Feigley v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (AT & T/Verizon)

794 A.2d 428, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 143
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 12, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 794 A.2d 428 (Feigley v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (AT & T/Verizon)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feigley v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (AT & T/Verizon), 794 A.2d 428, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 143 (Pa. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

OPINION BY

President Judge COLINS.

In the two above-captioned separately docketed matters that were consolidated for argument before this Court, Sandra L. Feigley (Feigley) and The Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants (C.U.R.E.),3 collectively Petitioners, petition for review of the April 19, 2001 opinion and order issued by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) at Docket No. C-00981434. Said order denied Feigley’s and C.U.R.E .’s exceptions and adopted, with modification, the Administrative Law Judge’s (ALJ) June 27, 2000 recommended decision, and designated the matter “closed.” The factual background of the present appeal follows.

On April 21, 1998, Feigley filed two complaints with the PUC against AT&T and against Bell Atlantic-Pennsylvania, respectively, alleging unreasonableness and unconstitutionality of rates charged by AT&T and Bell Atlantic to recipients of telephone calls from inmates housed by the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (Corrections Department).4 In her complaints, Feigley challenges the rates she pays for telephone calls received from her husband, who is incarcerated under the supervision of the Corrections Department. The record indicates that AT&T provided inmate-accessible telephone service under a contract that was opened for bidding by the Commonwealth acting through the Corrections Department. Calls by inmates are required to be made through this specialized phone system. The calls that are the subject of the instant complaints are those both where AT&T was the primary contractor and those in which AT&T was subcontractor to Verizon.

Feigley’s counsel subsequently transferred his representation to Dianna Hollis and Robert Franz, president and member of C.U.R.E., respectively, while Feigley proceeded pro se. Hearings were held in the matter, and additional briefs were filed by Feigley through 1999. On December [430]*43021, 1999, a final hearing was conducted after which Hollis and C.U.R.E. were allowed to officially intervene in the action.

Feigley testified that an inmate’s placing a telephone call results in a $3.30 charge regardless of the length of the call, while AT&T representatives testified that the charge for calls placed from inmates in a state correctional facility consists of: (1) the prison collect call surcharge of $3.00; (2) the pay phone compensation surcharge of $.30; and (3) the transport charge, increased from $.27 to $.45 per minute as of August 6, 1999. Hollis and Franz, appearing on behalf of C.U.R.E., testified about the quality and nature of inmate telephone calls and their own excessive bills for calls from relatives incarcerated within the Corrections Department system.

On June 27, 2000, the ALJ issued his recommended decision denying Feigley’s complaint. On July 12, 2000, Feigley filed exceptions to the decision, and on July 19, 2000, C.U.R.E. filed exceptions. AT&T replied to said exceptions on July 27, 2000. On April 19, 2001, the PUC issued its opinion and order denying Feigley’s and C.U.R.E.’s exceptions and adopting the ALJ’s recommended decision with modification as per the opinion.5 This appeal followed.6

On appeal, Petitioners challenge the reasonableness and constitutionality of the rates charged by AT&T to recipients of collect telephone calls from inmates housed by the Corrections Department. Specifically, Petitioners aver that since 1988, the Commonwealth has contracted with a single telecommunications provider, AT&T, for the inmate telephone system and that this monopoly violates the federal Telecommunications Act of 19967 and the Pennsylvania Public Utility Code.8 Petitioners also contend that AT&T’s rates for inmate telephone calls are not just and reasonable, that said rates exceed the actual cost of providing telephone service to inmates, and that during the present litigation, AT&T raised its rates for recipients of inmate telephone calls by increasing the per minute charge from between $.16 and $.31 to a flat rate of $.45 per minute. Petitioners contend that an average ten-minute inmate call costs AT&T approximately $6.20 before taxes, $3.00 of which is a commission that goes to the Commonwealth, generating approximately $5 million annually. Although Petitioners acknowledge that the Commonwealth distributes $3 million to the Inmate General Welfare Fund, they contend that the remaining millions go to the Commonwealth’s general fund.

It is further argued by Petitioners that AT&T’s rates are not comparable to those charged in other states for like services, that Pennsylvania has one of the highest surcharge rates of the states surveyed, and that the propriety of the bid[431]*431ding procedures between AT&T and the Commonwealth is questionable. This disparity, according to Petitioners, is particularly intolerable considering the poor quality of the voice transmission, and the fact that the inmate’s conversation is frequently interrupted by taped messages that trigger the security system to disconnect the call, thereby necessitating placing the call again with the recipient incurring another surcharge. Finally, Petitioners argue that AT&T’s rates are unconstitutional in that they violate the First Amendment rights of an inmate’s family and Mends by impeding their ability to communicate with the incarcerated family member, and that AT&T’s rates violate their equal protection rights by subjecting recipients of inmate telephone calls to excessive charges not imposed on other users.

Upon review, we find that substantial evidence supports the PUC’s adoption, with modification, of the ALJ’s recommended decision concluding that Petitioners failed to meet their burden of proving that AT&T’s rates as applied to correctional facility inmate collect calls are excessive, unjust, unreasonable, discriminatory, and unconstitutional. The record includes Respondent’s submission of statistical data including, but not limited to, 1998 and 1999, indicating that the rates for inmate collect calls are comparable to those for collect calls made from public pay phones, and that the difference between an inmate collect call and one made from a public pay phone is minimal. The record also supports the ALJ’s determination that Petitioners failed to proffer objective evidence establishing that AT&T’s rates for inmate collect calls were unjust and unreasonable as alleged.

We further concur with PUC’s observation that with regard to telecommunications systems, the condition of incarceration subjects an inmate, as in the present matter of Feigley’s husband, to “choices circumscribed by the operation of the Commonwealth contract and prison administrative policies under which the contract is carried out,” and that the lack of competitive alternatives in carriers is an “unfortunate incidence of incarceration.” As to Petitioners’ averments that their First Amendment rights regarding freedom of speech are being violated, we concur with the PUC’s conclusion that these allegations are not viable. Substantial evidence supports the PUC’s adoption of the ALJ’s determination that Petitioners have failed to prove that AT&T’s rates for inmate collect telephone calls under its contract with Verizon are unreasonable and in violation of the Public Utility Code.

Similarly, we concur with the PUC’s determination that Petitioners’ other constitutional arguments are without merit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

M. Rokita Jr. v. PA DOC
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2021
Feigley v. PA. PUBLIC UTILITY COM'N
794 A.2d 428 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
794 A.2d 428, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feigley-v-pennsylvania-public-utility-commission-at-tverizon-pacommwct-2002.