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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20120307Reply Comments.pdfMar S. Hobson Attorney & Counelor 999 Main, Suite 1108 Boise, il 88702 208-885-8666 RECEIVED 2811 MAR -7 PH 4: 39 March 7, 2012 VI HAD DELIVRY Jean D. Jewell, Secreta Idaho Public Utilities Commission 472 West Washington Boise, ID 83702-5983 RE: Case Nos. QWE-T-12-01, CEN-T-12-01, CGS-T-12-01 Dear Ms. Jewell: Enclosed for fiing with ths Commssion are an original and seven (7) copies of THE CENTURYLINK COMPANIES' REPLY COMMNTS IN SUPPORT OF PETITION FOR EXEMPTION. CentuLink's Confidential Attachment A, which is fied under separate cover and with an Attorney's Certificate, contains confidential information that supports the relief requested in the Companies' Petition. If you have any questions, please contact me. Than you for your cooperation in ths matter. Ver trly yours, 6::;!!t-- Enclosures Mar S. Hobson (ISB. No. 2142) 999 Mai, Suite 1103 Boise, ID 83702 Tel: 208-385-8666 mar.hobsonW2CentuyLink.com Lisa A. Anderl Associate General Counsel 1600 7th Avenue, Room 1506 Seattle, WA 98191 Tel: (206) 345-1574 Lisa.Anderl. W2CenturyLink. com Attorneys for the CentuLink Companes BEFORE THE IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMSSION IN THE MATTER OF QWEST CORPORATION DBA CENTURYLINK QC, CENTURYTEL OF IDAHO, INC. DBA CENTURYLINK AND CENTURYLINK OF THE GEM STATE, INC. DBA CENTURYLINK'S PETITION FOR AN EXEMPTION OF THE COMMISSION'S TELECOMMUNICATIONS CUSTOMER RELATIONS RULE 502 (lDAPA 31.41.01.502) Case Nos. QWE-T-12-01 CEN-T-12-01 CGS-T-12-01 THE CENTURYLINK COMPANIES' REPLY COMMENTS IN SUPPORT OF PETITION FOR EXEMPION Qwest Corporation dba CentuLink QC, CentuTel of Idaho, Inc. dba CentuLin, and CentuTel of the Gem State, Inc. dba CentuLink (collectively "the CentuLink companes" or "CentuLink") by and though their underigned attorneys and pursuant to Commission Order No. 32446, file the following Comments in support of CentuLin's Petition for Exemption from Rule 502 of the Commssion's Customer Relations Rules. CenturyLink Reply Comments - 1 - In Support of Petition for Exemption BACKGROUND The CentuLin Companes filed their Petition seeking an exemption from the Rule 502 on December 22,2011. The Commission issued its Notice of Petition, Notice of Modified Procedure and Order No. 32446 notifyng "any person desirng to state a position on ths Petition" that wrtten comments "in support or in opposition" of the Petition maybe filed with the Commission withi 28 days from the servce date, Janua 25, 2012. Frontier Communcations Nortwest Inc. and Citizens Telecommuncations Company of Idao dba Frontier Communcations of Idao, (collectively, "Frontier") fied comments fully supporting CentuLink's Petition and askig that the Commssion "imediately grant a waiver of Rule 502 to CentuLin and all simlarly situated companies." Frontier Comments, p. 2. Frontier also requested that the Commssion open a ruemakg to discuss what it terms "an imbalance in reguation, which limts the flexibility with which reguated companes can respond to customers." Id. The Idaho Public Utiities Commssion Staff ("Staff') fied comments recommendig that the Commssion deny CentuLin's request for an exemption and recommending that the Commssion open "a Negotiated Rulemakg Proceeding regardig Rule 502." These Reply Comments address Staffs reasons for opposing the exemption and the scope of any Commission rulemakg relating to telecommuncations rules. REPLY TO STAFF REVIW Staffs opposition to CentuLin's requested relief appears based on two concern: 1) the scope of the requested exemption ("CentuLink's waiver request as a practical matter would eliminate the rue entirely for all customers thoughout its service terrtory," Staff Comments, p. 3), and 2) the possibilty that some customers do not have competitive alternatives to CentuLin wireline voice servce ("when wireline servce fails, few, if any CentuLink Reply Comments - 2 - In Support of Petition for Exemption alternative communcation servces are available in some rual areas" Id.). Neither of these concern justifies Staffs wholesale opposition to CentuLin's Petition, nor do they respond to the legal and practical issues raised in the Petition and reinorced by Frontier's Comments. 1. Relief by exemption is not limited to small companies or requests impacting few customers. The Commission may grant an exemption where ''uusual or uneasonable hardships result from the application of any of(its) rules". . . IDAPA 31.41.01.003 ("Rule 3). Nothig in the Commission's rules prevents it from granting of relief in the form of an exemption where, as here, the unusual and uneasonable hardships resulting from the application of the Commssion's Rule 502impact a large Idaho company instead of a small one. Nor, as Staff seems to suggest, do the Commission's rules require that requests for relief impacting a relatively large number of customers be addressed only in a ruemakng proceeing. Requiring rulemakng would ignore the importt differences between the company-specific and the relatively immediate relief contemplated by Rule 3 and the more comprehensive, and considerably more time-consuming process of rulemakng1, with its general application to all companes. Whle Staff correctly notes CentuLin has stated its wilingness to paricipate in rulemakg, CentuLink's intention was to suggest that a broader examination of the Commission's rules in general as they impact the competitive viabilty of regulated companes may be appropriate. At the same time, CentuLin asked that the Commission "expeditiously grant the relief requested" in its Petition. Id at 19. The 1 A rulemakng proceeding, because of the requiement of review by the Legislatue, canot be completed until the 2013 Legislative session. In the highly competitive environment in which CenturyLink operates, a delay of relief for another year or more is itself an unjustified hardship. See Confidential Attchment A, which shows the significant changes experenced by CentuLink over an 18-month time frame. CentuLink Reply Comments - 3 - In Support of Petition for Exemption Commission should grant CentuLink's exemption, even if it plans to open a rulemakng proceeding. Staff presents no compellng reasons that should cause the Commission to delay the request for immediate relief from Rule 502. 2. The undisputed competitive disadvantage to CentuLin resultig from the application of Rule 502 demonstrates the exemption should be granted. The hear ofStafts opposition to CentuLink's Petition is concer about remote rual customers who, Staff perceives, do not have alteratives to traditional wireline service offered by CentuLink2. However, Staff does not and indee canot, argue with CenturyLink's primar point that the vast majority of customers have several alteratives to CentuLink wireline serice. This fact establishes two things: it underscores CentuLink's competitive disadvantage as the only provider among competitors that is subject to Rule 502, and it shows that most customer are not trly "out of serce" while wieline repair is taking place. In the case of CentuLin QC, which is regulated under Title 62, Idaho Code, the competitive disadvantage resulting from the application of Rule 502 rus afoul of Idaho Code § 62-605 (5) (b), which requires the Commission's authority to "determine the noneconomic regulatory requirements relating to basic local exchange serice" be exercised in a maner that is "technologically and competitively neutral." CentuLink's request for exemption allows the Commission to restore the competitive neutrality mandated by the Legislatue for Title 62 companes. In addition, for all of the CentuLink companes, the application of the Rule creates a competitive disadvantage that plainly comes withn the scope of Rule 3 relief 2 Sta maes some inccurte claims regarding serices available to rual customers tht CentuLink will address below. CentuLin Reply Comments - 4 - In Support of Petition for Exemption from uneasonable or unusua hardship. As one concrete example, the fact that CentuLink alone among"its competitors must provide a full month's credit to each customer whose service is not restored withn 24 hour, regardless of whether the customer was inconvenenced by--or even noticed--thedelay, is evidence of an unreasonable hardship occasioned by the application of Rule 502. 3. The overwhelmg majority of CenturyLink customers have alternatives offered by competitors who are unfettered by Rule 502. Staff Comments make no effort to refute the conclusion that Rule 502 creates a unque regulatory hardship for CentuLink as compared with its unegulated competitors. Instead, Staff chooses to focus on the extreme margins, suggesting that the circumstaces impacting a relative handful of customers somehow justify the continued application of Rule 502 to all of Centu Link. Staff contends that "it may not be tre" that customers "in the ver rural pars of CentuLink's serce tertory" have access to wireless and broadband serices. Staff Comments, p. 3 CentuLink concedes that somethng less than 100% of its customers have access to wireless and broadband. Indeed, when wireline serce was the only alterative and unversal servce policies supported telephone companes' expansion, 100% penetration for wireline was never achieved. However, in attempting to identify a ver narow segment of CentuLin's customer base that lacks access, Staff overstates its case and ignores the fact the vast majority of customers have access to competitive alteratives that augment and even substitute for their wireline serce. The Commssion has always taen a reaonable position with regard to the serce levels required in the CentuLink Reply Comments - 5 - In Support of Petition for Exemption most remote and isolated pars of a company's servce tertory. Staffs Comments ask that the Commission reverse ths policy. a. Wireless servce is available to almost everyone in CenturyLin territory. Looking at the question of availability of wireless serce, Staff apparently does not dispute that nearly all customer in the legacy Qwest tertory have wireless access. Staff also concedes that wireless alteratives are available in the CentuTel of Idaho exchanges of Salmon and Leadore. Id. at 4. That leaves only the North Fork exchange in norteast Idaho-with roughly of250 access lines (residence andbusiness)-without wireless access by Stafls estimation. Ths exchange represents only about 8 % ofthe lines in the legacy CentuTel ofIdaho serice tertory. Furerore, CentuLink's information differs from Staffs in that the company's serice techncian reports wireless serce in Nort Fork is "interittent due to the mountain terain" but "that doesn't stop everone here from having one (wireless phone)." Ths latter comment raises an important point about rual customer and wireless serce. Whle some rual customers may not be able to access wireless serice at their homes, because of their isolation these customers spend a lot of time in their automobiles accessing all kinds of other necessities such as groceres, schools, medical facilties and so on. This mobilty enables people to make use of wireless service while on the road and explais its popularty even in areas where it may not work well in some residences. In the CentuTel of the Gem State tertory, the situation is ver similar. Staff concedes wireless access is available in Grandview and Richfield, but states "there are no cellular serces in Brueau or Grasmere-Riddle." Id. at 3. CentuLink contends wireless serice is accessible in pars, but not all, of the Brueau exchange, and agrees it CentuLink Reply Comments - 6 - In Support of Petition for Exemption is not accessible in the vast majority of the Grasmere-Riddle exchange. CentuLink's records again show these areas, although geographically ver large, contan ver few customers. Despite its large geographic area, CenturyLink has only about 100 access lines in the Grasmere-Riddle exchange. Most of these are clustered on the Nevada/Idaho border on the Duck Valley Reseration. These customer are sered out of a central office in Owyhee, Nevada. Neither Grasmere nor Riddle constitutes anything resembling a communty. See Attachment B showing aeral photographs of these areas (Source: Google Maps). Similarly the approximately 200 access lines in the Brueau exchange are widely distrbuted within a ver large geographic area, although Brueau itself does contain a school, post offce and a cluster of homes. If one were to assume, contrar to fact, that none of the customers in these two exchanges has access to wireless, the total lines in these exchanges represents less than 30 % of the access lines in the legacy Gem State tertory. Comparng the number of the lines in the areas claimed by Staff to be without wieless access in both CentuTel ofIdaho and CentuTel of the Gem State, the total comes to approximately 550. That is less than two tenths of one percent (.2%) of the roughy 300,000 CentuLink lines in Idaho. CentuLink does not suggest that the customer who subscrbe to these lines do not matter, or that rual customers should not have reliable serce. The fact is, however, these customers constitute a tiny minority. The competitive realities facing the CentuLin companes as they sere the overhelming majority of their customer base requires that an exemption from Rule 502 be granted. CentuLink Reply Comments - 7 - In Support of Petition for Exemption Finally, it is ironic that Staffs Comments have singled out remote exchanges in the serice tertory of CentuTel of the Gem State to make its case in opposition to the exemption. In its Petition, CentuLink specifically noted that the Gem State terrtory should qualify for an exemption due to the unque physical characterstics of the service tertory that make compliance with Rule 502 impossible from a practical standpoint. Petition,pp. 13-14. Staff did not respond to the fact that CentuTel of the Gem State qualifies for an exemption from Rule 502 on independent grounds. b. Staff underestiates the availabilty and capabilty of broadband servces in rural Idaho. Staffs Comments state that "CentuLink curently does not offer broadband serce to its customers located in the legacy area formerly sered hy CentuTel of the Gem State." Id. at 3. Staff is misinformed.. CentuLink offers broadband serice, including standalone broadband serice, in all of its exchanges. Ths means that customers can choose to subscrbe to stadalone high speed interet from CentuLink and choose a VoIP provider for voice serce. In the CentuTel of Idaho tertory, 98% of the available lines are broadband capable. Even in a low density, remote area such as the Grasmere-Riddle exchange, almost 70% of the available lines in the area are broadband capable. CenturyLin customers in rual Idaho also have competitive broadband alteratives. In the former CentuTel ofIdaho serice terrtory, customers in Leadore and Nort Fork have access to satellte broadband serice3. Interestingly the third exchange, Salmon, has both a satellte option and a facility-based broadband competitor, 3 Broad band satellte serce does not accommodate Voice over Internet Protocol (V oIP) servce due to tie delays in the signal reachig the satellte. However, broad band access allows customers to communicate though emal, to exchange documents, conduct Interet commerce etc. CentuLink Reply Comments - 8 - In Support of Petition for Exemption Custer Telephone, which is expected to provide local voice serce in competition with CentuLink later this year. Customers in the CentuTel of the Gem State's Richfield exchange also have a satellte broadband alternative. Customers in Grand View, Brueau,.and Grasmere-Riddle have thee competing satellite broadband providers. In addition, those in Grand View also have the option of mobile wieless broadband serce. Staff Comments also seem to underestimate the signficance of having broadband. Staff contends that small business customer ''may have a greater reliance on wireline serice (than residence customers)" citing its use for facsimile transmission, and adverising puroses.4 Id. at 4. Staffs Comments overlook the role of broadband in providing a competitive alterative to and ancilar benefits above traditional wireline serce. In general, businesses today rely much more heavily on emailing documents over a broadband connection than sending facsimiles over a phone line. Furterore, as the use of paper directories steadily declines, businesses rely on web sites and other forms of advertising to attact customers. If CentuLink does not perorm to customer' satisfaction or if other technologies better sere them, small business customers (just like residence customers) can and do choose competitors to CentuLink, even for sending documents. The suggestion Rule 502 must continue to apply to CentuLink to protect the interests of small business customer in sending faxes and maintaining the value of their directory adverising investment is not only outside the scopeofthe Commission's 4 The Comments' focus on advertsing and facsimile trmission misses an importt point. The Commssion's servce quality reguatory authority is lited to services with the defition of ''basic local exchage servce" as found in § 62-603 (I), Idao Code, i.e., "the provision of access lines. . . with the associated trmission of two-way interactive voice communication." (emphasis added). Since neither facsimile tranmission nor advertsing are voice servces, they lie outside the scope of the Commssion's authority. CentuLink Reply Comments - 9 - In Support of Petition for Exemption regulatory authority over basic local exchange serice, it seems paricularly out of touch with today's environment. 4. Staffs claim of Rule 502's "relevance" is misguided. Staffs Comments state that it "does not agree that the existence of competition in a large geographic area renders Rule 502 obsolete~" Id. p. 4. The Comments contan little in the way of an explanation of ths statement. Apar from pointing out that not ever customer has access to ever competitive alterative, the only other arguent advanced is that "Rule 502 provides a modest incentive for companes to restore serice in a timely maner." Id. Both of these statements appear to suffer from a misunderstanding of the role of competition in regulating markets and demonstrate a belief that only goverent regulation can incent good customer servce. In its Petition CentuLink pointed out that wireless penetration in 2009 was between 80 and 90 percent and that there were nearly two wireless connections for ever housing unt in Idaho. Petition, p. 8. Cenh.Link noted that in 2010, 67 % of all voice~ connections in Idaho were wireless (Id. at 5), and that as of June 2010, over 30 % of Idaho households no longer had wireline serice and relied solely on wireless. Id. at 4. CentuLink has lost 43 percent of its lines since 2001. Id. at 5. Similar information was provided to demonstrate the profound impact of broadband competition. Id. at 9. Staffs Comments make no mention of any of these facts. The Comments do not attempt to explain why a "modest incentive" in the form of a Commission Rule is needed when CentuLink stads to lose the.customer and all futue revenue from that customer to a competitor. Nor do they address the legal prohibition against regulation that is not ''technologically and competitively neutral." §62-605 (5) (b), Idaho Code. The CentuLink Reply Comments - 10 - In Support of Petition for Exemption Comments do not address why a regulation that applies to only one competitor among several does not impose an ''uusual or uneasonable hardship" on that competitor. In short Staff Comments do not make their case that Rule 502 seres some relevant purose that justifies its continued application to CentuLink in the face of the demonstrated facts. CONCLUSION Staffhas not provided any reason that the Commission should not immediately grant the exemption request. Regardless of whether the Commission also decides to open a ruemakg proceeding to consider the competitive impacts of the Commission's rues on all reguated companes, the exemption meets the requirements of Rule 3 and should be granted to avoid fuer competitive har to CenturyLink. The Staffs focus on a few of the most isolated and widely dispersed rural customers is a deflection from the compelling competitive story laid out by CentuLink, reinforced by Frontier, and effectively undisputed by Staff. It is not CentuLink's objective to abandon rual Idaho or to provide poor customer serice to any of its customers. For CentuLink in parcular, providing high quality serice in rual service tertory has been key to its history and its success. What CentuLink hopes the Commission wil understad is that good customer serce means different and more complex company responses than were imagined when Rule 502 was adopted. CentuLink is in the best position to detere how to meet evolving customer needs and it has ever incentive to meet the real needs of its customers since customer have choices and wil exercise them if it CentuLink missteps. Rule 502' s alleged incentive in unecessar and burdensome to CentuLink. CentuLink Reply Comments - 11 - In Support of Petition for Exemption Submitted ths 7th day of March, 20 I 2. Mar S. son (ISB. No. 2142) 999 Main. Suite 1103 Boise, ID 83702 Lisa A. Anderl Associate General Counsel 1600 7th Avenue, Room 1506 Seattle, WA 98191 Attorneys for the CentuLink Companies CentuLink Reply Comments - 12 - In Support of Petition for Exemption CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I do hereby certify that a tre and correct copy ofthe foregoing CENTURYLINK COMPANIES' REPLY COMMENTS IN SUPPORT OF PETITION FOR EXEMPTION was served on the 7th day of March, 2012 on the following individuals: Jean D. Jewell Weldon B. Stutzm Idaho Public Utilities Commssion 472 West Washigton Street P.O. Box 83720 Boise, il 83702 .. Hand Deliver U. S. Mail Overght Delivery Facsimle Email ijewellCfuc. state.id. us Weldon. StutzmCfuc.idao. gov Renee M. Wiler Frontier Communcations Hand Deliver U. S.Mail Overnght Delivery Facsimle i Email Renee.Wiler(ift.com j;:fllz Attorney for The CentuLink Companes CentuLink Reply Comments - 13- In Support of Petition for Exemption