Securus Technologies v. Public Utilities Com.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 2023
DocketB320207
StatusPublished

This text of Securus Technologies v. Public Utilities Com. (Securus Technologies v. Public Utilities Com.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securus Technologies v. Public Utilities Com., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 2/1/23; Certified for Publication 2/27/23 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR

SECURUS TECHNOLOGIES, B320207 LLC, Commission Decision No. Petitioner, 21-08-037 v. PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISION,

Respondent;

THE UTILITY REFORM NETWORK et al.,

Real Parties in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of review of a decision by the California Public Utilities Commission (Cal. PUC Decision No. 21-08-037). Decision affirmed. Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, F. Jackson Stoddard and Russell M. Blau for Petitioner. Christine Hammond, Dale Holszchuh and Elena Gekker for Respondent. Edelson and Yaman Salahi; Stephen Raher for Real Party in Interest Prison Policy Initiative, Inc. INTRODUCTION

Securus Technologies, LLC (Securus), is one of six telecommunications companies providing incarcerated persons calling services (IPCS) in California. In this original proceeding, Securus challenges the decision of the California Public Utilities Commission (PUC) adopting interim rate relief for IPCS in the first phase of a two-phase rulemaking proceeding. Among other things, the PUC’s decision: (1) found IPCS providers operate as locational monopolies within the incarceration facilities they serve and exercise market power; (2) adopted an interim cap on intrastate IPCS rates of $0.07 per minute for all debit, prepaid, and collect calls; and (3) prohibited providers from charging various ancillary fees associated with intrastate and jurisdictionally mixed 1 IPCS. The interim rate cap and prohibition on ancillary fees will remain in place until the PUC adopts a subsequent decision in the next phase of its rulemaking proceeding, which remains open. We granted Securus’s petition for writ of review to consider its request that we invalidate the PUC’s decision. In support of its request for relief, Securus contends the decision is unsupported by substantial evidence, is arbitrary and an abuse of discretion, ran afoul of certain procedural requirements, and violated Securus’s constitutional rights. As discussed below, we conclude Securus has not shown the decision must be set aside. Accordingly, we affirm the PUC’s decision.

1 A call is “jurisdictionally mixed” if the end points of the call cannot definitely be determined. (See fn. 15, post, and related text.)

2 BACKGROUND

I. Federal Regulation of Interstate IPCS

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) began regulating interstate IPCS in 2012, when it opened a rulemaking proceeding to address concerns regarding a lack of competition in the IPCS market. The next year, in FCC Order No. 13-113, the FCC determined rates for calling services used by incarcerated people greatly exceeded the reasonable costs of providing those services, and adopted interim interstate rate caps of $0.21 per minute for debit and prepaid calls, and $0.25 per minute for collect calls. In October 2015, the FCC issued an order (FCC Order No. 15-136) “adopt[ing] a comprehensive framework for interstate and intrastate [IPCS].” Among other things, the FCC adopted permanent interstate and intrastate rate caps of $0.11 per minute for prisons, $0.14 per minute for jails with average daily populations of 1,000 or more, $0.16 per minute for jails with average daily populations of 350 to 999, and $0.22 per minute for jails with average daily populations of less than 350. The FCC also “establish[ed] a limited list of ancillary fees that [it] will permit [IPCS] providers to charge[,]” and capped the amounts that could be charged for those fees. Of relevance to this case, the FCC: (1) capped automated payment fees 2 at $3.00 per

2 Automated payment fees are those charged by IPCS providers for various types of transactions, including credit card payments, debit card payments, and various other bill processing fees. These fees are incurred when incarcerated persons or their families use a credit or debit card to fund their IPCS accounts for future calls.

3 transaction; (2) capped live agent fees 3 at $5.95 per interaction; (3) capped paper bill/statement fees 4 at $2.00 per statement; and (4) with respect single-call and related services fees 5, prohibited providers from charging more than the exact fee charged by third-party financial institutions for processing single-call transactions, with no markup. In 2016, the FCC reconsidered its decision to exclude all site commission payments 6 from the rate caps set in 2015. “[T]o account for claims that certain correctional facility costs reflected in site commission payments are directly and reasonably related to the provision of [IPCS]” (footnote omitted), the FCC adopted the following revised rate caps: $0.13 per minute for prisons; $0.19 per minute for jails with average daily populations of 1,000 or more; $0.21 per minute for jails with average daily populations

3 Live agent fees are those associated with the optional use of a live operator to complete IPCS transactions. Live agents, for example, may assist in setting up an account, adding money to an account, or making a call.

4 Paper bill/statement fees are fees associated with providing paper billing statements to IPCS customers.

5 Single-call and related service fees apply where an incarcerated person makes a collect call to a recipient who does not have an account with the IPCS provider or does not want to establish an account. Those calls are billed on a per-call basis through a third-party, who charges a transaction fee.

6 Site commissions are a percentage of calling service revenues that IPCS providers pay to incarceration facilities. They are individually negotiated in the contracts between the providers and the facilities they serve, and can vary at the local, county, state, and federal levels.

4 of 350 to 999; and $0.31 per minute for jails with average daily populations of less than 350. In 2017, the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit vacated various portions of FCC Order No. 15-136. (Global Tel*Link v. FCC (D.C. Cir. 2017) 866 F.3d 397, 402.) Among other things, the D.C. Circuit vacated the FCC’s caps on intrastate IPCS rates, reasoning they “exceed[ed] the FCC’s statutory authority[.]” (Ibid.) It also vacated the FCC’s 2015 rate caps on interstate calls, concluding several of the methods used to set those caps were unsupported by reasoned decision-making. (See ibid.) Subsequently, in Securus Techs., Inc. v. FCC (D.C. Cir. Dec. 21, 2017, No. 16-1321) 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 26360, the D.C. Circuit summarily vacated the FCC’s 2016 order adopting revised rate caps because they were “premised on the same legal framework and mathematical methodology that [the court] rejected in Global Tel*Link v. FCC, [supra, 866 F.3d 397].” In an order adopted in August 2020 (FCC Order No. 20- 111) 7, the FCC: (1) revised certain limitations on ancillary service fees; (2) proposed to lower the interstate rate caps on debit, prepaid, and collect calls to $0.14 for prisons and $0.16 for jails; and (3) proposed to cap rates for international calls. While the FCC believed these actions “will ensure that rates and charges for interstate and international [IPCS] are just and reasonable[,]” it acknowledged “the vast majority of calls made by incarcerated individuals are intrastate calls[.]” The FCC therefore “urge[d] [its] state partners to take action to address the egregiously high intrastate [IPCS] rates across the country.”

7 We refer to this order throughout this opinion as the FCC’s August 2020 order.

5 In May 2021, the FCC adopted an order (FCC Order No.

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Securus Technologies v. Public Utilities Com., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securus-technologies-v-public-utilities-com-calctapp-2023.