Alltel Arkansas, Inc. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission

19 S.W.3d 634, 70 Ark. App. 421, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 472
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJune 21, 2000
DocketCA 98-1362
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 S.W.3d 634 (Alltel Arkansas, Inc. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alltel Arkansas, Inc. v. Arkansas Public Service Commission, 19 S.W.3d 634, 70 Ark. App. 421, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 472 (Ark. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

MARGARET Meads, Judge.

Alltel Arkansas, Inc., appeals a narrow issue that resulted from Order Nos. 6, 7, and 10 entered by the Arkansas Public Service Commission in Docket No. 97-419-U. In these orders, the Commission adopted the Administrative Law Judge’s holding that a carrier’s ability to reclassify its services from toll to local and thereby reduce its responsibility to the Arkansas Intrastate Carrier Common Line Pool is not a violation of the Telecommunications Regulatory Reform Act of 1997 (Act 77). Because we find that the Commission failed to provide sufficient detail to enable this court to determine how it arrived at this decision, we must reverse and remand for additional findings.

This appeal began with a petition filed by Alltel for clarification of the settlement mechanism with respect to the intraLATA carrier common line revenue requirements of the Arkansas Intrastate Carrier Common Line Pool (AICCLP). The AICCLP is defined by Ark. Code Ann. § 23-17-403(3) (Supp. 1997) as the unincorporated organization of the providers of Arkansas telecommunications services, authorized by the Commission, whose purpose is to manage billing, collection, and distribution of the incumbent local exchange carriers’s intrastate toll common line service revenue requirements. Carrier Common Line (CCL) service refers to the use of an incumbent local exchange carrier’s (ILEC’s) common lines by a carrier to provide intrastate communications services to end users. In exchange for a carrier’s use of an ILEC’s local loop network for the origination and termination of toll calls, the carrier pays a non-traffic-sensitive access rate to the AICCLP, which collects the access charges from the various carriers and distributes them to the ILECs for reimbursement of their revenue requirements. All carriers that use an ILEC’s local loop network to originate or terminate a toll call are assessed a CCL charge. The access rate is set by the Intrastate Flat Rate Carrier Common Line Service Tariff (Tariff) and is determined by obtaining the sum of the ILECs’ intrastate CCL revenue requirements, any applicable Arkansas Universal Service Fund (AUSF) requirement, the direct expenses incurred by the AICCLP Administrator and staff, claims for adjustments to final revenue requirements, and the charges or credits approved by the Commission. See IFR CCL Tariff 3rd Rev’d Sheet 7. Once this sum is computed, the AICCLP Administrator determines each individual carrier’s CCL pool charge by apportioning the total intrastate CCL pool charges based on the percentage of each carrier’s reported intrastate net retail billed minutes of use (RBMOU) relative to the total intrastate net RBMOU reported by all carriers. Prior to the dissolution of the Arkansas IntraLATA Toll Pool (AITP), the ILECs used the AITP to settle the CCL charges among themselves and the AITP Administrator reported the ILECs’ combined RBMOU to the AICCLP Administrator. The IXCs (pure-interexchange carriers such as AT&T, MCI, and Sprint) reported their RBMOU directly to the AICCLP Administrator.

Because of the dissolution of the AITP, Alltel’s petition contended that none of the ILECs were settling their intraLATA CCL revenue requirements with the AICCLP. Alltel proposed that the “post-toll pooling ILECs” begin settling all of their intrastate CCL revenue requirements directly with the AICCLP Administrator by reporting their RBMOU to the AICCLP Administrator and that the IXCs continue to report their RBMOU to the AICCLP Administrator. On January 9, 1998, Docket No. 97-419-U was established by the Commission to address Alltel’s petition, and it was consolidated with two other dockets, not relevant to this appeal, for hearing purposes. Intervention was granted to a number of ILECs and AT&T Communications of the Southwest, Inc. The general staff of the Commission (Staff) also participated in the docket.

At the hearing, Jack Redfern, Staff Manager of Regulatory Matters for Alltel, testified in support of Alltel’s petition. He proposed that the proportionate share of the intrastate CCL revenue requirement that is borne by each carrier, ILEC or IXC, be based on the relationship of their total intrastate RBMOU reported to the AICCLP compared to total RBMOU reported by all carriers. Initially, he argued that the reported RBMOU, used to compute the carriers’ CCL pool charges, should be frozen at their December 31, 1996, levels and that increases or decreases in growth of RBMOU after December 31, 1996, not be .considered, since the intrastate CCL revenue requirements were frozen at their December 31, 1996, levels by section 4(e)(4)(D) of Act 77, Ark. Code Ann. § 23-17-404(e)(4)(D) (Supp. 1997). In his surrebuttal testimony, however, Redfern amended AUtel’s proposal. He stated that other carriers’ concerns that Alltel’s proposal would keep new entrants from paying for the non-traffic-sensitive portion of the network are well-founded and appear to justify that the actual PBMOU should not be frozen. Redfern, however, continued to argue that the categories of service, which were reported prior to December 31, 1996, must be frozen. Gerald Shannon, Regulatory Planning Manager for GTE Service Corporation (GTE), concurred with Alltel’s position, arguing that if SWBT were to reclassify some of its services from toll to local, then the proportion of payments to the AICCLP would change.

Larry Walther, Executive Director for Regulatory Matters for Southwestern Bell Telephone (SWBT), disagreed with Alltel and GTE. He testified that SWBT can reassign service between its exchanges from toll to local and thereby remove minutes of use from the AICCLP. He testified that some optional calling plans are toll services but he considered the flat rate plans, like the plan that SWBT implemented between Little Rock and Benton, to be an extended area service (EAS) type plan and local and should not be included in the AICCLP. When asked whether SWBT has historically reported the minutes of use associated with optional calling plans to the AICCLP, Walther replied: “[I]n the negotiations to establish those plans, [we] agreed to do that. That was not our position. We had always contended that those were local plans, and by agreement at the time we implemented them when we were in the toll pool.... We agreed with the AITP members that we would report them to the AITP.” (Transcript pp. 193-94.)

John Bethel, manager of the telecommunications section for Staff, testified that Staff supports the settlement of all intrastate CCL charges directly with the AICCLP but disagreed with Alltel’s initial recommendation that the RBMOU reported to the AICCLP should be frozen at their December 31, 1996, levels. He stated that section 23-17-404(e)(4)(D) did not freeze the level of minutes; that freezing RBMOU would prevent carriers initiating intrastate service after December 31, 1996, from reporting RBMOU and paying intrastate CCL charges; and that the CCL charges associated with the RBMOU of carriers that were operating at December 31, 1996, and have since ceased operating would be unrecoverable. Bethel also testified that ILECs could initiate optional calling plans or reclassify RBMOU from toll to local or intrastate to interstate, pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §§ 23-17-408(c) and 23-17-412(a) (Supp. 1997), stating that it appears that electing ILECs are now able to initiate new telecommunications services and reclassify traffic from toll to local or intrastate to interstate without prior Commission approval and thereby remove the associated RBMOU from the AICCLP.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.3d 634, 70 Ark. App. 421, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alltel-arkansas-inc-v-arkansas-public-service-commission-arkctapp-2000.