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VOLUME 11, NUMBER 4 JANUARY
28, 2005
To: Members
From: David Crothers, Executive Vice President
The introduction of new legislation will slow dramatically after this
week with the deadline for new measures having passed for members of the
State Senate. The deadline for house members was early last week. Study
resolutions and measures that have the blessing of the Delayed Bills Committee
may still be introduced.
Legislation to require North Dakota telcos to rewrite and survey all
of their easements, regardless of the age, was heard yesterday afternoon
by the House Political Subdivisions Committee. Members of the independent
telephone industry were extremely concerned about its impact on our companies
and worked diligently to provide the Association information and personnel
to defeat it.
Larry Bontjes, the construction supervisor and engineer for Red River
Telecom and Dean Anagnost from Kadrmas, Lee and Jackson joined Mick Grosz,
the CEO of West River Telecommunications Cooperative to testify against
the measure on Thursday. All of them did a great job and our membership
is indebted to them for their efforts. The Association also testified
against House Bill 1384 and told of the great expense and countless hours
that would be expended to solve a problem that no longer exists.
While we are encouraged by the committee members' reaction to our testimony,
they have not made a recommendation to the full House of Representatives
yet.
As you will note in this week's Legislative Report, two new bills have
been added that affect the operation of telecommunications companies in
the State. The first, a measure to increase a telco's gross receipts tax
from 2.5 percent to 5.7 percent. That portion of the legislation is part
of a 108 page bill that seeks to repeal the State's individual and corporate
income taxes.
Second, a bill has been introduced by Qwest that will give telecom companies
the ability to avoid paying taxes on nontaxable services when those services
are bundled with taxable services. The occasion generally applies when
a telco is selling bundled services. Although the Association's Legislative
Committee is still reviewing the proposal we believe that it is an important
component in our ability to offer bundled services in the future.
Please contact me or any of the members of the Association's Legislative
Committee if you have any questions or comments regarding any of the legislation
that was introduced this week or hearings scheduled for next week. Members
of the Legislative Committee can be found on the Association's homepage
at www.ndatc.com.
HB 1008- The two-year appropriation for the
North Dakota Public Service Commission (PSC). The Commission is asking
for $11.1 million and anticipates income of almost $6 million. The requested
appropriation is approximately the same as for the last biennium, but
for $900,000 additionally for a complaint against rail rates.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 7 |
House Appropriations Committee Hearing. |
| Jan. 13 |
House Appropriations Committee Hearing. |
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HB 1105- Legislation giving the Public
Service Commission the authority to bar competitive local exchange carriers
(CLEC's) from "slamming" or "cramming" services on
their customers' bills. Although CLEC's are subject to PSC jurisdiction
in a number of areas, including cross- subsidization, discrimination,
dialing parity, quality of service, refunds and others, they have not
been previously been part of the slamming and cramming statute. The Association
is supportive of the legislation.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 11 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Recommended
"Do Pass" 13-0. |
| Jan. 13 |
House Passed 91-0. |
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HB 1106- A bill to modify the Public Service Commission's
"Performance Assurance Fund" to ensure that it continually has
a balance of $100,000, rather than funding it once to that level. The
Performance Assurance Fund is a special fund within the North Dakota treasury
that is part of Qwest's section 271 agreement with the Public Service
Commission. It is related to the Commission's approval of Qwest's petition
to offer long distance telecommunications service within the State.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 11 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Recommended
"Do Pass" 13-0. |
| Jan. 13 |
House Passed 91-1. |
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HB 1156- Legislation that will require telecommunications companies
that are not incumbent telcos to register under a new system developed
by the State's Public Service Commission. Those telephone companies that
are not incumbents will have to register with the State prior to offering
service to North Dakota residents.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 25 |
Political Subdivisions Committee Recommended
"Do Pass", as Amended 12-0. |
| Jan. 26 |
House Passed 88-0. |
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HB 1207- A bill that would reduce the amount that counties
can assess from $1.00 to 75 cents to fund emergency communications systems,
which are more commonly referred to as Public Service Answering Points
(PSAPs). The assessment is collected by telecommunications companies and
remitted to individual counties. It applies equally to wireline and wireless
telecommunications companies. There is a provision within the draft legislation
that exempts 911 surcharges that were adopted prior to August 1st, 2005
if the assessment does not exceed the 75 cent threshold. The intent of
the legislation is to roll-back the amount that most counties in the State
are assessing..
| Jan. 5 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 27 |
Finance and Taxation Committee Recommended "Do
Not Pass" 10-2. |
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HB 1219- Language has been drafted to modify the reverse
E 911 statute to allow Public Safety Coordinators to include unpublished
telephone numbers in the calls that the PSAP makes. Under the current
statute only the identity and location of the individual with an unpublished
telephone number may be used. If this legislation is approved the E 911
coordinator or Public Safety Answering Point may contact the unpublished
number directly and notify them of an emergency.
| Jan. 5 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 12 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Recommended
"Do Pass" 14-0. |
| Jan. 17 |
House Passed 94-0. |
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HB 1257- Legislation that will extend the E 911 tax adopted
by a county to prepaid wireless telephones. There are a number of options
for the location in which the tax will be paid, including the location
of the purchase or the customer's billing address or the location associated
with the mobile telephone number.
| Jan. 10 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 19 |
Finance and Taxation Committee Recommended
"Do Pass" 10-3. |
| Jan. 26 |
Referred to Finance and Taxation Committee. |
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HB 1275- A bill that obligates certain government entities
to report to the Information Technology Advisory Committee whenever their
information technology projects that exceed $100,000 are over budget by
20 percent or those projects are delayed by more than six months. The
law would apply to the executive branch, judicial branch and institutions
under control of the State Board of Higher Education. The report must
specify the corrective actions being taken.
| Jan. 10 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 20 |
Appropriations Committee Hearing. |
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HB 1323- Legislation that would give customers of wireless
telephone companies credit when they complain to the wireless carrier
about the quality of service of a particular call within sixty days of
the billing date. If the Public Service Commission finds that provisions
of this language have been violated by a wireless company and it receives
universal service funds, then the
Commission shall remove eligible telecommunications carrier status of
the company.
| Jan. 10 |
Introduced in House. Referred to Industry, Business
and Labor Committee. |
| Feb. 1 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Hearing
- 8:00 am. |
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HB 1384- Legislation that greatly expands the obligation of utilities
to describe the location, width and change of course of the easement.
Specifically, HB 1384 mandates that including in the recorded description
of the easement the specific legal reference points as to the location
of the easement in relation to the corners of the specific property involved
at the points the easement enters and departs from the property, the width
of the easement, and each change of courses as the easement crosses the
property. The bill mandates a "definite and specific description".
Furthermore, the proposal includes language that provides, "This
section applies to every easement over private property acquired by a
public utility regardless of when the easement was acquired or created."
Managers of the State's independent telephone industry met with the Association
this week to review this bill and expressed grave concern over whether
the initiative's mandate was even possible, regardless of the extremely
high cost of complying. In many, many instances utilities have extremely
old easements that have never been recorded. The Association testified
the bill was unneeded because it would not solve the problem of very general
easements of the past. Nor was it needed because today's easements are
very specific. Larry Bontjes, construction supervisor/engineer at Red
River Telephone, and Dean Anagnost from Kadrmas, Lee & Jackson both
testified against the bill and aided the Association in preparation of
our testimony.
| Jan. 14 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 27 |
Political Subdivisions Committee Hearing. |
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HB 1485- A bill that would allow all cable television providers
to offer commercial
broadcasts from "public institutions" at the same terms and
conditions without discrimination. Representative Craig Headland introduced
the legislation to halt the practice of public institutions such as the
Ralph Englestad Arena from signing exclusive agreements with cable television
companies at the expense of other video providers in the same market.
The practice is becoming widespread in North Dakota despite taxpayer support
for those "public institutions", such as the University of North
Dakota and their hockey team. Independent telephone companies offering
video in Hillsboro, Mayville, Portland and Jamestown are being denied
access to the programming and the problem promises to grow as more communities
are served by alternative cable companies. Representative Headland's legislation
would require that those "public entities" be required to "offer
the commercial broadcast agreement on the same terms and conditions to
each commercial broadcaster or cable television system in this State."
| Jan. 17 |
Introduced in House. Referred to Industry, Business
and Labor Committee. |
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SB 2021- The appropriation bill for the Information Technology
Department. ITD is requesting a spending authorization of $109,640,934
and anticipates income of $98,830,575. A majority of their income is received
from other State agencies entities that ITD provides service to throughout
the State. There is also language in the bill extending the amount of
time the agency can finance the acquisition of equipment or software from
three years to five years.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in Senate. Referred to Appropriations
Committee. |
| Jan. 11 |
Appropriations Committee Hearing. |
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SB 2037- This legislation is the Information Technology
Department's revisions to their policies and operating procedures. It
is a substantial piece of legislation that makes both large and small
changes to the way the agency operates. Included within the 12 page bill
is language that gives the State board of higher education the right to
manage and regulate information technology planning and services for institutions
under its control. It is a significant policy change from ITD's central
planning for all of those who receive its services. The bill language
also significantly modifies the content that ITD must provide in their
annual report. Additionally, agency also seeks to exempt "any policy,
standard and guideline" they adopt from North Dakota's Administrative
Agencies Practice Act.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in House. |
| Jan. 13 |
Government and Veterans Affairs Committee
Hearing. |
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SB 2038- A bill to establish a statewide information technology
improvements revolving fund and to appropriate $1 million. The fund is
to be used by a State agency or agencies working together to improve efficiency.
The agency will submit a proposal to ITD's chief information officer for
review and recommendation. For worthy projects the CIO will recommend
to the Legislative Council's Budget Section that they fund the initiative.
Only the Budget Section will have the authority to fund a project. Funds
dispersed under the program will have to be repaid into the revolving
fund by the agency receiving the money.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 20 |
Appropriations Committee Hearing. |
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SB 2090- Legislation introduced at the request of the Public
Service Commission to expand the agency's jurisdiction to implement Lifeline
and Link-Up programs. The Commission is seeking the increased authority
following the Federal Communications Commission's revision of existing
Lifeline and Link-Up rules. The independent telecommunications industry
in North Dakota has been working with the PSC to implement the new Federal
rules. There has been discussion that telcos within the State may wish
to advocate for some parameters around the Commission's jurisdiction in
this legislation. Mick Grosz, general manager of West River Telecom testified
against the measure and told committee members that passage of the bill
would require North Dakota telcos to abide by the rules of two agencies
without any additional benefit to participants in either program.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 24 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Hearing. |
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SB 2091- A bill relaxing the requirement that telecommunications
companies file price schedules with the Public Service Commission. Under
existing rules a telco must file schedules showing all prices with the
Commission. The legislation, however, would modify the standard by requiring
only schedules for "essential" services be filed. The Association
does not believe that this section applies to cooperatives or telecommunications
companies with fewer than 8,000 access lines.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 10 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee
Recommended "Do Pass" 7-0. |
| Jan. 11 |
Senate Passed 46-1. |
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SB 2134- Legislation to expand the Public Service Commission's
jurisdiction to be able to order refunds when a utility has charged an
"unreasonable" rate. There is no definition of the word "unreasonable"
in the statute. The Association is very concerned about this bill and
will be working with members of the legislative committee to ensure that
independent telecommunications companies are not harmed by a capricious
application of the rule.
| Jan. 4 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 10 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Hearing.
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SB 2209- A bill that amends the North Dakota One Call statute by
including the State's Department of Transportation as an "operator"
for their underground facilities in rights-of-way. An "operator"
under North Dakota law is the owner of underground facilities. Currently,
the Department of Transportation is specifically exempted from being considered
an "operator" under the law. There was no opposition to the
legislation during the appropriations committee hearing this week.
| Jan. 12 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 17 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Hearing. |
| Jan. 28 |
Appropriations Committee Hearing. |
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SB 2216- Legislation that is introduced at the request of Qwest.
The bill is a 12 page document that is both substantive and housekeeping
in its nature. Specifically, Qwest proposes to eliminate both second lines
and business lines from Public Service Commission jurisdiction. Primary
lines would remain an essential service. The legislation also removes
all of the "examples" of nonessential services, but retains
the "nonessential" section of the code. The legislation also
proposes to "clean-up" some of the telecommunications sections
of NDCC 49-21 by repealing 9 separate sections. The Association agrees
with a number of these proposals, but is concerned about the proposed
repeal of NDCC 49-21-24, which includes some of the rural protections
for interconnection. The Association strongly recommends that independent
telcos in the State review this legislation for any negative impact it
may have on their ability to provide service in their territory. The Association
testified at the hearing that repealing a section requiring eligible telecommunications
carrier to offer all federally supported services was not in the State's
best interests. Our amendment was adopted by the committee and the offending
language is no longer in the bill.
| Jan. 12 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 19 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Recommended
"Do Pass", as Amended, 5-1. |
| Jan. 24 |
Senate Passed 43-4. |
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SB 2309- Legislation that imposes stringent and untenable new rules
on rural electric cooperatives' capital credits. The initiative would
require rural electric boards' of directors to "pay interest at the
rate of three percent per annum compounded annually" on any unpaid
capital credits until they are paid. Furthermore, there is language also
mandates the cooperative pay off any capital credits in full upon the
death of a member. The Association of Rural Electric Cooperatives have
asked the Association for our assistance on this matter and we are pleased
to submit testimony on the REC's behalf. Members of the Association believe
the legislation is an unwarranted intrusion on the discretion of rural
electric board members, as well as potentially endangering the individual
REC loan agreements with the Rural Utilities Service and other lenders.
| Jan. 17 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Jan. 24 |
Industry, Business and Labor Committee Hearing. |
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SB 2327- A bill to raise the gross receipts tax that telecommunications
companies in North Dakota pay from 2.5 percent to 5.7 percent. The portion
of the legislation is part of a massive 108 page bill that also includes
the elimination of the State's corporate and individual income taxes.
The Association will be discussing the legislation's viability to determine
the level of opposition to this measure is appropriate.
| Jan. 19 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Feb. 1 |
Finance and Taxation Committee Hearing - 8:30
am. |
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SB 2331- Legislation that prohibits automobile
drivers with either a "temporary operator's permit" or having
a "restricted license" from using wireless phones while operating
a motor vehicle. There is actually an exemption for wireless devices that
are voice-activated, but, specifically, bars use of "a portable wireless
telecommunications device" if the driver must "remove a digit"
(finger) from the steering wheel for use of the device. The penalty for
violating the new statute is reckless driving and/or a fine.
| Jan. 19 |
Introduced in Senate. Referred to Transportation
Committee. |
| Feb. 4 |
Transportation Committee Hearing - 9:30 am. |
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SB 2379- Legislation that allows telecommunications companies
that sell bundled services to apportion or separate in their accounting
those services that are taxable and nontaxable. If the telecommunications
company is unable to identify those services that are taxable and nontaxable
they will be obligated to remit taxes on the entire amount. In North Dakota
there is a "general rule" that all bundled products are taxable
if any single item is taxable. Currently, the rule is interpreted to require
that a company must separately list taxable and nontaxable items. Senate
Bill 2329 gives the telco permission to dilineate those services "behind
the invoice."
| Jan. 24 |
Introduced in Senate. |
| Feb. 2 |
Finance and Taxation Committee Hearing - 11:00
am. |
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CALL YOUR LEGISLATOR TOLL-FREE: 1-888-635-3447
LOCAL TELEPHONE NUMBER: 328-3373
WEB PAGE ADDRESS: www.state.nd.us/lr/
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