telecommunications relay service can be provided in a cost-effective manner by a service provider or service providers, the commission may require every intrastate telecommunications carrier to contract with such provider or providers for the provision of the telecommunications relay service under the terms established by the commission.

     (d)  The commission may establish a surcharge to collect customer contributions for telecommunications relay services required under this section.

     (e)  The commission may adopt rules to establish a mechanism to recover the costs of administering and providing telecommunications relay services required under this section.

     (f)  The commission shall require every intrastate telecommunications carrier to file a schedule of rates and charges and every provider of telecommunications relay service to maintain a separate accounting for the costs of providing telecommunications relay services for the deaf, persons with hearing disabilities, and persons with speech disabilities.

     (g)  Nothing in this section shall preclude the commission from changing any rate established pursuant to this section either specifically or pursuant to any general restructuring of all telephone rates, charges, and classifications.

     (h)  As used in this section:

     "Telecommunications relay services" means telephone transmission services that provide an individual who has a hearing or speech disability the ability to engage in communication by wire or radio with a hearing individual in a manner that is functionally equivalent to the ability of an individual who does not have a hearing or speech disability to communicate using wire or radio voice communication services.  "Telecommunications relay services" includes services that enable two-way communication using text telephones or other nonvoice terminal devices, speech-to-speech services, video relay services, and non-English relay services."]

     SECTION 40.  Section 269-16.8, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-16.8]  Aggregators of telephone service requirements.  (a)  For the purposes of this section:

     "Aggregator" means every person or entity that is not a telecommunications carrier, who, in the ordinary course of its business, makes telephones available and aggregates the calls of the public or transient users of its business, including but not limited to a hotel, motel, hospital, or university, that provides operator-assisted services through access to an operator service provider.

     "Operator service" means a service provided by a telecommunications company to assist a customer to complete a telephone call.

     (b)  The commission, by rule or order, shall adopt and enforce operating requirements for the provision of operator-assisted services by an aggregator.  These requirements shall include, but not be limited to, the following:

     (1)  Posting and display of information in a prominent and conspicuous fashion on or near the telephone equipment owned or controlled by the aggregator which states the identity of the operator service provider, the operator service provider's complaint handling procedures, and means by which the customer may access the various operator service providers.

     (2)  Identification by name of the operator service provider prior to the call connection and, if not posted pursuant to subsection (b)(1), a disclosure of pertinent rates, terms, conditions, and means of access to various operator service providers and the local exchange carriers; provided that the operator service provider shall disclose this information at any time upon request by the customer.

     (3)  Allowing the customer access to any operator service provider operating in the relevant geographic area through the access method chosen by the provider or as deemed appropriate by the commission.

     (4)  Other requirements as deemed reasonable by the commission in the areas of public safety, quality of service, unjust or discriminatory pricing, or other matters in the public interest."]

     SECTION 41.  Section 269-16.85, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-16.85]  Retail intrastate services; fully competitive.  (a)  Notwithstanding section 269-16.9 or any other law to the contrary, the public utilities commission shall treat retail intrastate telecommunications services, under the commission's classification of services relating to costs, rates, and pricing, as fully competitive and apply all commission rules in accordance with that designation.  In addition, a telecommunications carrier shall not be required to obtain approval or provide any cost support or other information to establish or otherwise modify in any manner its rates, fares, and charges, or to bundle any service offerings into a single or combined price package; provided that a telecommunications carrier, except upon receiving the approval of the commission, shall not charge a higher rate for any retail telecommunications service than the rate for the same service included in the telecommunications carrier's filed tariff.  All rates, fares, charges, and bundled service offerings shall be filed with the public utilities commission for information purposes only.

     (b)  This section shall apply to retail rates charged for service to end-user consumers only and shall not apply to wholesale rates charged for services provided by a telecommunications carrier to another telecommunications provider, a wireless communications provider, a voice over internet protocol communications provider, or other similar communications provider.

     (c)  Nothing herein shall modify any requirements of a telecommunications carrier to provide lifeline telephone service, comply with carrier of last resort obligations, or comply with applicable service quality standards."]

     SECTION 42.  Section 269-16.9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["§269-16.9  Telecommunications providers and services.  (a)  Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, the commission, upon its own motion or upon the application of any person, and upon notice and hearing, may exempt a telecommunications provider or a telecommunications service from any or all of the provisions of this chapter, except the provisions of section 269-34, upon a determination that the exemption is in the public interest.  In determining whether an exemption is in the public interest, the commission shall consider whether the exemption promotes state policies in telecommunications, the development, maintenance, and operation of effective and economically efficient telecommunications services, and the furnishing of telecommunications services at just and reasonable rates and in a fair manner in view of the needs of the various customer segments of the telecommunications industry.  Among the specific factors the commission may consider are:

     (1)  The responsiveness of the exemption to changes in the structure and technology of the State's telecommunications industry;

     (2)  The benefits accruing to the customers and users of the exempt telecommunications provider or service;

     (3)  The impact of the exemption on the quality, efficiency, and availability of telecommunications services;

     (4)  The impact of the exemption on the maintenance of fair, just, and reasonable rates for telecommunications services;

     (5)  The likelihood of prejudice or disadvantage to ratepayers of basic local exchange service resulting from the exemption;

     (6)  The effect of the exemption on the preservation and promotion of affordable, universal, basic telecommunications services as those services are determined by the commission;

     (7)  The resulting subsidization, if any, of the exempt telecommunications service or provider by nonexempt services;

     (8)  The impact of the exemption on the availability of diversity in the supply of telecommunications services throughout the State;

     (9)  The improvements in the regulatory system to be gained from the exemption, including the reduction in regulatory delays and costs;

    (10)  The impact of the exemption on promoting innovations in telecommunications services;

    (11)  The opportunity provided by the exemption for telecommunications providers to respond to competition; and

    (12)  The potential for the exercise of substantial market power by the exempt provider or by a provider of the exempt telecommunications service.

     (b)  The commission shall expedite, where practicable, the regulatory process with respect to exemptions and shall adopt guidelines under which each provider of an exempted service shall be subject to similar terms and conditions.

     (c)  The commission may condition or limit any exemption as the commission deems necessary in the public interest.  The commission may provide a trial period for any exemption and may terminate the exemption or continue it for such period and under such conditions and limitations as it deems appropriate.

     (d)  The commission may require a telecommunications provider to apply for a certificate of public convenience and necessity pursuant to section 269-7.5; provided that the commission may waive any application requirement whenever it deems the waiver to be in furtherance of the purposes of this section.  The exemptions under this section may be granted in a proceeding for certification or in a separate proceeding.

     (e)  The commission may waive other regulatory requirements under this chapter applicable to telecommunications providers when it determines that competition will serve the same purpose as public interest regulation.

     (f)  If any provider of an exempt telecommunications service or any exempt telecommunications provider elects to terminate its service, it shall provide notice of this to its customers, the commission, and every telephone public utility providing basic local exchange service in this State.  The notice shall be in writing and given not less than six months before the intended termination date.  Upon termination of service by a provider of an exempt service or by an exempt provider, the appropriate telephone public utility providing basic local exchange service shall ensure that all customers affected by the termination receive basic local exchange service.  The commission shall, upon notice and hearing or by rule, determine the party or parties who shall bear the cost, if any, of access to the basic local exchange service by the customers of the terminated exempt service.

     (g)  Upon the petition of any person or upon its own motion, the commission may rescind any exemption or waiver granted under this section if, after notice and hearing, it finds that the conditions prompting the granting of the exemption or waiver no longer apply, or that the exemption or waiver is no longer in the public interest, or that the telecommunications provider has failed to comply with one or more of the conditions of the exemption or applicable statutory or regulatory requirements.

     (h)  For purposes of this section, the commission, upon determination that any area of the State has less than adequate telecommunications service, shall require the existing telecommunications provider to show cause as to why the commission should not authorize an alternative telecommunications provider for that area under the terms and conditions of this section."]

     SECTION 43.  Section 269-16.91, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-16.91]  Universal service subsidies.  (a)  For any alternative telecommunications provider authorized to provide basic local exchange service to any area of the State pursuant to section 269-16.9(h), the commission may consider the following:

     (1)  Transferring the subsidy, if any, of the local exchange provider's basic residential telephone service to the alternative provider; and

     (2)  Transferring from the local exchange carrier to the alternative provider the amounts, if any, generated by the local exchange provider's services other than basic residential telephone service and which are used to subsidize basic residential service in the area.

     (b)  To receive the subsidy amounts from the local exchange service provider, the alternative telecommunications provider shall be required, to the extent possible, to obtain basic residential service subsidies from both the local exchange service provider and national universal service providers."]

     SECTION 44.  Section 269-16.92, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-16.92]  Changes in subscriber carrier selections; prior authorization required; penalties for unauthorized changes.  (a)  No telecommunications carrier shall initiate a change in a subscriber's selection or designation of a long-distance carrier without first receiving:

     (1)  A letter of agency or letter of authorization;

     (2)  An electronic authorization by use of a toll-free number;

     (3)  An oral authorization verified by an independent third party; or

     (4)  Any other prescribed authorization;

provided that the letter or authorization shall be in accordance with verification procedures that are prescribed by the Federal Communications Commission or the public utilities commission. For purposes of this section, "telecommunications carrier" does not include a provider of commercial mobile radio service as defined by 47 United States Code section 332(d)(1).

     (b)  Upon a determination that any telecommunications carrier has engaged in conduct that is prohibited in subsection (a), the public utilities commission shall order the carrier to take corrective action as deemed necessary by the commission and may subject the telecommunications carrier to administrative penalties pursuant to section 269-28.  Any proceeds from administrative penalties collected under this section shall be deposited into the public utilities commission special fund.

     The commission, if consistent with the public interest, may suspend, restrict, or revoke the registration, charter, or certificate of the telecommunications carrier, thereby denying, modifying, or limiting the right of the telecommunications carrier to provide service in this State.

     (c)  The commission shall adopt rules, pursuant to chapter 91, necessary for the purposes of this section.  The commission may notify customers of their rights under these rules."]

     SECTION 45.  Section 269-16.95, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["§269-16.95  Emergency telephone service; capital costs; ratemaking.  (a)  A public utility providing local exchange telecommunications services may recover the capital cost and associated operating expenses of providing a statewide enhanced 911 emergency telephone service in the public switched telephone network, through:

     (1)  A telephone line surcharge; or

     (2)  Its rate case.

     (b)  Notwithstanding the commission's rules on ratemaking, the commission shall expedite and give highest priority to any necessary ratemaking procedures related to providing a statewide enhanced 911 emergency telephone service; provided that the commission may set forth conditions and requirements as the commission determines are in the public interest.

     (c)  The commission shall require every public utility providing statewide enhanced 911 emergency telephone service to maintain a separate accounting of the costs of providing an enhanced 911 emergency service and the revenues received from related surcharges until the next general rate case.  The commission shall further require that every public utility imposing a surcharge shall identify such as a separate line item on all customer billing statements.

     (d)  This section shall not preclude the commission from changing any rate, established pursuant to this section, either specifically or pursuant to any general restructuring of all telephone rates, charges, and classifications."]

     SECTION 46.  Section 269-34, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-34]  Obligations of telecommunications carriers.  In accordance with conditions and guidelines established by the commission to facilitate the introduction of competition into the State's telecommunications marketplace, each telecommunications carrier, upon bona fide request, shall provide services or information services, on reasonable terms and conditions, to an entity seeking to provide intrastate telecommunications, including:

     (1)  Interconnection to the telecommunications carrier's telecommunications facilities at any technically feasible and economically reasonable point within the telecommunications carrier's network so that the networks are fully interoperable;

     (2)  The current interstate tariff used as the access rate until the commission can adopt a new intrastate local service interconnection tariff pursuant to section 269-37;

     (3)  Nondiscriminatory and equal access to any telecommunications carrier's telecommunications facilities, functions, and the information necessary to the transmission and routing of any telecommunications service and the interoperability of both carriers' networks;

     (4)  Nondiscriminatory access among all telecommunications carriers, where technically feasible and economically reasonable, and where safety or the provision of existing electrical service is not at risk, to the poles, ducts, conduits, and rights-of-way owned or controlled by the telecommunications carrier, or the commission shall authorize access to electric utilities's poles as provided by the joint pole agreement, commission tariffs, rules, orders, or Federal Communications Commission rules and regulations;

     (5)  Nondiscriminatory access to the network functions of the telecommunications carrier's telecommunications network, that shall be offered on an unbundled, competitively neutral, and cost-based basis;

     (6)  Telecommunications services and network functions without unreasonable restrictions on the resale or sharing of those services and functions; and

     (7)  Nondiscriminatory access of customers to the telecommunications carrier of their choice without the need to dial additional digits or access codes, where technically feasible.  The commission shall determine the equitable distribution of costs among the authorized telecommunications carriers that will use such access and shall establish rules to ensure such access.

     Where possible, telecommunications carriers shall enter into negotiations to agree on the provision of services or information services without requiring intervention by the commission; provided that any such agreement shall be subject to review by the commission to ensure compliance with the requirements of this section."]

     SECTION 47.  Section 269-35, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-35]  Universal service.  The commission shall preserve and advance universal service by:

     (1)  Maintaining affordable, just, and reasonable rates for basic residential service;

     (2)  Assisting individuals or entities who cannot afford the cost of or otherwise require assistance in obtaining or maintaining their basic service or equipment as determined by the commission; and

     (3)  Ensuring that consumers are given the information necessary to make informed choices among the alternative telecommunications providers and services."]

     SECTION 48.  Section 269-36, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-36]  Telecommunications number portability.  The commission shall ensure that telecommunications number portability within an exchange is available, upon request, as soon as technically feasible and economically reasonable.  An impartial entity shall administer telecommunications numbering and make the numbers available on an equitable basis."]

     SECTION 49.  Section 269-37, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-37]  Compensation agreements.  The commission shall ensure that telecommunications carriers are compensated on a fair basis for termination of telecommunications services on each other's networks, taking into account, among other things, reasonable and necessary costs to each telecommunications carrier of providing the services in question.  Telecommunications carriers may negotiate compensation arrangements, that may include "bill and keep", mutual and equal compensation, or any other reasonable division of revenues pending tariff access rates to be set by the commission.  Upon failure of the negotiations, the commission shall determine the proper methodology and amount of compensation."]

     SECTION 50.  Section 269-38, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-38]  Regulatory flexibility for effectively competitive services.  The commission may allow telecommunications carriers to have pricing flexibility for services that the commission finds are effectively competitive; provided that the rates for:

     (1)  Basic telephone service and for services that are not effectively competitive are cost-based and remain just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory; and

     (2)  Universal service is preserved and advanced."]

     SECTION 51.  Section 269-39, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-39]  Cross-subsidies.  (a)  The commission shall ensure that noncompetitive services shall not cross-subsidize competitive services.  Cross-subsidization shall be deemed to have occurred:

     (1)  If any competitive service is priced below the total service long-run incremental cost of providing the service as determined by the commission in subsection (b); or

     (2)  If competitive services, taken as a whole, fail to cover their direct and allocated joint and common costs as determined by the commission.

     (b)  The commission shall determine the methodology and frequency with which providers calculate total service long-run incremental cost and fully allocated joint and common costs.  The total service long-run incremental cost of a service shall include an imputation of an amount equal to the contribution that the telecommunications carrier receives from noncompetitive inputs used by alternative providers in providing the same or equivalent service."]

     SECTION 52.  Section 269-40, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-40]  Access to advanced services.  The commission shall ensure that all consumers are provided with nondiscriminatory, reasonable, and equitable access to high quality telecommunications network facilities and capabilities that provide subscribers with sufficient network capacity to access information services that provide a combination of voice, data, image, and video, and that are available at just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory rates that are based on reasonably identifiable costs of providing the services."]

     SECTION 53.  Section 269-41, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-41]  Universal service program; establishment; purpose; principles.  There is established the universal service program.  The purpose of this program is to:

     (1)  Maintain affordable, just, and reasonable rates for basic residential telecommunications service, as defined by the commission;

     (2)  Assist customers located in the areas of the State that have high costs of essential telecommunications service, low-income customers, and customers with disabilities, in obtaining and maintaining access to a basic set of essential telecommunications services as determined by the commission.  The commission may expand or otherwise modify relevant programs, such as the lifeline program under section 269-16.5;

     (3)  Ensure that consumers in all communities are provided with access, at reasonably comparable rates, to all telecommunications services which are used by a majority of consumers located in metropolitan areas of the State.  The commission shall provide for a reasonable transition period to support the statewide deployment of these advanced telecommunications services, including, but not limited to, the use of strategic community access points in public facilities such as education, library, and health care facilities;

     (4)  Ensure that consumers are given the information necessary to make informed choices among the alternative telecommunications carriers and services; and

     (5)  Promote affordable access throughout the State to enhanced government information and services, including education, health care, public safety, and other government services.

     The commission shall administer the universal service program, including the establishment of criteria by which the purposes of the program are met."]

     SECTION 54.  Section 269-42, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["§269-42  Universal service program; contributions.  (a)  There is established outside of the state treasury a special fund to be known as the universal service fund to be administered by the commission to implement the policies and goals of universal service.  The fund shall consist of contributions from the sources identified in subsections (e) and (f).  Interest earned from the balance of the fund shall become a part of the fund.  The commission shall adopt rules regarding the distribution of moneys from the fund including reimbursements to carriers for providing reduced rates to low-income, elderly, residents of underserved or rural areas, or other subscribers, as authorized by the commission.

     (b)  The commission may allow distribution of funds directly to customers based upon a need criteria established by the commission.

     (c)  A telecommunications carrier or other person contributing to the universal service program may establish a surcharge which is clearly identified and explained on customers's bills to collect from customers contributions required under this section.

     (d)  Telecommunications carriers may compete to provide services to underserved areas using funds from the universal service program.  For the purposes of this section, "underserved areas" means those areas in the State that lack or have very limited access to high capacity, advanced telecommunications networks and information services, including access to cable television.

     (e)  The commission shall require all telecommunications carriers to contribute to the universal service program.  The commission may require a person other than a telecommunications carrier to contribute to the universal service program if, after notice and opportunity for hearing, the commission determines that the person is offering a commercial service in the State that directly benefits from the telecommunications infrastructure, and that directly competes with a telecommunications service provided in the State for which a contribution is required under this subsection.

     (f)  The commission shall designate the method by which the contributions under subsection (e) shall be calculated and collected.  The commission shall consider basing contributions solely on the gross operating revenues from the retail provision of intrastate telecommunications services offered by the telecommunications carriers subject to the contribution."]

     SECTION 55.  Section 269-43, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

     ["[§269-43]  Carriers of last resort.  (a)  The commission may define and designate local exchange service areas where the commission has determined that providing universal service funds to a single provider will be the most appropriate way to ensure service for these areas.

     (b)  The commission shall determine the level of service that is appropriate for each designated local exchange service area and shall invite telecommunications providers to bid for a level of service that is appropriate.  The successful bidder shall be designated the carrier of last resort for the designated local exchange service area for a period of time and upon conditions set by the commission.  In determining the successful bidder, the commission shall take into consideration the level of service to be provided, the investment commitment, and the length of the agreement, in addition to the other qualifications of the bidder.

     (c)  The universal service fund shall also provide service drops and basic service at discounted rates to public institutions, as stated in section 269-41.

     (d)  The commission shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 to carry out the provisions of this section."]

     SECTION 56.  Chapter 440G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.

PART IV

     SECTION 57.  During fiscal year 2012-2013, an amount equal to fifty per cent of the moneys collected by the public utilities commission from telecommunications carriers and deposited into the public utilities commission special fund shall be transferred to and deposited into the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund.

     SECTION 58.  The unencumbered balance existing on June 30, 2012, in the cable television division subaccount in the compliance resolution fund shall be deposited into the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund.

     SECTION 59.  There is appropriated out of the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund the sum of $           or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2012-2013 to implement this Act.

     The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act.

     SECTION 60.  There is appropriated out of the telecommunications and cable television services commission special fund the sum of $      or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2012-2013 to fund transition costs related to the retention of logistical and technical assistance by the public utilities commission in transferring electronic and physical data, as well as other related transition costs.

     The sum appropriated shall be expended by the public utilities commission for the purposes of this Act.

     SECTION 61.  Transfer of functions.  (a)  All rules, regulations, policies, procedures, decisions, orders, exemptions, waivers, certificates of authority, certificates of registration, certificates of public convenience and necessity, charters, franchises, guidelines, tariffs, informational filings, and other material adopted, issued, or developed by the department of commerce and consumer affairs or public utilities commission to implement certain applicable provisions of the Hawaii Revised Statutes which are in effect on the effective date of this Act, reenacted or made applicable to the telecommunications and cable television services commission by this Act, shall remain in full force and effect until amended or repealed, as applicable, by the telecommunications and cable television services commission.  In the interim, every reference to the department of commerce and consumer affairs, director of commerce and consumer affairs, public utilities commission, or chairperson of the public utilities commission in those rules, regulations, policies, procedures, decisions, orders, exemptions, waivers, franchises, charters, guidelines, tariffs, informational filings, and other material is amended to refer to the telecommunications and cable television services commission, as appropriate.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, this Act should be read in context with any applicable federal and state laws and regulations.

     (b)  All deeds, leases, contracts, loans, agreements, permits, or other documents executed or entered into by or on behalf of the department of commerce and consumer affairs and public utilities commission pursuant to the provisions of the Hawaii Revised Statutes, which are reenacted or made applicable to the telecommunications and cable television services commission by this Act, shall remain in full force and effect.  On the effective date of this Act, every reference to the department of commerce and consumer affairs, director of commerce and consumer affairs, public utilities commission, or chairperson of the public utilities commission therein shall be construed as a reference to the telecommunications and cable television services commission, as appropriate.

     (c)  All functions of the cable television division of the department of commerce and consumer affairs shall be transferred to the telecommunications and cable television services commission.

     SECTION 62.  Transfer of records, equipment, appropriations, authorizations, and other property.  All appropriations, records, equipment, machines, files, supplies, contracts, books, papers, documents, maps, and other personal property heretofore made, used, acquired, or held by the department of commerce and consumer affairs and the public utilities commission relating to the functions transferred to the telecommunications and cable television services commission shall be transferred with the functions to which they relate.

     SECTION 63.  Transfer of personnel.  (a)  The department of commerce and consumer affairs shall transfer seven positions from the cable television division to the telecommunications and cable television services commission.  The positions selected for transfer shall reasonably relate to the functions of the telecommunications and cable television services commission.

     (b)  All officers and employees who are transferred to the telecommunications and cable television services commission by this Act shall continue to perform their regular duties upon their transfer, subject to the personnel laws of the State and this Act.  No officer or employee of the State shall suffer any loss of salary, seniority, prior service credit, vacation, sick leave, or other employee benefit or privilege as a consequence of this Act.

     (c)  If an office or position held by an officer or employee having tenure is abolished, the officer or employee shall not thereby be separated from public employment, but shall remain in the employment of the State with the same pay and classification and shall be transferred to some other office or position for which the officer or employee is eligible under the personnel laws of the State, as determined by the director of human resources development.

     SECTION 64.  Beginning July 1, 2013, any telecommunications carrier or telecommunications common carrier as defined in section    -1 of section 2 of this Act and subject to the authority of the telecommunications and cable television services commission pursuant to section    -5 of section 2 of this Act shall not be a public utility solely for the purpose of chapter 269.  Any reference to a public utility, utility company, or public utility facility that is referred to under any other chapter, charter, franchise, statute, ordinance, rule, or regulation, shall continue to apply to the telecommunications carrier or telecommunications common carrier; provided that any reference in said chapter, charter, franchise, statute, ordinance, rule, or regulation that states or refers to the public utilities commission or chapter 269 shall instead mean and refer to the telecommunications and cable television services commission or chapter    , respectively.

     SECTION 65.  Conflict with provisions of this Act.  All Acts passed by the legislature during this regular session of 2012, whether enacted before or after the effective date of this Act, shall be amended to conform to this Act unless those Acts specifically provide that this Act is being amended.

     SECTION 66.  Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken.  New statutory material is underscored.

     SECTION 67.  This Act shall take effect on March 15, 2034; provided that:

     (1)  Section 2 of this Act shall take effect as follows:

         (A)  Part I (relating to the telecommunications and cable television services commission, generally) of the new chapter shall take effect on July 1, 2012; provided that those provisions relating to the regulation of telecommunications carriers shall take effect on July 1, 2013;

         (B)  Part II (relating to telecommunications services) of the new chapter shall take effect on July 1, 2013; provided that section   -37 shall take effect on July 1, 2012; and

         (C)  Part III (relating to cable services) of the new chapter shall take effect on July 1, 2012;

     (2)  Sections 5, 9, 10, 11, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, 30, and 38 to 55 of this Act shall take effect on July 1, 2013;

     (3)  The amendments made to section 26-9(o), Hawaii Revised Statutes, in section 3 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on September 30, 2014, pursuant to section 45 of Act 48, Session Laws of Hawaii 2011; and

     (4)  The amendments made to section 36-27(a), Hawaii Revised Statutes, in section 5 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on June 30, 2015, pursuant to section 34 of Act 79, Session Laws of Hawaii 2009.


 


 

Report Title:

Telecommunications and Cable Television Services; Commission

 

Description:

Establishes the telecommunications and cable television services commission within DBEDT to regulate telecommunications and cable television services. Effective 7/1/12 regarding cable operators and 7/1/13 regarding telecommunications carriers. Effective 3/15/2034.  (HD2)

 

 

 

The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.