In re Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.

19 Fla. Supp. 2
CourtFlorida Public Service Commission
DecidedNovember 29, 1961
DocketNo. 6403-TP
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Fla. Supp. 2 (In re Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Florida Public Service Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 19 Fla. Supp. 2 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

BY THE COMMISSION.

Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., a public utility engaged in, among other things, furnishing local exchange telephone service within the state of Florida, has filed with this commission its petition seeking authority to revise its statewide groupings of exchange rate schedules. Also, the telephone company requests this commission to provide a method whereby future inequities resulting from exchanges growing out of their respective rate groups may be automatically corrected and adjusted in accordance with rules and regulations of the commission.

The commission held two public hearings in the city of Jacksonville on the petition, pursuant to formal notice giving the time, place, and purpose of said hearings. The notice of said [4]*4hearings was given the most comprehensive distribution of any case ever handled by this commission. It was served by United States mail on the mayor of each city and town served by Southern Bell; the chairman of the board of county commissioners in each county; each labor organization within the telephone company’s service area; every chamber of commerce in the territory served by said utility; every member of the Senate and the House of Representatives of the Florida legislature representing any part of the territory served by said telephone company; and upon several hundred individuals who, at one time or another, have requested notice of such hearings.

In addition to the broad distribution just described the commission, by formal order, directed Southern Bell to publish notice of said hearings, together with present and proposed rates, in at least one newspaper in each county in which the telephone company operates a telephone exchange. Every medium of mass communication, newspapers, radio, and television, participated in giving the public detailed and comprehensive information concerning the petition and its proposed revision in exchange groupings and rates. In spite of the wide publicity given these hearings, there was virtually no objection raised at the hearings concerning the telephone company’s proposal.

Such protest as was advanced was of a most nebulous character and appeared to be directed primarily at the telephone company’s yellow page directory advertising policies and practices. The commission disallowed these protests on the basis of court decisions holding that yellow page advertising is not a public utility function of the telephone company, and therefore, is not subject to control and supervision by a commission such as this.1

[5]*5Southern Bell’s present schedule of exchange groups became effective on February 1,1952 and was based on telephone development as of March 31, 1951. In this proceeding, it has taken the position that the unusually large growth in number of telephones within certain service areas during the past decade has rendered the old schedule inappropriate for present day use. The record discloses that, since the adoption of the present groupings, the number of telephones served by Southern Bell in Florida has increased approximately 190% while some of the individual exchanges served by said utility have increased by as much as 1500%. The phenominal growth of some exchanges has resulted in telephone subscribers in exchanges of comparable size, in many instances, paying different local exchange rates. Extensive expansion of local calling areas throughout the state, and the establishment of many new exchanges, have also resulted [6]*6in different local exchange rates for exchanges of comparable size. The primary purpose of this proceeding is to place each exchange in its proper rate group, thus bringing all of Southern Bell’s exchanges in Florida into proper relation with each other and eliminating existing inequities in the application of exchange rates.

Another important purpose of this proceeding is to obtain commission approval of some method whereby future inequities resulting from exchanges growing out of their respective rate groups may be corrected and automatically adjusted in accordance with commission prescribed rules and regulations. Florida’s anticipated growth during the next ten years gives substance to this portion of the proceeding and alerts the commission to the need for devising some procedure whereby telephone subscribers in the various exchanges of a telephone company will be assured of continuous equality between their own rates and those paid by subscribers in other exchanges of comparable size.

While the primary purpose of this proceeding is to revise exchange groupings so as to eliminate existing inequities, it is also important to note that the proposed revision of exchange groupings will result, if approved, in an increase of approximately $2,192,500 in the telephone company’s gross annual revenue, or $1,015,996 increase in its Net Operating Income. This feature of the proceeding makes it necessary for us to look at the company’s present earnings, and projected earnings, to be certain that the proposed revision, if approved, will not result in excessive earnings for the utility.

The telephone company’s local exchanges presently are comprehended in 8 different exchange groups which are based on total telephones, main stations, and extensions. The proposed revision contemplates 13 different groups based on main stations only. The two schedules are as follows —

Present Group (Stations) 0-350 1 351 - 1,400 2 1,401 - 11,000 3 11.001 - 20,000 4 20.001 - 50,000 5 50.001 - 100,000 6 OVER - 100,000 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Proposed, (Stations) (UPPER LIMIT) 500 ” ” 1,000 ” ” 2,500 ” ” 5,000 ” ” 15,000 ” ” 25,000 ” ” 35,000 ” ” 50,000 ” ” 65,000 ” ” 100,000 ” ” 200,000 ” ” 400,000 ” ” 600,000

[7]*7Under the proposed revision, some exchanges will receive a small increase in telephone rates; some will receive a decrease, and some will have no change in their existing rates. For example, under the proposal, there would be no change in 6 exchanges for 4-party residential service, 17 exchanges for 2-party residential service, and 14 exchanges for residential individual-line service. With further reference to residential service, there would be reductions in 32 exchanges for 4-party service, 58 exchanges for 2-party service, and 44 exchanges for individual-line service. There would be increases of a small amount in 53 exchanges for 4-party service, 20 exchanges for 2-party service, and 36 exchanges for individual-line service. For commercial service, there would be increases in more exchanges than there would be reductions, or no changes. In only two exchanges, Hollywood and Ft. Lauderdale, have increases in excess of forty cents per month been proposed. Those two exchanges enjoy extended area calling privileges and have grown from group 6 to proposed group 11. In 1951, those two exchanges had in excess of 20,001, but less than 50,000 telephones; whereas, at the present time, they have in excess of 100,000, but less than 200,000 telephones.

The specific rates proposed by the telephone company were published by the company at the direction of the commission for each exchange served by it within the state. For that reason, and for the further reason that there will be some changes in the final effective rates, there is no point in setting forth the various rates proposed for the different classes of service at the exchanges affected.

Before concluding this order, some reference should be made to the company’s earnings and the impact the proposed regrouping will have on such earnings. The company’s exhibit no.

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Related

Horn v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.
19 Fla. Supp. 142 (Miami-Dade County Circuit Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
19 Fla. Supp. 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-southern-bell-tel-tel-co-flapubserv-1961.