Harrisonville Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Comm'n Replaces vacated opinion of 5/23/03

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 11, 2003
Docket5-02-0199 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Harrisonville Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Comm'n Replaces vacated opinion of 5/23/03 (Harrisonville Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Comm'n Replaces vacated opinion of 5/23/03) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrisonville Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Comm'n Replaces vacated opinion of 5/23/03, (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

(text box: 1) NO. 5-02-0199

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT

_______________________________________________________________________________________________

HARRISONVILLE TELEPHONE COMPANY, )  Appeal from an Order of the

MOULTRIE INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE )  Illinois Commerce Commission.

COMPANY, LEAF RIVER TELEPHONE )

COMPANY, MONTROSE MUTUAL )

TELEPHONE COMPANY, NEW WINDSOR )

TELEPHONE COMPANY, ONEIDA )

TELEPHONE EXCHANGE, VIOLA HOME )

TELEPHONE COMPANY, WOODHULL )

COMMUNITY TELEPHONE COMPANY, )

and ILLINOIS INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE )

ASSOCIATION, )

)

Petitioners, )

  1. )  Nos. 00-0233 & 00-0335

)          (Consolidated)

ILLINOIS COMMERCE COMMISSION, )

Respondent. )

_____________________________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE KUEHN delivered the opinion of the court:

The petitioners appeal from an original order and from an order on rehearing, both entered by the Illinois Commerce Commission.  The original order was entered on September 18, 2001, and the order on rehearing was entered on March 13, 2002.  At issue in this matter is the establishment of a state universal service fund for small rural telephone companies.

FACTS

Following the restructuring of the telecommunications industry in the 1980s, the federal and state governments enacted legislation designed to keep the playing field level for rural telephone companies and to ensure that telephone service was universally available and affordable.  In keeping with this policy of keeping service available and affordable, various funding sources were established.  Funding was essential to the support of these rural carriers, who often had very high costs in providing service to citizens of the rural setting.  In fact, oftentimes, the costs to provide telephone service in these rural areas exceed the revenue derived from providing those services.  These funds are distributed by both the federal government and the state government.

On May 7, 1997, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) established a federal universal service fund, providing essential support to small local exchange carriers to assist these companies in meeting a portion of their high costs of providing telephone service to the public in rural areas.  On March 17, 2000, the Illinois Independent Telephone Association filed a petition with the Illinois Commerce Commission (Commission) requesting that Illinois establish its own universal service support fund for rural telephone companies pursuant to a recently passed Illinois statute contemplating its establishment.  Thereafter, the Commission ordered its own investigation.  The dockets were consolidated on May 10, 2000.

On September 18, 2001, the Commission entered an order that established an Illinois universal service fund for the first time.  This universal service fund support is to be provided to companies whose economic costs of doing business of providing the group of services that constitute universal service exceed the affordable rate established by the Commission for the supported service, less any federal monies received for the same provision of service.  A finding in this order established that the aggregate costs of providing services for all access lines in the areas serviced by the rural telephone carriers, after accounting for federal similar support, exceeded a Commission-established affordable rate of $22.23 per month by as much as $73.5 million or as little as $29.9 million.  However, the rural telephone companies were not seeking these economic costs amounts but were seeking funds based upon the appropriate rate of return that each company was entitled to earn.  The amount sought by the rural telephone companies was $12,799,298, with some minor adjustments.  After reviewing all of the evidence presented, the Commission determined that a proposal set forth by Verizon North, Inc., and Verizon South, Inc. (Verizon), best served the competing needs in that it utilized the affordable rate and the economic costs gap in reaching a determination on each company’s funding needs.  Utilizing an affordable rate of $22.23 monthly, suggested by Verizon, would reduce the subsidy amount sought by the rural telephone carriers by $6.2 million.  Under this proposal, each rural telephone company would be required to demonstrate the need for funding through the use of the $22.23-per-month affordable rate and the current rate for telephone services that each company charged.  In this order, the Commission also determined that the list of Illinois-supported telephone services should mirror the FCC-supported services list but that it would only consider funding for each primary access phone line–not for every access line in homes and businesses.  It reached this determination by concluding that the “voice grade access to the network” category of lines eligible for federal funding only included a primary residential line and a single business line, stating, “[D]iscretionary services should not be supported by the *** fund.”  The order established an initial universal service fund in the amount of approximately $6.6 million.  

The Illinois Independent Telephone Association, along with other petitioners, filed a timely application for rehearing.  On October 31, 2001, the Commission granted rehearing on four of the issues raised.  Two of the issues involved alleged mathematical errors.  The third issue involved the number of access lines considered.  The fourth issue questioned the Commission’s decision to disallow a phase-in of rate increases or a transition plan to the “affordable rate.”  The order upon rehearing was entered on March 13, 2002.  The Commission corrected its mathematical errors, increased the initial universal service fund size to $8,420,271, and utilized $20.39 monthly as the “affordable rate.”  No change was made to the original conclusion that the access lines considered would not include secondary business and residential lines.  The order on rehearing resolved the final issue by approving a three-to-five-year transition plan based upon the level of an individual company’s existing rates.  That determination meant that initial fund size would be $10,535,634, and the final fund size at the conclusion of the transition would be $8,695,055.

The Illinois Independent Telephone Association appeals from this March 13, 2002, order on rehearing.  The Illinois Independent Telephone Association raises the following issues:

1.  The Commission should not have denied universal service fund support for all access lines.

2.  There was no evidence to support the level of funding included in the initial universal service fund.

Additionally, several rural telephone companies (footnote: 1) raise the following additional concerns on appeal:

1.  The finding that the rural telephone companies are entitled to earn an appropriate rate of return is inconsistent with the reduction of the amount of each company’s funding by the percentage of secondary lines the company serves.

2.

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Harrisonville Telephone Co. v. Illinois Commerce Comm'n Replaces vacated opinion of 5/23/03, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrisonville-telephone-co-v-illinois-commerce-com-illappct-2003.