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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20120110Petition.pdfMar S. Hobson Attorney & Counselor 999 Main Suite 1108 Boise, il 88702 208-885-8666 f"'"J ,- ¡ ~..¡, il ;ï' iOll DEC 22 PI:; 4: 21 December 22,2011 VI HA DELIVRY Jean D. Jewell, Secretar Idaho Public Utilities Commission 472 West Washington Boise, ID 83702-5983 RE: Docket No.€EN-tt-ll- Q WE -7 - tl-CJ I ê~N -T- I')-/)/ L ~CS- T - 1).- 0 I Dea Ms. Jewell: Enclosed for filing with ths Commission are an original and seven (7) copies of the Petition of the CenturyLink Companies for Exemption from Rule 31.41.01.502. Qwest Corporation dba CentuLin QC, CentuTel of Idaho, Inc. dba CenturyLink, and CentuTel of the Gem State, Inc. dba CentuLin (collectively ''te CentuLink companes" or "CentuLink") respectfully request that the Commission consider ths Petition on modified procedure and expeditiously grant the relief requested herein to allow the Petitioners a permanent exemption from Rule 31.41.01.502. CentuLin's Confidential Attachments A, which is fied under separate cover and with an Attorney's Cerificate contains confidential information that supports the Petition. If you have any questions, please contact me. Than you for your cooperation in ths matter. Ver trly yours, Afb~ /-. L- Mar Sdobson Enclosure Mar S. Hobson (ISB. No. 2142) 999 Main, Suite 1103 Boise, ID 83702 Tel: 208-385-8666 mary.hobsoncmCentuLink.com F~E:(;E:i ZUIL JAN I 0 A~l 9: 45 Lisa A. Anderl Associate General Counsel 1600 7th Avenue, Room 1506 Seattle, WA 98191 Tel: (206) 345-1574 Lisa.Anderl.cmCentuLink.com Attorneys for the CentuLink Companies BEFORE THE IDAHO PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION PETITION OF THE CENTURYLINK COMPANIES FOR EXEMPTION FROM RULE 31.41.01.502 Case No. GfL=T ii ~WB-T"- 1';-0 I c-el\-T- 1).-0 I t (jS-T-J?--D/ . THE CENTURYLINK COMPANIES' PETITION FOR EXEMPTION Qwest Corporation dba CentuLink QC, CentuTel of Idaho, Inc. dba CentuLink, and CentuTel of the Gem State, Inc. dba CentuLin (collectively ''te CentuLink companes" or "CentuLink") by and though their undersigned attorneys, file ths Petition for Exemption from Rule 31.41.01.502 (petition) on the grounds set out below. BACKGROUND CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 1 - Ths Petition is filed pursuat to IDAPA 31.41.01.003. CentuLin requests a peranent exemption from the provisions ofIDAPA 31.41.01.502 (Rule 502), which perains to standads for restoration of voice serc~s and customer credits. CentuLink respectfully requests that the Commission review this Petition on an expedited basis. CentuLink seeks ths exemption to obtain relief from the unusua and uneasonable hardships that result from the application of Rule 502 to the CentuLin companes. These hardships arse from the profound changes that have occured in the telecmmuncations industr in Idaho since the provisions of Rule 502 were adopted eighteen years ago, in 1993. Today, the majority ofIdaho voice customers enjoy access to alterative forms of voice communication (e.g., wireless phones, cable telephony, Voice over Interet Protocol (VoIP) servce) that substitute for the serce regulated under ths Rule. Signficantly, virtally all of Centu Link's competitors for these local exchange customer are not regulated under the Rule. Competitive pressures, paricularly from wireless technology, have a large impact on all thee of the CentuLink companes. In addition, CentuTel of the Gem State, Inc ("Gem State") suffer from additional hardships related to the physical characterstics of its serice tertory that make compliance with Rule 502 unquely burdensome. STANDAR OF REVIEW The Commission may grant exemptions if ''uusua or uneasonable hardships result from the application of any of (its) rues". . . IDAPA 31.41.01.003. The circumstaces descrbed in ths Petition meet this stadad. These include the anti competitive impact on the thee CentuLink companes and the physical hardships for Gem State. In addition, as the discussion below will demonstrate, application of Rule CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 2- 502 in the context of today' s telecommuncation market in Idaho results in regulation that conflicts with the mandate of the Idaho Legislatue that any Commission regulation of Title 62 companes providing basic local exchange serice be competitively and technologically neutral. DISCUSSSION A. Application of the provisions of Rule 502 to CenturyLink in today's Idaho telecommuncations market is anticompetitive and conflcts with Idaho statute. 1. Since the adoption of Rule 502 Idaho's telecommunications market has changed dramatically. Rule 502, which creates stadards for interal for the restoration of voice serce and the payment of customer credits where stadards are not met, was initially adopted in 1993. At that time Qwest Corporation dba CentuLink QC ("QC") was known as "US WEST Communcations" and was virtally the sole provider of wire line voice serce to the residence and small business customer residing in its serice tertory. The Federal Telecommuncations Act of 1996 (Federal Act), which would irrevocably open local telecommunications markets to competition, had not yet been enacted. Cell phone use was then limited primarly to business leader and their pees who cared heavy devices that resembled bricks with antenae, 1 and the use of peronal computers to access the Internet was in its infancy. Local telephone companes were strgging to meet customer demand for new and additional telephone lines to provide ''basic local exchange servce," i.e., access lines to residential and small business customer with the associated transmission of two-way interactive switched voice communcation withn in local i The FCC's wieless report showed a tota ofl6 millon wieless subscribers in the entie nation in 1993. As of December, 2010, the same source reportd 285 millon subscribers. CENTURYLIN PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 3 - calling area.2 That basic local exchange servce (which is the focus of Rule 502) was subject to economic regulation by the Commission under Title 61, Idaho Code. The coming years brought signficant change to Idaho's telecommunications market. QC's predecessor company reached the apex of its line penetration in 2001 with 544,640 lines in serce in Idaho. Soon, however, the rapid adoption of wireless phones by user of all ages and economic levels, and the availabilty of competitive alteratives for wieline communcations (especially for businesses and cable television customers) ushered in by the Federal Act, ended QC's role as the predominant provider of telephone serces for residence and small business customer. As of June 2010, over 30% of Idaho households no longer had wireline serce and relied solely on wireless technology for their voice needs. 3 Meawhile, any customer with a broadband connection can subscrbe to Voip4 serces from a carer like Vonage or Google to meet their voice nees. According to the FCC, as of December 2010, there were 706,000 broadband connections in Idahos-a number that significantly exceeds the 455,000 incumbent local exchange carer (ILEC) access lines in the state.6 Each of these broadband customers can use VoIP for voice callng and avoid buying basic local exchange serice from an ILEC such as one of the CentuLink companes. 2 Idaho Code § 62-603(a). 3 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, Wireless Substitution: State- level Estiates from the National Health Intervew Surey, Janua 2007-June 2010, released Apri 20.2011, Table 3. 4 The term voice over Internet protocol (V oIP) servce refer to telecommuncations services that are provided without using the public switched network upon which trditional telephone services are based. High Speed Servcesfor Internet Access: Statu as of December 31,2010, FCC Industr Analysis and Technology Division, Wireline Competion Bureau, Octobe 201 i, Table 17.6 Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31, 2010; Industr Analysis and Technology Division, Wireline Competition Bureau, Ocober 201 I, table 8. CENTURYLIN PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 4- These competitive technologies have taken their toll on traditional ILEC voice serices. By December, 2010, 67% of the total voice connections in Idaho were provided by wireless carers, while another 9% were provided by non-incumbent wireline carer such as competitive local exchange carers (CLECs) and cable companes, and only 24% were provided by incumbent wireline providers such as the CentuLink companes.7 QC's total line count in Idaho declined from 544,640 in 2001 to 310,870 in 201û-a loss of43%. 2. Idaho's regulatory statutes have also changed since the adoption of Rule 502. When Rule 502 was adopted, incumbent providers such as the CentuLink companes were the predominant providers of local voice serice. Ver few customers used wireless serices and most had no alternative for voice communcation in the event their traditional phone line suffered a serce outage. Customer reliance on voice technology was also significantly greater at that time since the Internet had not yet becme a widespread means of peronal and business communcation. In addition, in 1993, virlly a1i8 voice services offered to residence and small business customers remained subject to full economic regulation under Title 61, Idaho Code.9 In ths context, Commission regulation of restoration of voice serce interals and customer credits where stadards were missed made sense. Customers' voice options were few or nonexistent at that time, and the Commission was in a position to set prices (charged to a 7 Id., tables 8 and 17 8 The exceptions were cooperative telephone companes whose customers also owned the companes frovidig servce.For most companes ths meant rate of retu reguation, including price settg by the Commssion. However QC's predecessor and perhaps others wer able to persuae the Commssion to adopt an Alterntive Form of Regulation (AFOR). Neverteless even under an AFOR, prices for basic voice servce were set by the Commssion and the entie rate strctue could be reviewed under rate of retu priciples under appropriate circumtaces. CENTURYLIN PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 5 - stable or growing group of customers) that allowed companes to achieve revenue streams that were suffcient to pay the costs of maintaining the stadards adopted. In the intervening years, however, the technological changes already noted provided many new options for customers to meet their voice communcations needs. Given the availabilty of these options, market forces, as opposed to Commission regulation, began to drive telecommuncations companes' revenues, and it became clear market forces should also drive the pricing and other product decisions of these companes. Recognzing this, in 2005 the Idaho Legislatue enacted an amendment to the Idaho Telecommuncations Act of 1988 to authorize incumbent local exchange carers to elect to have all serices (including basic local exchange serice) excluded from economic regulation under Title 61, Idaho Code.1O In makng ths change the Legislature specifically spoke to the level of Commission regulation it deemed appropriate for basic local serice offered by companes no longer subject to Title 61, regulation. Idaho Code § 62-605 (5) (b) provides: The commission shall have the continuing authority to deterine the noneconomic regulatory requirements relating to basic local exchange serce for all telephone corporations providing basic local exchange service including but not limited to, such matters as serce quaity standards, . . . which requirements shall be technologically and competitively neutral. It is this notion of ''technological() and competitive() neutral(ity)" that is violated by the application of Rule 502 to QC in today's environment. As the number of lines lost in QC's Idaho serice tertory demonstrates, QC is facing intense competition for 10 AlthoughCentuTe1 of the Gem State, Inc. and CentuTe1 ofIdao, Inc. have not yete1ected to retove their services from Title 61, Idao Code, to reguation under Title 62, the unai burden on these companes' ability to compete is parlel to tht faced by QC. Regardless of their Title 61 reguatory status, Gem State and CentuTe1 ofIdao face competition from wieless, and possibly cable and VoIP providers, who are not subject to reguation under Rule 502 and are therefore free to establish their own service priorities and customer loyalty intiatives. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 6- customers. However the greatest competitive theat to QC and the other CentuLin companies, wireless telephony, is not regulated by the Commssion. Wireless, cable and VoIP competitors are simply not subject to the perormance stadards, or the customer credit requirements imposed by Rule 502. Indeed, as descrbed above, only 24%11 .of all of Idaho's voice connections in 2010 were incumbent ILEC lines subject to regulation under Rule 502.12 In light of this disparty of treatment beteen the CentuLink companes and . their competitors, application of Rule 502 to CentuLink under the curent market conditions in Idaho amounts to an ''uusual or uneasonable hardship()" that justifies an exemption under IDAPA 31.41.01.003. CentuLink recognizes, however, that an exemption of this scope for the largest ILEC in Idaho as well as the two other CentuLin companes may itself constitute a signficant change in the regulatory landscape in Idaho. Therefore, CentuLink is wiling to parcipate in a rulemakng to address the serice quality rules in a more comprehensive context, should this Commssion deem such an effort appropriate in the futue. However, ths present request for an exemption for the CentuLin companies is not.simply a philosophical question of fairness; the nee is immediate and pressing as the furter discusion below wil demonstrate. 11 As noted above, in 2010 70% of all voice connections in Idao were wiless. Ten percent of the tota connections were served by either cable companes or CLECs. In tht market segment only those connections provided CLECs would come with the purew of the Commssion's noneconomic reguation under Title 62, Idao Code.12 In the non-ILEC market segment, only those connections provided by CLECs would come withn the puriew of the Commssion's noneconomic regulation under Title 62, Idao Code. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 7 - B. For CenturyLink compliance with Rule 502 amounts to an unreasonable hardship that compromises its abilty to serve customers. 1. Since 1993 customers' dependence upon traditional wielieservce has diished signcantly. The degree to which residence and small business customers in 1993 depended on incumbent local exchange carer (ILEC) basic local exchange serice may have justified a Commission regulation that both set a standard for restoration for wireline serce and provided an economic. incentive for maintaning that standard in the form of large customer credits at that time. Today, however, a substantial majority of basic local servce customers are not cut off from communcation-are not "out-of-serce"-in the event their wireline telephone is not workig. The FCC reported that in 2009 wireless penetration in all Idao economic areas studied was between 80 and 90%.13 Most customers that have not eliminated their wireline serce have both a wireline and a wireless phone in the household. The FCC identified 1,221,000 wieless connections in Idaho in 2009, while the 2009 census recorded only 647,502 housing unts in the state.14 Ths represents a ratio of nearly 1.9 wireless connections per housing unt in Idaho. In comparson, as of December 2010, the FCC reported there were only 455,000 ILEC access lines in Idaho.1S Furer, in its latest report, the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) reported that only 12.9% oflandline households in the United States 13 Anual Report and Analysis of Comptitive Market Conditions With Respect to Mobile Wireless, Includig Commercial Mobile Services, WT Docket No. 10-133. Fifteenth Reprt, Released: June 27, 2011, Table C-3. 14 See htt://ww.census.gov/popest/dataousing/tota1s/2009/index.htm 2010 Housing unt data is not yet available. 15 Local Telephone Competition: Status as of December 31,2010; Industr Analysis and Technology Division, Wire1ine Competition Bureau, October 2011, table 13. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 8- did not have a wireless phone. 16 Thus, for the vast majority of wire line customer who also mainta a wireless connection, an out-of-serce condition for their wireline serce does not have nearly the impact for voice communcation capabilty that it did in 1993. Even for the minority of customer that do not purchase their own wireless connection, the ubiquity of wireless phones provides options that were not available in 1993. When wireline serices were the only form of voice communcations, only a telephone company employee or contractor could brig reliefby restoring serce. Today a guest, relative, or caregiver can brig voice communcation capabilty to the customer who is out-of-serice by simply offerng a wireless phone for an important call or even loanng a phone to the out-of-serce customer. Simlarly, the explosion of broadband serces has changed the impact of a CentuLink voice serce outage on Idaho customer. If the customer has a broadband connection that is not impacted by the outage, the customer may have the abilty to communcate via access to the Interet and the use ofVoIP serices. As noted above, over 58% ofIdaho households had a broadband connection as of December 2010, when there were 706,000 broadband connections as compared to only 455,000 ILEC access lines. Whle many may useVoIP to place voice calls, other may rely on the Interet in countless ways to gain information, order goods, schedule meetings or otherwise communcate though emaiL. Regardless of how they use broadband, such customers are not out-of-serice in the way that was contemplated in 1993 when Rule 502 was adopted. The development and widespread adoption of alterative communcations technologies by customers destroys the basic assumption supportng Rule 502, i.e., that 16 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Nationa Center for Health Statistics, Wireless Substitution: Early Releas of Estites from the National Health Intervew Surey, July-Dec 2010, releaed June 8, 2011, Table 1. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 9- where wireline serice outages occur, customer canot communcate until serice is restored. The presence of wireless and broadband technologies mean most customers are not out-of-serce and do not depend solely on restoration of their wireline serice to communcate. Under these circumstances, application of Rule 502 to the CentuLin companes who have suffered huge competitive losses to providers of these technologies who are not themselves subject to regulation, amounts to an unusua or uneasonable hardship for which the Commssion should grant an exemption. 2. The economics of the changig telecommunications industr in Idaho do not support Rule 502's exclusive focus on voice restoration. Nor is such focus consistent with Idaho Code § 62-605 (5)(b). In the secnd quarer of 201 0 CentuLink was actually servng only 44.27% of the Idaho customer locations (commercial and residential) to which its facilties are available. 17 By the second quarer 2011, that percent of customer locations sered had de~eased to 40.88% of the available customer locations on its network. 18 In other words, in almost 60% of the locations where CentuLink has facilities available for use, the facilities are not in use. This reflects a substantially different business reality for CentuLin today as compared to the environment in 1993, when its predecessor companies were providing servce to a much higher percentage of the customer locations they passed. Rule 502 forces CentuLin to dedicate resources to the specific actvities that are required to quickly restore serce outages for voice customer, but ths rue ignores the realities of competitive industr in which these companies now operate. In 1993 when the Rule was adopted, installation and maintenance of the facilities used to provide 17 See Confdential Attchment A filed seartely and under an Attrney's Certficate puruat to IDAP A 31.01.01.067.03.18 Id. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 10- voice serces was the primar focus of the telecommuncations industr. Today, the CentuLink companes must make signficant capital expenditues to expand the reach, speed and capabilties of their broadband network so they can attact and retain broadband customers and remain competitive in the marketplace. CentuLink must also balance the allocation of network resources between its voice and broadband network at the same time its overall customer base is declining. Qnthe employee side of the equation CentuLink is engaged in a similar balancing act. As the number of customers continues to decline, CentuLin must adjust its work force downward even though the overall size and sophistication of its overall network is increasing. Ths means that a smaller work force must be deployed to meet the needs of both the traditional voice customer and those customers demanding the latest broadband capabìlties. CentuLink must be ready to maintai the entire network, and be ready to provide voice and broadband serice on demand. Application of Rule 502 to the CentuLin companes seres to skew the delicate balance the companies must stre in deploying their employee resources. In early 2011 QC reported that it had missed the Rule 502 stadards three consecutive months (November 2010, December 2010 and Janua 2011). In August 2011, QC met the standards, but only by a narow margi after missing them in June and July. QC thereby avoided the need to again report thee consecutive months of perormance below the Rule 502 stadards. In short, QC is having diffculty consistently meetng the requirements of Rule 502 for restoration of serice. 19 19 Gem State's diffculties in meeting the standard are descrbed in section B.3 below. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 11- QC's efforts to meet the stadard in Augut.are ilustrative of the imbalance created by the Rule. . In August QC had to focus its network resources primarly upon meeting the Rule 502 standard at the expense of offerg competitive instalation intervals for its broadband serce. In some areas the interals for installng High Speed Interet (HSI) were moved out to over 3 weeks, as techncians were focused on perormng the duties necessar to meet the restoration stadard. Meanwhile, Cable One, a fierce competitor for broadband customers, was adversing same-day installations. Without question, some customers wil choose not to wait for QC to install based on these installation interals and wil purchase serce from the competitor who can more rapidly fill their serce request. QC's abilty to respond to such competition is adversely impacted by the regulatory requirement of Rule 502. Ths impact on the CentuLink companes' ability to compete is exacerbated by the fact that cable, wireless and VoIP competitors are not subject to the regulatory requirements of Rule 502. Unfettered by the constraints of the Rule, these competitors are free to focus on what customer tell them is importt and exercise independent business judgment in how best to sere them. They are free to allocate scarce resources to whatever priorities they believe wil result in a competitive advantage. Cable One's same-day installation offer is an example of how that competitor chooses to differentiate itself and meet customer expectations. CentuLink needs the abilty to balance its repair and installation resources to meet customer priorities as its competitors are doing. If QC must continue to comply with Rule 502, it is unikely to be able to move toward the customer- frendly options its competitors are offerng. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 12 - More importtly, for QC the application of Rule 502 to wireline voice providers, but not to wireless, cable and VoIP provider, rus afoul of Idaho Code § 62-605 (5)(b)' s requirement that Commission regulation be technologicaly and competitively neutral. The evolution of the telecommuncations industr has brought a once competitively neutral regulation to the point where its impact is simultaneously competitively harful to CentuLink and irrelevant to the large number of cutomer whose serce is not provided by a traditional wireline carer. Ths development renders the application of Rule 502 to the CentuLin companes, an ''uusual or uneasonable hardship()" that justifies an exemption under IDAPA 31.41.01.003. 3. For Gem State the physical characteristics of its servce territory impose unique hardships in complyig with Rule 502. In August of this year, CentuTel of the Gem State, Inc., (Gem State) gave notice to the Commission that its records indicated that the of out-of-serce trouble reports cleared withi the interal requirements of Rule 502 had not been met for the months of April, May and June, 2011. In a confidential filing that accompanied Gem State's notice, the actual percent of restorations meeting the interal requirements each month was shown to be substatially below 90%. Similar results were also provided under confidential cover for July and Augut 2011, and a notice peraig to September, October and November is in its final stages of preparation. For Gem State, the physical characterstics of its serce terrtory make compliance with the requirements of Rule 502 unquely burdensome. Gem State seres a total of 1026 access lines in a geographically large serce tertory that includes the Duck Valley Indian reseration on the southwest border of state, the communties of Grand View and Brueau, Idaho, and a non-contiguous serce area surounding the CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION '" 13- communty of Richfield in south-central Idaho. Richfield is located 110 miles from Grand View where the Gem State serice techncians are located. It takes a techncian an average four hour simply for drive time between Grand View and Richfield to attend to a serce request. Given the small number of access lines and the fact that a relatively small number of trouble reports can impact the percent of serce restorations achieved with the required interal, Gem State has found it impossible to meet the requirements of Rule 502, even on a sporadic basis. Ths problem has been exacerbated by the fact that CentuLink servce techncians in nearby QC exchanges are unonized whereas those in the Gem State tertory are not. To date, management has bee unable to negotiate an agreement with the union that would allow techncians from QC to help restore serice in the Gem State serce area. Gem State customers, however, have not advised either the company or the Commission that the level of serce in the tertory is unatisfactory. Few to none of the customer in any of the CentuLin companes have chosen to complain about the interal for servce restoration. Ths is parcularly noteworthy, however, for those customers in Gem State who have experience restoration interals that are longer on a more consistent basis than any other CentuLin customer group. For these reasons, CenturyLink respectfully requests that the unque characterstics of the Gem State serice tertory, be considered in grting an exemption from Rule 502 under IDAP A 31.41.01.003. c. Rule 502 is no longer meetig customer needs or actig as an appropriate incentive. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 14- 1. Rule 502 no longer reflects customer needs or priorities. Rule 502 requies that CentuLink dedicate its resources to rapid restoration of voice serce whether that is important to the customer or not. Looking back to 1993 when the Rule was adopted, the assumption that voice serce restoration was the customer's highest priority may have been largely justified. However, today customers have other options to traditional basic local exchange voice service and ths has changed customers' priorities. Today, many customers view mobility via a wireless phone as a priority and may not be as concered with fast wireline voice serice restoration. Other customers view HSI as a priority, and may see voice serce as a by-product or featue of the customer's broadband communications link. These customers may view quick broadband installation as more important than quick wireline voice serce restoration. Today's customer priorities are being expressed in the marketplace where demand for broadband serices is growing while wireline voice connections continue to decline. Furer evidence of customers' priorities (and their relative tolerance of wire line voice serce outages) may be found in the fact that CentuLink's interal complaint offce and the Commission's Staff have see ver few complaints conceng slow restoration of voice serice. Nor is there any evidence that customer complaints increased as performance fell below the Rule 502 standard as in the November 2010- Janua 2011 interal reported to the Commssion by QC or at anytime durng 2011 for Gem State. CentuLink submits that customers are not complainig to the Commission for a number of reasons. First, many customer do not consider themselves out-of-serce because they have other options for voice communcation such as their wireless phones, CENTURYLIN PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 15 - and their broadband serices. These customer may be more interested in seeing that their other serces such as their HSI are fuctionig. In addition, customer who are dissatisfied with their wieline voice serce have competitive options. They need not bother to complain to the Commission since they ca simply disconnect their serce and move to a wireless or cable option. Whle ths widespread adoption of other technologies poses a serous theat to CentuLin, it also demonstrates that Commssion regulation of serce restoration is no longer neeed to protect customers. CentuLink needs the abilty to balance its repai and installation work to meet customer needs as it perceives them. Rule 502's focus on a single assumed customer need, which in many cases no longer reflecs customer priorities and preferences, places CentuLin at a competitive disadvantage. 2. Rule 502 is no longer required to incent appropriate customer servce, is not tailored to compensate those actually out-of-servce, and is ineffective in promotig customer loyalty. If an exemption is granted from the requirements of Rule 502, the CentuLink companes wil remain motivated though market pressures to restore serce within a reasonable time, due to an overding need to satisfy and retain customers. While CentuLink can no longer afford to look at customer needs though the single lens of a regulatory stadard set nearly 20 years ago, ths is not to say that CentuLink wil not have incentive to provide good serice to voice customer. CentuLin is well aware that dissatisfied customers can, and will, move to a competitive cable, wireless or VoIP serce to meet their voice callng needs if their needs are not met. Once those customers are lost, they are unikely to retu or to order other serces from CentuLink. From an economic and business perpective, losing a CENTURYLIN PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 16- customer to a competitor is a considerably more serious consequence to CentuLin than reporting a stadard violation or even paying a Rule 502 customer credit. Thus, Rule 502 no longer provides a meangful incentive to the CentuLin companes. Instead, today the competitive marketlace provides the incetive for the companies to provide each serice at the level of quaity demanded by customers. Furerore, Rule 502's requirement that all customers receive a full month's serce credit when restoration of their serice is delayed is not tailored to assure that the credit is being applied to customers who are actually out-of-serce. The vast majority of customers who can use their wireless or broadband technologies while their wireline serice is being restored have not lost voice communcation capabilty and are therefore not out-of-serice inthe maner contemplated when Rule 502 was adopted. Requiring a ful month's serice credit for customer who have not experenced a loss of abilty to communcate imposes an uneasonable hardship on the CentuLink companes where other, more signficant marketplace incentives are also present. Finally the Rule 502 customer credit is an ineffective means of retainig customer loyalty. If a customer is unappy about the interal for restoration of his broadband serice, the fact that he may coincidentally receive a credit for another, lower priority, serce is unikely to bring satisfaction. . And, if the customer is dissatisfied with restoration of the voice serce itself, she is free to keep her credit while moving to an uneguated voice alterative such as wireless. In that instace, the competitive loss to CentuLink is compounded by a regulatory penalty of a credit payable to a customer who will not continue to do business with CentuLink. CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 17 - CONCLUSION Grantig CentuLink a peranent exemption from Rule 502 wil perit it to better sere customer by providing the flexibilty to respond to customer nees for all of the serices it provides. Nearly two decades that have passed since the Rule was adopted, and as descrbed above, the marketlace has changed signficantly with the growt of wireless and broadband-based compettion. These changes have rendered the application of Rule 502 to the CentuLin companes an ''uusual or uneasonable hardship" under IDAPA 31.41.01.003. . Customers now have alteratives to basic local exchange voice serice, which they have adopted to the point that the vast majority of wire line. customers are not "out-of-service" if the basic exchange wireline serce is not working. . Rule 502 forces CentuLin to allocate scarce resources to activities that maybe out of step with customer priorities. The rule declares restoration of voice serce within cerin interals to be the number one priority, but customer may believe faster broadband installation is a greater priority. . CentuLink directly competes with wieless and cable provider. Yet these competitors are not subject to Rule 502, which places CentuLin at a distinct disadvantage to its most successful competitors. . Rule 502' s customer credit requirements pale in comparson to the economic incentives at work in the marketplace that wil assure the CentuLin companes meet customer needs or risk losing these customers entirely. Meanwhile, the application of the credit requirement in the present competitive envionment is not CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 18 - tailored to compensate those actully out-of-serce, and is ineffective in promoting customer loyalty. REQUEST FOR RELIEF CentuLink respectfully requests that the Commssion consider ths Petition on modified procedure and expeditiously grant the relief requested herein to allow CentuLink a peranent exemption from Rule 502. Submitted thi~4daY of Deceber, 2011. Respectfully submitted,...'- Mar S. bson (ISB. No. 2142) 999 Mai . Suite 1103 Boise, ID 83702 Lisa A. Anderl Associate General Counel 1600 7th Avenue, Room 1506 Seattle, WA 98191 Attorneys for the CentuLink Companes CENTURYLINK PETITION FOR EXEMPTION - 19-