ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
SULLIVAN, Justice.
Ameritech Indiana sought declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent the City of Gary from imposing a “requirements-based fee” on telecommunications providers using City .rights-of-way. The trial court declared the fee void as an improper tax issued beyond the City’s powers. We reverse in part, finding that the City was initially entitled to charge compensation for the private, commercial use of its real estate, until the legislature affirmatively said otherwise.
[152]*152
Background
On January 6, 1998, the City of Gary enacted Ordinance Nos. 6970 & 6971, which were signed by the Mayor two days later. Ordinance No. 6970 establishes a telecommunications policy for the City and creates the Gary Access, Information, and Telecommunications Trust (“GAITT”) to, inter alia, “[e]nsure that telecommunications is available as a community resource for individuals, organizations, and businesses on an affordable basis.” The GAITT is charged with several responsibilities under Ordinance No. 6970, including the development, implementation, and collection of fees comprising fair and reasonable compensation for the commercial use of public rights-of-way.
Ordinance No. 6971 is a companion ordinance that imposes a “requirements-based fee” on all telecommunications providers using the City’s rights-of-way. The total “requirements-based fee” for 1998 was to be $20,000,000. This initial aggregate fee represented “approximately fifteen percent of the telecommunications providers’ local revenues, based on the national average revenue per capita reported by the U.S. census,” with credits for public, educational, and government access, as well as institutional access. Appellant’s Br. at 6.
Ameritech Indiana’s share of this total initial fee was $3.2 million and was determined by using what Ameritech characterizes as “an intricate scheme for apportioning the $20,000,000 charge among the various telecommunications providers in the rights-of-way, based on the number of kinds of services provided by each.” Appellant’s Br. at 7 (describing § 4 of Ord. No. 6971). Ordinance No. 6971 contemplates telecommunications providers discharging some or all of their “requirements-based fee” by furnishing in-kind telecommunications services. In future years, the total “requirements-based fee” would be calculated in one of three ways: (1) based upon an assessment of the City’s “requirements,” (2) based upon a percentage not to exceed 15% of the providers’ gross revenues, or (3) based upon a “growth factor” calculated from the providers’ telecommunications revenues multiplied by the previous year’s “requirements-based fee.”
On January 15, 1998, Arlene D. Colvin, the City’s Chief of Staff, sent a letter to Ameritech Indiana along with copies of the two ordinances, informing Ameritech that Gary intended to establish “a process for telecommunications vendors affected by the enclosed Ordinances to meet their economic obligations.” The letter also indicated that a City representative would contact the company “in February, 1998 to negotiate [its] contribution.”
Before any meeting was held, Ameritech Indiana filed a declaratory judgment action, asking that the ordinances be declared void as exceeding the scope of the City’s municipal powers. After hearing oral argument on cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Ameritech Indiana, finding “that City of Gary Ordinances Nos. 6970 and 6971 are and have been from the time of their enactment INVALID and VOID in their entireties.” (R. at 292; Final Judgment of June 25, 1998) (emphasis in original). The City appealed.
The Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part, finding: (1) that the requirements-based fee imposed under Ordinance No. 6971 was void as an impermissible tax assessed in violation of the City’s authority under Ind.Code § 36-l-3-8(a)(4) (1993) (“Home Rule Act”); (2) that even if the requirements-based fee was not an impermissible “tax” under the Home Rule Act, it was an impermissible charge by the City as of March 13, 1998, when the Indiana Legislature amended Ind. Code § 8 — 1—2—101(b), prohibiting municipalities from receiving any form of “payment” other than the “direct, actual, and reasonably incurred management costs” for a utility’s occupation of a public right-of-way; (3) that the remaining provisions of Ordi[153]*153nances 6970 & 6971 did not violate Ind. Code § 36-l-3-8(a)(7) as infringing on the jurisdiction of Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (“IURC”); and (4) that the remaining policy provisions of Ordinances 6970 & 6971 would stand despite invalidation of the revenue-producing, requirements-based fee provisions. City of Gary v. Indiana Bell Telephone Co., 711 N.E.2d 79 (Ind.Ct.App.1999).
Discussion
In this case, the trial judge entered specific findings of fact and conclusions of law, neither of which are required nor prohibited in the summary judgment context. See Dible v. City of Lafayette, 713 N.E.2d 269, 272 n. 2 (Ind.1999). Although specific findings aid our review of a summary judgment ruling, they are not binding on this Court. Id. Instead, when reviewing an entry of summary judgment, we stand in the shoes of the trial court. Id. Summary judgment is appropriate only when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 66(C). We do not reweigh the evidence, but will consider the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Perry v. Stitzer Buick GMC, Inc., 637 N.E.2d 1282, 1286 (Ind.1994), reh’g denied.
I
We begin our analysis by looking to Indiana’s Home Rule Act. Pub.L. No. 211, 1980 Ind. Acts 1657 (codified as amended at Ind.Code §§ 36-1-3-1 to -9 (1993)). The Home Rule Act abrogated the traditional rule that local governments possessed only those powers expressly authorized by statute and declared that a local government possesses “[a]ll other powers necessary or desirable in the conduct of its affairs.” Ind.Code § 36-1-3-4(b)(2); see also City of Crown Point v. Lake County, 510 N.E.2d 684, 685-86 (1987) (construing the Home Rule Act). This broad grant of authority notwithstanding, the Home Rule Act also specifi-eally withheld certain powers from local governments and reserved them to the State. See Ind.Code § 36-1-3-8.
, Here, we are faced with deciding whether the requirements-based fee was within Gary’s broad grant of powers conferred on it by the Home Rule Act or whether the fee impermissibly impinged upon those powers reserved to the State. The reserved powers implicated in this case are: first, the “power to impose a tax,” id. § 36-l-3-8(a)(4); second, the “power to impose a service charge or user fee greater than that reasonably related to reasonable and just rates and charges for services,” id. § 36 — 1—3—8(a)(6); and third, the “power to regulate conduct that is regulated by a state agency, except as expressly granted by statute,” id. § 36-l-3-8(a)(7).
II
Among the various powers “need[ed] for the effective operation of government as to [its] local affairs,” Ind. Code § 36-1-3-2, are those labeled proprietary whereby local governments “act[ ] in a private or proprietary capacity” for the “peculiar and special advantage of its inhabitants, rather than for the good of the State at large,” Taylor v. State, 663 N.E.2d 213, 216-17 (Ind.Ct.App.1996) (analyzing Department of Treasury v. City of Evansville, 223 Ind. 435, 440, 60 N.E.2d 952, 954 (1945)).
A local government’s specified power to manage the “public grounds” falling within its borders, see Ind.Code § 36-1-3-9(a), includes the unspecified power to operate in a proprietary capacity to charge fair and reasonable compensation for the private, commercial use of these public grounds, irrespective of the label placed on the compensation. See, e.g., City of St. Louis v. Western Union Tel. Co., 148 U.S. 92, 99, 13 S.Ct. 485, 37 L.Ed. 380 (1893) (recognizing the general right of a city to seek “rental”-like compensation from a [154]*154user of the city’s land/right-of-way);1 City of Dallas, Texas v. Federal Communications Comm’n, 118 F.3d 393, 397 (1997) (A fee imposed on a telecommunications provider was “not a tax ... but essentially a form of rent: the price paid to rent use of public right-of-ways [sic].”); TCG Detroit v. City of Dearborn, 16 F.Supp.2d 785, 789 (E.D.Mich.1998) (construing the Federal Telecommunications Act, 47 U.S.C. § 253(a), (c), and approving the imposition of a “franchise fee,” requiring, inter alia, a percentage fee on gross revenue, costs, and conduit space for the city) (There “is nothing inappropriate with the [City of Dearborn] charging compensation, or ‘rent’, for the City owned property that the [plaintiff telecommunications provider] seeks to appropriate for its private use.”), aff'd, 206 F.3d 618 (6th Cir.2000); Bell-South Telecommunications, Inc. v. City of Orangeburg, 337 S.C. 35, 522 S.E.2d 804, 806 (1999) (authorizing the City of Orange-burg to charge a “franchise fee” in exchange for granting BellSouth the “special privilege of using public streets to place its equipment in order to serve [the] City’s residents and generate private profit”), reh’g denied; cf. Federal Telecommunications Act, 47 U.S.C. § 253(a), (c) (Supp. II 1996) (This section does not affect the authority of a city to “require fair and reasonable compensation from telecommunications providers ... for use of the public rights-of-way.”).
A
In determining that the fee was an improper tax, the trial court found it significant that “Gary has offered no authority for the proposition that a municipality may charge rent for use of public rights of way by public utilities operating under certificates of territorial authority issued by the IURC.” (R. at 289; Concl. of Law No. 4.) As we just explained, however, the Home Rule Act abrogated the traditional rule that local governments possessed only those powers expressly authorized by statute. See Ind.Code § 36-l-3-4(a)(l)-(3) (“The rule of law that a unit has only[] powers expressly granted by statute; [ ]powers necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to powers expressly granted; and [ ]powers indispensable to the declared purposes of the unit[ ] is abrogated.”).2
Simply put, the City of Gary need not have the specific statutory authorization to charge companies compensation for commercial use of its real estate to generate private profit. See id. § 36-1-3-4(b)(2) (A governmental unit has all “powers necessary or desirable in the conduct of its affairs, even though not granted by statute.”); id. § 36-l-3-4(c) (“[T]he omission of a power from [a statutory] list does not imply that unit lacks that power.”); cf. Department of Treasury, 223 Ind. at 442, 60 N.E.2d at 955 (“ ‘When a municipal corporation engages in an activity of a business nature ... which is generally engaged in by individuals or private corporations, it acts as such corporation and not in its sovereign capacity ....’”) (omissions added) (quoting City of Logansport v. Public Service Commission, 202 Ind. 523, 177 [155]*155N.E. 249 (1931)). Therefore, we proceed to analyze this requirements-based fee to determine if it is valid under the Home Rule Act.
B
The Court of Appeals invalidated the requirements-based fee as an improper tax on two independent bases with respect to the Home Rule Act. See City of Gary, 711 N.E.2d at 83; see also Conclusions of Law Nos. 3 & 4 (R. at 288-89).
B-l
First, the Court of Appeals cites to a 50-year-old Illinois Supreme Court case for the proposition that a charge or fee assessed by the governing entity and based upon a percentage of the payor’s gross revenues is a tax and not a rental charge. City of Gary, 711 N.E.2d at 83 (citing Village of Lombard v. Illinois Bell Telephone Co., 405 Ill. 209, 90 N.E.2d 105 (1950)). We disagree and cite to the Court of Appeals’s own decision in Ace Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Indianapolis Airport Authority, 612 N.E.2d 1104 (1993), transfer denied, for the proposition that the revenue-based aspect of a municipal charge or fee does not ipso facto transform it into a tax.
In Ace Rent-A-Car, the governing entity was the Indianapolis Airport Authority (“IAA”), a municipal corporation empowered with the specific3 authority to “ ‘adopt a schedule of reasonable charges and to coUect them from all users of faeilities and services within the district.’ ” Id. at 1106 (quoting Ind.Code § 8-22-3-1 (1993)). As such, the IAA imposed “a fee upon all off-airport car rental companies, along with all off-site hotels, motels and parking lots for the privilege of using airport roadways to operate their shuttle services.” Id. As the fee pertained to off-airport car rental companies, they “would be assessed a fee of 7% of all sales for the rental of automobiles to customers originating at the airport.” Id. (internal quotations omitted).
Ace Rent-A-Car first challenged the validity of the percentage-based fee as being generally inconsistent with the type of user fee approved by this Court in Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Auth. Dist. v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., 259 Ind. 464, 288 N.E.2d 136, enforcing 405 U.S. 707, 92 S.Ct. 1349, 31 L.Ed.2d 620 (1972).4 Ace contended that “the seven percent fee imposed by IAA is based solely on revenue the companies generate and is totally unrelated to their use of airport roadways and facilities.” Ace Rent-A-Car, 612 N.E.2d at 1107. The Court of Appeals disagreed with this reasoning, cited several decisions from foreign jurisdictions, and upheld “fees based on the overall benefit a user derives from the existence of [an] airport.” Id.
Ultimately, the court concluded that “the airport’s very existence provides a marketplace from which Ace Rent-A-Car derives an economic benefit,” so that a user fee “based on a percent of the rental sales of automobiles made to customers originating at the airport represents at least one fair, although imperfect, method of measuring ‘use’.” Id. at 1107-08 (relying in part on Alamo Rent-a-Car v. Sarasota-Manatee Airport Auth., 906 F.2d 516, 519, 521-22 (11th Cir.1990), cert. denied, [156]*156498 U.S. 1120, 111 S.Ct. 1073, 112 L.Ed.2d 1179 (1991) (deeming a broad construction of the term “use” as appropriate where the benefit derived by the user depended on the existence of the entire airport facility)).
Here, Gary rights-of-way provide a marketplace from which Ameritech derives an economic benefit, so that Gary’s fee, based in part on a percentage of the company’s gross revenues, is at least one fair, if imperfect, method of measuring Ameritech’s use of Gary rights-of-way. The revenue-based aspect of the fee does not ipso facto transform it into a tax. See id. at 1108 (“We disagree with Ace Rent-A-Car that because the fee is based on revenue it is therefore transformed into a tax.”)
Furthermore, as the Court of Appeals in Ace Rent-A-Car noted,
A tax is compulsory and not optional; it entitles the taxpayer to receive nothing in return, other than the rights of government which are enjoyed by all citizens. Ennis v. State Highway Commission (1952), 231 Ind. 311, 108 N.E.2d 687, 693. On the other hand, a user fee is optional and represents a specific charge for the use of publicly-owned or publicly-provided facilities or services. Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Montana (1981), 453 U.S. 609, 621-22, 101 S.Ct. 2946, 2955, 69 L.Ed.2d 884, 896-97, reh’g denied, 453 U.S. 927, 102 S.Ct. 889, 69 L.Ed.2d 1023.
Id.; see also City of Orangeburg, 522 S.E.2d at 806 (“Generally, a tax is an enforced contribution to provide for the support of government, whereas a fee is a charge for a particular benefit to the payer.”); Black’s Law Dictionary 1470 (7th ed.1999) (“[A] general tax ... returns no special benefit to the taxpayer other than the support of governmental programs that benefit all....”).
Ameritech receives considerably more “than the rights of government which are enjoyed by all citizens,” Ace Rent-A-Car; 612 N.E.2d at 1108, when it conducts business in Gary rights-of-way. The requirements-based fee is not a tax but instead is compensation, representing a specific charge assessed against Ameritech for its commercial use of Gary-owned rights-of-way to generate private profit.
B-2
Next, the Court of Appeals invalidated Gary’s requirements-based fee as an improper tax based on the City’s avowed purpose to use the fee revenues “to finance improvements to communications networks in the City’s schools and government buildings - the type of improvements normally funded by tax revenues.” City of Gary, 711 N.E.2d at 83 (relying on City of Portage v. Harrington, 598 N.E.2d 634 (Ind. Ct.App.1992)).5
Having found that the requirements-based fee is not an impermissible tax but is instead valid compensation charged by Gary for the private, commercial use of its real estate, we find it unnecessary to consider the purpose for which the fee revenues will be used.6 Cf. City of Orangeburg, 522 S.E.2d at 806 (“Where a municipality seeks to justify a charge as a [157]*157fee because the revenue generated by the charge is used for the payer’s benefit, we will consider the fact that the revenue is placed in the municipality’s general fund in deciding whether or not the payer specifically benefits from the imposition of the charge. This factor is irrelevant, however, where the benefit to the payer derives not from the municipality’s use of the revenue but is a benefit given directly and solely to the payor in exchange for the fee.”) (emphasis added).
Having determined that the requirements-based fee is not a tax, we now address what type of fee it is.
Ill
Both parties to this appeal, as well as the trial court and Court of Appeals, were in agreement that the City of Gary’s requirements-based fee is “neither of the types of fees contemplated by” the Home Rule Act. City of Gary, 711 N.E.2d at 82 n.3. While we agree that the City of Gary is not charging a licensing fee while “exercising a regulatory power,” Ind.Code § 36 — 1—3—8(a)(5),7 we disagree with the view that the requirements-based fee is not the type of “service charge or user fee” contemplated by the legislature in Indiana Code § 36 — 1—3—8(a)(6).8
This Court previously considered the concept of a valid user fee in Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Auth. Dist. v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., 259 Ind. 464, 288 N.E.2d 136 (analyzing $1.00 airport user fee assessed by the Airport Authority against enplaning commercial airline passengers), enforcing 405 U.S. 707, 92 S.Ct. 1349, 31 L.Ed.2d 620 (1972). After acknowledging the Airport Authority’s statutory power “[t]o adopt a schedule of reasonable charges and to collect the same from all users of facilities and services within the jurisdiction of the district,” id. at 466, 288 N.E.2d at 137, Justice DeBruler, writing for the Court, offered the following rationale in upholding the validity of the user fees assessed only on enplaning commercial airline passengers and not on “all users” of the facilities:
Users of the airport facilities differ widely in the extent of their use and ‘reasonable’ charges for use, as required by the statute, would of necessity reflect those differences. It is meaningless to say that ‘all users’ must pay the same amount of user fees, e.g., would the lessor of space for a barber shop pay the [158]*158same fee as the lessor of space for an airplane? Would the lessor of space for a restaurant pay the same user fee as a visitor to the airport? The very concept of a ‘user’ fee implies that there are different uses that can be identified and the amount of the fee relates to that use.
Id. at 467, 288 N.E.2d at 137 (emphasis added).
We find this reasoning equally applicable in this case: providers of telecommunications services and consumers of those same services differ substantially in both their method and extent of use of city-owned rights-of-way9 and “reasonable and just rates for charges for services,” as required by Indiana Code § 36-1-3-8(a)(6), would of necessity reflect those differences. So while we offer no opinion as to whether the amount of Gary’s requirements-based fee assessed against Ameritech is “reasonable and just” given the extent of Ameritech’s use of Gary’s rights-of-way,10 we do find that the requirements-based fee is the type of “service charge or user fee” contemplated by the legislature under Indiana Code § 36-1 — 3—8(a)(6).
IV
Ameritech Indiana lastly contends that “Gary’s ordinances are invalid because they impermissibly tread upon the exclusive domain of the [Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (“IURC”) ],” which is vested with “jurisdiction to regulate all facets of service, rates and charges, and competition” concerning public utilities. Appellee’s Br. at 27 (emphasis added).
As set forth in Part I, supra, the Home Rule Act does withhold from Gary the “power to regulate conduct that is regulated by a state agency, except as expressly granted by statute.” Ind.Code § 36-1-3-8(a)(7). However, an earlier version of Indiana Code § 8-l-2-101(a) - effective when the ordinances were first enacted - provided Gary with an express grant of “powerf t]o determine by ... ordinance ... [the] terms and conditions ... upon which such public utility may be permitted to occupy the streets, highways, or other public property within such municipality.” Id.11 As such, Gary’s ordinances did not impermissibly impinge upon those powers reserved to the IURC in violation of Indiana Code § 36-l-3-8(a)(7) (1993).
Finally, if Ameritech Indiana finds the amount of Gary’s requirements-based fee to be unreasonable, it has the complaint process before the IURC as contemplated by the remainder of Indiana Code § 8-l-2-101(a) (1993).12 In our view, the [159]*159IURC is better qualified to make this type of reasonableness determination,13 and therefore, has primary jurisdiction in this regard. See Austin Lakes Joint Venture v. Avon Utilities, Inc., 648 N.E.2d 641, 645 (Ind.1995) (“ ‘No fixed formula exists for applying the doctrine of primary jurisdiction,’ ” but appropriate administrative agencies should not be passed over “ ‘ “in cases raising issues of fact not within the conventional experience of judges or cases requiring the exercise of administrative discretion.” ’ ”) (quoting Hansen v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co., 689 F.2d 707, 710 (7th Cir.1982) (quoting in turn Far East Conference v. United States, 342 U.S. 570, 574, 72 S.Ct. 492, 96 L.Ed. 576 (1952))).
V
These determinations notwithstanding,14 we nevertheless agree with the Court of Appeals that Gary was without authority to charge the fee as of March 13, 1998. On this date, the Indiana Legislature amended Indiana Code § 8-1-2-101(P.L. 127-1998) by adding new subsection (b) to prohibit municipalities from receiving any form of “payment” other than the “direct, actual, and reasonably incurred management costs” for a utility’s occupation of a public right-of-way. See City of Gary, 711 N.E.2d at 84-85 (“A municipality cannot continue to enforce an ordinance that has been superseded by subsequent legislation of the General Assembly.”).
The City of Gary emphatically argued both in its briefs and at oral argument that the 1998 amendment to Indiana Code § 8-1-2-101, adding subsection (b), only addressed “occupancy” of rights-of-way by utilities, thereby not preempting Gary’s Home Rule powers to collect compensation for the “use” of rights-of-way.
However, in looking to the plain language of the statute - always our first line of inquiry - we cannot ignore the legislature’s clear mandate that “direct, actual, and reasonably incurred management costs do not include rents, franchise fees, or any other payment by a public utility .... ” Ind.Code § 8 — 1—2—101(b) (emphasis added). See Poehlman v. Feferman, 717 N.E.2d 578, 581 (Ind.1999) (“When a statute is clear and unambiguous, we need not apply any rules of construction other than to require that words and phrases be taken in their plain, ordinary, and usual sense.”).15
In addition to this clear legislative prohibition against charging public utilities “any” form of payment, we also highlight the fact that both traditional and legal [160]*160dictionaries invariably include the concept of “use” when providing multiple definitions for “occupy” or variations thereof. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1560 (1976) (defining occupation as “the actual possession and use of real estate”); Black’s Law Dictionary 1106 (7th ed.1999) (defining occupancy as “[t]he use to which property is put”) (emphasis added); id. (defining occupation as “[t]he possession, control, or use of real property”) (emphasis added). As such, we decline Gary’s invitation to distinguish between Ameritech’s “using” rights-of-way and “occupying” them for purposes of avoiding a clear legislative mandate. See Poehlman, 717 N.E.2d at 581(“Clear and unambiguous statutory meaning leaves no room for judicial construction.”).16
Conclusion
We therefore (1) grant transfer; (2) adopt and incorporate by reference that part of the Court of Appeals’s opinion finding that (a) the requirements-based fee was an impermissible charge by the City as of March 13, 1998, when the Indiana Legislature amended Ind.Code § 8-1-2-101(b); (b) the remaining provisions of Ordinances 6970 and 6971 did not violate Ind.Code § 36-l-3-8(a)(7) as infringing on the jurisdiction of the IURC; and (c) the remaining policy provisions of Ordinances 6970 and 6971 would stand; (3) vacate the remainder of the opinion of the Court of Appeals; and (4) remand to the trial court with instructions to modify its order of June 25, 1998, in accordance with this opinion. Our decision is without prejudice to any rights Ameritech Indiana has preserved under Indiana Code § 8-l-2-101(a) (1993).
SHEPARD, C.J., and RUCKER, J., concur.
BOEHM, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part with opinion in which DICKSON, J., concurs.